(Disclaimer: I want to be as true to life as I can but my
memories of my grandparent’s house may not be totally accurate. Still, they
have a fuzzy-edged clarity that is lacking in any other memories from my
childhood. From these family trips, I can recall smells, sights, and sounds
that I can match up to feelings of fear, wonder, and happiness. It’s a
simplicity of emotion reserved mainly for children. For this reason, when my
sisters and especially my mom read this they will most likely disagree with
certain aspects of my recollections. To this I say: Get your own blog.)
When I was growing up, my family would drive to Illinois
once or twice a year to visit my grandparents. It was a long trip from Kentucky
where we lived until I was seven and an even longer trip from Tennessee. I
don’t remember much about the actual car ride but I do know it didn’t involve DVDs or iPods. We were happy just to listen
to cassette tapes on our Panasonic tape player. (Ok…we probably weren’t exactly
happy. We still drew imaginary
boundary lines in the seat to emphasize to each other how unhappy we were to be in the car all day together.) We
spread out all over our faux wood side-paneled Station Wagon—lying on the
floorboards and sitting backwards in the rear. I could usually tell when we
were getting close because the endless cornfields would begin to give way to
neighborhoods that looked like my grandparents’ with grassy alleys in between
modest wooden houses. And there always seemed to be the smell of burning leaves—a
smell I still associate with Danville, Illinois to this day.
When we finally arrived, my grandmother would be waiting for
us at the back door. She’d reach down to hug and kiss us, then she would usher
us into the hallway leading to the kitchen. The kitchen transformed throughout
the day following the rhythm of hungry, active kids. In the morning it smelled
like fried eggs with lots of pepper and hot coffee. The Today Show played on
the small television set. A large mahogany and leather rocker sat near the
doorway to the dining room. This was grandpa’s chair. He would sit there as he
peeled an apple with his pocketknife and feed the peelings to our scruffy
mixed-breed poodle named Rusty. At suppertime, the kitchen held in the warmth
and scent of fried chicken and creamed potatoes.
At some point during our week there, we would be forced to
go through the door that stood innocently at the corner of the kitchen. This
door opened to a set of rickety, wooden stairs that led to the (gulp) basement.
It took up the entire underside of the house and appeared to have been carved
out of a giant stone slab. As I cautiously made my way down the stairs,
trailing my hand along the bumpy, dusty stonewall, I could almost hear it
whispering to me that it wanted nothing more than to become my tomb. Grandma
had her ancient washer and dryer down there along with a stand up shower. The
walls were lined with Mason jars and there was one small door along the top
near the stairs that led outside. (Note: Anytime you are in a room that seems
to whisper to you about your impending doom, be sure to locate all exits. If
people in horror movies employed this rule they would be more likely to
escape.) We were in the basement because—although it was the mid to late ‘70s and
early ‘80s and there was some kind of rule that everyone must have greasy
hair—we eventually had to take a shower. Grandma always stocked the shower with
shampoo displaying a picture of a green apple on the bottle that smelled like
sweetness and sunshine—an ironic touch down in that dank basement. We showered
as quickly as we could so that we could run upstairs to safety with wet hair.
Other than the kitchen, the main floor held my grandparents’
bedroom, the only other bathroom in the house, the dining room with the large
round pedestal table and the living room. I always felt like the living room
ceiling was about a mile high. There were beautiful old books on the built-in
shelves and Grandma had lamps on every end table. One of the lamps was made to
look like a gnarled old tree. It had one of those fake birds you find in the
floral section of craft stores perched at the top and a sleek, black panther
stretched out in one of the crevices at the bottom of the lamp. It never seemed
strange to me that this lamp should present a predator vs. prey story. I just
liked to look at it. Grandma also had her old, worn KJV Bible on one of the tables. Once, I
put my cup on top of the Bible and I was chastised severely for using God’s
Word as a coaster.
One of the things that my sisters and I loved to do was to
hop along the thick sheets of plastic that covered the carpet and rugs in the
living room and dining room. Grandma had created a track of these sheets to
protect the high-traffic footpaths. The main goal was to only step on the
plastic without accidentally lifting a corner of it revealing the spiky
underside that kept the mats in place. If you stepped on the spikes barefooted
you were definitely the loser. Off of the living room was the downstairs front
porch. It was screened-in and housed a porch swing and metal chairs. We went
out there to play a Holly Hobby board game and a game called Tiddlywinks.
On the far side of the living room was an impressive
staircase. It had a landing with a little window looking outside and a darkly,
polished banister. I would start at the top and walk gracefully down,
pretending that all eyes were turning to see the beautiful lady make a grand
entrance into the room. Upstairs there were two bedrooms and an office with a
twin-size cot. Off of the larger bedroom, there was a sleeping porch with a day
bed and all of my mom’s old toys and books. We were allowed to play with her
Barbies with their heavily lined eyes and fashionable outfits. We would dress
them up as nightclub singers, nurses, and society ladies ala Jackie Kennedy.
Grandma had also saved my mom’s paper doll set. It included two guys and two
girls. They had names like Bob and Pam and we loved dressing them up. My
daughters have several sets of paper dolls and I bet none of them are a
complete set. It’s amazing how meticulously my mom cared for her things.
We spent most of our time during our visit on the upstairs
porch listening to 45s on my mom’s little red record player, dressing up dolls
and reading or—if the weather was nice—playing outside. The house was built in
the corner of the lot, creating large back and side yards. There was a neatly
trimmed hedge that ran along two sides of the property. It looked like it fell
right out of an episode of “Leave it to Beaver. “I could just imagine Ward
Cleaver with his hedge clippers pausing to impart some bit of wisdom to his
bungling, young son. There was a substantial garden complete with grape arbors
in the back corner diagonal from the house. Next to the garden was grandpa’s
workshop. My grandpa was a carpenter. Massive snowball bushes grew near the
doors of his shop and they attracted every bee in town. Because of the bees, I
rarely went near his shop and never got to see him in action.
My grandfather died when I was in the fourth grade and my
grandmother came to live with us soon after. I never got to see their house
when I was old enough to appreciate the intricacies of grandpa’s workmanship
inside or the architecture of the house outside. Now that I have no
grandparents left living I have begun to understand what most people know only
after it’s too late. My grandparents were real people with a long, rich history
that I’ll never know. I’ve learned from my mom that my grandmother had a bleak
childhood as a product of a broken home. When her parents divorced, she and her
siblings were dispersed amongst relatives and she went to live with her
grandparents. Years later she returned to her parents after they found religion
and were re-married. My grandfather became the man of the house early on when
his father unexpectedly died. His mother opened her home to strangers as a
boardinghouse so that she could support my grandfather and his two sisters.
When I was little, all of my grandparents were what they did
for me or gave to me. My grandmothers were chocolate chip cookies and handmade
nightgowns. My grandfathers were Filet-o-Fish sandwiches and wooden blocks. As
I grew up and I began to realize that the world didn’t turn because I needed it
to, I still didn’t appreciate what my grandparents represented. These elderly
family members blended in to the background of my young adult life. Now that
they are all gone, I wish so much that I could sit down with them and ask them
questions about their lives. What did they wish to become? What were their
greatest disappointments and accomplishments?
Beautifully written, Abby! What you've described is essentially the circle of life. What we take for granted we repay by passing on to the future generations. --Anna Leta
ReplyDeleteHi Abby, I just saw your comment on my blog. It is so fun to "meet" other families in the Nashville area who are adopting in the DRC! Look forward to following your family's journey and hopefully meeting one day! Lori (www.mosaicofgrace.blogspot.com)
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