June
30, 2005
Thursday
A word of advice
to the home-alone husband, on what not to say to his wife who has been
on an aircraft or in one airport or another for 11 hours and has just
called to say that her flight out of Chicago will be delayed another
two hours:
"Oh, by the way, the garbage disposal broke. I don't really use it that
much. I don't think we need to replace it."
I got back from my odyssey to Wyoming* some time after midnight last
night, but my body had finally adjusted to the time difference, and I
felt as if it might only be ten or so. Of course that would be a ten
p.m. after a wearying day. I wasn't so much ready to leave Wyoming as I
was ready to be at home again, and I spent several hours reacclimating
myself to my familiar surroundings. I reinstalled my computer in my
study, found a box for all the picture packs and maps and brochures I'd
picked up along the way, determining to create a scrapbook of my trip
before I leave for Vermont in mid-August. It was past two when I went
to bed, but I got up before seven when Lynn did.
So it was in an early morning more humid than I've been experiencing
that I opened the newspaper and learned that the Class of '65 of Bishop
McDevitt High School would be burying its third member this month. (The
other two had both had chronic illnesses. One died a few days before I
left, the other I learned about while I was away.)
Thomas "Bubbles" Williams and I sat near each other in homeroom all
four years of our high school life. He was a jolly, energetic kid who
always had a smile and a good word even for me. I was shy and uncertain
in those days (in a lot of ways I still am). A lot of people claim that
they experienced high school as a living hell where their real selves
were squashed by unimaginative teachers and their true personalities
vitiated by the ridicule of the popular kids. I still say that high
school saved my life, that it was the support and acceptance of my
teachers and my peers that gave me what I was not getting elsewhere.
Bubs was among those whose care of me remains a cherished memory.
Bubs became an elementary teacher and worked for a long time in the
city schools. My last memory of him is as master of ceremonies and
general cheermonger at our reunion in 1980.
But that was twenty-five years ago. Had I seen him since then? I
certainly hadn't called him nor written to him nor invited him to any
of my gala Christmas parties. Had his name come up in planning for last
fall's reunion extravaganza? Why was I so gripped by a sense of loss at
opening the newspaper to discover that he'd left us much, much too soon?
I arrived at the funeral service with my head still back in Wyoming. I
hadn't fully recovered from the trip, and I felt as if I had one foot
on a cool mountain slope above a rippling sea of grass in the Tetons
and one in congested and steamy Harrisburg. I saw a lot of classmates.
He had cancer, I heard. Someone remarked that she'd seen him a few
months backed and he looked ghastly, a thin shell of his robust self.
The pictures and memorabilia on display in the narthex showed be the
Bubbles I remembered.
Bubs had never married, but he had nieces and nephews who seemed
overcome at their loss. His father was there in a wheelchair. His
mother was too infirm to come. This was the second adult child they
were burying. That just shouldn't happen.
Even though the burial was in the cemetery across the street from the
church I didn't go. It was just too hot and suddenly I felt too worn
out. At home I got out the yearbook. "To Margy," he'd written, "a real
sweet girl. Remember homeroom and P.O.D.** and maybe me."
My sweet classmate has passed into memory. I wish I'd paid more
attention to him, told him that he was part of a past I value more the
more I move away from it. My long dreamed of trip to Wyoming has passed
into memory as well. I can't stop to mourn either. Instead I move into
the future, ready for the next big thing.
*****
*Essays chronicling the odyssey to Wyoming can be found at my Typepad
site, Enormous Moments,
beginning with
" On
the Loose."
**Problems of Democracy, what the state-mandated
civics class for seniors was called back in the day.
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