Category: Family


…a Day in the Life, a Very Good Life

Feeling so good, I can’t quite believe it. After so many months of pain, nausea, fatigue, and mental fog, I am finally on the mend. So fucking glad!!

Started getting ready today for a fantabulous trip to Crater Lake. Haven’t ever been there and am soooo excited! Especially since I’m feeling healthy. Got the ok from the doc to hike from the rim to the lake and can’t wait to make it happen.

Also looking forward to spending five days alone with my honey. No kids. No furry. Will miss them all but will also enjoy the man…

Some People’s Kids: Happy. Healthy. Vacationy.

A Friend for Grams

Life was looking up a bit for Grams. She had a friend. Perhaps her first and only friend. Josie came to the house daily to clean and dress Grams’ wound (you remember, the maggot infested wound from spilling grease). She also cleaned and cooked meals. Basically Grams got a friend and a break. She had worked so hard all of her life especially since she lost her ability to walk. Wow…pushing a chair around to get from the stove to the washboard to the clothesline…She even did her own dry cleaning – with gasoline! The youngest (my mother) passed at school after breathing the fumes. I’m surprised the whole class didn’t have to be evacuated! That would certainly be done today, in a heartbeat.

Josie lightened the load not for Grams but also for the son and the youngest. The son could spend even more time away and the youngest could have a bit more carefree kid life. Grams could confide in Josie and Josie could just smile and everything seemed better. As a child I was always more excited to go see Josie than I was to see any of my crazy family. Her world was somehow safer and more joyful and well she made the best tortillas in the southwest. Josie passed this talent on to the youngest (my mother), when she was an adult, who improved upon the recipe to ultimately make the best tortillas in the universe! I’m not kiddin’.

There was an added benefit to Josie’s relationship with Grams. It seemed that Gramps didn’t spend as much time at the house. Once Grams was healed, she continued to spend time with her friend and they remained so until Josie’s death.

Some People’s Kids: Healers…

On the Road…

A wonderful day for a drive with my honey and my daughter, the elder! Miles and miles of songs at the top of our lungs and laughter. Is there anything better? The only thing missing was my daughter, the younger, and the furry…definitely something to look forward to.

There’s not much that I like doing more than taking a road trip with loved ones and my tunes. I don’t really know where I got this trait. My mother was never much for drives or music blaring but I certainly passed it on to my chillens…

Oh, and how could I forget?! I found out about my daughter the elder’s strange attraction to her cat. We were all happily riding along when she shared that her cat had been looking quite sexy the day before. She claimed that she didn’t actually feel sexually attracted (my god I hope that is true!) but that she could appreciate that another cat would find her sexy! Hmmmm…quite disturbing is all I can really say…

Some People’s Kids: Drive. Sing. Laugh. Think lovingly of their cat.

Thank You, FDR

So I have been gone for for a couple of weeks due to technical difficulties but my trusty personal IT guy (love you babe) fixed my broken site…thank goodness! As well as a variety of other reasons but I have returned.

Well, it’s Church day! It’s funny that I would choose this day to write about my family and start with my Gramps since he was sooo anti-church and always referred to himself as an atheist. Or, then again, maybe it’s completely perfect.

Following the death of his favorite middle child, Gramps became harder and harder to live with. If the son made a wrong move he was beaten. A particularly nasty beating came when the son broke a pane of glass. Oh yeah…uh huh…a beating offense if I ever heard one!

The youngest (my mother), though never beaten, heard with regularity how she didn’t measure up to her sister. She wasn’t outgoing enough. She wasn’t smart enough. She wasn’t entertaining enough. She simply just wasn’t enough!

My Grams, however, was the primary recipient of his verbal abuse. Every little thing that went wrong in his life was her fault. Her defense system caused her to shut down and her silence just made him more and more angry. I’m sure that an objective observer might say that it was his own shame and guilt that fed his anger but that really wouldn’t have made his victims feel any better. After all they were the people he was supposed to love. To care for.

I guess in their own dysfunctional way they went about the business of living their lives. The youngest attended school. Her shyness made any public speaking almost unbearable. During one school project, she chewed most of the collar off her dress. A dress that Grams had painstakingly sewn for her. She always sat in the back of the room and as a result it was months before anyone realized that her eyesight was so bad she couldn’t see the board. She became very successful at remaining unnoticed. No one knew how smart she was and how much potential she embodied.

The son just tried to stay out of Gramps’ way. There was no father/son relationship to worry about. Survival was the order of the day. He spent as much time away from the house as possible. He brewed rootbeer (I guess he shared more with his dad than he thought), hung out with his dog Fido, and kicked around town with his friends.

Grams went about her daily chores. Pushing a chair around in front of her like a walker while she cooked, cleaned, and did the laundry. She withstood the periodic rages from her husband and entertained her kids with stories of the family.

Once, while cooking, she spilled grease on her leg and although a scab formed, she developed a terrible itching. It turned out that the wound hadn’t been properly cleaned (remember no doctor visits for this family) and as a result, she had maggots living under the scab. Since she couldn’t really care for herself during this time, Gramps thought it would be appropriate to have the youngest (my mother) stay home from school to nurse her back to health. The school however took a slightly different view. They helped the family access one of the many social programs put in place under FDR. It is through this program that Josie, a wonderful woman, became a part of their extended family. She would prove to be Grams’ closest friend and beloved by subsequent generations…

Some People’s Kids: Are Lifesavers…

Good Morning and welcome to the Church of the Wholey Bizarrely Insane otherwise known as my family history. We’ve journeyed through immigration, bootlegging, illness, and death. Where shall we go today? I’m thinking the brain is just not really working so I will just have to see you next Sunday…

Some People’s Kids: Brain dead.

PTSD and This American Family

Wow…just watched the new video for the Eminem/Rihanna song, Love the Way You Lie! The spontaneous combustion of a troubled relationship, takes me back…

There were many times that I wondered how such a sweet love turned so ugly. Sometimes, I guess, it is just the chemical reaction between two people. When my buttons feed off his and his off mine and on and on…Scary, hateful, romantic, dangerous. Definitely not healthy.

This video as well as the lyrics made me cry, made me sad for all of the hurt we caused each other as well as those we love and who love us. My girls suffered through fights, tears, silence, anger, blame, divorce. Sure there was also laughter, love, happiness, hope. But it is often so much harder to remember. As adults what scars do they carry, how has it effected their relationships. The elder experienced her own violence, anger, tears, death of the relationship. The younger seems to have lost her exuberance for life and love. They both seem so eager to settle. Settle for less love, less caring, less honor in their lives from those around them. Or maybe for themselves from themselves.

Wow…suddenly I seem to have more clarity. When a relationship combusts, the collateral damage is widespread. If there are children then they can’t help but get burned. What is the remedy? There’s no magic salve so what can I do, what can they do? I’m feeling sick at the thought that I may have done irreparable harm. That the shrapnel is so deeply imbedded that they won’t be able to see it’s relationship to what they feel today, to the choices that they make, to the journey they are on.

I’m not sure I have ever been so effected by a video. I don’t know if I have ever seen quite so much of myself on display. My discomfort is palatable…

Some People’s Kids: Implode. Explode. Destroy.

Oh the Sea, the Beautiful Sea

Great day playing in the ocean with the furry and the elder daughter. Sometime I forget how important it is to spend one on one time with each of the offspring. Even when they are grown. Mayhaps even more importantly when they are grown. After all how will they know that their company it truly enjoyable until you choose to spend fun time with them as adults! Hmmm…definitely worth a thought or two.

The sky was such a deep blue and the water alternately cool and warm. Mmmm, simply a delicious way to spend the day. Laughter and singing in the car, splashing and playing in the water. The furry ran and pounced and chased the ball with seemingly boundless energy. Forget the “energizer bunny”, it is a puppy that goes and goes and goes and…you get the idea.

My daughter, the elder, lent her beautiful voice to Sarah McLaughlin and Rush (I know, go figure) while keeping me company. Note to self: must remember to make room for this kind of joy on a more regular basis. I am so lucky to have birthed babies that have grown into women who are funny and interesting and so much fun to be with!

Can’t wait to do it again…

Some People’s Kids: Wonderful!

Death Through Arrogance

Welcome again, my children, to the Church of the Wholey Bizarrely Insane! Our sermons have so far taken us through Grams’ marriage to the Spaniard. His bootlegging. Her fast. Her coma. His gambling. What more could go wrong?! Well…

Just as Grams recovered and the rhythm of life resumed, the hits just kept coming. Her middle child, who was entertaining and outgoing and the apple of her father’s eye, became ill. Her life thus far had not been easy. She was very small in stature with very poor eyesight. In fact the family had been told that she would eventually lose her eyesight entirely. They tried to prepare by sending her to the state school for the blind. She came home with skills that would allow her to have a full and independent life. It seems, however, that fate had different plans for the green-eyed teenager.

One day this middle child became desperately ill. She was burning with fever and could barely breathe. As already established, my Gramps wasn’t fond of doctors and this time his arrogance would prove deadly. He and my Grams tried to care for her themselves but they didn’t have the knowledge or the tools to make a difference thus the sixteen-year-old just became sicker and sicker. Finally, friends and family intervened and sent for a doctor and then forced Gramps, at gunpoint no less, to allow the physician to see the girl. Unfortunately, it was too late and soon her young life dimmed. You see it turns out she had diphtheria. So to add insult to the most grievous injury the signs were nailed to the door and the family did their grieving while under quarantine.

As soon as the quarantine was lifted, my Gramps went on the binge (as will become a pattern in his life) of all binges. Essentially, he felt he had killed his favorite daughter and to the end of his days he lived with that guilt.

He disappeared for weeks and no one knew where he was until a cousin came by and told Grams that they were sure they had heard him singing from a window in the State Mental Hospital. Leave it to Gramps, from tragedy to the ridiculous in one fell swoop!!

Along with his return to the family home, however, terror took up residence. He was never easy to live with but now he bullied my Grams, beat the son, and humiliated the the youngest (my mother). Oh yeah…and he became a master philanderer.

It was not unusual for my mother or her brother to hear from “friends” that Gramps had been seen at a carnival or the movies or a restaurant with some woman and her kids. Not that he ever took Grams or his own kids to any of those places. Not an easy childhood experience to be sure! Perhaps this explains the difficulty they would each have with their own children…

I wonder what new challenge will befall this family next Sunday…hmmm…

Gramps the Bootlegger

Oh my gosh, so yesterday just got away from me. I agreed to be the support system for my daughter, the younger, while she became festooned with art for the body. Her newest (she has eight tattoos) is a cityscape, from the ’40s, of two New York City hotels. Tres magnifique! I hope you will forgive my absence from the blogosphere.

Well it is Sunday and here we are again at the Church of the Wholey Bizarrely Insane. Another installment of the story of my incredibly crazy family. It seems that around every corner there is some quirky tidbit.

When last we met, Grams had lost her senses and her ability to walk (probably due to a stroke). Life for her became about finding creative ways to do all of the assorted chores she had done before as well as just plain getting around. Mostly she used a chair. Yep, she pushed a chair around in front of her while she cooked, cleaned, and washed the clothes. It would be quite some time before she would use crutches.

As you might imagine, my Grams was a determined lady who came from hardy stock. She was one of nineteen children (OMG!!!), ten of whom lived to adulthood. Her father and his two brothers were handsome Germans who, after being orphaned, were raised by Hispanics. Rumor has it that the parents were killed in an Indian raid but who really knows.

When my Gramps first came sniffing around the family it was with thoughts of riches in his head. But he was disappointed because though Greatgramps was land rich he was pretty much cash poor. So after Gramps and Grams got married, and before Grams lost her senses and her legs, he had other ideas for quick money.

He dabbled in gambling (quick won, even quicker lost) and farming (not quick at all) but, thanks to the Eighteenth Amendment, the real money was in bootlegging! It was Prohibition so he and a small circle of Spaniards began making their own booze and they quickly developed a reputation for having the very best product.

Those Spanish boys were quite innovative and although the revenuers had their suspicions they were never able to catch them with much in the way of incriminating evidence! Gramps and his family lived on a pig farm and whenever there was a hint of revenuers in the area they buried the jugs in the pens! After all, who would choose to look there?! In addition they had created an elaborate system in the basement of the house. A false wall was constructed with a bookcase for a door behind which most of the stash rested. In addition the support columns were hollowed out and with the help of a swivel hinge, gallon jugs could be stored safely.

It was in this very basement that the most amusing story from the period took place. The revenuers had come to the house thinking they had finally caught Gramps with his pants down. They somehow knew about the hollowed out posts but could only come up with one jug. My Grams was sweating bullets because her youngest (my mother), who was just four at the time, knew all of the best hiding places. Grams was just waiting for the wee one to point out the magic bookcase. However, she needn’t have worried because as the government agents prepared to escort Gramps to jail, the youngster picked up a fly swatter and, with her big brown eyes blazing, she began wailing on them. “Leave my daddy alone, leave my daddy alone,” were the only words she uttered at the top of her very tiny lungs each time the fly swatter came down on the men. It just may have been my mother’s proudest moment: the day she beat up the revenuers!

So…Gramps spent a couple of days in jail and paid his fine. Most of southern Colorado continued to get their bootlegged booze from the Spaniards. But alas…Gramps was no Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr., thus the proceeds were not parlayed into great wealth or a political dynasty. And though they did make a very good living during this time all of the funds were managed by my Gramps and eventually it was all gambled away. So sad…

See you next Sunday…

Some People’s Kids: Bootleggers. Irresponsible. No good.

Beyond Dysfunction: A Family Story

So…since this is Sunday, I thought it might be an interesting weekly practice to spend it visiting the Church of the Wholey Bizarrely Insane. My family! Both sides of the aisle are filled with “B” movie scenarios that have been equal parts chuckles and tears for me.

Let’s start with the most colorful character in the family and I don’t really mean that in any way that is positive, my grandfather. He was born in Santander, a port city on a bay in the northern part of Spain and he smoked and drank his way through life until his death at eighty-two.

Gramps came from a wealthy Spanish family. They accumulated their fortune through fishing and then canning. Eventually they lost their fortune to Franco!

As was typical in wealthy Spanish Catholic families, someone had to become a priest. So in their collective wisdom the family determined Gramps to be the ONE! Understand now, he had no calling to this vocation and he wasn’t particularly devout, he was just the second son and not the heir to the fortune…so it made sense. Ha! At the time no one knew what a joke that was. Ironically, it was the heir who had the calling, so surprise of all surprises…no one was going to be happy.

So on to Seminary Gramps went. I can’t imagine his road was any too smooth as he always had the spirit of a rabble-rouser. He was incredibly smart and not much got by him so when he realized that the priests were doing more than praying with the nuns (hmmm, some foreshadowing there), he said “adios” to the seminary. The family was furious but this opened up the opportunity for the brother to do what he had felt called to do all along.

While the family fumed, the brother became a highly regarded priest who traveled through rural villages spreading the word. Of course, as I later came to learn, the world can be a dark and sad place where bad things happen. The brother, while visiting his congregation in inclement weather, contracted pneumonia and died. Let me tell you, the family immediately assigned the responsibility for this travesty on ol’ Gramps. This, in addition to his profound personal feelings of guilt, led him to hop a freighter to the US.

Upon his arrival to Ellis Island, he adopted the requisite misspelling of his surname and began his journey in the new world. As with most immigrants, he knew where to find his compadres, and southern Colorado called. He planned to ingratiate himself with the local Spaniards and identify a wealthy landowner with available daughters. In case you haven’t noticed he could be calculating and manipulative.

When the prettier, more desirable sister married another, he courted and married my shy, very inexperienced grandmother. Not that I’m knocking it, after all I might not be here if they hadn’t contributed to the gene pool. But I’m pretty sure she was woefully unprepared for what was to come.

I don’t know much about those first years I can only hope there was some measure of happiness. There were children, the first a boy, the second a girl with bright green eyes, and the third another girl who came early, very early, on a farm, with no doctor. She was so small and my dear old Gramps suggested that my grandmother was crazy to get too attached since the baby would die anyway. Yep, definitely a warm, sensitive, loving guy. But Grams was strong and smart and she put the baby in a drawer and surrounded her with milk bottles filled with warm water to keep her alive. Kind of a rustic incubator and voila, she survived!!! I am sooo grateful to my Grams as that baby was my mother. As always I’m completely in favor of the propagation of the family tree.

My grandfather ran the family like a boot camp with calisthenics in the yard, a vegetarian diet and only water for the kids and Grams (of course Gramps ate meat and drank whatever he wanted). My mother said he was like the the father in the original “Cheaper by the Dozen” but without any of the humor.

He made his impact felt in many ways over the years. When my mother was three, Grams went on a fast. She got the idea from a pamphlet espousing cleansing the body of toxins that Gramps had brought home. I guess she was just ahead of her time given the trend toward all kinds of cleansing we see today. Anyway, hers lasted for two months. Uh huh, you got it, that’s what the family says, two months without food.

The end of the fast came when she went into a coma (no real surprise there!). The story, depending on who tells it, is that either she became delirious with hunger and found some peanuts and ate them (Gramps” side) or Gramps tried to kill her by giving her peanuts (guess who’s side?). Whatever happened, she probably suffered an electrolyte imbalance maybe resulting in a stroke. She wound up in a coma and when she came out of it she had aphasia, meaning she would think one thing and say something else. In her case she called everyone by a number instead of their name. My mother was “44.” Crazy!

Gramps didn’t believe in doctors so he cared for her himself. When she developed terrible bed sores (one so bad you could see the bone), he built a sun porch on the back of the house and carried her up there everyday to dry them out. Unfortunately, because he didn’t know as much as he thought he did, as the sores healed, the tendons and muscles shrank and as a result her leg was shortened by several inches. Without medical care or physical therapy, she never walked again on her own. She was thirty-seven…

To come…death…and bootlegging… and deportation…oh my!

Some People’s Kids: Heartless. Arrogant. Too smart for their own good. Not suited for families…

Powered by WordPress | Theme: Motion by 85ideas.