A Walk in the Past

When I was in elementary school, every year we were given an assignment to write about our family’s Christmas traditions. We had none. No menorah to light or stockings to hang and no fireplace. We were Catholic, but not consistently practicing ones.

No advent candles marked the coming of Christmas. No extra trips to church; not even for confession. No special foods, except for a sickly-sweet date-based treat that my Grandma Rieske made.

My dad would buy a real tree and store it in the garage, in a bucket of water, until the time was right for decorating.  He always went alone. I never understood why I couldn’t go: choosing a tree seemed like it would be fun. But that’s not how my family functioned.

When it was time to decorate, my dad would stretch out the strings of lights all over the floor. He’d cuss and yell, often and loudly, because the wires would always be tangled despite being carefully stored away the prior year.

He’d plug them in, and if a string didn’t light, he would painstakingly replace a bulb, plug it back in. If it didn’t work, he’d remove the new bulb, put it in a different slot, and so on, until he’d get the thing to work.

At first it was fun to watch, but then he’d get angrier and angrier as time went on. I’d disappear.

Once he had lights, he was the one who strung them on the tree. According to him, he was the only one who could ensure proper placement.

One time my mom put the lights on when he was at work. Oh, that was a huge mistake! He threw a temper tantrum fit for a toddler.

My siblings and I were allowed to hang the ornaments, but only under his supervision. The sizes, shapes and colors had to be balanced, not clustered.

Our ornaments were cheap, easily breakable things. Nothing special about them, no heirlooms, no gifts from family.  Nothing fancy, either, just solid colors that were quickly fading.

Tinsel came next. There was an art to placing these strands of foil.

My dad was in charge of the process. He’d lie on his back, under the tree, and slowly, methodically, worked outward, would place one strand at a time, exactly one-inch space between each. 

The tinsel also had to drape evenly over the branch, so that the edges were in perfect alignment.

Night after night, my dad would slide under the tree, placing the tinsel so carefully that, when finished, it was a shimmering silver wave.

He’d work hi way up the trunk, always from inside out. He’d stop periodically to check of his work.  If he didn’t like something, he’d pull off all the tinsel from that section and start again.

None of us were allowed to drape a single tinsel on the tree.

It changed when we moved to California. My brother and I were both teens, in high school, and showing reasonable intelligence. Plus my dad was having difficulty finding full time work, and often drove for hours to and from a printing office that hired him for a day.

I don’t think he allowed us to take over out of trust, but rather because he lacked time and energy. He did, however, inspect our work. Anything found to be substandard had to be redone.

Only after the last bit of tinsel was applied were strings of garland added. There was an art for garland hanging.

You began in the back, tucking an end around a lower branch. As you circumnavigated the tree, the garland must travel in a wave-like pattern, rising and falling as with the tide. The distance between each wave had to be precise.

Interestingly enough, he had no rules about the color, so our garland strings were in many different colors over the years.

Another “tradition” concerned the manager. It could be displayed at any time after Thanksgiving. The entire entourage would be present, even though we all knew that the angels and shepherds didn’t arrive until Christ was born. The wise men bowed in supplication weeks before the baby appeared. The “star” was lit every night, pointing the way.

Even after my younger sister no longer believed in Santa, after we were in bed, Christmas Eve, my father unwrapped the baby Jesus and placed him before Mary and Joseph. I was the one who would go straight to the manger in the morning and announce that the Christ child had arrived.

My siblings headed for the gifts.

Gift opening took up an entire morning. We never had more than three gifts each, but my mother insisted that each gift be opened with the same precision and care that she put into the wrapping.

My dad handed out the gifts. My brother opened his first, then me, then my sister. Mom came next, and then my dad. Paper was gently removed, folded, and stacked.  Ribbon remnants and bows received the same treatment. “Leftovers” were packed away for the next year.

There were behavioral expectations. We had to show proper appreciation for each gift, meaning that there were oohes and aahes all morning long. Even if you didn’t like the gift, or had not asked for it, you had to fake appreciation and gratitude. Any sign of ungraciousness, and you were sent away while the rest of the family finished. Sometimes you’d get the rest of your gifts later that day, but not always.

You also had to sit perfectly still while someone else opened their gift.

We seldom had large meals. When you’re poor, you eat a lot of beans and potatoes, but on Christmas we enjoyed ham, scalloped potatoes, baked beans, rolls, and a homemade pie for dessert.

During the summer of my thirteenth year, when we still lived in Ohio, a surprise thunderstorm arose in the early morning. It was a viscous, thunderous affair, rattling not just windows, but the entire house.

There was a huge explosion that made me sit up in bed. My mother, not my dad, was the one who searched the house to make sure we were all okay. As she passed the room I shared with my sister, she told us to stay in bed, then closed the door.

Later on, we learned that lightning had struck the antenna attached to our garage.  My dad knew it had to be grounded, but had not had time to do so. When the lightning hit, our house exploded in a ball of fire.

After the volunteer firemen left, and the ashes had cooled, we discovered that the garage had suffered the most. One whole side was gone, and everything inside was melted metals and ash.

My mother insisted we sift through the remains. I didn’t want to, but I did so because it was expected.

It fascinated me how some things were whole while others were decimated.

My bike was unscathed, but my brother’s, which sat right next to mine, was a melted ruin. My mother’s canned foods sat proudly on their shelf, next to a crystal radio set that was a charred mess. 

The most surprising find was the Christmas manager. The manger itself was nothing but ash. Mary, Joseph, the angels, shepherds and wise men survived, but were badly charred. The baby Jesus, which had been wrapped, like all the other figures, in flimsy tissue paper, was unscathed. Not one burn mark.  All the fingers were there, as was the halo. 

If you didn’t know it had been in a fire, you’d think it had just come from the store.

Years late as I recall that morning, it gives me goose bumps. How could that figurine, cheaply made of a ceramic cast, have survived the intense heat of the blaze, when all the rest of the manger set was destroyed?

Standing in the still smoldering ruins of our garage, as I stared at the figurine cradled in my mother’s hands, I felt an electrical charge run up my back. An awareness stole over me, an awareness that just as baby Jesus was saved from the fire, so would I be spared from the never-ending torture that was my life.

I was convinced that as long as I believed in Him, I was promised life eternal. 

In my church we don’t usually talk about “being saved” or “accepting Jesus as my savior,” but I felt as if I had been pulled back from a precipice, and that I was, indeed, saved.

From those humble Christmas traditions, I did takeaway some important lessons. I developed respect for the gift and the giver. I understood pride in accomplishment. I discovered that Christmas was not about material possessions, but about the power of the Lord to pull us through fire and travesty.

Even though my relationship with my parents continued to be tense until they both passed away, I eventually understood that they wanted us to give homage where homage was due, to honor God and family, and to take time to enjoy the true meaning of Christmas.

Eating Out

I’ve always loved eating out. When I was a kid, it was something we rarely did.

Low-income families don’t have money for unnecessary expenditures. Meals were either at home or not at all. Or, if we were lucky, my mom might prepare picnic foods that could be easily transported, it would go into the car along with the dog, and off we’d go, looking for a nice park with a tad of shade.

The first time I remember eating at a counter was at a drug store in Dayton, Ohio. My mom and I had taken the bus into town in order to see an eye doctor. After finding out that I needed glasses, my mom decided to treat me.

There were colorful balloons floating above the register. The clerk asked which one I wanted. It was tough choosing. Red? Blue? Green? I don’t recall which I selected, but once I’d decided, the clerk popped the balloon. Inside was a coupon for a free banana split.

My eyes grew wide as the clerk layered ice cream and toppings on the split banana, then topped it off with tons of whupped cream and three cherries. It was the most delicious thing I’d ever had.

The following week we returned after picking up my new glasses. Balloons still floated. I still got to choose. I told the clerk I was wishing for another banana split. I crossed my fingers as she punctured the balloon.

I didn’t get that split, but instead won a milkshake! Oh, it was difficult choosing the flavor as I’d never had one of those before.

One time my family was traveling to Kansas. When it was time for dinner, my dad stopped at a large restaurant. It was so big inside and so noisy, that I was awestruck. We each got a tray, then slid it along rails, looking at the foods on the other side of a glass barrier.

My dad carefully monitored what we got. I remember jello, bread, and soup. Those weren’t all that I wanted, but I had to be satisfied.

Much later I realized it was cafeteria style, meaning that we were charged for each item.

My dad was a semi-professiional bowler who traveled all over the Midwest in order to participate in tournaments. Most of the time he went alone, but sometimes the whole family would go. We’d always bring our own food, but there was one time when we stopped at a Bob’s Big Boy.

The large statue of a boy standing on the roof imposed me so much so that every time since, when I’ve seen that same boy, I’m filled with warmth.

It’s weird that I remember those few times that my family didn’t eat a homemade meal. But when it’s special, when it’s unique, impressions are made that aren’t easily forgotten.

Once I started working and earning my own money, I did eat out a few times, usually at fast food chains. Not the healthiest choices, but they were choices I made, not ones forced upon me.

As a parent, I tried to treat my kids to meals every now and then. If I had enough money, I’d join them, but if not, I’d enjoy watching them devour burgers and fries, tacos and beans.

My husband and I love date days in which we see a movie and enjoy a lunch out. Sometimes it’s chili dogs and fries, sometimes a deli sandwich, and if we’ve got a coupon, a nice meal at a sit-down restaurant.

I don’t recall those meals, not like the ones from my childhood. What lingers is the joy, the time together, the essence of the meal.

Eating out is something that I still look forward to, something I truly enjoy.

There will come a time when I won’t be able to leave home, wherever that may be. I’ll be infirm, perhaps both mentally and physically, not able to understand or digest restaurant foods.

Meanwhile I continue to look forward to sitting at a table not at my home, eating foods prepared in a kitchen that’s not mine, shared with someone I love.

Not-so-Clear Lake

            Prior to moving to California, vacations meant visiting family. Once a year we’d drive to Galipolis to see my mother’s relatives, many of whom lived in small houses without running water and indoor plumbing.

            Sometimes we’d visit my Aunt Lucy who lived, all alone, in a large house with backyard gardens with lush, green grass and more varieties of flowers than I’d ever seen before. There was Aunt Rachel whose home sat at the top of a hill, a wonderful, perfect slope for rolling downhill.

            My Aunt Ginny led the life of a traveler, moving from place to place. The most interesting home was up near Lake Michigan, nestled in the woods. It had no-anything. If I had to pee during the night, it meant walking into the woods to the outhouse where I imagined all kinds of creepy-crawlers. But…the lake!

            They relocated to Tennessee, a large white house with a wraparound porch. They had chickens that laid eggs! I was excited to go to the coup and gather them every morning. It was hot and humid and they didn’t own a single fan. Instead my cousins and I spent time in the shade of the porch. Until I discovered some type of insect sticking halfway into my arm! Boy, did I make a fuss, which caused all the adults to come running.

            Once it was removed, I wanted to leave. Now.

            One time we drove all the way to Kansas to see someone my mother befriended when she was in the Army. I don’t recall the woman’s name, but I will never forget the altars dedicated to Mary all over her house.

            My dad’s parents moved often. I loved the farm where they had a donkey, a gaggle of clucking chickens and a horse that loved to roll around in dirt. But, there were also wasps, and when one stung my finger and I had trouble breathing, I never wanted to go back there.

            Shortly afterward, they sold the farm and moved to Cincinnati. It was a modern house, with air, a bar in the basement stocked with all kinds of sodas, and a pool. The summer before we moved, my grandma invited me to spend a week with her. I had a marvelous time! Until I spent too much time in the pool and got so badly sunburnt that my mom wouldn’t let me return.

            While we had family in Ohio, my dad dreamt of moving to California, and when my mother’s doctor said we should move somewhere less damp due to her severe asthma, my parents wasted no time selling everything, packing up the car and heading west.

            Once we settled in a tiny rental house in South San Francisco, we began Sunday explorations. Using a map from the car insurance company, we drove all over, from up north to the Russian River, to east out to Lake Pinecrest, and south, well past San Jose. My mom would pack a picnic lunch, and off we’d go.

            I had become a temperamental teen. I’d always been sulky, primarily due to what I perceived as my low status in the family.

My mother doted on my older brother, feeling she had to protect him from our father’s ire. While Dad was an athlete, able to confidently play almost any sport, my brother was not. My dad was good with his hands, able to tear apart car engines, fix issues with the house, and build any type of shelving my mother wanted. My brother had not aptitude or interest in those things. To put it mildly, my brother was not the son my dad wanted.

Just as I was not the daughter. I disliked girly things, preferring pants and sports. I loved being outside, no matter the weather. I didn’t read fashion magazines and paid no attention to what the cool kids wore.

My sister was completely opposite. She was emotional and moody, just like my mom. She cared little about school, preferring the dangerous kids, the ones who sold and did drugs. My mother came to her rescue many times, including getting her out of juvenile hall after she’d been caught passing drugs through the fence of her elementary school.

Moving to California, I hoped, would change my life. I’d make friends. I’d go to movies and school dances. I’d play on sports teams and have a boyfriend. I’d make money, somehow, and buy myself a radio. And, I’d go to college. Anywhere away from home.

Back to vacations.

Sometimes our Sunday trips were short drives down to Woodside Park. We’d find a semi-isolated table, unload our gear, and spend hours lounging about.

My dad heard about Clear Lake, and so one day we drove up there to check it out. I don’t recall how long it took to get there, but by the time we arrived, things were tense in the car.

My parents were fighting, once again. About how long it was taking, about wanting to turn around, about anything and everything. My brother was poking and pinching me and on the other side, my sister was kicking my legs.

When we arrived, we had to find a place to park. It was tough because the folks who knew, had staked out every table and flat piece of ground.

Eventually my dad parked and said get out.

There was a beach, shade, and someone was vacating a table. Perfect.

We changed into our swimsuits, then waded into the water. It was so cold it made it hard for me to breathe. I could almost swim, my strongest stroke being the elementary backstroke. However, when something brushed my legs, I freaked out.

My dad had to rescue me, talking me back to shore.

On a drive around the lake, my dad saw a sign for cabins. They were small, cheap, and right on the lake. He went inside the office and made a reservation.

I loved that cabin! Because the porch hung over the water, it was relatively cool inside. My dad and brother went out fishing in the mornings, meaning I could entertain myself gathering shells, throwing rocks, sitting and enjoying the sounds of the water lapping the small dock that jutted into the lake.

When my brother stayed behind, we were allowed to jump off the dock. The water was shallow, so there was no chance of drowning. We’d jump in, climb out, jump again and again and again until we were exhausted.

My dad caught lots of catfish. Every night we’d eat out on the porch, waving off the aggressive bees that wanted our food. Thankfully I never got stung, for at that time, no one knew how very allergic I was.

We returned the next summer. The lake was not clear. There was a thin veil of green algae covering the part of the lake near our cabin. This was before anyone knew of the dangers of algae bloom.

My parents still let us jump off the dock. Whichever one of us went first would tread water, using our hands to sweep away the algae. The other would jump, then we’d repeat.

By the end of each swimming outing, our suits were covered in green dots. My mom would rinse them in the kitchen sink, then hand them on the porch to dry. After lunch we’d go back, doing the same thing over and over.

That was the last time we vacationed anywhere. I didn’t know a lot about finances, but I understood that my dad was unable to find steady work as a printer. No longer were papers made by moving tiny letters, which was my dad’s skill. Since he didn’t know how to work presses, his talents were no longer needed.

It’s now sixty years later and I still recall the algae, the fun jumping off the dock, the endless meals of catfish, and sharing the bed with my sister who stole the sheet every night.

Clear Lake remains, in my mind, that murky, green waters that entertained me so thoroughly back when I was a teen.