The Girl I Discovered In My Search For You

There was a sharp knock at the door, odd at that dark, early hour of December 13th, 1999. But a knock in the night is always strange.

I had closed in a Christmas show the evening before and hadn’t been able to fall asleep for hours, so now, disoriented, I bolted awake as my husband answered the door. My brother. He lived up the hill; came down to tell me the news. Our father was dead.

I remember I had a grief reaction—an outcry, a bend forward—that didn’t seem authentic to me at the time. It felt like a rote response that was expected or something a person would do in such a circumstance, but the emotion didn’t make it to my gut until much later. Which was also odd. But I hadn’t lost a parent before so there was no foresight into how it should feel, how I should react, what was the appropriate response. Mostly it felt surreal. He’d been sick, so it wasn’t a soul-rattling shock, but still … it was my dad. And now he was gone.

If you asked me about my relationship with my father, in today’s vernacular I’d have said, “It’s complicated.” It was, in both basic, traditional father/daughter ways and in very individual him/me puzzles. A lifelong mash-up of deep love, incredible admiration; cyclical conflict, longing for closer rapport (me), confusion about what the hell I was doing with my life (him), and ultimately, always, back to deep love. It was hard getting enough one-on-one time with a parent when you have ten siblings, at least it was for me, and back then, as I created my splashy, vivacious persona to, no doubt, attempt to stand out in the crowd, I felt my father was still … elusive. That’s a good word, I think. I wanted his approval, his attention, but I wanted the stuff that was just for me, not “all my kids,” and that was … elusive.

Yeah… I might’ve driven him crazy.

So I left home and got into my own life across the country, and years into that adulthood it seemed we were, finally, getting to a place where we could relate as peers. I’d become a wife and mother by then; we were grown people with common history and a shared passion for writing, reading, and arts in general, engaging in meaningful discussions of books, movies, family, the meaning of it all. It was good.

Then he got sick.

Neuromuscular, incurable; diagnosed as ALS, degenerative, devastating. It was only five months between the time he entered the hospital and that dark December knock on the door. Which is swift for that dreaded disease. But, as research of other cases made clear, that might have been a blessing.

I remember the first frantic day we knew something was undeniably wrong (there’d been denial on his part up to that point). My brother and I flew up to Olympia after he’d gone into respiratory arrest, lodged ourselves in a waiting room waiting for word while simultaneously watching shocked coverage of JFK, Jr.’s plane crash. July 16th, 1999. That confluence of tragedies made the date one I won’t forget. He was ultimately transferred to a Seattle hospital, where my sibs and I rotated vigil in the ICU family room. I was there eleven days without leaving, getting to know the doctors and nurses involved, being the family spokesperson, wrangling my confused and terrified mother; spending time and feeling hope after my father came to consciousness once again.

That hope took a rollercoaster ride over those next five months, up and down, good news; bad news, reassured, uncertain, ultimately concluding in a rehab facility where he lived with my mom until that December 13th. He died the very first night he slept without a breathing machine (something he’d insisted on), and only a few hours after I’d charmed audiences at the Alex Theater in Glendale with my bluesy rendition of “Walking In a Winter Wonderland.”

That’ll change Christmas for you.

That was twenty-five years ago today. Doesn’t seem that long ago, but twenty-five years is a quarter-century and much has changed in me, in my life, since. I think of him almost daily and look back on the road we traveled together, noting how my perceptions and interpretations of that journey have changed along with my own evolution.

His quick nutshell history:

Born to two Greek immigrants who’d fled Turkey in the early 1900s to settle in Chicago where a large Greek community thrived, my father was a serious, handsome boy with one older brother, a love of nature, books, and writing, inspired to major in journalism at Northwestern University. In his early twenties, he fell in love with a funny, effervescent Irish/German Catholic girl who became my mother. His parents weren’t happy about the union—not so much because she wasn’t Greek, but because she was Catholic, a religion for which they held great antipathy, exacerbated when my father converted to make a church wedding possible. My grandparents did not attend that wedding, but later a shaky detente was achieved (the imminence of grandchildren will do that), and my parents moved into the second floor flat of their home, where my two older sisters, a younger brother, and I were born. Then they absconded from the city to raise us (and, subsequently, seven more children) in rural northern Illinois.

My father was one of those converts who became, perhaps, more committed to the religion than even my mother, which is what sparked many of our cyclical conflicts. I was a skeptic, a questioner, a doubter of the dogma and doctrines; he was not only an enthusiastic devotee, but it informed many of his parenting decisions I most chaffed at. Head-butting was frequent. But in between, I adored him for being the creative, funny, adventurous father he was, introducing us to theater, nature; getting us to White Sox and Cubs games. There was lots of music in the house; records played, singing was frequent; there was art, basement plays and backyard carnivals. While working at the local post office, he created a board game for us called, “Country Mailman.” We loved it. When the TV broke, boxes of library books replaced it and after we stopped caterwauling about losing our cartoons, we found the trade-off endlessly absorbing.

He was also a prodigious and frustrated writer. “Frustrated” because he was determined to get what he wrote—articles, short stories, novels—published, but, as many of us in the field know, that can be a hard goal (and there was no Substack back then!). He certainly found it so and that ground at him. Beyond the time and tasks related to that endeavor, he also kept copious journals he invited his children to read. I scanned a few but at the time didn’t find them particularly interesting (lots of dry, statistical data and odd analyses of people in his life). After he died, however, I was alerted to one written when I was twenty-six in which I played a central role, his year-long commentary on choices I’d made in/for my life and why he felt I was a failure at that point, squandering my many talents. Suffice it to say, that was a sucker punch.

Which became the title of my first novel, After the Sucker Punch, a highly fictionalized story that wrestled with those very plot points. Writing the book was both creatively joyful and a form of therapy. How strange, really, that a totally imagined character, the father’s sister, guided “Tessa,” the story’s protagonist, to an understanding of her father that was heretofore missing, helping her reclaim memories of her childhood and her honest love for him. All of which ended up informing my own emotional and psychological evolution. Fiction as self-therapy … what a concept! I had “Tessa” put some of that epiphany in a letter to her deceased father at the book’s end:

Here’s what I know: You were a good man. You had moments of warmth and kindness and you took good care of us. When you laughed it was golden. You loved a good book. You appreciated creativity and personal expression. You understood passion and you somehow made me feel like I could find my path in the world, that I had the courage to step outside of convention to go after bigger things. You encouraged my artistic self even if you didn’t understand it. You had your own dreams and you understood their value. I know because you were the one who gave me the eyes to dream in the ways I still do. You gave that to all of us, and it is a gift so treasured…

What I discovered in my search for you, Dad, is a stronger sense of myself. It’s fragile, occasionally teetering, in need of much support and reinforcement, but it’s there. I even wrote a song about it, the first one I’ve written in over five years. I’m sending it to you with this letter because it’s about you and me. About how, in trying to find you, I finally discovered who I am. The real me. The true girl. The one who survived your sucker punch, survived my own mistakes and evolved into who I am, not the stranger you wrote about. Your words didn’t define me; my life does. That is a monumental accomplishment. I’m holding on to it for dear life. And I hope you like the song!

Mostly? I know you loved me. No matter what you said in that journal, I know you loved me. As I loved you. And in accepting that, I’ve come to accept you as the flawed man you were. I’ve forgiven you for that man, as I’ve forgiven you for hurting me. I’ve also come to accept you as a loving father who relished life and cherished his family. Can those contradictions exist in the same person? Yes. Because I’ve chosen to believe that. And that choice gives me faith. Faith that you loved me. And that’s just going to have to do.

And I did write that song. For my own father. It’s one of my favorites. “My Search For You.” Click the title to listen.

During one of our last conversations, he was at my dining room table reading some one-acts I’d written for a theatrical production. After putting them down, he looked up at me and said, “You’re a better writer than I am.” He said it humbly, authentically, and it left me both elated and sad. Elated that he recognized and acknowledged a skill and talent he’d, in fact, nurtured in me; sad that it seemed to indicate a resignation, a reconciliation, of his own dashed dreams. But still … he kept writing until his beleaguered hands couldn’t write anymore, which was just weeks before he died. I’ve often thought that as a passionate, driven writer, his being forced to accept that limitation was one final, powerful reason to let go… which I understood.

So, on this twenty-fifth anniversary of your death, know that I’m thinking of you, Dad, as I so often do. I hope wherever you are you’re either living another robust, creative life, or hanging with Mom and Eileen, maybe even Grandma, enjoying the lightness and freedom of whatever that vaunted, unknown realm offers. Know you are loved and missed by us all. Certainly by me, your third daughter. The loud one. You’ll always be missed by me.

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What Barry White Taught Me About Love

I’m talking about love today … true, true love. Dreaming of it, imagining it, seeking it, finding it, holding on to it, blowing it up, rebuilding it, soundtracking it — wait. Soundtracking it? Yes. Soundtracking it. That’s where this story starts: A song.

 

I wrote something on this years ago for HuffPost but here we are, a decade later; I just celebrated my thirty-four anniversary and I’m in the mood to revisit the theme. Love’s Theme, if you will (which I’m actually listening to as I write this … I really am.)

Picture this: a young girl, electric with sensuality, eager to revel in all things lust, passion, and love, discovers a song sung by a man with a silky voice that is quite literally an anthem to all three: Barry White’s “I’m Gonna Love You Just A Little More.” She’s smitten, pulled in. It’s like a drug, that song; she can’t listen to it without mooning and swaying in time, awash in the ache of yearning and gauzy dreams of — “Oh, for God’s sake, child, stop daydreaming, drink some cold water, and calm the fuck down!”

(That was my inner-mother; my real mother would have never used the f-bomb, nor would she have abided my dreams of lust.)

I can laugh now, but that ache was very real back then. If I found Barry’s song on a juke box, any juke box, I had to play it … over and over and over. I drove anyone in the vicinity crazy with those dogged replays, but the mood and feel of that song had me under its spell: The suspense of the intro as the drums start, high hat clicking, kick drum keeping a beat that echoed in my head; then keys set that iconic riff; Barry’s voice weaves in and out, that bedroom mumble of his, and the piano starts, then the bass … all of it combining to create the most grooving, driving, layered paean to immutable love I’d ever heard. Cue swaying.

Give it up, ain’t no use
I can’t help myself if I wanted to
I’m hung up, no doubt
I’m so in love with you for me there’s no way out

‘Cause deeper and deeper
In love with you I’m falling
Sweeter and sweeter
Your tender words of love keeps calling…

Eager and eager, yeah
To feel your lips upon my face
Please her and please her
Any time or any place

I’m gonna love you, love you, love you just a little more, baby….

This wasn’t a song about hook-ups and flirtations; this was a song about LOVE, true love so strong “there’s no way out.” That’s what I wanted, even as a youngster, to be in love with someone who’d fall “deeper and deeper in love” with me right back. Now, mesmerized by romance, poetry, and a great bass line, I had my own love theme.

But as time went on, music changed. Barry put out other songs I liked, some a lot, none quite as much as that first one. I grew up, fell in and out of love more times than my mother appreciated, and learned that the kind of passion Barry rhapsodized about wasn’t easily found. I still believed it existed, didn’t give up on the possibility of it, but I stopped holding every relationship to the standard of “no way out.” I always seemed to find plenty of ways out … as did they. I wondered, at times, if Barry had misguided me a little; seduced me with words and music that said that kind of love was possible. I didn’t want to become a cynic, but his ode to romance was getting harder and harder to believe.

Until I met him. Him. The man I married, the man who, thirty-four years ago this week, told me, by virtue of everything he was, everything he had, and everything he promised on that wedding day, that he was, indeed, so in love there was no way out.

This time it looks like love is here to stay
As long as I shall live
I’ll give you all I have and all I have to give

No, those weren’t his vows—I’m still quoting Barry here—but in the ensuing thirty-four years, he has given me all he’s had to give, which was every joyful moment, every event, every triumph, crash, rise, fall, and memorable experience you could imagine.

But life being what it is — meaning we weren’t living in a love ballad with an unforgettable piano riff — we also hit some walls that were so damn hard I thought our heads might crack (after a serious brain injury his almost did). Those were the moments when “no way out” felt more like a sentence than a promise. We ebbed and flowed, ran away and came back; sought and studied and learned in every way we could and, somehow, some way, ended up full circle, back to where we started … back home. Where we healed and evolved and let go and forgave until we knew, once again, with no doubt, “love is here to stay.” A vow coming full circle as well.

I’m sure you realize there’s a wink in how I’m framing this story, a clear understanding that my believing love could be defined by a ballad sung by Dr. Love was sweet, youthful naiveté. But still … certain ideas nestle, certain sensations and feelings become part of your cellular memory, and even seemingly trite words and melodies become connectors to grander ideals. Like endurance. Commitment. Tenacity, resilience, acceptance, and joy, found, lost, and recaptured. And to this day, whenever I hear “I’m Gonna Love You Just A Little More,” I’m transported back to that juke box, swaying to the beat, eyes closed and heart open, filled with longing, believing in life and passion and those “tender words of love.”

And this week I celebrate the man I married, the one with whom I discovered the true story inside the love ballad. Happy Anniversary, darling. Wherever we’ve been, wherever we’re going, know I’m always gonna love you, love you, love you … just a little more.

Thank you, Barry White.

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The Lesson Of Long-Term Marriage: What’s Better Is So Much Better Than What’s Worse

Twenty-three years ago today I got into a car with a very handsome man dressed in blue pants and a white shirt, drove a couple of hours to a courthouse in the very bucolic town of Mt. Vernon, Washington and, during the lunch break of a local judge, and in the presence of the bailiff and court secretary, married the man to whom I am still married today. The bailiff fired off a few snapshots from my then-cheesy 35mm camera (pictures I, years later, Photoshopped to the excellent results below!), we had lunch at a nearby cafe where a bottle of champagne and a slice of pecan pie with a bride & groom atop awaited us, then we drove north to Vancouver to spend three days at the Pan Pacific Hotel as our rainy, wondrous honeymoon. It was perfect… and when people ask if I ever regret not having a wedding, I assure them I still think it was perfect, to this very day.

Wedding day sepia 4 triptych

There is much to be said for weddings done right (I covered a few of those HERE), and certainly the topic of marriage is a deep and many-layered one (in The Warmest Chord my own heartfelt perspective is offered), but on this anniversary, from where I sit many years beyond that glorious Pacific Northwestern day, currently miles away from my stoic, stalwart husband who continues to deal with the ramifications of brain injury, the message of marriage I have to share is a different one than I had 23 years ago.

It’s a stronger one, one built more on wisdom, resilience, commitment and compassion than wild romance and youthful lust. Though, don’t get me wrong; I’m all for romance and lust, revel in it whenever it presents itself (which, as most of us would attest, is never enough!), but life teaches that any long-term relationship survives within an unpredictable mix of emotion and events… and the way we respond to both. And the longer I live the more I realize, while I may not be able to predict events that come flying my way (damn that unpredictable universe), I can do something about how I interpret, respond to, and learn from those unfolding moments.

Love is a funny thing, too. It keeps you attached and aware of that other person; sensitive to their needs and emotions, impacted by the events of their life that can overlap your own. Sometimes those intersections are lovely, sometimes they’re… challenged. As any couple knows who’s dealt with illness, adversity, injury, or any of those kinds of unexpected events that knock us off our feet  – a job lost, a disease diagnosed, a family member’s death; a brain injury – marriage can become about endurance and tenacity, a balance between attachment and detachment, even an ability to let go when needed to allow life to reorganize into some different while you’re away.

As the wife of a husband dealing with brain injury, I’ve learned about that part of being married. I’ve learned (as I wrote years ago in Love In the Age of MTBI) how circumstances can change and impact a marriage, make it more complicated and mercurial, shake it up in ways that can both take your breath away (and not always in a good way) and make you realize how strong your relationship really is, strong enough to endure the dark corners stumbled upon repeatedly and sometimes without warning. When pain episodes strike, when the walls go up and the lights go down and you realize plans will change, warmth will take a holiday, communication will be backburnered in lieu of necessary isolation and silence, it’s then that you face the reality of what you and your chosen one created back on that magical day, years earlier, in a courthouse in Mt. Vernon…

The tether. The bond. The connection. You can pull apart because you have to, because you both need time to regroup and recalibrate, but you never stop feeling the connection. The love. The sense that you are family and you will get through this to a happier time, a better time.

And while away, if you’re smart, you’ll take the opportunity to pursue your own “vision quest.” You’ll pay attention, listen, learn, and remember that thoughts impact reality; you’ll readjust your own view of life to get stronger, more compassionate and loving… to him and to yourself.

And if, during that time, an anniversary pops up, you’ll pay attention to that, too. You’ll look at that person – from wherever you are – with all the love you feel, all the belief you have in what’s good and right, and you’ll … celebrate another anniversary. Another year of marriage. Another worse endured for all that is better.

Because what you find when you step away, when you take that breath, and look at the reality outside of pain and the adversities life throws at you, is that what’s better is so, so much more than what’s worse. Worse, you can overcome; better, is the life you’ve created and will continue to create. That’s the lesson, the true gift of a long-term marriage.

Happy anniversary to us!

LDW w glasses


Visit www.lorrainedevonwilke.com for details and links to LDW’s books, music, photography, and articles.