~This essay was previously published in in Fourth Genre:
Explorations in Non-Fiction (1999).
Today
I will throw out the two-inch toy Coke glass. The two halves of it fit
perfectly together and could have been glued, but I’m done with gluing. It is
late spring and the glass has been here since November. I remember how my
mother gasped, Oh what have I done now, with unusual vulnerability as she heard the
clamorous crack. I heard it too and saw her lifting her foot, afraid of further
destruction. I was afraid of her falling. It’s nothing, I said. Just that little Coke glass.
That’s from
Detroit, she answered, meaning from the
green-lawn days I set up my toy trademark Coke dispenser on Hawthorne Avenue
and waited for business. The four miniature glasses, narrow at the bottom and
wide at the top, had Coca-Cola in script on
the sides. With careful fingers I filled the glasses, lined them up in a row,
then lifted and drank each one. Perhaps I sat on my striped canvas director’s
chair, my hair pulled into the popular Alice in Wonderland look. I don’t know,
but my mother would have a clear memory of watching me do this through the
window of our house, as she clutched my baby brother in her thin arms.
What a
shame, she said. I lifted the broken toy off the kitchen
floor and told her not to worry. I would glue it. At the time I intended to.
Not for the sake of my own daughter. She didn't prize the little glass, had
probably not noticed the authentic logo of the world’s most popular drink. I would put it back together for the memory, my
debt of preserving the past and keeping track. And to assure my mother that all
damage done under her foot could be undone. I showed her how easily the two
halves fit, then placed them in the corner of the kitchen window.
The
next time I saw my mother she was sitting up in her bed. It was three in the
afternoon on a Saturday in November and she had died before dawn. Died before
there was light enough to open the shades. Before morning coffee. Before this
now empty body had gotten something decent to wear to Lucille's for Thanksgiving. Gone in an instant, the coroner said. Shouldn’t there
be a warning? At least a minute to prepare, to memorize the way the world
looked the last time we looked at it together?
Weeks
later I found the two halves of the toy glass in the window and stuffed them
out of sight in the cupboard. Other signs of my mother’s last visit surfaced.
There was a small spoon on the deck railing where she and two-year-old Nadine
made pies out of snow they wanted to save. Nadine had on a hat and mittens, and
my mother stood in the doorway calling, “Look at this girl dressed for winter,
and I’m only in this sweater! We need more pans!” she laughed, holding her
cigarette high so smoke didn't drift into the kitchen. I had not recognized
this jovial, energetic woman.
After
the funeral, I found the pie tins in the play kitchen and held them for a
while. My mother had tried to help me save snow, too. This was after Detroit.
This was in the hills of East Tennessee where it snowed only twice in ten
years. A thin layer on the roads and the city shut down, schools closed and we
got to stay home listening to tales of my mother's childhood on a Wisconsin
farm where snow drifted so high her father had to climb out the upstairs window
to shovel a path to the door and free the family, eight tow-headed children
watching in their cotton nightshirts. I would go outside and try to save a
small patch of snow on the hill of our lawn, shielding it with my body from the
southern sun and the other children who wanted to ruin it with a snow angel. My
mother did not make me come in, did not make me share the snow with the others. She understood more than I did at the
time, that I was trying to connect to her story, and preserve magical evidence
of her girlhood.
The
pie tins, the spoon, the Coke glass, everything my mother had touched her last
night in our home held her memory for a while, then got put away. Only the
broken Coke glass had no place to go back to. For a while it lay with the
dishes in the cupboard. At some point I dropped it into a canister and piled
sugar packets on top. One day I noticed it there and fished it out. The two
sides fit nicely. The scar would look like just another scratch on the thick
translucent plastic. I put the pieces next to the stove where I would see them
and remember to do something.
I
don't know when I decided not to glue the little glass back together. Maybe it
was just today, when with sudden clarity I knew I would throw it out. Not with
malice or regret. Not in grief or frustration. I will throw the little Coke
glass out because its purpose is completed. On that last night, under my
mother’s foot, it was conducting a final ritual, breaking its body open to take
us back, mother and daughter, to glimpse the world we had together: she at the
age I am now, watching her daughter conduct business on a sunny sidewalk, as if
there was nothing I could not master.
*****
THE STORY BEHIND THE ESSAY:
I was a poet, and for about a year I had tried to
write about this and other extraordinary and terrifying moments associated with
my mother's death. Many journal pages were full of aborted poems that seemed to
prove I had nothing to say. Then I happened to attend a conference at Western
Michigan University where Michael Steinberg held a panel about something that
was a new concept for me: creative non-fiction. Michael talked about how material
that doesn't work in one genre should be tried in another. I timidly approached
him after the panel to ask if he would please look at one of my failed poems
and tell me if he thought it was possibly trying to be an essay. I knew that if
he said, "No, no, that there's just a rambling journal entry!" I
would give up on those poems entirely. He kindly agreed and the result was this
essay, published in the first volume of the journal he founded, Fourth Genre. I credit Michael Stenberg
with the paradigm shift my writing needed at that time. I had always written
poems, because they fit within my perceived time limitations. Now I may spend
years on an essay. They are a bit like a horse on a runaway gallop; but once
reined in they can seem to flow like magic.
*****
ABOUT
RASMA HAIDRI
Rasma Haidri grew up in Tennessee and now lives on the
Norwegian arctic seacoast where she is a newspaper columnist, textbook writer
and teacher of British and American studies. Her writing has been anthologized
by Puddinghouse, Seal Press, Bayeux Arts, Marion Street Press, The Chicago
Review Press and Grayson Books, among others, including publishers in the
United Arab Emirates, UK, Hong Kong and India. Literary journals featuring her
work include Nimrod, Prairie Schooner, Passages North, Runes and the Sycamore
Review. Her most recent work appears in Veils, Halos and Shackles:
International Poetry on the Abuse and Oppression of Women, edited by
Charles Fishman. Among other distinctions, she received the Southern Women
Writers Association Emerging Writer Award in Creative Non-fiction, and the
Wisconsin Academy of Arts, Letters & Science Poetry Award.
The story you told in the essay is reflective of your view of Rasma. Your words put my mind into visualizing a sharp, intelligent, assertive, and yet nurturing person. - Layce from an Australian writing service.
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