Driving Mr. Madden
Throughout my life, my father was something of a mystery to me. He had very rare moments of joy or lightness, but mostly he brooded-- he paced, he fretted, he lay awake at night. Of course in the 21st century one would have recognized the classic symptoms of post-war PTSD, but in the 1950's, retired soldiers were expected to re-acclimate to civilian life-- to have families and jobs and be 'normal'.
Whether or not he was CIA, as some of my curious boyfriends were convinced, he'd had a challenging military enlistment punctuated by wounds and acts of great heroism. As many soldiers will attest, the accolades and medals do little to assuage the deep psychological trauma that went mostly unaddressed in those 'happy' days of the 1950's. Many self-medicated with alcohol or prescriptions, but they were mostly on their own.
At some point in my adulthood, my mother tried to soften the emotional walls I'd created to shield myself from the effects of his moods and disapproval. I was referred to as 'the one who works in bars' with a kind of built-in question as though not even that description was apt. Anyway, during one of his more difficult depressive episodes, she related a story to open my heart a little. As his enabler and life partner, it was rare that she divulged anything, especially to a daughter whose natural inclinations toward the arts and free speech made her suspect and outside the realm of trust.
During his European service, my father as Captain of the 101st Airborne had a driver. Besides his military field heroics he also participated in some dangerous undercover intelligence missions. His driver was a black man from Kentucky. They became close. The driver made him promise if he was ever killed in action, my father would go to his family in person and deliver the news. He did not want his poor mother who could not even read to have one of those terrible telegrams she feared. So they made a pact. One day during a risky maneuver, they were attacked and a grenade blew up the jeep. My father was wounded but not critically; his driver, attempting to shield my father, took the brunt and was instantly killed.
After 9/11 my father was given a hero's license plate which allowed him to park anywhere in the city. For some reason he seemed a little lightened by this recognition. While he still experienced periodic deep depressive episodes, he began to attend weekly Old Guard meetings. Being too macho to submit to psychiatric treatment, these meetings were therapeutic. I guess he was able to pull this story from his memory... one of the terrible guilts from which he suffered. Most of them were unavoidable-- the consequences of following military orders. But this was a personal debt he'd left unpaid and it ate at him, decades later.
Why he never attempted to contact the family is a complicated mystery, like most of my father's narrative. For me who goes to great lengths to fulfill even the silliest of promises, this is baffling. But recently it occurred to me that among the landmarks of my life that most irked my father, I married a black man. Perhaps he saw this as a painful reminder and criticism of his personal failure. I don't know; he so rarely gave me a kind look or an embrace; I both feared and hated him.
Last week I read the Count of Monte Cristo... a classic I had written off long ago as a 'boys' book. It was in my son's teenage library, untouched. And it was fantastically entertaining. Adventure, intrigue, conspiracy, murder, romance... everything one would want. But most of all it was a story of not just revenge but the resolution of deep irreparable damage from the miscarriage of justice, the way one envious man can turn against another. The unlikely resolution of one man's trauma results in further damage.
Today as a kind of personal dare I have begun the daunting Divine Comedy. Dante, like Dantès in the Dumas, had been wrongly accused, and the writing of this was a kind of retribution. Whatever the motive, I surely read it in school-- the Longfellow translation which is maybe not the best but I learned today how HWL faced this project just after his beloved wife was killed in a house fire. He, too, was wounded in the inferno. A double dare.
As we age, the issues of guilt and anxiety weigh on us. We look back and try to re-interpret our past as though there is a moral there. Sometimes we find understanding-- forgiveness. I tried hard to forgive my father, and have done so, to the extent that I have forgiven myself where he has not. We don't have an enlightened guide like Virgil to guide us through the layers of narrative, to shed light on the good and evil of our present which seems, like worlds past, to have confused the system of punishment and reward. The life which seemed so easy and simple in the 1950's has become cluttered and confused. One wants to write a guidebook to take us through these times where there are literally millions of digital answers to whatever question we pose. A definitive contemporary Divine Comedy.
In the end, we are each of us responsible for not just ourself, but someone else-- maybe one other person-- fulfilling the promise we made, or explaining, or listening to the man on the bus who looks ill... or the lady on the park bench who stares, day after day, who leaves her lunch untouched on the seat. I am sure that my father, to someone else, was a hero-- was perhaps kind, and understanding. And I hope somehow that driver's mother-- now long dead, certainly, was able to find peace. After all-- no one's presence could really have relieved the pain of losing her son. Maybe my father knew that. He was a believer, I think. Maybe at the end, he finally forgave himself.
Labels: 101st Airborne, 1950's, 9/11, CIA, depression, Dumas, guilt, heroism, Longfellow, Old Guard, PTSD Dante, reading, The Count of Monte Cristo, the Divine Comedy, trauma, Virgil, WWII

2 Comments:
Reminds me of my dad, Master Sergeant serving in Burma...
Amy.... as always so beautifully written. So sorry that u had that kind of relationship with your Dad. It does indeed sound like he suffered from PTSD but at least he found a support group later in life. I on the other hand had a kind, fun, supportive, and loving father and without him I don't know who I would have become. Happy Mother's Day 💕
Xoxo Amy E.
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