I called my friend Sheila from the Lyric Opera tonight. I was seeing Oklahoma! Artist’s Date 21. Standing in the lobby, talking into my corded ear piece, I told her I felt at ease here by myself. That it didn’t seem strange. That I was comfortable.
Perhaps because I had been on 20 solo Artist’s Dates prior.
Or perhaps because I wasn’t really alone.
I got a call this morning. My birth mother, Pharen, died. She was 60.
We just met for the first time three years ago. She had been looking for me for 12 years, but it wasn’t until I began my search for her that we were connected. And then it was ridiculously and remarkably fast. And easy.
We spoke for the first time two days before I turned 40. I was on a plane to Charleston to meet her a few months later.
During that visit she gave me a pair of mother-of-pearl opera glasses — one of the few things she had to give me, she explained, apologizing that she had long ago given her “good jewelry” to her nieces, as she wasn’t sure she would get to meet me.
I patted the lump in my bag that was the glasses, tucked inside a soft purple Crown Royal bag. Exactly how she gave them to me.
Sweet irony. For it is only in getting sober that I finally mustered the courage to look for her rather than talk about looking for her. That I found friends who had done the same and could walk me through it, step by step.
Sweet irony. That I would be going to the opera the day she died.
My friend Lynn told me to be gentle with myself during this time.
This time when my stomach feels full with anxiety and yet I don’t know what I am anxious about. She says it is my body responding to the uncertainty of experiencing something new.
Like losing a “parent” — even if she didn’t raise me. Or going to the opera alone.
My body has grown accustomed to these Artist’s Dates.
Picking up my tickets from will call, I felt kind of cool and confident, like the girl in a Charlie! perfume commercial from the 1980s. “Who’s that in the orange suede boots and short, pink-wool blazer by herself? The one with the bindi and the cropped hair?”
I used to sometimes feel sorry for people I saw alone at events. I don’t anymore — because I don’t feel sorry for me.
I settled into my aisle seat — main floor, row RR — relieved that I didn’t have to make conversation. That I could sit. That I could read from the book in my bag. That I could return emails and texts from my smartphone, clicking “like” by every condolence I received on Facebook. Right until the lights went down and the curtain went up.
I’d never seen Oklahoma! before, movie or stage production. I loved it. Who doesn’t love a surrey with a fringe on top? I pulled out my glasses to see the performers better. I had a hard time getting a really clear view, but no matter. I felt her with me. I wasn’t alone.
I loved the simple story of courting and coupling — a different time, but the foibles and heartbreaks universal, transcending it. I saw a little bit of myself in wildly flirtatious Ado Annie. Always keeping her options open. Easily swayed by pretty words and sexy kisses.
I thought of my Aunt Julie, Pharen’s sister, who I met this fall when I went to Charleston a second time — when I received a call that my birth mother was dying, but didn’t.
I had met a boy while I was there and fell head over heels over head. And when it didn’t turn out exactly as I had planned, she warned me about “pretty words.” And to “stop and pay attention” when I hear what I want to hear, words that make my heart race.
Aunt Julie is practical and wise. Pharen was like me. A dreamy romantic with her heart on her sleeve and her feet often-times not quite touching the ground.
I loved the singing. I loved the dancing. I loved that it was light and I could just smile through it.
I loved that I could, in fact, smile through it.
That I no longer had to be attached to my sadness. That I could experience moments of joy amidst my sorrow.
That I could go to the opera without wearing the look of “rescue me” painted on my face.
That I coudl go to work today, rather than calling in “tragic victim,” and not feel the need to announce to my Weight Watchers members that my birth mom had died earlier that morning. That I could engage in their stories. And when one offered that her niece had recently died, I didn’t have to match her loss with my own.
That I could call my parents, the ones who raised me, and tell them about Pharen’s passing. That I could go to them with compassion and without expectations, knowing that this isn’t easy for them — my having found my birth family. That I could turn to others less affected for comfort and soothing.
That I could call my birth dad and not want a thing from him other than to tell him this news.
That I could experience joy when 45 minutes after receiving the call that my birth mother had died, I received another call letting me know I had won fifth prize ina a writing contest I recently entered — my first ever. Addressing the topic, “How Creativity Changed My Life,” I wrote about these Artist’s Dates and the book from which they come, The Artist’s Way — my companion in divorce, in my (mostly) chosen single-dom. Chosen but not always embraced.
That I could take the Mother’s Day card I bought yesterday — signed, sealed and ready to be delivered — and drop it in the mailbox anyway. Knowing she would “get it.” Just like I knew she was there with me tonight…
Peering through the opera glasses to see which male performers were cutest. Knowing Ado Annie but wondering how she might be more steely, like Laurey. Admonishing me for wearing orange suede booties in the rain, while I waited for the valet to bring my car — the ones that clomped down the hospital corridor so loudly, causing her to yell, “I knew it was you from half-way down the block…”
No wonder I didn’t feel alone.
Sorry to hear, darlin
This is a well described article. ty 🙂
Thanks for reading, and for your kind words.
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