Thursday, October 8, 2009

My Other Mother


My mother was born in 1903 in Milwaukee. Her father was a German cooper and her mother was a Gypsy. A real Gypsy. Mother had had 3 sisters, all older, and was brought up Catholic. (She left the church when she was 15 because a priest wouldn't let her light a candle for her mother unless she paid for it. She challenged him about only rich people getting to heaven, turned and never went back to a Catholic church again.) They were poor, and as each sister married and moved out the house got less crowded. Her mother dropped on the street in 1910 and died on the spot. Nobody knows why she died. Nobody now knows where she is buried. A little girl was too much for her father, so she was sent to live with her oldest sister, married but childless. Her uncle abused her until she went out on her own at 14. The year was 1917. She got a job with the telephone company and moved in with another operator who became her life-long friend. She was an exotic beauty and soon was modeling for various photographers and artists. She was a flapper, a dancer and a general hell-raiser. She met her husband, my father, in 1921 and was married in 1925. The Roaring 20's. He was a hell-raiser too, so they raised hell together throughout the 20's and 30's and endured the Great Depression with a large group of close friends and a lot of bathtub gin. My father was a graduate electrical engineer and had steady work all through those tough years. She raised hell and had a ball. They tried for children, but she could not keep a pregnancy, so in 1937 they adopted my brother. That did it. Thank you Tom for me.
World War II came along and so did I. My father worked in D.C. during the war years (they had moved from Milwaukee to New York in the 30's) She stayed home coping with 2 boys, rationing and a old friend that desperately wanted her (and never getting her. He was an undertaker and she made my father promise that when she died "he" would never touch her body. I don't know if my father ever knew of the attempted betrayal by his friend).
After the war she spent the next 5 summers living in a surplus army tent at the end of a potato field hauling water a mile from the farm house at the end of the road, using a latrine and getting sprayed several time a summer with pesticide from a bi-plane crop duster. She got a tick bite and contracted what was diagnosed as tick fever, and was never the same again.
Enter my Other Mother.
She went down hill pretty fast after that. We moved into a new neighborhood in 1950 and she had an "nervous breakdown" shortly after that. She took loads of Valium when they came out, and got shock treatments several times in the early 50's. She suffered from a continuous string of physical problems, some "in her mind" to quote the family Doc., and some of an infirm body. She smoked like a chimney, lost weight, got emphysema and died in 1971 of heart failure.
I often wonder what life would have been like if my original mother had survived into my adolescence and adult life. She was such a risk-taker and hell-raiser there is no telling how the family would have been different. But she didn't. I miss them both and love them both for different reasons, and wish them well where ever they may be.

2 comments:

Matt said...

One of the things that's occurred to me as I read these stories and prose-pictures on your blog is not that I didn't know anything about you, your parents (my grandparents), and your childhood/young adulthood -- I did, and do. It's that I've "known" histories about these people in these times for years, but those histories were as much my own inventions as they were accurate narratives of the past. As a kid, I'd overheard bits of conversations here and there and seen old photographs, and I'd pieced them all together into something like a coherent whole that made sense to me, like stitching a quilt out of a pile of disconnected swatches.

So reading these posts of yours gives me a sense of deja vu... the narrative and the images are familiar, and I have the certain sense that I've "known" many of these stories all along. But even as an adult I've always filtered these stories through a four or five-year old's sensibilities, and made them into impressionist paintings with indistinct details and too-vibrant colors.

(Your story about you and Max and the abortive fireworks business, for example: I've "known" the skeleton of that story for years, but it's tied to a strong childhood memory of old fireworks that wouldn't light.(I don't know when that took place; the "centerpiece" of that memory is a roman candle that wouldn't light. I think it caught on fire, and burned with a noxious smell.) I think you must have told me the story about you and Max and the fireworks while you were trying to light some old fireworks -- or told it to someone else while I listened -- and I've always conflated the story and the fireworks together. So in my memory, the story of you and Max and the fireworks from Chinatown ends with the two of you getting home from your harrowing journey with a bag of dud fireworks. Except for one string of Chinese firecrackers that worked.)

I really enjoy having this clearer view!

Secret word: "subjecti", which is strangely relevant to the topic, and this comment...

woody s. said...

Matt. Yeah, those roman candles. I remember the fizzle but not the location. I hope these musings aren’t disquieting insofar as they may have a different slant on memories. Then too one cannot know precisely what the origional slant was either. Most of the stories are purposefully of a time and circumstance where no one is likely to get hurt in the reading and remenbering. I have some essays written that I have not posted, too. Having labored over then for some time I would wonder what would be gained by the turning over of that particular stone. And sometimes I answer myself “nothing” and leave a draft. These are important to me, and I will share them some day with you and your brother at least, and maybe the world. For now, thanks for reading and responding. I regret to this day all the times I wish I were there,with and for you and your brother, but know with certainty that the price would have been too high. I will write an essay on this very soon and pass it on to you and Hal. As life approaches the last few chapters many in my place have seemed to compulsively write memoirs or histories or make photo albums. I never understood that, but now I think I see. A chance to go on record with my side of things. And also to keep the pressure on some folks in some ways. I am wandering here so will close and go pressure wash more of the driveway. BBQ tomorrow for Sal’s people. Love ya Matt. John (yours) , Hal and Cori too.

Matt. Yeah, those roman candles. I remember the fizzle but not the location. I hope these musings aren't disquieting insofar as they may have a different slant on memories. Then too one cannot know precisely what the origional slant was either. Most of the stories are purposefully of a time and circumstance where no one is likely to get hurt in the reading and remenbering. I have some essays written that I have not posted, too. Having labored over then for some time I would wonder what would be gained by the turning over of that particular stone. And sometimes I answer myself "nothing" and leave a draft. These are important to me, and I will share them some day with you and your brother at least, and maybe the world. For now, thanks for reading and responding. I regret to this day all the times I wish I were there,with and for you and your brother, but know with certainty that the price would have been too high. I will write an essay on this very soon and pass it on to you and Hal. As life approaches the last few chapters many in my place have seemed to compulsively write memoirs or histories or make photo albums. I never understood that, but now I think I see. A chance to go on record with my side of things. And also to keep the pressure on some folks in some ways. I am wandering here so will close and go pressure wash more of the driveway. BBQ tomorrow for Sal's people. Love ya Matt. John (yours) , Hal and Cori too.
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woody
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