You should know this first of all. I never fantasized about my mother when I was a teenager. I never spent mornings stroking myself in bed with her in mind. Nor did she ever walk in on me accidentally -- I knew how to lock a bedroom door. I never rummaged through the dirty clothes to sniff her panties.
Your mother may stroll the house in little more than a tee-shirt and thong. My mother was completely dressed by 7 a.m., or in pajamas from neck to ankle. Let me be candid. During my teen years, not once did I see her even partially naked. She never left the bedroom or bathroom door ajar. Never.
Your mother may be a 35-year-old blonde bombshell, a Pilate-obsessed gym rat who looks 10 years younger. If so, your friends no doubt drool over her voluminous breasts, especially when she wears that trashy micro-kini while tanning beside your backyard pool. We don't have a pool. And my mother's swimsuit is stylish but very modest, her shorts, even her summer dresses, reaching almost to her knees.
So, there would be no story for me to tell had it not been for a return home during my final summer vacation in college. Previous summers had been spent away, on sweaty, low-paying temp jobs. This last stint at home was to be spent writing resumes and lining up interviews for life after graduation. I had my eyes on some kind of job far away, maybe the west coast.
But as John Lennon once wrote: "Life is what happens to you while you are busy making other plans."
Life was about to get in my way.
* * *
In those first few weeks home, I made myself scarce, didn't want to have to hang out with the folks. They were boring. Too quiet. They never did anything anymore. To avoid them, I made constant plans to head out with friends. Such was the agenda one day in early June.
My mother was sitting in the small sun room at the back of our house as I walked past, my car keys and sunglasses in hand, ready to leave. This was her favorite place, her refuge. Quiet, sunlit, warm. Her gaze was out the window at our small patio flower garden, which she brings to life each spring, while on her knees, trowel in hand.
She looked at me. "I'll have dinner ready at 7."
I left, drove a half dozen blocks, turned the car around. Her smile wasn't there. Something else. I couldn't put my finger on it. Something wrong. I went back home, into the sun room. Leaned down on one knee beside her chair. We looked at each other. She knew I could tell.
"Michael, I have cancer," she said, softly but straightforward. "Breast cancer." We both stood up, I held her in my arms and we cried together. She grew weak, could hardly stand. I picked her up in my arms and sat on the sun room sofa, she in my lap, head against my shoulder, arms around each other. We stayed there for two hours. "Where's Dad?" I asked at one point.
"He can't take things like this," Mom said. "We both know your father." Yes. As heavy-handed and stern as he could be at his small accounting firm, at home he avoided conflict or any emotional involvement. In truth, a coward. He knew about this but went on to work. She insisted. Said it was a small thing. Not to worry. For her, it was a relief that he did.
You can see why my father figured little into this. There was a time when the three of us -- I'm an only child -- would vacation at the beach, backpack down the zigzag trails of the Grand Canyon or spend a week in New York traipsing from one Broadway theater to the next. Now he just watched TV at night, puttered in the yard on weekends, played poker with his pals each Thursday. He grew older than his years, gained weight and looked tired. Their marriage, if I had to guess, was like so many others over time: worn out. They went through the motions, each with their own lives. At least, that's my take on it.
Sitting there, with her, may have been the first time in years that we held each other. It certainly was the first time she curled up in my lap. With her knees pulled up, I reached down below her skirt and massaged her legs, then her feet as she filled in the details of her illness, her sandals dropping to the floor.
Her name is Mary. Mary Armstrong. She was 54 then. Slender. Brunette. A fascinating face. All cheek bones. An unusual, modest smile. Large brown doe-like eyes. From my point of view, beautiful. Also, quiet, thoughtful, reflective. But don't confuse that with being shy or unintelligent. She speaks when she has something to say. For years, after earning her Ph.D., she taught quantum physics at the university graduate level. She retired to write poetry. Some of it has been published.
I can't express how much I liked holding her in my lap. Our bodies fit perfectly into each other. And it had been forever since I smelled her perfume or her hair. "This feels good, Michael," she said. When dad pulled in the driveway, we got up, she smoothing down her skirt and adjusting her rumpled blouse.
I drove us to her oncologist appointment the following day where she was told a lumpectomy might suffice. Worst case, they would have to take her left breast. They wouldn't know until they were headlong into the operation itself.
She held up well during that conversation. Stoic. No tears. Just the facts. Surgery in two days. We drove home. She took my hand, walked us into the sun room, turned on Frank Sinatra -- her favorite singer -- and motioned me to the sofa. Again she curled up in my lap. No crying this time. We had cried it all out. Just talking and quietness.
She brought her hand up and cupped her left breast through her white blouse. "It's hard for me to believe," she said, "that by the weekend I may not have one of these puppies any more."
She smiled that modest smile. I laughed out loud. I'm sorry, I just couldn't help it. Never would I have imagined my mother referring to her breasts as "puppies." She lightly massaged her breast for a moment, before putting her hand down in her lap.
I don't know why I did what I did. It's totally unexplainable. Inexcusable. But I then lifted my own hand and gently cupped her breast. Even massaged it a little. It fit perfectly in my hand. She said nothing.
I was embarrassed, put my hand down. "I'm sorry. Mom. I shouldn't have done that." She reached for my hand and put it back.
"I'd rather you than anyone else."
I caressed her breast through her blouse and bra. I felt her nipple get hard, squeezed it gently with my fingers. Her head was on my shoulder, eyes closed. I think it soothed her.
You may not believe me, but this wasn't about sex. It was, as I realized only later, about intimacy. My mother, a very private person, was sharing this very private matter with me. Crying with me, talking with me as she would with no one else. She chose me over her girlfriends, even over her own sister. She wanted closeness with me. I was only 22, but even I could see the gift she was offering. For the first time in my adult life, I wanted that same closeness with her.
We held similar feelings years before, but lost them. As a kid, our relationship was special. I was her child, of course, and she babied me enough, but more than not she approached me with respect, as one adult to another. No talking down to me, always including me in adult conversations, letting me drink a little wine at the dinner table when I was still in elementary school. She taught me how to cook, beginning with pancakes on Sunday mornings. I'm quite good at it now.
By my early teens, she turned to me as her date for social events when Dad would no longer budge from his sofa. And she was embarrassingly frank in explaining sex to me. She spent hours telling me what it is to be "a woman." That alone was worth more than my college degree. I was her son, but also her friend. That is until I rebelled as a teenager, determined to go down my own path. I paid a terrible price in those years, losing perhaps my best friend as I distanced myself from her. She, of course, accepted it gracefully and without complaint.
We knew each other well back then, which is why, seeing her sitting in the sun room, I had sensed something wrong. You see, we're both on the same page. Kindred spirits.
"You know, Michael," she said, while sitting on my lap, "There's a great irony here. My breasts are the one part of my body I've always liked, the only thing I really admire about myself in the mirror. They're too small to attract most men, I guess. But they suit me. There's a heaviness to them. I've always thought they were quite pretty, in their own small way."
She sat up, turned to me, and straightened her back stiffly to show them off. "See. They look good on me. They're the best part of me." She was being part silly, part serious.
And once again, I did something that made no sense to me, made me feel like a fool. I said, "Can I see your breast?"
She gave me a gentle smile, ran her fingers through my hair, and closed her eyes as if deep in thought. I remembered her doing that a lot when I was younger, always asking her some weird or hard-to-answer question that made her pause, muss my hair and shut her eyes, contemplating how to respond. You see, I was an inquisitive kid. She taught me to be.
She looked down at her breasts and slowly began unbuttoning her blouse. She let it fall off her shoulders. Then slipped off her bra, lifted her head to my eyes. And then that slight smile again.