Diary of a Widower

Daily entries by a husband, who stayed behind with his two sons

Archive for the category “Remembering”

Love is that fleeting second…

TUESDAY,  April 20 – So tired, dead-tired. This is all I was planning to write today.  Things turned out differently.

I was in the Mini on the way to an appointment in the city…  good-looking  women on bicycles sped by. It was a lovely sight and in the back of my mind I saw Jenn on her bike going over the bridges, saw how people looked at her in her denim mini-skirt and purple leggings, her black leather jacket and pale blue scarf. And the black-brown locks with those incredible curls.

Then I began to cry – and I’m still crying as I write it all down.

Why was all that taken away from her? It’s that question – to which there is no answer – that makes me so sad.  Sad for her. Not so much for myself.  She’s dead and I’m not. I’m alive.

I couldn’t shake off that feeling and during the business lunch I felt my mind drifting. Two colleagues were trying to provoke each other. I was the chair and I should have intervened, taken over, and gotten the meeting back on the rails.  But I couldn’t care less.  At that instant I was painfully conscious of the futility of it all. What the fuck am I doing here?  I excused myself, walked out of the room, put on my coat, got into the car and went home.

Home to my children. Love, that’s what I needed right then and that’s what I told Eamonn later in the car, on the way to baseball practice. That’s why I was waiting for him in the schoolyard at 3:30 which was a surprise, since he had expected his brother to pick him up. ‘You know why I enjoy picking you up, Eamonn?’

No, he didn’t know.

‘Love is that fleeting second when our eyes meet.  When I see the little rush of surprise.  Hey, it’s Papa!  You’re standing there. The quick smile of recognition, of affection, of closeness.  This afternoon, Eamonn, I needed that moment.’

Oh, okay. And he accepted my words for what they were worth.  We were both still for a moment. ‘Or do you think I’m a jerk, Eamonn?’  He laughed out loud. ‘That sounded funny, Papa.’

Colossal love for nature’s force

SATURDAY, April 17 – The volcano in Iceland has been spewing ash and paralyzing European  airspace.  No end of irritation and inconvenience and yet I find it fascinating. Jenn and I would have shared the experience, in secret admiration for the colossal forces of nature. Not man, but nature rules. Eyjafjallajökull, we love you!

My deranged but sexy knee

FRIDAY, April 16 – Sports massage at home. G is a fantastic – and  merciless – masseur. This time he tackles not only my back and arms, but also my calves. You can’t put anything over on G: my body speaks the truth. He can tell that I once injured my left knee.

Overstretched, I say.  The diagnosis was a ‘deranged knee’.

We have a good laugh.  He wants to know how it happened and I grin at the thought. My wife once sat down on my knee.  I think back to the day she put a torn-out magazine article on the nightstand:  ‘Ten positions that will spice up your sex life … with illustrations’.  It proved more complicated than we expected, but still fun until my knee ‘gave way’. I cherish the injury, which still rears its head from time to time. The body never lies.

Crying in the workplace

THURSDAY, April 15 – The NOS foreign correspondents are back visiting at headquarters and I will have to address them at some Amsterdam hotel. This is the first time they’ve seen me since last year, and their support from a distance has been heartwarming. The plan is that I’ll start off the morning with a few brief remarks related to Jennifer’s death before we get down to the nitty-gritty of the meeting.

Unfortunately, I’m overcome by my emotions and this despite my rehearsed talk, despite just the few short sentences I had intended to utter. I thank them and tell them how we’re doing at the moment and I tell them I’m looking forward to a challenging program – a day full of debate, but then I choke up.  A colleague takes over for me and I sit down.

Why the tears? Because at that moment I realized that a foreign correspondent is only able to do his or her work when the home front is covered one hundred percent. When you can be available twenty-four seven because your partner takes complete care of the children. For years, that was the way I had worked:  it was single-mindedness bordering on monomania, because Jennifer had allowed me to. The same is true of the many colleagues who work abroad.

Without Jennifer, I would not be standing there.  I knew that and so did they.

Taking a peek at the ashes

WEDNESDAY, April 14 – This afternoon I sent the boys to the park to give Elsa a run. Taking advantage of their absence, I took a quick look inside the mini urn next to Jenn’s photo. Just curious. It’s still a bizarre sensation having Jennifer’s remains here in the house. I shook it, but the ash, a kind of dingy grey grit, didn’t mean much to me. The imprint from my wedding ring is still visible.

Jealous of a regular family

SATURDAY, April 10 – Things are going fine. Until you’re pushing your cart around the supermarket and you find yourself next to a young couple. The father had clearly not slept well and the mother, who’s pushing the baby carriage, is annoyed but doing her best to ignore his conduct. He repeatedly reprimands his young daughter, who’s having trouble navigating her miniature shopping cart down the aisle. I’m annoyed not only with them, but also with myself, because I feel a stab of jealousy.

Or am I being overly-nostalgic and sentimental? A yearning for the days when we ourselves formed a young family of four?  Father, mother and two young children.  The future beckoned: we were building a life together, with expectations and doubts, ambitious plans, and daydreams about the years to come. You gradually get used to the routine of being a parent – the lack of sleep and also from the friction that inevitably arises in trying to establish equitably parenting commitment. Parental care and parental cares.

I feel the urge to wallow in depression and am poised to give in. Most of the articles in the shopping cart are taken from the list that Jennifer always used. I know it almost by heart and every week I end up buying too much food so when I get home, I first have to throw away all the food that’s already gone bad – usually without a trace of remorse.

My culinary creativity also leaves something to be desired. I have great plans and purchase the necessary ingredients, but then I don’t enjoy the actual cooking. I seldom try out a new recipe or surprise myself with some culinary tour de force.  As long as the meal is hot and the ingredients have not gone bad, it’s okay by me. Oh, and every week I forget my bonus card.  If only that was all…

The same family is now behind me in line. The little girl is sucking on her lollipop, the father contemplates the rest of the weekend, and the mother leans over to kiss the baby. Your average family.  One of thousands.

14:00 – I think about K. a lot … but not that much. My head seems to be overflowing.  I want to mark time for a while and go back a bit so that  I can grieve for Jennifer. Go back to my wife, to the mother of my children. Not only physically, but also mentally. Back to the past and back to the future which are both so much a part of the present. I want Jenn back. I want to embrace that impossible desire undisturbed. And alone.

Being sociable is a tough job

FRIDAY, April 9 – Initially, I didn’t much feel like going to L’s housewarming party tonight. After dinner I was overcome by a kind of apathetic melancholy. I had only myself to blame after having spent far too much time at the laptop. There were plenty of things I could and should have done that would have given me energy for this evening.

All things considered, it had been a really good day. I went to the new apartment where the renovation is going smoothly. I had a great guitar lesson. I made three appointments with potential movers and then, all of a sudden, I went into a dip. I told the boys I was going to stay home.

That is until the moment when I was changing the beds and I suddenly said to myself: ‘For Pete’s sake, go to the party, meet some new people. You can always leave early.  If you don’t go, you’ll only feel worse.’  So I went.  It did help – the people there were pleasant and easy-going. L’s new boyfriend has just moved into her boat house and there were German, English and Dutch friends there.

I spent a long time talking to P from Brighton. Good conversation, I dropped her off at her hotel, where we said goodbye with a pleasant, warm feeling – no more than that. A fine evening. So, it is possible. I can be sociable, meet new people, do my own thing and just be myself. Now, off to bed and try to keep to the new course. Positive energy.

In bed I open my laptop. I look at P’s Facebook photo. Suddenly I notice how tiny she is. And that she has short black hair. Large eyes. Just like Jennifer. That gave me a bit of a jolt.

A visit to my dead dad

THURSDAY, April 8 – Spent an hour in Oisterwijk, the town where Id grown up. I had a business meeting in a nearby city and took advantage of the opportunity to stroll through the cemetery. The death of my father was my first confrontation with mortality. Would it do something to me, seeing his grave? Would it evoke forgotten emotions? Provide new perspectives?

Nothing. Nothing at all.

It must be years since I was here last.  He shares a grave with his first wife, who was in her thirties when she was struck down by cancer. Pa had been left with three young sons. What a morbid resemblance between our lives, but am I actually conscious of that bond?  Not really. I never discussed that time with him, since he died far too young. And now he’s lying here.

I had no trouble finding the grave. Turn left at the end of the path. A simple gravestone with simple lettering. No frills. Not because he was a modest man – he was sick and, in my childhood memory (which is unbeknownst to mental illnesses), he was crazy – but because the grave had to be cheap. You can barely make out his name and the dates of his birth and death are illegible. I felt no urge to tidy up the grave.

Unable to pick… curtains

MONDAY, April 5 – We didn’t argue a lot, Jenn and I. Often the outburst came after a long period of ignoring a problem, bottling up the anger, and voicing reproaches indirectly. Some inconsequential trigger would then lead to a vehement discussion.  About curtains, for example. I couldn’t care less about curtains.

When we moved to Amsterdam in mid-2008, Jenn accused me of not being involved in the process of furnishing the apartment. For months there were no curtains in the living room, bedroom, dining room or bedroom, mainly because I was too lazy to give the problem some thought. It wasn’t my cup of tea and the very idea made me nervous.

She said, ‘All right then.’ Jenn took care of it and was angry with me.

To my relief, our downstairs neighbor recently offered to make curtains for our new apartment. She helped to measure the windows and choose the type of curtains. But when she presented me with a large bag of fabric swatches, so we could take our time choosing the color and material, I panicked.

Not Eamonn.  He had no trouble deciding on the curtains for his own room. The kid has taste.

Sander said: ‘It doesn’t make any difference to me.’  Same here, but we had to choose. I broke out in a cold sweat. Sander was still absorbed in his laptop, pretending he was doing his homework. Eamonn, who lay contentedly on the couch reading a book, was pleased with his choice of fabric and happy to just get on with things.  OK, Overdiek, solve the problem. I called the downstairs neighbor again. Help!

She came upstairs and made various suggestions. But the more options I was presented with, the more difficult it became. Blank, nothing, nada, not a clue.  ‘I’m finding this difficult,’ I stammered.  In more than one respect.  Then I left the room and went up to my bedroom.  Beyond hope, I threw myself on the bed.  I’m a hopeless bungler. Jenn would have known and at that moment I would have given anything to be able to bicker with her over curtains.

Five minutes later I got hold of myself and went downstairs. The neighbor made a few subtle suggestions. Minutes later the problem had been solved,  but what kind of curtains will soon be hanging in our new apartment and what color they are… I still haven’t a clue.  But that’s always better than not having an opinion.

What to wish for on my birthday

FRIDAY, April 2, 2010 – It was around twelve-thirty when Eamonn shuffled into the bedroom. My birthday had begun a half hour before, but that wasn’t why he was there. It was the same nightmare that had brought him to my room the night before. He was being followed by a man in a car who was just about to grab him. Come on, big guy, climb in!  It’ll all be okay.

The next morning everything was not okay.  Eamonn said he felt awful, because he hadn’t bought me a real present. All he had was a handmade birthday card. But son, that’s the only thing I wanted. A hand-written card or a drawing. Nothing else.  But he was still ashamed. I’d already bought the big present from the boys: a karaoke box. It still had to be gift-wrapped. ‘How about if you go off and take care of that, Eamonn, and then everything will be fine.’

So the day began right. With coffee, apple juice, cheese and crackers, the morning paper, and the presents. The karaoke box was beautifully wrapped in a plastic supermarket bag. Two cards: Eamonn’s finished days ago, Sander’s late last night. Both equally touching.

Eamonn: Happy B-Day! Thank you for reaching your 45th year and 9 years of a good father. Sincerely, Eamonn J Nolan. Complete with paw prints from Bodhi and Elsa and a drawing of an exploding birthday card.

Sander drew an imaginary iPad with the enthusiastic text:  Introducing iPapa. The best dad you could ever imagine. Available forever.

What more could a father wish for?  Well, maybe a real present … and that was the karaoke box. It should be fun: singing together plus a bit of verbal horsing around in the living room. But even that’s not important compared with the anticipation of the day that lies before us. What will it be like?  Lying there in bed, an uncomfortable feeling came over me: the fact is that this is the first birthday without Jenn in nineteen years.

Sander took Elsa out. Eamonn made his own breakfast. I went off to the gym, did the shopping and ran four loads of laundry. I always change the beds on Friday. So, today, as well. No sweat. Why had it always been such a chore and why hadn’t I realized how simple it could be to play a more equal role in the housekeeping? Just a question of being a bit more observant.

Picked up the yellow Mini Cooper. All set to go. It needed a new battery, that was all. We drove to the Amsterdam Woods, careening down the road with all the windows open. Spent a couple of hours climbing trees at Fun Forest: three modern Tarzans following the zip lines high over streams and tall brushwood. Just the right activity for three guys like us and all the time Jenn was there in our thoughts. She had a fear of heights, but last summer she’d given it a try.

Transferring from climbing tree track 5 to track 6, we were so high up that a couple of times even I had to swallow hard. We asked ourselves whether Mom would have been up to it.  What she would have done. In any case, she was with us today, sailing along high in the trees. I was in the lead and when I turned around, I saw how at the other end of the cable Eamonn was getting some pointers from Sander, how the two of them were a team, as they stood there exchanging tips. Was I seeing how Jenn was watching over them or was it my imagination? Was I calling up thoughts that were simply not possible.

The wish is father to the thought.

I barely answered the phone today and only responded to a couple of emails and text messages. It was kind of friends to think of me, especially today. But I wanted us to be together, just the three of us. That idea was immediately appropriated by Eamonn who announced that on his birthday he wasn’t going to invite his friends over, because he would rather do something together, just the three of us. We’ll see how things work out; but there’s no denying that today was intimate and close and I want to hang onto that feeling as long as possible. Without the outside world.

During dinner (at our favorite neighborhood restaurant), Sander found it necessary to correct  me. I proposed a toast, to a terrific birthday, with terrific sons, and terrific activities, and all that in spite of the huge sense of emptiness because Mom wasn’t there.  According to Sander, I shouldn’t have said that.  It was unnecessary. Let’s just live in the moment was his message.  I took the hint and apologized.  Still, it was great the way he got his message across.

‘And yes, Eamonn,’ I said before he asked.  ‘You can sleep in my bed tonight.’  He beamed.  But instead of the usual back-scratch, which generally took place in silence, he had a special request.  ‘I want something different this time.’  Alongside a back-scratch he wanted to hear stories ‘about you and Mom’. He snuggled down to listen.  I began.

How we saw each other for the first time at the airport in Brussels. How Mom appeared in the arrivals hall, after her name had been called: her wallet had been found on the floor of the plane.  How I brought along a red rose and how she gave me three Dutch kisses on the cheek. I described how we went first to Bruges and then to Antwerp. We had dinner at a steakhouse where she ordered a salad and told me she was a vegetarian.  How later that evening we kissed passionately. I didn’t elaborate on how passionately.

How Mom threw out every single thing in my fridge, how she taught me authentic American recipes like cheese bread with paprika and popcorn in a pan with olive oil, and my introduction to broccoli.

Eamonn had another request number. Tell me about the Kitchen-Aid again.  It’s a good story. It’s all about how that first year in New York I’d bought a huge mixer for Jenn who had just graduated from culinary school. How I’d lugged that huge cardboard box all through SoHo, onto the PATH-train towards Hoboken and then had to walk the last five blocks. The result was magnificent:  Jenn was so overwhelmed by my present that she burst into tears.

Eamonn gazed at the wall, following the images that my words called up.

Later that evening Sander went to pieces.  As usual, the symptoms were anger and frustration.  We’ve seen it before, but this time things had been churning through his head for too long.  While that morning he hadn’t wanted to talk about Mom, now she’s the only subject on his mind – zooming endlessly around in his head. One thing led to another and he ended up distraught and mired down in despair.

Here again, a back massage did wonders.  Later that evening a glass of whisky was my sole companion. On the rocks.  An excellent Friday, this Good Friday. Fucking forty-five.

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