My Father’s Hands

Yesterday was my father’s birthday.  It has been many years since he passed away but there is hardly a day that goes by that I don’t remember him–and miss him.  It may be part of the reason I am so attached to that bit of land up in Northern Minnesota.  I can remember so many times driving those last thirty miles toward home after I moved to South Dakota.  And all I could think about when covering those final miles was that I would drive up in front of the house and my father would come out of the door, draw me into his arms, and kiss me on the lips.  That images is totally engraved on those northern acres.  Today many would think it weird to be kissed on the lips by their father, but all of my siblings kiss each other that way–even the sisters sometimes.  And having one of my brother’s smack me on the lips is almost like having dad back.  Oh, I miss him.  I am sure it is from him that most of my siblings and I got this crazy creative gene.   We all have more ideas in an hour than some have in a lifetime.   Of course, it makes us a little crazy and hard to live with, but . . .

Below is a piece I wrote about a year after my father died.  I’d had a dream and just followed it.  

Jamie

My Father’s Hands 

 

Last night I dreamed my father gave me a beaded bag with trails of heart-shaped beads wandering across the pale cloth.  Something in my soul wants to finger the trail of beads to discover what he meant by this gift.  Does he mean follow this trail, my darling girl, the trail that is both made of the heart and leads to the heart? 

So many books about mothers and daughters, fathers and sons-but what of the daughter caught by a golden thread to her father’s soul?  What of that child? 

I see a grown woman, a grandmother now, who looks down at her own stubby fingers one day and sees her father’s hands.  They are not the hands of a piano player or a dancer but the sturdy hands of labor, of getting things done, of endurance and strength.  She remembers his hands in one scene and then another: tying her skates in winter, sketching the walls of his new house, or solving an intricate problem on paper as if each blunt fingertip had its very own brain and only when his hands moved could he think. 

She remembers the warmth and strength of his hands as he kneaded the calves of her legs late in the night when growing pains hurt badly enough to wake her up crying.  She sees his hands holding cards in a favorite game of whist or bridge or gently patting the shoulder of a friend he meets on the street.  She sees his two hands resting on a steering wheel while driving to Grandma’s house or holding the very edges of the Sunday paper after church, a plate of powdered-sugar donuts hidden on the other side of the news.  She remembers the way her father’s hands would pick up her needlepoint project and run the yarn through six rows tugging just a little too tightly so that she could always see in the tapestry of the finished work, his rows beside her own.

It is his hands she sees holding the Louis L’Amour book late in the evening letting go only to take a sip of the beer warming on the side table, his hands building two of their houses to shelter those he loved most, his hands fashioning the ugliest boat ever out  of wood and plank, his hands turning wood, twisting metal, picking berries and then building a special screen to roll the berries down to clean them.

She sees his hands playfully slapping her mother’s backside or holding her against the fridge to steal a kiss, and his hands wielding the razor that plowed a smooth path across his lathered chin while she, sitting on the closed lid of the toilet, waitied for the moment when he would turn and growl and try to kiss her cheek like a rabid dog until she screamed and ran out of the bathroom giggling. 

All of this she sees in an instant when she looks down and sees her  own square hands, so sturdy and strong. 

And then she sees his hands, swollen and bruised, a blueberry stain on the back where the IV had kept him alive for three more minutes, five more minutes, and then that last and final breath, of death.  And then he was gone, living on in the short fingers of her own hands that crack in the winter just like his did. 

 Note:  My father married on June 18, had the first of eight children on June 18, and died on June 18.  It was Father’s Day on the day he passed on.)

The Other Great Love of My Life

 I was wandering through old journal writings tonight and came across this one.  I am thinking of spring coming and planting berries on our new piece of land–and wishing my parents were still there and feeling nostalgic.  So I share this post with you.  A “timed writing” is just practice where anything goes.

jl

July 30, 1992–timed writing

I remember the low-bush look on the forest floor and me kneeling or crouching, sitting where the berries dance heavy all around and I can pick sitting down, my fingers bluing with time like my grandma’s hair.  I remember the feeling of berries rolling from their ripe, loose hold on the low bush and dropping into my hand and the tiniest sound of berries dropping into the bucket. 

The forest makes sounds.  It buzzes, sometimes too near-and even with sleeves and jeans and scarf, the mosquitoes find my skin and bite down like my own teeth into berries.  Juice, blood red, blue, and tiny pale green leaves that land amidst the berries like green lace.  “Mom?”  I call out.  She murmurs, still near-even a hundred years later, still near.

And the blue blush of my father’s face in the hospital bed.  Why did he die on their anniversary?  Why not sooner?  Later?  His face was plumped and his skin loose and cool like berries gone too long on a bush.  He didn’t like to pick berries.  Only mom and I liked the soft prayer of a berry patch, the pull of muscles too long bent over, and the contagious quiet that always left us with little to say.  “Mom?”  “Here.”  “Okay.”

She cried when he died.  Even with her tears and soft choking voice she leaned near him and told him, “It’s okay, it’s okay for you to go now.  I’ll be alright.  Really I will.”  She kissed his cheek, and stroked the hand that hosted the IV needle in his blueberry stained skin.

How I loved picking blueberries.  And my father.  The forest knew my name–would give me songs to sing and wind so sweet with green smells that I would stop, small animal, and sniff. 

My father knew my name.  I remember his soft hand with its short fingers walking through my hair as he threatened to kiss me with his face all white with shaving cream and me sitting, legs swinging, sitting on the stool watching him shave.

Later, I couldn’t take my eyes off his hands, so still on the bed.  I was glad he was unconscious.  I kissed his fingers, touched the blueberry mark softly.  I put his fingers to my eyes so his heart could feel my tears.  Salt.  Sweet.  Sweet love filling my bucket.

Dad liked to fish.

I don’t remember when we drew apart, what blue water flowed cool between us and made it so difficult to say I love you.  I need to know your thoughts, your inner yearnings.  Talk to me, Dad.  I don’t remember what went by or past or when.  A decade snapped its fingers and then another and soon I was not six or sixteen but thirty-six and I watched with envy as my little girl, Lisa slipped quietly into my seat in his heart.  A child is so easy to love.  Curtains of age hid him from me but flew open at the sight of my own child, so like me-but not me-in his arms.

Not anymore.  I never wanted to remember the ache gathering at the base of my skull that made me want to draw my body up tight and small and have him lay his fingers in my hair and stroke and one more time call me, “Pappy”.  Now, I never want to forget.