No Running Around the Pool, a painting by my sister (denisebrookstudio.com), is ‘an homage to mom, who forever yelled those words at us while she sucked down vodkas and made us lunch.’ Such rife symbolism. The San Fernando valley is blazing hot in the summer. A swimming pool is a magical escape. Splashing and laughing with friends. Soaking in soothing, invigorating womb-temperature water. That forty-thousand gallons of clear liquid was space to go all out, stretch, scream, play. Then lemonade, sodas and melon under the shade of the patio overhang. The safest of places. And yet.
The pain is palpable in the room---twenty, thirty, forty
years later. Talk of patriarchs turns to tales of parents. Eight of us sharing
life over warm gooey chocolate chip cookies. Tales of father wounds rendered
physically by hand, emotionally by absence. Parent betrayals. “You have to make
space for forgiveness in your mind or it’ll eat you up.”
If my mom had a love language it was food. Watermelon
slices and snacks in abundance after swimming. Showering us with Michelin star
morsels from Sunset magazine recipes. So we had that. There was no hugging, no
personal contact and we never heard, “I love you.” Not even years after I’d
been softened enough to say it to her. As for the vodka drinking---that left other
marks; some visible in cigarette burns on the linoleum.
Growing up I wanted everything black and white. Easier to
hold to artificial absolutes in a childhood that didn’t have many. “The line
dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being. And who is
willing to destroy a piece of his own heart?” says Solzhenitsyn. As I see more
gray in me, I realize this: the rule, no running around the pool, applies to
everybody. It’s easy to slip and cause harm. Forgiveness is similar. A rule to
heal us from harm against us. Freeing us to get back into the swim.
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