avatarSherry McGuinn

Summary

Sherry McGuinn reflects on her complex relationship with her parents, regretting not asking deeper questions about their lives and dreams, which she believes could have provided insight into their unhappiness and her own driven nature.

Abstract

In a poignant reflection, Sherry McGuinn explores the haunting realization that she never truly understood her parents' inner desires and struggles. Despite their tumultuous relationship, marred by alcoholism and depression, McGuinn acknowledges her deep love for them. She laments not inquiring about their aspirations and the reasons behind their staying together, recognizing that these unasked questions have left a void in her understanding of them as individuals. McGuinn's revelation comes as she grapples with her own relentless drive for success, which she attributes to her genetic inheritance. The essay serves as a posthumous tribute to her parents, with McGuinn hoping that her screenplay about their relationship, particularly during their battles with cancer, will be produced. She encourages others to engage with their parents, to ask the difficult questions, and to learn from their stories, a step she wishes she had taken earlier.

Opinions

  • McGuinn believes that asking her parents about their dreams and what made them happy could have provided her with valuable insights and understanding of their troubled marriage and individual struggles.
  • She suggests that the lack of open conversation about depression in her parents' time led them to self-medicate with alcohol, which exacerbated their issues.
  • McGuinn reflects on her own difficult behavior as a child and acknowledges that she may have added to her parents' challenges.
  • She expresses a deep sense of regret for not having delved into her parents' pasts, particularly after learning about her mother's childhood hardships and her father's family traumas late in life.
  • McGuinn emphasizes the importance of knowing one's parents beyond their roles as caregivers, advocating for meaningful dialogue to avoid the regrets she now carries.
  • She sees her driven nature as a legacy of her parents' influences and unfulfilled aspirations, which she channeled into her writing and screenplay.
  • McGuinn encourages readers to interview their parents, using provided questions as a starting point, to foster a deeper connection and understanding before it's too late.

Questions Never Asked

Those are the ones that will haunt you

Pixabay/Pexels

I’ve talked a lot about my parents here on Medium. They’ve been gone four years, but it feels like only yesterday that they made their final exit.

They flicker in and out of my consciousness like fireflies on a summer night. Random memories of good times and bad. My father, tending his garden. So very proud of his tomatoes. Big. Ripe. Luscious. Their sweet juice adding a very special nuance to my mother’s Italian “gravy.”

My mother. The musky, animalistic scent of Shalimar lingering in my parents’ bedroom after a night out. And the arguments. Vicious. Raging. Fueled by alcohol…after a night out.

I don’t mean to cast my parents in a negative light. I hope that wherever they are, they know this. But, even though I loved them both — loved them to death — I often prayed that they’d call it quits. The fighting. The hurled invectives. Ugly words no one should ever have to hear. Everything combined, culminating in one simple, heart-rending truth: My mother and father were terribly unhappy people.

Depression got the better of them both. A disease that wasn’t openly talked about back then. Certainly not the way it is now. And instead of Prozac or Zoloft, my parents used vodka to self-soothe.

As the oldest of three siblings, I was around for a lot of the bad stuff. And those memories have proven to die hard, if at all. I also remember that I wasn’t an easy kid. OCD. Some bad choices, like driving over the Illinois border with my equally-underage friends so that we could get legally drunk in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Yeah, I tested their patience, for sure.

And then there was the time my brother found my hastily torn off clothes in the back yard. Best not to expound on that.

Divorce. Aside from having to bear witness to their tearing each other apart, I wanted my parents to split up because I thought they’d be happier, that way. But I now realize that I didn’t know shit. And the reason for that, is I didn’t bother to ask.

Ken Treloar/Unsplash

“Mom, what would make you happy? What did you want for your life?”

“Dad, what did you want to be? Do?”

“Mom, Dad, why do you stay together?”

Very basic questions that would have given me the insight I lacked as to who they were as human beings.

My parents married very young. My mother birthed me at the tender age of twenty. She went straight from her girlhood bedroom to the marriage bed, in a small, Chicago apartment. And then, my father was sent to Korea.

My mother packed us up and moved us back to her family home, where I was spoiled rotten by my grandparents and her four siblings.

Incredibly, I remember snatches of that time. How does a baby form memory? I remember my grandfather hoisting me up on his knee and spooning up little sips of the sugary coffee that I loved. My grandmother rocking me in her arms, cooing a tune of her own making. I can see these blips in my past as clear as day.

And then there are those that I choose to slam the door on. Lights out. Nobody home. Don’t bother to knock.

Questions. So many.

Why now, am I thinking about this? I believe it’s because lately, I’ve been wondering how and why I’m so driven. So damned driven to make it. Whatever that means in the real world. And I have to acknowledge that much of this is due to my genetic makeup…to my parents. To the two most important people in my life.

Why didn’t I work harder? Ask more questions? Ask any questions? What was I so afraid of?

I was long into adulthood when my mother revealed to me that when she was a child, money was so scarce that she and her siblings had to be farmed out to relatives. This shocked me to the core. Why had I never known this?

That revelation hurt, physically. My heart broke for her.

My father had his own traumas. His beloved dad was a gambler. His smothering mother may or may not have fooled around.

He was an eloquent writer. Yet I never asked if that was something he’d thought of becoming.

I never asked my mother, who was a beautiful woman, if she had harbored aspirations or dreams or for that matter, any regrets that she married and gave birth to a child at such a young age. Yet, I believe in my heart that she did. But, because I didn’t ask, I can only imagine what those were.

How well do you know your own parents? Do you hold them at arms-length without realizing it?

Elion Dumon/Unsplash

Sometimes the simplest things are so hard for us. Inexplicably so. And because I don’t want you to have the same regrets that I do, here’s a thought: Interview the two people who made you. Sure, you may be stunned by some of the things you uncover, but you could be amazed and delighted, too. You may even want to write about it.

From beyondtheinterview.com, here are some questions to get you started:

What comes to mind when you think about growing up in (hometown)?

What did you love to do in high school? What was your favorite class?

Who was your best friend growing up and why?

What did you love to do in your free time?

Did you have a close relationship with your own parents?

What do you remember most about your Mom and Dad?

What do you remember most about your teenage years?

How did you know that Mom/Dad was the one?

How did you choose your career and is it what you thought it would be?

If you could be anywhere or do anything where/what would that be?

Were you ever scared to be a parent?

That’s more than enough to get you started. Probe. Question. Ask.

As it turns out, I paid tribute to my Mom and Dad by writing a screenplay about them. This is the script that my manager is currently shopping. It documents how our relationship took a revelatory turn after all three of us were diagnosed with cancer. I pray every day that it gets produced.

Meanwhile, I think about the questions I never asked. It’s too late, now, but maybe, my parents are somewhere close…hovering just beyond the veil…and they can feel how sorry I am. They can feel it, because I am a part of them.

Who knows? I don’t.

Sherry McGuinn is a longtime Chicago-area writer and award-winning screenwriter. Her work has appeared in The Chicago Tribune, Chicago Sun-Times and numerous other publications. Sherry’s manager is currently pitching her newest screenplay, a drama with dark, comedic overtones and inspired by a true story.

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Family
Life Lessons
Regret
Love
Parents
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