To Sleep, To Dream
Sometimes I think of Mom. I talk to her picture, but
it’s not the same. When I talk she never answers but once in a while I hear
her speaking in my head, mostly when I’m just drifting off or beginning to wake
up.
Of course, her voice is only a memory now and I’m not
even sure it really is hers. Maybe I’m just pretending I remember what she
sounded like. I’m glad I have that one old tape though, because without those
bedtime stories I’d forget the sound of her.
The tape has just clicked off and I’m lying in bed
watching the moon move across the sky through my window when I see her clear as
day.
“RJ,” she says, and I recognize her voice right away.
I’m flooded with happiness that she’s back, that it was all some terrible mix
up, a horrible joke.
“Mom,” I shout, jumping through the window and
landing on a cloud beside her. I grab her and hug her so tight she’ll never get
loose. She doesn’t try to, just stands still and hugs me back. Finally, I let
go of her. Then I look down and shriek. Our farm is far beneath me, a swatch of
white outlined by the roads that surround it.
“No worries, Little Man. You won’t fall.” She takes
my hand and we stroll through the clouds which feel oddly like the sand dunes
on the beach in San Diego. We climb up to the top where the moon is shining
brightly. His old face beams, just as glad to see me with my mom as I am to be
with her.
“Why did you leave?” I ask her the one question I
really want answered. “Why didn’t you live?”
“Well, it wasn’t my choice, baby. There are some
things you cannot control,” she says conversationally, pulling me down to sit
beside her on the cloud. A shooting star falls in the distance. She wraps an
arm around me, hugging me close. “That’s something you will have to understand
sometime, soon I hope.”
“If it had
been your choice you’d have stayed, right Mom?”
She kisses my forehead, leaving a warm spot like the
imprint of lipstick. “I wouldn’t part with you for anything in heaven or hell,”
she reassures me. “Nothing could have split us apart short of death. I’m so
sorry, RJ, so very sorry I’m not there with you now. But I left you in very
good hands. Your father loves you every bit as much as I do. I’m so very glad you
love him back and want him to be happy.”
I suddenly feel disloyal. “Yeah, I do Mom, but not in
the same way I loved you.” I’m trying not to cry but first one tear escapes,
and then another. They float off into space to become twinkling stars.
“That’s the wonder of love, Little Man. You can love
more than one person with all you’ve got because your heart will always make
room. You can never love too many, or too deeply. Of course,” she says using
her mommy voice, “you marry only one at a time and you bring respect and trust to that
union as well as love. That’s what makes a family. Like you, your dad, and
Stephen.”
“You know about him?”
“Oh sure, honey. Your dad and I talked and texted
back and forth every week. I always consulted him when making big decisions
about you and often took his advice. If it’d been up to me, you’d have been
studying music rather than playing sports to earn a scholarship.”
“That was Dad?”
“Yes it was. He needed to be part of your life even
if he didn’t want to shock you with his lifestyle. I sent him pictures of you as you grew, and
he sent me photos of life here on the farm.
“When he found Stephen something changed. He’d always
loved you, and me, but a part of his heart he’d always kept closed opened up.
We had decided you were old enough to deal with his having a boyfriend and were
going to start sending you back to the farm more often so you could meet
Stephen and see how happy they are together, but then fate took a hand. I
understand they’re going to get married. They must be very happy.”
I focus on the face of the moon rather than look at
Mom directly. “They were,” I answer, “but I fixed that. I helped Dad see the
light.” The moon in front of me dims. “He’s straight again now.”
“Oh no, I thought you wanted him to be happy?” Her
voice and body fade away and I’m left sitting on a cloud all alone.
“What do you mean, Mom?” She doesn’t answer. The moon
goes dark like a total eclipse, and the cloud beneath me starts to shift like
drifting sand. “Mom!” I call for her as loud as I can but she’s gone. Again.
What did Mom mean when she said she thought I wanted Dad
to be happy? I do want him to be happy. Happy and straight. No one who is gay
can be happy. She must not understand, I think, and then laugh at myself
because she’s nothing but dust to dust, ashes to ashes. She can’t understand,
or misunderstand, anything now.
The cloud sand beneath me opens up and I start
falling back to Earth. I try to scream, but suddenly my mouth seals shut. It
won’t open, so I try flapping my arms like I’m a bird. I know it’s foolish but
I’m desperate. And it works.
My pajama sleeves turn in to wings and I find I can
soar. It’s a joyous feeling, better than Christmas or sinking the winning ball
in a game, even better than getting straight A’s. I fly high, high, as high as
I can go to see if I can find Mom among the clouds again.
This time the clouds feel like spider webs, sticky, light, and
creepy. They clutch at my wing sleeves, slowing me down, but I shake them off
and continue upward.
It’s not the moon that greets me because the sun has
risen. Golden rays spread out from its surface to warm my face. When I look
straight at it I’m blinded for a moment and lose control. I’m falling and my
sleeve wings burn away, but a huge hand catches me in its palm. I try to follow
the hand to the arm and up to the face of my rescuer, but the light is too
bright. I’m blinded by its brilliance, so I focus on the hand.
Standing beside me is a boy about my age. His clothes
are strange to me, a swirling cloak of many colors. He’s playing a stringed
instrument I’ve never seen before and starts to sing:
“There was a boy, a very strange enchanted boy,
And while we
spoke of many things, fools and kings, This he said to me:
The greatest
thing you’ll ever learn
Is just to
love, and be loved in return.”
Listening to him fills me with a
feeling of safety. When he finishes, I say, “My mom used to play that song on
the piano. Do you know where she is? Who are you?”
“Yes, I know where she is and she’s
safe. As for who I am, I have a million names. The one I want you to use is
Friend.” His eyes, dark with understanding, gaze into mine.
“How did I get here? How will I get
home?” I ask him.
“You came here searching for something.
You’ll go home when you find it.”
I think that over and say, “Sounds like
a lot of books and movies, Lord of the
Rings, Indiana Jones, A Wrinkle in Time. Can’t you give me a
bigger hint than that?”
His face lights up with mischief.
“Ultimately we all search for the truth.”
“But that’s as vague as the first hint.”
He shrugs. “Listen, Friend,” I try, “how about if I ask questions? Will you
answer them?”
Suddenly he’s standing in front of a
large and colorful game board. On it are ten spaces leading from the first one,
marked Confusion, to the last one, labeled Understanding. Above it hangs a
flashing sign that reads: WHAT AM I SEARCHING FOR? A marker with my face on it
stands smack in the middle of Confusion, ready to go.
I’m standing behind a contestant’s
pulpit with bright lights in my eyes, and somewhere behind them is an unseen
audience applauding. They quiet down and Friend says to them, “Welcome,
welcome, welcome to the game of…”
He
pauses and the audience shouts back, “…What Am I Searching For?”
His teeth gleam white in the
spotlights. “That’s right. Our contestant today is RJ, age thirteen. He loves
sports and academics, any competition really, but as we all know his only opponent
today is himself.”
Friend turns to me. “Good luck, RJ. You
may ask me any question you’d like but I’ll only answer with one word, ‘Yes’, ‘No’,
or ‘Partially’ so consider your questions carefully.” Among fresh applause he
calls out, “So if you’re ready we’ll let the game begin.”
My first question is easy. “Am I
searching for something I can touch?”
“No.” Friend moves my image one step
along the path of the game board.
“Am I searching for myself?” I realize
it’s a throwaway question as soon as I say it.
“Yes.” He turns around and raises his
arms as if conducting an orchestra. As his hands fall the invisible audience choruses
with one voice, “We all are.” My icon moves another step.
Twenty percent of the way across
already. I’ve got to think of better questions. I take a moment before asking
the third. “Okay, it’s not something I can touch, but it is, in some way, a
search for myself. Am I searching for love?” It seems to me that’s a crazy
question, but so many people online post about looking for love I think it’s
worth a shot.
“Partially.” That mischievous look is
back on Friend’s face. That makes me think of Jessica.
Uh, why? Where did that come from? But
it does make me think of another question. “Am I searching for ability?” Like
in sports, or medicine…
“Partially,” but this time as my piece
moves Friend’s face darkens, and the unseen audience shifts nervously in their
seats.
Question number five will take me half
way across the board and I am no closer to finding out what I was searching for
than I was before the game. I plan my words before I speak. “Will I be a better
person when I’ve found it?”
The audience breaks into spontaneous
applause, my piece jumps happily to the next spot on the board, and Friend looks
relieved as he answers, “Yes.”
As the applause fades the lights dim
and a team of people come flocking out of the dark. They swarm Friend blanketing him from
sight and I hear him protest good-naturedly. One woman pulls herself away from
the pile and looks at me standing behind my podium. She walks over to me with a smile jumping from
her lips to her eyes.
Taking a towel from a pocket she begins
dabbing at my face. I realize I’ve been sweating heavily, but she pats me dry
quickly and applies a little clear powder too my face. “You’re doing just fine,
honey,” she says as she works. “Most of ‘em give up by this point, but you
scored a big one just now.” She looks around and leans in conspiratorially. “Figure
out the difference between that question and the ones before. It’ll make things
clearer.”
I refresh my memory. “My last question
started with ‘will I’ rather than an ‘am I’. Does that make a difference?”
She dips into another pocket and
produces a glass of cold water, which she hands me. The lights come back up and
she along with the other flock of people begin streaming out. But she pauses
long enough to look over her shoulder and nod before disappearing with the
others back into the dark.
Friend is standing in front of the game
board just where I’d seen him last. He’s spruced up and looking good, his robe
is cleaned and adjusted, his face patted and powdered. Even his smile seems brighter.
He turns to face the unseen audience.
“Welcome back to the second half of our
game. As you will remember, RJ has made it halfway across the board and has
five more questions to ask to discover…” He raises one eyebrow expectantly.
“What He’s Searching For,” answers the
audience on cue.
Turning back to me Friend asks, “Are
you ready, Friend?”
I know he’s speaking to me, but I can’t
help asking the obvious. “You told me to call you Friend and now you’re calling me Friend?”
“I call lots of people Friend, with a
capital letter and without,” he says. “I’ve always found it a nice way to keep relationships
peaceful. It’s hard to get mad at someone you call friend.” The audience
applauds. “Now,” he says to me again, “are you ready?
When I nod my head he asks, “What is
your sixth question?”
“As it’s something that will make me a
better person when I find it,” I muse aloud, “involving love and ability, I
think I’ll ask this: “Is it difficult to find?”
The mischievous light is back in Friend’s
eyes as he says succinctly, “Yes.”
Watching my game piece move another
step forward I say, “Mom always used to tell me that the hardest things to
achieve are the most rewarding.”
Friend’s compassionate gaze doesn’t
irritate me as so many others have. He says, “She said many wise things during
her short life on Earth.”
“Is there any way I can bring her back?”
I cross my fingers hoping he’ll say ‘Yes’. If there is, I’ll do anything and
everything it takes.
I hear the audience’s collective sigh
of disappointment. “No,” says Friend with a touch of sadness, “which you knew
already but couldn’t stop yourself from asking, huh?” He knows me pretty well for
meeting so short a time ago. My icon moves forward and there are only three
spaces left. I have to make them count.
Which is why I’m shocked to hear myself
blurt out, “Is it something I have to learn the hard way?”
“Yes,” nods Friend firmly. The game
piece with my face on it moves forward on the board.
Well, now I have some clues with which to
work. A difficult to find lesson I have to learn the hard way which will make
me a better person, involving ability, and love. Lots of wriggle room there. I’ve
got to narrow the field.
“Only two questions left,” announces
Friend to the audience as he holds up two fingers. “Will RJ finally get his
answer to the question...,” He waits.
“What Am I Searching For?” This time my
voice alone can be heard. The audience is silent.
“Okay, RJ. What is your ninth question?”
I see hope on his face and realize he’s been rooting for me all along.
“Does this have anything to do with my
plan, Courageous Change?” I ask.
“YES,” Friend shouts, and again my game
marker skips happily to the next space. “You’ve got one more question. Can you
figure it out, RJ?” He’s nearly jumping up and down he’s so excited for me. I
hear a chattering among the unseen audience. They’re pulling for me too, I can
feel it.
A lesson learned the hard way involving
Courageous Change. It will be difficult to find but will make me a better
person. Ability and love will play a role. And suddenly I know.
“I am searching for something that will
make my dad happy and straight!” I announce. “That’s it, isn’t it?”
Just as Friend opens his mouth to answer
a loud bell interrupts him. The huge golden hand in which this has all taken
place tilts. While I slide down Friend floats up. He shouts the answer to me
but the bright light of the sun shining through my bedroom window distracts me
and the ringing alarm clock blocks my hearing. It’s time to get up. I have to
feed the dogs, chickens, and Nanny before the school bus gets here.
As I stumble to the bathroom I hear Dad
going out through the mud porch. Morning starts pretty early for a farmer
working a piece of land the size of ours, and his workload has doubled. When I finish
my chores and get to the kitchen for my own breakfast I find only a cold cup of
coffee at his place.
I’m not stupid, I watch TV. I can see Dad
is suffering from a broken heart but the afternoon talk show hosts say those
eventually mend. A lost soul is a lot harder to fix. I have to stick to the
plan.
Courageous Change is for the greater good and soon Dad and I will be happy, living as a straight family like everyone else.
Still, I watch Dad moping around here when he thinks I’m not looking and wonder when the happy part is going to kick in. Maybe he needs to date a woman.
Courageous Change is for the greater good and soon Dad and I will be happy, living as a straight family like everyone else.
Still, I watch Dad moping around here when he thinks I’m not looking and wonder when the happy part is going to kick in. Maybe he needs to date a woman.
I set about figuring out who that should be.
I like this addition.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Stormy!
Delete