Sunday, July 31, 2016
WHERE I STAND, AND WHY
I think of her every day now, as I contemplate my own impending opportunity to vote for a female president. You are goddamned right, it *is* a big deal, and generations of my foremothers are speaking through me when I say it is an honour.
My mother, Jo, to my memory never missed voting, not once, despite the fact that we sometimes moved three or four times a year, and changing her registration must have been a headache. I can clearly remember the excitement she and my father felt as Goldwater Republicans, and how disappointed they were about Kennedy’s election.
When I became a pacifist in high school at age fourteen and dared speak out against the Vietnam war at the local Memorial Day flag-raising, my parents were as outraged as the high school principal, but my mother engaged me on the issue, and through long, emotional arguments, she slowly changed her mind. She voted for Nixon the first time around, but not the second, infuriating my father.
She vigorously denounced Ronald Reagan’s candidacy. She persuaded me to find an eight-by-ten black and white glossy of Ronny Raygun in the arms of Bonzo the chimp, his co-star in one of his movies. She framed this and kept it beside her Barcalounger, pointing it out to anyone who visited, and saying the chimp would have her vote before Ronnie.
When I was sixteen I participated in the Texas UIL Ready-Writing competition as I did every year in high school, and I won District that year for my essay advocating for the right of eighteen year-olds to vote. To give you some background on the Ready-Writing competition, one or two students from every high school in a large scholastic district met in a classroom armed with only notebook paper and two ink pens. At a given point the proctor would write two topics on the blackboard, and we had three hours in which to compose a ten-paged, single-spaced essay on one of the topics, including an outline, an opening argument and a concluding paragraph, with rigorous deductions for errors in spelling, grammar or handwriting. Writing in ink meant we had to think ahead because crossing out words deducted from the final score. It was a major accomplishment, and I went on to Regional, where sadly I came in third; but my senior year I went all the way to State and won: number one in the entire State of Texas.
Even more exciting to me was that eighteen year-olds were given the right to vote by the time I reached that age. This law has since been changed, but I have the memory of driving back from college to the Montague County Courthouse (where almost certainly my grandmother had cast her first vote, and where my mother had voted as a young, enfranchised woman) to choose a President to replace the recently ousted Richard Nixon. I went up the courthouse steps intending to vote for Eugene McCarthy and Shirley Chisholm. The small open room where voting took place held two elderly Baptist ladies, Pearl Fischaber and Gladys Corpening. My heart sank. With them in charge, the privacy of my ballot would be non-existent.
Sure enough, Miz Corpening came over to the table where I sat with my ballot to personally show me how easy it would be to put my X in the box for a straight Republican ticket, all in the guise of being helpful.
I already had a history with Gladys Corpening. During the summer before I turned fifteen I somehow got browbeaten by my grandmother, Sook, into agreeing to help teach Vacation Bible School for a month at the only church in Stoneburg, of course Baptist. I was bored out of my mind, things were tense at home, and Mama assured me it might look good on a resumé somehow. The first day of class I was assigned to work wth Gladys Corpening who was teaching a handful of three to five year-olds. One of them was a near neighbour, and angelic three year old called Tracy Posey. I was glad to see hm. Miz Corpening began telling them the story of Cain and Abel. Their little faces crumpled at Abel’s murder, but worse was to come.
She began haranguing them with the details of God’s punishment for Cain: how he was cast out and marked forever so that he and all his descendants would be instantly recognisable as God’s “unchosen”. She said this mark was black skin and her voice dropped to a confidential tone as she began saying “This is why we can never trust Negroes or give them equal rights”.
I looked at Tracy’s face. The shock I saw there was unbearable. I stood up and faced her, saying “That’s not true”. She gaped at me in disbelief. I repeated, “That’s not true. Show me in the scripture where it says the mark of Cain is black skin”. I had read my Bible, I knew what was in it. She did not bother with flipping pages; she was gathering her fury. I turned back to Tracy, and said “It’s not true. Sometimes grownups lie”. Then I walked out. I went home and told Mama, who backed me one hundred percent through the ensuing storm. I was not invited back to Vacation Bible School.
So, when that same Gladys Corpening stopped right by my shoulder waiting to see how I voted, I considered my options. I could confront her and make her go to the other side of the room. I could vote as I meant to, with no shame. Instead, I found the box that indicated voting a straight Socialist ticket, and I put an X there. The air behind me went icy. I began folding my ballot as Gladys scurried over to Pearl; I heard whispers and a gasp. I cheerfully put my ballot in the box and went home to tell Mama, who shrieked with laughter.**
I later checked the local paper and found that in the entire county there were only two people who voted socialist. I always wondered who the other one was.
I should add here, the man who raised my mother, Auther “Red” Atkins, was himself a very public Wobbly who raised my mother with socialist rhetoric and labour songs. I am not quite a Red Diaper Baby, but for Montague County, I’m the next best thing. At fifteen. I (unbelievably) discovered a copy of "The Communist Manifesto" in my high school library. I have no idea on earth who could have ordered such a volume in a sun-downer town. The spine was uncracked and no one had ever checked it out. I decided not to check it out, either, so as not to draw attention to it. I slipped it into my backpack and later read it over and over. Unfortunately, my sharp-eyed basketball coach-cum-algebra teacher spotted it in the stack of books on my desk, confiscated it, and it disappeared forever.
That 1974 election saw the return of the Senate to the Republicans for the first time in twenty years. This was due primarily to George Wallace’s third party run. I learned then and there that third party efforts have to begin at a local level and work up through years if not decades to challenging our entrenched two party system. I hate the system but magical thinking does not get working class people anywhere.
In 1978 I moved to San Francisco and plunged into revolutionary politics. Although many of the Lesbian activists whose thinking and writing most shaped my world view came from a socialist background, I was not persuaded by it, mostly because it was riddled with woman-hating. During my 20s I checked out the Greens, the Peace and Justice Party, Prairie Fire, the Anti-Klan Organizing Committee, and anything else that suggested we rip rip out the patriarchy by the root and start over, I found nothing as inherently radical as my own belief system.
When my vote might help swell the number of a marginalised group I used it there, gladly. Living in California, my single vote was powerless to stop Reagan and all that followed. I did hold two contradictory viewpoints in mind, as any good revolutionary will. There is the long term goal, and the next immediate step. When, in 1978, we defeated the Briggs initiative, but by an equal margin saw the death penalty reinstated in California, I could not celebrate. I embraced pragmatism. Lives depended on it.
I was glad to vote for Jesse Jackson, and let me say here, I do not consider the rainbow flag to be a gay symbol. It was stolen from Jackson’s campaign. Some of us remember things.
When I moved back to Texas, it was not yet overrun by Republicans refugees from California suburbs and the Rust Belt. Up to that point no major candidate for whom I had ever voted had won their elections. Then, in 1992, an epiphany happened: my first choices for president, governor, and local representative all won (Bill Clinton, Ann Richards, and Glen Maxey). For the first time in my life I was actually represented.
I have to admit it changed my viewpoint. Despite decades of paying intense attention to civics, political processes, and poring over the League of Women Voters’ handouts, I suddenly felt a direct connection to those who were deciding major issues that would affect my life. I knew I was a drop in the ocean, but at least it was the same ocean.
In 2008 I was blogging at a national level, reading and conversing with astute progressive movers and shakers. I was immune to the charisma of Obama, nor was I a fan of Hillary Clinton. I was not afflicted with Clinton Derangement Syndrome, mind you, like almost everyone at Daily Kos. I had paid attention to the Republican smear campaign, and I fucking well know woman-hating when I smell it. My first and second choices were John Edwards (O, the betrayal) and Joe Biden, but I read the writing on the wall, and I threw in my support behind Obama. I did write one post outlining what I most expected of him as president, acknowledging he was unlikely to deliver, because they were genuinely to-the-left ideas. Sure enough, he failed in every regard. He is, at best, a moderate. But I supported him again in 2012, because I value my vote, and I believed Hillary was building her cadre.
She is as qualified as any candidate in my lifetime. On all of the issues that progressives find important or reprehensible, she is in virtual lockstep with Obama. If you supported him and despise her, I do not believe there is a reason to justify this except the woman-hating we unfortunately all internalise.
She is flawed, but to no greater extent than Obama, and in both instances the flaws that cripple them are the product of how they have been oppressed by their place in the patriarchy. I do not forgive them or excuse them. I expect better. But there is a Nazi at the gate, and I believe that each of them will keep us from his scorched earth policies.
And, to be completely honest, there is an additional quality in Hillary which I find attractive: her unwillingness to take any shit at all from Republicans without extracting blood for the privilege. This is a quality Obama lacked (as he had to in order to survive his upbringing). I expect her to surprise me. I expect her to cherish women and children in a way we do not often see. I am sure she will be expedient in ways that disappoint me. Career politicians do that. And Bernie Sanders was at baseline a career politician who tried to game the Democrats, and failed. I do hope his influence endures; it's a good thing. But personality cults, however popular in America, are disastrous when it comes to leadership.
There. That’s where I stand in this election. I will proudly vote for Hillary Clinton for the first time, and I will do all I can to keep the hyenas from her flanks, including the hyenas from our own community. I’m with her. And metaphorically speaking, I have been all my life.
copyright July 2016 Maggie Jochild
** I do not mean to paint Gladys Corpening as a villain. She and I eventually made our peace. Decades later when I was in my thirties I traveled back to Texas and visited her, now in her eighties, because I needed to ask a favour of her. Se was at the time managing Oak Hill Cemetery, where all of my ancestors from Stoneburg were buried, and I needed her help regarding the disposition of my grandparents’ graves. She fed me tea and cakes, assisted me in all my requests, and seemed genuinely glad to see me. She hugged me at the end and said “I always admired you”.
Gladys lived her life trying to do the right thing, especially with regard to serving the community. She volunteered for everything, she donated money, and she tried desperately to maintain a veneer of middle class respectability. The problem was that her rancher husband, Scotty, conducted a 20+ year not quite clandestine affair with Glenna Prater, one of their friends, and someone Gladys was forced to socialise with. Absolutely everybody knew that Scotty was screwing Glenna, and and it was rumoured that Glenna’s son Gary was in fact Scotty’s — a rumour disproved if your knew both of them, as Gary was clearly descended from John Prater in both looks and venality. I understood everyone is carrying a burden of shame, deserved or not, and sometimes the only way they can feel better is by dumping on those they perceive to be lower down on the rungs.
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Labels: 2016 Presidential campaign, family memoir, Hilary Clinton, memoir, women in politics, women's vote
Tuesday, September 9, 2014
VILLA BASINGER BARNETT, 1901-1980: PORTRAIT OF A SURVIVOR
My father's mother, Villa Mae Basinger Barnett, was born 22 December 1901 in what was then Chickasaw Nation, Indian Territory (now near Jimtown, Love County, Oklahoma). Her parents were recent immigrants from McNairy County, Tennessee who participated in the parceling out of Native American land to white farmers during that era. When Villa was eight or nine, they sold their Love County land and moved west to settle permanently near Davidson, Tillman County, Oklahoma, growing cotton just north of the Red River.
At age 19, Villa married Lorenza Derwin (L.D.) Barnett, a man who lacked ambition or voice. Their oldest son was my father, Harold Derwin Barnett, and he never remembered his parents actually being happy with one another. Villa was hyperreligious, a mania that only increased with age, and a hypochondriac. L.D. gave up any hope of work during the 1930s and retreated to Frederick to play dominos for money. Villa followed him and somehow started a cafe, keeping the family afloat until World War II offered L.D. employment and evangelical Protestantism diverted him from gambling.
They had a second son, Vern, four years after my father. My father joined the Army Air Corps right out of high school and left home forever, desperate to escape his mentally ill mother and ineffectual father. I grew up dreading my grandparents' visits. They both died when I was in my 20s and living in San Francisco. A few years later, I began doing genealogical research with a few specific goals in mind, one being to figure out what the hell had happened to my grandmother to make her crazy.
She had two constant refrains: That nobody loved her (had EVER loved her) and that she was at death's door. Her younger brother Allie Basinger had inherited the family farm, and she relentlessly told stories about how he was favored over her during their upbringing. We vaguely knew the Basingers had lived elsewhere in "Indian Territory" before settling outside Frederick. I began my research with census and land records.
A decade later, I had assembled the following picture: Villa's father, Thomas Henry Basinger, was one of the younger of 12 children born to Nep Basinger and Susan Jane Carothers in McNairy County, Tennessee. Only six of these children survived to adulthood, an average out of skew when compared to others of their circumstances in that region. The high death rate was commented on decades later by a Carothers researcher, who agreed with me it indicated either congenital health issues or negligent/abusive parenting (or, of course, both). I have been able to put names to only eight of these dozen children, but I have been to Mars Hill Cemetery in McNairy County and mourned the long line of small graves in the Basinger plot.
Villa's mother, Sarah Elizabeth Morton, was fair-skinned and blue-eyed, but her mother's father, Elijah Morris, had been Choctaw and fought for the Union. Some of Sarah's brothers looked pure Native. One of Villa's paternal uncles had also fought for the Union side, and none of the Basingers appeared to have enlisted in the Confederacy. However, the Basingers had been slave-owners and carried virulent racism with them to Indian Territory, passing it on to Villa and her brother. Villa herself was very dark-haired and dark-eyed. I wonder how all these variables played out in her upbringing.
She also almost certainly had some form of epilepsy, an inherited condition she passed on to several of her descendants. This was evident in what were called her "fits", seizures where she would fall to the ground and jerk, or babble unintellibly. This would have been considered evidence of demons or Satan by her family of origin, and was denied or blamed on her "excitability". On the 1900 federal census, Tom and Sarah had been married ten years; Villa would be born at the end of the next year. Sarah states she has had eight children at that point, none of them surviving. This statistic is even more apalling than the survival rate for Tom's parents: What on earth was going on?
In the 1990s, my father and I drove to Love County and found the cemetery which had been used by the Tennessee migrants before they relocated further west in Oklahoma. There were graves for four of the dead Basinger children (my grandmother's siblings), indicating none of them had survived beyond two years of age and one boy had never been named. Daddy remembered that his mother used to insist her parents did not name her until she was three years of age, a claim everyone scoffed at. Suddenly we realized this had probably been true. They likely had not dared investing her with a name until they knew she would survive.
Then we both recalled her constant wails that nobody had (ever) loved her and that she was likely to die at any moment. Daddy sat down heavily on his pick-up tailgate and said "My god, she was right. In her own way, she was right." She had been held at arm's length by parents frozen by loss, if not outright abusive, who expected her not to survive. Somehow she had managed to defy the odds, but it damaged her permanently.
She actually lived to be 78. After her funeral, my father came home, sat down heavily on the couch, buried his face in his hands and said "I just wish once in my life she had told me that she loved me."
We are all trying to repair the scars of our ancestors, whether we know it or not.
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Labels: Basinger family, family memoir, Indian Territory, Lorenza Derwin Barnett, memoir, Villa Mae Basinger Barnett
Thursday, August 21, 2014
THROWBACK THURSDAY: ORPHANED ATKINS CHILDREN AND GRANNY, 1933, STONEBURG, TEXAS
Photo taken circa 1933, after my mother and her siblings were orphaned. Back row is my Aunt Sarah Margaret Atkins; my mother's mother's mother's mother Margaret Semmerine Ritchie Armstrong Dowdy; and my Uncle Bill, William Rusk Atkins II. In front is my mother, Mary Jo Atkins. Very soon after this photo, the three children were separated, sent to live with different Atkins aunts and uncles, and would seldom see each other again until adulthood. Aunt Sarah and Uncle Bill wound up in abusive households. Mama would luck out, having a good home. I think this photo shows their fear and hurt, already hitting them. The red brick building in the right background is Stoneburg High School, attended by my mother's mother, my mother, and then me. I knew every inch of it. It has now been replaced by a new metal building.
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Labels: family memoir, Margaret Semmerine Ritchie, Mary Jo Atkins, Sarah Margaret Atkins, Stoneburg, William Rusk Atkins
Sunday, July 20, 2014
JAMES FRANKLIN AND IDA BELLE REEVES TURNER, FAMILY LOSS AND SURVIVAL
Lots of interesting developments in the genealogical spelunking yesterday.
I've been fleshing out the descendancy of my great-great-grandparents Thomas Joseph Turner and Cerilda Ann Sandefer. Tom Turner was born to Joseph Turner (who immigrated from England to Tennessee in the early 1800s) and Matilda Clementine Smith (born in Alabama to Jabez Smith).
Joseph and Matilda married in 1841 in Fayette County, Tennessee, which is on the border with Mississippi and one county east of Memphis. It was at that time part of the Delta cotton belt. When I visited it on a research trip in the mid 1980s, I was forcibly struck by how it still retained a strong racist overtone and resistance to modernity.
Joseph died around 1849, leaving Matilda alone with two small sons including Tom who was only six. However, she turned out to be resilient and smart. She married twice more, outliving both husbands, migrating westward into new Arkansas territory, and accumulating both property and influence without owning slaves. In 1879 she was listed as #3 on the roster of leading women in the Ash Flat (Arkansas) area in farming and businesses, heading a household and farm remarked for being one of the oats growers in the township.
Matilda only had four children with her three husbands, and I suspect that is part of why she was able to focus her interests elsewhere. Whether her small family size was the result of some uncommon grasp of birth control on her part or perhaps relative infertility, I will never know. She lived to be 66 and farmed her own place until her death.
It was while tracing the line of one of their older sons yesterday that I encountered some fascinating tidbits. James Franklin Turner, called Frank, was born in Sharp County, Arkansas in 1874 but grew up primarily near Stoneburg, Montague County, Texas. At age 22, he married Kate Wright, another Sharp County child who had migrated to Montague County. They lived in the Stoneburg area in 1900, with two living children (Zola and Otto), where Frank was a farm laborer. By 1910, they had moved to Lawton, Oklahoma, having purchased a home and launched Frank's career as a photographer. Kate had borne seven children but only two were still living, Zola and Otto.
Between 1910 and 1917, something cataclysmic happened to the family. In 1917, Frank has remarried to Ida Belle Reeves, 16 years his junior. He is working as both farmer and photographer, and they are living in Mammoth Springs, Arkansas. Three years later on the 1920 census, I can find no trace of Kate Turner or the two children. The possibilities include divorce (rare in those times) with Kate remarrying by 1920 and changing the children's names to that of their stepfather or the death/adoption out of Kate and the children. I really wish I could find any clue about what happened to them: Was it ordinary loss or did Frank abandon them?
Three years later, Frank and Ida appear on the 1920 census in Independence County, Arkansas, renting a home while Frank continues work as a photographer. Ida has had two sons, Alvie Guille and John Orman Turner.
Alvie Guille Turner, born 1917 in Fulton County, Arkansas, must have been named for the man who married Frank's youngest sister Ora, one Alva Guille Cowgill (known as Bill) who was immensely popular among his cohort. More than one child in the extended family was named after him.
John Orman Turner's unusual middle name, Orman, has no known family source. However, there was a well-known Alabama State Superintendent of Education named John Orman Turner (1850-1910) who in the 1880s advocated land be set aside for the use of Tuskegee Institute. He also expanded the role of women in governing Alabama schools and pushed for better education of girls. He has no known relation to our Turner line. If Frank and Ida named their son after the late John Orman Turner, it sheds a light on their values.
This second family of Frank Turner's also met difficulty with his death on 3 December 1929. At this time, he was 55 and the family was living in Elkhead, Christian County, Missouri, where he still worked as a traveling photographer. Frank's death certificate states he died of cerebral apoplexy contributed to by atherosclerosis. One of his descendants, via Frank's son , reports the son always said Frank "died of complications/infection after having a tooth removed."
Ida and the two boys were left to manage on their own as the Depression took hold. On the 1930 census, Ida is head of household in a home she owns in the Bruner Township of Christian County, Missouri. She is listed as a photographer with her own studio. They are living next door to Ida's elderly parents.
A year later, Ida died "after an extended stay in a hospital in Springfield, Missouri of a hemorrhage that could not be stemmed or stopped." The boys moved in with an uncle (presumably one of Ida's brothers) but apparently his care of them was inadequate. In 1932, a woman by the name of Rose Wilder Lane inquired after the circumstances of a 13-year-old boy who had come to her begging for food. That boy was John Orman Turner. She took him in, either adopting him or becoming his guardian, and when she found out Alvie was in similar straits, she gave him a home as well.
The Turner orphans were extraordinarily lucky. Rose was well-off enough to give them excellent educations and a stable start on adulthood.
At age 19, Alvie Guille Turner was able to visit Paris. After one year of college, he enlisted in the Army Air Corps for World War II, being promoted to the rank of Sergeant. Post-war, he worked for 36 years as a field service engineer at McDonnell Douglas Corporation.
He married Goldean Branson in 1945 and they had three children together: James A., John O., and Barbara J. Turner. His obituary states he "was active in the Civil Air Patrol in Missouri, Arizona, Nevada and Florida. He was a deacon emeritus at Ridgecrest Baptist Church in St. Charles, Missouri. He was also a Bible teacher. He was a volunteer with the Powell Terrace Benevolence Center and Meals on Wheels and a member of the Missouri Campers on Missions." He died at age 79 in St. Charles after a long and useful life.
John Orman Turner also got to live in Paris at age 19. He attended the New Mexico Military Academy, the Sorbonne, LeHigh University, and then obtained his degree from the University of Missouri. In 1951 married Marjorie Laura Thompson, and in 1975 he married Betty Rule. He lived in Seabrook, Harris County, Texas until his death in 2001 at the age of 82.
All of this is edifying enough. What makes it more striking is that the woman who took in these teenaged orphans and rescued them during the Depression, Rose Wilder Lane, "(December 5, 1886 – October 30, 1968) was an American journalist, travel writer, novelist, and political theorist. She is noted – with Ayn Rand and Isabel Paterson – as one of the founding mothers of the American libertarian movement." [from Wikipedia] She was the first child of Laura Ingalls Wilder and Almanzo Wilder (and their only child to survive into adulthood). It is from her Facebook page that the story of her fostering was found, along with the annotated photo of Ida Reeves Turner at the head of this article.
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Labels: Alvie Guille Turner, Cerilda Ann Sandefer, family memoir, Ida Belle Reeves, James Franklin Turner, John Orman Turner, Matilda Clementine Smith, Rose Wilder Lane, Thomas Joseph Turner
Thursday, July 10, 2014
THROW-BACK THURSDAY: KOLKATA 1956
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Labels: family memoir, Nilmoni, throwback Thursday
Thursday, May 8, 2014
THROW-BACK THURSDAY: CAMP RIVER VIEW, LEAKEY, TEXAS, 1966
My older brother announced he was not going with us at the last minute, and my father had to use physical violence to get him in the car. The two-hour drive there from Dilley was hellish, with Craig in the back seat venting his rage on me and Bill.
Once there, my father discovered the rental fee was $1.50 per day instead of the $1 he had been told, and he ranted at the woman attendant, saying he would not be cheated, we were turning around and going back home. I began crying and my mother intervened, insisting he pony up and drive us in. He went into a sulk that lasted the rest of the weekend, refusing to set up camp or participate in any way.
Despite him and the threat of Craig's proximity, Bill and I had a blast, getting to frolic for hours in the cold clear water which was shallow enough that we could safely wear styrofoam tubes and not worry about drowning. Mama fed us sandwiches and Shasta sodas from the cooler, and sat on the riverbank watching us, laughing with us. Craig disappeared for hours at a stretch and Daddy steamed at the concrete slab which was our site. At night, Bill and I slept on quilts in the back of the pickup, looking up at the stars, while the three adults and near-adults were on borrowed cots on the slab.
All of Mama's photos from that weekend are shot through with a light leak in her failing Brownie camera. But I don't need the photographs, really. It was a rare time of freedom from worry for me, us two young ones protected by Mama.
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Sunday, February 9, 2014
HAPPY REMEMBRANCE, JO AND HER CHILDREN
Today Mama would have been 87 years old.
Last night I dreamed I was a child again, living with my little brother Bill, Mama, and a man who was either my father or a stepfather. The father figure had short white hair but no facial features and no voice.
My parents lived in a ramshackle, unpainted house on the shore of a lake or small sea. A few hundred yards out was a small bare island, and on it was a one-room, lopsided shack with rusting roof that was my and Bill’s bedroom. Access to the mainland was via a cobbled-together wooden walkway. The shack was unheated, with drafty windows that let in glorious light, bare wooden floors, a double iron bedstead, and a stack of boxes that held our clothes. Not actually dissimilar to some places we lived when I was little. Bill was around 5 or 6, and had the round buzzed hair shown in this photo.
It was the night before Mama’s birthday, and he and I were planning what to give her for her birthday. We had no money and no materials from which to make a gift, but we were undeterred. I created an elaborate plan of making breakfast, cleaning the house, singing her a song, etc, and I coached us in the details until bedtime. We were both wired with anticipation at the happiness we’d see on her face.
When we went to bed, Bill spooned back into me for warmth. In the dream, I once again felt his thin small frame, the fuzz of his head, and his little boy smell that was once so familiar to me. Instead of filling me with sadness. I simply felt joy that I had ever known him and had him as a brother: Two eggs which once floated together in our mother.
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Labels: family memoir, personal journal, William David Barnett
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
REINTERPRETATION
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Labels: daily journal, disability, family memoir, working class
Thursday, January 23, 2014
TWO UNEASY PIECES
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Labels: betrayal, family memoir, guns, Joan Annsfire, Louise Erdrich, Michael Dorris, racism, The Shawl
Saturday, November 30, 2013
NEW POEM: BABY BROTHER BLUES
BABY BROTHER BLUES
When I woke up this morning
The light was fulla ghosts
When I woke up this morning
That sun was streaming ghosts
There's no place that don't have 'em
From caprock to the coast
My brown-eyed baby brother
He ain't with us no more
My brown-eyed baby brother
He ain't with us no more
The darkness kept on knocking
And he walked through that door
My mama and my daddy
They said they loved him same
My mama and my daddy
They said they loved him same
But mama held me closer
And handed me her name
The place we learn injustice
Live mighty close to home
The place we learn injustice
It mighty close to home
We learn to keep our mouth shut
Before we ever roam
It ain't my fault we lost him
They tell me that's a fact
It ain't my fault we lost him
A silver-dollar fact
But what I wouldn't do now
To whistle him on back
© Maggie Jochild; 30 Nov 2013, 11:37 am
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Friday, July 19, 2013
ELIZA OPHELIA HILL STAFFORD
This is a photo of my great-great-grandmother Eliza Ophelia Hill, born 1858 in a cane-growing region of Florida. She witnessed the Civil War as a child. Her father Jimmy "Cane" Hill fought in the Confederacy and after the war named his youngest son Rebel.
When she was 12, the family sailed from Florida to Galveston and traveled by wagon to North Texas, settling in Montague County. There at age 17 she married George Austin Stafford, a kind and bright man who farmed but also worked as a homespun inventor. He lost his left arm as a boy in a threshing accident, and devised many tools to accommodate his disability, including a combined spoon-knife-fork for the one-handed diner.
Eliza bore 14 children over the next 25 years, including a final set of twins. Four of these children died in infancy or toddlerhood.
George retired in his 60s and they moved to Sour Lake, Texas. Wives and mothers don't get a retirement. Eliza outlived George by 15 years and died at the age of 92 on the Gulf Coast. Just found this photo of her today. I cannot accurately guess her age, considering what she lived through.
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Labels: class, family genealogy, family memoir
Sunday, June 30, 2013
NEW POEM: SAGA DOMESTICA
SAGA DOMESTICA
All the stories a family shapes and reshapes
are mine alone now. Scraps surfacing
without anyone to reminisce over:
the time daddy chased a peeping tom
pounding down the gravel beside the trailer,
me having caught his face at my window,
and guns suddenly emerging from beneath
my parents' pillows. Or the goat, Blossom,
who became a pet we let sleep in the kitchen
at night. The chihuahua who would only come
if you yelled "Hush!" Mama's cherry pies,
the string of poodles with French whore names,
Daddy's fried quail, the unexplainable joke about
Van Horn, Grandmommy's seizures, what Bill said
when he broke his arm, the poinsettia that took over --
all now up to me to remember, save or set free.
My attic needs purging but Sundays I miss them
fierce, miss the smell of dumplings, bickering over
what to watch, somebody hogging the couch, and
people who knew what I looked like that first day
of first grade, brown dress and red ribbon, a dime
for the week's milk tight in my fist, as I prepared
to live without them.
by Maggie Jochild, written 3:15 p.m., 30 June 2013
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Thursday, December 20, 2012
ENOUGH EXTRA TO MAKE COOKIES THIS YEAR
Mama focused on family baking and crafts during the holidays, and that is what I have missed about adult celebrations of Christmas. She was unhurried and we laughed as we messed up in the learning process. Her Must Make list included divinity (both white and black fudge), lemon bars, Danish wedding cookies, candy-cane cookies (sprinkled with crushed peppermints we got to whack into dust with a hammer, and stained glass cookies. These latter were not the short-cut versions almost every recipe now has, but involved a double layer of dough with the top being an actual mosaic of colours cut from various hues and painstakingly fitted together by earnest little fingers. Sheer joy.
She was also a big fan of fruitcakes, but often simply waited for the one Aunt Sarah would send every year from that place in Corsicana. None of the rest of us could abide fruitcake, and the gingered candies were expensive to buy.
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Labels: family memoir, food, personal journal
Monday, December 17, 2012
EMAILS FROM THE HUNKERED-DOWN RIGHT
The whole thing reeks of such fear. They live in fear and misery.
And some part of me thinks her adding me to this list may be rationalized in her mind as trying to "save" me, but down at the deepest level, it's a cry for help. I am not going to help her, my priorities are elsewhere, but it's no problem for me to read the anguish and silently wish her well before going on to where I actually can be effective. And to note that someone else on that list is not drinking the koolaid.
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Labels: Christian Right, family memoir, personal journal
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
NEW POEM: SINGING BASS
The last time I saw Daddy, we laughed so hard
about the singing bass which hung over his mantle
that we both began coughing, me with an inhaler.
him without. Some sharp sound activated it
and the fish twisted off its plaque toward the room,
began singing "Take me to the river" in a deep voice.
We looked at each other, startled, then collapsed.
He was a sucker for gag gifts, bad magic and anything
by Ronco. He wanted to be funny, to be quoted. People
always told us "Your dad is such a gas", and I smiled
politely, Bill quipping "No, that was a whoopee cushion"
which was genuinely funny even though his tone
belied his fury. After we lost Mama, Bill decided to
stay close to Daddy, the only parent we had left, and
listen to the jokes he told over and over. He said somebody
had to do it.
That laugh landed as we sat in our funeral clothes, me and
Dad. We'd put Bill's ashes next to Mama's three hours earlier.
I did not know then it was the last time I'd see Daddy,
I had no plan to make it so, but I am not surprised now.
As the idea of a return visit, another drive up 35, became
a wraith which staticked our phone calls in the following years,
he once dared "You blame me for Bill dying." I told him "No,
I don't" and meant it. Then.
He tried to delay my departure that day, wanted to feed me
though I had not kept anything down since Bill had died.
He kept offering me things, an ancient clay lamp he'd found
in the Libyan desert, a Reader's Digest large-print book, but
his gifts were never what I really wanted, never to do with
me and him. I said carrying anything to the car while leaning
on a four-point cane was too tricky just then, and he went silent,
not able to carry it for me himself.
The rattle of his front door set off the fish again, and we grinned
but I was already in pain from standing, wondering how I'd manage
getting down his uneven steps with no handrail, then make a long
trip with one knee unrepaired. He had taken out his teeth once
we got to his place, and his stubble was evident, so the kiss goodbye
was a familiar chore of suffering masculinity. It was already dark
outside. He told me to call when I got home, and I hesitated before
I promised I would.
The next month, he'd take Bill's insurance money and buy himself
a funeral plan with ostentatious casket. He never gave a cent
to Bill's common-law wife and her daughters, evicted them and
took Bill's clothes to Goodwill. She got off light, I eventually
decided: She'd have stuck by Daddy and he would have sucked
her dry, if she'd been a white woman.
Copyright Maggie Jochild. Written 12/12/12, 2:29 a.m.
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Wednesday, November 21, 2012
MOTHER'S COMING
One of the great thrills about living on that house on Rua Joao Alves is that Bill and I each had our own room. It was for each of us our first taste of real privacy, and I seized it in my teeth. I actually had a key that locked my bedroom door, an old-fashioned skeleton key, and I began insisting nobody, not Mama or Suliadora, go into my room without my consent. Mama bristled but was too ill to fight it out with me.
Bill didn't care but, at age 8, he simply let his own room become a trash-heap. Eventually, Mama resorted to nagging us nonstop about our need to clean our rooms, and unknowingly made sure I would not cooperate by intimating I should actually help Bill with his, since he was so much younger.
Help the baby clean his mess? Never gonna happen.
One of the oddities of being a doodlebugger's kid who lived in constant transience is that we were not just isolated as a family, we were expected to be and remain friends with the other children who worked for the same company as my Dad. Our paths would cross in a sporadic manner as our fathers sometimes worked on the same crew in the same small town, and we had a bond with these other kids that I think is similar to army brats or the children of migrant farm workers. No matter the age or personality difference, we had to make nice with the other GSI kids.
Thus, in Aracaju, we were forced into the orbit of Paola, whose father was Daddy's cohort and whose mother was a feud-loving Sicilian, Fulvia, he'd married along the way. Paola would nowadays be diagnosed as ADHD with severe anger control issues. She was halfway between me and Bill in age, and playing anything with her seemed to inevitably result in her having a raging tantrum where she broke our things and ran weeping to her mother. Everyone, including Mama, was frightened of Fulvia, so we cheated clumsily during any game with Paola to make sure she won or was appeased. This seldom worked.
Until, after a round of Mother May I and Simon Says, I dimly remembered a boring little kid's entertainment called Mother's Coming. The set up was that someone played Mother, a stern-faced tyrant who stood at the end of the hall and began walking, extremely slowly, toward the child's bedroom. Someone hissed "Mother's coming!" in a tone of horror, and those in the bedroom had to get it completely cleaned up, bed made, floor swept, etc before her hand reached the knob and turned it.
This approaching maternal doom struck a deep chord in Paola, and the need for frenzied, even chaotic, tidying was a job she could handle. She would fly into action, shrieking at us to help, and after two rounds the room would be spic and span. She never wanted to take a turn as approaching Mother, preferring the release of cleaning.
We exploited her relentlessly, without shame.
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Labels: family memoir, life in Brasil, memoir
Friday, August 31, 2012
NEW POEM: AFTER SHULAMITH
AFTER SHULAMITH
He took with ordinary greed, holding out
a plate he never washed, eyes hooded --
Unless what came his way was blame:
For that he had a crowsnest and alarums,
would shoot down at a distance, shrieking
it was ours, all our faults. A cry
so masculine we cannot hear it any more,
it is the drone of every story copied
into ink or bit. He had no success to claim
except outliving wives, using
more than his share. He did that
moderately well. He signed the cards
others chose and set before him,
let her keep us fed and hushed, claiming
family in that slipknot way we expect.
Man is hard and smooth, the stone
that wears through pocket seams,
a nonsorb surface onto which we
paint imagined humanity
until the reel is changed, or
afternoon showers arrive.
© Maggie Jochild, 31 August 2012, 6:57 am
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Sunday, May 20, 2012
FAIRY BREAD
Thanks to Tammi's valiant efforts to keep the fridge and pantry organized, I now have a chart I can refer to when asking someone to locate an item. But that has not taken care of the problem. This morning, when asking the fill-in attendant to create breakfast and lunch, I kept track and she spent 22 minutes claiming certain items (tomatoes, already cooked pancakes, bread, roast beef) were not there.
In particular, she kept digging into the freezer, which is something Debra also does, not being to differentiate between fridge and freezer. I've learned to hear the difference in which door is being opened and kept shouting "NOT the freezer, the baby carrots are in the FRIDGE produce bin!" In each case, I would not relent and began insisting she bring me, for instance, every item from the produce drawer or every ziplock with a leftover in it. Then, suddenly, she'd be able to "find" what I was asking for.
I don't know what else to do. I had canned chili for dinner last night and saw Debra's face light up when I asked for that as dinner. It wasn't thoroughly heated through, but whatever. I feel like giving up on eating fresh dinners. Tammi is already worked to the max. She left me with prepared food which others have either trashed or spent an unconscionable amount of time denying it was there. I try to just be grateful I am eating at all -- three years ago I could only afford to eat every other day, and when I lost mobility, for six months I ate only from packages. Things have definitely improved since then.
Honestly, it does stir up being a hungry, helpless kid. I reacted then with anorexia, funneling my food to my little brother so he got enough, refusing to take a full share so maybe Mama would eat the leftovers on my plate instead of smoking cigarettes to kill her own hunger. It's insanely hard emotionally for me to ask for real food.
One time Daddy's check didn't come (we later found out because he had cashed it himself and decided we could wait until he came home with it) and we ran out of anything, even beans or greens from the garden. Craig went to stay at a friend's house, Mama holed herself up in her bedroom with books, and I was left to deal with Bill, who was five at the time. I was nine.
We slipped around the back of a few house to the orange trees of an old man who let them rot on the limb, and I picked a box full of them. Back home, whenever Bill began complaining about hunger, I'd peel or slice an orange and make up stories about what we were eating (venison brought down by Daniel Boone's gun, hard tack on a ship sailing around the Horn, space grub on our flight to Mars). As the days wore on, it got harder and harder to distract him, and then he got diarrhea from nothing but oranges. At the end of the third day, Daddy came home and Mama emerged to have a huge fight with him. As they raged, I took Bill out to Daddy's car where there were always cheese crackers and Tom's peanuts in the glove compartment.
But I can no longer afford to skip meals. Indeed, it is now past time for my own lunch. Have to take a sugar and eat a couple of bites. Once I do that, the hunger kicks in and I can eat normally. Pushing through usually does the trick.
Except when Margot is here, I don't have to use any tricks at all, or worry about food in any regard. Not yet resigned to her absence. Gimme a couple of weeks.
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Labels: class, disability, family memoir, memoir, Personal Update
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
ON THIS DAY...
She told us all to stand quietly and get in line for a special assembly. She led us outside to the flagpole, where every other class in that elementary school were also arrayed in lines radiating outward like the rays of a star. The principal himself began lowering the flag, and stopped at halfway down. I was utterly bewildered, and cold with fear from the adult disbelief in the air. The principal said we were all being sent home, told us to get our things and go straight home.
It wasn't until I passed by some older kids that I heard what was going on: The President had been shot and killed.
I didn't know what to think. My parents were both Goldwater supporters, and I had heard a lot of bad stuff about Kennedy at home. I walked slowly home on that bright November day, noticing how deserted the streets seemed. When I came in the front door, I tried to align myself with how I guessed my mother might feel by calling out "Did you hear the good news?"
She gasped and shushed me. She had clearly been crying, and I was more confused than ever. Bill, a toddler, crept in beside me and I put my arms around him. Mama returned to our blacl-and-white TV, and we were left to our own devices. After a while Craig came in, a teenager, raging and thowing himself about. Mama focused on him. and I kept Bill and myself out of their way.
I was upset when the afternoon cartoons of "The Funny Company" were pre-empted. We ate dinner in front of the TV that night. I don't know if Daddy called -- he was in Irving, a suburb of Dallas, and I never asked him how he experienced that time. My personal life was crammed full with worrying about Mama, who was very pregnant with our last brother at the time, and with trying to keep Craig away from me and Bill. That was the autumn when he was forcing me to play strip poker with him whenever Mama left the house. A hint of what was to come.
By the end of January, Sammy would have been born and died. Mama would have died when her uterus ruptured and been waved back from a bright light by her own mother. Daddy would sell the trailer and move us all, Mama still with weeping red surgery scars on her belly, to a tiny apartment in Irving by Mama's birthday on February 9th. He gave her a chihuahua for her birthday, my grandparents said to help her forget the dead baby. Things unraveled swiftly after that.
But it all seemed to begin, in my mind, with President Kennedy's assassination.
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Wednesday, September 28, 2011
WHITE TRASH THEME PARK OUTINGS
However, the ride through the various habitats was over an hour, and Mama's nicotine addiction could not sustain such an extended period, so before long she had cranked down her window to light up a cigarette. We had cups full of preserve-approved wild beastie kibble, and Mama was overly generous with it, attracting the attention of some exuberant baboons. Our screams persuaded her to close her window, and the dent in the roof never came out again after the frustrated temper tantrum of one baboon.
When we reached the lions' savannah, she again had the window down and was calling "Here, kitty, kitty." They lay in the torpid heat and watched her coldly. Likewise was the indifference of cheetahs and leopards. Mama was so crushed that at the end of the tour, as the rest of us bought large iced drinks and washed our faces in the restroom, my teenaged brother bought a large ceramic spotted leopard cub at the giftshop and presented it to Mama. She wept. It occupied pride of place in her living room, and after she died, Bill kept it in his own den.
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Labels: family memoir, memoir