The Palace of Tears
Pushing my youngest child in a swing was like being in a time warp of joy.I grabbed her feet as she flew toward me, the little leather slippers with owls stitched on the front. “I got your toes,” as she giggled in delight. I remembered the blue ones with cars my oldest son had 13 years ago. Each time she came toward me, excited with a little drool slipping down the one corner of her teeny mouth, I was in the moment, my heart rising up a little with the black rubber baby swing. Each time she slipped away, I had this sense of the younger parents next to me and of all the years that had come before this, all the times I had pushed a baby on a swing, coached a toddler to reach his little legs out and in, and reach for the clouds with your feet, reach for the branch, reach for mommy’s hand held out just beyond the reach of their toes. It was like I couldn’t make sense of being 43 with a one year old, like I couldn’t understand how I could have a baby and a teenager at the same time, gray hair and nipples leaking milk.
The baby’s eyes crossed as the swing slowed. She pulled her hands from the metal triangles attaching the rubber seat to the chain and clapped them together. How much her father would enjoy this, it killed me not to have him here. I looked over at the couple to my left, pushing their chubby little boy with dark curly hair who kept giving them rasberries. They were arguing over who had left the towel on the floor. “I just felt caught off guard because I thought we were in good shape for the open house,” the wife was saying passive aggressively, “So I freaked out and shoved it in your bottom drawer.” She made a clucking noise to the little boy, avoiding eye contact with her husband. “So, y’know … just so you know.” She grabbed the swing, pulled it up to her chin, locked eyes with the baby and said, “Ah, ah, ah … ah-choo!” and let the swing go, the baby giggling and kicking his little feet.
I didn’t feel so bad to be alone anymore.
Probably the best sex we ever had was by a swimming hole he wanted to show me. We had talked about it for a while, doing it outside, and I had been obsessed with 10,000 Maniacs that summer. And we had wildflower fever. We had to lay down where they grow… But the honeyed haze with which I now remember those 20 minutes seem impossible, like somebody else’s movie. I remember the sweat dripping off of him, the bees buzzing around us, how amazing it was to jump into the water after that. I was 41 but I could have been 14. I could not have felt any younger, more free.
Then there was the time I wanted to go swimming in the city pool the next summer, when I was pregnant. I was so big and he had been moving in for months, the whole summer it seemed. It was taking forever, just a few boxes at a time, but each time a new load came in it was like my house’s pants felt tighter after a big turkey dinner. We worked all day without the air conditioner to save on the bill. It was dark and dank in the house and humid and bright outside. Come on, I said, it’s the weekend. Let’s take a break. I have to jump in the water. He said he’d be out shortly. I waited and waited, trying to bite my lip, to be patient, shifting my hips around on the stoop to ease my sciatica, but he didn’t come. Sorry, he finally said as he walked out onto the stoop, closing the front door behind him, but he didn’t mean it. We got in the car. He was silent and dark. I kept pointing out the items I’d brought to make it pleasant: towels and water bottles, snacks and sunscreen. I heard my voice go up and octave and I hated it. This is how I’d been with my ex-husband, trying to cheer him out of his moods.
When we pulled up to the pool, it sounded like a party in there with hip hop thumping like a sound cloud around. It was one of the few city pools with trees in the outer park, and it looked shady and inviting while the pool seemed blue and crowded and cool. I unbuckled my seat belt. “No fucking way,” he said. “What?” I was so close to relief. “I’m not going in there.” I felt ready to cry.
I know what I should have done, of course. Had my therapist been the little angel on my shoulder, I would have looked at him calmly and said, suit yourself, I’m hot as fuck and I’ve given up my whole damn summer to help you move in, bent myself over backward to make you feel welcome and clear out all my stuff and my kids’ stuff you can have room for your own, and now I’m going in the fucking pool.
But of course, that’s not what happened. If it was, I wouldn’t still need therapy, would I? Nope. Not at all. Instead, I said, okay there’s another location on 4th and Washington, but it might be closed by the time we get there. He drove, slow as molasses, and parked and as I got out, I heard the lifeguard blow the final whistle of the day. Everyone got out and went to their towels. I got back in the car, choking back tears, and he said sorry but didn’t mean it for the second time that day.