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FICTION
Birdie, Birdie
ESSAY
Good Enough
SCHOLARSHIP
When We Are Hungry
POETRY
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Good
Enough
What can I trust my mother to do? She
will usually come when I need her. She will love my children as fiercely
as I do, but in an older, less-complicated way. She will frequently enrage
me. She will not always be honest with herself, or with me. But my mother
can see things from far away, useful things like road signs for gasoline
and food, for airports I need to find, for towns I think I have missed.
And she can see things that frighten and surprise me, like betrayal before
it comes, and what is happening in my heart when we are hundreds of miles
apart. My vision is flawed. I am nearsighted and prefer to examine everything
close up. I remember lying in the grass, observing the small world of
ants and worms, closely watching a particular ant unable to lift a particular
crumb. That was a long time ago, but I am still very good at noticing
little things. I am still very, very good at finding mistakes.
I missed a speed-limit sign, and for
two months I did a rather bad job of waiting to stand before a judge,
obsessing about the choices I had made: I’d chosen to leave our
family cottage in Wisconsin at five o’clock in the morning on Sunday,
July 29. I’d chosen to limit my stops, hoping to arrive home early.
I’d chosen, as I often do, to be in a hurry. I was not paying attention — which
is a choice, too.
I took a highway that passed through a small
town. When the highway became Main Street, I failed to notice the posted speed
limit of twenty-five miles per hour and kept right on driving what my grandfather
liked to call “a sporting sixty-two.” Why did I miss that sign?
I know I was distracted by my children’s voices. I know I was talking
on my cellphone. I think I was also, somehow, trying to listen to an interesting
story on Minnesota Public Radio. Isn’t that the problem with not paying
attention? Only after a police officer stopped me did I see that I
had not been paying attention. I had been both stupid and lucky. Of course,
I was glad that no one had gotten hurt. And I was sorry, but mostly for myself:
Sorry that I was busy and tired. Sorry that I had gotten caught. Sorry that
my children were in the car to see it, and that I’d made them feel afraid.
I received a ticket, which I paid, but a judge
decided it wasn’t punishment enough. I got a letter in the mail ordering
me to appear in court to argue why my driver’s license should not be
suspended for up to a year and explaining that my crime was a six-point moving
violation, comparable to a DUI. I was offended by this. What did I have in
common with a drunk driver? I still didn’t get it. But I knew that I
was in big trouble, and I wanted sympathy. While I waited for my trial, I told
my story at least once to everyone who loves me best, trying to make each of
them laugh, trying to pass small pieces of my worry into every willing palm.
Three days before my trial I was in Florida
for a wedding. My parents, sister, aunts, uncles, and cousins had all
gathered at a beachside resort to celebrate my cousin Becky’s marriage.
My own husband and son and daughter were at home, and I had not been
gone long enough to miss them yet. I went for a walk on the beach, looking
at the white sand and the clear sky. There wasn’t much room in
my life for quiet, and an hour alone near the ocean was a gift. I was
trying to be thankful, and was working on a lovely word to name the color
of the sea.
Then I saw my mother coming my way. My father
was with her, and I gave them a brief wave. My mother raised her entire arm
in response, and I immediately grew annoyed with her. How loud and obnoxious
she is. Why must she wave with her whole arm that way? She is so needy. I’ve
acknowledged her already. As we continued to walk toward each other, I
saw that I’d been wrong: She was not waving her arm at all. Her right
arm was raised, yes, but it was pointing toward the water. She wanted me to
look at something. It was a moment before I saw them: dolphins. They were leaping
from the water in pairs, closer to the shore than I would ever have guessed
they might come. My six-year-old daughter had taught me a little about dolphins:
that a pod of dolphins is a mix of relatives and friends, a family that creates
itself.
I met my mother and father at the edge of the
water. They were thrilled to have brought me the dolphins. We talked for a
minute, then turned together to follow the dolphins down the shoreline. My
parents seemed happy that I was walking with them. When was the last time we
had done something like this? Had we ever done something like this?
I have spent so many years being furious and
right. I have not always chosen to be with my family, and sometimes my parents
have chosen something else besides me. But slowly the truth has come to me,
and it is beginning to break my heart: my parents have been seeking me, have
been trying to love me the best they can for a long time — and for me
it has never been good enough.
I am reluctant to tell you about my day
in court. (Might the judge somehow see this? Could he still find me in
contempt?) I do not like remembering what it feels like for someone to
wield great power over me, especially when that someone so enjoys their
power. The judge was small and thin, and when I saw him, I knew at once
he was an angry man. His desk was a plain table on a platform at the
end of a narrow, paneled room. My memory is not a transcript, but it
went something like this:
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JUDGE: What happened here?
ME: I missed the sign.
JUDGE: How could you have missed that sign?
ME: I don’t know.
JUDGE: What were you thinking?
ME: I wasn’t thinking.
JUDGE: What were you doing?
ME: I was wrong. I made a mistake. I am sorry. It will never happen again.
JUDGE: Do you honestly expect me to believe that you just missed that sign?
ME: Yes. I mean, I don’t know. I don’t have a good reason.
JUDGE: How could you have missed the obvious indications that you were in a town — like
houses, businesses, sidewalks?
ME: I really don’t know. I was really wrong. I made a terrible mistake.
I am so sorry. It really, honestly, will never happen again.
JUDGE: How would you feel if someone had been hurt?
ME: I would feel terrible. I would probably never forgive myself. |
The judge didn’t believe me.
He was disgusted with me. My carefully chosen words weren’t good enough.
I was not good enough. He asked me these questions again, and I answered again.
I cried. I had forgotten what it is like to be yelled at and shamed. It occurs
to me that this is evidence of my good fortune: I am not used to people yelling
at me.
The judge did not suspend my license. He let
me off, but not without first warning me that he had the power to make me walk.
I cried some more. I think he liked it when I cried.
Afterward my husband wanted to do something.
My uncle, an attorney, told us we really ought to register a complaint with
the state bar association. But I think I got the right judge. He convicted
me in ways he could not have predicted. I had to be forced to see that I was
guilty, even though no one had been hurt; to see that carelessness is the ignorant
(but no less dangerous) cousin of recklessness and malice. For too long I have
carried my anger like a burden on my back. I have, too many times, been a self-appointed
judge over people who have made mistakes. When the judge did not believe me,
when my apology was not enough, it was both familiar and distressing. What
more did I have than my story and my regret?
What can I trust my mother to see? A
long time ago my mother missed some things. Sometimes she was busy missing
my father, who was missing things too, by choosing to work instead of
coming home to us. Sometimes she was distracted by her own parents, who
were taking turns dying of cancer. Sometimes she was drinking. There
was also something she did not want to see. Something no parent wants
to see. Something so common and awful and tired it has become cliché.
My mother did not want to see the family friend quietly and persistently
abusing his daughter, my sister, me. How could my mother have missed
the signs? When I asked her, so many years later, she could not say.
That man and his wife divorced, he moved away, died. Now my mother is
the only one left to face judgment, my judgment, and all she
has ever offered me is her implausible story and her regret. I wonder
now, could my mother really have saved me? Could she have saved any of
us? Could my mother have seen anything that close up?
So here is the lesson that keeps following me,
and it seems about time for me to pay attention. To forgive means: “to
cease to feel resentment against an offender; to give up claim to requital
for an insult.” To be forgiving means: “allowing room for error
or weakness.” I want this: to be forgiving, to be forgiven. A woman I
respect once touched my hand and told me that resentment is a bitter root that
poisons the one who chooses to hold on to it. The act of forgiveness, then,
is as much a balm for the one in pain as for the one who caused the pain. What
kind of forgiveness can I give? What kind of forgiveness can I hope for? Christians
everywhere pray: “Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who
trespass against us.” And I do not find caveats anywhere. Nowhere do
I see the notion that forgiveness is only a good idea if the offenders
understand the gravity of the harm; if they acknowledge their role; if they
promise to act differently in the future; if they are sorry enough.
I wonder about my own vision: all the other
signs that I may have missed, all the beautiful things I may never see because
they are too far away. I wonder about how fast I move through the world, and
about the need to pay attention. I wonder about the heavy burden of anger carried
upon so many backs, the frequent ugliness of power, how it feels to judge and
be judged, and how much I want to trust my mother. I wonder about loving my
children as much as I can, taking their love in return, and knowing it all
has to be good enough. But mostly I wonder about forgiveness.
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“Good Enough” first appeared in The
Sun Magazine,
July 2006 |
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