| Aren't we the cutest kids ever? |
Stories live here.
It's the last day of my trip home to my dad's house. When I moved into my first apartment in college, I ransacked my bedroom furniture and, consequently, no longer really have a room of my own here. None of us kids do. Our rooms are now shells where things accumulate. I'm currently spread out in my cocoon, a king-size bed at one end of my dad's basement that was shifted here after he had the house redecorated and purchased a new bedroom suite. Technically this used to be my brother's room. My room has an air mattress purchased to make sure we all have enough sleeping space at Christmas, the one time we are all home together. The air mattress, like this bed, is an accumulation, something that has crept in after we crept out.
This is the part of the house that doesn't get used much anymore. My dad lives, always has, almost exclusively on the first floor. The 1960s style wood paneled basement was the domain of my mother (laundry and craft room), me (family room=play room with blocks, Legos, and K-Nex sets strewn everywhere), and whichever kid was old enough and, in theory, responsible enough to earn a basement bedroom space. I was the only kid who didn't break curfew and climb out the basement windows after bed-time, so I was technically the only kid who was ever responsible enough to be down here, but that's a different story.
There are so many stories enclosed by these walls. Since my mother's passing, I have joined my brother and sister in moving on to other lives away from here. As a result, the basement has become a catch-all for lives that used to be. There's my giant wardrobe, the only piece of bedroom furniture that I didn't abscond with on my way to grad school. There's the bookshelf with a set of encyclopedias long since outdated. There's my violin and Poseidon's trident from my freshman year Greek mythology project, a no-longer-but-may-be-soon-needed-by-someone microwave, a waist-high wooden case for old VHS tapes, an antique lamp whose glass shade bit the dust and hasn't yet been repaired, boxes of family pictures sorted by my mother in ages past, my old desk with the disks for an early 2000s version of Paint Shop Pro, my first college computer, a costume from an Illinois College Follies performance, Banana Republic gift boxes from last year's Christmas. The list could go on; all of these are accumulations.
And these accumulations accumulate naturally, like dust. The floor plan is the same. The furniture, while not the same as when I was a child, is in the same basic arrangement. The picture of my siblings and me is still hanging in the same spot. The effect is comforting, a gradual accumulation of life gathering like layers of sediment. If you sift through them, you might discover a stack of drawings and find yourself in 1999 watching a young Marc Malone sketching floor plans of ships while watching the Discovery Channel. You might travel to Paris via a bag of waiting-to-be-scrap-booked memorabilia from my study abroad experience. Your eye might fall on a pile of antique Crayola tins and see a parade of Christmases where my mom always got one as a gift. These things are everywhere you look. And each thing is a story.
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Tonight, as my dad let the dogs out before bed, I sat at the dining room table and picked up a copy of his Alumni newspaper. We started talking about a high-rise dorm that was recently demolished, and before I knew it I was hearing about college, about my mother who lived, only briefly, in that now-demolished dorm with a woman who was "not bad, but the polar opposite of your mother" (I remember my mother referring to her as a "wild child" while shaking her head, her eyes locked in disbelief on the empty space in front of her). I heard about my mom's method of coping with this roommate: "Every night she would come over from her dorm and hang out with [her brother and me] until bed-time, and on some nights she traveled home every night. But I probably wouldn't have met her otherwise, so it was a good thing in the end." Then I asked about my dad's experience living with my Uncle Bobby, my mom's brother: "It was interesting; he was a minimalist. He had six shirts in his closet hanging next to six pairs of pants. He probably had six pairs of underwear, too. When I went off to college, my dad harped at me for filling a trunk with things. I had one of those compact vacuum sweepers--'Well what the hell do you need that for?! Don't you have maids to clean your dorms for you?' No, Dad, we certainly don't..." The conversation eventually bled into my college experience and I thought about how I did have a maid in my freshman year dorm room and how a suitemate and I joined the Orange Crush, a student cheering organization. I also remembered how I was one of the only ones who used our in-apartment kitchen, and I wasn't great at remembering the dishes. "Fred didn't care, but Stephen and David did." Then we talked about me moving home and cloistering myself in a small, private school, about whether that decision was the right decision and why it was or wasn't. The whole conversation was a high-speed trip through thirty some odd years of family history, and there was something magic about it. There will be a time when no one, and I mean no one, has access to that part of my family history. It can only be passed through stories.
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Earlier today I asked my dad if he is excited for Christmas. "No," was the simple answer. "But why? It's the best time of the year!" He thought for a moment. "Christmas is stressful for me. The shopping, the menu planning, the trying to make it special and rarely succeeding." I tried to insist that it always ends up special, but I don't think he believed me.The truth is that stories live with family, and inside the ancestral home, like no place else, we don't have to go in search of the stories. They live in the alumni newspaper accumulating on the dining room table. They live in the quilts pieced and sewn by my mother. They live in the Crayola tins and the Follies costume and the pictures lined up everywhere.
Stories live here, and that's what makes coming home the best place for a quick end-of-summer vacation. It's the getting away from the current version of "real life" long enough to reconnect with all of the past lives. And that's why I don't need, now or at Christmas, extravagant dinners or fancy wines to make it special.* I just need some stuff--some accumulations--to stare at and some family to explain it to me.
*Dad, if you are reading this, the extravagant dinners and fancy wines are nice, too. So, you know, don't feel like you have to skip them, you know, just on my account.
So true about the memories accumulating over time. They're so familiar that it's hard to notice them, but they keep coming none the less. Sometimes it feels nearly impossible to dislodge myself from my 'current version of real life' for long enough to slow down and appreciate the distance I've traveled.
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