Fathers and Sons

Still Here … (to Lissy, Laurie, Kimmy and Kenny)

My parents had four kids in five years. 

Ten years later I came along … and surprised all involved parties.

My three sisters and brother are all between 10 and 15 years older than me. 

I grew up … looking up.

To a person they held up their ends of the big sibling bargain. 

Kim bought me my first album at the National Record Mart. Let me pick it out myself. Still remember the words to every song.

Laurie didn’t shoo me away when she’d invite her pretty friends over (swoon). 

Kenny would take me with him on his pilgrimages to WVU when he was teaching there. Always let me pick out some Mountaineer gear at the bookstore.   

Missy taught me my letters, numbers and punctuation marks by drawing them in soap on my back during bath time and having me guess what she drew. When my kids were little, I employed the Missy Method.

As a bonus … I knew all the cuss words before my friends did. As I remember it, Kim and Kenny did the heavy lifting there.   

At home the five of us were spread across the three upstairs bedrooms. 

Kim, the oldest, had a small bedroom to herself. Laurie and Liss shared the big bedroom across the hall. My brother took me in during the expansion draft of 1970. 

After graduating high school, Kim joined the Marines (um, as one does). Laurie, popular with the boys, got married a couple years after she graduated. 

Kenny went away to college when he graduated, which left just me and Liss at home.  

I had just turned seven.

Towards the end of the summer Kenny went away to school, Liss spent a week of vacation away from home (with my aunt, I think). 

It was the first time I had to sleep upstairs by myself.

I couldn’t do it.  

Scared me.

The wooden floors creaked. 

And it was really dark in my room. 

There was a light in the hall but it was too bright to keep my door open, so I’d have to close it tight. I could only see a sliver of light between the bottom of the door and the floor. I was always afraid I’d see shadows of footsteps in the hall … like I saw on a scary TV show once.  

There were two, big deep closets in my bedroom. I had clothes in one, the other one I was told not to open. Always imagined monsters lived in that one.  

Dad was on ‘tuck-in’ duty that summer. 

It was also the summer he taught me the Our Father. 

I remember us taking turns with the lines.

Me: Our Father, who art in heaven … 

He:  … hallowed by thy name.

etc. 

Once I had it down, I’d vary the line breaks. 

He’d pick up where I left off. 

Me: Thy will …

He: … be done. 

Me: Give us this day our daily … 

He: … bread. 

Kept us payin’ attention.

I’d follow it up with the requisite “God Blesses,” starting with “Mom, Dad, Lissy, Laurie, Kimmy and Kenny,” and work backwards from there.

It’s funny the things we remember.

The first night Liss was away, after trading lines and tucking in, Dad went back downstairs.

I lasted maybe 10-15 minutes with the creaky floors, the light under the door … whatever was lurking in the closet.  

Got outta bed and trudged back down the 14 steps.

Told my parents that I missed Liss and was too scared to sleep upstairs by myself. 

I think I lobbied to sleep on the couch in the living room … unsuccessfully. 

I remember Dad walking me back up. 

Tucking me in again. 

Closing the door behind him. 

And going only as far as the tiny hallway, which was really just a landing.  

Sat down on the top step. 

He’d brought his Bible with him.

Cracked it open and read under the hall’s bright light.

I couldn’t see him. 

Even if I left the door open, the top of the steps were parallel to my room, hidden from my view. 

So I’d call out … to make sure he hadn’t gone back downstairs. 

“Still there, Dad?” 

“Yep,” he’d reply. 

“Still here.”

Even though I couldn’t see him, just knowing he was there … made things better. 

I liked his chances against the monster lurking in my closet. 

I don’t know how long he stayed that first night.

Until I fell asleep is all I know. 

I had trouble falling asleep every night Missy was away. 

After we’d “Our Father,” Dad would close the door behind him, go sit on the top step and read his Bible.

There were at least a couple of nights — maybe all of ’em — I couldn’t fall asleep right away. 

I was a big worrier back then. 

On those nights I’d test the emergency broadcast system more than once. 

Sometimes a few times. 

“Still there, Dad?” 

“Yep … Still here.” 

No matter how late it got. 

No matter how many times I asked. 

Each time … “Still here.”

Not sure how long I made him sit there. 

Several chapters worth is my best guess … which is more Bible ground than I’ve covered in a while.  

Until I fell asleep is all I know. 

__ 

Last Sunday would have been Dad’s 98th birthday. 

My sisters and brother were blowing up the group chat all morning. 

We’re about 50 years removed from our last sleepover. 

To a person they are still holding up their ends of the big sibling bargain.

I think of my Dad every day. 

When I hear certain tunes. 

When I retell the same stories. 

When the world gets scary.

When I remember to say the Our Father and God Blesses in my head before bed. 

I can still hear him finishing the lines sometimes.

When I can’t fall back asleep.

I can’t see him.

But I know he’s there.

In my mind he’s sitting on the top step reading his Bible under the bright light.

No matter how late it gets. 

No matter how many times I ask.

Still there, Dad?  

Yep. 

Still here.

 

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Postcards

Best seat in the house …

I got to tell a tiny story last night. 

On a tiny stage. 

In a tiny theater. 

About people I love. 

We laughed.

I cried (just a little). 

It was so weird and wonderful. 

The best part? 

In the front row were friends I grew up with. 

In the back row were friends I met at Waynesburg College.

We went for tacos after. 

Sitting next to my first college roommate, he reminded me that he’d met my friend John a couple times before. 

First time at my wedding. 

Last time … at my Dad’s funeral.

After the show had ended … and I walked into the lobby and saw John and Lisa, Matt and Jenn, Scott and Aline, Mike and Laura, and Mike #2 (who had Kelly drop him off) … all of ’em standing there … waiting to greet me …  the first thought I had was how rare and precious a thing it is to have friends from different seasons of your life together in the same room. 

Pretty much weddings and funerals, as my first college roommate validated. 

So to get to share a tiny theater and some tacos with humans responsible for crowd surfing me through my youth …

… and who are still showing up for me …

… well.

Forgive me if I cry a little.  

That’s no tiny story. 

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Postcards

Going through the heart again …

Last week a co-worker came down with the flu. She’s been with us almost a couple years now. Was a middle school teacher before that. 

She was out only one day when she messaged us to let us know that her husband had tested positive for the flu, too. 

As did their one-year-old. 

All three of ‘em, down for the count right before the holidays.  

Found myself thinking about them on my long Wednesday commute, when a warm memory popped into my head (I find that sometimes my memories eavesdrop on my thoughts). 

From kindergarten through third grade, I went to Areford Elementary. It was a neighborhood school (which were more common back then), just a few blocks from my house. We all got to walk to school. 

For second-grade I had the most awesome teacher, Mrs. Schifbauer. 

Mention her name to my kids, and they will roll their eyes and say, “The bee’s knees.” 

Which is what I always say when I mention Mrs. Schifbauer. 

Seriously, to my second grade self, she was the bee’s knees.

I remember she had the most beautiful handwriting. 

To this day I can still conjure both the image and sounds of her writing our spelling words on the chalk board (with the good teacher’s chalk). It was all so mesmerizing to me. She’d write all the numbers on the board first. Oh, the way she’d swoop her 2s. (swoon). When she’d get to double digits, she’d start putting periods after the numbers. I would so look forward to the percussive punctuation of her chalk stabbing periods on the board. Twelve was my favorite … you’d get a swoop with a stab chaser (ha). 

It’s funny, the things we remember.   

After second grade they switched some of the teacher assignments, so I got to have Mrs. Schifbauer for third grade, too. It was like winning the teacher lottery. 

The specific memory that visited me on my commute was the time in third grade when my friend Jerry got really sick and had to miss school.  I remember it was wintertime. I don’t remember the specific circumstances of Jerry’s illness, just that he missed a bunch of days in a row.

And that Mrs. Schifbauer did the most remarkable thing.

She had our entire class grab our winter coats, and proceeded to shepherd us outside. Along with Mrs. Fisher (the other third grade teacher), she walked us down Eggleston Street, where we made the left onto 7th, and then the right onto Connor, where Jerry lived. Had one of us climb the steps onto Jerry’s big porch and knock on the front door. I remember Mrs. Rehanek (who, for the record, made the most awesome cherry floats in the history of the universe) coming to the door, seeing us all, and then ducking back in to summon Jerry. 

I don’t remember specifically what happened from there … if Mrs. Schifbauer said anything, or had us say or do anything.  I only remember that she just wanted Jerry to know how much we all missed him … and that we couldn’t wait for him to feel well enough to come back to school. 

If it wasn’t for a vague remembrance I have of a photo that Mrs. Rehanek took from the porch that day … I’m not sure I would even trust my memory. 

I mean, can you imagine such a thing happening today? 

__

Recently, I learned that the Italian verb “to remember” is ricordare, (similar to the Spanish recordar). The etymology is Latin — Re meaning ‘to go backwards,’ and cordis meaning ‘heart.’ 

Or put another way … ‘to go through the heart again.’ 

Isn’t that just the loveliest thing? 

Why am I telling you this? 

Because when the memory of Mrs. Schifbauer and her kindness went through my heart again on my Wednesday commute … I actually imagined such a thing happening today.

And thought of a couple teachers who might also appreciate such imagining. 

One of ’em … Jerry.

Who I haven’t seen or talked to in maybe 30 years. He’s a teacher in Maryland these days. 

I messaged him and asked him to fact-check my remembering. 

He hit me back almost immediately. 

Yep. 

Matter of fact … 

“I think I have a photo somewhere. I can text it to you if you wanna see the pic.” 

__

Went out for lunch Wednesday. It was a good day for soup, so I chose a deli not far from work, where they make it from scratch. 

On a whim, on my way out I asked the person behind the counter if their to go soups come hot or cold. 

Both, he said. 

Ordered a cold quart of chicken noodle to go. 

For a certain former teacher I know. 

Who’s been home from work with the flu all week with her husband and baby boy. 

__

Found myself driving to her house after work. 

Pulled outside.

Put on my winter coat.

Marched up the steps. 

And though I was by myself, I wasn’t alone. 

Jamie was there. Tonya and Tracy, too. Ricky and Danny. Scott poking his head between Jodi and Gretchen. Amy, Joy and Susan. Blaine and his kind smile way in the back.

All of us.

And a smiling Mrs. Schifbauer standing next to Mrs. Fisher. 

The bees knees I’m tellin’ ya.  

I didn’t ring the bell, though. 

Just left the soup. 

Along with a note recounting all of the above.

Shot Sydney a text as I was driving way, letting her know I’d put something on her porch. 

And that we all missed her … and that we couldn’t wait for her to feel well enough to come back to the office. 

Told her it was from Mrs. Schifbauer’s third grade class. 

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