The painting

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It is like the establishing shot of a film’s opening scene: A gray silhouette of mountains in the background and on the front-right, a small bright kampung house with two tall coconut trees behind it give the painting regional context. Next to the house, in the center of the painting is a stream that runs into a small waterfall. I can hear the water moving over the rocks and stones. On the far right side of the painting, there is a red flowering tree and on the opposite side, its leafy green companion. The sky is light orange – sunrise or sunset? It’s lush, with contrasting and saturated hues of green, blue, deep reds and yellows, with flecks of white.

I found this painting in my father’s house in Malaysia, behind a stack of papers and empty decorative boxes piled next to a tall glass cabinet. It was covered with a thick layer of dust, and parts of the ornate wood frame was cracked. But there it was. This painting hung in every house I remember living in when I was growing up. It made my heart light and happy. It is beautiful.

Each time I return to this house, I search for evidence from my childhood. I never lived in this huge house that sits next to the 17th hole of a PGA golf course. It has a large wooden front door, marble floors, and heavy brocade draperies on the windows. There are seven spacious bedrooms, three studies, a separate living space for the maids, five living rooms, three kitchens, and more.

There are old large framed family photos on the walls and arranged on cabinets throughout the house. All of these are eclipsed by many more framed images of my father’s former military status, group photos with important or famous people, and many large grandiose photos and paintings of him in uniform and displays of stiff, formal traditional attire.

After my mother died, my search for childhood memories have become more intentional. I open cabinets, drawers, doors, and closets. I look behind sofas, under coffee tables, and venture into any unlocked bedroom and storage room. It’s always the same. In every space I find mementos of my father’s military service, binders with old documents, expired jars of marmalade, packets of stale food, broken hair dryers, old clothes, scrunched up plastic bags, decades-old receipts, old newspapers, dusty suitcases, golf bags, old mattresses, and many empty boxes. 

When I look back to my childhood, it’s odd to find so much clutter in my father’s house. We moved frequently as military families do, and every house we lived in had different furniture, curtains, carpets. Not many things followed us from house to house. As he rose in rank and status, the houses got bigger, and the furnishings more lavish. When he retired from the military, he built a mansion, and moved in with my mother more than 25 years ago. Today, he lives there alone, unwilling to part with anything. 

After my mother died, my two brothers kept their distance and my father expected us to prioritize his grief over ours. I tried to close the gap with my brothers but failed, I was on my own. Grief is revealing. My brothers have never been emotionally available. My father’s loneliness magnified his self-importance, using his wealth to show power, control, and in his mind, to guarantee love and companionship.

I have quietly defied this part of him for decades, and when he sees through me, I face silent petulance. The physical distance between us since I was 19 masks this tension and side steps conflict. But the pain from my mother’s death revealed my deep frustration and anger. For my father’s selfishness and not ever having the family I needed. 

Then I found the painting. I wanted to bring it home with me, to remember the warmth and happiness of my childhood ignorance. So I broke my own rules.

Over breakfast on the patio the next morning, I showed my father deference, chose my words very carefully, I showed him my heart, and I asked. 

“Ayah, it would make me very happy, if I could have this painting.” 

He looked at me and shook his head. 

“No. It’s special. This Indonesian general gave it to me. You cannot have it.”

Finally, he found a way to have the upper hand. He hurt me, made me very angry and very sad. But I didn’t say more. I closed my heart, and remained silent. 

This dusty painting. Forgotten and hidden for years behind boxes, not important enough to be admired on the walls. Musty, dirty, cracked and faded. A genuine, heartful, meaningful gift that could connect me to him, my mother, and my childhood. Not tied to his money or expensive tokens. 

No, he declared. 

I will stop searching, this is all the evidence I need.

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One Hour

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I found my engagement ring. I felt something sharp under my foot on the carpet in my bedroom. The husband, who was crawling under the bed helping me with the search, said I reacted with an “Oooh.” Right before I sobbed with relief and reclaimed the fragile thread that has been holding my emotions together since this pandemic began.

My ring was missing for one hour. It started when I noticed that the ring wasn’t in its usual spot on my dresser. It is one of three rings that I mindlessly slip on my fingers every day – engagement ring, wedding band, and a sentimental silver ring. For one hour, there were only two. The platinum band topped with a small dark blue sapphire stone was gone.

When the pandemic arrived on my doorstep in March, I remember thinking all we have to do is stay home. That shouldn’t be hard. My home cocooned me, and I felt safe. I didn’t leave. I stayed and stayed and stayed even while the world slowly ventured out. The husband and I started new traditions, my favorite one still happens at the end of each day, when we toast each other with a cold one and a kiss. But the pandemic invaded my house and my mind. I still fear so many things. Most of all, I fear losing the husband. He is my suit of armor. Without him, I just have this fragile thread. And for one hour I lost both.

The ring is us, starting our adventure 22 years ago. We needed nothing but love to commit our lives to each other, without knowing what forever really meant. Over 22 years, love held us together when the journey became rough and unpredictable. When life gave us ugliness and heartbreak, love opened doors and allowed forgiveness to come in. The ring is us 22 years ago, when life was glued with vows and promises. Love, that’s all we needed.

Since March, that love has been my only normal. My protective armor that allows me to sleep at night and face the day each morning. For one hour, my normal was gone. Even as he was on hands and knees, looking under the bed, in laundry baskets, and trash cans. Pulling out clothes from drawers and pointing light under dusty dressers. Not knowing if we would find it but assuring me that it would turn up.

For one hour, micro episodes of our lives going back 22 years flashed through my mind. Walking into the antique jewelry shop together, choosing the simple dark blue stone over the flashy diamonds, remembering that moment in time and what our lives meant to us back then. And him getting on one knee in front of all our friends in our tiny apartment to propose a life together. For one hour all the living stories were turned into a distant memory.

“Ooooh,” I said. He laughed and hugged me while I cried and cried. The next day, he repurposed a small vintage teal ash tray, placed it on my dresser and put my trio of rings in it. My armor. My love. That’s all I need.

FORCE FIELD

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My oldest child is leaving me. She’s flying into the future, outside my force field. I won’t be able to protect her. It doesn’t feel natural, but here we are. My herd is shrinking and my heart is breaking.

My mother did it, as did my father, both my brothers, and me. We all traveled thousands of miles from home to learn, to be uncomfortable with change, to sleep in new beds, to make new friends, to walk with strangers, and sometimes to eat dinner alone. Now it’s her turn. She is traveling 378 miles, and my force field can’t reach that far. This is natural, I’m told.

Her departure date is coming fast, and I’m trying to step around this new sadness. When I allow my toes to dip into it, I’m simply overcome. How is this natural?

When I left home 30 years ago, the shock of feeling so alone among hundreds of students lingered for months. I didn’t dare speak much and the loneliness was crippling. Yet somehow, I lived, learned, and discovered. Not all my discoveries were good, some were quite painful. And I had no force field.

She won’t have a force field either. And she may be so lonely, sad, and homesick. Ohhh.

It won’t last, trust me.

But I don’t want her to suffer for one second.

She has to learn.

I have to learn.

Oh, how I love you Saleha Mai. I must let you go, I know. I want you to see the world and meet many people who will open your heart and your mind. I want you to surround yourself with people you respect, who also will help you reach your stars.

Don’t be stingy with love, and try to love yourself as much as others love you. Always be kind and gentle to those who need it, but most of all, be kind and gentle to yourself. And remember, if you build yourself a strong sisterhood, and you will have an army to fight your life battles with you.

And never forget when you have to lick your wounds, heal your heart, or rest your soul, you can always come home to be loved and soothed. My force field will always protect you.

Love

It’s not enough. 

To just love is not enough to raise a happy child.

I am guided by love that allows me to feel her sadness, and to always know where to find that missing shoe. This love also allows me to offer up the last juicy shrimp in my bowl, and to know exactly how much salt to put on her eggs. Every time.

It’s not enough.

My legs and my heart, they’re a little wobbly. It’s getting harder to stand back up when I get knocked down by this growing, beautiful child. Her cold shoulder and harsh words overwhelm me, they make me weak. I should hide so she won’t have a target. Oh my love.

It’s not enough.

I am her ugly monster. The source of her anxiety, her stress, and everything that is wrong with her life. I can’t be spoken to, trusted, or treated like a loved one. But I have so much love.

It’s not enough.

Stay low, move quietly, and avoid direct contact. I need to repair the damage within and protect my fragile, cracking shell. She needs more than love.

It’s not enough.