Fair warning:
There's (almost) no sex in this sex in this story.
*****
My Dad shot himself when I was eight years old.
Felt like I had to get that out there.
When I look back, and try to gauge how much loss I felt at the death of my father, I find myself reluctantly thinking that the loss wasn't that great. In many ways we had already been losing him, even when he was still with us.
My memories of my Dad are of a man who was stepping backwards from life; stepping away from me and my mom. He was reluctant to take part in things like trips to the beach, birthday parties, Christmas mornings. I think - looking back now at the age of 24 - he had been losing himself for a while. And finally lost himself entirely.
So maybe - as far as how much loss I felt - maybe I'd been preparing myself for his loss already? And when he eventually took his own life, maybe I expected it.
So the loss - I don't remember my 8 year old self being overwhelmed by grief.
And if there was grief, there was also, very soon, Ben.
I
My best friend, from Kindergarten and all the way through elementary and secondary school, was Sarah. Sarah's parents were Donna and Ben. When my Dad committed suicide, Donna and my mom, I don't know, did they make an agreement about bringing our families closer together? Donna and Ben bundling mom and me into their family? Probably not, but that is essentially what happened. My memories of my childhood seem to be as full of memories of Sarah's house, and her parents, as they are of me and mom's house.
If I close my eyes, and think of being in the back seat of a car, it's the back seat of Ben's car, with Sarah on the seat beside me. The two of us laughing and looking at books together.
If I think of dance classes, trips for ice cream, trips to Bradford Beach, it's Ben's car, and some combination of me and Sarah, Ben and Donna, and my mom Heather all in that car.
Ben's eyes, his face, looking back at us through the rear-view mirror.
I can remember all of that so well. Close my eyes and lift a leg and stretch my toes, and I'm touching the back of Ben's seat as he drove us somewhere.
Smiling at him, making a face, seeing his eyes twinkle in the rear-view mirror.
As the years passed, as I hit the tweens and early teens, it became increasingly common for it to just be me and Ben in the car. Ben was outdoorsy and sporty, while his wife Donna leaned towards crafts, and working with her hands. Sarah began to spend more time her mom, and since I had come to love running and swimming, I spent more time with Ben. So car rides - trips to swim meets, trips home from a highschool track meet - that came to be time I spent alone with Ben. And, in many ways, Ben gave that part of my world to me. The Natalie I am today - the girl who loves running, who got a lacrosse scholarship at U.Minnesota - Ben raised that girl.
Summer mornings on the Oak Leaf Trail. Doing 5km on weekday mornings before he had to go to work. Maybe doing 10km on Saturday or Sunday. That was me and Ben.
Donna and Ben's cottage. Cooking dinner on the barbeque. After dinner Sarah and Donna would often go inside to read and escape the mosquitoes, and Ben and I would push the canoe out onto the lake. The soft shush of the paddles in the water as we canoed out into the sunset. When we rested, and let the canoe drift, I would set the paddle down across the gunwhales, and listen to the soft plops of water fall from the paddle into the smooth lake. The summer day fading away as we drifted silently. That was me and Ben.
I called him "Ben" all those years.
Once in a while, mainly when I was younger, "daddy" escaped my lips. I can remember most of those moments quite distinctly. The flush of embarrassment hearing that word escape my lips and then Ben, the gentleman, smiling and continuing the conversation as though nothing had happened.
He just called me by my name. Natalie.
We were so much a part of each other's lives though, and maybe I was so much underfoot, that he'd jumble up my name and Sarah's name sometimes. "Sarah, I mean Natalie, please put that apple core in the compost", or "Natalie, I mean Sarah, are you going to close the fridge door?"
Damn. I'm 24, and in Oregon as I write these words, but I can still see that kitchen. I can see Ben puttering about doing 15 different things, with me and Sarah underfoot, NPR on the radio, Sarah's mom perhaps off to work already.
An apple on the kitchen island. Morning sunshine beaming through the window.
Am I romanticizing those years? Were they really that good?
In my memory, those mornings, they shimmer. They glow.
Part II
My mom didn't really date after Dad's death. I think she was overcome with both grief and guilt, and it made her forget about men for many years. She went to counselling, but if it had any effect it was hard to see. She became withdrawn - not as badly as my Dad had been - but she wasn't dating, and she wasn't out on the town being social and meeting friends either. But then, through someone at work, she met Kevin.