I’ve always been
teased.
My dad always had various names for people other than their given name.
That wasn’t unusual. But when the Chatty Cathy doll came out and I asked for
one, he said, “We already have one,” meaning me. Everyone else laughed. I was
hurt. And I never got the doll.
I had lots of
dolls I didn’t ask for. I combed their hair until
they were nearly bald, but otherwise took care of them. Some were kind of ugly,
as far as I was concerned, but they were what I had, so that’s what I played
with.
Tiny Tears was
probably my first name doll. I’m not sure whether or not I wanted her, but she
was a baby doll, and that’s what my mother thought would be good for me.
My mother didn’t
often let me feed my dolls water because they all wet themselves, and she didn't like wet doll clothes all over. The
difference with Tiny Tears was that if you fed her water, she cried “real
tears,” too.
Of course, water
wasn’t the same as milk. Since real babies drank milk, I wanted something that looked like milk. In my quest for something resembling reality, I ground up chalk and mixed it with the water. This
was fine for all of the dolls except Tiny Tears. I didn’t realize, as a small
child, that the chalk would also go to her eyes. As a result, I had the only Tiny
Tears with cataracts.
Chatty Cathy was
a different story. You didn’t feed her. She actually talked. She came with a
choice of blonde or dark hair, rather than the dull orange most of my dolls
had. This was a chance to actually have a doll with dark hair like me. But my
dad said no because I was the Chatty Cathy of the house. And that hurt. (Chatty Cathy Christmas Ornament, pictured above)
My mother used to
say I was quiet. Of course, as I got older, people would tell me I talked a
lot. Too much. Do you ever shut up? I know often I would start to say something
and someone usually interrupted me before I could finish a sentence, and no
matter how many times I attempted to tell them what I was trying to say, I was
always interrupted, and never got to finish. That’s probably why I prefer being
by myself.
I didn’t have
friends. Oh, yes, there was a girl everyone called my friend, who lived across
the street. She was a year and a half younger, which when I was four, made her
2 ½. Not someone to socially interact with. I played alone most of the time,
unless my brothers were available.
That’s the only
reason I was interested in dolls. They were my friends. I could line them up on
chairs and pretend they were the audience, and I’d be a rock star. Or they were
the patients when I played hospital. Or I’d choose one or two to be my sidekick
for some game I was playing. They were never my “children.”
I don’t think I
chatted all that much. I wanted to participate in the family chatter at the
dinner table, but I was usually told to be quiet because I didn’t know
anything. My mother told me once that she used to come in to my play room or
out in the back yard to check on me to make sure I wasn’t dead because I was so
quiet in my play. I “talked” my dolls in my head because I thought only crazy
people talked to dolls or talked out loud pretending to be the doll answering.
I think, looking
back on it, that my dad was just teasing – they never got me that doll! –
but I didn’t know that then. He hurt my feelings, and no one seemed to care. I
don’t think my parents considered much that small children have feelings.
My brothers also
called me names. I was “Hey Ugly,” or “Hey Stupid” for no better reason than I
was the youngest and fair game. But that’s what brothers do, so I’m told.
I know I had lots
of questions as a small child, but I didn’t ask them. If I asked my mother something,
she’d reply with, “Because I’m your mother, and I said so.” My brother, Rob
would say I didn’t know things because I was stupid. I knew I wouldn’t be
enlightened by my mother, and I didn’t want my brother to think I was stupid.
So I kept my questions to myself, and tried to figure out answers that made
sense to me. They were wrong, and to an adult me, they were hilarious, but my
answers weren’t really a help to child me.
My mother always
thought I was being a smart-Alec when I would look at the sky and the ground
before crossing the street, but I was looking up and down, just like she said.
Often, since I
didn’t have friends, I created friends in my head. I would have a whole
imaginary scenario set up, and often forgot that others didn’t know about it.
I’d make a comment based on my imaginary play, and people – especially my peers
once I went to school – looked at me oddly and moved away from me.
School was
supposed to be an amazing wonderland where I would not only learn to read, but
also have lots of friends. It didn’t go quite that way.
I progressed
through school with an attention deficit and mild dyslexia. They didn’t diagnose
things like that when I was in school – especially not in parochial school –
much less do anything about it. And I
was considered fairly smart, so every problem was blamed on my being left-handed.
My mother, working with me on reading, got me through learning to read. Since the letters in the words were so large
and the words were widely spaced, it wasn’t that difficult, once I got the hang
of reading frontwards.
Problems didn’t
show up until third or fourth grade when letters were smaller and more closely
spaced. But by then I had figured out compensations that allowed me to cover. Still,
I’ve always read slower than my peers because I have difficulty going from one
line to the next, and sometimes the words move around.
Because we never
printed, but used cursive handwriting, I was never found out because letter
reversals weren’t a possibility. If they’d looked at my printing, they would
have seen several reversals. But since we didn’t use printing in school, it
didn’t matter.
By about 6th
or 7th grade, I only had two reversals left, z and Q. I figured out
a way to test the direction of z. Write Zorro, with the orro on the bottom line
of the z. If the z came first, it was done correctly, and I could erase the
other letters. If the o came first, I needed to erase everything and make the z
the other way. Q, I never found a way to fix. Unless I had a Q to look at, it
was a guess, and still is. I would stress over where the bottom line went.
Finally, I’d just put it anywhere. Once done, it was always
wrong.
I’ve now adopted
that as my unique Q, and I don’t care. I’ve also been told my check marks are
backwards. Until I was in college, I didn’t know there was a
backwards or forwards for a check mark. I don’t care enough about them to fix
them. It’s another signature thing I do.
My mother always
complained about my handwriting. So did my teachers. I was doing the best I
could, but, like art, it didn’t come easily to me, like math or English. I still get mixed reviews.
My husband thinks my handwriting is pretty but illegible. Other people seem to
be able to read it just fine. Of course, there are fewer and fewer people who
can read cursive, so I suppose it’s better that most written things I have to
give people are typed.
I was considered
fairly intelligent at school, but I had no social skills. The first day, I was
put in line with a sea of children, most of whom were crying. I didn’t know
whether or not I was supposed to cry, since I didn’t know why they were crying.
I knew from my mother that you weren’t allowed to cry without a reason. One of
her favorite sayings was, “If you don’t stop that crying, I’ll give you
something to cry about.” So I stood there, mute, wondering if I would get into
trouble for not crying. I was relieved, once we entered the building, that the
others had stopped crying by then, and I didn’t get into trouble.
Our first recess
was a revelation to me. We had to line up with partners. There were two girls
in my class that I knew. One, who lived in my neighborhood, and apparently liked
first grade so much she was doing it for a second time, didn’t like me. Her
dislike – and the way she plagued me the entire year – was because of something
that happened a few years earlier at home, where she was forbidden by my mother
to come anywhere near me. As a result,
she did her best to get me into trouble whenever she could.
The other girl I
knew from church. But she was on the other side of the room, since her last
name was near the beginning of the alphabet. So, I had to pick someone near me in
order to have a partner before everyone was taken.
The girl in front
of me at our desks was cute and littler than me, and she had a name I loved
(Debbie). Those were reasons enough to ask her to be my partner. She accepted,
and I thought that made her my friend. To my mind, we would play together once
we were outside, and be partners in line forever. That’s not what happened.
Once we were
outside, Debbie disappeared – apparently, she actually had friends. I wandered
around, trying to figure out how to play the various games the other girls were
playing – girls and boys were not allowed to play together at my school. I went
from group to group asking if I could play until I found a group that didn’t
say no. That is how recess worked for me for most of first grade.
I didn’t know why
I was rejected, and never did figure that out. Maybe they thought I was ugly,
like my brother said. At six, I was very aware of things and people either
being pretty or ugly, and I was never told I was pretty, ever. I knew what
pretty looked like. I had a cousin with blonde hair and blue eyes, and everyone
said she was pretty.
I never went near
groups of pretty girls. I knew they wouldn’t play with me.
When recess
ended, I again stood next to Debbie, as I did every time we lined up for the
next few days. Then my world crashed. One morning as I lined up with Debbie,
another girl I didn’t know dashed up and said Debbie wasn’t my partner, she was
hers. And she stole Debbie. I had been betrayed, and stood in line without a
partner, crushed.
Sister wanted all
of us to be partnered. I told her I didn’t have one. She made me go to the back
of the line. Apparently, being a failure who didn’t have a partner was the most
horrible thing a child could do. Once at the back of the line, she grabbed
another girl without a partner, and pulled her next to me. After that, I would
just wait until everyone else was lined up, and go to the end of the line,
hoping someone would be my partner.
Recess was an odd
world. There were all of these children who knew each other. I lived in a
neighborhood where most of the girls were older than I was, except for the girl
across the street. Just before I started school, another girl, Helen, appeared.
She was also a year younger, and lived down the street. She was one of those
children my mother called a street urchin because she was allowed to wander
anywhere she pleased in the neighborhood, instead of having to stay in her own
back yard, like I did. So, when I went to school, Helen essentially stole my
only friend in the neighborhood because I wasn’t there. And when I got home, she often didn't play with me because she already had Helen.
The large globs
of children tended to play together, and to protect themselves from outsiders,
they would cross their game. Then if someone like me showed up, asking to join,
they would say the game was crossed, so they couldn’t let me play. No one ever
came up to me and asked me to play with them. (Crossing the game wasn’t the
religious expression it seemed. “Cross, cross, double cross, nobody else can
play but us. If they do, I’ll take my shoe and beat them till they’re black and
blue. Cross!” Such a Christian sentiment for little girls in a Catholic
school.)
The girl who had
repeated first grade often walked up to me in the recess yard and told me I
thought I was a big shot. I didn’t. How could you be a big shot if you didn’t have friends? She said that because I usually knew the
answers when called on in class, and she didn’t.
But it didn’t
matter. Sister used to put all of the girls who were repeating the grade – I
discovered there were several of them – in charge when she left the room. My nemesis
would invariably make me stand in the back of the room, and tell Sister I was
talking. Usually, Sister's habit hadn’t completely left the room before my nemesis told me to go
stand in the back of the room.
When she returned
to class, Sister would ask why I was in the back of the room (I was never
alone. There were usually several.) I would tell her I didn’t know. My nemesis
would say I was talking. I would say I hadn’t been talking, and Sister would
tell me to sit down. If I had been lying, there were plenty of people who would
have said so.
Our first grade Sister
apparently didn’t like boys, so she was severe with them at a time when
corporal punishment was the norm in Catholic school.
When I was
growing up, there were two churches that I knew of in the area: the Catholic
church that I attended, and the Methodist church. The children who attended the
Methodist church went to public school, so those of us in Catholic school
referred to them as “the Publics.” And there were some Catholics who attended
the public school, so they were also Publics. Being referred to as a Catholic or a Public was just a
way of acknowledging which school someone attended, and there was no stigma
attached. Many of the children in my neighborhood were Publics, so I never got
to know them at school. But they were mainly older than I was.
By the end of
first grade I somehow managed to have some friends, but I never knew from day
to day whether or not they liked me. Sometimes they would let me play with
them; sometimes not. The girl who had stolen Debbie from me ended up as one of
my friends for a few years, but Debbie was more of an acquaintance for some
reason.
I went through
elementary school drifting socially from one group to another. The summer of
1964 I had a group of three friends who lived three or four blocks away. Two
were in my grade at school. The other was a Public. We played together most of
the summer, and often went swimming at one girl’s house. Her older sister - a teenager - belonged to the Beatles fan club, so she got the Christmas recordings the
Beatles made each year, and had all sorts of Beatles memorabilia that third
graders could only dream about.
We had a game
that summer called Beatle wives. We each picked a Beatle. I had George, since Paul
was already taken. They would pretend to be married to their chosen Beatle. I
didn’t want to be married to anyone, so I pretended to be George. Because we’d
listened to the girl’s sister’s Beatles Christmas recordings, where they
actually talked, I learned how to do a Liverpool accent. Not bad for a
9-year-old. They were impressed that I could talk like the Beatles. (Only years
later did I learn about inflection, British vocabulary and idiomatic phrases.)
To anyone from Britain, my Liverpool accent was probably on par with Dick Van
Dyke’s Cockney, but my friends and I thought it was good.
The nice thing
was, they didn’t mind me being George and not being a girl. Whenever I played
with Helen and the girl across the street from me , they would get mad at me for
being a boy. They’d try to tell me I had to be a girl, and I didn’t want to be.
And I always played the youngest, usually a boy named Michael.
After that
summer, those friends drifted away. The girl with the pool was in the other 4th
grade, so she hung around with a new set of friends, and I really never saw the
Public girl. The third girl (another Debbie) moved away.
My nemesis from
first grade was still sometimes my nemesis, and sometimes – like when she
needed help with homework – pretended to be a friend. I didn’t particularly
like her, so if I were playing in my yard and she came over, I frequently hid
until she went away. Often I was in the tree fort, and she couldn’t see me from
the ground. My mother, fortunately, never gave me away. She assumed if I wanted
to play with the girl, I would’ve made myself known.
It never bothered
my mother that the other girls would sometimes decide to fight with me. They’d
insist I couldn’t be whatever character I was pretending to be that day, or
they’d make me pick whatever game we were going to play and then refuse to play
that game, saying I always picked that one. It didn’t matter if I told them I
didn’t care what we played. They were intent on having an argument. So I’d go
home.
My mother often
told me I didn’t need them, they were stuck-up. And eventually, I didn’t. I had
enough pretend friends to have all sorts of adventures by myself. I’d ride my
bike, pretending it was a motorcycle (balloons or baseball cards clipped near the wheels to make the engine noise), or go into the woods to pick
blackberries, or play in the tree fort, pretending it was a space ship or an
apartment or whatever I was thinking of that day.
I never quite
figured out girls, although I could do the girl act pretty well by the time I
got to high school. At least there no one ever said I thought I was a big shot.