She liked to do quick pencil sketches. Her lines were rapid and many, which gave the pictures a kind of unique immediacy. Of course, my language to describe her work back then was not quite so florid. I probably thought her drawings were "cool" or "nice."
One night, as we sat in the living room of our dark-blue shingled split level, my mother sipping, I imagine, her ubiquitous gin and tonic, she came up with a new, peculiar idea.
"I'm going to draw you as I would imagine you'll look at age thirty," she proclaimed.
"Thirty?" It seemed so distant to me. That would make the year 1993. Images of flying cars and robot butlers filled my head.
She had me sit in my father's big, mustard-colored easy chair, and she got to work.
"Get your giggles out," she commented, as I customarily got attacks of nervous laughter, set off by the way her eyes darted from my face to the paper, where her fingers became shockingly nimble, revealing a part of her life that fascinated me: her artist's training.
I realize now that these modeling sessions were a primitive form of meditation for me, as it was necessary to level my breathing, and steady my gaze on a certain point. Normally, I'd reach a kind of "no-mind" state, akin to being asleep with my eyes open. On this occasion, however, I imagined what thirty would be like; would I be married? To Debbie Francis, maybe? She was my current fascination back then, with sandy blond hair and dimples that made me want to entertain her just to see them appear. Did we have kids? Were we rich? Were we happy?
Ten minutes or so later, she stopped looking up from the paper, continuing to scribble. "You can move," she said, her eyes still down.
When I started to make my way over to her, she held the sketchbook against her chest, hiding the picture.
"Oh no. You'll need to wait till I'm done. Go watch some T.V."
One of my mother's earliest sketches, "Daddy" from her high school art class |
"Okay," she called a few minutes later. "Come on up here."
When I returned to her, she had on the self-critical scowl she always wore after completing a new piece of work.
"Well, here it is."
I took the sketchpad from her. She'd titled it "Danny at 30." It was my face, but she'd moved my hairline back a bit, given me some laugh lines at the temple-edges of my eyes, and a dark mustache. I realized some years later that the picture looked a lot like a studio photo of my dad when he was around that age.
"Thirty," I repeated.
"What do you think?" she asked.
I didn't really know what to say, being as her reason for wanting to draw a picture of the Future Me was a mystery.
"It's nice."
She giggled at my response.
I wonder now, twenty-five years past the age she was trying to envision, and forty-five
years after the memory of her creation of "Danny at Thirty," if her motive had anything to do with the fact that a fierce bout with pancreatic cancer would prevent her from ever seeing me at that age. She died in 1988, a few weeks shy of my 25th birthday, long before I started growing the mustache I now wear as a matter of course.
I wonder, too, making my way down the school hallway back to my office, where that picture is today.
No comments:
Post a Comment