Mother Talkers

Contemplating Joan Crawford

Sat Dec 08, 2007 at 11:01:33 PM PDT

She wasn't Joan Crawford, I just like the title.  I'm referring to my complex and troubled paternal grandmother, who died yesterday.  We weren't close, which was probably for the best, and I was prepared.  So I can't say that I'm grief stricken.  What I am is regretful and sad.  Sad that she had so many difficult times, sad that she was unable or unwilling to take an honest look at herself and make a change, and sad that even when facing death she couldn't let go of her bitterness and anger.

When I was a child, I adored both of my grandmothers.  Grandma Georgie lived nearby.  I saw her frequently and she was as doting as a grandmother could be.  As I grew older, I recognized a strong, compassionate, kind and brilliant woman.  She was everything I wanted to be, and everything I still strive to be.  The checker at her preferred grocery store came to her funeral, despite the fact that they had no other relationship.  Everybody loved her.  

She was also direct and able to communicate.  She disdained passive-aggressiveness and manipulation above all else.  Her death when I was 15 was one of the most traumatic events of my childhood.

Grandma Mary lived in Chicago.  I rarely saw her, but talked to her on the phone once a week.  She sent me Juicy Fruit gum and five dollar checks in the mail.  

As I got older, I became privy to the fact that she was always on speaking terms with either my dad or his sister, but never both.  She would go years without speaking to whomever was on her naughty list.  The only communication during those times would be nasty letters.

The last time she stopped speaking to my dad, and therefore me, was about four and a half years ago, when I told her I was pregnant with Simone.  Our last conversation went as follows:

"You're going to be a great-grandmother!"
"What?  Who?"
"Me."
"You're having a fatherless child?"
"No..."
"Are you married?"
"No."
"It's fatherless."
Long pause...
"I was married once, you know," she informed me.
"Oh, yes, grandma, I know."
"He was a jerk."
"Oh, so being married isn't so great."
I'd stumped her.

Over the next three years, my parents received several cruel pieces of mail.  I believe that she said unflattering things about me in them, but my parents didn't share it.  During this time I would occasionally send her a card, although I never included a return address.  I felt it was better not to be on the receiving end of her hate mail, and this allowed me to have nothing but compassion for her.  She was lonely, bitter and miserable.  Moreover, I knew that she didn't really disapprove of me.  She wasn't religious and didn't like marriage.  She only lashed out because she felt left out and abandoned.

I often thought that I should visit her.  I hadn't seen her since I was nine years old.  Once I mentioned to my dad that I was considering taking Simone to meet her.  Her grew concerned and told me something he'd never told me before.

It seems that when I was between one and two, she came from Chicago to visit my dad and meet me.  One day, she was upstairs playing with me and my parents were downstairs.  My dad her her yell "Bobby!"(his name).  A minute later, I came tumbling down the stairs.  When she got home, she took all the pictures of me that my parents had sent her and sent them back to them, addressing them to my mother and using her maiden name.  My dad has always believed that his mother may have pushed me down the stairs.

Whether or not she did, it doesn't bother me.  It certainly wasn't personal.  What strikes me about the story is the fact that it would even occur to my dad that his own mother would push me down the stairs.  If one of my children fell down the stairs on my parents or in-laws watch, I might be angry.  But the idea that it may have been on purpose wouldn't even cross my mind.

When she was diagnosed with breast cancer about a year ago, she refused treatment.  My father, brother and I decided to visit her, taking Simone with us.  My aunt suggested that we surprise her so that she wouldn't have time to build up a case against any of us in her mind.  But my dad couldn't help himself.  He called her and let her know we were coming a few days before we arrived.

Our first morning in Chicago, we lingered at my aunts house until early afternoon.  Finally, she asked, "um...are you going to go see grandma today?"  The three of us just glanced nervously at each other.  "They're all afraid," my cousin said sweetly.

Finally, we decided to bite the bullet and go.  We arrived and rang the buzzer to her apartment.  As we approached her door, she poked her head out.  She looked so tiny and vulnerable, sloe eyes darting nervously around the hall.  Nothing to be afraid of.

Her apartment was tiny and immaculate.  There wasn't much storage, but she had saved gifts for all of us, gifts she had obviously been amassing for some time.  She gave Simone a teddy bear and a tea set, among other things.  Later I found a note attached to the teddy bear that read "To Bobby's granddaughter, Valentines Day 2006."  

At 86, she was beautiful and very  vain.  She didn't allow any photos to be taken, but I was able to sneak a few of her and Simone due to her lack of understanding of digital cameras.  When she caught me she made me delete most of them, but I secretly kept one.

As we were leaving, we passed the building's custodian in the hall.  She pointed at Simone and excitedly told him "That's my girl!"  

Over the next few days, we took her to lunch and did some walking.  She doted on Simone.  She always wore high heels and attractive dresses.  She tired out relatively quickly, but the fact that she was walking around at all stunned me.  The cancer had broken several or her ribs.

She had always loved fried foods, but she was weight conscious and never allowed herself to eat them.  We visited her on her birthday, but in her mind that was no excuse to cheat.  In my mind, the real excuse was her impending death, which no amount of avoiding fatty foods would prevent.  I wanted to scream it at her, but all I could say was "Grandma, it's your birthday!"
In turn, she pointed an accusing finger at Rachel Ray several times, blaming her for making even vegetables fattening.

On our last day, my cousin, brother and I picked her up and took her to lunch.  When we dropped her off she wouldn't let us help her to her apartment.  Instead, she watched us drive away with her big doe eyes, knowing it would be the last time.

My brother, Simone and I sat in an airport restaurant waiting for our flight home.  My brother was especially sad, much more so than I.  He wished we had seen more of her.  I didn't.  It was the fact that we had so little contact with her that allowed our love to be relatively pure.  Our cousins who grew up near her have been on the receiving end of more meanness than we can imagine.

She sent me Juicy Fruit gum.

She poured water on her front steps during frigid Chicago winters an hour before her husband was due home from work.

"I love you, Grandma Mary," I used to say to her on those long ago weekly phone calls.

"I love you, too, granddaughter.  I adore you."

I think of my grandmother when I'm angry and resentful.  I think of her when I'm nursing a grudge, which I do often.  I have her in me, and she is a powerful lesson in keeping that part of me in check.  Ending up as miserable as she was is my worst nightmare, yet I never forget that it's possible.

Only a week or two ago, my sweet aunt went to the hospice to take her for a walk.  On their way out, a nurse told her to enjoy her dinner.  "What do you care what I eat?"  my grandmother snapped.  "Worry about your own nutrition."

I feel for my dad.  Flawed as she was, she was his only mother.  He's sixty years old, but the symbolism of losing a parent never loses its potency.  Aside from the fact that we love the individual, to lose one's  parent is to lose one's protector.  The person standing between us and the grave.  After they go, we're next.  In all the world, there are no adults.  I'm also impressed with him, this man who was able to be a loving father despite have no model.  He's not done yet.  The last lesson a parent teaches their child is how to die.  I feel certain that this will be one more thing that he will do better than his parents did.

My great-grandmother died when my grandmother was only eight.  Her father sent her sister and her to an orphanage and kept their brother.  In nearly eighty years, my grandmother's feelings of abandonment never softened.  God could have anything he wanted, she felt.  Why did he need her mother too?

Today, I would like nothing more than to believe that Grandma Mary has finally been taken into her mother's embrace.  But I doubt it.

Tags: death, compassion (all tags)

Permalink | 25 comments

  • my condolences (0 / 0)

    and my respect for writing such a lovely, nuanced piece, Erin.

    I found myself really warming to what you wrote; I have a very complicated relationship with my mother's mother, my only grandmother (91, still living). I find it ironic that you would link your grandmother to Joan Crawford; I always compared my grandmother to Katherine Hepburn. They are both New England patrician type women, taller than average for their era, elegant, fiery and icy at the same time. It's interesting the archetypes we hew to.

    Again, my condolences.

    • asdf (0 / 0)

      I know what you mean about the fire and ice.  I haven't spent much time in New England, but while that archetype may be glamorous from a distance, I can see the stiff upper lip and cold exterior being hurtful.

  • I'm sorry for your loss (0 / 0)

    This was a beautifully written piece. Thanks for sharing it.

  • I can relate.... (0 / 0)

    Very interesting and insightful diary, thanks for sharing your feelings upon her passing.

    My mom is that person.  She is very bitter, angry, agitated and completely narcissistic.  My father recently became ill and fell out of bed, and those of us who know her wonder if she didn't push him out.  We also have gone through years of back and forth not speaking and I have learned to wear a very elaborate (invisible) toxic waste suit before seeing her so that her venomous poison does not infiltrate my psyche.  

    I am not sure how I will feel when she begins her decline and passes.  I just know that I strive to be the exact opposite of everything that she is.

    "In the face of impossible odds, people who love their country can change it."--Barack Obama

    by heathennextdoor on Sun Dec 09, 2007 at 09:06:22 AM PDT

    • Must have been so difficult (0 / 0)

      growing up with that.  And I'm sorry about your dad--it seems like we should at least be able to trust our loved ones not to attempt murder.  But I suppose not all of us can.  The way you cope sounds very similar to the way my dad does.  I wonder if my grandma ever thought about how lucky she was that her kids stuck by her whenever she allowed them to.  Neither of them ever turned their backs on her.

    • Hey heathennextdoor ... (0 / 0)

      My mom is that person as well. "Bitter, angry, agitated and completely narcissistic." And ... my father passed away last year; he was 78 and had had a head injury and my mother let him lie on the floor for days before calling the paramedics. Granted they had had a stormy relationship (they were sort of made for each other that way); but the hospital personnel were so disturbed by what my mother had done (or not done) that they requested the police investigate her. They never pressed charges against her, thank God; but they could have had a real strong case if they had.

      I too strive to be the exact opposite of my mom. It's tough because every time I have any contact with her, I feel like I have her toxic residue all over me for a good few days. Then it wears off and I can again be a happy wife and mother. And, of course, we all get impatient and stressed out by our children. Every time I have any negative feelings toward them, I worry I'm turning into my mom. It took me many years (my oldest is now 9) to realize all my feelings were normal and that I was nothing like my mother. Still, I feel I must always be vigilant.

      My mom is now showing some signs of memory loss. She's still bitter and resentful, even though she doesn't have my dad around to blame. Now she's getting into it with her friends! It's ugly. As she ages, I know I will do my duty as a daughter to make sure she's safe and taken care of, but it's hard to imagine doing any more than that for her. Not unless she has a radical personality overhaul and makes amends for the pain she's caused ... and I don't see that in the cards.

      I suspect you and I could share some tales. Sounds like you're doing your best with a very difficult person.

      • My God (0 / 0)

        It's stunning how many people have someone this disturbed for a parent.  And impressive how often they become loving parents anyway.  

        • You know what I've gained from this? (0 / 0)

          That good parenting matters. I constantly reflect on what my parents did and how it made me feel, think about what they could have done differently, and do that instead. In some ways I think I'm more attuned to what my kids need emotionally than even my DH, who grew up in a peaceful, happy, loving home. I know how it hurts when your feelings aren't validated or when a parent says something in anger. I watch and listen to my kids very carefully to make sure their souls feel safe and secure.

          I also feel a certain amount of peace about my mothering skills. My mother was not a great mom, but I still think about her every day (even though many of my thoughts are about sadness and lack of love and disappointment). If I still feel that connection with my mother, then my kids are bound to feel it toward me -- positive or negative. And I'm working and hoping that it will be positive!

      • Nice to have a compadre (0 / 0)

        as sad as that is!

        My biggest fear has always been turning out like my mom. Every sharp or shrill or short tempered exchange with my kids, especially as they have morphed into teens, makes me cringe inside for days. My mom kicked me out on the street when I was 15 (literally) so all of the normal friction between teens and parents raises huge red flags for me.

        Thank goodness my MIL is an LCSW who raised 4 relatively healthy and successful kids and is a wonderful friend and role model to me.  I call her for advice frequently, and I think she definitely enjoys being able to pass on what she knows.  I am very grateful for her presence in my life.

        My parents live on the east coast, and I am California.  This is a blessing in that I can prepare for the short toxic visits, but as my dad ages, I wish I was there to watch out for him.  I am on his HIPAA form at his doctor's office and speak with them frequently.  But that is no substitute for a watchful advocate.

        Honestly, every visit with my mom confirms for me that she is mean spirited at the very core of her being, and that there is not a snowball's chance in hell I could ever be like that.  So in a twisted way, my parenting as imperfect as it is, is affirmed with every interaction with her.

        "In the face of impossible odds, people who love their country can change it."--Barack Obama

        by heathennextdoor on Mon Dec 10, 2007 at 08:46:13 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

  • Wow. (0 / 0)

    So like my father in law...his father died when he was nine and we've always thought that this totally defined his life.  Since my mother in law died 2 years ago, he's a sad old man.  He's so mean to everyone around him that his grandchildren seldom visit...for example, he will barely talk to my daughter because he fiance is of a different race.  In his mind, he really believes that he's been abandoned again because none of us will let our children drop out of school and go live with him full time in order to "take care of him".  And ofcourse, he uses  his money to manipulate...you know, the "I'm writing you out of the will" stuff.  

    My husband would love to be close to his father, but he can't be.  No one can tolerate being around so much misery all the time.  Ofcourse, it doesn't help that my father in law is jealous of my husband in many ways...he sees my husband's modest successes in life as being a taunt to what he believes are his own failures.  

    • my husband has the same theory (0 / 0)

      about my mom.  That the reason I am the main target of her venom is that I have had success in my life, and she has never had a hand in my success.  When my life needed changing I have done a few U turns and dont get stuck.  She got stuck in hers and never found solace in anything.  Very twisted indeed.  

      "In the face of impossible odds, people who love their country can change it."--Barack Obama

      by heathennextdoor on Sun Dec 09, 2007 at 10:13:10 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

    • Wow .... same here! (0 / 0)

      That was my dad! Sad old man. Alcoholic, self-destructive, and blamed everyone for the way he felt. My father was furious with me because I wouldn't let him take my daughter out to lunch. He was an angry, rageful drunk driver, and just not someone I trusted to take my daughter anywhere. I told him I would take her to a restaurant and sit in the waiting area while he ate with her, but he refused. No, he had to be the one driving her all by himself. I said no way. As a result he stopped contributing to her college fund!

      That's just one example. There were many others. I was never completely estranged from him, but I couldn't have much of a relationship with him. I was cordial and polite, but I was always ready to end the interaction on a moment's notice if necessary

      He died last December, almost exactly a year ago. Call me a terrible daughter (he certainly would), but I felt more relief than grief at his death. Yes, he was wounded and in pain, but he gave that back in spades to people who didn't deserve it. I'm glad he's out of his misery now. I hope I never behave that way toward my descendants in my old age.

      • My father in law is not an (0 / 0)

        alcoholic...if he was, it might actually improve his disposition.  No, he's just drunk on his own misery.  

        My husband calls him about once a month.  He'll probably drive out to see him when we visit my parents on Christmas.  He just isn't someone you can maintain a relationship with.  My husband constantly says that he wishes that it had been him who died first instead of his mother who passed away a couple of years ago.  

        • Yep ... boundaries are really important (0 / 0)

          with relationships like these. Sounds like your husband has carefully considered what he can and can't do for his dad. You give what you can, knowing that setting limits is the most loving thing you can do. It took me a long time to realize that protecting my boundaries was perfectly OK -- indeed, the only sane option under the circumstances.

          • That was decided long ago. (0 / 0)

            My mother in law kept him in check a little while she was alive, but sometimes, she could be a bit much, too.  After we moved a couple hours away, we found out  how nice it was to not be mad all the time...dealing with these kind of people make you walk around seething more than you might realize.  Our kids didn't deserve parents who were often ready to explode.  

  • It's a beautiful piece, Erin (0 / 0)

    Thank you for sharing it.
  • beautiful diary... (0 / 0)

    thanks for sharing this story.  my husband is losing his best friend who is in his final days of hospice. like everyone he has good and bad sides, but it looks as though he will depart this earth with anger towards his siblings.  he too was abandoned as a child.

  • Erin (0 / 0)

    What a beautiful spirit you have.  I'm glad you are sort of at peace with her death, despite regrets and sadness.  I'm sorry for those feelings.

    My MIL was similarly abandoned as a child -- her mom died, her dad remarried to a woman who kicked her out -- and that continues to be the defining event of her life.  She has tried -- years of therapy -- but has never been able to leave her victim status, or her fear of abandonment, behind.  I know what you mean about looking to your grandmother as a warning of what not to be.  

    • so many of them... (0 / 0)

      my ex MIL lost her mother at age 11 and her father was a brute.  she became a religious fundamentalist, but i never let it annoy me. she  found a way to battle her demons through her religious fevor.  she knew evil and she wanted to combat it and to live a "good" life.  in many ways she succeeded.  her brother did not as he himself abandoned his 3 children.

      erin, i too admire what you have been able to take away from your grandmother.  it is inspirational.

    • I don't mind (0 / 0)

      feeling sad and regretful.  I think the truth is that I feel guilty for not feeling worse.  It seems to me that  when someone dies, their offspring should care.  It should matter.  I just wish that she had been able to do some healing during her lifetime.

      • Isn't that the sad thing? (0 / 0)

        It's very bracing to realize that lives don't always have Hollywood endings, with families gathered around the deathbed full of forgiveness and redemption. Some people never get it, and they die the way they lived: angry, bitter, lonely and resentful.

        I always assumed that my elders knew better, that they were wiser and more evolved than me. To realize that some can stay in a childish narcissistic state to the end of their days ... wow. That makes me feel very scared.

        What I take from this is: whatever prevents you from being a fully loving human being, work it out now, while you are relatively young and healthy. It seems that if you don't, that bitterness calcifies by the time you are elderly. I want to be remembered as a loving and generous woman, not someone who held grudges until the end. Because sometimes the grudge is the only thing you have left to hold onto, and that's a very empty embrace.

        • it's so true (0 / 0)

          One thing I've noticed is that most people don't develop new skills or capacities in old age.  It's best to go into it like one goes into parenting:  In the best shape you can possibly be in, physically, mentally, spiritually.  Old age is hard and wearying, and most people don't learn well in those circumstances.

  • my condolences (0 / 0)

    What an eloquent tribute. And I am so impressed by your grace and generosity toward a woman who was so flawed. I am glad you got to see her one last time and leave with good memories.

  • asdf (0 / 0)

    Wow, Erin, what a beautiful essay. You have a very big heart to be willing to visit your grandmother when she was sick, and to introduce her to Simone.

    My condolences.

  • What an (0 / 0)

    honest portrayal of your grandmother, Erin.  Thanks for sharing this very personal story.  

    My father died 3 1/2 years ago and we had issues too.  I completely know what you mean about "carrying her in you".  I keep that part of my father's influence/genes in check with me too.  

    "We are the music makers, and we are the dreamers of the dream..."

    by 1plain1peanut on Mon Dec 10, 2007 at 06:50:10 PM PDT

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