Chapter 1. Reckoning
My grandmother on my mom's side, Lydia Lane, was crazy about the Beatles and anything from the 1960s. She wore tie-dyed shirts, oversized round glasses, and had long blonde hair usually adorned with beads. She was like a time traveler who refused to conform to the era where she'd landed.
She met my grandfather at a Beatles tribute band concert after high school. He was tall with long hair, earrings, a full beard, and a big smile. To hear Mom tell the story, it was love at first site.
When my mother was born, it was obvious to these two Beatles fans that she should be named "Penny Lane." It seemed like hippy-bliss, but those feelings passed as the reality of dirty diapers and 3:00 AM feedings "wasn't his scene." My grandfather departed for California, never to be seen again.
My mother was raised by her grandmother. Her mother, young, idealistic, and with a touch of wanderlust, slowly faded into the background until she declared that she, too, would be going to California to pursue whatever was left of the 1960s, Haight-Ashbury, and free love.
In that trio of mom, her mother, and her grandmother, mom was the serious one, the responsible one, and the one determined to break this cycle of abandonment. She graduated from High School as Salutatorian, pulled together enough money and scholarships for college, and left home. But the circle was not so easily broken.
Mom met a wealthy man late in her first year. He was tall, good-looking, and charming, sweeping her off her feet. They were married that fall, and I arrived soon thereafter. But domestic life wasn't for my father, and his family, against the marriage to a "poor commoner," applied so much pressure to dissolve the marriage and erase the mistake that a divorce with an enormous monetary settlement was soon arranged. When asked why she didn't push back, Mom said, "I didn't want to be married to a man that didn't love me." To scrub the abandonment from her life, she scrubbed it from her name, dropping both her married name and her father's last name. She took her mother's maiden name to become simply "Penny Lane."
My childhood was bumpy. Mom did her best, but I was a terror. I'm so ashamed of those years. Looking back, most of those problems were my fault, and I'm not even sure why I acted out as I did. We were financially secure, Mom loved me with all her heart, and I wanted for nothing. To this day, I don't understand myself.
Even with me being as I was, Mom continued to press on. She returned to college when I was ten years old. Her interest in biology, medicine, and biochemistry had only grown since she had married and dropped out. While my grades were mediocre, hers were stellar. She juggled housework, laundry, meals, coursework, labs, and me with finesse, understanding, and love. She was a marvel.
Those two things, her love and decency and my complete lack of it had to collide at some point. That moment was after midnight at the end of a week when I had been especially bratty. Shame, regret, and near despair descended as I lay in the darkness. Each memory of a selfish act or failure stabbed me in the heart. What have I done with my life? What have I done to this amazing woman who gave of herself so much to raise me? I cried that night, first for myself and then for my poor mother, who had suffered from her ungrateful child. When my tears finally dried, I sat up and pulled my knees to my chest. I can't erase my mistakes, but I can begin anew. I swore to myself I'd do better.
Saturday morning followed my night of reflection. When I arrived in the kitchen, Mom was sipping coffee at the table and scrolling through her phone, and she smiled as I entered.
"Can I make you something? I'm going to have an egg," I said.
Mom looked confused. "You want me to make you breakfast?"
This was the first time I'd ever offered to help in the kitchen, so her confusion was understandable. I knew how to cook but never offered to cook for her. It was another red mark in my ledger.
"No. I'm making breakfast for both of us," I said. "Would you like an egg or something else?"
Mom tilted her head and squinted a bit. "Toast?"
I started the eggs and loaded the toaster before grabbing plates and a glass of orange juice.
"OJ?" I asked.
Mom shook her head, clearly off-balance.
After a glance at her coffee mug, I said, "Let me top that off for you."
I refilled the mug and said, "That's it for this pot. Should I start another?"
"No, thank you," she said. "I need to go to the library."
The eggs were done, the toast popped, and I filled the plates. A quick dab of margarine and breakfast was presented.
She picked up her fork, then put it down. "Jason? What's going on?"
It was time. I took a deep breath, closed my eyes, and tried to relax my neck. It had been a very long, sad, terrifying, depressing, and horrible night. When I finally looked up and looked into her eyes, she tensed.
"Jason! Why are your eyes so bloodshot?"
Her hands were on the table, which made the next bit easier. I reached for her hand and held it. There was no point in being coy. I had things to tell her and didn't want to drag it out.
"Mom, I owe you an apology. The biggest apology I can make. I'm so sorry," I said.
I felt Mom's hand squeeze mine. She might have even been shaking.
"What happened? What have you done?" She asked.
Another deep breath. "I've been horrible. I don't know how it happened, but I've been angry, spiteful, and mean for no reason. I've been a brat. I've treated you horribly. And it's so unfair. We have a great life. You're an amazing mom. And I love you. I don't say that enough, but you should hear it. I love you, Mom. And I'm so very, very sorry."
She was quiet for a time. Then she squeezed my hand again.
"That doesn't explain why your eyes are red," she said.
You've got to love the focus of this woman. I put my other hand on top of our clasped hands.
"I've been thinking a lot lately, and it all came to a head last night. I'm so angry and disappointed in myself. I spent half the night crying," I said. "Please don't say anything. That was hard to admit."
I lightly rubbed her wrist, then released her hand. I sat back in my chair and folded my arms across my chest. We learned in school that this was a defensive body language posture, and I thought: yup, that seems about right.
"Thank you for saying those things. I love you very much," she said. "I'm sure I could have done better—"
"No," I said. "No. You are amazing. This is on me. And because it's on me, I have the power to fix it—and I'm going to. You've done nothing wrong. You stuck by me while I was having a multiyear meltdown, and, honestly, I don't know how you put up with me."
Her eyes were locked on mine, and I continued. "I love you, Mom. Things will be different around here, better, but I will need your help with some things."
"Name it," she said.
I rolled my eyes a bit, embarrassed with this next part. "I know you've shown me the laundry stuff before, but I could use a refresher. I'll start doing my bedding, towels, jeans, shirts, and whites. I'm nervous I'd goof up your stuff, so I'm not offering yet. But, if you want to throw your towels in with mine, I can probably be trusted not to botch that too badly."
She smiled and relaxed a bit. "OK. We can start a load after breakfast." Then she looked serious again. "Are you sure there isn't something else I should know?"
It was such a relief to get this off my chest that I felt like joking again. What a wonder she is, how she can put me so at ease.
"Look," I said. "I can assure you that I'm not on drugs, haven't murdered anyone, and I'm not pregnant."