I have always avoided talking about my mother. Mostly
because when people ask “What did your mother say?” or “What does your mother
do for a living?” or “When will I meet your mother?” they assume I have one. And
not only that I have one, but also that answers to these questions about my
mother will be quick, clear, and simple. And yet, who has a simple relationship
with one’s mother, even if that mother did raise you and support you and is
still an integral part of your life? Nevertheless, when people innocently ask
about my mother, they don’t realize they are unlatching a gate to a house I have
kept closed for years. It’s not fit for living in. There’s no one hiding out in
the attic or rotting in the basement, no bones buried under the floorboard or
secret wills tucked into pantry tiles; in fact, quite the opposite. The house
is empty, swept clean, sanitized. No furniture, no gardens, not even a box of
baking soda in the fridge. And I like it that way.
From Toronto poet, fiction writer, critic and editor Priscila Uppal, raised in
Ottawa and currently a professor at York University, comes an incredible memoir:
projection: encounters with my runaway mother (Toronto ON: Dundurn Press, 2013). Already a finalist for both the
Hilary Weston Writers’ Trust Prize for Nonfiction as well as the Governor
General’s Literary Awards, projection:encounters with my runaway mother begins with a background on Uppal’s immediate
family. The blurb on the book’s leaf tells it best: “In 1977, Priscila Uppal’s
father swallowed contaminated water in Antigua, and within 48 hours was a quadriplegic.
Priscila was two years old. Five years later, her mother, Theresa, drained the
bank accounts, including those of her two children, and disappeared to Brazil. After
attempting to abduct her children twice, Priscila’s mother had no further
contact with the family. Twenty years later, Priscila happened upon her mother’s
website and, a few weeks later, she summoned the nerve to contact the woman who’d
abandoned her as a child. After a few awkward phone calls and e-mails, a trip
was arranged.” I’ve always been amazed as Uppal as a positive force, both
personally and professionally, as well as her impressive output, so I can’t
even imagine how difficult such an upbringing could have been, or just how it
might have affected someone less willful.
I want you to understand my psychology.
Good.
That’s exactly what I want too, whatever that means. This is not a typical
mother-daughter gallery chat, but a case study. I want to know what makes her
tick, what keeps her living when she claims she’d rather die, what thoughts
fill her day, what thoughts fill her night, what she has done with the past—whether
she has hidden those skeletons, if she’s dressed them up in parasols or Arctic
snowsuits, if she ever takes out memories like antique cutlery and sets a
special table for them.
I do not like to fight for things. If someone wants to
fight me, I hide.
She
doesn’t believe she’s cruel; although she won’t use the word, she’s labelled herself
a coward. It’s the psychology of someone who, as a child, never had to fight
for what she wanted. Faced with the possibility of competition, she bolts to
avoid conflict, confrontation, failure. Whereas her children fought for
everything they have.
Uppal
structures the chapters of the memoir through film, using one of the things she
and her mother have in common—a love of cinema—as a way to ease into territory
that can’t help but be extremely loaded with emotional difficulty. Chapters wrap
themselves around a dozen or so features, from Blade Runner and Maid in
Manhatten to Mommie Dearest, God Is Brazilian, Throw Momma from the Train and The
Purple Rose of Cairo, a structure used effectively to propel the narrative
from one chapter into another. The book focuses on the twelve days Uppal spend,
solo, travelling south to Brazil to stay with her mother. After decades without
any contact at all, suddenly Uppal is under her mother’s mercy in hotels, her
home, and finally surrounded by her mother’s family, with little more than a
notebook to protect her. Throughout the book, Uppal describes responses by her
mother that are quite baffling, and even terrifying, and one can only admire
Uppal’s courage to put herself through such a complicated process; and I understand
fully, having recently completed such a project myself, that the only way for
some of us to work through such a territory is to write it out. Uppal’s
exploration is incredibly articulate, open and honest about herself, her mother
and just what it is she learns through the process of interacting with a woman
who, it becomes increasingly apparent, refuses any responsibility, negativity
or blame, and won’t even read a book with an unhappy ending (although Uppal’s
maternal grandmother is an absolute delight). As narrator, Uppal refuses easy
blame and finger-pointing, attempting as best as she can to avoid easy judgment,
and instead, showcasing a wary generosity, an odd humour and a scientific approach
in attempting to comprehend the impossible: how any woman could abandon her
children. projection: encounters with my
runaway mother compares in interesting ways to how other writers,
specifically female writers, who have written of their mothers, from Jeanette Winterson’s
Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal? (Knopf,
2011) [see my review of such here] or Ottawa writer Elizabeth Smart’s numerous
accounts of her relationship with her mother, including the unfinished Dig a Grave and Let Us Bury Our Mother. Given
the nature of discovery, this work could even compare to Monica Kidd’s memoir
of genealogical discovery, seeking out her great-grandparents in any other woman: an uncommon biography (Edmonton
AB: NeWest Press, 2008) [see my review of such here]. Uppal’s projection: encounters with my runaway
mother is a brave, heartfelt, thorough and unforgettable memoir, and one
that needs to be read, whatever the nature of your relationship with parents or
children. I have been recommending this book for some time.
I’m starting to wonder
how much of my mother’s psyche is elusive to me because of culture rather than
nature. If I learned one thing on a six-week cross-Canada trip I took starting
in Victoria, British Columbia, and finishing on Prince Edward Island, it’s that
landscape and environment are responsible for everything: weather, diet,
clothing, industry, economy, and especially personality. If you live among the
Rocky Mountains, you can’t help but climb them, spend your days looking up,
seeking adventure. If you live where you can see for miles without a single
obstruction, not a hill or tower or farm, you become a master of patience, of
seasoning planning. If you live on an island where the soil is so red it
literally stains your skin, no matter where you travel that sand never rubs off
and you always feel homesick. São Paolo’s commercial hustle and bustle and arts
institutions suit my mother’s hunger for constant entertainment, endless
sensory input to fuel her fantasy life. Brasilia seems to feed her need for
order and predictability. But she grew up in Rio de Janeiro, I can’t forget
this, a city with a reputation for complete disorder and dysfunction and a mess
of contradictions: a city of brutal violence on the one hand and the largest
dance party in the world on the other, with one of the tallest art deco
sculptures of Christ on top of a massive hill, watching over its mansions and
apartment complexes and millions living a precarious existence in the favelas day and night. The old capital city.
My mother’s family one of the first to move from one capital to another. One of
the first to exchange one set of dreams for another. And proud to do so. When my
mother first set foot in this futuristic city raised from dust in the desert,
she would have been just a wide-eyed little girl, her own dreams like the new
species of plants, just beginning to take root under the sun.
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