Read Knocking on Heaven's Door: The Path to a Better Way of Death Online
Authors: Katy Butler
Tags: #Non-Fiction
in a tiny, nearly illegible script. “Your legs never let you down even
though put under great pressure. Such legs are not available to
every body.” My parents had a good week in Maine, and not long
after they returned, my mother decided to quit Remeron on her
own. I came to visit in November, got the flu, and extended my
stay to a full week. Oblivious, I lay in the guest bedroom blowing
my nose in my unmade bed, her calligraphy desk littered with
the galleys of my finally completed magazine story.
I cooked in my mother’s spotless kitchen the way I did at
home—piling up mountainous salads at dinner and working my
way through big plates of rice, vegetables, and chicken at lunch.
My mother pursed her lips and sat down with my father, each
before a translucent white plate holding half a peeled, sliced
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apple fanned like origami; three spears of ruffled romaine; and
two or three translucent curls of sheep’s’ milk cheese. At tea, to
her annoyance, I refused her offer of toast and jam. When my
father methodically wheeled out the television and turned on
the evening news—one of the few chores he was still capable of
doing—I declined to join her in her ritual evening glass of wine
accompanied by a thimbleful of peanuts in a tiny blue and white
Chinese eggcup. She asked why I deprived myself of all pleasure.
I asked her to let me be. She said I was paranoid and oversensi-
tive. The next day I borrowed a pair of socks and returned them
without washing them. I withdrew to my room, nursed the tail
end of my flu, and moved up my return flight up by a day.
The day before I was due to leave, as we unloaded groceries
from the car, she stood on her doorstep and shouted that all I
thought about was “Me! Me! Me!” My diet, she said, was “rigid,
excessive, and ridiculous.” I could have been a teenager again,
standing in the cold, tears filling my eyes. There on the doorstep,
as alive as ever, were our ancient angers and griefs: my desper-
ate need for autonomy and hers for control, our mutual inability
to say, “I need you,” my craving for her love, and my fury at not
getting it. I ran upstairs weeping and pulled my Rollaboard out
of the closet. I was nearly fifty-six, and she was eighty.
In the emotional world there is no time. Staring out the
window as my Southwest flight descended once again over the
Cargill salt ponds into San Francisco International Airport, I
mentally ticked off my resentments. She’d brusquely told me to
eat the big zucchinis and the dark chicken meat and leave her
the small zucchinis and the white meat. She’d forgotten to put
out an extra cup for me at tea. She’d mocked my father when
he couldn’t finish his sentences. Whenever my brothers—who
barely remembered to call her on Mother’s Day, while I usually
sent a card or a book—hinted they needed money, she’d mail
out a thousand dollars to cover a month’s rent, or car insurance,
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or an acting workshop. But she’d insisted I pay separately for a
$1.29 Burt’s Bees lip balm that I’d put in her supermarket cart.
My mother called to make up. She’d just been irritated and
impatient, she said, it was her besetting sin, and she was too
ashamed to talk further about it. I said I wanted an apology.
“Do you mean to say I habitually treat you with disrespect?” she
said in surprise, and then wailed, “I have limitations!” I got off
the phone and called my brothers, indulging in our cherished
tradition of bashing absent family members behind their backs.
My brother Jonathan told me to give up on the fantasy that if I
played Perfect Daughter, I’d finally earn her love.
He put down the phone, found his well-thumbed copy of
The Big Book
of Alcoholics Anonymous, and read a page aloud
to me:
Acceptance is the answer to all my problems today. When I
am disturbed, it is because I find some person, place, thing
or situation—some fact of my life—unacceptable to me, and
I can find no serenity until I accept that person, place, thing
or situation as being exactly the way it is supposed to be at
this moment. Nothing, absolutely nothing happens in God’s
world by mistake.
Over the phone, I could hear him close the book with a snap.
“Your mother is a rattlesnake,” he said. “She was a miserable
bitch before the stroke and she’s still a miserable bitch. Don’t
try too hard.” On my next call, my brother Michael offered me
empathy and called her “the cute little monster.”
Lisa, one of my closest friends, who was a long-distance care-
giver for an elderly, recently widowed mother and a disabled sis-
ter, advised a showdown. Some months earlier, she’d flown to
New York to help her mother complete the final tax return for
Lisa’s deceased father. One night at 1:00 am, when Lisa was on
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the phone with her husband, her mother flew into her bedroom
and scolded her to put out the light and go to sleep. The next
morning, Lisa sat her mother down at the breakfast table and said
that at fifty-three she was old enough to choose her own bedtime,
and that if this continued, she’d stop coming east to help. “Do
you understand me?” she said, and would not let it go until the
old woman dropped her eyes, intimidated, and said yes. Circum-
stances had changed, my friend told me. We dutiful daughters
had to turn the family hierarchy upside down or perish.
The physical world was my mother’s arena: I was too intimi-
dated to confront her there. I retreated instead into the written
word, and sent her a heavily revised, six-page letter of com-
plaint, detailing every insult and every blow. “I will not be your
convenient Cinderella,” I wrote with a flourish, “to be praised in
your hour of need and denigrated when no longer useful.”
Silence.
Brian and I held a New Year’s Eve party, and everyone wrote
down what they wanted to get rid of and what they wanted to
bring into their lives, and threw the shiny papers into the blaz-
ing fireplace. One of our guests, a writer named Noelle Oxen-
handler whom I then barely knew, burst into tears. Her mother,
who’d been living in Provence with a lover who could no longer
care for her, had dementia. Noelle, with a daughter in college
and a mortgage to pay, had been forced to fly over and trick her
mother into returning to the States. She had set her up in a
townhouse in Sonoma and was paying a full-time caregiver out
of her mother’s dwindling savings.
My mother and I did not speak for months. In the early
spring, after teaching my annual writing workshop in Washing-
ton, I took Amtrak north, stayed with an old college classmate
in Larchmont, and met with editors in New York for whom I
wanted to write. Then, rather than taking the Metro-North to
New Haven and having my parents pick me up there, as was our
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custom, I went back to California. I did not want my mother to
touch me with a three-thousand-mile pole.
My father kept laboring over his torturous handwritten let-
ters to me, full of love, odd sentences, and wisdom. One letter
read, “This is a bad time for you and your mother. I know you
are having a ‘frightful row’ but that must be got over as soon as
possible. You should be able to do so fairly quickly.”
I did not. One day in California, I drove to the end of the box
canyon I lived in, took a wooden footbridge over a stream, and
climbed through a stand of second-growth redwoods and up a
slope lined with blackberry bushes onto Mount Tamalpais, my
sacred mountain. Up the steep railroad-tie steps to Cowboy Rock
I sweated and panted, my buttocks and lungs burning, up past
the county water tank and the dozen rich houses built where the
Flying Y Ranch used to be. At ten in the morning, I breached a
ridge and entered a vast bowl of unpopulated hills. Car sounds
died away. Finches twittered in the chaparral. I followed the trail
beneath a bent bay laurel, bonsaied by the winds. A madrone
showed its red bones.
“Mountains,” the Zen master Eihei Dogen told an assembly
of Japanese monks in 1240, “are our Buddha ancestors.” Inside
my brain, an invisible hand turned the volume knob down. I
moved deep into the sock of the valley—the only visible human.
Except for a ribbon of yellow-lined asphalt below me, there was
no sign of human making. Beyond the last hills lay the Pacific.
Over the ridges at my back, far to the east, beyond three thou-
sand miles of deserts and mountains, my mother was proba-
bly putting away the Manchego cheese as my father hovered
around her in the kitchen. Perhaps she was shouting at him to
sit down and stop crowding her. Helping her, I thought, was like
reaching through barbed wire to water a rose.
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*
*
*
From my earliest childhood memory, my mother was beautiful,
bewildering, and dangerous. When I was four, she’d stopped our
car on a road through a great beech woods. We were driving from
Oxford to pick up my father, who was teaching in High Wycombe.
It was autumn. All the leaves were golden yellow. The branches
of the beeches met high above our heads, making an arched and
open cathedral. The very air was yellow with the glory of the trees.
My mother turned off the ignition and put the keys in her pocket.
“We are going to build a house for the fairies,” she said, and opened
the door. We walked into the yellow woods. At a hollow place at
the foot of a tree, my mother knelt down. She brushed away leaves
and stuck forked twigs into the ground. She balanced sticks across
the clefts, making roof-beams, a ridgepole, then rafters. I propped
yellow leaves against the sides and roofed it in beech leaves—they
were broad-bladed, like spears, and their points made a jagged line
along the peak. We put moss in the front garden, and round white
stones to lead the fairies to the door.
Even then she was a rebel and an agnostic, with nothing
good to say about reverence. But that day she led me to some-
thing she could not give me and taught me something close to
prayer. All the way back to the car, beneath the blazing beeches,
I held her hand.
When had things gone wrong between us? Was it after my
brother Michael was born, when I stopped serving her “tea” inside
a hollowed-out bush in Oxford’s University Parks? Was it the
day I was five and she strolled away from me on the Woodstock
Road, pushing Michael ahead in his pram, leaving me bereft on
the closed, hard street to run alone, weeping, back to our locked
brick row house on Thorncliffe Road, because I’d stamped my
foot and argued with her about which playground to visit? Was it
the evening not long after my brother Jonathan was born, when
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she collapsed in tears and exhaustion and my father helped her
wash the boys’ nappies, pulling them through the mangle with his
teeth while he turned the crank with his only hand?
Was it coming to America that broke us, stripping away from
our little émigré family every relative, colleague, neighbor, and
friend we’d ever known? Was it building that first Techbuilt, that
bare house, empty of furniture, where my father tried to finish his
thesis in a dark corner of the master bedroom while my mother
laid a cork floor downstairs? Was it the way my father and I treated
her like an idiot because she couldn’t spell? Was it her loneliness,
after my father got tenure at Wesleyan and grew increasingly pre-
occupied with teaching, writing, and hiding out in the evenings
behind his newspaper and a dark glass of bourbon and soda?
Was it the day I came back from boarding school at the age of seventeen and argued with her until she slapped me in the face on the
stairs of her new, bigger, better-furnished Middletown Techbuilt
and I slapped her deliberately back—the only way I knew to put
an end to a lifetime of her impulsive hitting and random cruelty?
Was it simply that I rubbed her the wrong way because I was by
nature chaotic and messy, and she was neat?
All I know is that by the time I was twelve, I hated her, and
I believed she hated me—a feeling confirmed when I found
a letter she was writing to my father while he was in England
doing research. “Katy has been awful,” it read. “But then she
always was your child, anyway.” I wrote my hate down in my
diary, which she found and read. I hated her when she tried to
teach me to sew and tore out and resewed my crooked seams