Remembering David

According to my mom, I asked for a little brother several times.

I don’t remember this.

In 1971, during the month of January, my parents presented me with a little brother.

I don’t remember this.

It seems that I was rather disappointed with this gift.  “He doesn’t do very much, does he?” was, apparently, something I said on more than one occasion.

I don’t remember this.

To be honest, I don’t remember too many things about the first few years of his life here.  I remember many things about my little brother, David, but, those early years are lost in the Whirling Fog, also known as My Brain.

Let me tell you what I remember.

I remember that he was adopted.  So was I.  My birth parents names are sealed in records somewhere.  David’s birth mother was my father’s niece.  She was young, single, and, in 1971, single-parenting wasn’t as common as it is today.  She saw that I was loved, and asked my parents to give her child the same love and good home they’d given me.

I remember that David, when he was quite young, had the biggest, roundest eyes I’d ever seen. I was five years old when David was born, so I suppose my exposure to people with big, round eyes was rather limited.  But, they were big enough to have made an indelible impression on my memory.

My favorite David photo. His preschool photo. The story is that he was scared of the lights and equipment. I love his expression, and I think it’s the best photo of his big, round eyes!

I remember that he was full of energy, and curious about everything.  He was slow to learn to talk, so he’d just point.  (The fact that he started talking later than many babies was more than made up for once he decided that he had things to say.  David, as a child, could talk endlessly.)

I remember that he hated to be hugged, cuddled and snuggled.  The minute anyone would pick him up and try to pull him close, his entire body would stiffen, his limbs would lock, and he’d push away.

I remember that he could throw rather spectacular fits.  They would begin with his face wrinkling up, his eyes squeezing shut, and loud cries would emanate from some dark, scary place inside him.  These cries would then turn into shouts of “No!” or “I want it!” or some such protest.  Then the jumping would start.  Some kids throw themselves across the bed, or onto the floor, and kick and scream, pounding the floor or bed with their legs and arms.  Not David.  My brother was a jumper.  Up and down in one spot to begin. As the cries got louder, the jumping would begin carrying him around the room.  If he was near the hallway, he’d jump his way up and down the hallway, back and forth, jumping, until the fit left him.

I remember that when he’d throw these bouncing, crying fits, that not a single tear was shed.

I remember one time, when he was about 5, and I was about 10, I burned him with the car’s cigarette lighter.  We had gone to the cabin, and, as we were driving down the road towards our destination, my mom stopped to speak to one of the neighbors.  David and I waited in the car.  I had recently become fascinated with the car lighter, after having seen a friend of my mom’s light her cigarette with it.  I was fascinated with how the coils inside turned red, and how that hot red caused a cigarette to burn but not catch fire.  Since we were alone in the car, it seemed a perfect time for me to check out the cigarette lighter.  I’d push it in, and when it popped out, I’d pull it out and watch the coils glow red and then slowly fade. I did this several times in succession, and, at one point, I decided, for whatever reason, I needed to press a scrap of paper to the coils.  I was rather surprised when, unlike the cigarette, the paper caught fire.  I quickly blew out the flame, opened the window, and tossed out the scorched paper.  David then uttered those ubiquitous words that have inspired sibling fights since the beginning of time: “I’m telling mom!”  I don’t remember what I said to him, probably some sort of Big Brother to Little Brother threat.  I glanced at the lighter in my hand, the coils were no longer red, and, I pressed the end against the bare part of his leg that was just below where his shorts ended. He screamed.  I pulled away the lighter and saw a round red mark on his leg.  The coils may have been out, but since I’d heated up the lighter several times in a row, the outside of the lighter was still quite hot, a fact that I don’t think occurred to me until after I saw the red mark.  I jumped out of the door, and ran to the back of the station-wagon, opened the tailgate, and rummaged through the cooler, until I found a frozen pound of hamburger.  I carried it back to the front, pressed the ice-cold package against his leg, and soothed him as best I could, apologizing profusely, and begging him not to tell mom.  Perhaps I wasn’t begging.  I think I might have been threatening him if he told on me.  He never did tell.  I never played with the cigarette lighter again.

I remember that David could get very angry, very quickly.  He didn’t shout.  I was the one who shouted in anger.  David was a thrower.  He’d throw his toys.  Not the soft, plush ones. No. He’d throw the ones that would hurt. Blocks. Matchbox cars. Tonka trucks. Anything big and heavy.  Once he chased me around with his popcorn popper push toy, one of the old, 1970s versions, made of wood and heavy plastic; I managed to avoid being hit by making it to my room, and getting the door shut before he struck.  He beat the closed door of my bedroom with the push toy.  Mom was not happy about having to replace the door.  When no toys were handy, he’d hit people.  In third grade, he punched his pregnant teacher in the stomach because she wouldn’t give him something.

David’s popcorn popper was much like this, though I think ours might have had red wheels.

I remember that he would eat, and eat, and eat, and he was always very skinny, no matter how much he ate.  He’d eat everything on his plate, eat seconds and thirds, and still steal food from the kitchen to eat in his bedroom.  He was given several tests by various doctors to find out if he had some sort of nutrition deficiency or other medical reason for consuming so much food.  Nothing was found to explain it.  My mom took him to a child psychologist who recommended that when stolen food was found in his room he was to be made to consume it all, right then.  The idea, as I understood it then, was that he’d eat so much at once that he’d be sick, and, that if he were sick enough times he’d not steal food anymore.  I suspect that today this idea would be considered abusive, but, in the 1970s, it was what my parents were told, and they followed the doctor’s plan.  I think that David was the only one who wasn’t changed by this experience.  I know I was a bit freaked out by it, especially after watching a few episodes of David eating things, like a big jar of grape jelly.  He wasn’t sick. He didn’t even burp. He even ate all his food at dinner about an hour later.  Another time, I watched David eat three jars of ice cream syrup (chocolate, strawberry and caramel) without being sick.  After a few of these marathon eating sessions, where he’d consume vast amounts of food without getting sick, mom and dad stopped.  It seemed pointless.  David went back to sneaking food.

I remember that he started stealing when he was in second grade.  Stealing from other people, I should say.  He’d take my toys, and he’d steal the food, but, until second grade, it was limited to theft around the house. In second grade he started stealing food from other kid’s lunch boxes.  He’d steal money from the teacher’s desk and purse.  When he was 8, he was sent to the school for the hard-to-handle kids.  I can’t remember what the politically correct phrase of the day was, but, basically, it was the school where they sent kids who were troublemakers, because having a school full of troublemakers seems like a perfectly natural way of … what?  Helping them?  On his way to and from this new school he’d walk by the grocery store and the drug store.  Both of which he was caught stealing from on more than one occasion. After the manager at the grocery store told him that next time he was even seen in the store, he’d call the police, David moved on to the convenience store that was not quite on the way home.  He was caught there too.  He never stole magazines, or toys.  It was always food.

I remember the day that everything began to change.  It was a few months after dad died.  David was 9. In retrospect, I’m sure there was an element of a young boy acting out because he didn’t know how to grieve. Retrospect is like that. It gives you perspective, it gives you possible answers, but, it doesn’t take the sting out of the memories.  This particular day, David was very late coming home from school, about an hour after the time he should have been home. Mom and I got in the car and went looking for him.  He was nowhere along the route he walked home from school.  We stopped at the grocery store, the drug store, the convenience store.  He wasn’t there, and no one had seen him.  Mom brought me back home, in case the phone rang, or in case David came home, and she went back out, driving around.  Within a few minutes of me walking back into the house, the phone rang.  It was the police.  They had David.  He’d been stealing.  When mom got back home, we went to pick David up at the police station.  He’d been caught at the convenience store, and, this time, they called the police.  There had been a shift change right after the police took David to the station, that’s why none of the convenience store employess had seen David when I went in to ask.  The reason it had taken the police so long to contact us is that David had made up a story: that his father had died (true!), and that his mother was in California with relatives (we had no relatives in California at that time), that his fourteen year old brother was taking care of him while mom was in California, but, I had a job and worked until late at night.  He gave them a phony phone number.  When they finally told him he was going to have to go to a foster home until they could contact his mother, he finally broke down and gave them the correct contact number.  By the time we got home, I knew that something had changed.

I remember that those months after my father died, my mother was locked deep in an anxiety attack, and wrapped in grief for the loss of the man she’d been married to for thirty-two years.  It would be six months before she’d return to work, and more than a year before the anxiety broke and left her able to function again.  During those desolate months after dad died, my mom was not capable of much — she paid the bills, and went grocery shopping.  That was about it.  I made sure there was food on the table, and that David made it to school every day.  When David was arrested, something in my mother broke.  She realized that she was unable to care for David, that she had neither the energy or the will.  She made a decision to do what seemed right for David — since he needed extra care, she thought that if David went to live with his birth mother, it would be a better place.  He’d have a mother who was younger (mom was 56, his birth mother was a good twenty or so years younger), and he’d have a father figure and several siblings if he went to live with his birth mom.  His birth mother was thrilled her son was coming home.

I remember the day he left.  I can still see his little 9 year old face as he set off on his new adventure.  In the fashion of many 9 year olds who was take a trip on their own, David was very excited, so excited, in fact, that the last thing he said to mom, before he got on the plane, was, “I’m so excited to be going home!” I don’t think that he meant anything by it, but mom, still locked in the anxiety, and dealing now with the loss of a son, took these words as a rejection of anything she’d ever done.  She still mentions it, and the pain on her face is visible every time she thinks about it.

I saw him once during the next six years.  When he was 16 or 17, he came to live with us while he finished high school.  He’d been having problems at home, and he wanted to come back to us for awhile.  He was older and taller.  And, he was still David.  He ate.  He stole.  He left here a year or so later, and, I spoke to him twice over the next twenty years.

I remember the first time he called me.  He’d gotten my number from mom.  He called me one evening, and told me that he too was gay.  That he was living with an older man.  That he too had contracted HIV.  I remember the horrifying sense of anguish I felt when he told me that he was HIV+.  I remember the burning sense of anger I had at myself for not setting a better example, for not teaching him to protect himself.  I felt as if it were my fault that he’d contracted that awful virus.  I remember the sense of loss I felt at that moment, the loss of his presence, and the loss of his life — this was sometime around 1990, and, back then, HIV was a death sentence.  Everyone was dying from it.  There were no treatments, no long-term survivors.  You got HIV, you got sick, you died.  I mourned for him, for the loss of losing him when he was 9, and then again after high school, and, then again for his certain death from HIV.

I remember the next time I talked to him.  It was about a year later.  He called to tell me that he was sorry that he upset me, but, that he wasn’t really gay, and that he didn’t really have HIV.  He said he just wanted to feel loved and cared for.  I was angry, but I was joyous that he didn’t have this hateful disease.  I was furious at him, but, at the same time, I hated myself, I hated my mother, I hated his birth family.  I hated that here was this young man who would make up this story in order to feel loved, when he should have had a family who showed him how much he was loved. With time, I learned that David was loved.  That his family loved him.  I learned that, like so many other times, David said what was most convenient to say. I learned that David wanted to be loved, but didn’t recognize love when it was given to him.

I remember that over the next twenty years, the news of David came in bursts.  He was married.  He fathered a son.  He left his wife and son.  He was living here.  He was living there.  He was with this woman.  He was with that woman.  He stole from this person.  He stole from that person.  He was on the run, one step ahead of the police.

Then there was silence.

No one knew where he was, or how he was.

I remember the call that came three years ago, at the end of January.  It was David’s new wife (that piece of news hadn’t reached us.)  She was in tears.  She was calling to say that David was dead.  He’d been ill for a time, though no one was quite sure what was wrong with him. She said he died in his sleep.  He was curled up next to her.  Of all the feelings I felt when I heard the voice of this stranger on the phone, telling me she was his wife, and that he was dead, of all the thoughts and emotions I had in those moments, I remember that the strongest feeling was being thankful that this man who was my brother had died curled up next to someone who loved him. Perhaps, at the end, he recognized love.

January is a mournful time for me: David was born in the first half of January, and died in the last half of January.  This year, January was more mournful then usual.  As I sat down to write about David, I began to realize that the majority of memories I have of him are the ones with the most drama involved.  David loved the theater, movies, singing and acting, so I suspect he might be amused by the irony that it’s the drama that I remember most.

It’s not all drama, my memories of David.

Some memories are vague, nothing more than fleeting moments of memory.  They’re all of laughter.  I’ve got several distinct memories of David laughing — in some he’s just a small kid, barely able to stand and walk, and in others he’s older, and while I can’t make out the words, I can see how animated his face is as he’s telling me something, for he had a very expressive face, and the memory ends with his laughing, sometimes briefly, other times rather heartily.  And, I can hear the sound of the laugh.  I can hear the three year old David laughing, and I can hear the 18 year old David laughing.  Both sounds bring a smile to my soul.

There are other memories that are a bit more specific.  I can remember playing Blind Man’s Bluff in the front yard, with David and a couple of kids from the neighborhood.  This particular memory starts with it being David’s turn as the one with the blindfold, and words from me to remember to not run.  Our front yard has a chain link fence all around it, and, when one can’t see, one shouldn’t run, as one could run into the fence.  I can see a couple of us, talking to David, as he’s blindfolded, and trying to “find” us, and, I can see with absolute clarity this moment: the instant when David got excited, and thought he knew where someone was, and knew that he could touch them and make them “It.”  His eyes were blindfolded, but, even through the blindfold, one could see his eyes light up with awareness, and, in his excitement, he forgot the rule to not run.  He ran.  Into the chain link fence.  His face struck the crossbar, and his body struck the chain link, which is springy.  The springiness threw him back about five feet, landing him face-up in the grass.  It took him a minute, but, I knew he was ok once he starting laughing with the rest of us.   Another memory: David walking towards the pole of the clothesline in the backyard.  He’s talking, and talking, and talking, and walking right at the pole, looking right at the pole, and walking right into the pole.  The impact caught him by surprise, pushed him back a foot or two, caused him to stop talking for an instant while he assessed what had just happened, and then resumed his talking moments later as if there had been no interruption.

The clearest moments I remember are David singing.  My father, a man with a good voice who sang in a Barber Shop Quartet, claimed that David had perfect pitch.  I don’t know much about perfect pitch, but I know that, when he was young, at least, he had a beautiful singing voice.  Me, I love to sing, though I’m willing to admit that I’m of average voice.  That doesn’t stop me though.  And, I loved singing with David.  We used to challenge each other to hold a note.  We’d hear a long note in a song, and we’d see if we could hold it as long as the singer of the song.  We each had a pretend microphone, and, we’d play the record loud and sing-a-long (having parents who worked two jobs left us plenty of time alone to play loud music and sing!)  I have this clear memory of standing in the living room, the sun streaming in the window, David and I holding our pretend microphones, seeing who could hold the long note in Donna Summer’s “Dim All The Lights”, and that long end note in Air Supply’s “All Out Of Love.”  I think we spent the better part of an afternoon singing our hearts out.

The thing about memory, about its selectiveness, is that not only do we pick and chose the memories we want to keep, but, sometimes, the memories we end up keeping are selected for us, because of all the drama associated with the moment.  I have all sorts of memories of David being in trouble for something or another, but I can find no memories of David doing things that caused no trouble.  I have memories of my parents scolding David for something, and I have all kinds of memories of David saying “I don’t know” when asked why he would do such a thing. But, I have no memory of any conversation with him.  I know we talked, or at least I think I know that we talked.  I seem to have these vaporish images of him and I walking and talking, or sitting and talking, but, unlike the fog on the ocean, which can amplify sound, the words that pass between he and I have been lost in the mist.  The memories I have of David seem to have been chosen for me, because of all the drama associated with them, and with so much drama around, the normal, everyday, mundane things never made a strong enough impression on my brain.

It’s been three years since he died, and my heart still aches.  Yet, in many ways, it’s been aching for him since I was 14.  I was a 14 year old boy who watched his brother get on a plane to go live in a new home.  Six months earlier I’d lost my father, and, on that day, I lost my brother.  And, then I lost him again after he came to live with us to finish high school.  And, then, I lost him to life: I was in my early 20s, and had just moved in with someone.  I had discovered my HIV-status before David left home after high school.  He’d been there when I told my mom.  In 1989, no one really knew that much about HIV and how you could and couldn’t get it.  There was still lots of fear that it could be contracted through casual contact.  David was there the day I told mom my status, and he was there to hear her say “Even if it means I’d contract it myself, I want you to know that I will take care of you if you get sick.  You won’t ever be alone.”  He saw that love, and, I can understand why a few years later, he told me he had HIV.  My life at that time was spent trying to learn what I could about HIV so I could try to stay healthy, it was spent in a relationship, it was spent working full time, and I’d gone back to school full-time.  I thought if I were going to die young, I should go to college (I’d not gone right out of high school), so I could get a good job, so I’d have money to do all those things I wanted to do before I died.  In all that life, in all those moments I was trying to live, I lost my brother.  I was too wrapped up in my own world to think about what was going on in his.  And, yes, when he told me he didn’t have HIV, well, as much as I understood, I was angry as well.  It was just another David moment, I thought.  And, I let him go.  I didn’t think about him for awhile.  When I finally grew-up enough, and wanted to seek him out, he had lost himself, hiding away from all of his family.  No one knew where he was.  And, then, he was dead.  The greatest loss of all.

When those we love die, and we’re left behind, we spend a great deal of time thinking about the things we wish we had said or done, and we spend even more time feeling guilty about things we did or didn’t do.  I’m no exception.  I feel guilty that for all those years, from the time 9 year old David left, until the time he died, I was able to make no memories with him.  And, I feel guilty that what memories I do have of him are only a small part of who he was — I know nothing about him other than the drama.

I remember this: he is my brother, and I love him.

And, after all these years, I can still hear your voice holding the long note at the end:

9 thoughts on “Remembering David

  1. It made me very sad to learn of your HIV status, John, but glad to know your mother’s love for you is so clear (and I know she’s not the only one). I wish we could talk over coffee some time about all the of this, our January/sorrow connection, David’s weird treatment of you and of himself, his constant hunger driving him so far away from the very people with whom he “stiffened” when he got too close. He’s an interesting person, but what I’m left with is your concern for him, your desire to understand him, and the way you wish him well, despite your differences and the pain in your relationship with him. I wish it had been different for him, for you, and for your parents, who were really just trying to do the right thing for all concerned. We’ll meet one day. I’m sure of it.

    • It’s funny that you mention meeting. I’ve had this feeling, ever since our blogging paths crossed, that we’d meet in person. I’m sure it will happen! Though, I suspect we could talk for much longer than it would take to drink a cup of coffee. I think we’d need at least a large, multi-course meal, dessert, and after-dinner coffee!

      We all have things in our lives that we spend hour after hour trying to understand. David is the ‘thing’ I’ve spent so much of my time trying to figure out. Even before his death, I spent time trying to figure him out, trying to understand him, and, to be honest, trying to figure out how many things I could have said or done differently that might have changed him. I feel a great deal of guilt when it comes to him. I never did horrible, Joan Crawford things to him. I try to tell myself that our relationship wasn’t that different from other brothers I’ve known — the older brother who picks on his little brother stuff. But, I can’t ever seem to accept that I didn’t do anything wrong, that I was just a young kid myself, and acting like millions of other big brothers. Maybe it’s the not knowing why David was the way he was that’s so tough. If, somehow, I could find out that it was some mean thing I said on some particular day that made him the way he was, then at least we’d know, and maybe it would all make sense. But when you don’t know, you can’t ever put it to rest. The unknown haunts you.

      Thanks, as always, for stopping by. Your comments always mean a great deal to me.

  2. Hi John,

    Firstly, please accept my apologies for not stopping on your blog for quite a while…nothing personal, just life and all that goes with it!

    I felt very moved reading your post and to be honest, I don’t really know what to write here right now other than you are a very special person and the way that you wrote what you wrote about David will stay with me for a long time. Thank you for sharing, I sincerely mean that. This must have been a very difficult post for you to write.

    • Samantha, there’s no need to apologize. I may not have been commenting on your blog recently, but, I do read every post, so I know that you’ve just had a big move (congrats on the new home! Hope you’re getting settled in!) Believe me, I know that real-life usually takes precedence over The Blogging Life.

      I really appreciate you taking the time to share your thoughts about this post. It was rather tough to write. Yet, it was also cathartic. It’s given me some perspective, and opened a dialog with family, and, I think it’s inspired some more writing about my brother.

      Thanks for stopping by! And, know, that I enjoy reading your posts, and seeing your beautiful photos everyday when they show up in my Reader!

  3. Love this piece, love the writing, love the sentiment. As soon as I read the words “He was curled up next to her” I felt relief that he died where he knew love. It seems like David and his wife shared an understanding of their true selves, a limbic resonance that wasn’t possible with anyone else he encountered through his life.

    • I, too, found a sense of relief and peace knowing that even though he and his wife had a less-than-perfect relationship (who has a perfect relationship?) that his end arrived next to someone he loved, rather than in any of a hundred other circumstances that I think many of us feared.

    • Thank you …. it was from deep in the heart. it was one of those things you sit down to write, and the writing just happens … there’s not thought involved. I didn’t even change it after I wrote it, fixed some spelling and added punctuation. Some pieces just flow… they’re usually the ones with the most feeling behind them.

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