Adam turns 27 today. Thinking back to our conversation at Chava’s I remember him saying, “I thought cancer was supposed to be this big life-changing event. And instead everything still feels the same.”
I told him how much I liked what he said after this meditation class we went to the last time I was here. It’s a regular Monday night group that meets at the SF Zen Center, and it’s really for people in recovery. (I knew that going in but didn’t tell him, though I don’t think drugs and alcohol are his problem now, just further impediments.) The fellow who ran the group gave a good introduction to the Buddhist precepts, kind of Zen 101, and then invited the (very crowded) room to introduce themselves, saying what their affliction/affiliation was as they went.
Being SF, almost everyone was more than one thing – “Hi, I’m Joe and I’m alcoholic, addict, Al-Anon member etc.” and by the time it got to Adam, who was literally the last person in the circle, sitting by the door, he said, “Adam, stand-up comic.” I could see people looking at each other – do you need a recovery group for that? Can I get in on that?
Later that evening I told him I thought that was funny and he said, “Yeah, but I thought about it and wish I’d said, ‘Adam, Aspergers, cancer-survivor and stand-up comic.”
That’s the key, I think: Identifying with the people who survive, the ones who are still here, who look at each other with some sort of recognition. If nothing else, being in close quarters with him for the last week has convinced me he is not self destructive, that he is not headed down the dark path my father took.
He is fascinated with Dad’s story, at times; he even said something to the oncologist about how my father killed himself because of his cancer diagnosis. No, I told him later: he killed himself because he was a miserable person who compounded his fear and hatred of other people with alcohol and isolation, crippling, near-total isolation.
One night while I was here I awoke and remembered sharply, as if in a dream, a trip I took to see Dad and Marion in Mackey, Idaho. I wasn’t 30 – Bonnie and I weren’t married (though she was with me on the trip) and Dad and I were friendly enough to have got invited to Idaho, where he and Marion had bought a bar in the god-forsaken little cattle town of Mackey, 30 miles from Nowhere.
Except when we arrived at the airport in Pocatello and called them, Marion answered and was very alarmed to hear we were there. This wasn’t a good time, she said – health concerns, your father had a “little stroke.” But after some whining on my part she told us to come on over.
It was a weird weekend. I remember despite Dad having had a “stroke” (of which there was no physical evidence) he was up at seven am, chopping wood outside our window. I think they were both wishing we would go away, and one afternoon Bon and I went into the moonscape hills outside of town and took mushrooms. I remember driving back and through a herd of cattle, a cowboy on a motorcycle waving us through.
Sitting in the bar that night I saw Dad behind the bar, not a position he was not born to. He didn’t like most people, and his customers were few and sullen. (I remember one old cowboy asking me what I did in San Francisco, and when I told him I worked in a bookstore he looked at me like I’d said I molested small children.)
We left, finally, the next day. Dad took us to the airport and remember a testy time in the airport lounge, waiting for the plane. B said something about how, for being a writer, I never spent much time actually writing, and I remember flipping her the bird. My father was shocked – gentlemen did not do that to ladies, I guess. “Why don’t you have a drink?” he said. “That might cheer you up.”
And look how well that worked for him!
But why was I remembering all this now, in vibrant color and detail? I think because I understood, all these years later, that he had not had a stroke at all but had made an attempt on his life, or was certainly headed that way. “I’m in the slough of despond,” was the most he ever said about it, and Marion was under strict orders to not speak of such matters. But I think, in old-fashioned terms, he was having a nervous breakdown: He had left his job teaching, sold his house, sunk what money had into running a business he was completely unprepared for in a town that didn’t want him in a land that looked like a bombing field. And he didn’t see any way out.