Avital Gad Cykman

The future of color

Many nights I lie awake and dread my unborn son's skin.

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The future of color

Many nights I dread his future color, my alertness pronouncing itself in prayers to a doubtfully existent God. These nights of a not-yet-mother trespass daytime.

At work, I pull back from the mud-colored poverty, not wanting the stories of lost battles. I say I will do my best but I know my best is never effective. I am a social worker who is losing faith in change.

Back at home, the slums crawl into my dreams. I cry and turn to all the religions for support.

- – - – - – - – - – - -

Days pass, counted according to the medical calendar: seven, 15, 45.

Under an exquisitely hot sun, I make the two-mile walk to the doctor’s office.

“What are the chances?” I ask him.

He has a coffee-colored skin, already wrinkled in places, big glasses and an air of pride.

“I don’t understand your concern,” he says.

“You don’t?”

He stays silent.

Soon the time comes to see my son. Once I am lying in front of the ultrasound screen, I close my eyes.

“Tell me he has my color, the color of Ken, the doll,” I want to say. “The color that is unquestionably accepted.” I mean to say it but I don’t. “What does he look like?” I finally ask. My fingers squeeze my eyeballs until I see red and yellow dots.

“He looks perfectly healthy,” the doctor says. “He has everything he needs at this stage, and everything is in place. You can open your eyes now.”

I look at the black-and-white screen and see my baby son in a fetal position.

“Oh!” I say.

“I love him,” I don’t say. The words slide back inside.

- – - – - – - – - – - -

I speak to my baby when I feel him pressing against my insides. “Your father and I became one, the way darkness and light absorb each other in the exchange of day to night. That ‘one’ is you, our baby.”

There was a father with a deep color, unlike my pale one. He had chocolate tones of skin and palpable warmth that lingered underneath.

Yes, there was a father, but there isn’t any longer.

I dread the day my skin the color of sea sand will not clothe my son. Even so, he will never be one of the kids who linger under the city bridge or in the strategically located crossroads. He will not have to use his infantile charm to receive food. No. He will be the one dot of color in the classroom of a private school.

- – - – - – - – - – - -

Day No. 200 brings a chilling wind. From the bus, going to work, I see children getting out of cars in front of the school’s entrance. I want to celebrate: I’m purchasing my first car today. I can’t celebrate. My mind goes back to the talk-show celebrity interviewing a cocoa-colored millionaire.

When he drives his Mercedes, the millionaire says, people think he works as a driver. He told the truth, I could tell. The interviewer and the audience laughed. He laughed too. He started as an office boy and worked his way up to a place where he can laugh.

- – - – - – - – - – - -

I am driving my new car when my son starts moving. It is the only discomfort I have ever loved. My body is our home. “You see, baby, inside we are the same. You shoot my belly up toward my heart, and all my body twists although I am not moving.”

I dread the time he will find out colors have meanings. He must not notice our different skins. They will be there, for the world to pass judgment on, but not for us.

“Together we embody my past and your future. You will be safe with me.”

I must be strong.

I tell him about his father. “He was not handsome, but his eyes and mouth, his hair and waist and limbs and skin had the truest look, the strongest sense of living. I knew his touch before he touched me, and when we loved, it was love. If you ever ask, I’ll tell you more, but you may choose not to ask. What’s the point in knowing anything else but that you are the fruit of this kind of love?”

- – - – - – - – - – - -

I still count the days according to the medical calendar, but according to my own as well. I feel our mutual motion at nights, when the womb’s undulation lulls us both to better dreams. We grow, my son and I grow up.

It is the night of the 290th day, and it is a good night.

I cannot be afraid any longer.

When it gets dark, I let my body rest against the pillows on my bed. The night lamp sheds tender light and the posters of Kandinsky and Miró color my white walls with festive colors.

Never fear, my son. Never fear.

Perfect for this world

Scarlett O'Hara taught my mother to make a velvet dress out of the living room curtains. And my mother, before she died, taught me that I must win at all costs.

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Perfect for this world

My mother watched “Gone With the Wind” about 15 times, but she only paid
for her first viewing.

Like me, all the kids used to go to the movies every Tuesday, accompanied by
their mothers. In Israel, where we lived during the ’60s, there was a recess in the middle of each film. The kids usually stood in line to buy popcorn while the mothers went together to the ladies’ room.

However, to my discreet sorrow, my mother acted differently.

On our first trip to “Gone With the Wind” she went into the film projector room during the recess, and returned only after the lights went back off. She was a beautiful woman, and we never had to pay for a movie ticket again. (And mind you, I watched the same movie three more times before I finally stopped accompanying her.)

My mother learned important lessons from the film. She took down the living room
curtains and sewed them into a pretty dress for herself and a nice suit for me. She mastered the sewing machine perfectly.

Evidently, Scarlett O’Hara had great success with her velvet curtain dress.
My case was different. The building where we lived consisted of small apartments arranged around an open patio, and the patio kids always stayed in each other’s homes. That’s how everyone knew that my suit had been made of curtains.

“Now that you have a suit, will your mom use your clothes as curtains?” Jacob asked.

Nastier suggestions followed. Joe, the oldest boy, asked if my mom’s bra could cover the bare living room window.

Three times I arrived home marked with signs of fighting. I claimed it had
been a fight over a boy, because I knew my mother would admire that. She was
a romantic, after all. I experienced hard times, but she seemed so proud of
our new clothes, and I had no heart to refuse her gift. How could I? She said I
was the most wonderful princess she had ever dressed.

And business had never been better. My mother had developed a delicate
marketing strategy, after she realized how impressed the neighbors were by her
ability to create clothes. Soon, many living rooms lost their curtains, to be replaced with straw blinds, and the women brought the fabric to Mom. She invited “the ladies” (as she called them) for tea and involved them in light conversation. My mother was the only daughter of a professor of literature, as well as a dancer, and she had inherited the brilliance of both. As a result, she easily charmed anyone around her. When the women felt completely at ease, she told them the price of the clothes. At that point, nobody could have refused her anything.

To please my mother, the only thing I had to do was be good at whatever I did. When I decided, at the age of 6, that I wanted to join a circus, my mom made me train every day. I put mattresses on the patio, jumped, rolled, stood on my hands and on my head and tried to attract an audience. I escaped mockery because some of the other kids decided to join me. While Mom conducted the small business affairs that rendered us a minimum amount of comfort, I dedicated myself to my future profession.

After a month or so, we, the circus players, felt confident enough to put on a show. One sunny afternoon, our mothers and two or three unemployed fathers bought tickets for the big event. We said that the money would be used for charity. As most of our families lived off small pensions of all sorts, it was true enough.

The show started at exactly 4 p.m. We made a pyramid, performed spicy clown jokes, walked on our hands in a zigzag formation and manipulated marionettes. We performed with great skill and received yells and applause from our astonished crowd. When I looked up, I saw my mother smiling and clapping her delicate hands, as charming as ever.

After everyone had gone home for dinner, my mother sat at the wooden table and asked me to join her. I suspected that she had something serious to tell me.

“Darling,” she said, “was the circus your idea?”

“You know it was, Mom.”

“Hadn’t you started training long before the others joined you?”

“Not really,” I said. “Maybe a week earlier.”

“A week is a long time,” she said. “Don’t you agree that you’re the best athlete and the funniest clown?”

Of course I didn’t object. Instead, I agreed enthusiastically.

“So why,” she finished dramatically, “why were you not the star? Why did I have to look for you among the others?”

She had caught me by surprise. I hadn’t given it a single thought. I had enjoyed performing in the circus so much, I hadn’t wished it differently.

“Well?” she asked.

“It was fun, Mom,” I said.

“Fun!” she mimicked me. “Fun! How will you survive in this world?”

The words were familiar, and they didn’t have the impact my mom had probably
wanted them to have. I knew she would always be there for me. She was so beautiful, so smart and strong. She would protect me. After all, I was only a plump little girl with problems in math.

Sometimes I would ask my mother: From whom had I inherited my looks, my difficulties in school, my awkwardness?

And she would answer: “Your father, too, had to struggle his way around, darling.
May angels guard his soul.”

I understood that my dad had already gone to heaven because he had not been
suited for this world.

Now I edit cookbooks. I never use curtains as background in my photographs. They remind me of “Gone With the Wind.”

I sometimes recall how my mom showed me the ways to win in this world. I remember that she said I shouldn’t express emotion. It is very likely that she was right.

During the years that followed the big circus show, I tried to follow the paths of my mother’s practical mind. I was not surprised when I grew taller and received good grades at school. I knew that I could go further than anyone else. Because I was fortunate enough to be her daughter, everything was possible.

That was why I was so shocked when my mother became sick. It was the year that I turned 14. She refused to go to the hospital because, she said, she knew better than the doctors what was best. My French aunt hired a nurse to help her. My mother was not pleased. It was more than we needed, as she put it.

It took my mother three months to die. For three months she repeated everything she had ever taught me and added some new ideas. She looked like a skeleton at that stage, and I was afraid. Nevertheless, she held on — alive and talkative — until she felt that I might survive without her.

Then she kissed my tears, said she trusted me to win and died. It was all done according to her precisely calculated timing.

She was perfect for this world.

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