He was my father. I‘d known him for more than forty-seven
years. But after he died, I got to know
him better.
“Your dad was my friend and one of the most incredible people I’ve ever had the pleasure to hang with.”
“Your dad was my friend and one of the most incredible people I’ve ever had the pleasure to hang with.”
The woman who told me this helped write his
obituary, which ran in the newspaper for which they were both journalists. They
worked together for decades. She sent me
two long and lyrical emails about her memories of him. I knew her name, Joye. But I’ve never met her.
I also received two detailed and moving emails
from Colette, the Activities Director at the assisted living home where dad
spent his final years due to the physical and mental ravages of Parkinson’s
Disease. I’d met her when I visited, but
I had no idea that she would write hundreds of words about my father, recalling
which songs he preferred, his prowess in trivia games, and his attempts – from
his wheelchair, in his limited and subdued voice -- to rebuke another resident
who was rude to her.
“You tend to fall in love with residents
at these places, but your father was extra special, he was brilliant, he
was funny, he was compassionate and kind.”
Reading descriptions of my dad written by
near-strangers elicited in me an odd mix of happiness, loss, fascination, and guilt. Shouldn’t I have known these stories? Shouldn’t I have known Dad better? Been a better daughter? Spent more time with him? And yet, how wonderful to find that his life
was deeper, richer, more connected, and more valued than ever I had suspected.
What does it mean to know someone?
“Alas, poor Yorick. I knew him, Horatio”. Hamlet, in his classic skull-holding
reminiscence, goes on to describe a kind-hearted and jovial man who gave the little
Danish prince piggy-back rides and was able to get a crowd of people roaring
with laughter. But a child who is small
enough to toss about was probably too young to understand half the grownup
jokes. Was Yorick sharing political
gibes, or naughty innuendos about “swords”?
How many other Shakespearean characters would we have to interview to
truly “know” Yorick?
Dad lived for thirty years before I was
born, in decades I never experienced – the war-torn forties, the aggressively
normative fifties, the rebellious sixties. Even if I untangle and reweave every
story I can recall – from him, his sister, his parents, his college roommate,
the context of history itself – I have only a sketch of a person.
Not that the details don’t draw me in. Dad
was a child of a socially and politically progressive and diverse immigrant
family; his father, a Sephardic Jew, came from Turkey as a young man, and his
mother, an Ashkenazi Jew, arrived from Russia as a little girl. The path that Dad’s family saw to the
American Dream -- open to those with white skin and relatively educated
backgrounds -- involved rapid acculturation, financial struggle, and hard work
by both my grandparents. It built
towards a house in the suburbs, baseball games, Christmas trees, crew cuts, and
good grades in school. Dad was a
precocious and intellectual child, but with a goofy and irreverent sense of
humor that he retained for his entire life.
He wasn’t much good at sports, but managed to fit in with the other boys
by cultivating a taste for nerdy baseball statistics. Dad wore chinos and
loafers and button-down shirts. Dad went
to Harvard, then piled on two Master’s degrees from Columbia in Journalism and
International Affairs. He served his country as a diplomat in the Foreign
Service, rather than getting sent to fight an unwinnable war in Vietnam. He met a young woman working at the British embassy
in Turkey, who became my mother.
It’s a rich sketch, with several possible
personal or sociopolitical essays buried within it, but it’s a sketch
nonetheless.
By the time my memories start, in the
mid-70s, Dad seemed established, iconic, and as ancient as any 33-year-old
seems to a three-year-old. Mom was the
designated caregiver, who stayed home with the kids until I, the younger child,
entered kindergarten. The expectations of
dad-hood have changed since the early seventies – a subject that would, itself,
fill several more essays.
Dad disappeared all day to work. He left wearing a suit, and came home with a
newspaper, Newsday. It took some time
before I realized that the paper he brought home every day WAS his work. I did not question his motives, his dreams,
or his inner life. Children don’t view
adults that way.
When I was small, I aspired to be old
enough, fast enough, smart enough, and capable enough to keep up with the
things Dad did with my big sister, and with adults. He was not the type to slow his stride or
offer piggyback rides, so I learned to move my short legs quickly. He was not the type to suffer through tedious
games of Candyland or Uno, so when I was six I learned how to play bridge and
Scrabble. He was not the type to take me
to Disney movies, so when I was seven, I watched all of War and Peace and I,
Claudius as PBS mini-series.
As I got older, I connected most with Dad
over New York Mets games and Scrabble matches.
The Mets lost a lot, but we rooted for them anyhow. I lost a lot, but still enjoyed finding new
words. I looked up to Dad, but not in
the way that others did, and not for the same reasons.
From age eleven to age fifteen, I delivered
Newsday -- proud on my three-speed bike with the big wire baskets. I thought of it as Dad’s paper, but I wasn’t
particularly impressed by his byline. I didn’t
put much thought into who knew my dad, or what they thought of him. When he was part of a reporting team that won
a Pulitzer Prize, I was like, “Huh, what’s that? Oh, okay.”
Every night at the dinner table, I heard about
Dad’s successes and frustrations as a reporter. I recall that he admired Joye’s
work, her smarts, and her pluck, and I distinctly remember his glee when she
helped him subvert a bad decision by an editor.
I also heard tales of many other invisible strangers: Rich, Howie,
Bob. Some of the stories were interesting. Some were hilarious. But I was a kid, immersed in my own world and
unconcerned with the professional connections and status of my parents.
Things got complicated during my
teens.
In that sentence lie several other essays
yet again, best left for another time. Suffice
to say that Dad was struck hard by clinical depression and anxiety, and some of
that pain cascaded onto my shoulders. My
shoulders were not strong enough.
We pulled through. Dad got the help that was beyond my power to
provide. Things got better. And I grew
to know Dad through different lenses. Closer,
more adult lenses. Less perfect lenses.
Three decades after my dad went to Harvard,
I went there, too. As a book-smart and
world-dumb eighteen-year-old, I was aware that Dad was glad I was following in
his footsteps, but I didn’t really feel the continuity. The world had changed a lot -- letting women
into Harvard, for one thing. I had my
own memories to create, although at the time, I didn’t think about it that
way. Teenagers are not preemptively
nostalgic. The closest I got was joking
with my new roommates, when Dad’s good friend and former Harvard roommate sent
me a nice desk lamp. “Does this mean that I have to give your kids lamps in
thirty years?”
I haven’t gifted any lamps yet. Maybe I never will. But a year ago, when I attended my 25th
college reunion, I did gain a new perspective on what it means to know others,
and to be known by them.
I expected the reunion to be fun,
nostalgic, a bit of a whirlwind, and a little cheesy at times. It was all of those things. It was also deeply connective. My long-ago friends – not just the very few
I’d assiduously kept up with, but also all those I hadn’t -- seemed closer than
I expected them to feel. We were not
awkward acquaintances, but people with shared memories, remembered jokes, and
common interests undulled by time. What
I found were pieces of myself, held in safekeeping by others.
In the Harry Potter series, we learn that Voldemort
seeks immortality by tearing apart his own soul and hiding pieces of it in
objects – “horcruxes”. This is obviously
a hideous distortion of a meaningful life.
And yet it strikes me that the dispersion of oneself sought by “he who
shall not be named” is at some level something we all long for. We all make beneficent horcruxes out of each
other, by offering up parts of our inner selves in friendship, in love, in
connection.
The offering -- and the vulnerability
engendered by that offering -- can be terrifying. To offer invites rejection and loss. To be known, truly known, means to inevitably
reveal all our flaws, inconsistencies, unrealized dreams, failed ideals, hidden
biases, foibles, mistakes, and weaknesses.
Close relationships of all kinds are difficult, and sometimes painful. It’s not easy to accept and love a complicated,
imperfect, damaged, maddening human.
It’s not easy to be such a human – as we all are – and reveal oneself to
another. But does anything feel better, deeper, and more joyful in this world
than to feel that someone knows you, and loves you nonetheless?
Love notwithstanding.
At my college reunion, people brought out
details about me that I’d all but forgotten myself. Each memory was like an old silver coin to
which someone applies a touch of polish.
Oh, was that sparkle there all the
time? The fact that others had been
keeping these pieces of myself, holding them safe for a quarter century, was
astonishing and humbling. Yet I found I,
too, had so many shining coins to share.
“We dwell in one another”. My friend Steve chose those words to describe this phenomenon, when reflecting on the reunion soon afterward. It was manifestly true. I don’t just “know” my friends, to varying levels and degrees. I have internalized small aspects of them, and they of me. In some cases – such as with Steve – the friendship forged some indelible part of me.
“We dwell in one another”. My friend Steve chose those words to describe this phenomenon, when reflecting on the reunion soon afterward. It was manifestly true. I don’t just “know” my friends, to varying levels and degrees. I have internalized small aspects of them, and they of me. In some cases – such as with Steve – the friendship forged some indelible part of me.
A year later, Steve’s words came back to
me, as I read the many thoughts shared by those who knew my dad. Some memories were general, and some were particular,
sweet, insightful, and funny. They did
not contradict my own knowing of my father, but they enriched it.
“Please know that your dad was
respected. He was loved.”
“I am very sad, but I still have
hundreds of happy memories going back to our being roommates at Harvard. Bob
began his love affair with journalism as a WHRB newscaster, and he followed the
weather on Long Island much more closely than he did that in Cambridge. His
Long Island weather addiction continued through his life. I will miss him very
much.”
“I cried when I read of your father's
passing.”
“At Newsday, Bob was a formidable
colleague. He helped — naw, hell, he was key — to my first project. I’d wanted
to find the biggest slumlord in Long Island. And he was far, far better than I
at digging out records and making sense of them. We shared a byline, but I got
the best of the partnership since I learned so much. We would work together on
several more projects together. And we worked well. Your dad was a
perfectionist.”
“One sweet singer named Mary would walk
around with her mic and often go right over to your Dad put it up to your Dad's
mouth so that he could sing. She just
loved your Dad too.”
“I remember so many long political and intellectual conversations at your home, covering every topic imaginable.”
“I remember so many long political and intellectual conversations at your home, covering every topic imaginable.”
“Many Newsday people have responded with
sadness at his passing and very fond memories of their own.”
“I am so honored that I got to meet and
know your father. He positively impacted
not just my life, but others’ lives too. What a nice, compassionate, caring,
fun and brilliant minded man.”
“One March 15, he had posted a note on
the fridge that said, Beware the Ides of March. Two days later, he replaced it
with one that said, Beware, the Irish march!”
“I remember a pun he sent you in one of
his letters. ‘It has been raining and raining
– it’s like terminal moraine.’ “
“Intelligent, amusing, kind are words that come to mind when thinking of Bob.”
“Intelligent, amusing, kind are words that come to mind when thinking of Bob.”
“Bob was an early adopter of data-driven
reporting techniques — he was quick to grasp how complex systems worked and had
encyclopedic knowledge of the Island’s counties, towns, cities and villages.”
“I remember him having a little twinkle
in his eye to go with his sense of humor and wry smile.”
“He loved his work and attacked every
reporting assignment with an unabashed earnestness.”
“He would not do well on entertainment
questions, but difficult ones he always got. And people, not the more
competitive residents, hehe, but people loved watching your Dad get the
answers.”
“He was a journalist with integrity,
respect, and compassion. A lovely man.”
“Your Dad took me into his work on one
trip… it was in the late 90's and I remember taking this photo of him at his
desk.”
“This may seem odd, but I don’t have any
memories of your and Jay’s wedding - except for the extraordinary pleasure of
meeting your dad. Was there a certain kinship, both being Long Islanders, or
was he just an unforgettable person for everyone who met him?”
“He was above all smart and intellectual. You could talk to him about everything — he
knew literature, he knew music, but he loved to talk about his daughters. He
was so proud of his daughters.”
So many facets. So many views. So many ways of knowing. He hated peas. He wore black dress socks with shorts. He was terrible at Pictionary. He preferred to drive a standard
transmission. He liked fresh New York bagels with lox. He read Dick Francis mystery novels. He
walked at Caumsett. He jumped in the
surf off Long Island. His facial hair was too coarse for electric razors. He had size nine feet. He completed the New York Times crossword
puzzle every day. He always liked to get
cake and presents on his birthday, but didn’t much care about Father’s Day, which he called a Hallmark Holiday.
We dwell in one another.
He was my father. I‘d known him for more than forty-seven
years. But others knew him, too. In hearing some of those memories, I’ve not
only gotten to know him better, but myself, as well.
Profound and beautiful. Your father will always dwell in you, Nancy, and you in your girls, and so on down the line, forever. Hugs, Steve
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