The Childhood Home
Sometimes crime just has to take a back seat.
This column isn’t about crime but it is about life and death.
For 18 months I’ve put it off. I mean, what do you do with a childhood
house full of memories after you lose both your parents?
We moved into the house when I was just out of elementary school - more years ago than I care to admit. And, I’m almost embarrassed to admit that I have let their home remain virtually untouched. I just
couldn’t bear tampering with their things. As an only child I have no siblings
to argue with me over my decision. So, I just let the house be, sitting there
like some sort of organic time capsule. I have been paralyzed with indecision
about what to do.
My parents had some lean times and, finally, more prosperous times and the house, while not big, showcases what they
felt was important. How could I now decide what was worth keeping and what was
not?
There are the pieces of china from my great grandmother’s wedding day in 1882, not particularly valuable but
rich in the history of our family. There is the lamp my grandmother got on her
wedding day in 1914 and the drawer full of doilies, dresser scarves and kitchen towels she created.
And all those family photographs.
So, on this week before Easter there I was alone in the house holding fading pictures of my ancestors going back nearly
a century and a half. Photos of my parents courting in high school, Dad in his
Navy uniform and then graduating from college in Mayville, North Dakota. There were pictures of the first house they bought in California and on the front steps my mother holding me as a tiny baby, my dad looking proud.
And there were photos of the house we lived in once they decided to move to Albuquerque, New Mexico in the 60’s
and open their own business. My parents knew how to work – but they also knew how to play. What struck me most were the years worth of grin-from-ear-to-ear pictures of them outside hosting a patio
party or holding their prized fish catch or garden bounty of roses, tomatoes, green chilies and mounds of green beans.
Pictures that were so hard to hold, harder to throw away.
The special table cloths Mom brought out for different holidays. My Dad’s stuffed swordfish on the wall, his
toolbox out in the garage, his favorite chair on the patio. All the knickknacks and possessions life sees you collect. I was nearly overwhelmed by the burden of deciding what I would keep and what I would
let go.
We use phases like “passed away” or “went to God” and somehow we think that cushions the fact
that our loved ones are never coming back. Well, I’ve finally gotten to
the place where I can talk about it. Dad died in March 2004, Mom died in August
2006. But more importantly what I see now is that they lived.
As I looked around their home I saw how they had fully embraced their lives in the Southwest. As I contemplated their
belongings - Navajo rugs, sand paintings and Indian pottery along side treasures from their native North Dakota – the
wooden rocker grandpa made out of one piece of wood, the old metal milk can with the family name on it, the wooden wall phone
that came from the farm – I realized this is where my parents found their place of peace on earth. I'd never thought of it that way.
My parents were well respected members of the Albuquerque
community, operating the Hughes’ Meat Company there for 35 years. They
did charity work and belonged to the Naval Fleet Reserve Club and the American Legion.
Dad, like his father before him, was a Navy veteran of World War II. My
folks loved nothing better than to jump in their motor home and take off for a nearby lake – and on one occasion all
the way to Alaska. They tended their prized roses and vegetable
garden, they played cards and pool with friends and they knew how to have a good time.
I learned a lot from them
about how to conduct a life. Through the living of their lives they instilled in me the virtues of: integrity, hard work and the value of a good laugh, sometimes at one’s own expense.
The time that has passed
since their deaths has been a necessary emotional buffer for me. Now I’ve
come to see that it’s just a house, the items inside are just ‘things.’ The real memories and the valuables
are the ones I carry inside me - always.
-30-
YOUR COMMENTS HERE
Maurice in New Jersey writes:
Wonderful piece. Made me think a lot about my parents and their lives. Thank you!
Peter in Boston writes:
Thanks so much for the piece on your parents. I'm going through a very rough time at the moment
with aging parents and this was so special and helpful to me.
Richard in Manhattan writes:
Lovely column... How moving it must have been for you... Full of the riches of
sadness memory and belonging. You were very lucky to be able to do this. So few of have childhood homes to go
back to when our parents are gone.
Lee Jay in Marina Del Ray, Ca writes:
What a rich, beautiful insight and reflection.
This is a keen insight into your heart - thank you for sharing it with us. And it's a mirror that I can look into (as
can all of us) to see a reflection of our own lives with our parents. I lost my father in 2006, and went through the
first chapter of this. Mom now lives here by us. I think it's a good night to call her and go have dinner with
her. Thanks Diane.
Jeff from Santa Barbara County writes:
What an incredible
article. Although I never knew your parents, I know that they must be incredibly proud of you. My dad died in 1999 and my mother in March of 2004. I to have held on to certain items; mainly their home.
I needed, the time, to come to a place in my mind and heart that revealed itself as "just a house". I am there now and
plan on putting it up for sale.
The family pictures are on a DVD and I have
the memories. You are an incredible writer. Everything that I have felt, in the loss of my family, you were able
to put into written word. Thank you for the gift of knowing that I am one of many.
Ralph in Nevada writes:
Precious memories. Thank you for sharing.
Very moving. Very beautiful.
Levi from Oklahoma writes:
What a moving
post. I remember when you appeared on Nancy Grace promoting your book and Nancy talked about meeting your parents at your book
party. You were with them throughout their business career and they were with you throughout yours as well. Not
only do you have fond memories of them, but I bet they have fond memories of you and your journalism career. Not everyone
has a daughter or son that made national headlines for their reporting and get a book published! I bet you made them proud!
Frank from Los Angeles writes:
Beautifully written. Just beautiful. And what
a loving, cosmic testimony to your parents: You couldn't bring yourself to throw away anything they cherished.
Larry from Ohio writes:
Diane, your mother looks exactly like you.
I see it. I look at her face and I see your face in it. I am so glad your father got to see you go from Albuquerque to making international headlines. I am so glad your
mother got to see you as a published author. They have every reason to be proud. They are looking down, and they
are just as proud.
Lyn from Minneapolis writes:
That's a wonderful story Diane. In those days without mobile phones,
color tvs or all of today's mod-cons that we all take for granted...they lived the simple but hard working life that just
does not seem to happen today.