Muscle Memory
by Traci Mullins
Two
o’clock in the morning was the worst time of Connie’s day—too many hours before
any sensible person would start her morning but not enough hours to get a good
night’s sleep. Yet how could any mother sleep like a baby when her only son was
living on the streets? Connie couldn’t.
Mark
was twenty-five, a man according to most, but he would always be her little
boy. He’d been drinking since he was fifteen. She blamed herself. Maybe she
shouldn’t have left his dad, paid closer attention to the kids he was hanging
out with. She’d lost count of the number of times she’d grounded him, made
excuses when he missed school, called his employer of the day when he was too
“sick” to go to work, spent what little she had to bail him out of jail. There
was no high school graduation, no steady job, not even a girlfriend who would
put up with him for more than a few months. He wasn’t a mean drunk, but booze
took him to places no one wanted to go.
Connie
had spent years pleading, bribing, threatening, punishing, coddling. She’d
gotten Mark into rehab—twice—but he was drunk within days. His dad was
disgusted. “Kick him out!” Dave said. But even when he was still living in her
basement at twenty-two, she didn’t have the heart. Surely there was something
more she could do—should do—to help him.
“You
have to get out of the way,” her Al-Anon friends told her. “Detach with love.”
It sounded so heartless, but she had to admit that nothing she’d ever done had
saved her son from himself.
So
shortly after his twenty-third birthday, she told him he was on his own. She
gave him $100 and changed the locks. Then she sobbed for two days.
The
months since then had been filled with drunken phone calls, pleas for money,
tears and fury. Connie rarely slept past two a.m. Was her boy cold? Hungry?
Living under a bridge?
One
night she gave up on sleep and paced into the kitchen. Glancing out the window
toward the back yard, she was startled, then frightened, to see someone lying
on the lawn swing. Should she call the police?
But
then she recognized his yellow windbreaker, his huge white sneakers. Her heart
flooded with relief. She longed to throw her arms around her son and lead him
into the house. But in the same moment she felt a resolve that surprised her. Months
of practicing letting go had become muscle memory. For his sake—for her
sake—she knew she had to accept what she had never been able to change.
Connie
went to Mark’s bedroom and gathered up his bedspread. Carrying it out into the
starlit night, she covered her boy tenderly. “I know you’ll find your way,” she
whispered.
And
then she slept—like a baby.
* *
* * *
"Muscle
Memory" was previously published by Palm-Sized Press on 6/22/18.
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