It was the mid-1980s and my brother and I were visiting my
mother in Yonkers and going to the Westchester County Fair. She lived within
walking distance to Yonkers Raceway where the fair was held every year. But
this particular Saturday night my mother and I left the fair early so I could
watch the movie Beverly Hills Cop on cable
television.
We ran through the crowds at the fair and down the quieter
streets off of Central Avenue to get to the house where my mother’s apartment was.
We made it just in time.
There’s a point in the film where Eddie Murphy’s character
makes fun of the way someone says “banana in the tailpipe”
that I found uproariously funny. I perhaps laughed harder than I had every
laughed before.
From that time forward, if I was taking life too seriously
or my mother wanted me to smile in a photograph she would whisper “banana in
the tailpipe” and despite my efforts at serious, curmudgeonly dignity I would
eventually smile. She had long ago decided that life, even at its most solemn
moments, should be met with a certain levity. When I danced with her at my
wedding and she looked as if she might be overcome with emotion, I got to tell
her “banana in the tailpipe,” to keep the occasion’s needed levity.
My mother was a theater person and that’s how she and my
father met. My brother and I are proud to be descended from theater folk on
both sides of our family. My mother’s life was an extension of her love for
life upon the stage. For her life was a grand performance where she relished
every part she played and interpreted each role in her own unique way. She
lived life with the expectation of celebration and a disdain for conventions
that would get in the way.
When I learned my mother had ovarian cancer, I was hopeful.
They were doing surgery, and that’s a sign of hope for ovarian cancer, which is
often detected very late. I started planning the victory party early. We would
do the T.E.A.L. 5k Run and Walk and have
cool t-shirts made up about my mother making cancer her bitch. We’d enjoy a
jack-o-lantern show every year from then on out to make up for the one she
missed when she first became ill. Things would go back to normal, I was sure of
it.
I made the mistake that is so common; I thought I had more
time. I thought that my mother would be able to see her grandchildren at least
once more, that I could say goodbye to her in some organized way that would leave
me with no lingering regrets. I didn’t know that the last time I saw her or
spoke with her would be the last time. I don’t really remember the conversation
that well. She told me she didn’t have long to live and I believed her, but I
left that conversation thinking we had a few more weeks or even months. Two
days later I got a call from my stepfather informing me that my mother had
passed away the night before.
If there is one moment in time with my mother that I could
somehow freeze or replay forever, it would be the moment I went to the waiting
room at the hospital after our first two girls were born, and seeing my Mom as
a grandmother for the first time. I don’t know if I ever saw her happier than
at that moment. I had made her dream of becoming a grandmother come true and
she had years of happiness ahead of her as a Grandma.
While I mourn my mother’s loss and regret all that we have
lost with her, I’m comforted by the fact that our older girls were gifted with
very early memories of her and saw her almost every week of their lives until
she was diagnosed.
A few weeks ago, we held a memorial service for my mother at
Bear Mountain. Bear Mountain was a popular place for us to meet up and it was
the last place I saw my mother. Friends and family from all over came to
remember how my Mom had held a special place in their lives. I had a few
prepared remarks that I kept brief, and signed off with this:
“My mother did not believe in funerals or being memorialized
with an engraved stone. She left it up to us, her family and wider family of
friends, with the lives we live and the love we share, to create her monument.
We thank you for joining us in this.”