Never Simple

An excerpt from the dark and poignant new memoir by Liz Scheier '00 about growing up in '90s Manhattan

Cover for the book "Never Simple"

I need to tell you something.

I looked up over the edge of my book. My mother was standing in the living room doorway in one of her endless array of flowered, crepey muumuusthe Shut-In Chic Collection, I called them privatelywith one hand on the knob, her face grave. I was on fall break, my freshman year at college; the last year, after this conversation, that I would consider my mothers apartment home. I let the book fall facedown on my chest.

W鞄温岳?

Well. She fiddled with the knob, coughed. You said you were going to take driving lessons and get a learners permit when you go back to school.

Thats right.

Thats going to be . . . hard. I dont think theyll give you one.

I laughed, a little offended. Im sure it cant be that hard. Millions of idiots do it every day.

Thats not what I mean. Look. More fiddling. Theyre going to ask you for identification, a birth certificate. You dont have one.

So Ill send away for a copy.

No. No. Will you listen to what Im saying? Theres nothing to get a copy of. I never filed a record of your birth at all.

I scrabbled my elbows under me and sat up, my breath sharp in my throat. Finally, I thought. This is it. A bureaucratic boulder she couldnt lie her way over. An official document even she wouldnt dare forge. At last: answers. I dont understand. Why not?

Well. Deep breath. I was married when you were born. But not to your father.

No one lies like family.

We lie to each other all the time. We lie to keep each other at a distance, to give ourselves some elbow room in the claustrophobic nuclear unit. To spare each others feelings. To cut short a conversation, or to begin one. To ensure that the artichoke-heart softness of our insides is sealed safely off forever.

As I write this, my two toddlers are in the next room, cheerfully belting out some interminable preschool song and throwing stuffed animals at each other. Theyre too young to ask me about my missing father, or my never-spoken-of mother, or why I am the way I am. Theyre too young to understand how much they dont know.

Then again, I havent started lying to them. Yet.

This is the story of digging out the biggest lie I was ever told.

 

Excerpted from NEVER SIMPLE: A Memoir by Liz  Scheier. Published by Henry Holt and Company. Copyright 息 2022 by Scheier, LLC. All rights reserved.

Published on: 05/24/2022