
Navigating The Complex Lattice of Family Relationships
I would think there should be some class, some group therapy, to prepare families for big reunions and holidays. Some basic training on how to conduct ourselves. Only family can push our buttons: chronically self-absorbed aunts rifling through our kitchen cabinets, parents making hostile, passive-aggressive comments at the dinner table, asking leading questions, browbeating us—politely—all evening long. Most of these people have either no awareness or no consciousness of how much their visit is dreaded. Not because we don’t love them but because we do.
Tough Love
				While searching for some art for this essay I discovered I 
				Will Follow, a brilliant, quiet, contemplative work by Ava 
				DuVernay. DuVernay has posted an extremely unconventional 
				trailer, bereft of the usual noise and subsonic rumble most 
				Hollywood trailer begin with. The trailer simply flutters open 
				pages of a book and DuVernay (or her editor) tell a story with 
				simple pictures. Salli Richardson-Whitfield, in a mesmerizingly 
				subtle and grounded performance, is spending time with her dying 
				aunt, played with sumptuous élan by Beverly Todd. There is no 
				Crackberry in her hand. No television blaring in the background. 
				Auntie had her complete attention and they were enjoying each 
				other the way people used to enjoy each other before everybody 
				got iPods. This was how my grandmother and I used to spend time. 
				I’d walk the mile or so to her house to bring her the paper on 
				Sunday. The paper cost a quarter but she’d give me a dollar and 
				I’d feel like a rich man for the rest of the day. I didn’t go 
				there for the dollar, though. I went there for the peace. I went 
				there to get away from my sister, whose name may as well have 
				been Loki (sideways geek reference). My grandmother and I would 
				sit and spend time. I’d watch the cherry trees bloom in her back 
				yard and listen to stories, listen to wisdom. Sometimes we’d 
				watch TV. She’d pull something out of the fridge at random and 
				heat it up—some leftover afterthought that would taste like a 
				four-star gourmet meal. I was always proud of my mother for her 
				sacrifice, for how she took life on, how she never gave in or 
				gave up. But here was the cost: my mom was not around a lot of 
				the time and when she was she was exhausted from working so hard 
				and from taking care of us. These moments, these formative 
				years, belonged to my grandmother. Mom resented that. She wasn’t 
				always happy to discover I’d wandered over there. But, more than 
				the crowded apartment I grew up in, my grandmother’s house was 
				home. Not because it was bigger or nicer, but because she was 
				there.
				
				When this woman died, I had to beg my mother to come to her 
				funeral.
				
Listen To The Stories: Richardson-Whitfield in I Will Follow.
When did family become so complicated?
				The premise of I Will Follow is a woman, who had been 
				living with her dying aunt, dealing with moving on after the 
				aunt’s passing. The aunt’s daughter—her cousin—arrives and 
				appears to channel her grief over her mother’s death or her 
				guilt over not having been there for her into aggression toward 
				the cousin who’d taken her place in her mom’s life. I have, at 
				this writing, yet to see this film but I find this to be an 
				extraordinarily relevant premise.
				
				Family is extremely complicated. We are hard-wired to engage 
				with family in ways we never would with even our closest 
				friends. Often, family are not friends at all. They are people 
				we’d likely not be drawn to or engage with if we were not 
				related to them. We didn’t choose them, they’re just here. We 
				often have nothing in common except a shared lineage of people 
				too drunk to use birth control. We tolerate, appease, overlook, 
				engage, pursue family. We beat our own selves up when we fail to 
				do so. How could you do that? She’s your cousin? She’s 
				also a nosy busybody who can’t keep her mouth shut. No one can 
				disappoint us like family. No one can wound us like family. I 
				would suppose, over the course of my lifetime, the majority of 
				stress in my life was family-related while the majority of my 
				joy took place outside of it.
				
				Family members who establish boundaries with family, who do not 
				put themselves through the constant turbulence of the genetic 
				crossfire, are often seen as heartless. But family requires some 
				self-discipline and, often, self-defense. Almost everyone I know 
				has the same movie playing in their head: this contented, happy 
				group of relatives who love one another unconditionally and who 
				all get along. The Norman Rockwell painting with the family 
				gathered ‘round as mom places the turkey on the dining room 
				table. Reality, as most of us know, is a lot tougher. Love, in 
				my family, was rarely unconditional. It usually came with 
				strings.




