Warning: The image below may be upsetting.
Today will be the last time I think Florence is looking at me.
The upheaval of emptying closets and preparing to vacate the apartment unearthed the bag of her eye stuff I had stuffed into a corner hoping it would disappear on its own. The only time things disappear on their own is when you are looking for them. The things you want to forget stay stubbornly in place waiting to piss you off and freak you out.
How to explain this piece of glass except to say it isn't one. It is, if anything, the portrait of
my mother, still as vibrantly alive as when it resided in her empty socket.
As a little girl, I didn't know this eye couldn't see. All I knew was
that Florence slept facing her bedroom’s doorway with one eye half
opened. I thought it was to make sure I didn't slip past her on my
illegal expeditions around the house after bedtime and before
breakfast. I liked the house when nobody was up. Unlike the angry
silences or not so silent anger when folks were up, before breakfast and
after bedtime offered rare peace and a world of possibilities. Worth
the risk.
Peeking into my parents’ bedroom, I'd stare back at her and if she
didn't say anything, I'd wave, just to make sure she wasn't seeing me
before scooting past her and into wonderful quiet, empty rooms.
My illicit activities didn't end there. One day, left alone in the
apartment while she and my father were out and about, I, desperate to
understand yet an angry silence between them, went through all their
drawers and closets. Spying two beautiful ring boxes in Florence’s
underwear drawer (right next to an odd disc made of rubber), I eagerly
opened one, hoping for something special.
There she was, staring back at me.
On walks home from TV night at
Gramma's in Knickerbocker Village,
my sister and I would ask, "What happened to
your eye?" But Florence never answered. She'd just glower and continue
striding down Madison Street. Later,
my father would tell us her father, whom she never spoke to, said she was born with something wrong and that she was in the hospital a long time and not allowed to see her mother. Hospitals did that in those days. Fearing it would be injurious to the little kids to be with their families, parents weren't allowed to visit their children for months.
But, years and years and years after that, putting out the fires
dementia makes, for some reason, I had to call the place that made her
eye. So, while I had them on the phone I asked, "Do you know what
happened to her eye?"
"Well, she said it was a gunshot accident,” they told me.
I
think she was pulling their leg. Although it was plausible. Florence
spoke of her neighbors in Bushwick, Brooklyn knitting hunting mittens.
When they first met,
the woman Florence loved her whole life didn't even know that eye was glass. All she knew was Florence's hair hid half her face. That woman, just introduced but knowing something different was happening, pushed the hair to the side and told Florence, "You look better this way."
There were also gentle moments of care when, in public, one of us
daughters would whisper "Wipe your eye" if it got too cloudy. But that
was as close as my sister or I ever got to Florence even admitting there
was anything wrong. Even at the emergency room of the Eye and Ear
Hospital at 2:30 in the morning, it was I who had to tell the attending
doctor the eye that didn't have cataracts was glass. Florence just sat
there tight lipped and furious he dared to even investigate.
So determined to defy and deny her lack of sight, that when coming home from an operation on her one good eye which was completely bandaged up, she pushed my hand away as we entered the
Quartchyard and pretended she was seeing through her glass eye as she literally walked blindly to her lobby door.
However, that last year of her life changed everything. Like a child needing to
hold hands with her mommy after a tough day in the playground, Florence began asking me if her eye was O.K. and could I fix it. After
fifty years of that piece of glass being a wall between us, putting her
eye into her empty socket and adjusting was probably the most loving
thing I have ever done for her. The Rubicon had been crossed. By both
of us.
Today, I will bring this portrait of my mother over to the Eye and Ear Hospital where it will be donated to a project that refits glass eyes for those in need. But before I do, I will look my mother in the eye for the last time and for the last time I will think my mother is looking back at me.
**
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