From Swallow the Ocean
San Francisco – 1976
When I was nine my mother explained the world to me.
“There’s a battle,” she said, “between good and evil. And some of us–the strong–have a special role to play.”
I was home alone with her–my father had moved out a year earlier and my two sisters were both at school. I was not really sick–no fever, no throwing up, no stuffed- up nose, just a vague bodily unease that convinced my mother to keep me home from school. We sat together on a clear spot on the floor in the front hall, looking at the faces on the dollar bills and coins in front of us. The mess that had been steadily overtaking every surface in the apartment since my father left stretched before us in all directions. Mail had accumulated near the front door, first on the shelves of the console table, but now it extended in unstable piles along the wall halfway to the living room, which was in turn a confusion of color and texture. Layers of clothing, papers, and toys blanketed the floor. Books pulled off the shelves but not put back circled the bookshelves. Records–some exposed, some in their white slips, some still in the album covers–fanned out in a widening arc at the foot of the stereo. Near the couches, fat metal knitting needles, holding twenty or so uneven lines of scarf, were jammed into balls of yarn–projects my older sister Sara and I had abandoned.
“Everyone who has ever lived is still with us,” my mother said, pushing her glasses higher up on her nose. A piece of Scotch tape held them together at the corner. The faces of these men on the coins and bills in front of us, circulating among us, had an impact on people and events, for better and for worse, she explained. She was in touch with some of them, the good ones.
“Like Abraham Lincoln?” I ventured.
“No.” She said, “He’s good, but not strong enough.”
I was a little put out on Lincoln’s behalf. He seemed like the best of the lot to me. He’d freed the slaves and his little boy had died, which made me feel protective.
“Who’s good and strong?” I asked.
She paused a moment, then said, “George Washington.” She handed me a dollar bill.
He looked a little mean to me, Washington, and his white curls, odd. But I could see what she was getting at–he had that firm set to his lips.
She picked a silver dollar up off the floor and handed it to me. “John Kennedy is the most powerful.”
Certainly, Kennedy was a powerful presence in our lives. You couldn’t wade through the living room without tripping over a book with his face on the cover. Whenever we were close to Golden Gate Park, my mother would drive up and down the boulevard that was named for him. Sometimes she made a special trip just to drive the full length of it, from the panhandle all the way out to Ocean Beach. She found a special gold-plated JFK commemorative half-dollar in the gift shop of the mint when she dragged me there for a tour. The coin was carved out so only Kennedy’s square-jawed profile hung inside a gold ring. She wore it now on a slim gold chain, replacing the heavy gold cross that had lain at the point of her clavicle for as long as I could remember.
“He’s my special partner,” she said.
I didn’t like the sound of “special partner.” Not at all. There was something wrong about it.
“He helps me,” she continued. I didn’t want to hear any more. And yet.
“Helps you what?” I asked.
“He helps me fight the devils,” she said.
I blinked, but kept going. “How?”
She rubbed a half-dollar between her fingers, searching for words, to describe what she knew I couldn’t see.
“I stretch them out in my mind,” she said. She held her fingers together, then drew them slowly apart, the way you might stretch taffy or bubble gum. “I stretch them until they’re destroyed.”
I watched her fingers slowly come apart and could see how the devils would be–solid at first like pieces of unchewed bubble gum, becoming elastic as they stretched, then turning to long filaments that finally broke and disintegrated as you pulled them apart.
I had a special place in my head for the things my mother told me. I knew a thing could be real and not real at the same time. I was a big reader–I took in what she told me like a book or a story, undiluted, caught up in the moment of the telling. I wanted details. I wanted to understand how it all worked. Whether what she told me was real or not almost didn’t matter. This was all treacherously real to her, and she took any sign of skepticism as betrayal. I lived in her world, and even if none of this was real to other people, the consequences were real for me.
She talked on and on. The weather, earthquakes, Vietnam, Patty Hearst, Squeaky Fromme, the signs of the times. Everything counted, everything was in play. A monumental shift was under way, right now as she spoke, and she was at the heart of it.
“There is no one else,” she said, “I have a role no one can fill.” Her pale blue eyes fixed on me from behind the thick glasses, waiting for a reply.
I nodded my assent. Her eyes slipped away. I felt relief. She gazed down the hall, past me, towards the front windows in the living room, her own head nodding up and down intently.
Sitting there on the floor next to her, asking questions, my body, eyes and voice must have reflected the same simple faith in her that I’d always felt, but a part of me was already backing away, edging towards the front door, slowly, the way you move away from a dangerous animal so it won’t startle.