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an everyday life

an everyday life

Tag Archives: Writing

Two Women’s Circles

10 Friday Jul 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Soul Care

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Everyday Life, Friends, Soul Care, Writing

In the crazy way that life works out, it was me who needed the break from Everyday God.  What has been exciting and fulfilling on the one hand has left me weary and needing rest on the other.  So last Wednesday, we gathered to wrap-up this leg of our shared journey.  And to discuss our next steps.    

It seems that this little bit of spiritual food I served each week to a small group of women has whet their appetites for more.  It’s a good sign that they are not ready for it to end, though I know that part of Everyday God’s appeal is that it allows folks to just show up, without the need for advance preparation.   Life is way too busy for most to add to their already full plates, though the desire is often there.  

What ever happened to those lazy days of summer?  Was it just a childhood myth that evaported into thin air as we grew into adults?  Thinking back to my Granny’s life, during the years  Granddad was growing acres of fresh vegatables and melons, summers were anything but lazy, as Granny and Aunt Jane were always busy canning tomatoes or green beans or whatever for Granny’ pantry. 

Memories of those hot summer days were preserved not so long ago that they are still easily recalled.  Most days I drove my 1972 Camaro back and forth to a TG&Y Family Center where I worked in Oklahoma City.  But whenever I had a day off, I would normally spend it in Granny’s country kitchen.  I was never much help though I grew tired anyway, just from watching  Granny and Jane work.

Granny’s kitchen was cooled by a big south window, so canning activities always took place in the morning before the kitchen grew unbearably hot.  In the evening, they’d take their work outside where they could catch a cool breeze — and beneath a big Pecan tree just outside Granny’s kitchen–Granny and Jane and whoever else happened to drop by or responded to their invitation would pull up an old metal chair to rest their weay bones as they husked corn or snapped green beans or shelled black-eyed peas.  And with busy hands, they would simply visit about everyday life.

I pulled up my motel chair every chance I got, partly because it was just lovely to be in the midst of this group of women and partly because I never knew what would come out of their mouths.  Sometimes a little bit of gossip, but more often than not, it would be a story from their own everyday lives.  Past and present.   

“Hey, did you hear…..?”     Before the complete story could be told, one aunt would cut the other off in mid-stream.  “Oh no.  That’s not what I heard…”   Then quickly… “Well, what did you hear?  And so  it went.  My two aunts held jobs in the midst of a thrving downtown, which pretty much made them authorities on the entire town’s doings.  As the Aunts battled over their talk of town, Granny would listen quietly as she battled her arthritic hands to finish her evening’s allotment of vegtables. 

The Circle from my past was interested in preserving food for the table while this Circle from my present is focused on food for the Spirit.  Yet both are bound together by a shared interest in getting to the truth of each other’s everyday life stories.  And this bit of shared thread is one that invites me to continue pulling up my chair to this newest  Circle in my life.  Perhaps, after three years and five hundred miles since belonging to my last, I may be finally finding my own seat within a new circle of chairs.   Time, as they say, always tells the story.  For now, I know our Everyday God Circle has agreed to meet monthly, where we will share the load of telling the Story and together, will listen to each other’s life. 

I look forward to playing the part of Granny at August’s gathering of circled chairs.   

Ghosts of Summers Past

06 Monday Jul 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

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Death, Everyday Life, Jessmore Family, New York, Oswego, Parents, Travel, Writing

Our unseasonably cool weather, in combination with other goings on in my life, has conjured up memories of  summers past, where my own childhood connected with that of my father’s, though at the time I didn’t recognize it as such.   

Traveling east on summer vacations always landed us at the home of Aunt Daisy, who was sister to my father’s mom, and for an unknown amount of time, surrogate mom for Daddy and Aunt Carol.  It was a different time really, when guests traveled to stay with family rather than at some local inn, and when hosts never made guests feel unwelcome, even when they arrived with their entire household in tow.  For my Aunt Daisy, this entailed my parents, my Greek grandfather–who by that time had taken up residence with my parents– and whatever children my parents had at the time. 

I was around for four such trips, though I’ve no memories of the first which took place the summer following my birth.  But by the time I teetered on the age of kindergarten, and we had ventured back for our second serving of a cool summer in upstate New York, I was able to latch onto a couple of memories for posterity, and though neither is remarkable, they are precious all the same, in the way that every day is a brand spanking new adventure in the life of a child. 

The spankings from my brand new adventures always came from Mom rather than Dad, though I heard my Aunt Daisy tell a story more than once — the kind that grows to the stuff of legend through the sheer number of tellings–of Daddy once bringing himself to slap my hand, accompanied with a quiet wavery voice saying  “NO, NO”.   I could tell that my Aunt Daisy relished the story’s telling — of  ‘Jackie’s’ feeble attempt at parental discipline–for it was always accompanied by such riotous laughter.    So it was probably Mom rather than Dad who helped make the memories of a bedeviled goat and a forbidden staircase–both childish lures to my own fascination–stick to my memory, compliments of her hand on my small childish behind.    

By our third visit to Oswego, I had come into my own way of storing memories, without further guidance of Mother’s hand.  I was ten the summer we descended onto the doorstep of Daisy’s new home, which in a former life, served as the old country school house.  The summer days were ripe for picking and preserving memories, as even today, I can rummage through the cellar where I’ve stored my oldest and best memories to recall a moving picture of my young and vital father throwing smooth stones, as big as my adult hand, into Lake Ontario, after our family had consumed a simple supper of fried fish sandwiches at a local fish stand, prepared by my daddy’s very own Aunt Gib; I can see our young family taking a small road trip to enjoy another part of the lake with a picnic lunch and a swim with Gib and Daisy and some young cousin my age (was his name Kip?) the very day Gib introduced us to the taste of Mountain Dew soda pop; and then there’s the big reunion picnic my Aunt Daisy hosted in honor of Daddy’s homecoming, which was held in Aunt Daisy’s backyard, with food and people galore spread all over her picnic tables beneath her cool and inviting grape arbor.  The memory of Daisy’s grape arbor inspired me to have one built for Mom and Dad, that still stands today near the foundation of my maternal grandmother’s home, just steps from Daddy’s house.   

But the loveliest everyday memories were made on Aunt Daisy’s enclosed back porch, where she and my parents and an assortment of drop-in guests would while away the afternoon while sharing snippets of stories about their shared past.  While the adults were talking, we kids would entertain ourselves with a huge chalkboard parked on the porch.  Several of the aunts and uncles took notice of the quality of my drawings, but by the time we had returned for our fourth and final visit, Aunt Daisy thought I had lost some of my talent.  Knowing what I now know, the loss of any artistic ability was minor compared to the losses suffered to my true and original self.    

I remember shaking off Aunt Daisy’s comment like a dog with a pesky flea, just as I had learned to shake off other hurtful comments from the intervening years, that had taught me the need to become a person that the world might like better, than that naive girl who had once enjoyed receiving adult accliam for some blackboard pictures.  And raging teenage hormones and cosmetics were helping me in my transformation, as these days I much preferred to draw on my new face. 

The night of our fourth arrival,  Aunt Daisy showed us to our rooms amidst whispers that her husband had just been diagnosed with cancer a few weeks before.  So the visit of 1969 was more somber in spirit — no parties, no reunions, though everyday life on Daisy’s back porch went on.  A few days into our visit, Aunt Daisy– thinking she was doing me a favor– advised me to relax rather than to bother with cosmetics, as there would be no guests around, onlya bit of  family now and then.   But finding her suggestion silly, I chose to hide behind my face paint;  and she, sitting on the other side of the porch, probably found me silly for going to so much trouble for no good reason.     

Forty years later I sit here and smile, with a clean face and still no ability to draw–except for whatever gift I possess in painting images with words– and still full of memories of those ghosts of summers past.  Perhaps these ghostly memories haunt me for a reason, as I am left to wonder why Daddy refuses to talk about them.  And it is Daddy’s very silence that has spurred me to take matters into my own hands– accepting help from friends and lucking onto a fruitful website that holds pieces of Daddy’s puzzling life– that I now hold copies of old census records from the 1920s and 1930s and some old newspaper stories of Daddy’s family, including a sizable article reporting his mother’s fatal car crash and a few obituaries scattered across the decades of Dad’s aunts and uncles, who are now truly ghosts of summer’s past.

It is difficult to reconcile Dad’s desire to pay visits to his mother’s family against the painful memories that Daddy’s childhood holds.   Maybe the visits were a way of Daddy reconciling his past with his new life and wife, a way of  showing his mother’s family that a good future can come from a sorry past, and that forty years later, I now see teaches me the same lesson.  Perhaps we trekked back east so Daddy could share bits and pieces of his childhood story in the way that he could.  Not with words, but with the important faces of his life.

However the visits came to be, I am thankful for the memories and even the bit of light they still shed onto Daddy’s shadowed history.  And  I hope that these visits somehow helped my father lay some of his own childhood ghosts to rest.

The Quiet Supper Club

28 Sunday Jun 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Soul Care

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Aging, Everyday Life, Friends, Nursing Home Life, Parents, Soul Care, Travel, Writing

Last Tuesday I had an urge to see Daddy.  So I broke my fast and fired up the Mini Cooper before I could talk myself out of  the 100 mile round trip between here and Seminole.  

It was one of those needs that make no earthly sense.  I had just seen Dad on Father’s Day two days before.  And I’d already made plans to see Dad two days later.  Earlier in life, with these facts in either hand, I would have dismissed this mysterious urge out of hand, convincing myself it would keep for a couple of days.  But no more.  These days I find life simpler to attend to needs as they arise –even those nagging thoughts that wake me in the middle of the night–rather than let my heart and mind do battle over that which defies reasonable explanation.   

I arrived in time for supper, though no food had yet been served.  As I walked into the dining room and over to the far corner to the only U-shaped feeding table in the room, I found four familiar wheel-chaired occupants waiting patiently for their supper.  All were looking down, until I put my hand on Daddy’s shoulder and leaned down to kiss his cheek.  As his face broke into a smile, so did a few others around the table.    

Daddy shares this table with three women.  Audrey and Marie, in better and younger days, were LPNs.  Miss Alpha, sittng on Daddy’s right, was once the proprietor of a women’s dress shop in Seminole.  Dad sat at his assigned spot, between Marie and Miss Alpha.  The inside of the U was still vacant.  But later, an aide would be there to spoon feed, cut up food and otherwise assist those sitting on the outside of the U.

I’ve learned that the aide is not the only caregiver in permanent residence at the table.  Marie, the former LPN that sits to Daddy’s left, does her best to watch over Daddy.  She and the rest of her dining companions may be people of few words, but still waters do have a way of running deep.  And out of a deep caring for others, Marie misses very little.  Marie surprised me a week ago by telling me that Daddy always eats better when I’m there to help.  I don’t think she shared this to make me feel guilty for the times I’m not there.  It was just her way of  letting me know the nitty gritty truth of Daddy’s life.  

But last night, Daddy ate with such relish and nary a strangle that it caused Marie and I to wonder at the miracle of it all, as a mere week ago it had been just the opposite.  Unbeknownst to Daddy, who was so engrossed in the task of feeding himself, Marie and I caught each others eye and shared this moment of pure joy together.  There was plenty of joy worth sharing, though Miss Alpha wasn’t in the mood to partake.   Being the newest member of this quiet supper club, Miss Alpha is the most withdrawn, and in more ways that just her drawn-in posture.  Her spine is so curved that her head is always bent toward her chest, like a little bird tucked into her feather bed for the night.  

Last Tuesday I wondered if Miss Alpha was grieving a way of life that no longer is.  And I felt a strong desire to let her know that she was welcomed into this quiet supper club.  So I asked Miss Alpha how she was doing–and as best as she could, Miss Alpha raised her head to acknowledge my polite interest–and without any fanfare, said, “I can’t complain.”

I realized in a moment that all the members of the quiet supper club shared a similar bond and sentiment.  None of them complain.  Instead, they bear their diminished bodies and minds with quiet dignity.  And without need for words, they support one another through thick and thin, perhaps with a look of concern across the table or by a quick grasp of two hands waiting to be held by my daddy. 

It strikes me that while these four sit on the outside of the U, it’s the rest of us — the aides and visitors like me–who are the true outsiders.  And I feel honored to be welcomed at their table; which in part, may be be why I whispered a sweet nothing into Daddy’s ear last week when he was strangling on every bite, to let him know that there was no place in the world I’d rather be than there with him. 

With the benefit of hindsight, I see that my urge that made no earthly sense had very little to do with earthly notions.  And though I hadn’t taken a bite, my spur-of-the-moment Tuesday visit left me with the sweetest, lingering sense and foretaste of  heaven.

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