There comes a day when you realize you’ve lived your entire on this block. It could come some Tuesday afternoon in the office. Or you may see it when waves roll on some shore you didn’t grow up with. And you realize you couldn’t have done anything vut take those steps down to the bones, the foam, the stones and perhaps the sand that are inevitable once you’ve crossed the place where an avenue and a boulevard collide at oblique angles with the street that you’ve lived on. No one ever tells you what’s on the other side; they only tell you not to go there.
You wake from a dream and somebody asks you about it but you’re not sure why. You’re not even sure of what you’ve dreamed; no one can tell you how those stories end. You only know that you begin some place you thought you’d forgotten and proceed through people you haven’t thought about since you left the block. Or even before that.
It all puzzles, frightens, infuriates and annoys me. Now I understand why mother stayed through all those years, alone, with me, alone with me alone. And why she kept me, even when she couldn’t afford to replace the clothes I’d just grown out of, much less the Catholic schooling she provided until there wasn’t money for anything else.
She knew something that men very often act upon but women understand intuitively. What other kind of understanding is there, anyway? What other kind of understanding does anybody need? Anyway, she told me this once: Any memory is paid for. Those recollections that people use to comfort themselves: That’s all they are, re-collections. The pieces, the shards, all picked up and rearranged, whether by reflex or design, into the stories other people use to acquit themselves or the world they’ve lived in. Things could’ve been better or worse, or they are. Either way, people sill conclude that they’re where they’re supposed to be or that they’re going there and that God, or whoever, is leading them there and providing them with everything they need along the way.
I don’t long to go back to some Garden of Eden that I never saw in my life. By the same token, I don’t regret anything. That’s helpful, in a way: I expect nothing of the future, not for myself or anyone else.
There are a few indisputable facts about my life, and they’re not on any certified documents. And they’re not the sorts of things that someone will find by making inquiries or by questioning me. Even knowing me, whatever that means, wouldn’t be enough. Of course I was a child and I grew. And what of it? What other incontrovertible facts are there? Oh, I was enrolled in school X for however many years, but how much did I attend, and how much did I learn? Even that’s not something I know for sure. I’ve never completed any sort of diploma, and to some people that means I don’t have any education or intelligence. Maybe I don’t. But that doesn’t worry me now, and I won’t argue the point with anybody. Maybe I’ve learned a few things; maybe I haven’t.
And what of it?, I ask again. If I have an education, it explains some of my life; if I don’t, it explains other things. Mother was protective, mother was domineering, mother was projecting. And….I was sensitive, I was a sissy. Which label suits your explanation of me? Or mine of you?
Someone, somewhere always has a label to stick on you. Once they’ve named you, they’ve tamed you. That’s what they know about you, and if they think they’ve tamed you, they also think they’ve solved you.
The name, the label is a lot easier to carry, to remember, than what’s been named or labeled. But some—most—people confuse it with a memory, which is an experience remembered. Mother told me that, or something like that, once. That it’s all about pain: the method of payment extracted for true, precise memories. Pain: that which can’t be transformed, transmitted; that which no one can take away. I don’t think anyone can ever share it. Pain is always solitary despite—actually, because of—all those people who devote themselves to muting it in other people.
What of all of those people who visit strangers, or even friends, in hospitals and nursing homes? Or the ones who try to feed and teach the children in the gutters of places no god would ever go anywhere near? Now, I know I never lived in such poverty, and somewhere along the way I stopped feeling guilty over the fact that I never did. Actually, I never had such pangs, not on my own anyway. There was somebody, usually a priest or a nun (when you’re a kid, that person is an adult) who resents you for…existing.
Some people don’t remember their own pain, don’t feel it. Even after suffering through the deaths of people they’ve known, or their own selves, they only have some story, some name that someone else gave them to describe the experience. And what someone else told them to feel. I guess that’s a pretty good definition of guilt: what someone else told you to feel.
So that’s how rich girls end up in the gutters of Calcutta. And how people end up at the bedsides of people they barely know, or don’t know at all, mouthing platitudes when what the person in bed needs, more than anything, is sleep. Or at least rest.
And so they recollect someone else’s suffering, or more exactly, some image of it. Or some way, perhaps in which the person expressed his or her suffering. Out of naivete, out of ignorance, sometimes out of condescension, disrespect or contempt for the other person, they try to quell their cries, their bodily contortions, the look in the eyes of a person in pain.
Truth is, the only way you can end another person’s suffering is to kill him or her. And even then I couldn’t tell you for sure: What happens when a person stops functioning in ways we’re accustomed to seeing? I don’t know. But I do know that a person’s pain can end only when it’s run its course. There’s nothing anyone can do to change that.
Any attempt to end another person’s suffering and pain is therefore an act of the basest sort of arrogance and self-righteousness. What right have I, or anyone else, to deprive another person of his or her experience, of memories—the only things that a person can truly claim to own?
Mother understood all this, I’m sure. And that’s why she never left this block. You never realize you need to hold onto anything until you have recollections. And the more you describe them to yourself, to anyone else, the further you stray from them. And the more you try to base your relations with other people on them. Really, you can only have a memory of the present, however long that moment may be. On the block where I grew up, it lasts until you leave. Until that moment when you cross that intersection, traffic circle or boulevard, and see a side, coast or any other boundary you’ve never seen before, you don’t have a past. And, of course, when you don’t have a past, you don’t have a future. To remain on this block, you don’t need either one: In fact, they’re burdens.
Once you make that crossing, you see that your street and others end or continue under different names. And another street, avenue, boulevard or perhaps a highway opens in front of you. Then there’s no choice but to follow it.
Mother really was right. She’d always told me—no, wait a minute, she never did that; she just somehow made it known to me—that I shouldn’t cross, that there was nothing but trouble on the other side. As if she should worry about trouble! She, raising me by herself, told me never, ever to answer the door. Or the phone, not unless I was expecting a call. There’s no telling who’s on the other side, who’s lying in wait.
How did she know? There is always trouble, only pain on the other side. Suffering: It’s what nobody and nothing can prepare you for. Some can warn you, but only about what they’ve known. They can never tell you what your own individual death—which is to say your life—will be. Nor can they describe their own in any way that will help you, that will change the outcome of your tribulations. All anyone can offer is his or her recollection.
Now I understand why I feel uneasy on those rare occasions when someone who’s never seen this block asks m to describe my experiences or my dreams. And why I came to distrust them much more intensely than anyone I knew on this block—that is to say, all of the women, including my mother, in the funeral parlor, I haven’t met anyone away from this block whom I needed or who needed me. The things they told me, I could’ve heard anywhere, really, even from the men on this block, however briefly they stayed. And anything I’ve told anyone since those days could’ve been uttered by anyone, anywhere. The stuff they could understand, that is. And that doesn’t include mother or anyone who came to her funeral.
And the women at the funeral: Could they’ve steered, consciously or not, some piece of me—whatever they grasped, for whatever reasons? The one whom the teachers kept after school: Most of the time, I didn’t understand why.
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