Sunday, September 18, 2011

The Cinderella Years

Me, about age six
This is me and my Dallas friend in our
look-alike dresses and purses
My mother died the November I was five, and there was no way that my dad was up to putting on a Christmas for us so soon after her death. A friend of my Dad's realized this and flew my sister and I from where we lived in San Diego to their home in Dallas. Texas.  They gave me a dress and purse just like their daughter's, and I remember that it snowed just a few flakes while I was there  I had never seen snow before, so I thought that it was absolutely magical.  At the time I didn't realize what an amazing thing it was that this family I barely knew did for us.  Thank you, Dallas people, whoever and wherever you are, for giving us a bit of normalcy during a crazy time.


Soon the family settled in to a new "normal".  My dad had always been a "meet me at the door with a cocktail after work" businessman, but after my mom's death his drinking increased.  He also started dating.  It seemed like he dated a lot.  I remember once he took my sister and me along when he took a woman away for the weekend.  He bought us all new nightgowns.  The way I remember it I slept in the closet. Maybe that was a different time- it happened more than once.  Anyway,  I remember thinking it was fun.  I remember pretending that I had to live in a space that small forever, and thinking about how I would decorate it and make it work. 


Robin and I with her grandson on his
birthday.  I remember being jealous
of him and this cake.
About a year after my mom died my dad got re-married to a woman named Bessie Etta Hart. She called herself Robin, but I don't know why. She was from Mississippi, and had been married three times before.  My father thought that she was beautiful.  She had dark curly hair and light eyes (blue? violet?).  She was a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Mormons).  We had been Presbyterians before, but hadn't really been to church since my mom's death. I remember the first time I went to an LDS meeting.  It was a children's activity (Primary) and I was sitting in the front row quietly listening to what was going on when the boy next to me suddenly stood up and barfed red kool-aid and hot dogs all over the floor right in front of me.  Awesome.


Robin had the LDS missionaries come over and teach my sister, dad and I about the church.  We all decided to be baptized (I think that my dad mad the choice mostly because Robin wanted it).  I remember the day shortly after my eighth birthday when I was baptized.  I felt wonderful- warm, peaceful and so loved by my Father in Heaven. That feeling got me through many tough times in those years.  Robin was an odd member of the LDS church.  She didn't want to be married to my father in an LDS temple because she thought (just one of her very strange beliefs) that if she was righteous enough she would someday be married to Jesus Christ.  


Life with Robin was hard.  These were my "Cinderella and her Wicked Stepmother" days, at least in my mind.  Here are some "highlights":
- at least two hours of housework every day, including scrubbing the floors on hands and knees and moving all of the furniture and cleaning under it weekly.  Six hours of housework on Saturdays.
- no new clothes or toys .  I wore her daughter's (age 27 and tiny) very out of style and age inappropriate hand me downs. 
- six tablespoons each of cod liver oil and brewers yeast daily as a health food remedy for my dermatitis (it didn't work)
- being forced to eat ant-infested lemon bars that I left out on the counter (ants and all)
- being exiled to my bedroom for two days on Christmas when my dad and Robin had a fight because I didn't come when called to help with Christmas dinner. I had been playing with a toy Robin's adult son had given me.
- frequent discipline with a flyswatter on the legs.
- the bill for my orthodontia being posted on my door with a hand-written note that said something like :"We are paying all of this for you, what are you doing for US?"


I remember I didn't have a costume
this year, so I wore one of my sister's
old dance costumes.  People asked
what I "was" and I said
"a dancing girl". I felt stupid.
But the worst part, for me, was all of the time I spent alone. In the neighborhood where we lived there were two sessions of first grade- morning and afternoon.  I had the afternoon session.  To my memory I was alone every day until school started and was responsible for getting myself dressed and ready, making my lunches, etc..  Needless to say my outfits didn't always match and weren’t necessarily even clean.  Robin didn't want to be bothered with my naturally curly hair, so she cut it very short.  She wouldn't let me have a part in my hair because "Parts look like an Indian chopped your head".   We lived in a very upscale area of San Diego at that time, and I remember the kids at the bus stop stealing my stuff and taunting me until they made me cry because I was shy and so different.  My first grade year was the year when I think it really hit me that my mom was gone, and wasn't coming back.  I cried a lot. 


Lyn throwing the bouquet at her at-home
wedding.  She made her dress and I
think she made mine, too.
Being alone at night was even worse.  I used to check behind every door and the shower curtains to make sure that there were no bad guys in the house.  I remember taking ropes and trying to tie all of the doors closed so no one could get in. All of this happened when I  was between five and nine years old.



My sister was married the week she graduated from high school.  She was seventeen.  She was definitely in love, and is still married to her husband today, but I also think that she was very glad to get out of our house.  I missed her, though, when she wasn't at home with me any more.  So much.


Lessons learned during this time:  Kids need you to put your needs second to theirs, even when it isn't what you feel like doing at the time.  Kids need supervision, even if they seem competent and mature beyond their years.  And, don't forget, there are good people in this world and even when we feel alone we have a Heavenly Father who loves us.
Life goes on, and there are good times along with the bad.  
More about some of those good times next time :)

3 comments:

  1. Janet you are such a beautiful person. Thanks for sharing the hard parts of your life. You have come through so much and are such an outstanding example of kindness and caring. I love that you're so real.

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  2. Janet, I love getting to know you this way! Mostly I admire you for being so amazing through all your trials. You are an example to me and I want to thank you for sharing this with us. Know that you are loved!

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  3. Jan, I wish I had brought you with me from the first day.

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