I’m
afraid to jump into the deep end from a high place. I talk big talk, and even
walk along that edge, but something always stops me from taking That Leap. A
fear of heights, of the unknown, of passing through the shadows, the mist
getting into my skin, who I’ll meet down there, or up there, or what I’d be
inclined to Do. I’m always inclined, and I have Done, but if let loose to do
like that, could I find my way back with heart intact or would I just float away
in the waves, sopping from my chest cavity and seaweed pulling at my legs? Would
that be all bad? Would there be anyone standing on the rock, the cliff, the
overhang, what have you, to wait or watch and make sure I was alright out there?
There
were fewer questions once. Because, it seems, I was always afraid of this leap.
Every summer, once we’d open up our big pool, all built by my father, hole dug,
pool placed, small creatures saved and insides cleaned out every single year, I
was always afraid the first time. I took to the water as was in my DNA to do,
but the deep end was a little troubling, and more than that, the first jump off
of the diving board was absolutely frightening. I eventually managed it a few
times in each summer, but the first time never failed to wreck my nerves and
cause an hours long scene, usually solitary, at the diving board, trying to get
myself to jump in, full throttle.
The
time, like many, my father was outside most of the day, as he was in summer, and
most times in the year, in the place. Time seemed to go slower – everyone says
that, but what makes it true? It slid and slowed into perpetual summer for me,
or in the realms of mind that remember it so. No matter the season my dad was
out there all the time. Around one end of land or house, or another. Some
implement at work, but at Work was the key. Actually, the key really being that
he was here, creating ponds and tennis courts, and septic systems, cementing
garden steps or fixing roofs or cursing at bees that were caught in the hot, dry
flimsy shed structure which I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy to be stuck inside
in the heat of summer. Oversized baseball hat on his tiny head, the same as
mine, v neck undershirt which never started out white, not that I could tell,
and all manner of sweat, dirt, grime and sun on it, baking shapes and stripes
into his farmer’s tan, different places in the same way. What the hell was 9-5,
I wondered? Nobody in my house sure did anything like that. Sure, he went and
did jobs but I’ve seen lazy housewives spend more time at “errands” in an
afternoon than he did wiring schools or doctor’s houses. His job was outside,
and that’s the way he wanted it. Truth be told, I’ve become really good at
staying in, but it’s not in my nature to want it that way. Something in the air
in late summer gets into my nostrils and I can’t seem to back away from it. But
once it gets lost, it’s hard to find it again and again.
On
that day, he was tending to his roses. To one side of the pool (which was
Olympic sized – this he wanted in exacting proportions), running all down the
length of it was a dirt hill. A fairly steep one at that, since there was the
time my dad was wheelbarrowing some dirt (just like he knew my favourite thing
was to be placed into the wheelbarrow (dirty of course) and rolled around in
whisk-like circular motions, kind of like the feeling when you jump) and fell
back down it and barely hit his head on the cement. He was fine, but there were
a few close calls like that. It was late afternoon, the rainbow feeling of the
light, and he was near the bottom of that hill, digging up weeds, and
re-planting, and picking beetles off of the row of multi coloured roses and
dropping them quick as a shot into the glass jars he had leaning every so often
in the dirt, filled up with some blue liquid that shocked them dead. He did all
of this with bright eyes, and I am only able to see his always satisfied face in
my mind, never anywhere he didn’t want to be, doing and being and striving and
being challenged and creating his own world exactly as he wanted it to
be.
I
was still sitting on the diving board. It had been too hot to really sit or
stand on, but the sun was beginning to fall a bit behind the leaves of the
tallest cluster of trees, and I was able to sit, then stand, bounce, then get
off, walk around and sit again. We were talking most of the time, but we could
be perfectly silent around each other too. These afternoons would form the
patterns of the late night wine conversations, long car drives from train
stations and figuring ourselves out talks with each other during my whole
childhood and adult life, and during the rest of his life. We were so alike in
our silences that there was never a need for any forced conversation. We were
easy like that. Embodied within our own worlds, and yet alive in each other’s.
He would teach me things about what he was doing, tell stories about his
childhood, and our family oversees, or just say things which seemed to drop off
the dew in the trees like “over your life, you will find that you can count the
truest and best friends, people who you love and who are the most important to
you on one hand”. It hasn’t failed me yet.
We
talked then- directly about my fear of the diving board and of jumping into the
deep end, and how it happened every single summer that I was afraid this first
time. He didn’t prod me, or push, but would work, and listen and talk about how
it can always feel impossible when it’s the first time for anything. Even when
the first time comes around again like clockwork. Eventually, I expressed the
pinpoints of the fear and how I was afraid that if I jumped from such a height
(truth be told it wasn’t very high, but I was short in those days and not very
confident in my physical prowess) into the deep, that I would drop too far down
and not be able to hold my breath (which I was also nervous about since I still
used my hand to hold my nose [I still mostly do in the oceans too]) and how
would I get out in time? Then he said it. Matter of factly, in his soft, broken
English and gentle Slavic by way of Italian sounding tone. He either called me
Mimi, my nickname, or more likely sweetie pie, which came out as sveeteh
pieh…the gist of what he said being, as he stopped what he was doing, put his
tools down and stood up, walking a few feet closer with the kind of intent I
seemed to have inherited, that if I fell into the water or was in need of help,
and he was upstairs in the window of the top floor or even on the roof of the
big house, he would jump down in a second and help me. The emphasis was that
there would be no hesitation, that I needn’t Ever worry, that the fear I was
having wasn’t necessary, because he was there and always would be.
I
clearly cannot erase that moment from my memory bank, nor live without the
knowledge of it. This, after all these years, has turned out to be a double
edged sword. A bliss/curse, or something. I live to this day with the feeling of
protection from my father, for many more years in my life with him in it and the
five and a half years with him only in my dreams (where, incidentally, he is
always young. I mean YOUNG, as a twenty year old man, in a way I have never
known him to be. He didn’t live a second of his life indebted to anyone else and
he is not starting now it would appear), he is there. In the shadows or between
the windy currents that blow at the top of the cliff, he is there to say this to
me, and I have full knowledge of it. That’s why he was a good father, because he
was there to teach me to not fear anything, at least not for too long. And he
was a good man, because he was never got down, even when he was. A gypsy with
two countries, many lives, the grandest of failures and creations, and a self
beating that would never give up, most of all on who he was. That’s who is
standing in the shadows for me, and it makes me feel very fortunate indeed. The
other prong of this puzzle comes simply from where this fact leaves me now.
Could anyone else in my life ever want to do that? Maybe he did it, so no one
else would have to, and so I wouldn’t need that of them, and so I could do it
for someone else, with the courage that he helped bloom quietly, on each of
those summer afternoons when I thought it was finally time to jump off the
diving board.
The
sum of this equation is written in the form of a promise. I have feared and
still will fear, when the height feels too high, or my confidence up or shot
aside, sensitivity to light or the abyss, both outside and inside me,
prevails…but promises are for people who don’t do anything, aren’t they. I have
jumped. I have jumped so far I thought I’d drown, and yet I know more chances
are coming, and I am going to have to take them at their word, take off my dress
and leap. I don’t wait for the first days of summer, or once a year’s time to do
it either. I am and will find myself out there, beyond the joviality of the
summer sun, arms out twisting with exaltation, mid-air, as I catch a glimpse of
his smiling, independent eyes from just around a corner from my starting point
and the sea.
{Happy (81st) Birthday Da.}