on time, Liz. Have you ever been to a social worker before?â
âNo.â I looked around the office and saw the empty chair my mom had sat in a few days earlier, when she dropped me off, which felt like a lifetime ago. Ms. Graham kept talking.
âWeâre just going to talk. Iâm here to help you along if you have anything on your mind.â
âOkay.â
âI spoke with your mother this morning and told her about your fainting spell. She was very concerned but I assured her you and the baby are doing fine now. How are you feeling?â
âFine.â
âShe said sheâd let your father know and keep him informed.â
I looked out the little window in her office. âNo, she wonât.â
âShe said she would.â
âBut she wonât.â
âWhy not?â
âThey donât speak.â
âI see. Why is that?â
I paused. âThey hate each other.â
âThatâs an awfully strong term.â
âI know.â
I didnât want to get into it with Ms. Graham, but the simple truth was that my father had asked my mother for a divorce the day before I got home from camp that summer, just after we moved to the new house. That was when she walked for two days. Some months later my parents divorced. And after that my dad married a woman who used to work for him. From then on, for the last five years, my parents hadnât spoken. It was a radically difficult time for all of us. I was waiting for things between my parents to calm down, for our lives to become easier, or find some new version of normal. But nothing ever really changed. Nothing between them, or around them, got easier. What I felt like was that I couldnât love my dad when I was around my mom, and I couldnât love my mom when I was around my dad. The two people who had been sitting in the same place in my heart my whole life were now forcing me to hold them in two different places.
âAre they divorced?â
âYes.â
âThatâs hard.â
âYeah, hard for my mom.â
Our mom was completely shattered when our dad leftânot the regular kind of shattered, brutally shattered from head to toe. Like someone-stuck-a-hand-down-her-throat-pulled-her-heart-out-and-threw-it-against-a-moving-train shattered. And that was only the beginning. Iâd been slowly learning some truths about life over the past few years. I knew that one brief moment at anygiven time could destroy how a person exists in the world. Almost like the earth stops rotating just for a second, and the force of the stop pulls everything thatâs good away . . . and some people never find their way back. My brothers and sisters and I were right there watching when the earth stopped rotating for our mom. She loved our father; she loved him so much she waited for years for him to come back. She quit smokingââgave it up to God,â she saidâso that he might bring our dad home, but Lee never came back. Itâs a rare anguish for a child to watch the person they love the most in the world suffer so profoundly, especially when thereâs no way to help. I listened to my momâs sadness through the walls of my bedroom almost every night before I went to sleep, for years after Lee left. Some nights it made me so sad I wept along with her from my own bed.
Ms. Graham looked at me a long time and then asked, âWas the divorce hard for you?â
âKind of . . . Yes. I miss my dad.â
âHow often do you see him?â
âNot very much.â
âYour parents donât speak at all?â
âNo, they donât. But a few days ago they had to.â
⢠⢠⢠â¢
Leeâs classic wooden schooner, the Malabar X , built in 1930, moved our dad to a place I only saw when we were sailing. It was like a peek at the underbelly of his soul, where joy, and ease, and purpose all came together at the same
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