ALL THE TIME IN THE WORLD

by Nancy Angiello on January 24, 2015

Mom gave me all the time in the world. I never, ever felt rushed by her (except when she’d snap up the shades in the morning so we wouldn’t be late for school, making us wake up from the sun, and the sheer force of her personality!)

But when it came to talking, listening, and wanting to learn all about my life, or to hear from me, any time of day or night, she had all the time in the world.

I find this amazing because she was always busy, always filled her life helping her family and friends, and doing, cooking, visiting, calling, everything you can do to be a wonderful mother, wife and friend. She loved getting together with our large family, and her numerous close friends. She loved her church and was devoted to it for 47 years. She had her interests in art, museums, music, readings and travel.

Yet, she had all the time in the world.

My greatest fortune is that my mother lived for so long, and for 53 years of my life gave me not only so much love, and so much time, but she gave me all of her love of the senses:  touch, taste, smell, seeing, hearing.

Mom was so finely tuned to the senses.  She taught me to love the way moss feels on a rock, to smell the lilacs blooming in the spring outside our kitchen window; she taught me to listen closely, and to feel with my heart. She gave me the joy of good food, of family around the table, no matter how crowded it was, the more the better.

She gave me the indelible memory of her delicious tomato sauce on her well-worn wooden spoon; I have that spoon, and whenever I see it, I can taste the way her sauce tasted all of those Sunday dinners and holidays.  I can see the way her hands flew around the kitchen, and there in the bowl mixing dough, mixing meatballs, her silver wedding rings flashing, letting us try samples of the food as she cooked…

Mom had an uncommon appreciation of life, and all of the beauty in life, and the thrill we could have experiencing the joys of the senses. She wanted to get the most out of every single day.  When NYC restaurants had prix-fix week, she was the one who would call me to make a date and go to the best restaurants. She’d meet me for lunch when I was a young working girl. I will never forget those meals, and how excited she was to be there. “Oh, and at such a bargain, too!”

Most of all, mom gave me her love of books and music, and her knowledge and love of culture was astounding, all the more so considering her great challenges she overcame in her early life.

When my good friend Joe read my Mom’s obituary, he wrote to  me, “her story is not only jaw-dropping amazing because of the incredible obstacles in your mother’s life, but also because of her tenacity of culture and decency.”

Then he went on, “Your mom is so familiar to me because she is like my mom.  That’s how God made ladies then:  tough as nails, smart and generous.”

My friend’s perspective on my mom really made me think.  “Her tenacity of culture and decency.”  What a beautiful and incisive way to describe what it so hard to put into words.

And it is so true, so very touching and profound:  despite overcoming the worst obstacles – being orphaned at 15 years old – and having no family at all in the world – my mother not only survived, but she survived with achievement, success, culture, kindness and grace.

We shake our heads in amazement, my family and I.  How did she do it?  How did she manage to be so loving, so giving, so nurturing, so feeding – in ever sense of the word, how she fed us knowledge, love, protection, stimulation, curiosity, sensitivity, and yes – grace and decency —not to mention, delicious food, day after day —when she had so much loss in early life.  And then yet to become as cultured and learned as if she had been given everything early in life.

Her mother – who raised her alone – must have been a wonderful person and mother.  That, and my mother had the resolve and strength of character to know who she was, know who she wanted to be, and to become and stay that person.

My mom was a passionate reader and lover of great literature. From early on, she shared with me A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, Little Women, Daddy LongLegs, A Little Princess, Little House in the Big Woods, and then later, everything and anything about old New York, especially books by Edith Wharton and Henry James, and everything British, from the Brontë sisters to Jane Austen. We really bonded over the English writers.

And we loved watching BBC television together and Masterpiece Theatre, especially All Creatures Great & Small and Upstairs, Downstairs.  I can still hear her calling me, if I was up in my room in the old house on 17 School Lane in Scarsdale: ”Nancy, come down!  Upstairs Downstairs is starting!”  Then, she’d bring Dad and me, and whoever was watching with us, some fresh fruit on a small, white china plate: ”Here, have a nice sliced orange.  It tastes so good, and it’s so good for you!”  And it did taste good, because she thought about it, she sliced it up, she brought it to me, and I can still taste the way that orange tasted.

I think that’s around the time – when I was in high school and college, when we loved these British books and miniseries—when we started talking with our special repartee on the phone. She would pick up the phone when I’d call, and I’d say, in a British accent:  “Hulloooo Mothah!”  And she’d say “Well, hellooooo, Dauuuggghtah!”  She made her voice deeper like that, like a proper British aristocratic matriarch.

We did that for years, really until the end of her life, and I miss her voice – British accent or not – terribly. I think everyone misses her warm, incredibly musical, loving voice. The two granddaughters got a special voice and greeting just for them:  “Well, helloooo sweetheart!”  and I know they will never forget their Grandmother’s special voice, used especially for her precious little granddaughters.

Her musical voice carried on in so many ways. Mom also passed on her love of classical music to me, and to her granddaughters as well. One of my happiest childhood memories is sitting in the kitchen as Mom ironed, with the radio set to WQXR, the classical music station.

There she’d stand, ironing our shirts, pants, and pillowcases, with the steam of the iron mingling with the smell of clean clothes and starch, mingling with the sound of her humming along to the music. Again – no matter how busy she was, she’d take time to talk to me, about my life, and about the music playing that she loved.

Most of all, after I began taking piano lessons, she sat with me, for years and years, when I would practice. When I wanted to begin lessons (because my best friend at the time, our next door neighbor, Suzu Kawamoto, had lessons!) Mom not only supported me and together with Dad, bought me a beautiful piano, but she encouraged me for the rest of my life.

I will never forget the way it felt to be the object of her complete and utter absorption and interest. She had an uncanny and generous gift of active listening. I love how she sat there, never judging; I could only feel the love and awe. Awe, because she would say to me, “It’s so amazing the way you can play. I’m so proud of you.

She gave me everything her mother could not, as far as luxuries like this, and she gave me everything – like piano lessons, and so much more – that she, a child of the Great Depression and an orphan—could never have.  But none of that mattered to her.  She was completely and utterly giving in her quest to give us everything.

While I played, she folded huge baskets of laundry.  She could have so easily thought to herself that I don’t have time, I want to watch tv, or take a bath or have some “me time.”  My mom didn’t do that.  If she had “free time,” she gave me more of her time by simply sitting there, folding laundry, and giving me the gift of her presence. The gift of her listening.

She could have chosen anything else…but she was happy being in that room because I was in that room.

Being together like that, just the two of us, was so precious to me, and I’m so lucky.  There is one time that is forever seared into my memory. After many challenging years in my own life, I brought myself back to life by taking piano lessons again and seriously studying, once again with my beloved teacher Danyal at the Greenwich House  Music School in NYC.

My mom and dad were so pleased.  For almost a year I studied, while taking care of my daughter, immersed and focused in a complex and difficult Intermezzo by Brahms.  I had never been able to play that piece before. It was my goal that year, and amazingly, I achieved that goal, and was then able to perform it in the school recital.

At that time, my parents had just moved from their house where I grew up, and where they lived for 43 years, to the apartment, and my mom had recently recovered—taking her many, many months—from a terrible fall.  My mom longed to be there for my performance!  At her age—87 years old—she wanted so much to drive down to the West Village and hear me play in a recital!

But between her recovery, the trip, the late hour of the concert, and my own trepidation about playing in public after so many years, I encouraged her to miss it, something I will never stop regretting.  I could never imagine that this would be the last time she could have ever attended one of my recitals.  We never, ever think there will be a last time with our beloved parents, until it is too late.

The performance, though, had been recorded.  Mom wanted so much to hear it.  So, after the recital, I visited them in their new apartment with a disc of me playing the Brahms. Mom and Dad didn’t yet have their stereo set up.  Since Mom wanted to hear it so much, we went to my car that was parked in front of their apartment house, to listen to it on my car stereo.

I will never forget this moment.  I popped the disc into the player.  There we were, parked on Garth Road, with me sitting behind the wheel and Mom next to me in the passenger seat.  When the music began, Mom became utterly silent, staring ahead at the dashboard.  She never once spoke for the long duration of this recording.  At the end of the piece, after the applause that was taped and when the disc went silent, my mother began to cry. I was so moved and surprised, as she had never cried in front of me when I played before, and mom rarely cried at all.  I’ll never know why. I can only imagine.  She lowered her head a bit, then wiped her eyes with her fingers. I whispered “Mom” and handed her a tissue. But I never asked her what brought her to tears.

The only thing I know is that for that moment—even though my mother had so much to do with a new apartment to settle into, and all of her own emotions about leaving our beloved School Lane house in which she and my dad and our family had decades together of  joy, and all of the emotions of getting older, starting over, healing after her terrible fall, learning to write again and all the bravery and strength she had to summon to heal—that none of that mattered to her as much as giving me her presence for those minutes in the car with me and my music, giving me her self, her love…giving me all the time in the world.  Thank you, Mom. I will never stop missing you.

 

.

 

 

{ 0 comments }

The Scary, One-Eyed Monster

by Nancy Angiello on June 18, 2013

 

Today I had a rare day off to take my daughter to a specialist.  It was thrilling to see her during the week instead of working long hours, and to be with her after school when I’m normally in the city on deadlines.  Even a specialist’s appointment was exciting to me.  I got to see my little girl, on Monday.  And instead of missing her like I do every week on that day, a missing so much it’s like the heart is taken out of the body and squeezed and thrown to the ground and stomped on, my stomach in its dark pit of sadness feeling like an elevator going up then plummeting (there are no words; only visceral images of body organs can express this), I got to take her to the playground!  This is something I did always as a full-time mom before the divorce, before going back to work.  But now it is as rare as a perfect summer day, which this seemed to be.

Ella was so happy, too.  “Mama has to work tomorrow,” she prepared herself, talking about herself.  “But you can go to the playground today.”

My little girl is 11.  She acts and speaks much younger than her age, but she has the face and body of a beautiful Botticelli princess. She is more precious than life itself, and you want to scrape the heavens for answers, claw at the clouds and the atmosphere and the moon to the gods above, below and beyond to ask why, why this perfect, beautiful baby had to suffer the medical reactions she did that destroyed the life and brain and normal development she was supposed to have.  You want to always go back in time to do it again, the way where she didn’t get injured by the medical procedure that so many have without incident, but that so many others have so similarly suffered.

You want to switch places with her and give her the life you had—friends, classes, outings, learning, speech, reading, writing, the simple exchange of a conversation between girlfriends, a playdate! An exchange with another child that goes past “Hi” and “I’m fine.” The ability to make a phone call by herself, or to have a real phone talk. A lasting friendship with her cousin.  Whispering and planning and the spontaneous, intimate chatter with a best friend her own age that she never had.   

You want to change doctors in the past, you want to cure her, you want to lay down your life for her and die for her.

But you don’t.  You get her ready for the playground so she can have fun like all the other kids.  She put on her bathing suit, shorts and a top and flip-flops—how she preened in the mirror!—and we took the elevator to the back door, and walked across the street, through the pretty little tree-lined path, to the urban playground here on the upper west side of the Bronx where for so long I felt a relief that it wasn’t suburbia, where so many colors and families and religions and ages blend together. Where, despite some times of funny looks from others and attempts to play, then immediately sizing things up and moving on—we still come back. New year, new summer, the spray fountain has been turned on, new chance to try again.

Since we had last been there, my daughter got older and taller—just so much taller now than the other kids.  But Ella saw the water and the delighted laughter of the children; nothing mattered to her but that. So hand in hand, we arrived at the little circular spraying fountain surrounded by happy little kids in bathing suits.

Whenever things sear into the head and heart, they become present tense, and present tense forever they live.  When my daughter has injustices done to her or experiences cruelty from an adult, she lives with them in the present.  She talks to me sometimes as if I’m not in the room, and right now I’m suddenly reminded as I write this of Truman Capote’s title, “Other Voices, Other Rooms.” So it is the same for my daughter.  She hears other voices, real voices, in other rooms—in places where I was not present to help her or experience it with her, and she shares these experiences by suddenly conjuring the reprimand or comment from the adult.  Often these voices she expresses are in the voice of that adult, and the conversation seems to be verbatim.  Everything with Ella that happened in the past that hurt her feelings, that traumatized her, becomes now and forever. And through her, they are forever for me.

And so this story, that happened this afternoon, switches to present tense. Ella is so happy when we arrive, she kicks off her shoes, takes off the shorts and runs to the spray pool. The late 5 o’clock sun is on her pure, white shoulders, her braids still have a bit of red and strawberry blonde in them from her baby hair, she doesn’t notice she is heads and shoulders and chests above the other kids, and prances beautifully in the shower of water.  There is a tiny girl, maybe a little over a year, in the most minute water shoes I’ve ever seen (the same color as Ella’s that we left home).  “Look!” Ella exclaims.  “She has your water shoes!” speaking about herself again in the third person.  The little girl is a delightful fairy sprite, seemingly just a few inches tall, like a tiny fairy who lives in the forest under a mushroom.  She’s wearing a black tee shirt with a skull motif, and pink and white seersucker shorts. 

Ella dances around the water with this tiny baby for a while, then starts to follow two 7 year-old, skinny little girls in two-piece bathing suits.  They are on a suspended bridge that bounces around when you jump across it, which used to seem so treacherous when Ella was very small.  She likes the little girls’ bathing suits, and as usual, hovers too close to them and—loving fashion and all things stylish—peers closely at their hair ribbons and details of the suits. She towers over them, and looms close down by their faces. “Ella, Ella sweetie,” I say.  “Say hello to them, and do you want to play?  We don’t go too close like that.”   The girls, who had already started backing off before I spoke, give her a glance, look at me, look at each other, look at her again, then continue to run around, dodging her and going off on their own.

Ella goes back and forth into the water, doing what the much younger boys and girls are doing. If one puts his stomach flat on the heavy spray at the base of the fountain, Ella does it too.  If one starts running around the water like ring around the rosy, Ella does it too.  She follows the two skinny 7 year-old girls again back to the suspended bridge.  She wants to hang out with them on the platform.  They keep slipping past her.  Wanting her to have fun and at the same time taking in the torrent of words all the younger kids so effortlessly spout, fountains and fountains of torrential drops of language that seamlessly make chains of words and conversation that my daughter never has done, not at that young age, and not at this present age, creates a dizzying effect like the way a ray of sunlight can suddenly make even the simplest mist of water a seemingly sky-wide rainbow.

All of these sensations surround me in a circular embrace; not stultifying as one would think, because the setting is being able to watch my daughter smile and run and feel the cool water all over her body on a hot day, and to share it with me on a weekday.  But it’s like an embrace of that rush of air that holds you and releases you at the same time, the kind of circular hold from within and from without—is it a centrifugal force—of an emotional, physiological kind—that encompasses everything, from the spinning sensation of the children all running in a circle around the suspended bridge, around the fountain, the sun rays following the children, the words of the very verbal children following the children in a circle as they race, my daughter trying to fit in with children half her age and half her size, and my heart following her as if it was running outside my body and trying to keep up with her.

In the midst of all this, the little 7 year-old lithe, vibrant best friends start plotting, from one moment to the next.  They whisper, stare at my daughter, run away from her, look over their shoulders and stand breathless, pretending they are in danger with her too close to them, then out of danger when they escape her.  They scream in fright, look backwards at her, and run again and again away from my daughter. My daughter, they have decided in their obvious role playing, is like the one-eyed monster, a broken half-person they don’t understand, haven’t seen the likes of but intuitively dislike and, reminiscent of “Lord of the Flies,” sense that ah, here, finally, is someone bigger than us, stronger than us, but much, much more vulnerable than us, that we, small and miniature, cruel yet innocent creatures that we are, can feel stronger, smarter and better than that much-bigger, strange—and scary—older girl.

They run, and dodge, they flee from her.  They laugh and mock her as she, completely unaware, or seemingly so, still continues to follow them in the game they have created that actually serves to abuse her and use her as their pawn. The more this goes on, in fleeting seconds and minutes that seem like hours, the more I think about my dear friend Tyler, who once wrote a comment in one of my previous essays, that it is up to me to educate other children who have not had the chance to learn about tolerance and kindness.  I wish she had been here to speak for me in a neutral way.  If you are the mother it takes an effort that I so far have not attained.

 At the third or fourth high-speed round and round of “get away from the weird girl” I stand in place, finally stopping the carousel-ride effect of the pattern of children around the fountain. I approach the ringleader as she passes me in this circle of hell, and with a rush of blood to ears and head call out “Hey!  That is my daughter. That is mean. Is it okay to do that to children who are different? Do not be mean to my daughter.”   This little girl, who had seemed so conniving, so cruel, suddenly becomes the very small, little girl that she is, and for a moment it softens the hurt and anger.  She looks very vulnerable herself, and she looks back at me with her face half turned, from the side of one eye, shivering, her pale skin turning mottled in the chill from the spray, her sleek black hair plastered on her face, the water running down it.  She moves her hands in a nervous way that says oh no, confusion and perhaps I’m sorry. Her hands, spraying droplets, flap with tension and embarrassment of being abruptly caught in the act, of having another mom defend a child, a big girl, my child—who in normal circumstances would have been the boss in command of this much-younger girl. 

The little girl stands frozen in place, not knowing what to do, still looking at me from the side of her eye, possibly with only a vague but now-forming idea that she had harmed anyone; standing, shivering and still until my movement away released her.

Ella runs over to me and I put the towel and my arms around her. As we walk away from the spray fountain to a bench across the park, I turn to see the father—the same cool, bohemian, bearded young dad of the tiny fairy of the spray fountain, talking in a serious way to the girl who taunted Ella. I had no idea he was her father.  I would have thought…that a dude that cool looking…with such a darling younger child, would have noticed his daughter being mean to mine, but he did not. He was so taken in by his other daughter, the little tiny thing wearing miniature water shoes. 

Ella thinks she has been bad, since we are so abruptly leaving.  “You were naughty,” she says of herself, trying to figure out why we’re leaving and why mommy yelled.  No, I tell her.  You were such a good girl.  You are such a wonderful girl.  You played so nicely.  How do I tell her the girls were being mean to her?  That I could not bear it?  She asks me about it in the elevator when we’re home. There is a nice, elderly couple  from a few floors below me sharing the ride up.  As they get out, Ella is still asking about the girls at the playground and why we left.  I tell her “some little girls don’t know how to play nicely.  They don’t know it’s not okay to be mean to other girls.”  My voice cracks and I start to cry.  Ella looks at me intently. Then she hits me.  Don’t be a baby, her hard, smacking hand says to me.  With no words, her eyes and hands say to me, Ugh, Mama, what a baby you are.  Do I have to take care of everything? says that hand I so want to hold and protect.  She whacks me again in the kitchen as I try to explain.  Whack. This is no time or place for tears, says her smacking hand.  I’m not going to let you go there, Mama, says my daughter’s brilliant, strong, resilient hand. Get a grip.

 

by NANCY ANGIELLO Copyright June 2013

 

 

 

{ 7 comments }

Pas de Deux

August 7, 2011

The world of symbolism and the spiritual, the world of the heart and emotions, is full of the deep, moving groupings of life’s experiences that come in twos and in threes. Just when you think you cannot take any more:  wham wham. Wham wham wham.  Then there are the small miracles that happen, also in […]

Read the full article →

After the Crash

July 3, 2011

Sometimes everything breaks at once: your car, your relationship, your child’s health, your printer, your heart. Sometimes, in a single moment, there is deep reparation that makes everything broken become fused, even for that second. It’s a moment so beautiful, so unbearably, painfully beautiful, that there is no other moment, thus there’s no past, no […]

Read the full article →

Saved by Sidney

May 23, 2011

There is an old French film by Jean Renoir, “Boudu Saved From Drowning.”  Today, the film in my mind from the day at the playground with my daughter would be called “Mommy Saved From Drowning by Sidney.”  Sidney is about 2 years old, and I never saw her before today. I met her with my […]

Read the full article →

The 34th Street Crosstown Magic Bus, NYC

May 17, 2011

One recent Wednesday was a rainy and melancholy day. Melancholy because it is May and it was raining, and raining, raining endlessly all May. It was a day of unsmiling New Yorkers who, like me, have brains soaked in the fog that settled on us since days before, who crave the sun, and who share […]

Read the full article →

The Grand Central Oyster Bar, NYC: Sipping, Slurping, Savoring

April 20, 2011

  This is a story about anticipation of the delights of food and the senses, and how food, unlike romance, is just as good in the anticipatory stage as it is when you are finally there, tasting and savoring. Tomorrow I am going to The Oyster Bar under Grand Central Station, with my dear friend […]

Read the full article →

Thinking about…my life and world as a NYC writer.

April 18, 2011

I dedicate my very first, very short, blog post to Walt Whitman. I spent my entire working life, save some time in Rome, Paris and London, in New York City. So Walt, you can shout out your words to your city muse here…because you speak to me with your words, your glorious poem! “Keep your […]

Read the full article →