Monthly Archives: October 2024

The Rose Garden, Chapter 11 – Secrets

File:Little girl on swing.jpg

Girl on a swing, Source https://flickr.com, Author Luiz Carlos (Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic)

WARNING:  Graphic Images

For nothing is secret that will not be revealed, nor anything hidden that will not be known and come to light” (Luke 8: 17).

Since my father often worked nights, he slept late during the day.  This required that we girls make no noise which might disturb him.  We were constantly cautioned about this.

If we were still awake when he came home at night, giggling in bed was strictly forbidden.  My father would pound on the ceiling with a broomstick, or stand at the foot of the stairs and shout unspecified threats up toward us.

This produced sheer panic on our part.  It did nothing to diminish our love for him.

Anger, Insecurity, and Tenderness

Though my father’s anger pervaded our young lives, anger was not the sole emotion to which we were exposed [1].

Gnawing insecurity about his own abilities manifested in a lack of confidence on my father’s part that either my sister or I would ever make our way in the world.  That projected insecurity is something we have had to fight against.

It was, I believe, coupled with a failure on my father’s part to recognize his children as distinct from himself.  Such a failure is characteristic of narcissism [2].

Yet, there were times when he treated us with genuine tenderness.  This is the source of trauma bonding.

My father enjoyed pushing me on the swings when I was little.  The higher I went the better he liked it, and the more he encouraged me.  That I had a morbid fear the swings would come loose from their moorings and topple over, I did not mention to him.  Love was defined by the willingness to sacrifice — even one’s life.

I remember the time my father ate the peel off an apple for me at the park, leaving behind the juicy fruit.  I still have the small piggy bank Pop bought for me at the zoo.

He affectionately referred to my sister (who owned a yellow raincoat) as his “yellow bubble.”  He scrambled eggs for us just the way we liked them.  He brought home an endless supply of cold cuts, cakes, and pies from the store.

It was my father who stayed with me on an unusual outing to the racetrack.  Since I was too young to be permitted entry to the track, we stood outside the gate in the rain, while my mother went inside to place her bets.

On another occasion, my father arranged for an acquaintance to take us flying in a private plane.  Only years after my father’s death did I learn from my mother how he agonized over our safety during that flight.

My father drove us around the neighborhood each year to see the Christmas lights.  He would take us through the car wash with him — something I found thrilling, and my sister upsetting.  My father was, also, the one who taught me to drive.

I came home from those sessions numb, Dad’s voice ringing in my head.  “No!  No!  Keep away from the divider!  You’re not going fast enough.  You have to predict what the other drivers will do.”  How to predict the actions of other drivers — or, more importantly, his own — my father never conveyed.

Early on, I had a major accident while my mother and sister were passengers in the car.  My sister was about fourteen at the time.  The first thing I saw, after coming to, was the blood running down her face.

Despite that, she never once refused to ride with me.  She simply gathered up her nerve, and got back in the car.  As a result, I regained my confidence behind the wheel.

Once I had my license, my sister and I could drive north on the Palisades Parkway and picnic alongside.  These are some of my sweetest memories. Continue reading

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The Rose Garden, Chapter 10 – Art Lessons

File:Dreirad 6340.jpg

Tricycle, Author NobbiP (GNU Free Documentation License Verson 1.2 or later, CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported, 2.5 Generic, 2.0 Generic, and 1.0 Generic)

WARNING:  Graphic Images

Search me, O God, and know my heart; Try me, and know my anxieties; And see if there is any wicked way in me…” (Ps. 139: 23-24).

Early on, one of the older boys in the neighborhood did something unforgivable.  He borrowed my shiny, red tricycle without permission.  Outraged, I was not permitted to tell the grown-ups my side of the story when the tricycle overturned in the street, injuring him.

This small — now amusing — incident left a lasting impression on me.  It just may be the reason I became a lawyer.

Obedience and Authority

I attended a Catholic grammar school, run by the parish.  The Dominican nuns there emphasized obedience as the highest virtue.  Though I now recognize the spiritual significance of that virtue, their intention was likely more practical.  Class size for years exceeded sixty students.

I felt at some fundamental level that there were things more important than obedience.  Consequently, I developed a rebellious streak in response to this well-intended tutelage.  It was easier to rebel in school than at home.

My first grade teacher was universally lauded by parents and universally despised by the children under her care.  She ruled with absolute authority in her small universe, so much so that bathroom breaks were not tolerated if unscheduled.  Consequently, accidents in the classroom were frequent and deeply humiliating for the children involved.

I could not at six have said why these situations so angered me.  Nor could I understand why the adults around me seemed incapable of recognizing that the teacher was the one actually responsible for them.

Inauthenticity

My second grade teacher was a woman in her early sixties who encouraged the children in whom she saw intelligence or talent — at least those children who conformed to her expectations.

I was quick to perceive this, thriving on the added attention, though it served to drive a wedge between other classmates and myself.

I began in the second grade to experience a feeling of inauthenticity, and a sense of failure which pervaded my life for years [1].  I attribute this in part to the weekly art classes the teacher arranged for me at a nearby school.  Rather than a pleasure, those classes became a burden.

I had learned while I had measles how to make paper dolls.  Designing and drawing clothes came easily, and seemed a way to share in the glamor I associated with my mother, even when she was absent.

It may be that an interest in art ran in the family.  In Hungary, Grandma was renowned for her breathtaking paper flowers, extravagantly displayed at religious festivals.  This avenue of expression was unavailable to her in America.  Cut off from it, she drew inward.

My interest in art offered Grandma the chance to reconnect with a part of herself otherwise buried.  This was not something I realized at the time.

My art classes — if they could be termed that — consisted of little more than proximity to paints, pastels, and canvas.  The so-called classes were presided over by a nun we were instructed to call “Mother.”

I never knew the details of Mother’s life.  But, from the outset, I could feel her contempt.

Throughout the year, Mother collected students’ drawings and paintings for the ostensible purpose of compiling individual portfolios.  What she failed to disclose, either to parents or students, was that she independently re-worked each student’s output, herself.

Without doubt, the resulting pieces were less amateurish and more polished than when they had been submitted to Mother for safekeeping.  There were, also, forgeries.  The pieces reflected the level of her skill, rather than the aptitude of her pupils.  For me, this was another violation.

Though I repeatedly attempted to explain to adults that the art work was not truly “mine,” I was consistently praised for it.   My discomfort was compounded by the fact I was called on to show the work to my class at the end of each year.  That ultimately led to my abandonment of art.

Having purchased a costly mail order course for me shortly before her death, Grandma more than once asked, plaintively, “Anna, don’t you want to finish your art work?”  It breaks my heart that I disappointed her.
Continue reading

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The Rose Garden, Chapter 9 – Geography Lessons

File:The National Geographic Magaine - February 1910 Volume 21 Number 2.jpg

National Geographic Magazine, Source https://flickr, Author Jake Jakubowski (PD)

WARNING:  Graphic Images

But whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in Me to sin, it would be better for him if a millstone were hung around his neck, and he were drowned in the depth of the sea” (Matt. 18: 6).

As the superintendent of an apartment building downtown, my grandfather knew a number of well-to-do people.

To anyone who would listen, he spoke of his grandchildren.  “Annalein loves books.  Our little one loves music.”  All the building’s tenants knew that he was the one to seek out, if they were discarding anything his granddaughters might like.

By this means, Grandpa brought home milk glass decanters still smelling faintly of exotic perfumes.  He brought home a bright orange dress, just a decade out of date; silk scarves, frayed but still lovely.

Grandpa salvaged an entire set of arts and crafts style crockery from the dustbin.  Margaret and I played at “Heidi,” with secondhand furniture my grandfather had procured standing in for the mountains.

National Geographic

Greater than all these treasures were the National Geographic Magazines Grandpa regularly brought home.  I lived for these.  They disclosed a world of wonders, the photography breathtaking.

Most striking to me were the photos of African women, their lips artificially distended by huge plates.  The article described the disfigurement as an avidly sought after, if local, affectation.  It failed to mention that this beauty ritual had originated as a desperate effort by local peoples to dissuade slave-traders from carrying off their women.

Self-mutilation as self-defense was an approach I would adopt, as well.  While I never actually engaged in “cutting” (self-harm), I did develop weight issues which had the same effect.

I learned in school of other cultures, also.  There were, for example, the Vikings.  In the sixth grade my grandfather helped me fashion a Viking longship out of cardboard.

It did not occur to me I should delay turning in the project until it was due, so the ship sat forlornly on a school windowsill until the rest of the fleet arrived, a week later.

Behind the Iron Curtain

Many years after he emigrated to the States, my grandfather returned on a visit to Hungary.  This took him behind the Iron Curtain, still in place at the time.  Standing in an open field, he commented to a relation on the wheat crop.  “Shhh,” was the hasty reply.  “They may hear you.”

Bigotry

All this information I drank in — forming opinions about equality and freedom, power and the abuse of it, while my father railed against any race or ethnicity different from his own.  According to Pop, “they” were responsible for the ills of the world. Continue reading

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The Rose Garden, Chapter 8 – Sisters

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e7/Two-finnish-refugee-sisters-arrive-in-Stockholm-142449184762.jpg

Sisters (PD)

Two are better than one, Because they have a good reward for their labor.  For if they fall, one will lift up his companion” (Eccl. 4: 9-10).

I have kept for nearly five decades now the letters my sister wrote me from France the summer she studied abroad.  Like her, they are interesting, funny, warm, forceful, and full of life.

My stereo and the cabinet on which it sits, my DVD player and television stand, my best china, the sculpture in my living room, the chef’s knives and appliances in my kitchen (microwave, coffee maker, tea maker, cappuccino machine, grill), the barbecue on my porch, in fact, the majority of jewelry in my jewelry box, were all gifts from my sister.

She is the real gift in my life.  Had she given me none of these things, I would feel the same.

My sister and I laughed together, played together, fought with one another, and clung to one another on the frequent occasions our father’s anger erupted.  My sister, in those days, was more reticent than I.  Quiet and shy, she kept her feelings to herself, where mine were always on the surface.

In the early years we slept together in a trundle bed.  This allowed us to share secrets and small jokes with each other, even after the lights were turned off.  I would lie awake making up stories after my younger sister had fallen asleep.

Sometimes we would be allowed to jump on our grandparents’ bed.  This was a great treat, since they had an old fashioned feather bed.  The feather bed enfolded us, the same way I imagined a fluffy cloud would.

My sister favored dolls.  Prominent among these was a talented doll which could talk when a string at the base of her neck was pulled.  Even more mysterious, the doll would drink from a bottle that appeared to refill with milk.

Envy prompted me one afternoon to throw the doll’s bottle across the room.  My sister was heartbroken that the bottle would no longer refill, as a result.

My sister lost another doll entirely to me.  This one, a fashion doll, was co-opted for a school project of mine.  My class had been studying the Middle Ages.  Against the doll’s wishes (or my sister’s, at any rate), this petite model was outfitted in a blue velvet gown and tiny headdress by our grandmother.

More often than not, my sister and I got along.  Grandma would not tolerate bad behavior.  Her demeanor toward my sister was, however, less rigid than towards me.

My sister loved to sit with Grandma while she ironed.  The two would sing together, as the aroma of fresh starch filled the garage where Grandma did the family laundry. Continue reading

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