Tuesday, June 19, 2007

My Grandmother



When I was seven years old, I was OBSESSED with "Annie." My grandmother, Mary Byrnes Collins, introduced me to the Broadway record, and I was never the same. "Annie" was my love, my life. I hadn't seen the play or the movie, but that was neither here nor there. Something in me was always incredibly drawn to orphans. Those without a home, who had nowhere stationary to place their love, so they had no choice but to go through life embracing all that was around them. Never taking love, or anything really, for granted. Appreciating the spirit and grandeur of the smallest things in life that most people didn't know how to.

I was not a spoiled child, to say the least. Everyone I knew and everything I owned was special to me, no exceptions. Including -- especially -- my Annie ring. It was a cheap, gold-ish ring in the shape of the cartoon Annie's head. I don't remember who gave it to me, or when or where, but I do remember wearing it with immense pride and immense love. It was my most prized and beloved possession. My physical bond to all the things inside me I didn't know how to vocalize -- triumph of spirit, love through loss. Beauty through the D(d)epression.

In the summer of '82, Robb and I spent a week with my grandparents at Hewlett's Landing in Lake George. It was the summer home that my mother's parents had had since my mother and her siblings were little. We'd "used" it for weeks here and there when my grandparents were elsewhere. This was the first time my brother and I stayed with just my grandparents, because my dad had a business trip somewhere.

It was great. My mom's parents were totally different from my dad's parents, who were uber-warm and mushy. My mom's parents were chill and to many kids, seemingly cold in comparison, but y'all have read my blogs, you guys know that even though I was young, I knew that my mom's parents were mad cool. They didn't need to bake me cookies and shower me with accolades. It was amazing that they taught me that both men and women could play sports, and that Miracle Whip and celery turned tuna fish into a delicacy. They rocked, and the week that I spent in Lake George with just them? Was great.

So I was happy, hanging with them, and never was I happier when I was a child than when I was immersed in water, especially Lake George. This One Day in the lake was no exception. I was next to the docks, doing I don't know what. Living in my imagination. Wondering, as I did with every visit, exactly how long it would take to swim out to the island that seemed so close, but was miles away, and blocked by a Frogger-esque motorway of boats. I wondered how I could get out there, but was also completely content just floating, and imagining, and really having one of those Perfect Summer Moments, when you're a kid, and all that matters is the sun and the water and the possibilities.

Until my Annie ring slipped off of my finger, out of nowhere.

Now, I had worn this ring since I'd received it, obviously. In the bath, the shower, the Warnos' awesome pool -- this ring was a PART of me. It seemed safe to wear in the lake, or I'd never have worn it there.

And I've always anthropomorphized things, which when mixed with deep abandonment issues...well, let's just say that losing my Annie ring was intense, and just unacceptable along the lines of when you see overinvested "Grey's Anatomy" people giving pathetic CPR to certain patients, because...dude is gone.

But this was different. This was my Annie ring.

I spent the entire day diving down for my ring. It is one of my most vivid memories. I was a total fish in the water anyway, it wasn't a sacrifice or a test of stamina, it was just what needed to be done. Down, up, down, up...

...no ring.

And my grandparents were incredible. Here is where it mattered the most that they weren't worrisome cookie-baking grandparents. Here is where they walked out onto the dock, said, "What's wrong?" and I told them, and they, despite being tremendous creatures of habit and probably wanting to go inside and relax, understood that this was ANNIE, and just let me do my thing. I couldn't let it go. I couldn't.

I don't remember when exactly I did let it go, the ring. I can still feel my water breaths, and the desperation with which I refused to let the Annie ring go without a fight. Not because I needed a ring on my finger, but because I was not about to leave this thing that I loved the most in the lake I loved the most to travel out to that island without me.

But it did. And that was the day that I learned to let things that I love go. At some point, I had to tear myself out of the water and realize that I'd done everything I could.

That same year, in November 1982, I went to the city with my mother and my grandmother, Nanny Collins. The party line towed by my mother was that Nanny's Christmas present was "in the city," and we had to go to my mom's job (also in the city) to pick it up.

Sure 'nuff. I LOVED the city! And if getting a sweater or something meant a trip there, then awesome! My grandmother was never one for the warm and fuzzy emotional presents, it was more like "Here's a perfunctory gift, enjoy," and it was all good, 'cause she was just a chill woman, grandmother status notwithstanding.

On our way towards my mom's office, the three of us started passing the Uris Theatre in Manhattan. Home of "Annie."

Home of "Annie."

This was even before I acted, but dude! Black and white shots, "ANNIE" emblazoned, or at least block lettered, on the marquis? I was enamored. I was transported. I was filled with the all-too-familiar sensation of yearning for something incredible. I stood there in the cold, knowing that many people would go inside, but no one would appreciate it the way that I would.

It didn't matter though, honestly. All that mattered was that I was THERE. Magical!

"Just think, Judith," my mother goaded, unbeknownst to me. "All of the actors are in the dressing rooms right now, just waiting to go onstage..."

"Yeahhhhh," I breathed, used, as a financially challenged child, to knowing other kids would reap the wonders of the world that I could only imagine.

And that was it. I was satisfied just to stand there, just to behold.

And then my grandmother, Nanny Collins, piped up.

"Judith," she drew out in her unique voice, "...Would you like to see Annie?"

WHAT!

WHAT!

WHAT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

It was a dream come true. THAT was my grandmother's present in the city -- a dream come true! She'd watched me mesmerize myself, listening to the soundtrack. She had witnessed me dive all day long just to get back the Annie ring, that's how much I loved Annie.

And now, she was telling me that we could go inside, and see what was to me, the equivalent of magic in real life -- on Broadway!

It was my first Broadway play, and it was unequivocally perfect. There are no words to describe what that night meant to me. Except that there were three generations of Collins women sitting together in the Mezzanine, only because one seven-year-old girl loved Annie. It was the best night of my life for a very long time.

And stayed with me for my entire life -- that was my best memory for so long.

Then, on August 23, 2003, my awesome grandmother, Mary Byrnes Collins, died unexpectedly.

She was the last one we expected to let go of at this point. She was the one who would have been annoyed by tears, and sentimentalities, and platitudes. She was the one who would have wanted to out-live everyone.

She was that kind of woman. I admired her more deeply than anyone I have ever known, in that respect. She didn't know how to, and would never have wanted to know how to, be the grandmother who tells you anything other than, on the day that you lost your ring in Davy Jones's locker, okay, suck it up, I'm so sorry and we can chill, but let's just go hang out and stop being crazy, 'kay?

That was my grandmother. Mary Byrnes Collins.

And the day of her funeral, we all went to the church, which she probably would have wanted just for religious sake.

We went to all the proceedings. I saw her buried on the hill in Lake George, while my grandfather said goodbye to her, to the mountains around her, to Lake George itself, as he sold the summer home the next year before beginning a new life for himself in a new town.

And it was beautiful. And it -- all of it -- would be exactly what my grandmother, Nanny Collins, would have wanted if she had to leave this party first.

But there were also these moments that day -- those most perfect of moments that can only be experienced in times of utter loss -- when I walked straight out into the lake, because I could barely deal with all of it. I couldn't bear that she was gone, and I just wanted to be immersed in water, enveloped in her memory, enveloped in everything that meant something, anything, ever.

And that day in the lake, I just lay there, you know? In the spot where I lost my ring, where I wondered about the island out there. Was it awesome, once you got there?

I really hope so.




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