Thursday, January 5, 1989
Home – er, here – for the holidays
© 1989 John Dallas Bowers
To
be fair, the dean of students warned us. In fact, during Vanderbilt’s
on-campus
freshman orientation this summer, they had one whole session (parents
only)
devoted to "When Your Student Comes Home to Visit." I thought it was
amusing.
My wife recognized it for what it was: an omen.
But
that was six months ago, and Susan and I had been doing well in
adjusting
to our daughter’s first extended absence. We rediscovered that while
three
had never been a crowd, two could be very fine company indeed.
Yes,
we missed our only child, but with regular letters and even more
regular
phone calls, we felt we could sustain some form of life until her first
visit home at Thanksgiving. It was in that mood of cheerful
anticipation
that we began the final countdown on the day of her return.
The
early signs, however, were not promising. After calling American
Airlines
and being told her nonstop flight from Nashville was "in the air and on
time," Susan and I waded through an hour of peak afternoon traffic,
arriving
at Philadelphia International with only minutes to spare.
We
needn’t have bothered. Not only was Jennifer’s flight not on time, we
were
told it had never left the ground, and, in fact, had been cancelled
earlier
in the afternoon. Such was the state of agitation around the American
counter,
however, that Susan suspected another scenario, one which she shared
with
me back in the car: Jennifer’s plane had left the ground, only to
return
at a rate of 32 ft/sec/sec. The fruit of her womb had joined the rest
of
Flight #980 as it dropped like a stone over some desolate Midwestern
cornfield.
I
left her in the car (to fend off the ever-vigilant airport
constabulary)
and went inside to separate fact from histrionics. Through the kind
intervention
of an empathetic American Express travel representative, I was able to
track down our daughter in the Nashville airport. We traded tales of
self-pity,
and then I assured her we would return to pick her up when her
meandering
flight (which was to include an airline change in Atlanta) touched down
at 1:15 the next morning. It did -- and we did, with equal measures of
exhaustion and relief.
That
first weekend, it appeared we had a very tired student in our midst.
Depending
on the time of day, there was a blond lump in the bed, at the kitchen
table,
or in front of the television. Having returned earlier than most of her
friends, Jennifer seemed content to live in a semi-vegetative state,
gathering
her strength for the reunions anticipated a few days later.
To
be sure, she allowed us to take her shopping and out to dinner. But
Susan
had been expecting more, and as Jennifer’s priorities became clearer,
the
flickers of anxiety started to blossom into mild agitation. This
isn’t some hotel, young lady. This is your HOME, and I’m your MOTHER!
Well,
you see, that was the problem. It seems that in the three months that
Jennifer
had been at Vanderbilt, she had, in navy parlance, "transferred the
flag."
We discovered this in brutal fashion when she mentioned to a friend
that
she was flying "home" (back to Nashville) on Sunday. Susan freaked when
she heard it.
Even
I, one who harbors no illusions about the wrenching metamorphosis
leading
to independence, was startled. I had loved my four years at Lafayette
and
had bridled at the notion of conforming during my periodic returns to
parental
rule. But I never stopped thinking of home as home. I guess each
generation
finds a new way to torture parents.
Of
course, there were many moments of pleasure during those nine short
days.
Quiet talks, shared recollections, just being together. And with lower
expectations, I was able to enjoy Jennifer’s stay. At times, it was
harder
for Susan. For the most part, I tried to remain in the eye of the
hurricane
as the two of them swirled through a few difficult moments. Their
imbroglios
were nothing new, but watching a daughter’s detachment block a mother’s
goal is never a pretty sight.
All
too soon, it was over. On the way back from dropping her off at the
airport,
we thought about how some things had changed, while others never seem
to.
It was clear, for instance, that Jennifer had come to visit, not to
stay.
The open suitcases scattered around her room were silent testimony to
that
fact. On the other hand, it was a cheerful reminder of her consistency
to discover the tops left off every container of toothpaste, shampoo,
and
deodorant in her bathroom (we needn’t mention the perpetually empty
toilet
paper roll).
So
this is how it’s going to be, I suppose. Those seamless years of
complete
access to our daughter’s life have vanished in a twinkling. What
remains
is an homogenous mix of wonderful memories and some aching regrets.
But
I can handle it. Just as many a film’s best moments are provided by
cameo
appearances, I suspect Susan and I will derive a new, if different,
pleasure
sharing smaller portions of Jennifer’s world. The trauma of losing
influence
over her life will be replaced by the pleasure of watching her gather
confidence
and maturity.
Besides,
it’s happening in easy doses. We just saw her a few weeks ago, and now
it’s only days until she returns for Christmas. If her mind is more on
her friends and the upcoming Charity Ball than pampering her parents,
that’s
okay.
And
I’ll try to be sensitive when I remind her of this in about twenty
years.
* * *
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