Shelly Strazis

I came early. At 1:15 in the morning, to be exact. Apparently I
was in such a hurry that my mother's obstetrician arrived 10
minutes too late. I was lifted into the world by a doctor whose
name no one had time to ask, while my mother, awake and laughing,
and my father, in mask and gown, watched the moment of my
entrance. I know this to be true because my father told me so,
seven years after he died.
Later that night, as my mom rested and I got accustomed to life
outside the womb, my father was at home alone. Euphoric and
punch-drunk with the new arrival, he eventually found himself
sitting with his Smith-Corona typewriter. No one, not even he,
could decipher his handwriting, so everything from television
scripts (for Columbo and The Execution of Private Slovik) to the
grocery list were banged out with his two index fingers on that
typewriter. It was the middle of the night in Los Angeles, in
1972, and my father couldn't sleep. So he wrote. He wrote to me.
Peppered with typos and misspellings he'd later attribute to the
hour (but which I now know were a constant), the letter was my
introduction to the world. He talked politics a seemingly
never-ending war in Vietnam. He talked medicine the relatively
new use of Lamaze. And then, for the first time, he talked as a
father. He told me he was scared, but that at the moment his work
was good, he and my mother loved each other very much, and he
would "try to make things happy for (me) here." He signed the
letter with his new title, "Your Father," put it in an envelope,
and sealed it. I wouldn't read it for 21 years.
That was how it started. Each year, on the eve of his only child's
birthday, he'd write a letter. He doubled up only once one letter for when I was two and three. The first few paragraphs
usually covered the basics. He'd tell me what I ate ("You're the
damnedest picky eater since your father"), keep tabs on my
vocabulary ("You've grown rather fond of 'No!'"), recap my
travels, and note that my blue eyes were making their slow turn to
green. Then he'd talk to me. Not down or around but to me. He said
he was writing to the adult I would become.
June 13, 1974
I just wanted to let you know what you were like at a certain time
and place. Yet you change and grow in the flicker of an eye one
minute willful and spoiled, the next tender and deeply loving and
there's simply no way to put you down on paper. It won't hold you.
You can't be fixed, or frozen, or held down so I can neatly
analyze you, and I'm delighted by that. We take your picture, and
write down some of your words, but a day later you're a new
person and that's as it should be.
The pile of sealed envelopes grew. I could read them whenever I
wanted, a fact Dad liked to remind me of. He'd sort of wave the
letter of the year in front of me before putting it to bed atop
the growing stack. When I was around seven, I said I wanted to
wait until I was "really old" to read them, so I picked an age as
far off as I could possibly imagine: 21.
Now I wonder if he had wanted me to read them as he went, to tell
him if he'd gotten it right. Was the boy I had a crush on in fifth
grade indeed Alec, or had I moved on by then? And just what was
the true cause of my two-day nontalking fit with my best friend,
Abbie? But I didn't read them. I told him I'd wait, and that he'd
have to wait, too. He didn't. My father died on March 12, 1987. I
was 14.
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