Typical ’80s life took over once my life ‘normalized.’ I watched cartoons on Saturday mornings. I watched Murder, She Wrote and Matlock with my grandmother. We watched Wheel of Fortune as a family. Sunday was reserved for football and sitting on the couch next to my dad watching our favorite teams has always been my second most favorite place in the world. Sitting in the woods, watching for deer, listening for the familiar crunch of leaves, smelling all the fresh smells of fall in the air and savoring every bite of my grandmother’s turkey and cranberry sandwiches is probably my favorite of all time. Both places live only in my memories now. But they’re good ones to fill that space with.
I remember the first time I took the D.A.R.E. pledge. I raised my hand. Ready to tell my personal story of how drugs are bad and how they took my mother, and almost my father, away from me. I wanted to share this experience – not because I was an early adopter of great behavior and wanted everyone to understand the negative consequences of such choices – but for two really important other reasons. First, I wanted to be heard. I wanted to feel like what happened to me had some meaning. Even at the age of 10, this seemed like what I needed. To have purpose. Second, I didn’t want to be the only one. I knew, I just knew deep down inside of me, that I wasn’t the only kid in that room that had experienced life like I had. I had been to enough Al-anon meetings that I was sure of it. I glanced around the room. I waited for my friends to make eye contact. I longed for the ‘me, too’ grumbles. They didn’t come. I sat alone in the space of having shared too much with too many, way too quickly. HOLY FORESHADOWING. That was a character flaw (trait? blessing?) that wasn’t identified until much later in life.
Normalcy, as much as possible, is what it seemed my dad was aiming for with our little family. He worked so much. He re-married. We went through the ‘normal’ trials and tribulations of all pre-teen girls. He started to travel for work. I barely saw him. He was doing important things. Dad things were less important than those things because if they weren’t, wouldn’t he be home with me? Especially on Sundays? It didn’t last more than a few years but during those years, when I felt especially distanced from him and really didn’t like the stepmom, I found other ways to occupy my time: Skating rinks, bus stops, sneaking out, lying, skipping school – from the outside it looked normal. From the inside it felt as far from normal as possible. Not cries for attention, no, I wanted to fly under the radar as much as possible. I didn’t know what I was looking for until much later in life. It wasn’t trouble, it wasn’t attention, it wasn’t specifically anything that I ever found in the activities I was participating in, it was just connection. The one thing that I spent years looking for. Decades really. And I found it sometimes, but usually in all the wrong places.