I need to be writing a speech right now. Speech writing is a
first for me, as will be the speech giving that follows it. The subject is one
I know well: my daughter. The occasion? Her bat mitzvah, a mere month away. My daughter,
E, also has to give a speech, one which she is already finished writing, by the
way, as if she has lots of free time to be writing speeches, in between her
Hebrew tutoring and seventh grade homework and guitar and piano lessons and
ridiculous amounts of texting. Then again, she had the guidance of the rabbi, a
man who gives speeches weekly. Me, I got nothing.
Well, that’s not entirely true. What I have is twelve and a
half years’ of memories of my daughter, and one strict admonition: don’t say
anything that will embarrass me, Mom.
Don’t say anything inappropriate, Mom. You have to say this in front of
the rabbi and my friends and my grandfather, Mom. Don’t scar me for life, Mom.
It’s not that I want to say the wrong thing, it’s that I can’t help myself.
It’s my super power.When I sit down to begin my speech, I think about all the wonderful things about my kid. Then I think of the stories to illustrate it. Then I just think of stories. All the hysterical things she has said or done over the years, a small lifetime of inappropriate anecdotes. I can’t tell any of those on her big day, in front of everyone she knows, all those people who have come to show their love and support as she becomes an adult, responsible for her own actions, her deeds and her words. Maybe that’s what’s wrong with me; I never had a bat mitzvah, and look at how I turned out.
Once, a long time ago, during the start of the whole
Catholic Church pedophile scandals, I was at an art show for a good friend of
my husband’s. I didn’t really know many people at the show, but fortified with
a glass of wine, I began making small talk with some other people who were
friends with my husband’s friend. We went from subject to subject, you know how
you do at a party, where one person tells a story which reminds you of a story,
and then your story reminds them of another funnier story, and it becomes this
Jenga game of top that stories that eventually has to crash.
Tthere I was, talking to these people, and they told a
slightly risqué but funny story that involved sex and religion. It reminded me
of a similar but more horrible one that I read in the paper, so I told them
about it. A priest had molested an altar boy by convincing him that fellatio
was a form of the Holy Communion. When I got to that part, which I consider the
punch line, the entire room went quiet. It was like something out of a movie, where
time stands still. My words hung in the air for all to see, to remember, to
imprint on their minds, until they evaporated into the ether. The couple with
whom I was speaking looked at me like I took a dump in front of them, not just
any dump, but a dump on the baby Jesus. Turns out they are Catholic. Go figure.
E doesn’t know that story, but she’s been around me enough
to know that she should be a little concerned about what might come out of my
mouth. Plus, I’ve got the goods on her. With that kind of power comes great
responsibility. How am I supposed to write anything about my child and not tell
a single story involving a body function or a bad mood? Am I capable of
relating a story that doesn’t somehow contain sexual innuendo? She’s an adult
now, according to Jewish tradition, so none of it is lost on her, and if you
don’t believe me, just say balls or nuts in front of her, for any reason at
all, and you tell me if she doesn’t laugh. She hasn’t ever seen any, yet
instinctively, she knows to laugh at them.
So I’m stuck. I have lots I can say about this marvelous
child of mine, but keeping it clean? I just don’t know. I’m much better at
keeping it real. And by real, I mean really wrong.
1 comment:
Keep it short, think about the blessings you would bestoy upon her at this milestone. Think of giving her what you were not able to have. Then get an editor...
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