Alma Mater
Transcription
Alma Mater
A T l m a Essay by Nate Liederbach Photography by Jeff Michalek m a ry picturing Boulder and the University of Colorado campus as a colossal female fertility figure. Imagine each street — Baseline, Broadway, Pearl — as warm, plump limbs, each coffee and sandwich shop the tips of her strong, gentle fingers. Imagine Chautauqua is her smooth forehead, her flowing evergreen hair, the Hill her lively face, mouth open and But here’s the contradiction I see in each chattering student, each lecturing professor and American English — alma maters are likened to the past, a finished chapter. each note streaming from the Fox her voice. I equate my alma mater with something that once nourished me then Now picture each separate campus building as a turned me loose, cut my financial aid great, ripe breast, milk overflowing, filling the streets, umbilical, revoked my daily structure, left me to self-nourish. Sure, my CU the air, space, time. CU — your alma mater. studies provided me skills, but skills aren’t nourishing in the maternally Sound like a Dali painting? Drug-induced? Reconnotative sense. Say “nourishing” lax, it’s merely Latin: alma mater. The term literally and I think omnipresent security, consolation, persistent revitalization translates to “nourishing mother.” So nurse away. from an outside source. 22 Coloradan June 2006 t e r Alumni, the noun, derivates from the Latin verb alere, “to nourish.” Alumni then translates to “nourished one.” So how does CU, five years beyond my graduation, still nourish me? Well, I’m being paid $3 million to write this essay. But money is cold, keeps an arm’s length. What about my spirit? Yet again this morning Chancellor Phil DiStefano failed to leave a pep talk on my voice mail. No former profs e-mailed inspirational quotes. Mostly all I retain from my alma mater are memories — oh, that slippery word. Listen, joking aside, I had a rough time during my CU years. I began my master’s in journalism shedding a brutal Oxycondone addiction from a car accident, the narcotic plaguing me with anxiety attacks and hallu- cinations for 15 months. Then, two months into that first semester, my older sister was violently raped. On top of all this, my marriage was decaying. Soon after graduation, I moved from Boulder, divorced and have returned only a handful of times. Nourishing? Sour milk. But these are the memories I’ve long linked to my alma mater — confusion, fog, loss. But then I flew to New Jersey last summer. What? Exactly. Who says, “I need nourishment — think I’ll fly to Newark”? It was a favor, see. But inconvenient. I was in mid-move from Colorado to Washington state, recently laid off from my teaching gig, broke, breaking up with my girlfriend — a veritable country song — but my buddy needed a groomsman. Of course, Matt’s request came with a caveat: “Um, Nate, Megan and I are excited you’re in the wedding. Just try not to offend everyone.” Matt, ah. He’s pensive, conservative, subtle and always makes a dashing first impression; me, I tend to approach the world like Mick Jagger devouring a microphone. “Sure,” I promised, “I’ll keep it mellow.” And I was happy, not offended. After five years we still retained our glaring polarities. See, Matt and I met two weeks into our graduate studies and over two years had four classes together. We’d razz Frank Kaplan during workshop, bask in Pat Raybon’s (MJour’77) elegance and bemoan Bob Trager’s law curriculum. Four times a week we met at the gym and on spare afternoons we’d bike Betasso’s single-track before winding back down Boulder Canyon to grab a beer at the Sundowner. Inevitably our discussions turned to heated, heady political debates, digressing with each Fat Tire gulp into affable insults. Then the headlock, couple of kidney punches, drooling, “I love you, man,” and off to bed. We were mid-20s, I had an intelligent, gorgeous wife, and he had an absent, out-of-town girlfriend, so Renee and I often had Matt over for dinner. Unabashedly he’d gush his envy of our marriage, loved how we acted together. He wasn’t much good at the dating scene and looked forward to marrying someday, to buying a place, to meeting a girl he knew was it for sure and, essentially, having what we had. In those moments Renee and I could see ourselves in Matt’s eyes; I think he reminded us to believe like he believed. When he and his girlfriend split and he discovered she’d thrown herself right back into another relationship, Matt showed up emotionally mystified. He choked up telling us. Renee cried, hugging him on the couch while I batted my own tears and quickly cooked up enough spaghetti for three solid food comas. I tried so hard not to cry, not to look at them. There was so much random anger in me that if I let loose I wouldn’t know who I was. “You’re so lucky to have her,” Matt told me nearly every day. “You know that?” “Yes,” I said, but I didn’t. After graduation, Matt returned to Jersey. Renee and I crumbled. During the next three years the concept of love filled me with such bitterness I’d spit the word marriage. Then Matt met Megan. He called me certain she was it. I hung up the phone feeling a sick, black happiness. Good for him. He deserves it. And I deserve what I got. They were soon engaged. Damned weddings. I didn’t want to go. They’re for everyone but the couple, a disgusting charade, letting the world believe love exists. What’s a wedding but a lame excuse to forget life’s difficulties and be- lieve for a moment in eternity and bliss, to idealize romance over reality? But I’d promised Matt I’d go, so I booked a flight and prayed for tornados and cantaloupe hail. Nothing. My car started. I drove to the airport. But my Mom called before I boarded. Renee had cancer; it was serious, and she’d recently undergone surgery. I hung up, speechless. Was she okay? I knew better than to phone her; she wouldn’t speak with me. Gathering myself, I called our mutual friends. Did you know? Yes, they warily told me, we’ve known. “You didn’t tell me?” “Why?” Renee and I were married over five years, that’s why. And then I was in Jersey, dudedup in my monkey suit, taking my place with the other groomsmen off to Matt’s right. I could see his broad back and Megan’s face. She was radiant, tearful. I stared. Renee and I had both cried through our entire ceremony, but why? Because of the ritual? Or the audience? Was I crying for me or for them? Was I crying because I knew our marriage would fail? But I didn’t know. I was crying, I realized while standing by Matt’s side, because all of our guests were focused on the positive, bent on hope, hope in all its mystery if only for that one moment. Even if I attempted to doubt, I couldn’t escape the sense of hope. Megan cried. Matt stepped over to her, his back trembling. The hate welled in me again and I wanted to despise the institution, the sentimentality. I know the pain they’ll endure, so how can I let myself get swept away in the hope when I know . . . . My knees buckled. What did I know? Anything about them? Nothing. But I knew this: Here was Matt four feet away. Not the same man I knew at CU, but part of him. And it wasn’t just Matt standing there; it was part of me, too. Like it or not, I was wound in his memories, entwined with who he was at that moment. Even though Matt had witnessed my damaged marriage, had tied me and Renee to his own hopes and dreams, and even though I’d crushed those, he wasn’t defeated. That evening, when I congratulated the newlyweds, I meant it. We can allow memories to jade us or encourage us. Nourish the past, not by sugarcoating it, but by seeing it as a mysterious, constructive teacher, and the past will nourish the present. Alma mater. Nate Liederbach (MJour’01) left Gunnison and is currently living and writing in Olympia, Wash. This is the fourth essay he’s written for the Coloradan (but we’re not paying him $3 million for it). In March of 2005 he published a collection of short fiction, Doing a Bit of Bleeding (Ghost Road Press). June 2006 Coloradan 23