Somebody’s Everything

Two months after the 1st anniversary of Mark’s death, a symposium was held in his honor at the med center where he worked for 28 years. I have wanted to write about it ever since, but it has been difficult for me to convey what it was like for the kids and I to be invited to step into Mark’s world of scientific research.

It was set in motion by Mark’s dearest friend, Tom, who is a professor at Brandeis. Both he and Mark were the stewards of a shameless and inappropriate sense of humor. They met at the University of Illinois where Tom was a post-doc and Mark was a graduate student. They were willing cohorts in antics around the lab that as Tom said, “It was the kind of stuff that nowadays would get you hauled into HR in a minute.” Tom got the ball rolling on this symposium and worked with Mark’s department to make it happen. The gratitude I have for Tom is hard to measure. He was so dear to Mark through decades – absolutely one of Mark’s favorite people, he stays in regular contact to see how I’m faring and that means so much to me, and he was the reason there was a day to honor Mark and his work.

Many of the people who were coming for the symposium were friends from years ago that I hadn’t seen in decades. Because of meetings and conferences, Mark would run into them but I rarely did. I wanted to have a happy hour the night prior to the symposium to catch up with them, for my kids to meet the people that formed their dad’s career, and to start it off celebrating Mark’s life and the people he met along the way. It was important to me that it not be somber or laden with grief.

We had the happy hour at my daughter and son-in-law’s house. I invited a few people from the med center who Mark was close to and loved, as well as his graduate students because there were a lot of contacts in that room that they needed for a future job. It was a lovely, boisterous night, and one of my favorite memories of that second year which was much harder for me than the first. Most of those who were there weren’t able to come in for Mark’s funeral so I threw some of the mass cards we made on the table in case they wanted one. Tom asked what they were and when I explained he said, “Wow, a Mark Fisher trading card. These might be worth something one day,” then burst out laughing which is exactly why Mark loved him so much.

The plan for the day of the symposium was for me and the kids to go in the morning, leave at lunchtime, and then come back for the happy hour and dinner, but that changed for us after the first speaker. We knew nothing about any of the subjects but were fascinated by all of it. Questions after a presentation sometimes felt like a DA grilling a murder suspect on the stand. My daughter leaned over and whispered, “I feel sorry for some of these people. This feels mean.” Mark’s friend, Joe, must have sensed our shock because during a break he came over to us and said that these things can be kind of intense and added, “Mark told me about one he went to where the argument was so fierce that it spilled outside and fists were thrown. Then everybody kissed and made up at the bar afterwards.” I told Joe that Mark never told me that story and he said, “Oh Mark wasn’t in there throwing punches, but he might have encouraged it because he did think it was some shit science.” Besides the science part of it, there were personal stories and Mark’s friend, Neal, said, “He was one of the kindest men I’ve ever known and I’ll leave it at that so I don’t start crying.”

In a twist of irony, the dinner was held in the restaurant of the art museum I worked at for two years. It was the most toxic work environment I’d ever been in, and when they told me that’s where the dinner was going to be I burst out laughing. If Mark were there we would have sat in the back and mercilessly trash talked the place which felt like the kind of dark humor I needed to get through it. The kids and I sat together and I told them they wouldn’t believe what I went through at that job, I fortified my nerves with a little wine, and then got up and spoke to the group.

“I fell under the Mark Fisher spell on our first date, a blind date set up by a friend. When Mark called to ask me out, a call I was expecting, I remember desperately looking around the room trying to come up with an excuse not to go. No believable answer appeared, and so a few days later he picked me up in his mom’s car, hit the curb when he parked, said, “Welp, I guess we’re here,” and held the door open for me as we went into the fine dining establishment known as Denny’s. By the end of that date I knew he was going to be my husband.

Throughout our years together, I rode the highs and lows of his career in science – promotions and pay cuts, the tenure golden ticket, increasing administration expectations, and the constant chase for grant funding. I don’t need to remind you that this is a tough business to be in. It is also tough to helplessly observe from the spouse’s seat.

Mark spoke often of what his legacy might be in the science world. What this career sometimes considers important will not be what most of us remember him for. Mark will be remembered for his quick and outrageous wit, his unwavering passion, the endless pots of coffee he drank, his steadfast support of students and faculty, and that daily dose of spandex shorts that once seen cannot be unseen.

His legacy in life is Maggie, Will, and Mallory who uniquely and fiercely loved their dad. They have always been mine and Mark’s most successful experiment, and with Nathan and Rubin have supported me and each other with enormous compassion. Mark was always so proud of them and they have risen to heights in the most difficult circumstances that neither of us could have imagined when we were raising them.

For forty years Mark was my everything, and like all of us, he had a light and a dark side. Each of you are somebody’s everything. You light up life in ways you cannot comprehend because most days it is so routine. Because of the light you cast, you owe it to yourself to be as aware of your mental health as you are your physical health.

I so wish this day came to be after Mark had sailed off into the sunset after a short stint in the Shady Acres Home for the Old & Brilliant. That is not how it turned out, and in every way, my life came to an abrupt halt on that Tuesday afternoon. The dark side claimed Mark, and for me it often feels like that side won, but by remembering how he lived and not how he died, it does not get the final say. On behalf of Mark, who is with me with every breath I take, and our family, thank you for being here and honoring his well-lived life.”

Recently there have been some high profile deaths by suicide in the news. These affect me greatly. I am too familiar with the aftermath of a decision that cannot be undone. Part of me feels grateful that Mark’s suffering is over for him, but it didn’t go away. It got transferred. I know that was never his intent but it was the result.

I struggle with suicide awareness information (especially the kind posted on social media) because I don’t believe that someone teetering between life and death is capable of googling the phone number of a suicide hotline. I may be very, very wrong about that but I can tell you with absolute certainty that whenever Mark spoke of suicide in all the years I knew him, every single time he said he couldn’t believe somebody could do that.

Instead I think we should all start being a little more honest about our lives. That there are traumas that have taken root in us that we can’t outrun or outwork, that this constant chasing of stuff is siphoning the life out of us, that periods of sadness and loneliness are not something to be ashamed of but rather our common denominator, that life is often incredibly difficult, that it’s easy to look on the bright side when everything is going your way but finding it when you’re flat on the ground is work. I am doing the work and it’s the hardest thing I’ve done in my life. Some days joy is right in front of me wildly waving, and other days it comes at the end of the day when I can crawl into bed and go to sleep.

I like to think my symposium will be after a short stint in the Shady Acres Home for the Wild-Haired-Bohemian-Gypsies, my trading cards will be limited because that’s how you create demand and drive the price up, and I’ll fly away to my everything. But now there’s a life to figure out, to be thankful for, to write about, to honor. It’s not what I wanted or ever imagined but I can tell that something is growing from it.

In the meantime, let’s all agree to stay here, shall we? So that when it is our time to see all our beloveds again, we can look at them and say, “You won’t believe the life I’ve lived since you left.”

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12 thoughts on “Somebody’s Everything”

  1. This is one of most touching Tributes to Mark that I have ever been fortunate enough to
    Read. Not having your writing skills, I have to try and tell you how much this touched
    My heart. After learning about the Symposium and how it was held, I loved the part where you spoke about all of us who go through things that are difficult and yet we don’t
    Share our difficult times. Your writing is a Gift that I hope someday you put in a Book.
    Meanwhile I will read your Blog and celebrate Mark’s life with you and the family you
    Raised and are so proud of.
    I am so happy you said yes to that first date. Tom and I speak of him often and our
    Conversations always end in a story that Tom tells me and we laugh , so grateful to
    Have certain memories. Mark was definitely your everything.
    Judy & Tom ❤️

  2. F&*$! That was beautiful. That is everything. Your tribute was so touching. The last 4 paragraphs say everything…everything that constantly circles inside my brain…succinctly and elegantly written. Thank you.

    P.S. Mine was a Tuesday afternoon, too.

  3. Kathy, I don’t always read your posts on the day they are sent. Sometimes I need a quiet moment in the house or physical activity to put me in just the right place to read your thoughts about Mark and you and the kids. Today I had a morning yoga class, with heart openers, and then a brisk walk for fifty minutes returning to a quiet house. I was very ready to focus on your world. “Somebody’s Everything” is just so well paced between the past and the present memories of Mark and you and the kids and your knowing observations about suicide awareness. Grief can throw one’s world into a new stratosphere and finding the ground, as you put it, requires difficult and personal work. I admire you for doing it and sharing this incredible narrative.

    Just so you know, Mark’s mass card is carefully tucked away in a box with mass cards of people I love and miss. He is in good company.

  4. Loved this Kathy. And, the part about suicidal thoughts and the hot-line!! My exact thoughts. I just discussed this same thing with my husband. It’s all
    mind boggling to me. There are people in my life that I do worry about at times. I pray for them , very often… daily … we just never really know what a person is truly thinking and how far this person would go to end it all. It’s scary as heck. I hate it and I hate this happened to you. I’m so sorry.

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