Most of our stories are unfinished… incomplete – the stories that need pages for the telling. Most of the illustrative quirks, curiosities, endearments, and the very molecular breath of personality go into the dust when the body dies.
There is the story of the hard times my dad suffered after his factory, Ironmasters, a wrought iron furniture manufacturing company, burned to the ground. The insurance he needed was not what he had. It is the story of my dad walking from his factory to his neighbor down the street, another factory owner, to ask what it would take to borrow from him, to borrow from his family to keep his business going. My dad knew who he was asking. It was a sober last-ditch ask.
The answer is where the story starts. It went something like, “Bob, I like you too much to lend you the money. You know what it would mean, and I will not do that to you. I should, but I won’t. The answer is no.”
Did my father nod and simply walk away? Had he tried to persuade? Did he go to the corner deli and get a pastrami sandwich? I don’t know, nor will I ever.
Walking on 64th Street toward Central Park on a brisk late autumn day, the sunlight was a cool yellow with overtones of gold and a breeze whipped leaves and scarves as if in a dance. It was a most beautiful day, and I was filled with joy and the love of my new husband.
Outside a door, held by the liveried doorman of an apartment building, stood a young woman. Under the awning, she was huddled inside a long, plush, dark mink coat. Her face registered; it was Tina, my best friend from 8th and 9th grades, whom I hadn’t seen in years.
Tina was such a pretty person. Her hair was thick and blond, lush with swirls of caramel. We both had lavish manes; it was one of our many connections. I could feel my happiness beaming toward her. I was with my beloved; it was a glorious day, and now I see this dear old friend. My delighted face met a face that certainly remembered me, remembered my name, remembered our connection, but was clearly at war with how to respond to our incidental encounter.
She seemed to pull further into her mink shell as she said hello.
Before we exchanged more than a few inconsequential pleasantries, a chauffeured black town car pulled up. You could tell it was there for her; the air shifted in that way that presages an action. Thus, cued, we waved goodbye and walked on.
That was 38 years ago, and I find myself thinking about those few moments. She remains an untold story. I so wanted to listen to it. I remember feeling words poised, experiences begging to be shared. She had been my best friend. I could feel her feeling; I could feel her weighed down as a heavy sac would be, unseen but borne, nonetheless.
I have made up many narratives for the lack of her story. My urge to know so I could understand was at first relentless, but over time, it was not enough to drive me to try to find her and ask.
In high school, I had a classmate named Wendy. Wendy became a standard to which I aspired for four decades.
I could not figure out how she did it. When a sunny, warm day would turn grey and rainy, I would become soaking wet, my waist-length hair frizzy and knotted, homework ink dribbling down the pages of my notebooks. Wendy, on the other hand, in her little sundress and espadrilles, would pull out a spring raincoat and umbrella, keep her waist-length red hair dry and smooth, her homework tidy and safe in her bag – all of which she did not have with her when she arrived at school that morning.
Awe and fury.
When I would go to her home, her room would always be perfect. The radio was always playing the best music; her underwear drawer was a work of art, and her beading materials – it was the 1970s – were agonizingly organized and just screamed interesting!
Over the years, I have tried to find her and have remained unsuccessful. I have never been able to see how her story unfolded. I could never ask her how the hell she managed to have it together seemingly and always. It was an art form lost to time.
In the summer before my senior year in college, I worked in Manhattan, commuting from New Rochelle. When the nights came in early, and the weather held at bay, I walked from the station to my apartment. It was a pleasure of mine to pass by and look at the homes that fronted on the streets. These lovely homes contained stories that I would never know.
I filled the vacuum when I passed by windows with people in them. I sketched out a story about this home and assigned an outline of a personality for each individual I saw, imagining how they interacted with each other. Each lit window, occupied or not, offered me a peek into the vignette of how other people lived and stirred my desire to hear the story not yet told.
I peer into grocery carts belonging to other shoppers to see something new, learn something new, learn about them, and gather pieces of their story.
When I wash the dishes or do the laundry, I imagine others doing the same tasks and wonder how they do it. Are they rushing? Are they careful? As a friend said, are they finding beauty in the act? For me, these musings dispel the banality of the ordinary, and thus, I am sewn into the fabric of life all around me – life I cannot see but can now reasonably believe is there.
People shut the door to their homes as they go out to attend to the list of must-dos. I wonder if they ever drop their keys not once but twice, or if, as they place the water bottle into the carry-all and when adjusting their arms, do the things they just put in occasionally cause everything else to tip out?
Actions caused by distraction are mostly a one-person show, and you are your own audience. Sometimes, they serve as the lead-in or fade-out of a bigger tale that has yet to come to be.
Mostly, we forget the passing moments of our lives when we realize the car needs gas. But were we to consider life’s filler moments as a narrator would, we, the reader, would be thinking, “And so what happened then?”
(Not) The End.
What unfinished stories have you wondered about? Have you wondered about the lives of long lost friends? Do you ever think about other people’s daily lives and how they do their chores?
Tags Nostalgia
The untold stories… So beautifully written.
Great article! I love calling friends from years ago and catching up with them. Some of the responses have been ‘interesting.’ I always wish everyone well and just like to know how they are. It’s fun to share photos and histories. They are always in my heart.
good for you, and lucky you that you have the ability to get in touch. ‘interesting’ is an interesting word. now I want to know more.
Loved this…so many stories to explore..
Pleased it touched you. Is there one story that is particularly desiring to be told and finished?
I enjoyed reading this well written and inspirational article. I too often think about people who were in my life long ago; school friends, work associates, former lovers and wonder how their lives turned out. It is rather easy now adays to fill in the gaps with Facebook. I find so many people from my past, and all look happy, and their lives appear to be fulfilling and successful with families and careers.
it is an elusive sweetness, isn’t it?
This so touched me. I wish we lived in simpler times. For decades, whenever I drive at dusk or in the evening and lights pop up in houses along the way, I wish I could knock on the door and share a cup and learn their stories. People lives are so deep and unknown and no one has the time anymore to listen and share their stories.
oh, how I love that imagery and that desire. We ache for connectedness, don’t we?