Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Latch-Key Child

Later on when I was more capable of doing something to get my own breakfast my mom bought boxes of the new product called Instant Breakfast. I mixed it with milk and it was my breakfast every morning- chocolate of course. I am not a fast food fan but this really enabled me to leave for school with some nourishment.
My mother gave me a key to our front door so I could get in our house when the school bus dropped me off every afternoon. I can’t remember where I stored the key but it didn’t matter because no matter what I tried to help my childlike memory, I was incessantly losing, misplacing or forgetting my house key. That meant habitually going to a neighbor who had a spare key to bail me out.
One day my mo came up with a brilliant idea. She purchased a long silver chain and hung the key onto it. Every morning I had to wear my new necklace inside my clothes so I would not lose or misplace the house key. It worked quite well as I rarely forgot to wear the new jewelry. When I got home I’d pull out and stretch the chain so the key reached the door lock. Thus I entered the empty house except for the times we had one of my best friends living there- a dog.
Mom insisted I call her on our phone at her office as soon as I got inside the house which I did every day. I give her credit for using her ingenuity to do the best she could to provide and care for me with what she had to work with. I just missed her all the time and always longed for more time with her and time to be physically near her which happened rarely. Mom was never highly affectionate but I knew she cared.
I did not know until many years later that there was a name for me- “Latch-key child.”

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

School Buses & Prescription Drawers

Although I lived most of my weekends with grandparents thankfully my mother made every effort to keep me living with her during the week. Obstacles were numerous for my mother Elle as she had to work a full time job during the day and then work part-time several evenings per week. I remember her working evenings at a huge Bingo hall. Occasionally I tagged along with her on nights when Gran was there playing Bingo. I could sit with Gran trying to occupy myself as the evening passed. I was quiet and well-behaved for them so it wasn’t too difficult.
After Great grandmom died there was no one available to help my mother so we began a routine when I was in the first grade that played itself out for years. I awakened in the morning to a clock radio that played my favorite station. This became increasingly important during my teen years when there was no real life without the radio or records playing. Somehow I got myself out of bed most mornings and proceeded to get ready for school. In the early grades (until mom felt I was old enough to safely walk to school) mom paid extra for the service and made me take a bus to school that picked me up every morning at certain time on our street. If I wasn’t there on time I missed the school bus.
It amazes me now how often I was able to get myself ready for school and to the bus stop in time. I was quite young, only about six or seven and I honestly did not have a routine or know what to do in the morning to get myself ready. I never thought it through but somehow I got dressed and ready enough to leave the house in the nick of time. I still have a school photo from the second grade where my hair was not combed or fixed before leaving home that day. I did not know that our school photos were scheduled for that day so I came back looking rather homely with my long messy locks.
There were too many days when I failed to get my young self to that bus stop in time. Missing the bus was a chronic problem. Solving it was also my own issue to deal with and each time I chose between one of two alternatives. Occasionally I would go knock on the door next and ask for help with my plight of missing the bus. The father of the family next door would then drop me off in his car at my school on his way to work. Sometimes I’d be forced t listen to his mini-lecture about how often I missed the bus. Naturally I listened to his reprimands and admonishments in silent agony. Mostly when I missed the bus I would resign myself to staying home that day. Eventually mom would arise and get herself out the door to her job and I would spend the day alone playing or watching television. My favorite game was playing school. I had a blackboard on the wall in my bedroom and I became the strict teacher to numerous imaginary students.
I had little way to learn many skills such as time management. To this day the passage of time never quite feels as it actually is. It could be 10 am or 3 pm and my body can be clueless. Fifteen minutes or two hours may have passed without me aware of much difference. Since I was usually late or arriving in the nick of time, I am still bored and uninterested to arrive any place early. I don’t know what to do with myself if I show up early so I end of stuffing in another productive activity that results in my just on time arrival. This is also why I carry books everywhere- in case there are spare minutes in between events. The virtue of getting some place fifteen minutes early seems more like a waste of valuable time than a positive quality. The struggle with time was excusable and sad while a little girl but now it could be categorized as a character flaw- something I need to grow up and out of.
Preparing breakfast for myself was more than I knew how to do so most mornings in those early grades I ran for the school bus without any breakfast. My mom was always asleep in the morning. She never was a morning person and the fact that she was able to keep her day jobs must have been due to the skill she brought to the business when she did arrive late for work or after missing a day of work because she just couldn’t get out of bed to ever make it in that day.
As I grew older there were too many mornings when my mother forced me to call her office and tell them my mother was too sick to come to work that day. I absolutely hated making the call and speaking to anyone at her office. I was so on the spot. Any protest on my part met with such insistence from my mother that I felt helpless as I went through the motions of doing something extremely uncomfortable.
I knew so much of the time that Mom wasn’t actually sick but just tired and hung over form being out late and sometimes drinking alcohol. Once I made the phone call for her she fell back into bed and disappeared from my day. I remember nights and mornings hearing mom in the bathroom sick form too much alcohol. I realized years later that she abandoned alcohol since it too regularly made her sick. Instead she turned to prescription drugs to ease the struggle of her reality. Sometimes I opened one of my mom’s dresser drawers and stared at the rows of prescription bottles lining the inside. I didn’t know what they were for but there were a lot of bottles. Several times in later years doctors made comments or expressed concern to me about my mother’s abuse of drugs. I did not understand nor did I ever discuss it with anyone. I was, as usual a quiet observant bystander.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Made for Relationship

                     Gran (Mildred) and me in our Easter outfits
Anyone learning about my life can easily observe the insufficiency of male input and support. This was, I believe, the foundation or lack thereof for what would become a near lifelong struggle and the setup for my largest life mistakes.
There was George Sr. who had emigrated from Russia when he was sixteen and later married Anna who was ten years his younger.  Pop as I called him tended things in the grocery store but wasn’t as easy going with customers as Gran. Pop was a nice enough man who was around the house to eat meals, watch television and nap in his recliner while Gran was usually in high gear industrious mode cooking and keeping her house spotless. She even trained me to use the towel after my shower to wipe down the entire shower area to avoid mildew and water spots. I never remember either of them driving and doubt they ever had a driver’s license. When Gran took me to the market we took public transportation- buses and trolleys.
                                           Young Mildred
Dutch, my other Pop married my grandmother Mildred when my mother was young. Pop went to the steel mill every day. I remember the black metal lunch box with a silver metal handle he carried back and forth. He often went fishing on his own from piers or on boating day trips and would clean and cook his own catches- yummy. When home he was usually in his recliner watching television. When I traveled anywhere with Gran and Pop, Gran and I were passengers. Gran had her license and I recall two or three times when she drove instead of Pop during long road trips in the summertime. During these trips we would often drive for hours at a stretch and on the occasion that Gran decided she wanted to take the wheel Pop and I softly moaned and were on utter edge until Gran decided she’d had enough and allowed Pop back in the driver’s seat.
It is impossible to explain the way Gran drove but it was like she did so many things- with great earnest and by her own rules. The best way to explain passenger anxiety when Gran drove is telling about when she went bowling. Most people understand that a bowling ball is held closely until your arm nears the floor of the bowling alley where you then sort of lay and push the heavy ball onto the floor, giving it direction so it glides down the polished wood surface.
Once we had an extended family bowling outing. Pop was in a bowling league one night a week but this time it was a family event and even though I was a little kid I played with the adults. As usual I was the only kid in the group. Gran knew how to bowl but her lack of experience and skill evidenced itself when she kept earning low scores by throwing gutter balls. After numerous frustrating attempts just to keep the ball from the gutter and hits a few pins, Gran’s patience was worn so she bowled her own way.  
With gusto, Gran’s fat jiggling, powerful arm released the ball while her arm was still high up in the air. The ball descended quite a ways before making its first loud thud (intermingled with Gran’s growls and hisses) as it bounced onto the wooden alley. Then it continued loudly bouncing its way halfway down the alley until finally reaching its destination in the left gutter. Amazingly, no one said a word. Everyone in the family froze with mouths wide open in astonishment. I laughed uncontrollably inside but couldn’t dare show it and risk incurring Gran’s wrath. Embarrassed? Everyone was so much so that no one knew quite what to do except pretend everything was normal. So is there any wonder why I rejoiced that I would live to see another day when Gran gave the steering wheel back to Pop?
Even with her foibles Gran (Mildred) loved me as best she knew how which for her meant taking me places, even the adult places where she and Pop went like race tracks, bars, casinos for slot machine games, Bingo halls. It also meant buying me games toys and especially dresses with matching socks, purses, gloves and hats for Christmas and Easter. If my mother wasn’t guilt tripped into buying something for me then Gran probably would if I asked her. Mom told me years later that she bought me things trying to make up for her not being with me so much of the time. Consequently I had more clothes than several children needed. It was fun to get something new and enjoy wearing it but it didn’t help alleviate the loneliness and fear for very long, not very long at all. Sometimes the stuff seemed to be all I had. The promise of anything satisfying our yearnings besides real personal relationship with our infinite-personal Creator and with other humans made in His image falls quite hollow within us and the fall comes all too quickly.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

The New England Primer

                                  The New England Primer

I’ve continued pondering how death is censured from our everyday modern lives. Our lives, our children are shielded from the realities of death and we have limited involvement with the dying. Death is set apart as if it is not really part of life. This was not always the case as evidenced by The New England Primer first published in 1777 in Boston for use in American public schools “for the more easy attaining of the true reading of English”. The New England Primer was the first textbook ever printed in America and was used to teach reading and Bible lessons in our schools until the twentieth century. In fact, many of the Founders and their children learned to read from the Primer. The textbook by which most American children learned to read would likely lead to a federal court case if any government school teacher tried using it today.
 Most of the verses and poems in the primer were meant for memorization by the youngest students. One old poem clearly reveals how children were not limited in their exposure to and awareness of death. This was before the discovery of antibiotics which can save the life of many babies and children who would have died from infections. Children were taught that sooner or later we all must die and therefore being spiritually prepared for this inevitable important change was vital.
I in the burying place may see,
Graves shorter there than I,
From death’s arrest no age is free.
Young children too must die.
My God, may such an awful sight,
Awakening be to me!
Oh! That by early grace I might
For death prepared be.

The Primer also contains a bedtime prayer children memorized that again kept them mindful of the fragility and preciousness of human life.

Now I lay me down to my sleep,
I pray the Lord my soul to keep,
If I should dies before I wake,
I pray the Lord my soul to take.

Read The New England Primer online for free at http://www.sacred-texts.com/chr/nep/1777/index.htm

Monday, February 14, 2011

Cultural Taboo

Great grandmom became too ill to continue living with us or to help care for me just after my first year of school. Other than the amusement of our silly arguments in which I taunted the poor woman, she was kind to me and she was there so I wasn’t by myself especially in the mornings and when I got home for school. I wish she had shared with me why giving me the gift of a Bible was so important to her. She never said anything about it that I recall but she beamed with pride and happiness when she presented it to me. I’m glad that I still have her gift after all the years.
The last time I saw Great grandmom was when my mother took me to visit at one of her son’s homes. She was lying in a bed and relatives were standing around in the room. Great grandmom kept repeating that she wanted to jump in the river.  I don’t know if she was in pain and imagined that a river of water would soothe her or whether she was seeing some sort of river in her own mind’s eye. This was the only time I saw what used to be commonplace- a family member dying at home.
Nowadays it is rare that anyone dies in their own home. It happens in hospitals, nursing homes and hospices but rarely in a home. It’s the same with birth. People used to be born and die sometimes in the same house and even the same room. Those days in America are long gone. While it is fantastic that we have so much life saving methods available in our modern world something is lost. We are shielded from death and it has become a culturally taboo topic as sex once was. When people observed birth and death as part of life from childhood I think they gave more consideration to the fragility of life and the reality of their own mortality.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Great grandmom

       Great-grandmom and me (really my step-Great-grandmom, Dutch’s mother)
The final divorce between Elle and George took awhile but there were no further attempts at reconciliation. Elle would live in the same house until her own retirement decades later.  The house had two apartments, upstairs and downstairs. I grew up living in the downstairs apartment with the sounds of renters upstairs.
Around that time Elle took me to stay with my grandmother Mildred for the weekend and soon I was taken there routinely every weekend. I wish I could recall a weekend in the apartment with my mom. I sort of liked going to Gran’s house for the weekend but usually I wanted to stay home with my mother. Naturally I kept such feelings to myself. I don’t know if my mother ever knew how much I wanted to stay with her.
There were many times I went to stay with George who ended up living most of his life with his parents where his alcoholic lifestyle was accepted. Once I started school I spent a good deal of time with them since Anna was available to care for me during the day. This is where I gained so many lessons in housekeeping and business savvy. Staying with Anna did not mean I had a good deal of time with my dad George since he spent most daylight hours sleeping.
Elle’s step-father Dutch had an elderly mother who Elle brought to live with us during the weekdays so she could watch me during the day. The only Great-grandmom I ever knew stayed with us until I finished first grade. She was given one of the two bedrooms that used to be mine and I had to sleep in bed with my mother. Giving up my room was not something I welcomed and I remember Great-grandmom and I arguing over whose bedroom it was. “It’s my room” I would say. Great-grandmom would respond with “No it’s my room, it’s mine.” Back and forth we’d go like not one but two children arguing over whose room it was.
Quiet though I was I must have been mean to Great-grandmom. Every morning before I left for school in the first grade she would coax and plead with me to eat my breakfast. She was the first amongst an array of people who took on the challenge of trying to get me to eat. Anna also became a crusader and told me thousands of times to eat in both English and Russian. So often I had little appetite and did not feel like eating. It may have had something to do with the availability of sweets. Given a choice I’d take the chocolate donut instead of the hot oatmeal. I knew no better.
It was very kind of Great-grandmom to come live with us during the weekdays and take care of me. I rarely, if ever, saw my mother before leaving for school in the morning. Thankfully Great-grandmom was awake and saw me off to school that entire first year of elementary school. She was also there in the evenings when my mom was either working her night job at the Bingo hall or out on dates.
Great-grandmom gave me a gift I still have. It is a King James Bible with a white leather cover. I remember how happy she was when she gave it to me. It was the only Bible I had growing up. I don’t recall any conversations about why the Bible was important enough to be a special gift to me. Mainly I just remember vexing her poor soul over my not eating and teasing her about the bedroom we both claimed as our own.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Multigenerational Divorce

               Phyllis Schlafly with President Ronald Reagan
I’d like to stand on a worldwide house top and yell so everyone could hear and really comprehend- Divorce sucks! It is never pretty. Though sometimes it is necessary, divorce never happens without splintering and wounding lives. Divorce is now a national travesty that undermines the very root of stability for any society. Where are values of lifelong commitment? I hope the next generation observes my generation to learn how they do not want to live. We’ve set a morally bankrupt example for personal integrity and family strength.
I hate divorce but it happened to my grandmother, my mother and me. I don’t believe in it except if necessary when there exists unrepentant adultery, abuse or abandonment. I bet that every couple still together experienced times when they wondered whether they made a mistake in the person they married, contemplated separation or divorce and did not love or even hated one another. Statistics clearly show that when couples weather such storms they do come out on the other side with stronger marriages. Statistics also show that couples who live together before marriage have a much higher divorce rate. Who promised happily ever after easy? If God says that “love is stronger than death” than why is there so much divorce? How do our hearts become so hardened?
I believe there is a lot to be said for doing what is right even when it is hard. That’s one reason I like the book Jane Eyre. In the story Jane does what is right even when it is unbelievably difficult. We are not much about that kind of morality nowadays. Have I exemplified such a standard? Far from it! I’ve failed miserably in this important area of life. Divorce has plagued my family for too many generations. It has brought untold heartbreak to my family, especially my own children.  Who we marry is the second most important decision of our lives, just second to what we do with our relationship with the living God. Deciding well with the help and counsel from those who love you is wise. Yet there is always risk in every life decision.
After George and Elle divorced I lived with my single mother and numerous stays with grandparents. I don’t know how many years I hoped and fantasized about my parents getting back together, as most children do. It is natural for the child’s heart to crave parental togetherness. Unquestionably, what is best for children are two parents together for life- a mother and a father.  It is ideal if the mother can be with her child and simply present and available. Someone needs to be there to take care of a child and in America today there is too often no one home at all. Children are farmed out to babysitters and daycare centers- forced away from their parents at such early ages. It makes my heart very sad because I’ve seen what it is like in the centers, however good they may be. I’ve seen the sad eyes of children who yearn just to be with mom or dad.
If anyone understands that there are times and situations that require children to be separated from parents it is I. It happened to me and then my children when I became a single mother. I had to work and leave them. There was no alternative but to become a careerist.  I am just saying that when it is not necessary any child will fare better just being with mom.  This is not complicated. I know the arguments. I would never condemn or point any fingers since they would only point right back to me and my own failures. My personal failures do not diminish the timeless truths about what is best for children and families. I pray that the scourge of unnecessary divorce stops in my own family, in America and the rest of the world. Divorce always brings sadness and severing of lives and it is most definitely a dirty word.
Back on top of the house I shout that parenting the next generation is the highest calling one could have! For women who want to be mothers and have a vital, meaningful career- look for role models of women who have “done it all” but not all at the same time.  We have seasons of our lives.  Regardless of what you may think of her views, Phyllis Schlafly, named one of the 100 most important women of the 20th century by the Ladies' Home Journal, and was the 1992 Illinois Mother of the Year, is an interesting example of a woman who has done much of it “all” as a world changing woman but not all at the same time. She stayed with her six children, got a law degree and much more. I need to say that if all I ever did as an adult was give birth to my children that would be enough- enough that is meaningful, life giving and intrinsically important and valuable. Motherhood is enough! Maybe part of the family splintering is the result of parents stressing and exhausting themselves trying to be and do everything. Radical as it may sound, even without children, being a faithful, loving, supportive wife is enough!  See Phyllis’ bio at http://www.eagleforum.org/misc/bio.html

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Memories of Mom and Dad Together

Dangerously standing up in my carriage- asserting myself early onJ I wanted to stand up and be counted!
Sadly, by Mother’s Day of that coming year George left Elle and me for good. After that I would never again experience what it was like with a mother and father together except when visiting the homes of friends. I do treasure a few memories of them together before their final separation that would lead to their divorce sometime between my third and fourth year of life..
There are a few snapshots in my mind of my mother being home and preparing supper for our family. I loved her being there. I remember having the chickenpox and her being there while I recovered on the sofa. I would stare at mom in the kitchen as she was busy preparing food and cleaning up the dishes. I loved the feeling I had just watching her being there. Having my mom nearly would become one of the obsessions of my childhood. I craved being near to her and was painfully homesick whenever I was apart from her. It would take many decades into adulthood before I found adequate strength to detach enough to stop craving my mother’s love and acceptance. I simply cannot understand a child who does not long to be close to their mother (regardless of the circumstances) since that was always my default mode and my mother was so often my world.
There is a strong memory of George my dad coming home from work and me jumping on his lap as he sat on the sofa. When he got home from work I was so happy and wanted to be with him more than anything. I’d sit on his lap bouncing or try to open his falling eyelids with my little fingers. George’s eyes kept closing and I hated that. “No no Daddy! Don’t go to sleep” I said. “I’m not going to sleep just resting my eyes” he would say. Sometimes he would bounce me on his knees to nursery rhymes. He was fun and made me laugh and feel so happy. No one could ever be afraid when on Daddy’s lap! He must have been so tired after working a long day at the steel mill at a job he probably hated. Unfortunately he didn’t keep most of his jobs for very long. His artist personality but mostly his drinking interfered with anything routine except time in the bar in the evenings.
I also recall times when Elle and George yelled at each other and he threatened to throw an old time radio at her. I think I usually started crying when they argued. I just wanted them to stop. I loved it when there was peace and harmony in our home. The surroundings were irrelevant. All that mattered was the two people so important to me- mommy and daddy.
A little child cannot understand why conflicts or arguments happen but they do have feelings about them. I believe that parents would do well to have their arguments and express conflicts when they have privacy apart from the children observing them. Watching conflict only makes a child feel insecure, afraid and the seeds of anxiety can be born before anyone knows it is happening. Children cannot comprehend adult conflicts and do best when they are protected from them as much as possible.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Three Years Old

                 The house Elle & George bought just before I turned three.
When my mother Elle tried to make things work out with George they returned to live with George’s parents Anna and George Sr. Elle worked during the day so Anna took care of me while tending to her household duties and helping my grandfather run the grocery store. My mother had tried to breast feed ne but it didn’t last long when she became so ill. I commend her for trying but wish I had been able to continue with the more natural way of feeding. I breast fed all my children while making every effort to eat well for their nutrition’s sake. I believe it significantly contributed to their health and well being. I wanted to do the very best for my children in every way I possibly could.
George decided he wanted to return to school and study art so Elle supported him in his ambition because he was a gifted artist. I remember watching him paint and draw. He mostly did oil paintings. When Elle discovered that George wasn’t faithful in either his work or studies with college she became increasingly frustrated and moved out again on her own with me.
George pleaded with Elle to get back together and finally she told him that she would do so only if they bought a house of their own. She wanted no more moving from apartment to apartment or back with his parents. George agreed and they bought a row house in the city. They moved in and got the place mostly ready and brought me from staying with my grandmother Mildred on Christmas Eve not long before my third birthday. It isn’t easy to bring back memories from our earliest years but I do recall being there in that house on that Christmas Eve. There were no curtain son the windows yet and my mom had draped some sheets on the front windows.
I was unaware of all the drama between Elle and George. I do however remember on that one Christmas Eve I felt really happy about both of them being there- all of us together. I can still feel those indescribable feelings of security, comfort, stability, strength and much more happening inside me with both of them present in my life and present together. I believe all children benefit more than we can know from having both parents with them and together. The value of this should never be diminished. It cannot always be this way in our broken world but it is certainly the ideal best for any child and they way we were designed to grow in families. That was a happy Christmas for me as a very little girl.
             Kitchen in that first house- with a gas stove!

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Asking & Listening: Fear's Antidotes


Now I think “If only”. If only someone had asked me questions when I was a child. Maybe I would have been able to express my inner world.
The fears that became a backdrop for my childhood robbed me of fun times. This makes me want to do something to rescue other children from unnecessary childhood fears. My own children were permitted to sleep with a light on or whatever made them feel more comfortable and secure. When they expressed any fear or uncertainty about the difference between reality and unreality I wanted to listen. I tried to demonstrate care do anything possible to soothe their questions, fears or concerns. Sometimes a child or even an adult can be stricken with fear over something seemingly trivial and insignificant. At times the fears of another can be laughable to us. We can help the one who fears see through the fear fog. With a bit of help any fearful person can recognize that entertaining unwarranted fearful thoughts is ludicrous.
This is one reason children need parents and people need each other. We can help reality test one another’s fears and provide rational feedback and guidance. It amazes me now that I lived so many years in isolation with my fears. No one knew how scared I was or of the monsters and vampires that roamed about my thoughts plaguing me, especially when the sun went down.
I wonder why the adults I my world didn’t question why I tried any possible maneuver to avoid bedtime. The aversion to bedtime established habits that to this day regulate my biological clock with and iron hand. I doubt I’ll ever achieve being a morning person though I believe it is more virtuous to be so. There’s something about hooting with the owls that seems less refined.
My recommendation to parents is try your best to keep asking your children questions. Not just factual questions that can be answered in one word or sentence such as “did you brush your teeth?”, “Do you want a snack?” or “Is your homework done?”? The art of asking open ended questions and then being a good listener makes one a good conversationalist and it can help others, especially kids, feel less isolated. Open ended questions are invitations to share and explore feelings. Factual reporting conversations can be boring, short lived and leave the participants feeling lonely even in a crowd.
I wish I’d heard someone ask questions like “What did you do all day with the babysitter?” “What was the movie about that you saw?” “What is that book about that you are reading and what things do you like about it?”  A simple question such as “What are you feeling?” was not something I learned how to ask myself or anyone else until I was an adult. I’m glad I learned about open ended questions and active listening. A good place to start for understanding these skills is the classic book How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie.
 

Friday, January 28, 2011

Possessions Can Own Us

The contrast between the housekeeping standards of my two grandmothers gave me a lot to consider. Mildred had a depression derived propensity to save everything and felt comfortable living amidst what for her was a tolerable amount of clutter. The mindset of saving anything and everything in case it might be needed had a stronghold on many Americans who painfully remembered what scarcity felt like during the difficult depression years.

Hoarding material possessions was considered resourceful. Stocking excesses of canned goods in rows on out of the way shelves was a habit adopted by many homemakers. No one wanted to be caught without enough food for their family in case inclement weather or a sudden economic downturn made purchasing food difficult. Canned foods would sometimes be stored for such long periods of time that it was impossible to know the can’s contents since the paper wrappers had worn off. Even if the food wasn’t edible anymore when one did open the can the presence of the canned items gave a sense of security.

Anna’s personal fastidiousness and impeccable housekeeping standards created an environment of simplicity and comfort. There was room to breathe and move about her house without a lot of stuff everywhere. Unlike Mildred and my mother Elle, Anna had no fondness for knick-knacks, trinkets and doo-dads that had no practical purpose except that they were somehow viewed as art.  Anna kept a few memorable items, mostly photographs and a few well cared for plants in her living room. The fact that I can’t recall seeing bugs in Anna’s house probably taught me to associate cleanliness with absence of unwanted critters. I believe Mildred did the best she knew how as do most of us and her home was a good place because she was there.

I have a personal distaste for anything resembling a knick-knack. Don’t get me wrong, I love art on the walls and beautiful things but have no desire to collect anything except meaningful relationships and possibly outdoor garden perennials. Too much stuff in the house makes me feel like I want to escape and run away from home. When the place is clean and uncluttered I breathe great relief and feel decidedly uplifted and happier. Anything we own actually owns us in that it requires cleaning, dusting or some form of maintenance!
The condition and decor of homes is one of many things I observed growing up. My mom, bless her, was very busy as a working mother. That fact combined with her awkwardness with homemaking meant our place was functional but to me it was never warmly welcoming or beautiful. It was home and for that I am thankful as too many kids can’t say they have a home. I was and am very blessed in always having a place to live. As I grew, it was from observing the homes of others that I acquired ideas that would change my philosophy on what a home should be as a place of refuge, safety and beauty for the people important to us and also as a place of hospitality and generosity.


One main thing I learned growing up is how I didn’t want to live. I guess most young people go through a time when they are convinced that they will live better or more effectively than their parents, do a better job of parenting and improve on the living of life in general. For me this desire to improve on life and the environments in which it was lived grew all pervasive. There was little I observed as a child that I wanted to consciously emulate.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

The Public Market & Garlic's Virtues

The way the city market looked. My grandparents had a scale and glass case for meats in their grocery store like the ones pictured here.
I enjoyed the trips Gran and I would take to the large downtown city market. Since there were no super stores this market housed the largest display and selection of foods I ever saw anywhere. The market had first been established in 1792 and today is the world's largest, continuously running marketplace. Farmers began selling their goods on Lexington Market's site after Colonel John Eager Howard, a hero of the American Revolution, gave permission for a market on a pasture in his family's estate. The market is named for the Revolutionary War's Battle of Lexington. In the first of a series of mid 20th-century fires in Baltimore public markets, Lexington Market burned to the ground in 1949. It was quickly rebuilt with the proceeds of a bond issue.
During my childhood visits to Lexington market it bustled with the activity of the meat, produce, seafood and bakery vendors as well as the steady stream of customers. The aroma of baked items and fresh fish frying made the adventure uplifting and memorable. The market was centered within a series of sidewalks and streets right in front of the city harbor. The entire scene was gray, dingy and in the outdoors one could see the brown and gray ships anchored in the harbor port. The air behind the market smelled fishy and salty at the same time. There was nothing glitzy or tourist worthy in the scene. The city harbor was an industrial pit.
Gran bought Jewish rye bread, Challah, and some type of dark bread from the market.  She let one of the breads sit out to get partially hard then rubbed fresh peeled garlic cloves on the hard rough slices until the clove disappeared. Then she added butter and salt to the garlic surface and fed me to my heart’s content with this vampire and germ chasing delight. I’ll probably enjoy longevity just from the massive amounts of garlic I ate as a child.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Strong Arms:Anna

My Gran (my Dad George’s mother) and my own baby. Even as she beautifully aged Gran was fit and maintained strong muscular arms and hands from her active lifestyle and hard work.

Gran on my Dad’s side was a fantastic cook. She took me on errands to the farmers market where she bought casing and ingredients to make her own sausage. I watched as she stuffed the casings until they looked like they would burst. After cooking them she sliced the large sausages into small pieces the way pepperoni is sliced. They tasted amazing. I especially liked the taste and texture of the whole mustard seeds dispersed with the meats.


Life happened in the kitchen. My grandmother’s meals were made from scratch. Fast food meant making a sandwich with deli meat and cheese. Cooking was a daily activity and kitchens were large enough to hold the table and chairs which was where family and visitors gathered. Cookbooks were never used and ingredients were measured only in the cooks’ mind. The value of fellowship over homemade, good food was implanted in my being by watching Anna keep her loved ones fed for years.  I learned how to be comfortable with kitchen experimentation though I also appreciate cookbooks.
Gran made her own sauerkraut using a lengthy method of rinsing and wringing the cabbage slices before preparing. A big family favorite dishes was Gran’s stuffed cabbage.  I watched as she carefully filled the soft cabbage leaves she had carefully pre-streamed with her mixture of meat, chopped vegetables and spices.
           Stuffed Cabbage the way Gran would pile the rolls on a plate on the kitchen table

Get Well Soup

This week we had winter sickness in our house so I made my own concoction which was a big hit in taste and comfort. The original version of this Get Well Soup recipe was from a long time friend but I’ve made my own adaptations which are always based on what ingredients I have on hand. Get Well Soup has a unique flavor you may either greatly enjoy or dislike. We like it.
Get Well Soup
2 quarts organic chicken broth
3 handfuls small orange lentils (the type used for Dal)
Organic chicken meat
Several organic celery stalks, chopped
6 organic carrots, grated
½ white onion, chopped
8-12 garlic cloves, chopped
1-2 large pieces fresh ginger root, peeled then grated
1 bunch organic flat parsley leaves sliced with kitchen scissors
1 can organic tomato sauce
Sea salt
Freshly ground pepper
Goya Adobo all purpose seasoning
Garlic salt
(Anything else you may have in the refrigerator or pantry)
Toss it all in a large pot then simmer for hours.

Grandmothers

                My Grandmother Mildred and me- she always dressed me in beautiful outfits.
Both of my grandmothers showed me love the way one imagines a grandmother’s love ought to be yet I often felt so lonely. My mother and Anna were the best loneliness chasers. Mildred adored me yet emotionally connecting with her for some reason usually alluded me. She and Dutch took me many places and bought me things but I was almost like a piece of the furniture when it came to emotions and my inner world. Gran died when I was sixteen and I remember feeling emotionless and numb. I loved her but emotionally detached as I was, I didn’t feel very close to her. Spending considerable time alone as a child set me on a course of holding in my emotions and thoughts. I didnlt know any differentand I didn’t know how to share anything and was extremely shy and scared to talk with anyone. The external world was largely superficial and my inner world was quite solitary.
Mildred with her auto in the 1950’s
My seamstress grandmother Mildred did her share of cooking and baking which I recall required long hours before important holidays such as Christmas. I tediously decorated her home baked cookies with colored sugars in whatever designs I imagined. It was Anna who took time to make breakfast for me, play card games with me and since all her work was home based she was available for careful observation. She made an effort sometimes to actually play with me. I grew up doing things alone and only occasionally having other girls to play dolls or games with so playing the ways children play is something I am still trying to learn.
                     My grandmother Mildred married Dutch when my mother Elle was eight years old

Business Women and Multi-Racial Friendship

My Gran and me (Anna, my Dad George’s mother)

The store my grandparents owned and operated was located at the front of their house. Their house was on the corner of the block and was designed to house a retail operation. On the corner of the city block facing the street was the door to the grocery store. Whenever someone opened the door to the store a large buzzer located near the ceiling in the doorway between the house and the store would echo throughout the house. It wasn’t an unpleasant buzzer but it was loud enough that one could hear it anywhere in the rest of the house. I think my grandparents took turns being on duty to respond to the buzzer so my grandmother could be free to go outside in the back yard to hang laundry or tend to her many household chores. In the summer when Gran was hanging laundry she’d put me n a tub of water to keep me cool. This was my swimming pool.
Cooling off in the hot summer time
When Gran wasn’t cleaning in the house she cleaned in the store. Everything was spotless and the inventory of canned and packaged foods was always neatly arranged. Gran arose in the morning before Pop and met the delivery man from the bakery. When I came for breakfast I knew I’d have my pick of the freshly baked goodies and chocolate donuts usually won out since my chocolate addiction began very early in lifeJ. These pastries would put Krispy Crème to shame. They were huge, fresh, warm, melt in your mouth delights. Gran also made fresh coffee every morning and workmen in the city and on their routes came by each day for coffee and pastries.
The corner store was where most people purchased all their groceries, paper goods and toiletries. This was before there were any super markets. Everything besides produce was purchased from my grandparent’s store. The competition was a farmers market in the city and truck gardeners who sold farm fresh produce from their wagons. I remember the wagons on the street curbs with melons, watermelons, and the largest brightest fuzziest peaces I’ve ever seen. The thought of those peaches makes my mouth water even now.
One summer day we got some peaches from a vendor and I asked Gran to cut the peach in half for me. Then I went outside and sat on the hot sidewalk next to a girl near my age who lived in the neighborhood.
 I offered her half of my peach and though she was surprised she was very happy to sit next to me as we shared the joy of peaches together. We were like two old crony men sitting having a beer or smoke together while passing the time enjoying one another’s company. When my Gran saw what I did she later gave me the biggest smile and kissed me as her way of congratulating me for what I’d done. My little girlfriend was black or colored as everyone said back then. The colored and white kids apparently weren’t accustomed to playing together but somehow I just didn’t know the difference. I can’t explain why but our differences barely crossed my mind and I thought she was such a nice girl I could play with and feel close to. I liked her and played with her any chance I got.
I think Gran must have been amused at my innocence and lack of awareness about racial prejudices. I suspect she was also inwardly, maybe even secretly pleased. I heard plenty of slang and derogatory racial prejudiced words but I don’t recall hearing this Gran speaking uncharitably about others. She was a business woman and I saw her treat her customers the same regardless of their skin color. She could have given seminars on sales skills she didn’t know she had. She always smiled when a customer walked in the door, respectfully greeted them and spoke kindly to them as she asked questions about what they needed and how she might help. Sometimes customer trickled in the store one at a time. Regardless of the endless housework beckoning her, Gran was never in a hurry as she patiently waited a customer shopped or wanted to chat. I’m certain Gran planted the seeds of salesmanship in my little heart and brain.
Anytime I was hungry I could go in the store and decide which type of meat I wanted sliced form the deli refrigerator with the glass window front. I watched so many times my grandparents would remove the large rolls of bologna, ham or whatever meat or cheese the customer wanted. They adjusted the large, frightening electric slicing blade to the desired width depending on how thin or thickly sliced they wanted their deli items. Every time the blade made a slice the motor made a very loud racket. Gran handled the deli machines as well as Pop though they were large and it took strength to push the electric slicer back and forth. Gran was a short woman but her arms must have been as strong as the arms of many men.
I strolled into the store when I had a hankering for cookies, candy and the like. Spoiled I was when it came to sweets. That combined with the fact that for some unknown reason no one took me to the dentist until I was about twelve years old, I am lucky to still have all my own teeth. The work in my mouth has put several dentists’ kids through college and probably paid off their dental school loans too. How I wish sealants were invented when I was a child. As I feasted on chocolate cupcakes, donuts, Tandy Takes, ice cream bars, every kind of chocolate candy, sweet tarts, fireballs, etc., no one ever mentioned this steady diet of sweets might not be the best thing for my teeth or overall health.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Art of Ironing & Where are the Sidewalks?

My dad George started out as a good husband and father but sadly the influence of alcohol addiction squelched his personal and professional growth. After separating from George for a short time Elle agreed to get back together and they returned to live with George’s parents Anna and George Sr., both Russian immigrants. Had it not been for my dad’s growing drinking problem, things could have gone well as the couple viewed this opportunity as a time to work, save and rebuild for their future. They wanted to provide well for their little daughter.
My grandparents Anna and George Sr. lived in the city where there were mostly concrete sidewalks with only a few trees. Sidewalks connected the houses (unlike so many neighborhoods nowadays) and streets because neighbor’s lives were usually bound up with one another. One knew their neighbors and was never really alone. During hot summer months people moved outside in the evenings to escape the hot indoor swelter and enjoy drinking iced tea while passing time socializing with each other.
Today the sprawling suburbs have few sidewalks because visiting or spending time with neighbors is a thing of the past. Obsessed with productivity, we’ve become giddy with our speed of light pace. There is little time to move slowly or listen to someone else unless there is something in it for us- some bit of information we need or something we wish to sell them. Listening for its own sake is a dying art. The “ministry of presence” is an art that could use reviving.
Anna took care of me while my mother Elle worked during the day. Anna was one of the most industrious, ingenious women I ever knew.  (My mother was probably quite the negotiator in the workplace but since she was working away from the home I rarely got to observe her in action.) My grandmother Anna was an amazing mix of diligent, resourceful homemaker and astute businesswoman. As I grew I was fascinated while observing her efficient, effective techniques for cleaning, ironing, cooking and dealing with customers in their family business. They owned the only neighborhood corner grocery store and Anna managed to do it all.
During my childhood I spent many days with my grandparents, especially Anna, and in their store. There are no recollections of my grandmother putting her feet up except for occasional television shows in the evenings as she got older. She married my grandfather when she was sixteen and her work ethic was sterling. My grandfather “Pop” worked hard in the store but perhaps since he spoke such broken English, he didn’t say much and it was Gran who was the life of the home. Since Pop came to American when he was sixteen and Gran when she was a bay they often spoke in Russian and I remember some words like the Russian word for “eat” because I heard it constantly form Gran as she coaxed my unfortunate finicky eating habits in her efforts to put some meat on my bones.
I still iron clothes using the same process as my Gran. First was “sprinkling” the garments one by one with water using her hand with water from a large bowl. Once the cotton item was good and damp it was rolled tightly to get the entire piece slightly damp and placed in the ironing queue. Then she would unroll one at a time and I’d watch as the wrinkled shirt body then the sleeves, collar, cuffs, pleats and shoulders were placed snugly on the ironing board in ways that made every wrinkle disappear. The shirt was transformed into a stiff, smooth work of art. While Gran ironed I sat in front of her and the ironing board watching her every move and the two of us talked. There is something comforting and secure about watching someone else work, observing their skill, especially when they are an adult and you are a child.
Gran’s house was always clean and orderly. People used to say they could ea off of her floor since it was so clean. There were rarely any bugs and Gran wiped up any mess as it was spilling. She preached to me that it was important above all else to have your kitchen clean and your bed made. If someone came into your home and you had the bed and kitchen in order (including the cleanliness of the kitchen floor) then you were a good housekeeper. This was a contrast to my other grandmother’s house  (Mildred’s) which was cluttered, often dusty and home to kitchen roaches that quickly scattered anytime one opened a kitchen drawer at night when looking for a fork or spoon. I didn’t like the roaches but wasn’t afraid of them either because they were always there as residents sharing the house with us.
I remember my mother had some big heave ho cleaning days on Saturdays and holidays when she would tackle chores all at once. Only my grandmother Anna demonstrated how to maintain an orderly clean home on a continuous basis. It meant cleaning as you go (I heard McDonalds has this cleanup philosophy), putting things away when finished using them and never letting anything get out of hand.
I liked Gran’s approach to homemaking though one would never have guessed it by observing the piles of clothes and stuff in my room at my mother’s house. Hanging things up regularly or putting things away was a dreadful thought and simply impossible until I grew to adulthood. Obviously I had much more than enough when it came to clothes, toys and stuff. My mom admitted years later that she would buy things for me because she felt guilty that she could not spend time with me when she was working so much. I was also Mildred’s only grandchild so some say I was spoiled. Indeed I was spoiled with stuff. I had plenty of toys and dolls to play with yet I suffered in quiet, shy solitude in the isolated world of my fears and loneliness.
As a child I always missed my mother terribly when not with her and longed to be near her. Although I liked visiting grandparents it was always painful because I carried the unspoken, ever present ache of homesickness. For me, home was wherever my mother was and the childhood fears of vampires and monsters that plagued me every night lessened when I was with her. I don’t know why I got so homesick or how I became so emotionally attached to my mother. I find it difficult to understand it when children do not long for their mother because it happened like breathing for me. I don’t think I learned how to yearn for my mother- it was who I was.
Houses built around 1920 in the neighborhood where my grandparents owned a neighborhood grocery store

Saturday, January 22, 2011

38th Anniversary Irony

Marv, my biological father

The day Elle walked away from Marv she had no idea what to do or how to handle her plight. She would not consider talking to anyone about her baby, not even her mother. She figured if she told her mother she’d receive a long lecture and what good could that do her? Elle’s decision for secrecy was motivated by one thing that screamed loudly and clearly to her- she felt ashamed, very ashamed. She was keenly aware that what she had done to get herself into a crisis pregnancy was wrong. No one needed to inform her of her mistakes.
Abortion was illegal but even so Elle would have been too afraid to consider such a course of action. Abortion was a dirty word because the consensus in the United States believed that abortion was a terrible word for snuffing out a very innocent human life. Other atrocities such as the slaughter of handicapped individuals, the elderly, Negroes, Jews or any form of racial genocide lessens in severity to abortion in only one way. Anyone already born has some possibility, however small or remote, of escape by fleeing from a life threatening predator. For an unborn human being there is virtually no chance for escape from the abortionist’s knife, suction or lethal medication. It is an attack on the most defenseless of humanity.
What if Elle had revealed the truth to Marv? Pondering life’s “what ifs” can become an endless exercise that proves both useless and vexing to mental and emotional health. Had Marv known about my existence before I could be born I suspect that my chances for survival would have been slim. Marv was liberally minded and from New York City where one of the abortion capitals of the world was located long before abortion was legalized in the United States. There were physicians such as Dr. Bernard Nathanson who ran the largest abortion clinic in the western world in New York and admits being “personally responsible for 75,000 abortions.”  Read Dr. Nathanson’s personal testimony here: http://www.aboutabortions.com/Confess.html
Dr. Nathanson, himself a Jew, later changed his views when his medical research confronted him with the unborn child’s full humanity. He forsook violence and began speaking out against legalized child killing.  Every citizen of the world should have the intellectual and moral honesty to hear Dr. Nathanson’s perspective on reality here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fbKwR5g6SCQ  It becomes a very slippery slope when one segment of humanity is viewed as not fully human…the slide to inclusion of other segments of society gets easier and we are desensitized to the intrinsic dignity and value all human life.  The American baby boomers that chose child killing for convenience are starting to find they are living out the full circle of their choices as they swiftly move to being the inconvenient and fiscally expensive elderly.
As irony would have it I am at this part of my own history on January 22, 2011 which is the 38th anniversary of the United States Supreme Court’s pro-abortion, legalized child killing decision in Roe versus Wade. Jane Roe whose real name was Norma McCorvey was the young woman used as a pawn by the attorneys in the case founded on a lie. Part of Jane Roe’s story is here: http://www.pregnantpause.org/people/roe.htm

The United States Supreme Court has been wrong more than once. The court was also wrong in the Dred Scott decision of 1857 which was strongly opposed by the Republican officials of that time, including Abraham Lincoln. http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/database/article_display.cfm?HHID=334
Since my biological father did not know I existed there were no attempts to end my life while I was pre-born. Elle bore her secret completely alone. She never told anyone…until 35 years later when she revealed the truth in a very unplanned and unexpected way. She had planned to never tell anyone, especially me.  The truth has a way of revealing itself however long it takes.  She feared that if I ever found out I would hate her. Nothing could have been further from the truth. When I did find out (which took a miracle) I felt only compassion for her. She was courageous and she gave me life.
Looking back, Marv may have been and probably was in love with Elle- at least she believed he was because he acted like it for a year. Had Marv found out the truth he would have never married Elle because she was a Gentile. At that time it just wasn’t done. So what would have been the alternatives? Would Marv have pressured Elle to go with him to New York to see a doctor there? I can only speculate based on the information I now have that I believe Elle might have faced such pressure. After all she was a young, impressionable woman alone with her shame, confusion and very uncertain future. Perhaps my chances for staying alive would have been slim.

Dr. Bernard Nathanson: I could have become one of his victims in NYC before his philosophic medical practice change.