My teen years were rough. My parents' marriage was dissolving and because they unwisely chose to stay together for "the sake of the children," the children suffered. My older sister -- a year ahead of me in school -- handled it especially badly. She acted out by getting pregnant at least twice (accompanied by abortions) and becoming violent with my mother and me. However, as is the rule in my family, none of this was ever discussed. She was pretty and on the Honor Roll. To the outside world, she was The Good Daughter. And as always with my family, it's the outside world who's opinion mattered.
I was The Bad Daughter. Think Ally Sheedy in The Breakfast Club. I read Sylvia Plath, wore lumpy clothes, cut classes, listened to what my father called "African Mao-Mao Music" (meaning anything with a beat) and demanded to be left alone. If you didn't heed my warning and insisted on interacting with me, I spoke my mind. While I went to church regularly and kept my hymen intact, I was less presentable to the outside world, which within my family is the cardinal sin. I was not only disillusioned by the hypocrisy of it all (which seemed to mirror Wateregate and Viet Nam), I also felt personally assailed.
Through those rough times, my #1 ally was my Cousin Rose. A decade my senior, she made her own way in the world. Lived single and independent. Traveled the world. I poured out my heart to her in long letters, and she responded by visiting Chicago regularly and intervened on my part with my grandparents (and if you knew my maternal grandmother, you know that took guts). If it hadn't been for Rose, her understanding and her example, I could very easily have slipped into drugs.
Rose suffered an incredibly painful divorce about 10 years ago and it changed her. She is angry about how much she devoted to a man who could leave her so easily for another and she is bitter about having sacrificed her opportunity to have kids. She sustained the kind of body blow it's hard to bounce back from, and my heart goes out to her.
But I find it difficult to be around her. Little makes her happy anymore. Everything is too expensive or too stupid for her to invest her time in. Nothing much interests her, except for fantasy/sci-fi (Harry Potter, Star Wars) and fixating on her half-empty glass.
She's in town this week and we're spending Tuesday together. I booked us on a Lake Michigan cruise. I told her it's because I love my city so much and I want her to see it from a new angle. The reality is: (1) a cruise has a predetermined beginning and end, so if she starts getting on my nerves I can reassure myself it will be over soon and (2) it's a booze cruise, so I can anesthetize myself if need be.
It's not pretty, but it's the awful truth.
These are the thoughts and observations of me — a woman of a certain age. (Oh, my, God, I'm 65!) I'm single. I'm successful enough (independent, self supporting). I live just outside Chicago, the best city in the world. I'm an aunt and a friend. I feel that voices like mine are rather underrepresented online or in print. So here I am. If my musings resonate with you, please visit my blog again sometime.
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Just remember to breath in and out... in and out. Hope it is better than expected! :)
ReplyDeleteJust loved your boose cruise thought! Too funny!
ReplyDeleteMay you have the patience to be kind and not to get wasted on your booze cruise. Ask for a tour of the bridge and maybe she'll hook up with the captain and sail away happily.
ReplyDeleteI give you credit for sticking with her, let's face it, she stuck by you when you were not at your best.
(Don't you wish you could just relive a few years of your past? Knowing what you know now?)
Thanks, everyone! Diana, you're right, these things usually turn out better than I fear.
ReplyDeleteWWFU, let's hope she isn't as hip to me and my otives as you were.
And Jenny, I know, I know … I feel very guilty about dreading this, especially because I know she how much she loves me. I value her devotion and her feelings, so I'll be sure to behave. It's just that I don't want to pull punches on this blog, and every awful word of this entry is true.
You're a good niece. Lesser women would have punted her a long time ago.
ReplyDeleteIs she seeing a counselor? Harry Potter and Luke Skywalker aren't going to save her - she needs someone who will snap her out of this emotional quagmire.
Kudos to you for hanging in there with her. I doff my wig.
Try to think of it as a role reversal...she was a great friend to you when you were going through a rough time....and now, she needs you to do the same for her. Try to keep that in mind.
ReplyDeleteI agree w/ Diana; I bet you'll have a better time than you think!
ReplyDeleteNow, go on over to this post and pick up your award - it's fitting, no?!
why do I get the feeling that The Gal might be a bit Irish?
ReplyDelete