It was March 26, 1985, a Tuesday. I left my job on West 57th Street at lunch time and walked 19 blocks north. All the way, my stomach did double flips. I found the building I sought and pressed the doorbell, 4D. I waited. There came a voice. “Who is it?” I looked around before I answered, and then said my name. The door clicked in release and I dove for it. There is a short window of opportunity with those buzzers. Inside, I found the elevator and pressed 4. It moved very slowly. When the doors creaked open, I stepped out and looked to the door on the left. 4D. Whew. Easy, I thought. I pressed the buzzer. My stomach had moved on to triple flips. “Yes?” called the voice. Damn…. I’m going to be forced to announce myself again. I hated saying my name. The voice instructed me to go to the other door. There was another entrance? Silently I cursed my friend – the one who’d referred me to this voice – she could have made this easier with better instructions.
The voice opened the other door. Attached to the voice was a solid woman about my height with large brown eyes and short, straight blonde hair that hung not quite to her shoulders. She led me a few steps to her office, and closed the door behind us. Inside the office on the left against a wall of book was a couch that looked like it might have belonged to Freud and a chair. Across the room on the opposite wall was another “normal” couch. She headed for the chair at the head of Freud’s couch. I made a beeline for the normal couch across the room. I sat probably 10 feet away from her with a wide expanse of rug between us.
Now what? “What brings you here?” asked the voice. I took a deep breath and the words came tumbling out. “There’s this guy,” I started. I did not stop for 50 minutes. I was crazy, madly in love with “this guy.” But this guy was not crazy, madly in love with me. I wasn’t whimsical enough. (To this day, I wince when I hear that word.) I was too much like him – serious, responsible. He wanted his opposite. Nobody specific – there was no competition at the moment – but he hadn’t met her yet. Not that he didn’t “love” me in a way. Just not the way I desperately wanted. Yes, we were sleeping together. But for him, it was just a fun thing to do with a good friend. He was crystal clear about that. But I chose to believe his actions and not his words because his actions gave me hope…. a reason to think that there might be a chance I could morph into someone else.
I told her the whole story of how I’d met him at school, how we made films together, how he’d urged me to move to NYC a year before, found me a place to stay with his then-girlfriend, referred me for a job that he knew about, about how I’d moved in with him when the girlfriend broke up with him (crazy girl, lucky me), and how I was now living in an illegal attic apartment in Brooklyn. About how attached I was to him, how he made me laugh, how handsome I thought he was, how he made me look beautiful on film (he had magical powers), how the deep sobs rose from my toes and could not be stopped whenever the conversation turned to our (lack of) future together. All the while, she just sat and listened to what must have seemed like the presentation of a person in the grips of mania. I finally stopped and took another breath. Oh yeah, I continued, and there’s my daughter. I have a daughter. She’s 7 and she’s living with a family – they’re friends – in Queens. This was another huge situation in my life I couldn’t seem to get a grip on.
“We have to stop now,” the voice said. We discussed money. I had none. She asked me what I could manage and I told her. The deal was made, and I was shown the door. “I’m sorry that I talked so much,” I said. “I was afraid I wouldn’t have time to tell you everything.” She smiled just slightly. “I was wondering why you were in such a hurry,” she said. “You know, we have forever together.”
Being that I was never mentally where I was physically located at that point in my life, it didn’t sink in until later. Then I thought – what a curious thing to say—we have forever together. What did she mean by that? Forever was a concept I didn’t quite “get”. Forever implied – well, a long life. Just a week before, I had stood in line at my bank waiting to open my first IRA as a defensive maneuver. The bookkeeper at my job had roughed out my taxes for me and due to accidental under-withholding my first year in NYC, I was going to owe the government money. I was terrified. I only had about $2000 to my name and the bookkeeper had suggested an IRA as a way to solve my problem. The line at the bank moved very slowly and I was having an out-of-body experience. I was not quite 32 years old. I would not have access to my $2000 again for close to 28 years. This was both stunning and sobering to me because I realized that I had not anticipated living that long. Opening an IRA was like a commitment to living. I wasn’t so sure it was possible.
When I returned to my office after the appointment, I realized I had forgotten to tell her that I wouldn’t be there the following week because I would be out of town. But I was “phone phobic.” I could not possibly call her to tell her so. The words would get glued together before exiting my mouth. I did the only sensible thing. I sent her a letter to tell her.
Two weeks later, I returned to her office. “What happened last week?” asked the voice. I panicked. “Didn’t you get my letter?” I did not want her to think I was irresponsible, that I would do such a thing as just not show up. “Yes, I did,” she said. She went on to tell me that she had been concerned because she was going away the following week for two weeks, and she had wanted to be able to tell me this the week I wasn’t there. She said she didn’t know how I would feel about such short notice. “It’s ok,” I said. Again, I was curious – why would she think I would have feelings about short notice? It would be fine for her to be gone, I wouldn’t notice the difference. Have a good time, I said.
Well, that was for sure the last time that she would go away without me caring. “The voice” became the woman I call my ‘heart mother.’ [Not that I didn’t have a perfectly wonderful real mother but this was different.] She moved into not only my heart, but every cell of my body. It is largely because of her that I made it to the age when I could officially get my $2000 back.
My heart mother will turn 70 on Tuesday this week. I honor her and I thank her. And I’m still counting on her to keep her promise – that we will have forever together. Somehow.
Another beautiful and powerful piece! Thanks for sharing and Happy Birthday to this very special woman!
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