Tags
boop, catholic, Chicago, cousin, funeral, humor, Hyde Park, Irish, kitten, life of the mind, Mother, roaches, University of Chicago
It was a swell funeral that brought us together. I was in college in Chicago when my mother told me one of my cousins had taken up residence in the Home For Unwed Nurses next to the university’s hospital. Naturally, I avoided her.
It wasn’t just that I had plenty of spare cousins. (Although my Irish-Catholic forebears had followed the commandment to “Be fruitful and multiply” so enthusiastically that a relative with fewer than six kids was considered practically childless. There may have been novenas.)
It wasn’t just that she came from an upscale suburb. (Although I was sure the girls there ironed their designer jeans and shaved their legs daily. Even in winter.)
It wasn’t just that she moved to my neighborhood. (Although voluntarily moving to Hyde Park on the South Side of Chicago seemed to me like voluntarily hitting yourself over the head. The best thing you can say about it is that it feels so good when you stop. The worst thing is that after a while, your head is a real mess.) I couldn’t figure out why anybody would choose Hyde Park when they could go someplace more pleasant, like a war zone.
No, the real reason was that she was beautiful. Her whole family was beautiful. As for my own family, Sister #6 nailed it. “Out of all ten of us, I’m the best looking one and I’m only sort-of cute.”
Luckily, glamour was not a prerequisite to a successful social life in Hyde Park. This was only partly because there was no social life in Hyde Park. Did you ever wonder what became of that grade-grubbing, geeky nerd in your high-school class? Well, they say that home is the place where, when you go there, they have to take you in. Hyde Park took us in.
We called it “The Life of the Mind”. But let’s face it – the mind doesn’t throw nearly as good a party as the body, especially those parts of the body that make 99-percent of college kids’ social decisions. In other college towns during my university years, kids with normal social lives were out getting arrest records. We were out getting mugged. My only brush with the law came the night I was walking home late from Jimmy’s, Hyde Park’s sole college bar. A squad car pulled up next to me. Over the loudspeaker boomed the voice of another of my cousins: “Barb, does your mother know you’re out at this hour?”
So naturally, when I heard that Miss America in a nurse’s cap had moved to the neighborhood, I greeted the news with the enthusiasm usually reserved for active plague carriers. She was no more anxious to meet me. The first person she saw when she got to Hyde Park was standing in the middle of the street having a heated debate with himself about a dog. In Hyde Park, talking to yourself – and answering – is not uncommon. It might mean you are a Nobel Prize-winning scientist. It might mean you are a rubber-room refugee. Sadly, it often might mean both.
Soon after this, she met some people who beat her with pointed sticks for refusing their request that she hand over her bike. What really bothered her was the universal Hyde Park response that this was her fault. The first thing Hyde Park residents learned was to carry an extra ten dollars for the mugger. (I did hear of a case where an impoverished graduate student’s mugger agreed to take a check…)
She was also disconcerted by the main topic of conversation at social gatherings. Roaches. You could guess one’s academic discipline from their preferred methods of roach removal. These ranged from the hard scientists employing biological warfare/chemical agents/engines of destruction, to the philosophers who questioned the roaches’ reality.
But after about six months of increasing maternal pressure on both sides, we finally agreed to meet for dinner. Each of us brought along a friend whose sole function was to rescue us from potentially flagging conversation with a reminder about the three term papers due in the morning. Don’t judge. Escape was hard in those prehistoric days BC (before cellphones). To my husband, our worry about finding conversational common ground is the funniest part of the story. When you come from large families like both mine and my cousin’s, you learn to talk early and often, and to follow at least three simultaneous conversations. He thinks if Eve had been in our family, we would never have left the Garden of Eden because the snake wouldn’t have gotten a word in edgewise.
And, in fact, the friends listened in horrified silence as we got on the subject of my grandmother’s swell funeral.
“Did you know about the Great-Uncle who was too cheap to rent a hotel room, so he slept in grandma’s bed?”
“How about the one who snuck out of the funeral early so she could put her name on Grandma’s things that she wanted?”
“Can you believe how smashed those cousins got at the restaurant after?”
“And who were those two swabbing out each other’s tonsils out in the hall?”
“Too bad Grandma missed it – she would have had a ball.”
We got through the entire evening without ever mentioning roaches. I forgave her for being pretty; she forgave me for being a Hyde Parker. I taught her my method for roach removal; she taught me how to apply eye-liner. We ended up sharing an apartment until she got married.
And we owe it all to Grandma’s swell funeral.
–***–
NOTE: I’m sorry about the radio silence the past month. I appreciate all those who sent messages asking if everything was okay as I spent time with my mother during her final illness. It was actually a wonderful, precious time filled with laughter and love and family.
And it was a swell funeral.
So sorry about your mother. There’s no other loss that’s the same. Hugs.
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My sympathies about your mother. Great fun post as usual. I read pieces loud for my husband. He asks what years you were at UofC. He was there 68-77.
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I graduated in 76. Small world!
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i’m sorry for your loss, it was nice you had the time together. what a wonderful story this is on my levels. my daughter went to uofc and i understand completely )
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And I’m sure that she was the beautiful, well-adjusted exception that proves the rule. [whew!]
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I had noticed your absence. Was longing for some more B Taub … Much like Christopher Walken needed more cowbell.
Coming from a large Irish-Catholic family, I could practically hear the conversation over dinner. Next month a bunch of my aunts and cousins are spending the weekend at my house for a girls’ weekend. I’m certain there will by uproarious laughter over many an “inappropriate” topic.
My sympathies go out to you. While I’m glad that you were able to spend nice time together, I’m sure the ache is profound. Sending much love. Xoxo
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One of the things we all wondered about over the past week is how people who don’t have huge families get through these things. I feel so sorry for them… [Except for the lines at the bathroom. Small families totally rock that one.]
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I am sorry to hear about your mum. I am glad you got to spend time with her. I am sure the memories of those days are very special to you now.
That funeral sounds like an Irish affair, and the drunk cousins are probably my family.
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I thought you looked familiar…
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🙂
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Many hugs, Barb, and not just those polite hugs either. Big hugs.
Love this post. Especially this sentence; “These ranged from the hard scientists employing biological warfare/chemical agents/engines of destruction, to the philosophers who questioned the roaches’ reality.” I always laugh out loud at your posts.
Loving Null City by the way, as well. Will review on blog soon as I’m done.
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Thanks so much! I used to have a t-shirt that read, “The University of Chicago. Where fun goes to die.” Good times…
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Sympathies, Barb – we’ve missed you.
Re this post – found the roaches paragraph slightly ambiguous till I got to the second mention when I realised that you really were talking about the ones that scuttle 🙂
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See, that’s what I mean. You *obviously* had a lot more fun in college if you automatically think of the other kind of roaches…
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Sorry about your Mom. I happy though that you could spend time with her living as you do in England, it went well like that. Glad it was a swell funeral…
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Thank you so much. It was the hardest week that I wouldn’t have missed for the world.
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I know what you mean, I really do. It’s good though having your loved ones around you in these sad passings. I send you a warm embrace.
inevitable
the passing of time and love
memories remain
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So sorry about your mother, Barb. Hope your book launch is helping to bring happier times.
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Pingback: Just A Note: 16 September 2013 | Bastet and Sekhmet's Library
Love the pandas. I’m jealous; they slide down the slide better than I!
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Late condolences on the passing of your mom, Barb. I hope your big family had a truly memorable get-together in her honor.
My two years of apartment living at the residential complex five miles up the road from the University of Maryland were filled with roach-strategies shared by dwellars of all ages, ethnicities and longevity. One of our roommate swore that his plan of spraying the Be-Gone merely under the apartment door would do the trick. Nope.
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I love your roommate’s approach–attack a tiny visible line and ignore what’s massing in the shadows. By any chance did he go into politics?
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Ha! With that strategy, he should have run for office, indeed. No, alas, he chose real job at a mega company and last I heard, stared down life with a beautiful wife and lovely children.
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