Memory Lane
I drive back home
with the radio on,
except it’s no longer my home.
Just a graveyard of memories.
I’m driving back for your funeral, Nan.
I’ve written a couple of books,
and so I’ve been asked to write and read your eulogy
at the little church
on that thin stretch of gravel road
where you used to take me as a child.
I’m the writer of the family now,
my father says.
We have a little bit of time before the funeral,
so I decide to show my kids
where their dad lived when he was growing up.
I show them my high school,
Braxton’s house right next to it,
and the park where I had my first kiss.
We turn right
and then left
and right again
before a two-story house
with a red steel roof
stands just like it did
all those years ago,
except now the tiny shrub
that we planted in the front yard
is as tall as the house.
I look into the window
where my bedroom was.
How many nights
I stared outside of it.
I can almost see my younger self
looking out.
Opening the blinds
just a hair
with my thumb and forefinger,
watching my dad walk to work
in the early morning fog.
But now I’m the dad,
and the kids are in the backseat.
I turn around,
and they don’t seem to care,
but that’s alright.
They’re too young
to care about the past.
Their past is non-existent,
which is why they’re so good
at living in the moment.
Up the street we go
and turn to the gyrel—
the skatepark where I spent
my summer days
shooting hoops,
hoping that all the answers
were inside of that metal rim.
I can see Pat,
and Jake,
and Spencer,
and Fraser,
and Nate,
and Braxton
all playing their hearts out.
I can see us
sitting on the thin stretch of grass
between the fence
and the asphalt.
We’re talking.
We’re talking about girls,
and movies,
and sports.
We’re walking to the theatre
to watch a movie—
not because we know what’s playing,
but because the night is young,
and so are we.
And even if the movie is garbage,
we’ll be there together,
laughing,
and knowing
that tomorrow
is just as hopeful
as today.
We keep driving down Aaron Street,
and an old Toyota Corolla drives by
and I can see Zach inside of it.
He just got his license,
and he asks me if I want to go for a drive.
I say, hell yeah,
and we drive through town.
I ask him to put on some music,
and all he has
is a cassette
of Madonna’s Greatest Hits.
We laugh
and put it on,
and before we know it,
we’re singing Like a Prayer
with the windows rolled down—
the old windows
that you needed to crank
with all your might.
I tell my kids
and my wife
about these memories.
My wife smiles
and the kids
just want to get out of the car.
I tell them soon.
Just a few more minutes
down memory lane,
because I’m sure
that after the funeral,
I won’t be coming back.
We cross the Van Horne Bridge,
and again I’m a teenager.
I’m 16 years old
and I’ve just finished getting
twelve stitches
above my left eye.
I’m drugged up
and holding a massive teddy bear.
I’m going to see my girlfriend
because I’m late for our date.
There’s a soft snow falling
and my head is ringing,
but she’s the first real girlfriend
I’ve ever had,
and so I need to see her.
I walk and walk and walk
and finally ring on her doorbell.
Sweaty,
out of breath,
and woozy from the painkillers.
She opens the door,
and I smile crookedly
before handing her the teddy bear.
She begins to cry
and wraps her arms around me so tight
that I can barely breathe.
She kisses me,
and my God,
to be wanted that badly
is a gift.
I look over at my wife,
and remember
when she used to do the same.
Finally,
we turn around
and head to the countryside—
to the little country church
with the small gravel parking lot.
There are cars lined up on either side,
and the wind is beginning to pick up.
My hands are clammy,
and my heart is racing
with reckless abandon,
because I’m scared
to read the eulogy,
and I’m scared
at the prospect
of looking at the small dirt hole
with flowers in it
and knowing that it’s true.
She’s gone.
So is my aunt,
and my grandfather.
They’re reunited.
My father and my uncle
are now a family of two.
Once a family of five—
they’re all that’s left.
And I don’t know what to say to them.
I’ve never known,
even during the best of days.
The pastor prays for my Nan
and then asks me to come up
and read the eulogy.
I’m frightened
and didn’t expect to be called upon so quickly.
My hands are shaking
and my voice cracks a couple of times
in the beginning.
But eventually,
I get my groove
and I read stories
that make my family laugh
and even cry.
I tell them about the flowers
in the garden centre,
and I tell them
about midnight snacks.
How I loved her pork chops so much
that as a kid
I asked for them on New Year’s Eve
when everyone was in bed.
Just her and I
eating pork chops
at the dining table
as the rest of the world went to sleep.
Afterwards,
we go to the firehall,
where we eat egg salad sandwiches
and homemade cookies
and watch a photo gallery of pictures
of her and my grandfather,
and my father and uncle and aunt—
all young and happy and healthy.
Their whole lives ahead of them.
My father is quiet,
trying to joke away the pain,
but it’s hard—
I can see it in his eyes
how hard it is.
I speak with relatives,
and then it’s time to leave.
On the drive back,
I’m quiet.
My wife doesn’t know what to say,
just like I didn’t know what to say.
As the mountains fade
in the rearview mirror,
there’s a moment
where I’m sad,
and I think
I might just break down and cry.
But I realize
that the town that I loved,
and that molded me,
needed to hurt me.
It needed to hurt me
so that I could know
what it feels like
when it happens to my kids.
When life turns upside down on them,
I’ll know.
And I’ll tell them
about the little black box of pain.
The one that you think is a curse,
but is actually a gift.
Because like my Nan always said—
“Flowers can’t grow without a little rain.”