Mothers and daughters often have an odd relationship.
My mother was an identical twin. I never had any trouble telling them
apart. There was something slightly different that I saw in their looks. And
their personalities couldn’t have been more different.
My aunt was an extrovert. My mother was an introvert.
They were born in the 1920s, and typical of that era, were born at
home, which makes the survival of both a bit amazing. They were the only twins
in their grade, and possibly in the school, so everyone made a fuss.
Typical of the times, their mother dressed them alike throughout their
childhood. Since they went to Catholic school, their uniforms were more of the
same.
When they became teens, my mother was content to continue dressing
alike. According to my mother, my aunt wanted to be more independent. She was a size smaller than my
mother, so she frequently tried to find outfits in her size that weren’t
available in my mother’s size.
I think of my mother as the dependent twin. Her mother didn’t help
things. If one wasn’t invited somewhere, the other couldn’t go. Consequently,
when she was invited to parties or other outings, my mother thought my aunt was
the one people really wanted, and she was only invited so her sister could go.
Because they were always together she didn’t develop much independence.
When it came time for high school, my mother wanted to go to the
Catholic high school. My aunt didn’t. But their parents couldn’t afford to send
both to Catholic school, and their mother wouldn’t split them up (which would
have been a good thing, especially for my mother’s development), so they both
attended the public high school, which my mother didn’t particularly like.
My mother’s father was Catholic, but her mother wasn’t. Since the
children were raised Catholic, and had been sent to Catholic elementary school,
their mother felt she’d fulfilled her obligation.
As was usual at the time, my mother lived at home until she married.
She got a job when she finished high school, and dated, like other girls.
One boy was interested in her that her mother wouldn’t allow her to
date because he wasn’t Catholic. She told my mother life was difficult enough
without having different religions in the family. She spoke from experience.
My mother dated a few different boys, but there was a war on – this was
the 1940s – and many went off to the military.
She was thrilled when the cute, “older” boy from the next block down asked
her out. He went into the military, too, but was discharged early due to a medical
complication, and they were married in 1944, when she promptly left her job and
handed her husband all of her money.
I balked when she told me that. When my husband and I married, we didn’t
like the way each other did banking, so we kept separate bank accounts in separate banks. Her
take on marriage and finance is not mine.
I was the only daughter and the youngest. A preemie born before the
advent of the NICU, I wasn’t necessarily expected to live. I suppose tenacity
kept me alive.
To say I have a temper is an understatement. I’m of Irish descent and an Aries,
and descended from redheads on one side of the family, which gives some
indication of just how much temper stereotyping and tradition say I have. I’ve
been told The Taming of the Shrew
could have been written about me (The main character is also named Catherine),
except I’ve never succumbed to being tamed.
Actually, I think the zodiac descriptions are nonsense, and the Irish
people I’ve met have been sweet-tempered and lovely, and my ginger relatives
were always wonderful when I saw them. Still, I – although not remotely a
redhead myself – seem to fit the trifecta stereotype.
It isn’t difficult to imagine the conflicts between my mother and me
when I was often forbidden to do the things my brothers were allowed to do for
no better reason than I was born female. In fact, most of our conflicts had to
do with gender and gender roles.
My mother always strove to make me “ladylike”. My so-called friends in
the neighborhood would pick fights with me, and say the most horrendous things
to me. I would like to have hurled an expletive or two, given them a litany of
their shortcomings, and had nothing more to do with them, preferring solitude
to joyless friendships.
But no. According to my mother, I must never stoop to their level. I
had to be kind because, how would I feel if someone said that to me?
Excuse me? Someone did!
Consequently, since this was drilled into me since I was a wee, small
child, I have never been able to have a face-to-face spoken confrontation with
anyone. I choke on the words. Everyone thinks I’m fine with everything, and
they can say what they like with impunity.
I’ve long said that this inability of mine was the greatest disservice
my mother ever did to me.
But oh, can I write letters that drip daggers and seethe with sarcasm.
If you’ve injured me, quake if a letter arrives from me.
But most of these things were the occasional spats mothers and
daughters have. My mother and I got along well. She would tell me stories of
her childhood, and I would rail against the injustices done to her. I wouldn’t
let someone do that to me or tell me I couldn’t go to college. I wouldn’t care
if I didn’t have all the best things. And she would tell me things were
different then.
Her parents were lucky they didn’t have me as a child. Anyone who knew
how adamant I was, even at six, that they weren’t going to make me write with
my right hand knows I would have been beaten to a bloody pulp by the 1930s
nuns, and refused to submit.
Submit was never part of my vocabulary. Even my mother in the 1960s and
‘70s would often shake her head and say, “What are we going to do with you?” (My fear was that they'd return me to the orphanage. I always believed I was adopted because I didn't look like my brothers -- that is, I wasn't a boy. And I couldn't tap dance, so what good would I be there? My only knowledge of orphanages was Shirley Temple films.)
One of the few things my mother and I had in common was that we were
both born female. She didn’t mind it. I hated it. I always said she wanted a
daughter, and she got me, instead.
Another thing we had in common was being introverts.
As a child, I was also shy, but somewhere in high school I think I
mostly outgrew that – they’re not the
same thing.
I still prefer the idea of a
party to actually going to one, and I have to rehearse what I’m going to say
when I have to make a telephone call to a stranger. I have to plan on what so
say if someone else answers, tells me the person isn’t there, or if I have to
leave a message on a machine. It's so much preparation! Texting is a godsend to introverts everywhere.
Dealing with people is exhausting, and I don’t know where my mother found
the energy to not only deal with, but actually enjoy three children. She once
told me she’d originally wanted five or six kids.
Of course, she couldn’t understand how I could dislike parties and
meeting people, yet absolutely love getting up on stage to perform. I told her
I only get stage fright at parties. On stage, you’re separated from people, and
you know you’re doing the one thing those party
people are afraid to do. On stage, I’m in my element; at a party,
especially where I don’t know many people, I have to pretend to be some
character and play a part. (And being a writer, I have lots of characters to choose from.)
Attending an all-girls Catholic high school was probably the best
academic decision she made for me. Because she was denied that choice, I was
denied any other. But it allowed me to flourish scholastically. Socially, not so much.
Girls were always difficult for me to understand. Growing up, I never
knew when they were going to decide they didn’t like me for a day, a week or
forever.
High school was a bit easier in that regard. I didn’t have people
bullying me for being better at schoolwork than they were, as I had experienced
in elementary school. We were separated into academic “tracks”, and I was
mostly with the “smarter thans.” Being in the middle range of that group, there
was nothing in that regard to bully me for.
I still didn’t have many friends. I always wanted to be popular, but in
hindsight, having a lot of friends probably would have been exhausting. That
was for the extroverts.
But how was I to ever date if I went to an all-girls school? Oh, yes,
there were dances. But I lived a half hour from my school, and my parents
wouldn’t let me have the car – although my brothers were allowed to take the car
to any and sundry thing they needed to drive to. That was another bone of contention
between my mother and me.
“Boys are supposed to drive.”
“But I don’t have a boyfriend because I can’t meet any boys because I
can’t get to the dance because you won’t let me use the car.”
While this wasn’t entirely true, it was my argument.
I was in the church guitar group, and there were boys in it. The
problem was, the boys I liked were dating other girls. Most of the rest were younger,
weren’t interested, or weren’t old enough to drive.
Only through the magic of my mother setting things up with her friends
who had sons, as well as a boy in the group who also didn’t have a date to the
prom was I able to attend the junior and senior proms. In those days one wasn’t even allowed to buy tickets to the
prom without a date.
“You can’t because you’re (just) a girl,” has never been an acceptable
reason for anything in my mind.
Anger combined with the “just a girl” restriction developed a very
strong sense of independence in me.
I can’t? Hold my wine. I’ll show you!
I probably accomplished more because I was told I couldn’t than for any
other reason.
I stood up to my parents when they threatened to take me out of said
Catholic high school halfway through because my father lost his job. Always
very private about finances, they wouldn’t go to either the parish priest or
the principal of the school to plead hardship for a tuition reduction.
I told my parents that if they tried to pull me out of my school where
I knew everyone to put me in a public school where I’d have to start all over
again learning my way around, and have no friends halfway through high school,
I’d go myself and tell the priest and the principal about the situation they
were trying to keep private.
They were horrified, and threatened, but I was determined. In the end,
no one was told. They left me in my school, and my mother got a job to pay my
tuition. (At 16, no employers believed I actually was 16, so I couldn’t get a job. Otherwise, I would have paid my
own tuition.)
It was surprising when, after graduating from university, she treated
me like an adult, not like the child who had better be on her best behavior
when we were out or just wait till
you got home!
During a 10-year period when I was actually at an appropriate weight
for my height, as a joke while looking for a bathing suit, I tried on a bikini
and was surprised it fit. My mother was with me at the time, and actually
encouraged me to buy it – I didn’t.
When one so-called boyfriend dumped me suddenly – the vast majority of my friends were married with
children by this time – and in frustration and not a few tears, I said, “Why
can’t anyone ever love me," she
actually cried.
The thing is, my mother was keen on my finding someone and getting
married. I wasn’t. I simply didn’t like being dumped, especially with lame
excuses or gas lighting.
My mother, the dependent twin, went from her father’s house to my
father’s house, and never really learned how to be independent. I was born
independent.
I went from my parents’ house to college, where I made my own decisions
on a daily basis, back home until I could – sort of – afford an apartment
alone.
When my father died, I had moved back home to go back to college for
something I could get a job in. My mother transferred her dependence on me. She
couldn’t make a major decision without consulting me. If one of my brothers
visited, she consulted him instead. I
found it quite frustrating that she was never her own advocate. I’ve always
bristled somewhat to have to consult with someone on more than a superficial
level about anything. I suppose that’s why, in 13 terms of college, I had 11 different
roommates. And I even liked some of them.
Relations between my mother and me were generally good as long as there
wasn’t a third party involved. Once the third person entered the picture, I
felt like I was expected to dissolve, especially if said third person was male.
I was, after all, only a girl.
Once I got married – at 39 – my mother was anxious for me to have
children. Me, not so much.
I assumed it was probably a foregone conclusion that a first child –
no, only child – at 40 wasn’t going to happen, and I proved correct in that.
I’m amused when people sigh and say how sorry they are that I didn’t
have any children. I kind of laugh and tell them I’m cool with it. Besides, if
God had intended me to have children, I would’ve been born male.
My mother, on the other hand, was decidedly not cool with it.
One day, we got into the whole baby discussion, and her desire for me
to have a baby so she “could have grandchildren before I die.”
Don’t ever do that to me. I
am not responsible for other people’s burdens.
I told her she had a granddaughter and two step-grandchildren. She
somehow thought that didn’t count because they lived at least five hours away,
and she never got to see them.
I am not without a sense of humor. I told her if she wanted to have
grandchildren so badly, she should’ve had them first.
The whole grandparent thing is lost on me. My mother’s parents died
well before I was born, so I never think of them as my grandparents. My
father’s parents were it, and we saw them only a couple of times a year. They
lived in the city, an hour away by the roads and speed limits of the time. They
had so many grandchildren, I don’t think anyone was particularly special. I
never had the impression my grandmother was particularly overjoyed to see us. I didn't actually think she even liked me, although I think my grandfather thought I was okay. I
didn’t know them well.
I have fond memories of my grandfather taking us for walks around their
part of South Philadelphia.
The thing I remember most about my grandmother was that when I was a
teen and into my twenties, every time she saw me she wanted to know if I had a
boyfriend yet, and the answer was always no. I don’t remember her ever noticing
me when I was a child.
She hadn’t wanted my parents to name me Catherine because none of the
Catherines born into the family had ever married. My grandfather’s youngest
sister was one, and she was a spinster.
My parents didn’t give any credence to such superstitions. And I, devil
that I am, would tell my grandmother that I was simply following family
traditions.
My mother was always my staunchest ally, although I didn’t always appreciate the fact. She
would defend me against any outsider, even if privately she would tell me I was
weird.
1 comment:
That was a great read! and I got to know you even a little bit better . Your mother was a beautiful woman. she may not have been able to advocate for herself, but as a Girl Scout lead, she sure took care of us girls.
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