Erase and Start Over

The resurfacing memories of a woman with PTSD.


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Jo Finally Gives Her Back

woman-leaving-door

January 5, 2015

Jo closed the magazine, placed it on the table and, finally, decided to walk through the door. She was done, and she knew it. She ignored the trembling of her fingers as she clasped the overstuffed purse beside her. Lips and back straight with decision, Jo rose from the old-fashioned couch. She blinked, momentarily surprised at herself, and realized she really was going to leave, permanently. Her eyes focused steadily ahead, and she took a step.

“What do you think you’re doing?” demanded the room’s only other occupant, a steel-grey-haired woman enthroned in her stiff pine rocker, plucking querulously at her scratchy afghans.

Jo wondered how the familiar door could seem so far away. Steadily, she put one foot in front of the other. She pushed through the tense air as if she were wading neck-deep through a pond, thick with clinging water plants.

The old woman snorted. “You never did know what was good for you. You mouse. Afraid of a little truth? Go ahead and leave, cry baby, but take that magazine with you. Maybe it’ll teach you not to be so worthless.”

Her heart was pounding in her ears, thankfully drowning out the eternal harping of the voice behind her. No more “improving” magazines to read, thought Jo, feeling lighter as the door swam closer. No more sarcasm, or wet blankets, or dripping layers of … of undeserved guilt.

“Don’t you walk away when I’m talking to you. You listen to me, young lady! I’m your mother!”

Jo stopped, one hand on the doorknob, and sighed a big, deep, cleansing breath, up for air for the first time in her life. She hung onto the reassuring solidness of the door, validating her own strength of purpose in the worn wood that had withstood years of kicks and slams by the house’s matriarch. She was done. Done with it all.

Turning slightly, Jo gave a long, last look upon the woman behind her. The unusually firm, quiet decision in her face surprised the old lady into momentary silence.

The two women looked at each other across gaping years of crushed hopes, low expectations, and shredded spirits. One pair of eyes wide with realization, the other pair narrowed in angry confusion. Finally, Jo spoke.

“I never had a mother.”

She gave the old woman her back and opened the door, stepping out of the murky waters and into a future that, at age 49, she could finally call her own.


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Meeting My Birth Father

I always cringe a little when I think of my behavior in Kansas City. I was not the person I am today. Add my unhealthy behavior to culture shock, and the result is that this poor man never received the reunion he hoped for when meeting his long-lost children. Mom not only took me from that side of my family, but she took me from our cultural heritage. My father will never have the Puerto Rican father-daughter relationship he imagined, and I’ll never know what it is to grow up Puerto Rican. It’s a real loss.

November 1986, I was 21

The organza was so slippery, and all I was doing was trying to make a neat hem. I stopped the machine and cut the thread, thinking I’d have better luck on the serger, when the overhead announced I had a call on line 2. I sighed and left the sewing room for the laundry area, where the phone was, expecting another pre-booking for a Santa costume. “Jo speaking, may I help you?”

Your name is not Dumont, it is Bautista and your father is looking for you,” said a heavily Spanish-accented frantic voice.

Um, what?”

Your name! You’ve been lied to. Your real name is Bautista and your father is trying to find you!”

I didn’t appreciate the dramatic tone in her voice and began to suspect a prank. “Well, I’m married now, so it’s neither. Who is this?”

Something in my own tone must have tipped her off that she wasn’t handling herself professionally. With more calm she said, “This is the Red Cross. The man you think is your father is not your father. You are a missing child. We’ve been helping your father look for you for 18 years. He is anxious to meet you.”

Well, I had already found my real birth certificate years ago, and knew my birth father’s last name was Bautista, but I was married with a toddler and another light blinking on line 3. There was nothing life-or-death in this call and my boss frowned on personal use of the phone. And not for a minute did I believe I was a missing child. I was right here in Kansas City for over a decade. It was a bit of a surprise to learn my real father was alive, but why he was bothering to look me up now, after all these years, was beyond me. Whatever, I thought, it’d be nice to know the family medical history.

Yeah, sure, I’ll meet him. Can you call me at home tonight? I really have to get back to work.”

She took my number, clearly disappointed with my anti-climatic reaction, but what did she expect? She was practically hysterical, unlike any Red Cross person I had ever heard of, she had nothing much new to say and I had work to do. She said she was calling from New York, so maybe that’s just how they talk out there. I picked up line 3.

“Jo, it’s Meg. Did you get a call from the Red Cross?”

Good grief, that crazy woman called my sister, too. We talked about how frantic she sounded, and how we both agreed that she was very unprofessional. If the whole missing-child story was real, why weren’t the police calling us? Or why not our real father? If I had a missing child and knew where she was, I’d be on that phone lickety-split myself, not leave it to some crazy person. Meg said that mom had called her yesterday, warning her that she might get this call. Astonished, I asked how mom got the heads-up, and why Meg hadn’t called to tell me. She said that somehow mom’s brother had found out, and told mom, and Meg wasn’t sure whether it would be fair to call me and possibly prejudice me. Mom had told her not to listen to anything he had to say. But Meg had a son, and I had Demi, so we both agreed that a medical history was an important enough reason to meet this guy. It’s not like mom was able to give us any decent information about her side of the family. The biggest drawback of meeting him, though, was that neither of us felt any need for a parent at our age. We’d had enough of those.

A few days later, I was sitting in a Waffle House facing the man who claimed to be my father. He had dark hair, worn a little on the short side. His skin was smooth and a darker olive than mine. He had a neat mustache. Other than his coloring, he didn’t look like me at all. He was – well – compact. Taller than me, but average height for a man. He appeared muscular but lean, an average build but well-shaped and probably stronger than he looked. I felt overblown and blousy next to him. His face and features were smaller than mine. I had big, brown eyes, unlike either of my parents. He was clearly fastidious, also unlike me. I was willing to just accept the diner’s dirt with a shrug and surreptitiously wipe my silverware on a paper napkin. Not he. In a Spanish accent with an educated and well-modulated tone, he politely asked for a clean fork, charming the waitress as if it were his fault that the fork wasn’t cleaned properly.

I didn’t know what to think. He told me this fantastic story about my mother taking me and Meg out for ice cream when one of my uncles was babysitting us, and never coming back. That he called the police, went to the courts, and even reported us to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children. Surprised, I asked him if our pictures were on milk cartons, and he said no, that by that time we were too old and he only had baby pictures of us. Then the pictures came out.

He was the oldest of eight boys. My grandparents were still living. I was the first girl in the family, and my grandfather had my baby picture on his nightstand this whole time, waiting for me to come home. I listened to Papa Bautista tell me about how his whole family missed me and my sister, how delighted and surprised he was to learn about Amy and how he wanted to bring the three of us home to New York. Apparently, mom was pregnant with Amy when she abducted us. I stared at the baby pictures, all younger than the ones mom had, and tried to see myself in them. There were pictures of him with mom, whom I had no trouble recognizing despite how young she looked. It must be true – but how did I turn out so big and curvy compared to everyone else on his side of the family?

He reached his hand across the table to stroke mine, and I pulled it away. He was 20 years older than me, but he looked young for his age, and I have had way too many older men put their hands on me. I’m sure he didn’t mean anything by it, but I didn’t know who this guy was. His story rang true, but he was so different from anyone I had ever known. There was a restrained passion about him that made me a bit nervous, and I didn’t know what he wanted from me. I tried to bring a little coolness to the conversation, and asked him about our medical history.

He sat back, easily able to sense that he needed to back off, and said I came from a very healthy family. I had a great uncle who had lived to 115 years old. My grandparents were as healthy as could be. No heart disease, no cancer, no arthritis – nothing for me to worry about.

He apologized for not finding us sooner. He explained that the courts all felt that girls belonged with a mother, and flat refused to help him. That he had broken his leg at one point, and was in long months of physical rehabilitation. That as soon as he got word from the Kansas City sheriff’s office as to where we were, he hopped into a car and drove through a Pennsylvanian snow storm to get here. He wanted to know everything about me, and was surprised that I wasn’t in college. He said I come from a very intelligent family and must know that I’m very smart. He was certainly charming.

After about an hour of talking, I felt comfortable enough to invite him to my home the next evening to meet Dell and Demi. He took care of the bill, just as charming as ever to the waitress, and we paused outside before separating to our cars. He reached both his hands toward my face, respectfully asking if he could touch me. I nodded and felt his two warm, dry hands resting on each of my cheeks. His face was very close, and he pulled my head down and gently kissed my forehead. As he pulled away, there were tears in his eyes, but he was smiling and said he looked forward to meeting my family tomorrow. Then he quickly stepped away.

Embarrassed, I went quickly to my own car, but hesitated with the key in the ignition. There was something so sad about him. Almost as if he were disappointed that I was too old to call him daddy, to sit on his lap and play patty-cake. I turned the key. I had plenty of problems of my own. Eighteen years were a long time, and there was nothing I could do about that. I couldn’t be his child, but perhaps we could be friends. Right now, I had to figure out how I was going to tell my husband that I had agreed to bring this man into our home without his permission.


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Step 2 Toward the Hospital

Step one, to recap previous posts, was my already cycling up depression. Step two began with my visit to Kansas City this past Memorial Weekend to spend time with family. I hadn’t been back there in about a dozen years, and I missed it. I stayed with Meg and her family – it was wonderful to be with them again after all this time. We had dinner on the Country Club Plaza, drove around Swope Park, and spent plenty of quality time together. Amy drove out to meet us, so only Beth was missing of the four of us sisters this time, and miss her we did.

Saturday morning, very early, one of my sisters came in to wake me up. I don’t remember which one. Mom’s husband had died. The three of us called Mom on speaker phone, and she was incoherent in her grief. They had been together 30 years. She was also completely wasted at 7am. We spoke with a neighbor of hers who had thankfully responded to Mom’s call and was there with her, and able to tell us what happened.

It wasn’t completely unexpected, just six months sooner than any of us thought. He had been diagnosed with cancer in March, during my 100-hour work-week marathons, and I hadn’t even called him until Friday, while I was waiting for my flight at O’Hare to KC. I told him how much I valued his kindness to me over the years, how glad I was that he was a part of our lives, and joked with him about subscribing him to a sherbet mailing list, so he could get gallons of orange sherbet mailed to him every week. The cancer was everywhere, but it hurt his throat most, and the sherbet was almost the only thing he enjoyed eating anymore. Then, less than 12 hours later, he was gone. He had gotten up at 2 in the morning to use the bathroom, fell, and was gone. Mom called her neighbor, then started steadily drinking. I was so thankful I had spoken to him, and horrified that I had almost missed letting him know I cared about him. He was Mom’s fourth husband, but I didn’t meet him until a couple of years after they were married, so there was never any attempt at a father-daughter relationship, just a natural one between two related adults. There was respect, and laughter, and no pressure to be anything except ourselves. We didn’t agree politically and in a number of other areas, but neither of us felt it necessary to convince the other of anything they didn’t want to hear, so we just agreed to disagree and focused on the lighthearted. I wish I could have at least have had that with my Mom.

Back to that Saturday morning. After we hung up with Mom, we called Beth, and then all worked out travel plans so Mom wouldn’t be alone. Amy and Beth were with her by Sunday, and I went ahead and kept my flight home Monday to New York, and drove to North Carolina to be there Tuesday evening. I was uncomfortable as hell about going, but I kept telling myself that this is a 69-year-old woman who had just lost her husband of 30 years, who needed help more than I needed to stay away from her. My phone call on Friday to my stepfather was the first time I had spoken to her in four years.

To use my mantra yet again, I was done. Four years ago, I had a conversation with her that was the straw that broke the camel’s back, and I realized I was done with her. I asked her not to contact me or my children ever again, not even during the holidays. I wasn’t angry, I was just done. No more toxic people in my life.

Anyway, I called work and let them know that I would be taking the week off to help with the funeral. Little did any of us know that it would be over a month before I would spend a day at my desk again.


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Simply Grateful

Grandpa's backyard

I remember helping Grandma hang clothes out to dry in this backyard. I remember Grandpa setting up a badminton set, and my sisters and I gamefully trying to hit the birdie. I remember Grandma teaching me to sing those old Croatian songs she loved so well, and Grandpa letting me stand on his toes as he taught me to dance to them.

I have several very happy memories from my childhood, and I promise to do my best to post them here, so this blog does not become filled with gloom, despair, and agony on me – woe!

I didn’t meet my real grandparents until I was in my late 20’s, but thankfully, these two wonderful people (who were the parents of my mother’s third husband) stepped up to the plate and treated me and my sisters like their own ever since I met them when I was 11 years old. Grandma taught us to bake apple strudel; Grandpa taught us to fish and play pool; and they both taught us the importance of family gatherings around the table, with cards and popcorn and plenty of laughter.

I am simply grateful for the love and influence of these two good souls in my life, who have now joined the angels. I love you Grandma and Grandpa.