As I Wait
"Just
you wait Eli, just you wait, just you wait until your father
comes home," those are the lonely words that I longed to
hear from my mother, instead of the many others she used to
advance the evidence of her superiority to a provocative five
year old. Yet all the same I continued to wait. And
with the waiting I carried the slightly demeaning helplessness,
and endlessness that was no less obvious to myself then, than it
is now. One of the more detrimental perils of waiting is
the inherent pain that comes from not being fully in command of
what happens. Orphans and sons of the lately more numerous
upper-middle classes all feel it one and the same. Because
feeling the pain of waiting is as innate to us as crying.
There
are different types of waiting, there is the apprehensive
waiting, the angry waiting, also the almost jovial waiting such
as one feels when waiting to receive a phone call from a long
forgotten friend. To call and tell you that they forgive you and
love you still. All of these states can of course coincide and
mix in any definite combination, however they all fall
dramatically short to the one type of waiting I lived through for
thirteen years to a date. And that is the waiting of
abandonment. It is the loneliest kind of waiting there is.
It by far surpasses the others in its painful perils. I'll
even venture to say it is almost as bafflingly brutal as waiting
for an overdue telephone to finally ring. And it should be
noticed that the latter brings with it no small degree of
throbbing heartache and apprehension. Yet in this sort of
waiting the sufferer does not expect a sudden revelation of his
desire, but rather lingers on, impatiently waiting for an obscure
moment when he will suddenly realize why it is exactly that he is
not worth waiting for.
Yet
the days and minutes trickled down, and like a spy weary of his
vigils, I grew content in the arrogant self-assurance that my
father was simply much too busy in worldly events to be worried
about someone like me. Who was I to judge the life of an
immigrant, who left his family behind, in the snow of a cold
Russian winter? The funny thing about waiting is that the
passage of time does not make the waiting any easier; it but
accentuates the pointlessness and futility of the delay that one
has already gone through. Yet to the contrary, with the
excruciating passing of time I could almost say I got used to
waiting. I could fall asleep to it, awake to it, I could
probably die and be born to it, and many mornings I felt like I
did. At times I could almost claim that I was proud of
waiting, as if it was a precedent of sorts, an advantage that I
could flaunt before my peers, as if asking them "So, boys
what are you all waiting for?" And they were all
waiting for something, no matter how readily they admit to it or
not. Some were waiting for their weekly allowance, be it
food or money, while others waited for the weather to get warmer,
waiting for the end of the cold Russian winter, waiting like
children wait when they sit outside of school. Some were more
apprehensive some were active, and from what I gather activity
leavens waiting, as constant movement seems to disperse the atoms
of dread and thereby making them somehow less harmful. I found
myself to be neither. I was simply waiting. With an
instinctual lack of patience yet in a most concentrated and
flexed position, waiting for my revelation, waiting for my
father.
Everyone
secretly hopes, regardless of what they may tell you. Thus I was
no longer waiting, but hoping that I was worth more than the
value someone seemed to have placed upon me; hoping that
something was due to come of this sadistic delay that was holding
up the rest of my life. I was seven by then, and waiting
for his return was already stored in the back of my fiber.
But
I suppose I forgive him, now that a few years have passed, now
that I have changed my name, my language, and my blood. He came
back. He finally returned, and took us with him. And
as I was getting off the plane in Newark, in my promised land, I
had already decided what it was, and that I would love it, and
that no matter what I had to relinquish to love it, I would love
it here still. And I surrendered, frankly a lot more then I
ever thought I had, the most painful surrender of all being the
surrender of my mother, a trade off of sorts, to give her up for
him. I know I would have never traded her away, not even
for my promised land, not even for his love. It was done
non-the less. When going up for a ball in a crucial game,
the player does not think of the crushing blow that is about to
be dealt to him by his opponent, but rather with a vexing
combination of conceit and insolence thinks of the cheerleader
that will reward him after. Thus I concerned myself with
nothing, while fate, like a vigilant opponent delivered the hit,
taking her away from me, forever. And just like that in the
span of a minute, the waiting got heavier, because now I was
waiting alone, without her, without my mom.
I
train myself in the art of waiting. I think of others in
insufferable situations: people in prison, or having to fill up
the hours in a hospital or an asylum. And I can't help but
scowl at the futility of my effort. Futile like waiting for
that phone call, both so crushing and ridiculous as everyone
knows such things do not happen when one waits too keenly.
In much the same way I now wait for her, like I once waited for
my father, who recently gave a piece of kwan-like knowledge to
console me. He tells me that life is an emerging process
and that succumbing to a kind of impatience, would bring only a
constant intervening pain. I forgive him for his folly, as
still with a reinforced patience, I wait. I wait for
my mothers love to return. Thus I wait every night on our
balcony, quietly whispering to myself "just you wait Eli,
just you wait."
And as I wait,
everyone waits. American children wait for Santa Claus, the
disillusioned baby-boomers wait for another Teddy Roosevelt, and
the world waits for Fidel Castro to finally realize that
communism is a lengthy comical disappointment. Thus
everyone is waiting, waiting for something lost to return, or the
waiting for the end of the harsh Floridian winter. Among
the many inadequacies of the human race waiting is one of the
most painful ones, and logic and waiting are bad bedfellows to
our eccentric American sensibilities. In spite of it we struggle
on, and we know we cannot influence our fate, all we can hope for
is to convert our lifelong plight into lasting faith.