Cindy

by - May 06, 2013


Is there such thing as a weekend sister? Because that's how it started. We shared Friday nights and Saturdays when my dad was dating her mom. Together we set tables, made salads, and played checkers. Before that, we both only had brothers.

I think we became friends out of necessity—we were thrust upon each other. After Dad and Carol married, there were only so many bedrooms to go around under one roof, so we skipped ahead to becoming step-sisters and roomies.

But it was over before we were teenagers.

When she was in fourth grade, I was every bit the seventh grader—shy and unsure. I missed my mom something fierce, so I moved back to her, which was far, far away from them. I packed up my half of our room, my half of our fledgling friendship, and, by default, all of the sisterhood, and never returned.

Only a visit or two sprinkled the following decades because we lived so far apart. My raw, perpetually torn heart ached exclusively for my dad—his wife and her children an irrelevant extension of him. I liked them well enough, but over time they had become inconsequential to me.

At some point, Dad adopted Chris and Cindy, and it was official. We shared a father and a last name, and, really, nothing else. The sun rose the next morning or maybe it rained. Who knows. I'm not even sure I found out the same day.

I asked this stranger who was my sister to be a bridesmaid when I got married. She donned obligatory pink satin and tried to blend into the fabric of my otherwise closest human relationships. She hid well behind her fabricated smile.

When she was in college, Mike and I visited Dad and Carol and she came over for supper. I only remember that she was there because I found it strange to hear her call him dad, and I noted his concern about her getting an oil change and how he pressed a twenty into her palm when she left with that stern half-glare only fathers give. I remember thinking he doesn't even know what kind of car I drive.

It wasn't jealousy. I don't know what to call it other than odd or surreal. That night, I watched my father be her dad while I felt like his dinner guest. There was nothing mean about it; it's just how our family had turned out. No one had scrambled all these relationships intentionally, but every one of us was the sad and beautiful damage that comes with blending families. And there we were that night, all juxtaposed together over a shared dinner. Before I knew what to make of it, Mike and I had gone home.



We went on being strangers-sisters, Cindy and I. When Jeff died, she didn't come. When Chris died, I don't go. That pretty much sums up our twenties and thirties.

Five years ago she called late on Christmas night. We exchanged our most impressive highlights the way old friends who've grown apart do when they run into each other unexpectedly in the grocery store. She wanted to come visit. She stayed four days and was reaquainted with my children. We called her Aunt Cindy and built a puzzle of the Boston skyline on the coffee table. And then she went home.

Last week, she came again with her fiance. We sat across the dining room table with our dinner plates and different lives between us. I told her a little bit about my reconciliation with Dad, and then said, "It feels a bit strange telling you about Dad because you know him so much better than I do."

We talked about Chris and Jeff, and the sisters that we weren't and yet we were. We decided we don't want to be strangers, but we've been this bizarre nothing-something for so long, we really don't know how to become anything else. There's so much impossible space and disconnected connection between us. We've both lost much, so it finally feels right to try for gain.

Weekend friends in the late 70s became step-sisters and roommates, and then strangers to each other again. Adoption made us full sisters while time and distance kept us strangers still.

There's not a word for sisters whose brothers have died, like a wife becomes a widow, but we both are that nameless thing too—another shared complication. We've both lost a brother—heck, we've both lost two, truth be told.

Once, on Facebook, I shared a romantic, reminiscent blog post someone had written about growing up with her sister. I introduced it by saying, "I don't have a sister, but if I did, I'd want us to be just like this."

"Interesting."

Cindy's one-word, Facebook comment was loaded.

When people ask me about my siblings, I tell them about Jeff and Wayne

But I have a sister. She hasn't been a big part of my past, but I'd like her to be a bigger part of my future.

I have a sister. Her name is Cindy. She came over for tacos last Saturday. And I think that's as good a place as any to start.
 
 
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14 comments

  1. Beautiful, inspiring post as usual. Thanks for sharing from your heart, Dawn.

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    1. Thanks, Laura. Your encouragement means a lot.

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  2. There is much grace woven into this post. It's beautiful, just beautiful.

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    1. Thank you for seeing the grace, Heidi. And for stopping by.

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  3. You are truly an inspiration Dawn. I'm full of emotion as I read this. My daughter has become part of a "blended family" and I pray every day that she continues to find the strength to overcome any doubts she has that things will be ok. Thank you for sharing. Kathleen Lester

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    1. Kathy, comments like yours are the main reason I open my life for all to see. So they can see some of their own story in mine and how it can be full of grace and forgiveness and beauty. I pray your daughter finds grace and redemption in her new and her old family circumstances. Complicated doesn't have to mean bad. Love you Kathy. Thanks again for sharing your thoughts.

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  4. 'Complicated doesn't have to mean bad' - words to live by. I read this and while I thought of our own 'blended' family challenges, I'm reminded that they are opportunities as well. And that God can turn something ugly to good - I'm glad to hear this about you and Cindy....and I count you and I now as one of those 'unnamed' relationships that I hope can somehow last / evolve in spite of the circumstances. Thanks for sharing.

    Kristy

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    1. Oh, Kristy. This post is turning into a very important post. For so many reasons. I will always love you girl. Thank you so very much for your words.

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  5. no one could write such a beautiful yet heartbreaking
    post like you can. i pray you can become closer sisters,
    but would caution you from putting expectations on
    this.

    "great expectations" are frequently disappointed.

    small expectations with prayers of great faith have
    a much better record.

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    1. myletters, you are full of wisdom. I have learned this lesson in my family (if nowhere else) through the years, but I don't think I had put my finger on that lesson until you articulated it here.

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  6. I have a sister named Cindy, too. She lives in Heaven. I'd give anything to have a second chance to be a sister to her. May God bless and guide you and bring himself glory.

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  7. Thank you for writing such a beautiful post, Dawn. I'm so glad we had the time to get together and for our Mikes to meet each other. As Kristy mentioned 'Complicated doesn't have to mean bad'...I'd like to add ''Complicated doesn't have to mean bad or judged." Our time is now. The only expectation I have is what we make of it going forward. I hope we make the best of it and we are a bigger part of each other's future. xo P.S. Look for a pm from me in your Facebook account...about Jeff's funeral.

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    1. Not an ounce of judgment from me Cindy. Only grace and restoration and the salvaging of anything of value for the future. Thank you for setting me straight on Jeff's funeral. Apparently you were there. Chris too. I was so grief-stricken, I remember very little of your detail. I have looked way backward in this post, but I did so in order that I might have my bearings to move toward a future that is sure-footed and steady.... Your realize this makes me the only lousy sister that didn't show up for an important funeral. That's perfect. :) xo

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  8. Dawn, this was beautiful! I have five sisters and you made me think of how distant my relationship is with all of them. I'd like them to be a bigger part of my future. Your words have encouraged me. Blessings.

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