Talia, Part 2 | |
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From Puffery@prodigy.com Fri May 31 01:57:34 1996 From: Puffery@prodigy.com Date: Thu, 30 May 1996 21:50:15, -0500 Subject: Talia_2 "We left early Saturday morning and were in the Smokies (ironic, huh? ) well before noon. The cabin that we were staying in was the same one we had been renting as long as I could remember. It was pretty old and musty but at the same time every inch was familiar and friendly. A little stream meandered no more than ten feet from the door on its way to the lake which was just out of sight over the knoll. Even though our parking spot was some distance away, mom pulled the car up between the stream and the cabin to make unloading easier. It did. Five minutes later she'd moved the car back to its assigned spot, all of our stuff already inside. Even though I was almost exclusively an afternoon smoker, the urge already seemed gargantuan by the time we arrived. The fact that I'd been thinking about practically nothing else all the way up, I'm sure didn't help. This picnic was not going to be any picnic. No matter what my earlier commitments had been, it was painfully clear that I would not survive the weekend without a confession or frequent walks in the woods. Even those walks would demand cigarettes not yet pilfered, a more challenging task in such close quarters. As soon as we finished unpacking, a decision would have to be reached. While I had been daydreaming, mom had already begun the task of getting organized. She took the small bedroom and the couch in the main room would be mine. Nothing new there. She'd even already stuffed my clothes into the makeshift end table, bookcase, and dresser combo. The only thing remaining was the groceries which she asked me to put away. Absently, I found space in the minuscule refrigerator for the meat and vegetables and most of the fruit. What wouldn't fit, was candidated for a luncheon fruit salad that I'd sportingly volunteered to make. Finishing up, I took the dry goods bag over to the pantry and mechanically began to unload it. Rotely, I extracted one item after another and pretty much randomly tossed them onto the shelves. How organized did we really need to be for just a three day weekend after all? As I neared the bottom I encountered an unopened carton of Salems and barely suppressed vocalizing my sigh of relief. This could be my out. A whole pack might be risky but not out of the question. Desperation demands creativity ... or is that thievery? Reaching one final time into the bag, I was puzzled to feel yet another carton. One carton would comfortably last mom about a week and we were only staying three days. Why in the world a second carton I thought as I lifted it out? Staring directly at it disbelievingly, I stopped breathing and my jaw must have dropped three inches. Indeed it was not a second carton of Salems but rather a carton of Benson and Hedges Menthol 100's, criss crossed with white ribbon, and a 'Happy Birthday Sophia' tag dangling from a big red bow. Dumbfounded understates how I felt. For a moment I was psychologically paralyzed then finally I spun around and saw your grandmother grinning from ear to ear, much as she's doing now. In some order I sputtered out 'What’s this?', 'How did you know?', and 'Thank you, thank you'. Then neither waiting for nor caring about the answers, I ran across the cabin and gave her a huge hug. Relief rushed through my body in more ways than I could count. I wouldn't be sneaking around any longer. I wouldn't have to break the news to her myself. I wouldn't have to endure the nagging discomfort already present today. All I could say was 'Mom, you’re amazing!' The grin transitioned into a giggle as she said to me 'Well you've been catting around for a long time now. I decided to end your misery. I know full well that my lecturing you isn't going to do a whit of good. Didn't with me. Never does. For better or worse you've already started and about the best thing I can do for you is stay off your back which, by the way, is more than you did for me a few years back my dear. So hurry up and go get a couple of Cokes and let's sit down and have a cigarette or two. We don't have anything much more pressing than that to do the entire weekend.' And that's exactly what we did. I was sure that I looked awkward and inexperienced as mom offered me a light but apparently she didn't see it that way. I started with a petite puff but then followed with the hard double drag my cravings demanded. Resisting an exhale, I just continued dragging until I finally exploded. Mom just stared at me and I suddenly felt more than a little self-conscious. I started to blush and ask if I looked really stupid. She just shook her head and said 'By no means. Just the opposite. My baby is an honest to God smoker. It’s hard to believe. I don't really know what to think.' And that's all she's ever said to this day. By the end of the weekend it was almost like old news. By simply spending time with her, I was smoking far more than I ever had before. I was nearly through a second pack by the time we packed up on Monday and it had all seemed so natural. Down at the lake. Sitting by the river. Out at dinner. Curled up on the sofa after dark. Reading. Watching TV. Chatting. No rules. No restrictions. No commentary. We'd always spent an unusual amount of time talking with each other. Smoking just further memorialized the activity. My thoughts on the trip home are as clear as if it were yesterday. Comfortably reclined in the passenger seat while smoking my first cigarette in the car, I felt like hugging myself. I liked to smoke. It was fun. It was adult. It was provocative. It was passage. Mom could have been as hypocritical as my friends' mothers, but she wasn't. She allowed me the space to seek my own identity, not one she bestow upon me, and that freedom, no matter where it led, was in my mind an act of love. Nearing home, I lit up a final cigarette for each of us and handed one to her. As she turned toward me, took it, and smiled, one small tear perched on my cheekbone as I said 'Thank you for loving me.' " Talia remain disquietingly quiet as a natural pause followed. Robotically, I searched about for my drink and cigarettes then turned to mom for additional commentary. None was forthcoming. It was now her turn to wipe away the mist. That was comment enough. Before I could even catch my breath however Talia's next questions came firing. "Are you still glad that you started? If you could go back and do it over again would you do the same thing?" My God this kid is inquisitive. And the questions are insightful beyond her years but then that's nothing new. "As much as I'd like to, I can't lie to you. You'd know anyway" I began. Then truthfully, if not proudly, I continued "I wouldn't do a damn thing differently" and that conversation was finished for the night. I was not so naive however, as to confuse this ending with closure of the topic, particularly given how candid I'd been. Given the opportunity to strongly discourage her, I'd knowingly not taken it and left the door gapingly open. Mom hadn't been a hypocrite with me. How could I be with Talia? For the next couple of weeks Donovanesquely the topic wasn't there, yet it was. While not a word was spoken, I was beginning to feel like a lab animal. Every time either mom or I lit a cigarette, Talia intently studied each and every move. Mom and I exchanged occasional winks over her fascination but we both knew what was coming. The proverbial other shoe couldn't be far from the ground. And it wasn't. I came home early on a late June Friday afternoon. Talia had been dealing with exponents that week and needed a little extra coaching. In the area of mathematics she'd left mom in the dust at least two years before so just the two of us set up on the verandah table while mom worked on dinner. Within minutes it was clear that exponents were neither a problem nor her immediate concern. They were just a ploy for arranging a one-on-one conversation with me. An altogether different kind of power function. "I've been thinking about this a lot mom and I've decided that it's time for me to begin smoking" she announced with brazen nonchalance. Even with all the time I'd had to prepare for the possibility of her so concluding, I hadn't expected such a frontal approach and was therefore caught off guard. "Oh?" I brilliantly retorted "and just why is that?" "Well" she began "it's just like all the things that you were saying the other day. It looks like a fun thing to do. And it's something that you and grandma both do that I feel left out of. I'm not saying that I want to smoke a lot like you guys do. I just want to be able to sometimes take a puff or two off your cigarette when we’re chatting. I talked to grandma about it this afternoon and it was all right with her if it's all right with you. It would just be here on the verandah with you guys. Nowhere else I promise. You wouldn't want me sneaking around like you did, would you?" Not much of an argument then zing, the sneaking around comment. In a household with two smokers even an idiot would be able to get cigarettes effortlessly and one thing Talia isn't, is an idiot. Quietly, I thought through her request. On the surface, ludicrous. No one in their right mind would allow a seven year old to start smoking. Would they? Never-the-lees I tried to stay balanced. She's seven in chronology only. She looks more like ten, sounds like fifteen, and acts like twenty. Which is she really? And regardless, is she likely to make a different choice next year or the year after? Unlikely. Say no and she'll go it alone. Say yes and sanctify an addiction but at least perhaps be able to monitor it. A tough choice but 'yes and hoping she'll hate it' is the only answer consistent with who I've taught her to be. Uncommonly subdued for me, "No, I don't want you sneaking around. Yes, you can try an occasional puff. And I hope like hell you hate it." I responded coolly. No childish cry of victory ensued. Just a simple "Thanks mom. Thanks for trusting me. You're just as great a mom as grandma ever was. I love you both. And don't worry, I won't get hooked." Famous, no infamous, last words I thought. This is unfortunately one of those rare occasions when Talia is nearly certain to be wrong. Hurriedly I reached out and pulled her tight to me. There was no need for her to see me well up. "You're a pretty amazing kid ya know too" I responded and then just held her for how long I don't know feeling incredibly disturbed with my decision. Only mom's gravelly announcement of dinner on the table brought us back into the now. Dinner, tonight flipped with cocktails due to the bogus study session, was vintage mom. While she'd accepted vegetables al dente, she still needed her red meat. Tonight we humored her and were happily rewarded with excellent spring lamb chops. With cocktails still in front of us, we finished quickly and reconnoitered to the verandah. The destination was familiar but the underlying sense of tension was not. I wondered just how determined Talia was likely to be in asserting her new privilege. Quite, I presumed, and I wasn't wrong. The very first time that I rested my cigarette in the ashtray she reached for it. With stunning confidence she carefully rounded the ash off and drew the filter to her lips. I was mesmerized by her first drag. She pulled with some force on the golden tip and clearly was rewarded with a mouthful of smoke. Showing the first sign of hesitancy, she held it in for a moment not quite knowing what to do next. Finally she opened her mouth and smoke inelegantly began drifting aimlessly out. Then suddenly something seemed to click. With perhaps two thirds of the puff already escaped, she rapidly inhaled the remaining. Her mouth wide open, I gasped as the white sheet of smoke vanished down this child's throat. I prepared optimistically for gagging and coughing but amazingly all she delivered was just a little hack and a short spurt of the just ingested smoke. Satisfied for the moment, she returned the cigarette to me and asked "Did I do that okay?" I responded "Yes you did that okay. Too okay. I'd really rather that you didn't inhale, Talia. At least not yet. It just isn't right." Quizzically she looked at me and shot back "Huh? Isn't that really why you and Grammy like it so much? It isn't even really smoking if you don't inhale, is it?" she queried. Again she got me through the heart. All I could say was "You're impossible. You know that don’t you?" She smiled broadly in response, recognizing that expression as my white flag. What more could I say? That evening she took maybe a half dozen puffs all told, inhaled a bit of each, and only choked badly on one of them. Her pronouncement at the end of the evening was that her original suspicions seemed to be correct. She thought she liked Grammy’s Salem Light 100's better than my Marlboros. For a seven year old to prefer light menthols to full strength regulars was in one sense quite reasonable yet in an other way unthinkably perverse. The parenting road ahead was taking some uninvited turns. Predictably the issue of alcohol wasn't far behind. She didn't push nearly as hard and I didn't cave. But just like Arnold, I knew it too would be back. For the moment however smoking was a sufficiently captivating activity. A typical summer night changed complexion little over the past few with a single exception. Talia actively and interchangeably shared our cigarettes. Her preference for menthol didn't preclude her from giving indiscriminate, equal time to my Marlboros. She did however, seem to understand that this privilege was pushing the envelope and she was careful not to abuse it. She limited herself to a single puff from each cigarette which probably totaled eight or ten over one of our typical two hour evenings. It was a norm I learned to live with through practiced oblivion. I took the week before Labor Day off and we headed down the Blue Ridge Parkway for the mountains but not to the same cabin that mom and I used to stay at. I rented a lovely three bedroom, lake front home a half mile and a world away. We had a full ten days to completely relax. Well almost completely. Schooling never took a vacation. Talia never asked. We never suggested it. But the venue alone would lighten the curriculum. Telescope in hand, we opted for night school. This left the days long and leisurely. Much too long for a diet of mixed drinks, so we stocked up well on Coke, iced tea, and a little chardonnay. The yard was sloped gently down toward the lake and offered comforting patches of shade beneath majestic old oaks. We swam, lounged, and swam some more. Okay so we really just floated on air mattresses. Don't be so picky. By mid-afternoon the sun left the barbecue pit area in total shade and the relief was welcome. Combined with a light lake breeze the 90/90 weather turned downright pleasant. If possible, it was an even more intimate setting than the verandah at home and remarkably peaceful. So much so, that we often caught ourselves whispering when there wasn't anyone else within a quarter mile of us. For several hours each afternoon and evening we congregated there. Talking and laughing. Drinking and smoking. Cooking and eating. While Talia continued to observe the unspoken one puff per cigarette guideline, it did occurred to me a couple of times that her opportunities had increased several fold here, but making an issue out of it seemed contrarian. So I just said nothing. The next week back at home I wished that I had. Monday evening Talia and mom were already waiting for me on the verandah when I got home. Quickly changing my clothes, I raced to join them. Mai tais awaiting, I anxiously poured myself one. Sitting down I noticed that Talia was already sharing mom's cigarette even as I arrived and what's more she wasn't automatically returning it after a single puff but rather taking a rapid second hit. Rationalizing that this was simple substitution for not having the usual pair of cigarettes to draw from, dismissively I too lit up and instantly relaxed. With mom having just extinguished her Salem, Talia now turned her full attention to my Marlboro and took a quick puff. I breathed a little easier as she immediately returned it to the ashtray but that was short lived when momentarily, before I'd had time to retrieve it, she reached for it again. It was spooky just how comfortable she now looked smoking a cigarette. It was no longer just a game. She knew how to smoke and by all indication truly enjoyed it. And eerily, down to the most minute details, as a smoker she looked like a miniature me. For the first time since early summer I couldn't help myself and blurted out "It looks to me like you're beginning to smoke quite a bit more. That makes me very uncomfortable." Staring me square in the eye she responded "Well, just because of where we were last week and how much you guys were smoking, I smoked quite a bit more than I ever had before and tonight I just don't feel like going back to so few puffs. I enjoyed getting to smoke more last week and I've really wanted to have a cigarette almost all day long. So not smoking more tonight is what would make me very uncomfortable." Seven and half and as usual she had this lawyer tongue tied. This time I didn't even have to say you're impossible. She could see it in my eyes. For the next several months that pattern continued. Talia would take two, maybe even three or four puffs off our cigarettes. Like anything else, it became first routine and then fairly invisible. More practiced oblivion. It had also become clear when I thought about it ... so I avoided thinking about it ... that she'd already crossed the line. She might be late to dinner but she was never late to smoke. Her inhales were no longer tentative and her exhales bore that out. She handled a cigarette the way a seven year old should handle pick up sticks. The whole act looked absurdly natural. The final milestone ... well perhaps I should never say final ... was almost a year ago now. She was now just turning nine and had been a parasitic smoker for well more than a year. One day I came home early from a West Coast assignment with the intention of surprising them. I brought with me a fifth of Dom Perione which I thought I just might let Talia have a little taste of. Quietly entering the house, I snuck up on them on the verandah only to see mom holding one cigarette and Talia another. My mood blackened as I was the one who was surprised. Before I could utter a word and as Talia stared calmly at me, mom jumped in. "Okay so you've caught us. Like Sharon Stone says 'What are you going to do? Charge us with smoking?'. Quit deluding yourself Sophia that you'll somehow be a better mother if you manage the amount Talia smokes. The horse has been long out of the barn my dear and you helped open the gate. Don't go beating yourself up over it now. It's unbecoming and rather indulgent don't you think? Just come to grips with the fact that your daughter smokes just like I had to with you a number of years ago and get on with it." Wounded, but not yet dead, I demanded "How long has this been going on?" to which Talia piped up and said "All summer". With you gone and only one cigarette to share, one day Grammy just said 'Let's cut out this charade. You know you smoke. I know you smoke. Your mom fights it, but she knows you smoke too. And I'm tired of you constantly waiting like a vulture for my cigarette. Here, have one of your own.' So anytime you're gone Grammy gives me a pack and lets me make my own decisions. Usually I still just smoke at night. Oh, maybe one or two earlier. It's not quite so easy to say anymore." "Well that certainly sets a lot of things straight" I intoned parentally, finally permitting myself to recognize just how comfortable she'd become smoking. With my mouth open and my next vitriolic observation about to emerge I suddenly found myself giggling and "Okay" popping out of my mouth. "If that's the way it is, let's have a cigarette on it" I said "but wait here for a moment first." Remembering the champagne, I chased down three glasses, a towel, and returned. Popping the cork, I poured mom and myself each a full glass and a splash for Talia. As it turned out, that was more than she needed. This she agreed must be an adult taste that she still wasn't ready for. And as far as smoking goes, that's pretty much where we are today. Talia's been free to smoke exclusively on the verandah for about a year now. Other places by specific permission. Needless-to-say her smoking's increased, as it always does when that kind of freedom is granted, but not overwhelmingly so. I pick up a carton of mom's Salems and my Marlboros at the store every Saturday but still only have to get Talia a fresh carton of Marlboro Light Menthol 100's about once a month. Well, come to think of it, maybe a little more frequently lately. I guess that's just how it is. As I'm writing this, it's two in the morning and Tally and I are alone in a hotel room in Boston. We've been up here for the last several days. As it turns out, there are only six so called 'summer prodigy' programs in the entire country and not surprisingly Boston area schools have three of them. We spent yesterday at BU and today at MIT. I think that Talia's leaning toward MIT's scientific methodology program but Harvard's New World Archeology program may well sway her tomorrow. In a couple of months, when she turns ten, she'll be eligible to attend any program she chooses. They've all granted her preliminary acceptance. All I need to do is provide the cash. No small feat for any of them. It seems more than a little strange that her first formal classroom experiences will be college courses. If it all works out the way we plan, she'll attend one or another of these programs for each of the next four summers. That experience, added to the home course work we plan, will have her eligible to be a college freshmen by the fall after her thirteenth birthday. Obviously she'll only go then if we all feel she's ready. Somehow I suspect she will be. We grabbed a late afternoon meal at the Commons and of course took an outside table in the still briskness of late April. We must have chatted for an hour before we even bothered to order and then, to the waitresses' chagrin, we staggered first calamari appetizers then Caesars a bit later. I've never seen Talia so animated. And enjoying her contagious enthusiasm, I polished off a full carafe with hardly a thought. Well almost full. I slipped Talia just a little. I also found myself smoking a little heavier than usual what with the wine and exquisite setting and Talia of course repeatedly sneaking puffs off my cigarette when no one appeared to be looking. A bit later, after we'd finished off the appetizer and Talia a short glass of wine, she look up at me as I was lighting yet another cigarette and suddenly much more serious than before said "Would you mind terribly if I smoked in public tonight? If you do, I wouldn't want to embarrass you but as long as I smoke, I don't see any particular reason why I should I hide it? I'd really enjoy being able to sit here and have a cigarette of my own with you. It'd be rad." Swallowing hard, I said "Well one reason for you not smoking here is to keep me from getting arrested for child abuse or negligence or something ... but what the hell, I'm willing to risk it. Sure, go ahead" and with that I pushed my pack and lighter playfully towards her. Rather than accepting it as I had expected however, she instead reached beneath the table for the small purse she'd been recently carrying. Placing it carefully on the table in front of her, she partially slid out an open pack of her Marlboro Menthols and adroitly slipped a long, white filtered cigarette out of the hardpack along with her own disposable lighter. Her cigarette was lit and her supplies back out of sight in the bat of an eyelash. With at least some attempt at being discreet, I watched her proficiently take a couple of quick puffs to make certain it was lit and then a single long, slow, deep drag. Now looking up, her cigarette was nonchalantly held in a near upright position in her left hand with her elbow resting comfortably on the chair arm. She smiled at me radiantly, held her inhale for another pronounced moment, then release an exhale that just couldn't have come from someone so young. Then ever so gently with her right hand she pushed forth an empty glass and for a second time I returned it more than half full. No longer could her behavior qualify as inconspicuous. She smoked openly and drank nearly so. And again I watched the watchers. A few folks just did a double take but for that matter so would I. A couple of young teenage boys must have walked by fifteen times just trying to figure the situation out. With her blond haired, chic ponytail and a bit of tasteful makeup, I'm sure they must have thought her their age or more. I don't think she even noticed. So far no problem. The guy a few tables away however, poorly camouflaged behind last week's Globe, couldn't take his eyes off her. He seems captivated by her poise and her conduct, his eyes locked hard on every drag she took. Him, he concerned me. With her only nine, albeit a rather precocious nine, I found I was already a wary and apprehensive parent. 'What will teen years bring?' I think to myself. Then looking at her lying so peaceful and still on the bed next to me, I conclude, 'Nothing this kid can't handle.' And gently leaning over, I kiss her soft and tender, sleeping cheek. The moment is to be treasured. Only at two in the morning, is Talia still nine. |
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