Eulogy For My Mother

NOTE: Please keep in mind that this was written to be spoken, so there are constructs and punctuation that aren’t exactly legit (not that I could see the punctuation through my tears).

I’ve been struggling with what to say today. When I did this 27 years ago following my brother’s passing, it was clear what to do: tell a few funny Scott stories and try to lessen the pain of the moment. But I couldn’t decide what approach to take for Mom. Did I want to recall humorous episodes or muse on how much Mom meant to me?

I was so torn that at first I thought I’d simply be a spectator today. But the outpouring of love for Mom, and the love and support shown to me by my friends these past few days has been so amazing that I realized I had to say something. But what?

And then I realized: the outpouring of love and support that I’ve witnessed this week was a reflection of the love and support and joy that Mom had been giving out her whole life. To EVERYONE in her life. What she’d put out into the universe was now coming back ten-fold to her family and friends. And to me.

Mom’s greatest attribute was her unbounded capacity to embody love and joy. As I’ve spent the past few evenings scanning photos of Mom, the one thing that struck me is how happy she is in every single photo. Her loving kindness JUMPS out of the photos.

We all have memories of Mom’s joyous energy and how with that energy she enabled us to surpass even our own expectations. It was the love and joy that she brought to her career that made her so beloved in what can be a pretty tough industry. It was that love and joy that prompted her to support and encourage so many people in whatever endeavor they might undertake. And it was with the love and joy that she lived and embodied that she showed me how to be a better, happier person.

Mom never lectured. She didn’t preach. She didn’t mandate. That wasn’t her style. Instead, she’d share her thoughts and let me sort things out for myself. She led by quiet example, living a life full of optimism. Optimism. How many people remember her phone-call sign-offs? Do you remember? “Onwards and upwards!”

So I was going to say that that joy, that optimism, is what I’m going to miss about Mom. But upon seeing friends last night I realized that I’m not going to miss those things at all because I’m going to inculcate that joy into MY life. To BE the person that Mom modeled for me every day of my life. The ease with which she loved, the joy she embodied…these are traits that I’m going to make core to MY life going forward. Not necessarily as a tribute to Mom, but rather because I believe that all along she was trying to show me how to live a happier, better, more fulfilling life. Always giving…that was Mom. She spent her entire life showing me, and everyone else, a better way to live.

One anecdote:
It’s that joy and optimism and love, clearly, that prompted Mom to leave her engagement ring…to me. I love that. Think about that for just a second and you’ll see the humor — but also, again, the love and hope and optimism — in her act.

It’s that love and hope and joy and optimism that I’m going to seek to make the key part of the rest of my life. Being a happier, better person is the least this unapologetic mama’s boy can do to say “thank you” and “I love you” to his mother.

An Open Thank-You Letter

I’m back now. At least for the time being. And to be honest: it feels good. I know there are a couple of hectic days to come, and a lot of real work in the weeks and months ahead, but it’s good to be back home again after a long, draining few days.

By home I mean: my desk in my apartment. At the keyboard. Writing.

And my first writing task is to craft this thank-you letter to all my friends, old and recent, who have reached out so kindly and lovingly in the past couple of days. The outpouring of love and support has been truly overwhelming. Truly overwhelming. I fancy myself a wordsmith, but words cannot convey how grateful I am to you all. You’ve comforted and warmed me so much, and the feeling of love and caring has helped soften the heart of even this grizzled curmudgeon. Thank you all so, so much. I will be in touch with you all in the near future. Until then…

One of my personal goals that’s grown out of the spiritual path I’ve tried to cultivate in recent years has been a desire to live more in my heart, in my emotions. That goal came as a result of what I felt was a hardening of the heart that occurred over the years since my brother’s death in 1985. In that time, I’d become inured to grief and heartache — I’d become the image that many have of me: the macho loner surfer/sailor/outdoorsman — or so I thought. But that’s not who I was or am, really, and it’s that approach to life and its eventual end that stunted my emotional growth for the 27 years since. I mean, for cryin’ out loud: I’m 46 and single, never married and no kids, and I’ve lived in NINE(!) different states and a couple of foreign countries (when I wasn’t out vagabonding around) since college. Talk about an emotional cripple! Crikey! Never any roots, any connections, for this guy!

But I’ve been trying to grow out of that (what I feel is a) childish, immature approach to life. It’s been a slow, laborious and not-yet-successful process. And it’s not to say the process is going to cease my wanderlust and travel.

But I am going to work to ensure the passing of my mother on Sunday proves to be the bursting dam to make true spiritual growth happen. It’s what she would have wanted.

Following my brother’s death, a lot of things that should have happened didn’t. This then-19-year-old, and all of the rest of his family, should have gone into therapy…lots and lots of therapy. That didn’t happen because that’s not how we did things. We were tougher than that. We persevered, we got back to work, we moved on. Yeah, right.

That’s NOT going to happen now. I’ve given a lot of thought to this (while spending all day yesterday driving my car back from Baltimore, which is where I’d left it when my father called me Saturday with the news of my mother’s accident) and I plan to write my way through this time. It starts with this letter and will continue for I don’t know how long. I’m going to chronicle the events and thoughts — and most importantly, the emotions — of the coming days, weeks and months, and I’m going to be completely open. And a lot of that openness is going to find its way here, to this blog. You’ve been warned.

We’ll see how open that which I publish really is; after all, I’m an editor: cutting things out is what I do. But I will be writing it all, and I’m hopeful a lot of good — writing, spiritual progress, psychological therapy — will come from it.

So to start the process off I say again: thank you. To all of you. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for your love and support. These past three days have been brutal and I’m pretty cried out for the time being, but I am coping. There’s still a lot of work still to be done, and I’m hopeful I can help my family, and my mother’s friends, as we all seek to move forward in my mother’s absence.

And I hope to finally become the better person my mother made clear she believed I was all along.

Master Thespian. Or…Not

People often ask me why I never went into acting like my sister. Aside from the fact that Brooke worked her ass off to get where she is and I’m a lazy sod, I reply to these inquiries with my standard observation that I have a good face for radio and then launch into the tale of my acting experience in fifth grade.

It was 1976. The bicentennial. And I had the lead role in the school play. I don’t even recall what it was or what it was about, other than something to do with the Revolutionary War. I want to say it had something to do with the story “Johnny Tremain,” but I don’t really recall. I’ve blocked most of the experience out of my conscious mind.

I went to rehearsals. I studied my lines. I did what I was supposed to do. And then came time to perform the play and I forgot my lines. No, not some of my lines.

Every. Single. Line.

Every last word. Complete and total brain lock.

I froze. I didn’t just stumble over my lines. I forgot every word I was supposed to utter. I forgot the little interstitial I was supposed to do that involved reciting the Declaration of Independence. Basically, I stabbed Thomas Jefferson’s corpse through the heart with a dull blade. And Laurence Olivier’s, too, and he wasn’t even dead yet.

I haven’t been on stage or in front of the cameras since.

But then last week, a friend sent me an email about a company in Boston that was casting for a commercial. The guts of it was: “We are also looking for former hockey players in their 40’s or 50’s. We are looking for the kinds of guys who have been around the rink their whole lives.”

40-something hockey player? Hello? Yeah, I think I fit that demographic just a wee bit.

The email included these details: “We will be casting both principals and extras. Those selected as principals will be paid $400/day, and extras will be paid $200/day. Shoot will be in the Boston area.” Whoa! Two hundred bucks (I didn’t expect to make principal status)? Sign me up!

So I sent an email detailing my hockey experience and included a couple of photos: the golf shot that is my current Facebook profile photo, and a shot of me skating in an alumni event in 2009.

A couple of days later I got a phone message asking me to call back and arrange a time to do an audition. And not wanting to be the guy who’s afraid to try something, I said, “what the hell?” and called back. I made an appointment to do an audition a day later and that was that.

But it’s never just that. You can’t help but start to wonder: what if this goes well? Hey, 200 bucks is nice but maybe this will lead to something else…maybe even an acting gig, even just a small supporting role. And then, hey! Maybe I hit an untapped demographic: never-married 40-somethings. One score: accolades, moolah, too much fame and fortune. Better than hitting the lottery, right?

Instead, I drove to a seamy neighborhood in Allston (shocking, right: seamy neighborhoods in Allston?!) with nonexistent parking for a building wedged between the Mass Pike and a shopping center complete with rent-a-cops to make sure would-be George Clooneys don’t park in their lot. I finally found a spot on the street and walked in, dressed, as requested, in chinos and a polo shirt.

A 20-something girl sat at a folding table in a hallway and asked if I was there for the audition. She handed me a clipboard with a form on it and had me stand against the wall for a photograph. I smiled. I wasn’t sure if that was the right move or not, but too many years of being told I never smile for photographs came to the forefront just then.

I sat on what looked like a church pew and filled out the form, detailing my height and weight, my athletic abilities and any other skills and certifications I had that might be relevant. The 20-something girl reappeared and stapled an 8.5-by-11 printout of my photo to the back of the form, and when I finished my bit, I turned it in to her.

There were three other guys in the hallway. Not one of them looked like they’d played any hockey beyond bantams, and they were all young enough to be my sons. So much for 40-somethings. One guy’s take on a polo shirt was a button-down biz-cas shirt with jeans. I started working on my Oscar acceptance speech.

A door opened and a man and woman stepped out and called for the next audition. The woman read four names — coincidentally, the names of the only four of us in the hallway — and we stepped into a room with another folding table and some folding chairs. There was an empty pizza box on the table and a video camera on a tripod a few feet away.

The guy explained what we were to do. First, we each, individually, stood between the table and the camera and, when prompted, held our hands beside our face and recited our names, our agent’s name or the fact we were non-union, and then turned to present a profile.

After that, we each took a seat around the table. We were supposed to pretend there was pizza in the box and act like we were old friends and talk about last night’s game and other assorted malarkey. I mentioned the hockey aspect of the listing and the camera guy said, “Yeah, in the commercial, you’ll see an empty zamboni run down the rink and then you’ll cut to Papa Gino’s where the zamboni guy and a bunch of hockey players are digging in. And, no offense, but you know, you hockey guys all look alike.”

Through it all, I had a huge shit-eating grin on my face. This was the first step toward Hollywood stardom and this clown wanted us, hockey players, to gush over Papa Gino’s pizza? Okay, like Master Thespian, I can do anything. I am, after all, the brother of a professional. And then the camera guy said, “Action!”

And I froze.

Oh, I kept the shit-eating grin on my face. I smiled the whole time. But the three kids fell right into it like they’d known each other all their lives. I chimed in with a “you’re outta luck” when the one guy asked why the box was empty, but that was about all I had to offer. I just didn’t know what to say. I had no lines to forget, but I also couldn’t generate any lines. I had expected a photo check or something, maybe there’d be a question or two about our ability to skate (I was really counting on the hockey part of the posting), but hell, this might as well have been Shakespeare and I was back in fifth grade all over again.

After a couple of minutes, it was, mercifully, over. We walked out and I asked one of the guys if he did this sort of thing often. “Oh yeah, all the time. Don’t you?”

“No,” I said. “First time.” I should have added, “Last time, too.”

Unsurprisingly, I never heard back from the casting agency. And the shoot was scheduled for today. Oh well. So, Brooke: your role as the actor in our family is secure. Me, I had a gas on my one audition. I’m glad I went, but I won’t be going to any others.

Before I drove off, I’d switched back into surf shorts and flip-flops, and I was headed back to the beach (via a marina to check out a couple of sailboats for sale).