Ascia

Por­trait of Ascia by Karen

As dis­tant and estranged as I felt from my father grow­ing up (hmm, Father’s Day essay?), so I seemed attached and con­nect­ed to my moth­er. Not in a cloy­ing, spend-lots-of-time-togeth­er way–in fact, I don’t remem­ber ever spend­ing much time with her. But some­how, my moth­er got me. There was one stretch, some­where between grades five and ten, where she had a spy plant­ed in the midst of my life. No mat­ter what prank, mis­deed or dev­il­ment that I per­formed, my moth­er was aware of it before the sun went down. My sis­ters swore their inno­cence (and how would they know, any­way?), and my brother’s loy­al­ty was beyond ques­tion. Truth is, I didn’t mind her peep­hole into my life since she observed my deeds more with bemuse­ment than moral reserve, per­ceiv­ing the antic inside of the crime. No, if I tru­ly dis­pleased my moth­er, her response was always the same: “Wait until your father gets home.” (Please don’t use that tac­tic, cur­rent mothers!)

I have often won­dered how Ascia would assess her own life. I sus­pect she would express dis­ap­point­ment. I believe she felt called to greater things than being house­wife and moth­er to a hus­band and six chil­dren, which is an accu­rate if cold assess­ment of her accom­plish­ments (albeit she left most of the actu­al house­wif­ing and moth­er­ing to Dowa­nee, my live-in grand­moth­er). Ascia was a dream­er, not a doer. In fact, I believe I share a hid­den trait with all five of my siblings–we ascribe to (but would nev­er acknowl­edge) an under­ly­ing belief that we are some­how supe­ri­or (intel­lec­tu­al­ly? moral­ly? spir­i­tu­al­ly?) to the com­mon masses–that we are of a high­er ilk. We got that from Ascia. Come to think, Carl prob­a­bly shared that conviction–he was always attribut­ing things to our tar­tar blood–so it’s a reces­sive gene! (Lest I appear a rag­ing ego­ma­ni­ac, I’d like to state that 70 years of obser­va­tion have taught me that the trait is delusional–but present nonetheless.)

Raskel­nikov comes to mind. In my mid-twen­ties I went on a Russ­ian lit­er­a­ture jag. I read Tol­stoy, Dos­toyevsky, Tur­genev, the sto­ries of Chekhov, even some Solzhen­it­syn. I loved their extremism–the extrem­i­ty of their depres­sion, of their joy, of their aspi­ra­tions and their cat­a­clysms. And in ret­ro­spect, I real­ize that I was bond­ing with my mother.

A sec­ond top­ic of won­der­ment regard­ing my moth­er is what she actu­al­ly did with her time. I just don’t remem­ber her being around very much even though she was always there. (Dowa­nee was the omnipresent one.) She was a vora­cious read­er, she loved to play bridge, she enjoyed the com­pa­ny of her neigh­bor­hood friends (“cronies,” she called them). I don’t remem­ber her gar­den­ing much, but she must have because we had lots of plants and our yard was well-maintained–I’m sure we wouldn’t have hired some­one. Per­haps the rea­son I don’t remem­ber her being around is because I avoid­ed her even more than she avoid­ed me.

There was noth­ing she liked to do more than out­rage and shock. My par­ents did some entertaining–cocktail par­ties, Christ­mas par­ties, bar­be­cues. Those of us who were home would duti­ful­ly greet the guests when they arrived and then be ban­ished up to our rooms while the grown-ups par­tied down­stairs. I remem­ber there would be inter­mit­tent burst of wild rau­cous laugh­ter, and I knew it was inspired by some­thing my moth­er said or did. She was no great beauty–her fea­tures were Slav­ic, almost homely–but there was some­thing about her face that held your inter­est. She would meet your gaze with a vivac­i­ty, an audac­i­ty, a com­po­sure that was daunt­ing. I know my father thought she was beau­ti­ful. There would some­times be fights between my moth­er and father after these par­ties end­ed. I believe my mom was a tremen­dous flirt, and my dad would get jealous.

She didn’t con­fine her out­ra­geous behav­ior to her own social cir­cle. She loved to cor­ner our friends and engage them in “soul­ful” con­ver­sa­tions. Her best trick was to steer the con­ver­sa­tion in a cer­tain direc­tion, set her vic­tim up, and then drop a bomb. Her favorite tar­get was girlfriends:
Mom: So, Karen, Dallin tells me you minor in art. What do you do?
Karen: Well, I like to draw.
Mom: Oh, yes. Dallin’s old girlfriend–Lou, did he tell you? She was a
gui­tar play­er and a singer. She was fan­tas­tic. She sang right here
in this room.
My friends either loved her or feared her.

She was just as bad a grand­moth­er. Our first fam­i­ly reunion was in Sea­side, Ore­gon when Bethany was sev­en years old. She had spent very lit­tle time with either grand­par­ents on my side since they had moved to the West Coast before she was born. My old friend Randy lived near Port­land, so he came to vis­it for a day and brought his six-year-old daugh­ter Alex. My moth­er, respond­ing to some self-per­ceived slight from me or Karen or Bethany, pro­ceed­ed to show­er all her atten­tion and affec­tion on Alex. Bethany was dev­as­tat­ed. I’m sor­ry to say that both of my par­ents were crap­py grand­par­ents, their over­ly­ing atti­tude toward all their grand­chil­dren being one of apa­thy. My dad used to say that peo­ple didn’t real­ly inter­est him until they were old enough to hold an intel­li­gent con­ver­sa­tion. By time my chil­dren were there, he was dead. One of Ascia’s crown­ing ges­tures came at a Christ­mas we cel­e­brat­ed in Texas. Some of my fam­i­ly and some of Karen’s fam­i­ly were present. Nathan and Zachary eager­ly opened their gift from Grand­ma Ascia. They each got a box of con­doms. Nate was four­teen and Zack was twelve.

I think she took all her pent-up famil­ial love and divert­ed it toward ani­mals. You nev­er met a woman for ooohing and aaahing over creatures–dogs, cats, ducks, and birds. She hat­ed zoos. She con­sid­ered it her min­istry to care for any stray, lost, mis­treat­ed or just out of sorts ani­mal that appeared on the hori­zon. She was effu­sive in her affec­tion, and that’s the only place I ever saw it.

She was a hard woman, a dif­fi­cult woman, but I loved her and she loved me. She came to vis­it me short­ly after I went to prison, and when I came to the glass win­dow, beat­en and blood­ied, her look con­tained such love and com­pas­sion and sorrow–it stead­ied me.

Ascia went out on her own terms. She had said for the past few years that being an “octo­ge­nar­i­an” was plen­ty for her. One day she took her dog Tut out for a walk, got tan­gled in his leash, and fell and broke her hip. She decid­ed not to recov­er. My sis­ters who lived on the West Coast con­tact­ed those of us who didn’t, and we all gath­ered to sit by her deathbed. I remem­ber when I walked into her hos­pi­tal room, fresh from Texas. She looked up at me, the ghost of a smile flick­ered across her face, and she said, “I have AIDS.”

We took shifts sit­ting by her bed­side as her con­scious­ness fad­ed, as her breath­ing became more and more shal­low, as her face became skele­tal. When Karen and I were alone with her, we blab­bered in her ear about Jesus and God’s love and eter­nal life. If any­thing reg­is­tered, she sure didn’t show it.

But I don’t think she would have.

Comments

  • Prison? How long? Beat up and bloody? That must have been scary. Com­plex parental his­to­ry. Did you like your grand­moth­er? Sounds like you got your great sense of humor from your mother.

    Gretch11 May, 2020
    • hey gretchen — yeah, it was scary. god teach­es us through suffering–can’t get around that. i believe it was a piv­otal point in my spir­i­tu­al jour­ney. i sus­pect that all fam­i­ly his­to­ries are very com­plex, even ones that don’t seem to be. yes, i def­i­nite­ly loved my grandmother…just not sure if she loved me. i would love to hear some reflec­tions on your mom and dad.

      Dallin Malmgren22 May, 2020

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