Finally a family
- Share via
Lolita Harper
The worn photos were always beautiful but along with color, they
lacked a personal connection.
Nancy Reaves could always look at the faces of her distant
Norwegian relatives but she could not recognize the life behind their
solemn stares. She couldn’t place where the barn stood in relation to
the river. She didn’t know the people or places that helped mold who
she is.
“All these pictures were up on a wall since I was a young girl and
I never knew who they were,” Reaves said.
In two weeks that will all change. Reaves will meet her Norwegian
family for the first time Aug. 8.
The Santa Ana Heights resident is cramming to learn Norwegian and
is anxious to try her grandfather’s favorite rice pudding dish. She
giddily bounces in her seat when talking about boarding a plane. And
excitedly points to a picture of the farm she will be staying on.
“It’s all coming together for me after all these years,” she said.
A FEARFUL BEGINNING
Reaves inherited the family photos when her grandfather passed
away. Her grandparents were the only relatives she knew. They helped
raise her and picked up the pieces when life would come tumbling
down.
Reaves and her sister, Jane, knew when they were younger as the
Nes sisters encountered, cruelty and mistreatment no child or adult
should be subjected to. Reaves is very open with her past, as she
moved on, and said she encountered mental, verbal, violent and sexual
abuse.
She tells her story without tears or shame. She tells her story of
surviving the demons that haunted her alcoholic mother, who would
whirl in and out of her life, always bringing a new forms of pain and
sorrow. Each time her mother would come in and swoop the girls up and
take them away, the grandparents would frantically search for them
and brace for the calm of the storm. When the mom would leave, they
would try to offset the trauma but despite their attempts at a normal
life, the family was always in hiding, Reaves said, hoping the mother
would not find them this time.
Because they lived in fear, the Nes family distance itself from
their Norwegian kin. And when her grandparents died, following the
deaths of both her father and mother, Reaves thought her only human
connection to those mysterious pictures died as well. She kept the
keepsakes and continued with life. Reaves moved to the beach, got
married, had children, fell in love with life and moved on. Every so
often she would sift through the pictures and wonder.
One photo in particular always grabbed her attention. The
porcelain face and dark lips of a beautiful young woman look intently
at Reaves.
“I knew I knew that face,” Reaves, 55, said. “This face was in my
memory of being at my grandfather’s house.”
An e-mail last year put a name to the face.
She almost deleted it when she first read it. Something about
distant relatives and inheritance. None of her family knew where she
was. Then a call came to her Costa Mesa home and after many questions
and many answers, she realized the man was legitimate. He set up an
account for the money and put her in touch with her cousins in
Norway.
“The money part was great but beyond that nothing could be greater
or more significant than inheriting my whole family,” Reaves said.
STILL A LITTLE GIRL
She and her husband Tim leave for Norway on Aug. 8. They will take
with them pictures of their five children, stories from their
childhoods and a lot of love. Nancy Reaves is in constant contact
with her cousins overseas and can’t wait to meet them. She never felt
completely validated until she made this connection, she said.
“And they all love me,” she said. “They are writing me and
e-mailing me all the time. They are taking the time to tell me about
their lives and ask about mine. They love me.”
The innocent gleam in her eye and her school-girl giddiness proves
her relatives will, in fact, meet that little girl they were kept
from. They will learn of her triumph and she will boast of her
family.
“I am a good mommy and a good wife,” Reaves said. “That is all I
want to be and everything I am good at. My life revolves around them
and protection.”
Everything in the Reaves home is a game of dress up. Yard sales,
family get-togethers, dinners, birthdays -- you name it and they are
in costume. It was her imagination that saved her from the harsh
realities of her traumatic childhood, Reaves said, and that fantasy
world plays a huge role in her reassuring reality.
“Personality was my winning way,” she said. “I learned to
overshadow all the negative with the positive, so now we have fun.”
But the biggest godsend in her life, she won’t have to explain. He
will be there, with her, sharing the life changing moment with his
wife.
“He is a great man who has kept it all together somehow,” Reaves
said of her husband Tim.
“She is so excited about going to Norway,” Tim Reaves said. “She
has researched and e-mailed and is just counting down the days.”
This is just another example of the miracles that await around
even the darkest corners, Reaves said.
“People who go, ‘Oh woe is me,’ need to get over it,” Reaves said.
“Put it behind you because it is what it is and guess what? It’s
over.”
And those who, thankfully, have not endured similar struggles
should realize their true good fortune.
“For all those people who have families and don’t appreciate them,
maybe they will take a second look,” Reaves said.
* LOLITA HARPER writes columns Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and
covers culture and the arts. She may be reached at (949) 574-4275 or
by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.