all these years later
by bam
forty-four cakes. three-thousand-two-hundred-seventy-eight candles. that’s how many cakes and candles we’ve missed since my papa died in the winter of 1981. i counted it up because today would have been his 96th birthday. he didn’t make it past 52.
all these years later the second of august is still a day i remember.
i remember the sunny sunday mornings when honeydew melon and handmade cards were strewn at his place at the dining room table, birthday brunch a step-up from the requisite eggs, bacon, and toast after ten-o’clock mass. i remember, in the preambles to birthday dinner, the glistening of his pewter mug, summer’s sultry humidity meeting the cold of his ice cubes and tonic and gin. the quarter of lime floating canoe-like near the rim. eight-minute burgers on the grill, corn on the cob littering all of our chins.
i remember his laugh.
much, though, fades.
i can’t remember the sound of his voice. or the way he called me barbie. i remember a few lines, but not the ones my brothers often remember. i remember the time he told me he’d prayed and prayed and could not understand why he was driving me to the hospital. i remember the time, driving home from my college graduation, when he told me he’d felt his mother right beside him when they called out the names of those who, like him long before, were graduating with highest latin honors, and he watched me rise from my seat in the crowded arena.
i remember how one late summer’s afternoon he called me from the office and asked me to meet him for burgers on the outdoor cafe of a place called jerome’s in lincoln park, a place he deemed “kicky.” my papa liked things that were “kicky” or “cool.” my papa, born of a locomotive engineer and a country school teacher in little bitty paris, kentucky, never shed the marvel of being a big-city ad man in the heady era of Mad Men and martini lunches and sixty-second commercials whose jingles and cutlines stoked the soundtrack of america’s bell-bottomed woodstock-and-watergate age. my papa liked to travel the globe. to give speeches in sydney and meetings in munich. he liked his corporate apartment in mid-town manhattan. he loved new york city. a place he never wanted to move us; he’d moved his moptop crew too many times, he and my mama agreed. one more uprooting might do us in. so he more or less made a weekly commute to the big juicy apple.
and home base for all those years was the two-story colonial with all the big trees at the bend in the dead-end lane. he brought the “neat, keen, cool, fab, it’s a blast” to our dutch backdoor, and on in to the big oval table where, at 6:30 sharp each night of the week except for on sunday when we pushed it to 5:30, we sat down for dinner, all seven of us. if there was something new out there in the world, my papa wanted us to know. didn’t matter if it was a word or a box soon to be labeled “hamburger helper.” he was our conduit, our passport, to all that was grander and jazzier than our sleepy little burg one in from the lake.
those are the things, all these decades later, i still remember––like yesterday. i remember, too, the year after he died when i thought i might never stop crying. how there were nights when i wailed a wild-animal sort of a wail, and bit into my pillow to muffle the sound. i never thought i would know joy again.
i never thought the ache would stop aching.
but here we are: two kids, a long marriage, and a whole career later. my papa had no idea i––a nurse when he died––would take his and my shared love of words and make a life of it. but the first day i sat down in the chicago tribune newsroom and they told me i needed a password, i knew just what i’d type each time i needed to rev up my desktop computer: my papa’s initials and mine; he was a part of every start to every story. and i never dropped his last name, cuz i wanted my papa to stay in the news. and in print. day after day. byline by byline.
here’s where i fell short: no matter how many stories i’ve told my boys and the man i love the most, i have not come close to bringing my papa to life. and, believe me, i’ve tried. no story, no matter how animated, no matter the gleam in my eye, can ever, ever come close. the man was a human high-wattage bulb. he was known for his wit. but i remember the tenderest parts. i’ve tried to bring all of it forth over the years.
but all these years later, it fades. and the truth is, my papa fades too. there’s too much i cannot remember.
grief and time make for an odd, sometimes cruel calculus. yes, the aching abates most of the time. though the piercing can come and come strong. in a grocery aisle. when a certain song comes on. when you’re trying to tell––or to catch every word of––a particular story. (writing these words here this morning, the tears have come too. if i’ve wallowed in moments, in memories, here, it’s only to make it all last. to live in those moments again.)
as much as the gasping for air is no longer a part of the grief, so too the frames of a life reel on, and the erasing begins. after so, so many years, you sometimes forget the one who’s no longer there. not always, and not in those crucible moments, when time itself feels condensed and magnified all at once. i too have felt my papa beside me when my firstborn walked a graduation stage; when my firstborn became a professor of law (a profession my papa once yearned for). i’ve watched how tender my so-called “little one” is, especially to my papa’s widow (“grammy” to both of my boys), and i know my papa would melt. but, truth is, ordinary time mostly hurls by, and i don’t remember. and then i might catch myself with a twinge. or i might not catch myself at all. there’s an anesthesia in grief that i never saw coming. maybe it saves us. maybe it’s cruel.
maybe that’s why there are birthdays, even when the someone is gone. especially when someone is gone. they become remembering days. they are days without cakes and no candles. but, in the silent chambers of the heart and the mind and the soul where time knows no rules, those someones return.
my papa rumbles in me this morning. in the only way i know how, i just brought him back. and i didn’t need to close my eyes, or make a wish, or blow out candles to make it happen.
he’s here. right beside me. in each of these stories. i know it.
happy birthday, dear papa. i love you forever.
at our house, we have an august birthday parade, a 2-4-6-8 of celebrations. so most blessed of birthdays i wish for my brother david (4), my blair(6), my teddy(8). i love you each and all to the moon and mars and beyond.…
tell a story of any someone you miss. any story. any someone. we’ll make this a party.




Wonderful Deerfield days with your Dad and Mother being such a fun part, Barbara. I will always remember them! Maureen!
to be remembered is a great great blessing. thank you.
So tender. So precious. So inviting of more reflection here in my soul…….
Happy Birthday to your Papa!
bless YOU for noting the invitation and delving in to your own tender stories….
Your beautiful memories moved me to tears and also struck that chord of loss deep within me. For my dad’s 100th birthday in June, along with a big farmers market bouquet in front of the headstone, I stuck a big, glittery gold “100th” cake decoration in the ground. My mom’s 100th is Aug. 9, and she’ll get her favorite red-orange glads and her own 100th decoration. And you’ve nudged me to go back to setting down those memory stories of my parents on the laptop. Some are already becoming a bit indistinct. I am reminded of what Joni Mitchell said: If you don’t write it down, it didn’t happen.
oh honey. double 100s. big summer. i can only imagine what’s unfurling from your fingertips as you put those stories to the page. maybe some day you’ll let us peek at a little bit of your beloved centenarians. xoxoxox
it is an endless miracle to me, the glorious souls who have found their way to this chair. you make my life glisten, dear karen.
amazing that you can now buy a glittery gold 100th cake decoration….the world has more centenarians than once upon a time….
Neglected to make clear that the Aug. 9 observation is also at the cemetery. Yes, the double 100s. I wasn’t sure how I’d take that, whether it would feel like a kind of cut off, a century since they were born. But I find the 1920s still relatable and relevant. (Think of the literature and art–plenty modern, as are the creative works of people born in the ’20s. It’s a continuum.) Anyway, the upcoming visit calls for speaking “We Remember,” shared by you here, except I do it in first person singular.
This essay is a portrait, a bright canvas from which your beloved papa might step as he always was – formidable and full of life. These memories you reveal are a rhapsody that echoes in the heart’s deepest chamber. Your words, these words, are purest poetry and the most tender of love letters… Thank you for this gift on the second day of August, for writing through decades of loss and heartache and grief, for typing through tears this morning, for daring to share your innermost heart, today. Let your words blaze on, an eternal flame to illuminate your papa’s memory. Oh, my friend, see how he shines…
oh, honey. a sigh …. the sound of feeling blessed… thank you, sweetheart. if only, if only, i could bring him to life…and thank heaven for souls like you who can fill in the blanks….xoxox big hug this august afternoon (how is it august already???)
Thank you for sharing your sweet Papa with us. What moments that you have tucked in your heart and as you exhaled they became vivid and tender to us.
My most precious memory of my daddy was when he taught me to swim when I was eight years old in 1956. I can still hear him say ” you can do this pumpkin keep on kicking….” That has sustained me many many times.
ohhh, pumpkin…!!! I love that word, especially when it’s an endearment.
”keep kickin’”: life advice.
Today, your words have clarified the picture I had formed of your father throughout these past years. You have remembered much more than many of us can, darling! Thank you for making him part of this table for all of us.
❤️❤️❤️
You remember SO much about your papa!
It would be so precious to capture as much as you (and your husband) are able, not for yourself, but for your sons – and someday, their children – so they may know and love their great grandpapa (and other greats)! Whether you write these memories down (which you have started in this blog) – or have one of your boys interview you (audio or video) – please do so. When you start remembering, your brain will dig up more memories hiding in the folds of your gray matter! All of you chairs, do this too!
I nagged my parents for years (they were in their seventies) to write snippets in a gift book with prompts that I gave both of them in 1997. That was the beginning of my mother’s dementia, unfortunately; she died in 2005. My father, however, finally made extensive notes and recorded his and my mother’s family histories – a 90-minute cassette tape that is now on CD, soon will be a digital file. He was 82 years old at the time, and died at 88. That family history and the sound of his voice – priceless. Do. It. Now.
amen, amen!! So so priceless! We do have my mom on tape. It was a blast. And oh to have my dad…..
thank you for always bringing your wisdom to the table.❤️❤️
No words…
As Paula says, so important to capture the stories.
July 20 was 41 years for my dad.
We never stop missing them.
❤️🩹
never ever.
xox