you and me and…

“… but the amazing thing about that, dad, is that you know Ash, yeah, well he, uhm, goes like from gym to gym to win uh, what do they call them, uh, oh yeah, to win badges yeah, so he battles, you know but to battle he has to capture new Pokémons all the time, you know, so it’s like this, when he wants…”

His unending stream of words floats up to me as we walk side by side on the way home from his school.

“… but the most important, you when he catches a Pokémon is that like the new uh, uh, creature has to want to become a,a, a, friend, or else it cant work, you understand?… yeah, so then…”

I want to tell him to pause, to breathe, but there’s no real point. I know it because that’s exactly what my Father used to say to me. Apparently I was an unending verbal flow. The injunction for air was more of a joke than an actual recommendation. So, as a kid, I just kept talking. Maybe I sensed that the moment I stopped, it would be for a long time.

My Father died this week, eight years ago.

A grade 2 dropout in his native Italy, he was barely literate in the English and French of his adopted Montréal. Yet, he told stories and made mostly salacious jokes in whatever language was needed. I quote him often, or at least that’s what I say. But I’m pretty convinced that many of the pronouncements that I begin with ‘as my Father used to say…” end up in inventions of my own. It would be more accurate to say that it’s in the spirit of my Father.

But, as my Father used to say ” never let the truth get in the way of a good story.”

I resemble my Father in many, mostly ineffective ways. But also in some terribly beautiful ways.

I will pursue the idea of woman to the ends of the earth and to exhaustion. Like he did with my Mother. They met during the war, when he was a 19 year old soldier from the North, stationed in her southern Italian village. She was 14. He had a penciled mustache. It was instant love that became marriage and lasted more than sixty years.

But she was not woman, she was a woman. She was very often unhappy… and angry. I think he was very often happy… and angry. They based their lives on a foundational myth, an illusion. A never satisfying proposition.

I’m often angry. And happy and not. And I’ve made my illusions my metier as a filmmaker and writer.

“… and you know what sucks, dad, it’s that when you like …”

I look down at my verbal tsunami machine as he hops and skips and talks and talks. His hands are flying to accentuate his words. His sweet little face is a canvas of fleeting emotions and ideas. He’s a storyteller. And I know he’s happy.

“Breathe, Noah…”.

He stops in  midstep.

“Wha?”

“Stop talking just long enough to breathe.”

He shakes his head. He’s heard it before.

“Dad, if I wasn’t breathing when I talk, I’d be blue and dead, you know. Gotcha, gotcha, oh yeah, oh yeah..” He wets his finger, touches his butt and makes a sizzling sound.

“I’m sooooo hot….”. He laughs and i join in. Then he starts talking again.

“So, like I was saying, the best Pokémon of the new series….”

He starts hopping and skipping as he unpacks the boxes and boxes of ideas in his head. I follow. I wonder if my Father was like that as a kid. Smart, cute, sensitive and brilliantly talented. Until fascism, misery and war stomped on all that.

Talk, Noah, talk until you’re blue in the face and beyond.

I feel a sudden urge to scoop Noah up in my arms and hold him tight like I wish I could hold my Father tight, once more.

burn

 

Noah gets up a half hour later than usual. I’m already in the living room sipping my first café latte. He pops his head out of his room and smiles.

Widely. Gloriously.

Ouaga, the cat, has been fretting, growling and miauling. She bumped her head against my closed door as I woke at 7. Unleashed a desperate “Arrrouuunnwww” and ran to her empty dish when I went to the bathroom.

“Sorry, fat cat, go wake the little guy. It’s his job.”

I swear, she slapped her forehead before swinging her fatness over to Noah’s darkened room. I heard a newly emphatic “Arrrounwww”.

For a full half hour she ran back and forth between the living room and the boy’s room, throwing meaning looks and singing her sad feline tune.

Finally, Noah is up… and smiling. The cat is beside herself with joy and anticipation, rubbing against his legs and cooing like a pigeon on four legs.

Noah and the cat bond in the bathroom. I hear them communicating. Noah is gentle and patient. The cat rolls it’s tongue in dulcet tones.

Noah leaps out of the bathroom and bounds on the futon beside me.

“Dad, I gave her like fresh water, too.”

“Great, she’s been waiting for you like a long lost friend.”

“Really?”

“Yeah, running back and forth and waiting for you to wake.”

“I love Ouaga, because, like even if she’s super hungry she lets me sleep, you know?”

Yeah, because she’s too busy banging her head against my door to wake me up, instead.

Noah settles in front of his six-berry muffin and tall glass of milk. He turns on the TV to his favorite show…Beyblade.

“Hey, Noah, it’s this morning that Subasa fights the last Beyblade battle and we find out who wins the semifinals.”

Noah throws me a perplexed look.

“Exactly.”

“I’m pumped. I hope Subasa wins. I like him, he’s been through a lot.”

“Yeah he had to … .”

He pauses, stares at his muffin, plucks out a massive blueberry which seems to have taken more steroids than Lance Armstrong. He rolls it around in his fingers before throwing it in his mouth and popping it with a loud noise.

“Uhm now that was one hell of blueberry.”

He turns to me, wide-eyed.

“Oops!”

“A heaven of a blueberry would make more sense.”

“Yeah, but it doesn’t exist.”

“So make it up.”

“True.”

We go silent as the cartoon starts. Anime boys and girls with cool spiky hair and big eyes battle with spinning tops for honor and friendship.

“Dad, I’m afraid Subasa won’t win because like you know he’s had to fight the dark side.”

“But he defeated the darkness inside him, right? By accepting it and going into it rather than trying to deny it.”

Noah again throws me a look.

“Dad, you really do listen!”

“I sure do.”

We watch Subasa struggle to channel the darkness without being overwhelmed, all in extravagant cartoon style with yells and bravado.

“You know, Noah, I just realized that the core of Subasa’s struggle is the same as the protagonist in the film I’m going to shoot next month.”

“You mean Samuel Beckett?”

I nod in appreciation.

“Exactly. Wow, you really do listen?”

He turns, pleased, and does a ghetto move with slashing hands and three extended fingers.

“Burn!”

I wet my finger and touch it to his shoulder.

“Tssss.. hot.”

I pull my finger back as if scorched.

The cat has finished her gorging. She jumps on the futon and slides onto Noah’s narrow lap. She turns and twists, claws extended, until she settles down and falls instantly asleep.

“Ow,” says Noah, before scratching her between the ears.

On the TV, Subasa has turned it around and is about to win the battle and his dark side.

“It was clear that the darkness I had always struggled to keep under is, in reality, my most precious asset.” Samuel Beckett

collateral benefits…

“When do you deliver? I’m not sure I understand.”

I’m on the phone as I accompany Noah to his day camp, Friday morning. I never do this. Hate being on the phone when he”s there.

He stares up at me.

“What is it, Dad. Do I get the uh, parcel like today?”

He hops a little. Understandably. He’s been excited ever since we saw the failed delivery notice stuck to our door.

Last night he was full of questions. “Do you think it’s from Belgium, from Johanna (his mom)? Or do you think it’s maybe like from Italy, from Mirella (his cousin)? Do they know I’m crazy about Pokémon? How come it’s not like from the mailman? Can we go pick it up now?”

The only way to get him to relent and go to bed was to promise that I would call first thing in the morning to enquire about delivery.

“Thanks dad. I love you dad.You’re the best.”

Yes, there are considerable collateral benefits to being a Father.

“Between 1 am and 7pm, sir.”

The Midwestern voice on the phone is polite in that perfectly modulated, barely human tone that leaves no openings.

I laugh out loud. Noah smiles, a little uncertainly.

“Wow, that’s not very useful. For one it’s an impossibly wide range and two, it’s the opposite of when I’m home, able to receive the package.”

“I’m sorry sir.”

Noah frowns, stops walking. “What dad, what did they say?” He ‘s not hopping anymore. I motion him to keep moving forward. We’re late.

“Can’t I make an appointment in a shorter time frame.”

“No, sir, I’m sorry, sir.”

This is the moment where I choose to rant or choose to smile at the absurdity of “service”.  Pre-fatherhood I would have ranted. But there’s Noah, all 137 cm. of trusting, hopeful excitement. Already he’s stopped hopping because of the weight of our inquiry.

“Sir? Are you still there?”

“Yes, I was just trying to figure out how to meet your unavailabilities.”

Ooooh, I’m proud of that one. Nasty but elegant.

“Sir, you can sign the delivery notice giving us permission to leave it at the door.”

“I see no other option.”

“You can include a check for the payment.”

“What payment?”

“Payment? For what? Dad?”

Noah stops moving again. He must be mimicking me because he’s frowning in a mix of surprise and mounting frustration.

“$38.40 for shipping and customs, sir.” Her voice is mono-chord.

“$38.40?” My voice goes up one octave. Incredulity and bitchiness does that.

“$38.40? Noah’s voice goes up at several octaves.

No surprise. Yesterday I grumbled at him because he bought a $1.86 push-pop candy that I thought was 99 cents. So $38.40 is a massive expenditure.

“Where’s it from?”

“Belgium sir.”

I try hard to control my face. Noah’s Mom has been gone for at least six of his 9 years… lost in the labyrinth of her mental illnesses, running up against the dead ends of schizophrenia, psychosis. borderline syndrome and other unicorns. He hears from her rarely, and that’s a good thing, given that she refuses any medication and is prone to violence. Luckily, she’s more than five thousand kilometers away.

“You can leave a check, sir.”

“Okay, thanks. Good day.” I hang up.

“It’s from Belgium, Noah. I guess from your mom.”

“But what, dad? She like sent me something that like you have to pay for?”

“She bought whatever is inside. But she didn’t pay for the delivery.”

“Whaaaa…? That’s mean.”

Yes. As usual.

“No. She probably just got confused.”

“I’m so sorry for you, dad.”

“What for?”

“For like the thirty eight dollars and uhm, forty cents. That’s a lot of money.”

“It is.”

“It’s like my fault.”

“Absolutely not! The Push pop candy last night, now that was your total fault.”

He looks up, sees me smiling and snickers.

“Yeah, that was a fail, huhn dad? Yeah! But still, she coulda like have paid it, you know.”

Yeah, but Noah… the cool thing is that it’s proof that she thinks about you. Probably all the time.”

“Really?”

“I’m sure. So she probably found something for you and was so excited she just had to send it whether she had the money or not.”

“Just like a kid, dad.”

Sweet, brilliant Noah.

“Exactly. And receiving a parcel from Europe. How cool is that?”

“I just like hope it’s not like the stuff, remember, when I was like 8. Yeah, she sent me a package that said Happy Birthday but, like two months late. Haha.”

He chortles and shakes his head in sympathetic acceptance, like an old man considering the folly of youth.

“And dad, it was like clothes I hated, and uh, candy I didn’t eat and the worst of the worstest was like she sent books, like, for a baby.”

“Yeah. you were disappointed. But at least she tried.”

“Yeah, poor Johanna.”

It rends my heart that he no longer calls her mom. Yes, she’s nuts and useless and thousands of kilometers away and yes she was violent and horrible before she left. But she was the only woman I had loved enough to bring forth a child.

Noah.

His little hand shoots up into mine.

“Dad, like what happens if you don’t want to pay?”

“It goes back to your mom. But that’s cruel. I think she would be very sad.”

“Really?”

Who knows my son, who knows?

“Really.”

“Yeah, and if it’s like stuff I don’t want, I can like give it to the poor.”

Sweet. He doesn’t know that we’re the poor.

“You’re a wonderful human being, Noah.”

“You too, dad. And a great Father, too.”

Collateral benefits to single fatherhood is that I get all of the love.

 

 

 

 

go play…

…have fun, I guess

“Be careful.”

“Okay dad.”

He barrels down the metal staircase descending into the alley behind our apartment. The soccer ball precedes him, bouncing down the three flights.

I willfully look away. Better not to see. Better not to say what is banging against the back of my teeth. Otherwise he may turn and complain….

“Awwww, mom.”

That’s what I spent my time thinking when I was a kid. Never saying it because it would have led to greater repression. My Mother was afraid of everything. So I was enmeshed in her protective webs. Made me rebellious yet timid, cowardly and foolhardy, a freedom warrior needing attachment. A mess.

So now, I’m a dad. I see Noah slip on the wet metal step and almost finish the descent on his head.

“Woooooouuuhhhh……that was close, dad, dad you see that? I almost went bouncing like the ball. Dad?”

He looks up. I’m on the balcony, two stories overhead.

“Yeah. If you fall from that height, I’ll have to say…’He was so smart before he fell on his head’. ”

“Dad…really!”

Yup. I’m a male. Tough. Grunt. Snort. Belch. Scratch.

Oops! Gotta check on supper.

I run into the kitchen. In a manly way of course. Damn, the pot is boiling over. Lousy stove is one of those ceramic top stupidities. It takes for ever to get something boiling and then when it boils over, it takes forever to bring the bloody temperature down. I run to the drier to get a clean dishcloth. I’m reminded Noah is out of clean socks. Mental note made. Run back to the kitchen with a virile growl and drag the pot off the element. I stir, careful not to scrape the bottom in case it stuck.

The cat rubs up against my legs and meows.

“Go away, fat cat, you were fed an hour ago.” I push it away a little harshly.

Tough love from a, ehm, man?

I glance out the window. It has begun drizzling.The wind has picked up and is cold. Noah is bareheaded, no sweater. How many times do I have to tell him the same things.

I step out on the balcony.

“Noah!”

No response. Damn he’s right there, three floors down. He’s ignoring me !?!

“NOAH!” Way louder.  He looks up as if waking from a dream.

“Come in. it’s getting cold and it’s raining.”

“Aaaaawwww….”.

The one side of me, call it the mom side, wants to go ballistic with a … ‘you’re not dressed, you’re going to catch cold, fall sick and I’m going to have to take care of you, etc etc.’….”.

“Get your bubble butt inside.”  A male compromise. Say you care, but brutally.

Shit, I forgot to put the pot back onto the element. Supper will never be ready that way.

Back in the kitchen, I take the dishcloth to move the pot and remember the wash to do. Noah steps in, frowning, dirty shoes dragging on the floor. Okay the floor is already not clean…bit still.

“Shoes off, Noah.”

He blows an ill-willed wind, but pulls his shoes off anyways.

“What do I do now, dad? I like have nothing to do.”

“Help me with the clothes.” I’m loading the washer. Not enjoying it. Not hating it.

“No way, that’s not fun.”

I get a waft of cat. Look down. Geez, the litter is full again. Feed the cat and empty the litter. Life. Simple and annoying.

Noah is turning on himself, scowling.

“Noah find something to do, before one of us, or both of us, go nuts.”

“There’s nothing to do.”

“Read, write, draw, play, throw yourself down and get dirty. Do something.”

“How’s that any fun?”

Getting down and dirty is the most fun I’ve ever had.

“Is your school bag ready for tomorrow, with your gym stuff and the library books to return?”

“No.”

“Well, there…now you’ve got something to do.”

“Aaaaawwww, dad.”

I hear the pot boiling over and the liquid sizzling on the element. I stride to the stove. Supper’s ready and unburnt. Hah!

Unfortunately, I forgot to start the dishwasher this morning, so I need to wash dishes and utensils.

I burn my hands under the water. No, no gloves to preserve my skin. I’m a man!

Which reminds me. I need a new mistress. I used to enjoy Wednesday afternoons in bed with a lovely lady, but she’s fallen in love with a guy without child. She wanted kids. The goodbye Wednesday was the best sex we’d ever had.

“Dad, I’m starved.”

“Ready, in two minutes flat. Go wash your hands.”

My male side says “get dirty”…the other side worries about germs.

MAPA me…

 

 

seen…

…and heard

“Papa, paaaaappppaaaaaaaaa, paaa……”.

A loud, wailing sobbing boy running after his Father on the street. Half a yard tall, longer snots streaming out of his nose.

Noah and I are both watching in silence on the corner as we wait for his school bus.

The Father walks ahead, seemingly unmoved as his son runs on an uncertain trajectory behind him.

“Paaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaappaaaaaaaa…”.

The wail is getting louder, shriller, less or more human depending on whether you find humanity primitive or evolved.

Passersby throw glances of instant judgment. 5 to 1, they condemn the parent as evil and cruel with a ‘I would never do that to my kid’ sneer. Plus he’s a man, if it was a Mother it would be different is the silent undercurrent.

I feel it. Makes my skin rustle like rough cloth on a scab.

“Dad, what’s wrong with that kid?”

The Father stops at a red light. The son catches up.

“Paaaaaaaaaaa……(snif)….why? and njsudb  skks p jsiweuuweii eh!”

Incomprehensible, blubbering wailing and whining all with a soupçon of reproach … obscured by drool and snot and a toque which now covers the kid’s eyes.

The Father towers over him like the World Trade Center. The boy throws himself against his legs, arms wrapped around him in desperation. The Father totters. He finally bends down and scoops the kid up. The small wet ball buries itself in his shoulder. The wails are smothered by the embrace.

“Wow, that’s a relief…huh dad? That kid was really annoying.”

The Father is whispering to his Son, who nods.

Noah has found the boy guilty. The passing adults have, instead, judged the Father to be of criminal intent.

I heard pain and fear and desire and the primal need to scream and the human flight from emotion.

Right. Wrong. A useless paradigm.

The Son suddenly giggles as loudly as he had wailed. The Father is tickling him, right there, in the neck, below the ear where it’s really funny.

Noah’s bus arrives, wiping the image before me. I kiss my Son, he still kisses back.

The bus pulls away. We wave and blow kisses to each other.

The street corner on the other side becomes visible. Father and Son have disappeared.

Instead, a young man is speaking fervently to a young woman as she shakes her head and charges down the street. He is practically running to keep pace. He finally reaches out to her, pulls her by the arm. Her head drops and she covers her face with her hands. The young man is suddenly bereft of words, uncertain.

I turn away and walk back home.

What a storied life I lead.