But you shouldn’t think that it’s been all
tears. We have these great kids, both of them adopted--Carrie and Jared,
wonderful kids. And sometimes it seems we've been blessed by being able to deal
with the big things, if you know what I mean. We've had big things happen in
our lives. It's the little things that cut and tear--keeping rooms clean, that
kind of thing.
But with the big things, and never really
on our own, I think we've done okay.
And then this.
In the middle of that pregnancy, our
daughter asked the agency if they knew anything about her own background,
anything medical that might be important. When we adopted her, the agency said
the files were locked; but things were different back then, and there was no
way Carrie could know. But they told her that if her birth mother ever came
around and asked, they would let her know. “Sometimes that happens,” the woman
said.
Amazing. A few years later it did. All four of us met Carrie’s
own birth mother in Toledo, Ohio, halfway to New York, where Garney—that’s her
name—lived with her husband and two boys.
It’s seven o’clock at night, and we’re
finally checked into the motel where we’d planned to meet her. Pretty much
right away, we called to make sure Garny was there in another room. She was.
“Whyn’t you come up to my room—seventh floor,” she said when we called—it was a
Holiday Inn.
Nobody really tells you how to handle
something like what we were right then about to go through. I don’t know that
I’d call it awkward exactly, but I couldn’t help feeling uncomfortable.
I couldn’t.
My wife gave Carrie all kinds of space. We
were on our way to meet this birth mother, marching down the motel hallway,
fourth floor, and Sandra was backing off because she was thinking that this
moment belonged only to our daughter. She was walking about two yards behind
her--we both were--when Carrie turned around impatiently and snapped,
"C'mon, Mom," she said, "you're my mother, you know."
That's the way she said it, almost scolding
but full of love.
"I know," Sandra told her, in
her sweet lilting voice. "Girl, I've been your mom for 22 years."
So we knocked on room 714 and this diminutive
lady came to the door, a woman so tiny she looked unhealthy. Sandra is still
giving Carrie all kinds of room; she’s standing behind her, at least a yard,
and Carrie’s right there facing the door when this tiny woman with the silver
hair, a woman with a matched set of our Carrie’s beautiful eyes, looks at our
daughter, one huge smile growing across her face. There they stood eyeing each
other—I don’t remember how long. No words.
And then the most amazing thing happened.
Garny steps right pat her daughter. There’s tears in her eyes, but she goes first
of all to my wife and hugs her, just hugs her as if the two of them were best
of friends. You think maybe I’m making this up? Not so.
“Thank you,” this Garny says, just like
that. “I don’t know how to thank you.”
That's what happened. That woman went
right after my wife, hugged her and kissed her, and only then, and somewhat
warily, started toward her daughter—our daughter.
I don't think I understood everything
Sandra was feeling that night, but once we got into Garny's motel room, once
this woman hugged Sandra and then Carrie and then me, once Sandra had given Garny
the presents she'd packed especially for Garny’s two boys because she didn't
want them to get lost in everything, she said to that tiny woman, "Do you
mind please, ma'am, if I sit down? I'm just breathless."
Garny said, of course she could sit down,
and Sandra did, on a bed in the manufactured air of that shivery motel room.
And not until she sat there- overwhelmed, yet oddly comforted--not until I saw
my wife perfectly speechless, even reeling, as if in a daze on that bed, not
until then did I realize what this incredible meeting with our Carrie's birth
mom had taken out of my wife, and what, bless the Lord, it had also somehow put
back in.
Sandra watched for the next half hour. More
than once, she’s told me since that she enjoyed every minute of it. In her daughter's
eyes she said she saw appreciation and commitment and even some love, but no
real bonding. Maybe what I’m trying to say is that that very first time Carrie
and her birth mother met, there was no intimacy.
Forgive me. I don't know if that's what either
of us were supposed to feel, whether or not it's right, morally sound or not; but
I know Carrie loves her mom, and I've no doubt that as long as either of them
live, Carrie will know exactly where Garny is. But I don't find that
threatening and neither does Sandra, because both of us know that whatever it
is our Carrie has with Garny, she's also got a lifetime and more with us.
"I think I know why God wanted me way
up here in the cold," Sandra told me one night about a year ago. "I’m
pretty sure I got it figured out."
If she had a choice, she wouldn't have
chosen to live in this cold little village a thousand miles into the great
white north. She's a Southerner through and through and living up here has
probably made her even more stubborn about for sure not being a Yankee. But she
married into an old Dodgeville family, four generations of furniture sales, me
the last probably, and she never quite felt at home in whatever culture we can
be said to have.
"I’m here because of my
children," she told me that night. "That's why I'm here. It’s very
simple, really,” she said, something of a testimony. “I’m here because of them.”
We were in bed, lying there with the radio
playing something New Age-ish. What she said came out of nowhere like it always
does with her. I reached over and held her arm in my hand.
"God wanted me here because those
kids needed me," she said.
I know when she wants to talk. “You mean
to say that God almighty couldn’t find anybody else?” I said. “And what does
that make me—succotash?”
“You’re an auxiliary, sweetheart,” she said and turned
her body into mine.
___________________________
Tomorrow: Finis
___________________________
Tomorrow: Finis
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