Since
I was twenty, I firmly believed in the line from one of Ezra Pound's Cantos:
"That which thou lovest is thy true heritage." A natural reaction, I
suppose, to the sense of rootlessness that comes of never knowing my biological
parents, and having a tendentious relationship with my adoptive parents. So
coming to Ireland was in a way a
challenge to Pound. Would I feel a sense of connection to where my people came
from, or more of a sense of distance, of disconnection? Would my
self-constructed heritage trump a biological one? Oddly, on this trip to
Ireland I having been feeling both.
This
morning we talked about lineage, its power to form us, as evidenced by whaat we
have heard from the people who have come to talk with us, Owen and Moly, PJ,
Patrick, Padraig, Noirin, and the musicians last night, Josephine, Tom, Paul,
Mick and Blackie. It is clear that this place and the people who are a part of
their DNA are the wellsprings from which they were formed. And I identify with
the deeper vein of place that may have helped shape me in ways I could not
imagine, even as an American child of Irish-American parents, both biological and adoptive. Doug says that he
understands me better having come here, that he sees this place in me and me in
this place. It certainly resonates for me.
But it
also shines a light into the empty space where knowing one's forebears lives.
This
is certainly true in terms of my birth parents, about whom I know almost
nothing. My birthmother was Irish - Edna Flynn - and the little facts I know
about my conception are not happy ones. Given her age at my birth (a surprising
38) it is unlikely that she is still alive, and my one attempt to contact her
to get a family medical history was rebuffed. It was one door shut to knowing
who I was and where I came from, My adoptive parents, Ann and Joseph Brennan,
had Irish blood. My father was pure Irish on both sides. My mother was more of
an olio of Irish, English, Alsatian French/German. The Irish side - Joe's side
- was predominant in our family life, presumably beecause he had extended
family living near us, and there were regular family gatherings. My mother Ann
always fought to give me a sense of myself as partly English and Alsatian, but
with no living relatives anywhere near us, the sense of heritage was less
reinforced. Heritage? I had great
confusion about who I was, what I was, how I fit into the world.
It was
no surprise, then, that the line from Pound's Canto spoke to me. If I could not
know who I was by my lineage and heritage, I could construct one out of the
things that I loved. Music, words, art, conversation with intelligent people,
cooking...a heritage grounded in present experience rather than who my people
were and where they had lived. It was, I know, a somewhat self-oriented view
that placed me on a map that I had created for myself, not on one that had been
bequeathed to me.I chose and built my heritage, or maybe it chose me in some
mysterious way.
But it
would be wrong to say that this alone would sustain me, that there wasn't a
hunger in me for what I saw in other families, in other people. Doug knows his
family, can talk about family tree going back to the old country, understands
both the joys and the losses in the long family saga. I have virtually none of
that, except what I could adopt from Ann and Joe Brennan. For some people, that
might be freeing, and in some ways, it is that
for me as well. But it is still a sense of lost markers to orient
myself.
It was
odd, then, last night, to see the uilleann piper Blackie. He looked so much
like my father as a young man that it took my breath away for a moment. My
father's hair would not have been long and curly like that - I have a picture
of him at his confirmation with the black short hair slicked back as would have
been the norm in 1926. But the shape of the face, the eyes, the thick dark
brow...it was Joe Brennan reborn, not as the tired alcoholic with which I grew
up, the man who would be in his grave by 57, the man who became the man of the
house supporting his younger siblings when his parents died in his senior year
of high school.. No, it was a different Joe - the possibility of youth and gift
and energy that I never got to see in the Joe Brennan who raised me.
And
the pain of never having known that part of him, if indeed there had been such
a part, was strong, and the grief of knowing nothing about Edna Flynn, my birth
mother, was equally painful. And the well of sadness of not being able to give
my children these threads to weave into their own story was a particular kind
of heartbreak, as if I had failed them as a mother by not giving them the whole
of their story.
Perhaps
Pound's line about true heritage will become my epitaph, that all that matters
is that I have lived and loved and created and failed and helped and struggled,
that I have found a deep love with someone who understands me mostly (just I
can understand myself only mostly) and that I have raised remarkable children.
Perhaps the lack of rootedness is what gave me the ability to move through a
complicated life with tenacity and a sense of something waiting for me beyond
the horizon and a willingness to be transformed at various points in my life as
I am meant to be transformed. But there is still within me that hole, that
empty spot.
In
great sculpture, there is always the negative space that provides context and
proportion and meaning to the metal or stone or clay that the sculptor wrests
into its thing-ness. In music, there is the necessity of silence to allow the
song to truly speak. For me, then, it
may be that hole which will have to suffice, rather than the latitude and
longitude of knowing one's heritage, as I walk along my pilgrim journey to the
next refuge.
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