Today's story is not fiction.
With all the exchange of
ideas from this last week, I have been slammed in the heart with the full
significance of these issues. Today’s story is non-fiction. I can’t much think of
anything but this, just now.
The Bench Babies
We three mothers sat on a
bench outside the Wolford Elementary gym. It was the last day of school and we
had come for an awards assembly. We
chatted while our kids went back to class to collect their last bits of end-of-year
flotsam.
There was nothing in our conversation that
had particular significance to us, other than the fact that we approached the
summer with mixed feelings. Let’s face it, summer is quite work intensive for
mothers of grade school kids. We might have said something about looking
forward to the time when our youngest children were in school, (Janet’s already
was).
It seems to me that we talked
about life after preschoolers. But I don’t remember exactly what was said as we
three friends sat on a bench on the last day of school.
Except for
the fact that we all were certain that we were done with childbearing. It had
been a quandary for me, since I always wanted eight and only had six. But my
youngest was three and my husband felt that it was time to be done. He was soon
to celebrate his 39
th birthday. He’d be too old, he reasoned, to do
for another child what dads need to do. I admitted the considerations and
thoughts regarding it to those two trusted friends.
Pam was
already in her forties and said with a laugh, “Well, I
know I’m done. I’m older than Jeff!” Janet assured us that she was
also sure of being done. She was in a rocky marriage, (though at the time,
neither Pam nor I knew
how rocky.)
That was the gist. We don’t write down casual
conversations with friends, do we?
Fast
forward about five months.
I was having
strange symptoms that seemed oddly like pregnancy. But I also had a few
menopausal signs, too. My hair was getting some stray grays and I had PMS like
never before.
I was only 35, but nobody
can predict the changes in life. But I took a pregnancy test, just in case.
Positive. Positive!
I was
sorry for about fifteen minutes. I had planned to go to school when my next youngest
went to kindergarten. I had begun to wonder what it would it be to grocery shop
alone. But it was not to be.
But then
the wonder and the joy and hope and sense of honor settled on me and everything
was all right.
Jeff’s
response was much the same as mine. He quickly calculated how old he’d be when
our baby graduated from high school. “I’ll be an old man!” he said. “I’ll be
retiring right after the baby finishes school!”
That very
night, my husband went to a church meeting that my friend Pam was conducting.
At the end of the meeting, she announced that she was almost five months
pregnant. She told me later when she saw the look on Jeff’s face, she knew that
I was, too. We had told nobody, not even our children, but Pam marched up to
him right afterward and asked him. Our news was still bouncing in his brain,
looking for a place to settle. He denied it.
Pam
called me the next day.
“Are you
pregnant?” I was tempted to deny it, too, but with Pam’s super nose for news, I
recognized that lies would not avail.
About two
weeks later, Pam called me again. “Janet’s pregnant, too. It was that bench!”
Pam herself had three older children. I
thought it was a little naïve to blame a bench outside the school gym for three
pregnant women.
But then again, it was
rather miraculous that 42-year-old Pam, 38-year-old Janet and I, at 36, could
all suddenly, unexpectedly be having babies.
But Pam called them Bench Babies. She threatened to take up a collection
to put a warning sign on the school bench.
Pregnancy
for older women is difficult. You might say, “It ain’t no picnic for young ones
either,” and that’s true. But it seemed to be hard much earlier. I remember the
last five months being ponderously waddley, achiley exhausting and tiresomely
conspicuous.
But my two bench sisters
had it just as bad. In fact, Janet, whose marriage had not been helped by the
situation, undoubtedly had it worse.
Never the less, when I was about four months along, I got a card in the mail from Janet. It was an official membership card for the O.P.L. club. In tiny letters that I needed to polish my bifocals to see I saw that O.P.L. Stood for Old Pregnant Ladies. It gave me the right to mood swings, eating anything any time, and all the moaning and groaning that I needed. I think there was something about sleeping late and bon bons on there too.
By the
end of the following school year, Pam had a new baby boy she named “Spencer.”
Janet and I were due within two weeks of each
other and in to the full blown misery stage, complete with swollen ankles and
puffy everything . . .then again, at our ages, it might not have been the
pregnancies’
fault.
Janet
jumped ahead of me and had Jeffrey almost a month early. Jeffrey had a
traumatic time of it with his airway impeded and the doctors worked frantically
to revive the darkening infant.
And they
succeeded!
By the
end of the summer, little Spencer, Jeffrey and Thomas were the dotage of our
ward. Two more members had joined our club, and they also had boys. But they hadn't been on the bench. So it makes far more sense that there was something in
the drinking fountain at church.
But
Jeffrey’s rough start had left an imprint on him. Janet took him to
therapies and treatments throughout his preschool years.
He seemed fine to me.
I remember asking Janet if she was certain
that his pace wasn’t just
his natural
development patterns. She patiently explained that he showed unique signs of
birth trauma and that the therapies were helping.
Before
long, the boys’ personalities began to emerge. Spencer was a daredevil in the
frightening extreme. “If this boy lives, it will be a miracle!” his mother
said.
He was still preschool age (if I
remember right) when he broke a bone swinging off a vacuum hose from the balcony
in their home. He was rather vague about the details.
I hope Pam doesn’t know about the part my own
children MIGHT have played in some of his legendary antics.
Jeffrey
always reminded me of Curious George.
At
church, when he went to the children’s meeting, (called Primary in the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,) he would sit on his chair with his heels
hooked on the rung so his knees stuck up. He looked like a grasshopper ready to
spring. He would hold onto the sides of his chair sometimes. I think that was
mostly to delay the inevitable leap. Jeffrey tried to be good, but sometimes
his exuberance got the best of him.
He was
tender-hearted, too. I remember once when I was in his school classroom as room
mother. I had the children making some sort of Christmas ornament and Jeffrey
came and just stood close to me. “Do you need something, Jeffrey?” I asked.
“No,” he
answered. “I’m just looking.”
You might
think I’m easily flattered, but I was. He seemed to be proving to the other
students that he and I were friends. There was something extra between us that
the other students didn’t have.
He was
so curious and engaged that he wanted to be in the middle of everything. He wanted
to
touch and feel and see and hear.
Thomas
was a cheerful, obedient, little boy with some tendency to fearfulness. It was
important to Thomas to “be good,” and he was sometimes troubled by his buddies’
naughtiness. At least that’s the way I heard it. With Spencer’s daredevil and
Jeffrey’s curiosity, we three mothers thought of them like gunpowder and fire.
Thomas might have been a bit of a cooling agent in the mix, but he liked to
spend time with both of them. Vibrant personalities like theirs are just FUN!
But in
the course of Jeffrey’s young childhood, his parent’s marriage fell apart. His older
siblings were either teens or early twenties, so Jeffrey became a
sticking point. I cannot comment publicly on such a private matter as those
years, but Janet and I became deeper friends. We confided to each other more often.
We had both gone back to school to finish our degrees through the BYU
BGS (distance learning) program.
Janet
anticipated going to work to support herself, and I felt I needed the degree to
be ready for the next phase, whatever it held. We took many of the same
classes, though not simultaneously, and commiserated together on the
difficulties of the process. We discussed our families together and analyzed Jeffrey’s
responses to the struggles he was being subjected to.
Maybe it
was that final bonding before Janet moved to another state, but we have kept good
contact through the years. Not too much later, we also moved away from
Colorado. But the miracles of email and facebook allowed us to “keep track” of
each other quite consistently.
Despite
Janet’s desperate attempts to keep Jeffrey with her, she ended up with a shared
custody with Jeffrey staying in his Colorado home.
His father had remarried and his stepmother
had a boy his age.
In recent
years, I’ve read Janet’s posts as she counted down the days to visits with
Jeffrey. What a relief it was to read that when Janet remarried, Jeffrey and
his stepfather developed a good relationship. He seemed to be getting along okay. But he had it tough.
Janet
sent a note yesterday. “Our three little boys are down to two.” Jeffrey died
last Tuesday. As I write this now, fresh tears start.
How can that be? Our children do NOT precede us in death!
I picked
up Thomas from school and gave him the
news. “
My Jeffrey Meacham?” he asked.
“Yes.
Your Colorado friend.”
He asked
some questions and I told him all I knew. He wept softly, his head turned away.
At fifteen, Thomas has
the body of a man but for a
moment he was a little boy, weeping for his boyhood friend.
When his emotion subsided, he asked, “Can we
go?”
“We’ll
see.”
It’s a ten hour drive. But I
wanted to go, too. There’s nothing to say or do that will ease the dreadful
pain for my friend. I want to go and let the angels carry up the message to
Jeffrey that there are many, many people that love and care about him. I want
his family to know that we mourn with them and blend our tears with theirs over
the harshness of mortality. Jesus wept at the death of his friend, Lazarus,
even knowing that he would immediately restore him to life. He wept over Mary
and Martha’s pain. He weeps for us as we suffer. But his hands are stretched
out still. He holds the balm and soothing ointment. I hope that I can help to
pour it in.
This is
for Janet.
Mother pain
I
forget an instant,
My
present pain:
A
moment from
The sad
refrain,
But in
the next,
descends
again.
My universe
Is ever
changed
Just as
it was
When he
first came.
Father?
Receive my son
Into
the power
Of Thy
love.
You
sent me your
Beloved One,
Thou
who art merciful to save,
Have rescued
from a hopeless grave!
Jeffrey's obituary can be read at dignitymemorial.com
Jeffrey Meacham and the state is Colorado.