Can You Hear Me Now?

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My 89-year-old mother-in-law is fiercely independent, a fact reinforced in late August by her failure to call for help after slipping off her kitchen barstool at 11 p.m., painfully injuring her right foot.  She didn’t want to bother my husband and me so late, or disturb her neighbors with a 911 response.

Turns out she’d fractured her ankle in three places.

Visiting her in rehab, Andy found her on the nursing center’s patio, her wheelchair parked at a table with three fellow patients, eating a pizza lunch.  She’s too polite to express it openly, but my husband knew immediately that his mother didn’t want to be there.

“So they’ve got you out here today!” he remarked with forced cheerfulness.  Every Friday the rehab center holds a themed luncheon, like a BBQ or luau.  “Must be pizza day!”

A week earlier a nursing attendant had invited her to join “special lunch,” which she graciously declined.  That Friday, however, a nurse had simply breezed in, wheeled her to the patio, and planted her with patients suffering from dementia in various stages. Despite her celebrated conversational skills, my mother-in-law found the meal a challenge.

She could have demurred, of course, stating that she preferred meals in her room, but that would have violated her code of courtesy.  Reluctant to appear rude or unreasonably difficult, she endured the special lunch experience without causing a fuss, even though it wasn’t what she wanted to do.

It’s painful to picture my proud mother-in-law this way, decisions made “for her own good,” her options gradually diminished by the infirmities of age.  Yet she retains the luxury of choice, the ability to exercise preferences, and the authority to express them, should she elect to do so.

I wonder how often my son’s preferences go unheeded, or even recognized.  He has lived in structured care for almost nine years, an arrangement inherently prone to conformity, to routine.  Yet even when he lived at home I so frequently misunderstood him, or didn’t understand him at all.

How often must he be frustrated by the disorder that has dictated the whole course of his life, unable to express clearly what he’s yearning for, or who he knows himself to be?

A friend suggested recently that Daniel may simply not know any different, or even recognize what he is missing in the typical world.  Autism and its attendant constraints is all he’s ever known, after all.  He may be more content than I can possibly imagine.  Perhaps it is only me who is suffering the weight of his loss.

This argument isn’t new to me.  I’ve told myself the same thing countless times, willing myself to believe it true.  How much easier than imagining my son trapped in a functioning body and mind, yet unable to direct the events of his life, or follow the path of his choosing.

Of course I appreciate many of his frequent, obvious requests — pop, fries, Denny’s, car — but what more complicated emotions go unnoticed?  Does he recognize the vast range of experience beyond the stifling hold of autism, and ache for that world?  Or has he simply given up on being truly understood?

As he matures and our relationship changes, I tell myself to let go of these haunting questions, this chronic doubt; to accept the limitations of Daniel’s life, rejoicing in all he is capable of, the joy he demonstrates for the modest slice of life he has been allotted.

Can any parent truly do this, though?  Do any of us accept “good enough” for our children, or stop longing to know what lies in the deepest folds of their hearts?

Over time I’ve set aside certain unanswerable questions, stopped demanding an explanation for Daniel’s autism, which, if granted, would change nothing.  The ache to know my son is not so easily relinquished, though, this duty I feel to understand and give voice to the unarticulated longings he may have harbored for a lifetime.  Who will carry this torch, if not me?

Daniel’s behavior has long been the most telling barometer of his mood, and there is evidence now to suggest that he is indeed content.  He appears comfortable in his group home, well-treated by his caregivers, and satisfied with his living arrangement.

Other behaviors are more complicated, his well-chronicled soda obsession the most troublesome example.  Is this simply an inexplicable symptom of the disorder, or his desperate bid to control one small scrap of a life orchestrated on his behalf, a life he is screaming to escape?  I wonder if I’ll ever live peacefully without the answer, if I am failing him, again and again, by not knowing him as he deserves to be known.

I consider the frequent and meaningful contact my daughter and I share, yet I don’t know all there is to know about her; of course I don’t.  I can’t even state with certainty that she is happy; I can only judge by her temperament, the tenor of her words, trusting the relationship we’ve forged over 26 years.  Yet, like my mother-in-law, she has the benefit of language, the power to communicate as she chooses.

Daniel and I rely on more subtle indicators to understand one another, like his willingness to let me go at the end of my visits. Often he’ll hasten my departure with a vocal “Bye!,” having procured his extra soda, his sticker book; after a drive together, the Chili Peppers cranked loud and liberating; after he’s reached from his seat behind me to caress my shoulder, reassured that I’ve come back again.

Is this all the fulfillment he needs from his life?  From me?  Can it possibly be enough?

I want to dismiss my friend’s suggestion as a well-meant but simplistic explanation for something infinitely more complex. Conceding to her theory feels like a betrayal, adopting a convenient, more palatable view of my son’s life to soothe my own loss, my own conscience.

Mustn’t I question, though, if I’m stubbornly projecting my sorrow over Daniel’s circumstances onto him?  Is it just me, unsettled and aching, who is hungry for more, as my boy becomes a man?

And I acknowledge, too, that part of me craves the reassurance that he is happy — that both my children are happy — because that would make me happy.  Oh, yes, I want that certainty, a gentle easing of the relentless burden of love.

Yet slowly I’m recognizing that Daniel is, in fact, expressing himself, that he is telling me who he is, perhaps even typically.

At times he is the engaged, affectionate Daniel, laughing, relaxed, unhurried, who brushes my cheek for the simple warmth of connection; who will peruse a book by my side as we did for years when he lived at home.  Other visits are almost routine, a necessary interlude he endures for my benefit, anxious to return to his own agenda, like any 24-year-old.  Even if his agenda includes a sticker book with The Aristocats for accompaniment.

Perhaps my son has been telling me what he wants all along, but I’ve been too consumed by on my own agenda, my own habit of despair, to hear him.

I recall the moment my daughter told me her boyfriend was “the one,” understanding intuitively that she was happy, truly happy, even as her words left me breathless.  Is she ready to make this decision?  Does she understand the heartache that may lay in store?  Yet I realized then the depth of my faith in her, my trust in her to know her own mind.

Can I learn to do the same with my son?

There is no forgetting the disparity between the life he deserves and the life he has.  I can try, though, to view his experience with eyes unshrouded by loss, to listen for what he his telling me, free of the weight of unmet dreams.  He deserves this much from me.  He deserves to be recognized, to be known as he wants to be known.

What might he teach me, if I am willing to learn?

Cracks in the Sidewalk

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One of the appealing features of the neighborhood where my first husband and I bought our home was the sidewalk encircling the whole block.  It was a common gathering place for residents, and an ideal circuit for walkers, runners or strollers.

As a young mother I made dozens of laps along the half-mile oval from my front door and back, pushing a stroller, pulling a wagon, or walking hand in hand with my children.  The sidewalk served as a natural boundary for the kids, too; Natalie, at least, learned to stay on the right side of the walk, clear of the street beyond.

When she was about six years old, I sat on my front steps as Natalie ran down that sidewalk, eager to reach her best friends, sisters who’d just come from their house across the street.  I watched as my happy daughter suddenly tripped on a crack and sprawled face first on the concrete, landing, fortuitously, at the feet of our dentist, the neighbor girls’ father, Lenny.

It looked worse than it was.  No broken teeth, no split lip, not even a bitten tongue.  Just a scrape and a scare, tears quickly soothed in my genial, even-tempered daughter.  An unexpected mishap, soon forgotten, one of countless more to come over the course of her childhood.

For years after my son’s diagnosis I desperately craved a road map, some clue to what was coming next.  I don’t know if I feel that way any more.  Would I have had the courage to continue, to face all that lay ahead, if I knew how often, how painfully I would fall?

Years ago my daughter and I attended a “psychic” party hosted by Natalie’s stepmother, Mary.  With no strong views on clairvoyance going in, I came out a believer: with a glimpse of my palm, Deb discerned facets of my life she couldn’t possibly have known, but did: I was an insomniac, a fledgling writer; I had another child, who did not speak, and had recently lost my father.  It was uncanny.

We visited Deb several times in the ensuing years.  She was so frequently on target that I trusted her gift, although, perhaps heedlessly, never actually based life decisions on her insights.  It was all just in fun.

Two months ago Natalie and a few girlfriends scheduled readings with Deb, and drove from Lincoln Park to Downer’s Grove on a Wednesday evening during a heavy snowstorm.  Although she’d just turned 25, I couldn’t help worrying, and sent Natalie a text about eight p.m. to make sure they weren’t stranded in a snowbank.

Undoubtedly it would have been better for both of us had I not done so.  Our texting went pretty much like this:

“Andy says driving is awful so let me know when you guys get home, OK? xo”

“I will.  Anita is finishing her reading and then Ari still has hers so it’ll be a while before we leave”

“Have you had yours?”

Yes”

“Well??”

“All positive… She sees a big move for me though in 6 months so start preparing yourself”

“Wtf?!?”

“Hahahahahahaha”

“A geographic move???” …. “Andy says ‘Maybe she’s moving back home’”

“Hahahahahahaha. Yes a geographic move.”

“Noooooooooooo! (wailing emoji face)  You can’t leave me! (wailing emoji)  Omg my life is over”

“She said you would react that way…”

“Screw that shit!”

“Oh calm down.”

“What about your work??  Your licensing???  Omg”

“Ok, you’re ruining the fun, please stop”

“Where are you going??  I’m coming with you”

“I shouldn’t have said anything to you”

(Forty-five minute break while I attempted to compose myself)

“Well still let me know when you get home please”

“I will, we’re finally heading back now”

(One hour later): “Made it safely home alive”

“Good!  Thanks for letting me know. xo”

“xoxoxoxoxoxo”

Yeah, I know.

Overreactive.  Needy.  Profane, to boot.

In the weeks since that exchange, I’ve struggled to understand my response, my utter panic at the thought of Natalie leaving the Chicago area, the seismic shift in our relationship I’ve allowed myself to imagine such a move would provoke.  My husband suggests that the changing relationship with my son makes me more sensitive to any threat to my role in Natalie’s life.

But it’s more than that.  Daniel’s disability has influenced our lives and our relationship immeasurably, but my bond with Natalie is unique.  My relationship with my daughter is one of the foundations of my life.  Losing her would be unbearable.

My mind leaps to such extremes, to all or nothing scenarios.  I imagine her taking a job on another coast, building a separate life, starting a family I’ll scarcely know.  I’ll be a part-time character in the cast of her world, cramming into rushed visits the intimacies we now routinely share.  She’ll become a whole new person as I watch, wistfully, from the sidelines.  Just as millions of moms do every day.

I don’t want to be one of those moms.

I want my daughter, near at hand, coming here on her day off to do laundry, stock up on paper towels, and store sweaters in my attic when the weather turns warm.  I want to go to Macy’s together and buy her a lipstick, to witness her reaction as she sorts through her Easter basket and finds the “Instant Weirdo Glasses” I’ve tucked inside.  I want to be a quick drive away if she gets ill, to be the one she calls when her apartment loses power for the first time.  I want to join her and Andy at the dining room table as she completes her first grown-up tax return, to trade scornful commentary while watching The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.  I want to share salads at Panera, face to face, as she describes the young man she’s dating now, her friendships, the challenges and rewards of her new career.

For years I longed to know what lies ahead.  But if what’s ahead is the loss of one ounce of what I have with my daughter, I don’t want to know.

Of course I’m not alone in these fears, the gnawing uncertainty of what life has in store.  Doubt is normal, trust in a benevolent future hard to maintain in a world so often unkind.  I miss the unguarded trust I once held, though, during the happiest days of my life: drifting along that tree-lined sidewalk with my perfect baby daughter, rich with the fullness of my world, the profound good fortune I knew, even then, I’d done nothing to earn.  When autism threw a wrench in that trust, I never fully recovered.

The future is ripe with possibility now, especially in relation to my daughter.  She is thriving and maturing and finding her own way, the very circumstances for which I’ve been hoping to lay the groundwork for years.  Since the day she was born I’ve believed that my most essential role is to help her find her own path, yet I’m afraid to succeed if it means losing a part of her.  I want her to stay with me, right here, on my side of the sidewalk.

I remember another moment on that sidewalk, when three-year-old Natalie ran toward me, laughing with joy.  Her dress billowed behind her as her bare feet slapped the pavement with quick, confident steps, her smile clear and open and sure as she came to me, and I understood then: You will never forget this moment, Kristen.  You’ll always have this moment in time.

I’m glad you aren’t afraid to run, beautiful girl.  The cracks in the sidewalk are no match for you.

And they’re no match for my love for you, the bond sealing your heart to mine.

That bond is strong enough to stretch around the world and back.

xo

New Light

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When my son was ten years old I read an essay by Chicago writer and educator Robert Hughes, “Getting to Know the Family Savant.”  He described the painful process of abandoning the “great cosmic myth of compensation”: that autistic people are automatically gifted with some extraordinary genius — a talent for music, an aptitude for languages, a startling, photographic memory.

Instead, Hughes gradually realized that his son Walker’s true gift was simpler, but no less valuable: his exuberance for life, his innate, irrepressible joy, visible “…on the face of the beaming boy himself, the knack for happiness he had then and has still.”

I was so moved by the essay that I wrote Mr. Hughes an embarrassingly long letter, thanking him for helping me recognize that, despite the devastating diagnosis of autism, my son, too, was happy; he was, in fact, the happiest person I knew.

I held that belief for a long time.  Despite his ups and downs, his extreme behaviors and outbursts, Daniel still seemed, for many years, satisfied with his life, unconcerned with what the wider world had to offer.  I consoled myself, believing he was content, secure, and confident that he was loved, that his autism even insulated him from the conflicting and messy emotions the rest of us regularly endure.

Over the last few years, though, my faith in that scenario has eroded.  As the degree and frequency of his outbursts increased, as his quirks became rigid, limiting obsessions, as the scope of his world devolved with each passing week, I began doubting that he could possibly be happy at all.  His behavior was screaming otherwise.

****

Never than in the past twelve months have I felt more powerless to help my son.  After an exhaustive search for his adult home, last January we selected a highly recommended care agency with a reputation for success with difficult behavior cases like Daniel.  As an added bonus, we knew the house director from Daniel’s previous school in Wisconsin.  Everything pointed to the positive and forward-moving experience we so wanted for our son.

Yet it didn’t materialize.  We soon recognized a pattern of erratic response from management to our questions and requests, from the very house director in which we’d placed such faith.  From home maintenance to haircuts to implementing the active and engaged lifestyle promised for Daniel, nothing panned out as planned.

His challenges became more entrenched than ever, with alarming new behaviors, like “elopement,” or bolting from the house, emerging after just a few months.  His day program, designed to provide purposeful, satisfying activity, fell through as his beverage-stealing obsession disrupted staff and clients alike.  By August he remained at home almost all the time, with little stimulation to channel his energy or the intelligence I’ve known for years he’s possessed beneath his unpredictable exterior.

No one in our family was satisfied, none of us willing to accept that this was as good as it would get for our cherished son and brother.  As parents in our situation understand all too well, however, the “obvious” solution — move him — was anything but simple.  Resources for people with Daniel’s challenges are scarce and hard to secure.

And even if we found an alternative, what impact would another move so soon have on Daniel, tearing him from the day to day caregivers whose devotion to him was never in question?  How would he react to another transition of this magnitude?  And the most haunting question of all: what if it still didn’t get better?

We’d given this agency more than a fair shot at managing Daniel’s needs, though, lending our support in every way possible. Waiting and hoping that life would improve for him there was no longer an option.

As it happened, another agency we’d seriously considered a year ago had kept in touch, their case manager checking periodically during the past twelve months on Daniel’s progress and adjustment to his new situation.  When our advocate from Wisconsin’s Department of Aging and Disability inquired in early November about Daniel’s possible transfer to their care, the case manager was enthusiastic, and immediately set the complicated application process in motion.

The ensuing weeks passed in a cascade of emails and phone conferences; discussion with the new agency and tours again of their facilities; a follow-up visit and in-person reassessment of Daniel at his current group home; and anxious, breathless days of waiting, of questioning and speculation, of daring, again, to hope that we might find the right path for our son.

In mid-December the case manager delivered the news: the new agency in Racine, an hour closer to both my husband and me, and Daniel’s father and step-mother, was willing to rearrange their current staffing and housing openings to accommodate Daniel, and offered him a place at one of their adult family homes.

They actively wanted our son.  They saw his potential, and believed they could help him achieve a fuller quality of life.

****

It’s been two and a half weeks since the bitterly cold day Daniel’s father and I said goodbye to him at his new home, a well-maintained, carefully decorated house on a quiet residential street.  His bedroom had been outfitted with new furniture, bedding, and artwork on the walls, a flat-screen TV and DVD player set up and waiting.  Staff was in place to welcome him, ready to manage whatever behaviors he threw their way, their philosophy of inclusion, of continual activity, stimulation and involvement in the community, regardless of challenges, an encouraging change from the restrictive environment Daniel had grown accustomed to in the past year.

Just hours later I received a “selfie” of Daniel and his case manager, Aaron, the man who had, in the week before the move, twice traveled an hour and a half to take Daniel on short excursions, so Daniel would know him and be more comfortable in his presence.  I couldn’t tear my gaze from that photo, Daniel’s face bearing the hint of an intrigued smile, as though he and Aaron were already sharing an adventure, something new and exciting and worth exploring.

The very next day Daniel went to an indoor water park, an activity he hasn’t enjoyed in years.  An emailed photo showed Dan waist-high in the pool, Aaron’s hand resting on his arm, guiding him, literally, through new waters with gentle, calm assurance. One week later, another pool photo: Daniel smiling broadly, confident, on his own in the pool, his face open and sparkling and alive, his eyes radiant with joy.

He’s made successful trips to restaurants, to Target and Sam’s Club and Starbucks, to a local museum; he navigated a company-wide “social” at a roller rink, only moderately distracted by the concession stand, which once would have derailed him completely.  These modest outings are huge for my son, whose compulsive behaviors had just weeks ago nearly eclipsed life outside his group home.  They are the activities we’d imagined for him, chances to discover, to grow, to be part of the larger world.

****

I approach hope sideways these days, wary now of plunging recklessly into the shimmering light of dreams, of believing too soon in the possibilities I want so desperately for my son.  The last year cured me of that, trusting in a shiny new beginning that became instead a slow-motion crash, each incremental slide more devastating than the last.

Yet there is no mistaking the new light in my son’s eyes, the expectation and curiosity that’s been missing for months.  He seems to recognize already that he’s on a new road, a different journey he is eager, now, to travel.  He is responding to staff’s repeated assurances that he is their “great guy,” their “kind guy,” their “happy guy.”

I hardly dare to believe it, but it seems to be so.

He is my happy guy again.

 

Robert Hughes responded to my letter in 2002 with a thoughtful letter of his own.  His kindness encouraged me to keep writing ever since.  His memoir about life with his son, “Running With Walker,” is available here.

One True Gift

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As the parent of a teenager learning to drive I was an utter failure.  When Natalie took the wheel I was such a basket case that she soon banned me from accompanying her.  Instead, my husband took over, guiding her on trial runs in the St. Patrick’s Church parking lot, hopeful, perhaps, that God would protect them both.

Natalie proved to be a fine driver, however, while I remained a lousy passenger and unhelpful critic, clutching the dashboard and hissing in alarm as we neared other cars.  It’s a testament to her self-confidence that Natalie learned to drive at all.

She’d had her license for several months when she offered to take Daniel for ice cream one evening.  I stood on the grass as she backed down the driveway, shouting advice and directions, gesturing like a crazed traffic cop as she veered toward our neighbor’s lawn.

“You’re not helping!” Natalie yelled out the driver’s window as she inched toward the street.

“Be careful!” I cried redundantly.

“Yeah, yeah, yeah!” she yelled back, waving me off.

“Both hands on the wheel!” I bellowed in reply. “I mean it now!”

As she shifted from reverse into drive, I observed Daniel in the passenger seat, eyes scrunched tight and hands over his ears, desperate, no doubt, to block the din of our banter.  But as I teased Natalie later, it was as though he couldn’t bear to watch as he placed his life in his sister’s hands.

Eighteen months later our mood was less jovial as we moved Daniel to a residential school an hour and a half from home.  He was fifteen years old.  Seven years ago today I let go of my son, placing his welfare in the hands of people I barely knew, relying on faith that we were doing the right thing for our cherished, special child.  It was the most painful thing I’ve ever done.

I had several months to prepare, to accept that he could no longer be educated through conventional special ed channels, or safely cared for at home.  The school we’d chosen was highly regarded, known for its success with students with behavioral issues.  We toured and met the staff, asking every question we could think of.  I talked to friends whose own son resided at the school, comforted by their positive experience.  We were as confident as we could be that we were making the best decision possible under difficult and heartbreaking circumstances.

Yet there was no real way to prepare Daniel for the life-change ahead, to explain that our actions had his best interest at heart, that we’d done everything we could and it was still not enough.  Words could not convey to our non-verbal child our profound love as we left him, in an unfamiliar place, his care now in the hands of others.  My dark fear that he’d believe we’d abandoned him almost broke me as I clung to the fragments of my tattered, trembling faith.

After Daniel’s move I rarely practiced that faith, traveling to Wisconsin most Sunday mornings to visit him.  In truth I was glad for the excuse to leave the church behind.  My parents were both gone by then, their memories filling the space they helped build before I was born, the church of my childhood now imbued with more sorrow than comfort, awash in reminders of all that was lost too soon, the old hymns and liturgies haunting in their constancy, vestiges of what I once believed invulnerable.

A few weeks ago my nephew Ted was scheduled to read scripture at that church, which he attends regularly now, and Andy and I went, too, to be with him.  It was the first time I met the new pastor, installed just six weeks earlier.

“They say ‘America’s Got Talent,’ but I beg to differ,” she joked in her sermon, noting that reality TV rarely depicts a truly useful skill, a precious gift, or a worthwhile endeavor.

“The high school teacher who makes algebra come alive—that’s talent,” she continued.  “The farmer who coaxes seed into food.  The musician who brings tears to your eyes.  The parent whose children know they are loved.”

I missed much of what came next, suddenly back seven years to the third night after we’d left Daniel in Wisconsin.

We’d spoken every day to his floor manager, Kip Kussman, whom Daniel had taken to immediately, learning of his first days without us.  So far he’d adapted remarkably, Kip told us, better than most new residents.  We’d been advised not to visit for thirty days, but Daniel was adjusting so well that Kip thought we may be able to come sooner, possibly for Christmas.

My voice broke with relief and gratitude as I thanked him.

“Daniel is going to be fine,” Kip assured me.  “He is secure in a way I don’t see very often.  This is a child who knows that he is loved.”

I doubt Kip will ever understand how much those words meant to me, that they remain the most meaningful thing I’ve ever been told.

For all the ways I felt we’d failed him, we had given Daniel that one gift.

He knew that he was loved.  He knew that we would come for him again.

It’s been a turbulent few years with my son.  I wonder sometimes if he still knows the depth of my love for him, how I treasure him despite the distance that separates us, if he remembers the love I could once demonstrate each day, waking him in the morning and seeing him to bed at night.  I wonder what my weekly visits evoke in him, if they are like the old liturgies of my childhood, stirring memories of faith once held without question, the melodies now echoing both loss and promise.

Does he know me, still?  Does he remember?  Have the seven years he’s been gone blurred his sense of me, or do I remain one thing he knows to be true, to be constant, no matter what?  He asks for me, but what is he seeking now? Does the memory of my love wound in my absence, or is it one true gift that distance cannot diminish?

I don’t know the answers for sure.  But I keep faith that he does know, that he has always known, that I am with him, that he will always, always be loved.

Farewell, dear friend

Kimball July 2012

An old friend of mine died last week, a man I hadn’t seen in 25 years until we reconnected briefly two summers ago.

Our lives went in different directions after a tumultuous relationship in my early twenties, though I’ve thought of him many times through the years.  I didn’t anticipate how deeply I’d feel this loss, as I knew he was ill, had known for weeks, in fact, that he was dying.

I was living in the city when I met him, sharing a tiny apartment above a travel agency with a sorority sister from college.  Our place had four cramped rooms, little natural light and virtually no closet space.  But at the corner of Clark Street and Belden Avenue, we were in the heart of Lincoln Park, and that’s what mattered when we were 23.

It didn’t take us long to discover Neo, the new wave, post-punk dance club just a block north on Clark, accessed through a graffiti-covered alley, a scarred metal door, and a bouncer with a couple of safety pins through his lip.

It fast became our go-to venue, close enough that we could run up the street during freezing Chicago winters without coats to worry about losing once we’d made it inside.  The music thrummed, pulsing and frenetic, driving the dancers who pitched and surged across the sunken dance floor.  The eight-foot aquarium behind the bar cast an undulating glow on the eclectic mix of habitués, patrons of the club “serving Chicago’s underground since 1979.”  We were thrilled to be a part of it.

A fight erupted one Friday night on the sidewalk in front of the club, between a guy I’d been talking to and another man, both drunk and throwing ill-timed punches as I stood by uselessly, shrieking at them to stop.

Kimball appeared from the alley then, a Neo regular I recognized from the club but had never met or spoken to.  A large man, massive, really, he moved with surprising, graceful fluidity, breaking up the flailing tussle without so much as raising his voice.  He picked a leather jacket up from the ground where it had been thrown, and gently handed it to my acquaintance, who took off down the sidewalk in humiliated rage.

I took off with Kimball.  We were together for two and a half years.

We couldn’t have been more different, he a self-described “fat Jewish kid from Skokie” with barely a high school education and no family of consequence, a Tai Chi master who wore the full-length robe of his discipline wherever he went.  He worked, at times, as a bouncer, but was often unemployed.  That didn’t matter, though: he was an artist, a painter who conjured mystical tableaus reminiscent of Salvador Dali or Hieronymous Bosch; a reader of Kafka and Ayn Rand and Mad magazine.  He was a storyteller who captivated, a listener whose attention made you believe you were the only person alive who mattered.

Everywhere we went somebody knew him, or wanted to, or pretended to.  He had a mystique, a charisma which attracted men and women alike.  Everyone wanted a piece of Kimball, had a story to tell of his exploits, his outrageousness, his larger-than-life personhood.

And I was his girlfriend, a diminutive blond from the North Shore with an expensive liberal arts degree, a new white Mustang and a 9-to-5 job at a dental association.  Insecure but hiding it, I was often called beautiful but never believed it, a girl of “privilege” desperate to claim my own place, to escape the repressive shadow of a stunning, accomplished mother who had and did it all.

Kimball offered that escape.  I didn’t realize then or care that I was simply trading one shadow for another.

It was doomed, of course.  The bond we’d fashioned from our incongruous lives was not destined to withstand the differences which drew us so compellingly to one another.  I don’t think either of us ever truly considered relinquishing enough of ourselves to accommodate the other’s expectations, our unformed yet firmly ingrained perceptions of what our real lives would be.  When it ended, undramatically, I felt more relief than sorrow.  But I never forgot him.  He was part of me, for a time, back then when I was young.

I recall one summer afternoon, near the end, when Kimball and I waited out a sudden, violent thunderstorm, huddled together inside my car as the rain pounded the roof and sluiced across the windshield, blurring the world beyond, sheltering us, for a few sacred moments, from all that waited on the other side.  Elvis Costello was crooning mournfully on the radio, and I remember the sense of melancholy I felt then, the certainty of impending loss.  Kimball held my hand and sang softly out of tune:  Alison, I know this world is killing you.  Oh, Alison, my aim is true.

He comes back to me now in snatches of memory, his broad face thrown back in laughter, his farcical antics with my roommate’s cat, his confidence, worn like armor, disguising his own scars, the detritus of a broken childhood.

And with him comes a yearning for those impetuous, unencumbered days when I was young, and still believed in limitless possibility, before I grew up and adulthood fully claimed me.  Those days when my parents were still alive, the home base I could run to; before I understood the mercurial nature of happiness, when inconsolable loss was as yet unimaginable, when I was still insulated by the arrogant gullibility of youth.

We saw each other two years ago at a reunion of Neo’s old guard, a gathering of regulars from back in the day I surprised myself by attending on a hot summer night in July.  We told each other we hadn’t changed, which in his case was true.  He was still robust, despite the disease which was slowly, inexorably taking him.

He reminded me of our attendance one Sunday morning at the church of my childhood, which I recall as a sort of last-ditch effort to find some spiritual middle ground on which we could build a future.  My mother was horrified, embarrassed by her daughter’s choice of boyfriends, and bringing him to church, no less.  Although he’d left his Tai Chi robe at home, Kimball’s blue hair was probably too much for her to publicly bear.

But Kimball was intrigued by the service, following the liturgy so familiar to me but utterly foreign to him.  He was touched by the unanticipated sincerity of those bourgeois suburbanites who welcomed him, and asked him to come back.

He told me that was the beginning, the spark that eventually brought him to God, and to a community which embraced him, and became his family.  I smile at the irony, he donning the comforting veil of faith as I suffered the loss of it, when my prayers for my son went unanswered, when I doubted so bitterly the belief I’d never had reason, before, to question.  I’m comforted now, knowing he had a doctrine meaningful to him, which, in a small way, I helped him find.

He was larger than life, larger than my life could hold.  Yet my memories of him evoke a simpler, less complicated time, an unguarded time.  We experienced that together, before the world crashed in, before I learned what I was capable of, what I could hold, when I needed to.

Farewell, dear friend.

Farewell.