Sunday, August 23, 2009

My Mom

My mom was born in Berwyn, IL, a suburb of Chicago, and moved to Moline, IL with my grandparents when she was very young. My grandfather worked at the Rock Island Arsenal, was a smoker, and had black Buddy Holly glasses. That's all I really remember of my grandfather. My grandmother had the 60's blonde wavy hair, smoked, and loved to wear makeup. She was very much into fashion and dressed my mother in all the latest styles. In the 60's it was the mod fashion with the Jackie Kennedy pencil skirts and the big sunglasses. It's funny because that is all coming back and I find myself attracted to the pencil skirt and somewhat of a mod hairstyle. Anyway, my mom grew up in the Quad Cities along with my Uncle George. She went to Alleman High School and from what she has told me - loved to write. After graduating from Alleman, she attended Black Hawk College and worked at Knee's Florist and somewhere in there worked at the post office. She met my dad in Biology class, would be out all night with him, and sneak back into the house early in the morning. My dad was drafted into the Army during Vietnam but stayed in the states as a mechanic at Ft. Bragg in North Carolina. He proposed to my mother before leaving for basic training and my mom planned the whole wedding while he was away. The wedding took place at St. Mary's Catholic Church in downtown Moline with the reception in my grandparent's backyard. My dad wore a light blue suit and it was very 70's. Eventually my mom moved to North Carolina into a trailer with my dad while he served his time in the army. She became pregnant with me in September of 1971. I found her diary with the story of her pregnancy with me and the turmoil that was happening in the U.S. regarding the Vietnam war. She wrote about the bra burning protests and the bad blood toward the returning Vietnam veterans. Part of me desperately wants to be back in the era because young people actually gave a shit about politics.
My parents moved back to the Quad Cities in an apartment in downtown Rock Island. My dad decided to become a carpenter and registered for aprenticeship classes with the local union. My mom stayed home to care for me. At some point they decided to move into a different apartment in downtown Moline and maybe it was because I needed to attend school??? Anyway, they moved into 11 Street A and that is where I recall most of my memories.
My mom would have me help bake cookies every once in awhile and on one occasion I remember throwing flour all over the kitchen. My whole face was white and I don't remember if any actually was added to the dough. Today when I'm cooking or baking I sometimes get that urge to throw flour. I think it's because the texture is so soft and pillowy when it's in the canister. It sure was fun throwing flour all over the kitchen and I don't think my mother scolded me but she did take a photo.
During the summer, my mom and I would cool off in a blue, plastic kiddy pool or we would wash the 1957 Chevy that my mom and dad inherited from my great grandparents. There was this huge rope-like haired dog that would run through the neighborhood. One hot afternoon my mom and I were washing the '57 and that dog came bounding down the hill, grabbed the hose, and began shaking his head. It was like an instant sprinkler. I remember screaming and laughing. My mom laughing like she did in between the "oh knows" (my sister Jenny does a wonderful impression of her laugh). We finally got the hose back and finished washing the car. Spending time with my mom was great!
I started kindergarten in August of 1977 and at the same time my parents broke ground on some land in Coal Valley, IL. We lived with my grandparents while the house was being built and it was great!! My grandma DeGrauwe would let me have vanilla ice cream in my chocolate milk in the morning! My grandparents would eat there big meal at noon and watch Days of Our Lives. Marlana became a household name that we kicked around like she was a relative. They had a park close by and we would walk at night down to the park so I could swing and try to go in the rolling barrel. I was scared to death of the rolling barrel. It was this wooden cylinder that was on rollers so that when you entered and leaned up against the side it would begin to roll in place. It was so scary and I thought that if I slipped I would roll to the top, fall, and hit my head. I liked going to the playground but I had a bad experience at the 16th street park. I was climbing the monkey bars and fell. I chipped two of my front teeth and had to have caps put on them. The caps were a light bluish color so my kindergarten pictures look like I have some weird front teeth. Anyway, I would swing or go on the slide and that's about it. My kindergarten class was fun and I had one boy named Karl Bodenbender that I became friends with but then we moved.
In 1978, we moved into our new house in Coal Valley and my parents bought me a dog. I remember going to pick her out. She was white and silky soft. I named her Buffy from the show Buffy and Jody that I loved to watch. The house was big and had a big backyard. Buffy loved to run around in the backyard with me and would sleep in my room. Oh my room....it had mint green carpet and mint green walls with two closets. One was big with room to hang clothes and the other had shelves so that I could put all my golden look books on them. My mom registered me for first grade at Bicenntennial School which was down the hill and up another hill. I had to ride the bus but my mom assured me that I would be fine and that she would be involved with the Parent Teacher Association (PTA). My first day on the bus was o.k. but there was this boy that sat at the back of the bus named Gabe. He lived in the trailer parks by the airport and he was mean to me. I tended to sit toward the front of the bus so that I could see the driver. My first grade teacher's name was Mrs. Simpson and she was really nice because I was shy and didn't really want to be singled out at all. I met some nice kids at school including a neighbor named Lisa Wildermuth and another girl named Michele Dillon. First grade was going to be fun!
Turns out that my mom was pregnant and I would have a sister or brother in the fall when I would be in the second grade. My mom often hung out with Judy Meirhaeghe, a neighbor that lived across the backyard. They had three children, a girl named Stacie who was 4 years older than me, Rick who was two years older than me and Eric who was 3 years younger than me. Stacie and I became friends and spent many summers riding bikes and building a fort in the woods. I rode the bus to school with them.

1 comment:

  1. this comment is pertaining to your comment on the setfreephotography blog, about 9/11 and where people were at the time. I hope you don't mind my asking but since you wrote at the end that you didn't go to orlando and instead was consoling your friend Amanda, would you mind my asking, if you were consoling her, does that mean someone close to her ended up dying? If they did I would like her to know that I am sorry for her loss and that she is lucky to have a great friend like you there to help her through such a tough time.

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