Guidebook for Twelve Years Old

I am the working mother, and he is home with them right now. This is why I receive a call from him–not from the school–after the incident has already occurred. First rule of being married to the person who knows me better than anyone on this planet: my phone does NOT ring while I’m at work unless there is an actual emergency. And that is why, as I stand surrounded by fifty students from seventy countries (whose names I spent 36 minutes taping to the backs of seats in preparation for the flag rehearsal), I walk out of the high school auditorium to take his call. That is why, three minutes later, I am picking up my backpack and running out the door, running against the violent spring wind uphill for 1.4 miles to meet my younger two daughters, to intercept their questions before they meet their oldest sister.

All the time I make the dash, I am thinking about what he said. A simple text to a girl whose name neither of us has heard. A quote found online that she was just telling me about yesterday: “Life doesn’t have a Control Z button.” (Our conversation continued with–Me: “What does Control Z do?” Her: “You know, UNDO.” Me: “That’s true!” Smile. Nod. Think of regrets, mistakes, times I wish I could have done something over. Perhaps she thought the same. “Cute quote.”)

And that girl’s email to their advisor: “I think Isabella is having suicidal thoughts.” And her advisor’s email to the interim school dean. And that dean calling her down to the office. And Isabella, first time in her entire school career being called to the office, becoming completely distraught. “Do you want to harm yourself? What is your home life like? How are things with your parents? Do you have friends at school?” And I don’t know what else. All I know is Bruce’s words related to me, of receiving three phone calls while he was in the shower and not understanding the dean’s heavy accent and walking into the school to see our twelve-year-old daughter crying in his office when he arrived, one hour before the school day was over.

And my two young babies, still in elementary: “Why can’t we stay and play, and why are you here instead of Daddy?” “Well, Daddy is home with Isabella.” And the momentary lapse of understanding, followed by questions. “Why is she home? Why isn’t she at school? What happened?” And the lie, one of eleven lies all adults make per week according to Riona’s read-aloud proclamation from her Weird but True book yesterday, “She wasn’t feeling well.” “Well what’s wrong? Her stomach or her head?” (Oh, Mythili). “Her head.” “Oh, I remember this one time when I had a headache and Ms. _____ wouldn’t let me go to the nurse and….” That is my life.

And I need a guidebook for Twelve Years Old. Man I thought fifth grade was hell. No friends, fresh from Spain, a little behind in all her schoolwork, and seeing nothing but pain flash across her face. But tell me, please don’t fucking tell me, that I have carried this child across the world and back with this ever-loving family wrapping its heart around her every tear, her every obnoxious teasing of younger sisters, for her to think at twelve years old that she wants to UNDO HER LIFE.

These are the things I don’t say to Mythili. The constancy of doubts that inundate a mother’s entire existence. The waves, weight of those doubts. Of the Spanish none of us really learned. Of the pieces we had to put back together, a world of debt and a house lost and a new career and a new everything, all sitting in that damn twenty-pound backpack her militaristic school makes her carry every day.

When I arrive home with the babies in tow, I go straight to her, already in pajamas at 3:52, fully engulfed in her fantasy novel. Just like my sister, her namesake. Trying to escape … something. Me? Him? School? The analysis could kill me. (Allow me this small irony). I sit beside her on the couch. “Hey sweetie… you OK?” Mythili pokes at her hair. “Looks like your headache’s gone” and Isabella flashes me the “I-know-Santa-doesn’t-exist” look. And she gets it, and I get it, she’s so my mini-me.

I text her father before I go to Spanish class (already mentioned–didn’t actually LEARN SPANISH while in Spain). “Were the phrases ‘Suicidal thoughts’ or any other such phrases used in her presence today?”

He doesn’t respond. I heat up pasta and wish for another night for this event. “We’ll talk later.”

He fills me in after they’re in bed. “I pulled over when … We talked about it. She knew what it was and started crying all over again, saying she’d been afraid of death her whole life and couldn’t imagine why anyone would do that…”

And he showed me the texts. The girl, the “friend,” didn’t even know at first who it was who was texting her. As soon as Isabella sent the text, the girl asked her if she wanted to kill herself. Isabella’s response: “What? I just thought it was funny.”

Is it me? Us? Our society? My children have lived nothing less than a sheltered life. Barely a PG-13 movie in their entire existence. Is it my daughter who should be pulled from class, made to think these thoughts, or the girl who had the idea in the first place? Why would she so rapidly jump to the conclusion that a silly little Internet quote meant suicidal thoughts? Why must the dean be informed, the school day cut short? Why bring this on all of us in this house, this home, this safety net we have wrapped around the twelve years of her precious life?

These are the questions I cannot answer without my Guidebook for Twelve Years Old. My working-mother-love-them-to-death-father-who-asks-the-true-questions lack of a guidebook. These are the questions I ask you: Does it ever get any easier? If so… when? (Please don’t say deathbed).

Maternal Thievery

mother’s midnight dance:
rinse puke from stuffies and sheets
listen for gag sounds

hazy dose of job
sick grandma cares for sick girl
while sick husband works

cycle never ends
grandmother mother daughter
through sickness, health

mother’s twilight dance:
six laundry loads, leave sick girl
in hands now soft, warm

sleep? a silent joke
stolen from night, afternoon
thieves, our mothers’ love

Life Sentences

the aches and fevers
mid-week stay-with-me stresses
medicine won’t work

she came in a dream
all better (never better)
if only the truth

i hate trapped secrets
the solid weight of her truth
worth liquefying

they have stopped asking
bless the sick season for that
(she’ll be sick for life)

losing a baby,
making candy memories,
alcoholism:

all life sentences
that never bring forth the dream
that they’d imagined

School

i learned there’s no guilt
like the guilt of motherhood
my Tuesday lesson

tossing and turning
don’t turn remorse into gold
they make me feel old

whispers in the hall
worse than when i was in school
oh wait–i’m here. school.

we mock others’ pain
forgetting our own swallows
mixed up with sorrows

three deaths, intervention
wrap up semester’s longing
for life, a new life

we all want sunsets
bright red-circle memories
to bring back our youth

then we’d be in school
that captive institution
we couldn’t flee from

my Tuesday lesson:
mouth shut, sunsets disappear
mouth open, truth shines

It Never Gets Easier

to think i once heard
babies are hard to manage
eat, shit, drink, sleep, cry?

let’s try on costumes–
fall party, field trip, grades due
count how our days go:

back-talk homework fight
second piano practice
three girls showering

second failing math??
not a word from failed teacher
guilt, failing parents

baby barely writes
always a Daddy story
spells like a Spaniard

oldest keeps me up
stressed– her chronic detention
Daddy leaves in huff

garbage disposal
fix in the house that plagues us
that we cannot sell

let me stack my plate
with conferences tomorrow
Spanish class Thursday

Halloween Friday
filled with makeup and drinking
(i need a disguise)

to hide from this life
this balancing act of love
we call parenthood

Blackening the Blue

your tone hovers
like an angry cloud of hornets
over the perfectly peaceful day
that i have said good night to.

i will tuck it away for now
knowing that its snippets of disgust
will linger in my dreams
blackening the blue of today’s sky.

you will know none of this.
as always, your stings come straight
from your rear end, piercing me
and then abandoning everything,
unaware of the pain you have inflicted.

Delete

just when i think my heart has moved on
you haunt me with messages in my dreams
forcing me to sever this one last tie that
has kept me connected to you (your life
without me) for more than a year.

it is just a click of one button (delete)
that eliminates all the hope held somewhere
within me, the hope that hovers inside my
dreams, sticking around like a bee in a
field of non-native clover.

it is just a click of one button (delete)
that i hope will rid the constant imagery,
the begging for forgiveness, the desire
that i have (that i have always had) for
you to love me as much as i have loved you.

it is just a click of one button (delete)
that i hadn’t the strength to push until today,
one year later, closing the screen (closing
my heart) to the amazing person that you (I)
have missed because of too many button clicks.

Insomniac

slightly heavier breathing and hardly a movement
my sluggish canine stealing every bit of my space
distant planes rumbling across the stars
the hum of intermittent cars two blocks away
the slamming of the neighbor’s door
the padded footsteps of a nocturnal beast
red alarm clock numbers glaring at me

everything to keep me from my dreams, my peace
everything to keep me trapped awake
in this nightmare of my current reality.