By BethShelby
When my daughter and her boy friend made up their minds to get married, they started immediately looking for a place to live. No such forethought went into the planning of our future for Evan and me. After a short honeymoon, we hit the streets of Jackson, Mississippi on the hottest day of the year, armed with the daily paper, a city map, and a bag of ice to help us survive it.
All of our possessions were stacked in the trunk and back seat of our`55 Buick Special. It was so special it had no heater, no air-conditioner, no radio and no clock. What it did have was room. They made them big in those days. Our possessions consisted of our clothes, sheets, towels, dishes, and kitchenware, which we got for wedding gifts. In addition, we did have food.
My mother saw to it that we had enough food with us to keep us alive for several weeks. Unfortunately, we had no means of keeping the food fit for human consumption that long. I was Mama's only offspring, and I was leaving the nest for the first time. This might have accounted for the large "care package", or possibly, she suspected we might be running low on cash before my new husband drew his next paycheck. Still, I doubt if she could have guessed how low.
Two major factors limited our options in our search for our dream apartment. The first requirement was it had to be furnished, because the largest item either of us owned was a radio. The second was it had to be cheap. We had no idea what apartments rented for, but we'd hoped to find something for around $50.00 per month. These days that sounds like the price of a meal for two at a decent restaurant, but this was 1956, and in our section of the world low rent was still possible, or almost.
We hit the streets early, because we wanted to be settled before nightfall. We couldn't afford for more of our rapidly depleting funds to go toward renting a motel room. As it turned out, there weren’t many furnished places to choose from within our price range. In fact, most of the ones we found were either in unsuitable areas, or had already been rented. The heat was oppressive, and our nerves were frayed. The bag of ice, which we'd bought to cool us down, had almost melted, and we were starting to wonder if being married was worth the trouble.
We were about to give up for the day, when we noticed a lady out in the front yard of a nice older home tacking up a sign which read "Furnished Apartment For Rent." We inquired, and she said we were in luck. Just that morning, her boarders, a couple of single girls, had moved out. The apartment was a little three-room cottage behind the big house. She hadn't had a chance to clean it yet, but if we'd give her a couple of hours, we could have it for $50 per month. It was exactly what we had in mind, and we could be in it by sundown. Things were definitely looking up.
That evening, we moved in. We spread a cloth on the table and pulled out the care package from home, packed with soggy, day-old sandwiches, stale crumbling chips, and tepid punch. For dessert, there was wedding cake. The heat had melted the icing, and the cake itself was starting to have a funky taste, but it was our first meal in our new apartment, and we were happy.
As we ate, it grew darker. From the woodwork, came roaches to share our evening spread. They came by the hundreds. Having never lived in the city before, this was my first experience with the loathsome creatures. I was horrified. This was totally unacceptable, but still I wasn't willing to give up on our little cottage just yet. Surely, there was something we could do.
What we did was proceed to the nearest supermarket and buy everything in the pest-control section with the picture of a roach on it. When we returned to the apartment, we wound towels around our faces and proceeded to fumigate. By the time we had emptied our cans, there wasn't a roach to be seen anywhere. Neither was there any air to be breathed. We exited sputtering, coughing and gasping for oxygen. We figured the air should be safe for breathing within four hours, so we got into our car and went to a double-feature, drive-in theater.
It was well after midnight when we returned. Other than a few dead ones on the floor, the roaches appeared to be gone. The apartment was still polluted, but we opened the windows and fanned in fresh air. Eventually we decided that survival was possible. It had been a long day, and we figured we'd have no problem sleeping. We made the bed with fresh sheets, turned off the lights and fell into bed, exhausted.
Earlier, we had only partially unpacked, and newspapers were scattered about the room. We planned to take care of those in the morning. Now, the papers started to rattle. There was a sound of movement everywhere. Suddenly something fell from the ceiling onto my face. I screamed and bolted out of bed. Evan bounced up beside me and hit the light switch. The ceiling was covered with dying roaches, hanging by two legs and falling to the floor, the bed, and everywhere. It was a nightmare. We grabbed our clothes and fled.
At two in the morning, we found a hotel with vacancies and checked in. I had a good cry, and then we both cracked up laughing. The next morning we went back to the apartment and moved out. The lady apologized and gave our deposit back. She was probably grateful to us, because I have a feeling, we took care of her roach problem.
What a way to begin our life together; broke, homeless, and not knowing what our next move would be. Yet we were young, and it was an adventure. We knew as long as we could still laugh, we would probably be able to handle whatever circumstances came our way. Why take the fun out of it by planning ahead?
Author Notes |
This one was originally posted in 2009 while my husband was still alive.
wd ct 1053 |
By BethShelby
Author Notes |
This is a continuation of "The Adventure Begins" which was posted earlier.
|
By BethShelby
By BethShelby
Author Notes |
Picture compliments of Google Image.
Please note: This isn't a story with a central theme, but more of a rambling essay of several events taking place during those early years of marriage. wc 1,012 |
By BethShelby
Author Notes | For those of you who have read my biography from the beginning, you may recognize some of this story which was written when Evan was still alive. For the later readers, you will learn a bit about how my story begins, told in a more humorous way. |
By BethShelby
Author Notes | For those of you who have read my biography from the beginning, you may recognize some of this story which was written when Evan was still alive. For the later readers, you will learn a bit about how my story begins, told in a more humorous way. |
By BethShelby
Author Notes | For those of you who have read my biography from the start, you may recognize some of this story I wrote after Evan passed away. This earlier version written was with more humor while he was still alive. |
By BethShelby
Author Notes | wd Ct 900 |
By BethShelby
By BethShelby
Author Notes | Sorry, I wasn't able to get this story upbeat. Sometimes life deals hard blows. |
By BethShelby
Author Notes | This is an ongoing story of my early marriage years and will become part of the book, Chasing the Elusive Dream, which is in my portfolio. |
By BethShelby
Author Notes | This is a personal essay rather than creative fiction. |
By BethShelby
Author Notes |
The picture is of Carol when she first started walking.
If parts of this seems incomplete,it is because it is part of larger book and will be put in as a chapter when this is no longer active. |
By BethShelby
When I was in my mid-twenties another lifetime ago, I found myself imprisoned in my own home by virtue of the fact that I had given birth to twins when I already had a child less than two. Suddenly, two hands were no longer enough, and trying to deal with a toddler and twin infants was overwhelming, to put it mildly.
The world has progressed a long way from the days when all mothers had to choose from were two types of cloth diapers; a gauze layered type and a waffled cotton. I owned dozens of these white flags, and believe me, many days, I felt like flying one. With three babies sporting them at one time, the washing machine ran constantly. A drier was a luxury beyond our limited budget, and the cold, rainy winter days were something I don't care to recall.
The twins learned at a tender age if one needed a quick change the best way to get it was to do it yourself. A bare bottom was preferable to a wet one. Removing a diaper from one’s own bottom was a bit tricky since there were open diaper pins to deal with. This was the pre-velcro days. Notwithstanding, in no time at all, both of my talented offspring had become adept at removing the offensive scrap of cloth. It was a trifle embarrassing to usher in guests to admire my little family only to find them sporting the bottoms to their birthday suits.
During those early months, I stayed home because I was still naive enough to believe I had some wonderful ideas on child rearing. Besides, I couldn't quite figure out what to do with them otherwise. Slowly, I adjusted to the situation in which I found myself.
I was pleased to discover, for a while at least, the babies were capable of entertaining themselves with each other as play things. Of course, it was necessary for me to disentangle their fingers from the hair of their twin when the wails became unbearable, It was also neccessary that I empty a jar of baby food into their waiting mouths at regular intervals. Actually, it isn't much harder to feed two than one, because while one is swallowing, spitting, or doing whatever else they might elect to do, you merely spoon a mouthful into the other baby. Jars are emptied much faster this way with far less leftovers.
Bottles were a little harder, literally. Because back then, most of them were made of glass. You give two babies in the same playpen matching glass bottles, and you have the recipe for disaster. Babies are born suspicious they are somehow being cheated, and the milk in their sibling’s bottle must taste sweeter. Glass bottles can be held in such a way as to become very effective clubs, enabling the conquering twin to take by force the bottle which holds the tastier beverage.
Still, we got through that stage without anyone being permanently maimed, and I actually had a little quality time left over for the toddler who seemed pleased at being dubbed "Mom’s little helper." (Now, unfortunately, she tells me she needs therapy because of being thrust into such a demanding roll at the tender age of twenty-two months.)
There is a limit to how much time babies will allow themselves to be confined in an enclosure of any kind, and that day arrived all too soon. The boy twin was first to discover that by standing on the face of his sister, he could manage to pull up on the side of the playpen and hoist one leg over. From that day on, my life went downhill.
Free at last, they made quick work of the lovely ceramic pieces which I had so painstakingly fashioned during my months of pregnancy. I remember the day I discovered my porcelain kissing-angels clutched in the chubby fists of my son. When I yelled "No!", he clashed them together like cymbals, sending broken wings and heads in every direction. Yes, I had put them out of reach, or so I thought. This child was preparing for a career at the top and was quite capable of finding plenty of objects that would support his weight on the way up.
Next, the terrible twosome invaded my kitchen cabinets. Molasses and flour were favorites. These made an especially intriguing combination when poured generously upon the living room sofa.
Regular trips to the emergency room and frantic phone calls to the pediatrician weren't at all unusual. On one occasion, they teamed up to climb onto the aquarium stand and overbalance it They were pinned to the floor, while ten gallons of water, broken glass and many jumping fish cascaded over their trembling bodies.
Don, the more active and accident prone half of the twosome, got so many lumps on his head from falls and objects he caused to fall that these occurrences ceased to be a reason for serious concern. He seemed to thrive nicely with half-inch high lumps on some portion of his head. Force feeding him bread, which seemed to be the doctors preferred method for removing pins, buttons, tacks and other foreign objects, became a standard part of his daily cuisine. The day the two of them fed each other toadstools growing by the side of the wading pool was a bit more unnerving. That was the day I learned druggists carry a product specifically designed to bring up substances recently swallowed. Another item was added to my already overstocked medicine chest.
In the long run, daycare proved to be a viable solution. I never went back to being a stay-at-home mom. My family seemed to appreciate my attention more when I was with them less, and I certainly enjoyed my time with them better when I wasn't so frustrated I felt like stringing them up. I didn't see any harmful side effects developing at the time. Their behavior appeared to improve with exposure to different people and situations.
Maybe it's a cop-out and I should feel guilty for my decision to work, but I have to admit, I have no regrets. To those of my offspring who think perhaps they suffered from lack of full-time mothering, I can only say, don't judge me till you've walked a mile in my moccasins. At least, you're still around to complain.
Author Notes | If this seems like a different tone from others in this series, it is because I wrote this story earlier than the other. I first posted it in 2009. but it seems to fit here so I'm going to use the certificate that allows it to be resurrected. The twins are about a year old in the picture. |
By BethShelby
Author Notes |
This is the continuing story of my life during the sixties.
It follows "Battling the Baby Blues." The picture shows twins at ages three and Carol at five. This story starts when the were a couple of years younger. |
By BethShelby
Author Notes | In the picture,Carol is five and the twins are three. |
By BethShelby
Author Notes | This is no longer a contest entry. I'm using the certificate to renew an old post because it fits into the book of memoirs I'm writing. |
By BethShelby
By BethShelby
With limited funds available for extras, the green used pickup my husband purchased for the ranch wasn’t anything to boast about, but the back was covered with a detachable camper hull with windows. Camping was something I’d never done. It sounded adventurous enough, I thought it might be fun. I had every intention of holding Evan to his promise of a vacation trip out West. If we camped out along the way, it should make the trip much less expensive and provide a learning experience for our three children.
Since he’d gotten his truck without me making a scene, Evan was open to the idea of trying it out on a cross-country trip. I’m not sure what I was thinking when he agreed, because I went a step further and suggested we take my mother along.
"You know how Dad is," I said. "All he wants to do is stay home. Mom loves to travel, but she never gets to go anywhere. She could sit in the back with the kids and watch them, and I could be in the cab with you, so I could help you drive."
Again he agreed, and Mom was delighted with the idea. She suggested we put a double mattress on the bed of the pickup, so it would provide a soft place to sit or lay.
Lest you get the idea that this was a fancy camper, let me assure you, it wasn’t. The double mattress took up the entire bed of the pickup so all luggage or food with be on it, as well as an adult and three children. There as no way to stand or move around. A simple white metal shell with windows fit over the bed of the truck and was the same height as the cab. In order to ride back there, one would have to sit or lie with legs spread out in front of them. Believe me, it was not the most comfortable position to be in for any length of time. These days, I doubt if it would even be a legal way to travel. Still, it was a cheap trip and something to break the monotony. My mom only thought she knew what she was getting herself into.
We lived in central Mississippi, and our destination was the Rocky Mountains of Colorado. Our time frame was one week. It was early May. School was still in session, and Carol’s first-grade teacher frowned on me for taking her out of class for a week. I figured she would learn more traveling than in reading about Dick, Jane and Sally. We packed our bags, a week’s supply of groceries, a small camp stove, sleeping bag, cooking pots, and two small tents and headed out on Saturday night.
We drove all night, and just before daybreak, we arrived on the outskirts of Dallas. Mom and the children were stretched out on the mattress in the back trying to sleep. We were congratulating ourselves on making excellent time, when suddenly we heard …Blump…blump…blump. Our mode of transportation had blown a tire. It was Sunday morning, and nothing was open. We finally found a service station and got a wrecker, but they couldn’t repair the tire. We had to hang around until after lunch in order to buy a new one. About two o'clock in the afternoon, we got underway again. Everyone's mood had deteriorated. Our three children decided this wasn’t such a fun idea after all. .
By five o’clock in the afternoon, we were exhausted and didn’t feel up to roughing it, so we stopped at a little town in Oklahoma and found a motel for the night. The next morning, after a good breakfast at a restaurant, we were refreshed and ready to try to get back some of our adventurous spirit. Before long, we faced the long drive across the Texas Panhandle. For a while, the children were interested in the tumbleweeds and the occasional roadrunner or jackrabbit, but Mom had her hands full keeping them occupied. They colored, fought with each other and tumbled around on the mattress, making keeping the covers straight impossible.
Our little adventure was becoming more and more like the journey taken by the Joad family in Steinbeck’s "Grapes of Wrath." Exhausted, we stopped at another restaurant for lunch.
I took a turn in the back to give Mom’s legs a rest and realized what she had been enduring. The space was so tight, even the double mattress barely fit. There was no way to contact anyone in the cab, because two layers of glass, with open air between, separated us. In order to get someone’s attention to stop the car for an emergency or a potty break, it was necessary to wave frantically and hope someone in the passenger seat would finally glance back. The side windows were small and didn’t provide much air. The children were bored and had started on the chips and cookies, scattering crumbs across the bed. Lying prone on the bed was a horrible way to travel, especially with three children fighting with each other and bouncing all over you.
This was becoming expensive. We were only one day into the trip and already we’d spent more than we planned for the whole week. It was time to get down to some serious camping. We were determined to find a campsite by evening. Still, there were miles and miles of open country with a few tiny towns and no campsite anywhere to be found. We hadn’t even passed a town big enough to have a motel.
As we crossed into the north corner of New Mexico, just before sundown, we spotted a small roadside park. There were several picnic tables and fire pits, so we pulled in. A couple of other cars were there. One group was a family of five having a picnic. At another table, there were four sleazy looking characters with stringy hair. They were loud as they argued and laughed while sharing a couple of bottles of liquor. An old beat-up looking Ford was parked near their table.
We pulled in and got out to stretch our legs. Mom and I pulled out some of the food and put together a fairly decent meal. The men, who appeared to be in their twenties, kept glancing in our direction. It was unnerving, to say the least. Mom declared, "It might be dangerous to try to stay here. You mark my word, those guys are up to no good."
The family finished their picnic, packed up and pulled away. We were considering doing the same, but then, the men got into their old car and also drove away. Their muffler was shot, and their car made a loud, unpleasant noise as it rattled out of the parking area. We felt very relieved to see them go.
This was obviously not the kind of motor park where people generally spent the night. There was a small restroom, but no bathing facilities and no staff around to monitor the place. We were all tired, and the countryside was so desolate it seemed pointless to go on. Our truck was the only vehicle remaining, and dark was upon us. Obviously, we weren’t about to pitch any tents here. We discussed it and decided, Evan and I would try sleeping in the back with the children, and we would let mother take her sleeping bag and curl up across the seat of the cab. At least, we could all be locked up for the night.
Evan looked in the glove compartment and pulled out a small pistol, which he had brought along in a brown paper bag. It was unloaded and the ammunition was in an another bag. He wanted it with him in the back in case we needed protection, but he hadn’t planned on the children seeing it. Around children, keeping things hidden is not always possible. When they realized their dad had a gun along, they freaked out. It dawned on them that maybe this trip involved some danger, and it took a while to calm them down.
In order to lock the back, it had to be done from the outside. Mother took the keys and locked us in before getting into the cab and locking herself in. We found sleep nearly impossible. Five people on a double bed doesn't make for good rest, much less sleep. In spite of the stifling heat and being jammed together, the kids did eventually drift off. Sleep was not in the picture for Evan and me. He kept turning the flashlight on to check the time. It was obviously going to be a long night. We heard a few cars passing on the highway, but traffic was light. At two a.m., things took a decidedly dark turn when we heard the unmistakable sound of the old Ford, with the busted muffler, returning to our area.
Evan and I sat up immediately, and he grabbed the pistol and loaded it. We started banging on the glass that separated our area from the cab, but it was no use because Mom couldn’t hear us. We were trapped. There was no way we could get out unless Mom unlocked the back with the key. It soon became apparent that she was awake, because she decided to start the truck.
Unfortunately, she didn’t know how. She turned the key, without using the clutch. The motor started but wouldn’t catch. The truck lurched forward and the motor died, all to be repeated over and over again. In addition to that, she repeatedly turned the lights on and off. What on earth did those men think was going on with us? Were they here to harm us? Maybe they were. We’ll never know, because after about thirty minutes, they drove away. The long night eventually ended with only the children getting any sleep.
The next morning, Mother came back and released us from our prison. She assured us that she had saved our lives, because she had frightened the men away with her futile attempts to start the truck. Evan vowed this would be his last attempt at camping. From now on, we would stay in motels, no matter what they cost. I was surprised he didn’t insist on going back home immediately.
We continued our trip and put the idea of camping behind us. We concluded that we weren’t suited for the great outdoors. Since we had never been there before, we were in awe of the Rockies. But poor Mom almost had a heart attack trying to climb the steps to the restaurant at Pike’s Peak. The thin mountain air caed her blood pressure to drop, and she came close to passing out.
Once after we’d paid for Mom’s breakfast at a restaurant, she insisted on buying everyone ice cream. Of course, no one wanted it after just having breakfast. She was stuck holding six melting ice cream cones over the already filthy sheets that covered our would-be bed. She finally crammed the whole sticky mess into a large mouthed thermos.
I would like to say the rest of the trip went smoothly, but with my mother and three children under eight, you would know I was lying. Still, nothing else that happened came close to being as hair-raising as that first Monday night.
When we got back home, we read in the paper about people being robbed and killed at rest stops along the Western highways. Mother said, "You see, I told you. I saved our lives." I wasn’t about to argue with her. Maybe she did. I figured she had suffered enough and deserve to be our hero.
Author Notes | This was posted earlier. I'm using the certificate to revive it. |
By BethShelby
Author Notes | I've written this in present tense rather than past although this took place around 1969. The title is an attempt at a play on words rather than a misspelling. The picture is the twins in the Jack and Jill costumes I made for them. There were supposed to look like children from bygone days. |
By BethShelby
Author Notes | This story is a continuation of Chasing the Elusive Dream, but until it is no longer active, it will remain a stand alone story. |
By BethShelby
Author Notes | This story takes place in Mississipp in 1969. |
By BethShelby
Author Notes | I realize there are a lot of people in this story. Let me know if all the names are too distracting. This took place about 1970. |
By BethShelby
Author Notes | This seems to fit at this point in my book so I'm reactivating. This was about 1971. |
By BethShelby
After five years with one printing company, I took a position, at a much higher salary, with a new company just starting up. For the first time in my working career, I worked with women and was in a position to have friends my own age I could socialize with outside of the office.
Up to this point most of my co-workers had been men. I learned the hard way, a woman can’t afford to be seen with a married male coworker outside the office. Wives are naturally suspicious of women who work with their husbands. I’d even managed to get chewed out by the wife of a man, thirty years my senior, for driving him to the hospital, when he had suffered a heart attack during our lunch break.
One of my new friends was a girl named Maggie. She was a fun-loving little brunette who had appeared in some TV commercials. She was married to a traveling salesman and was the mother of a four-year-old girl. Carolyn, a tall blonde flirt who drove racecars in a Powder-puff Derby, was another coworker. She had a boyfriend for every need. There was a mechanic, a banker, a repairman, and one guy who bought her groceries and met her physical needs.
"Beth, someone told me about this black lady who lives out in the projects who is really good at reading cards," Carolyn informed me. "I’m thinking about going out to see her. You want to come?"
"What kind of cards? " I asked. "Are you talking about those funny looking fortune-telling cards?"
"No, not Tarot cards. I think she just uses plain old playing-cards, but she told this girl I know some stuff, and every bit of it came true. I want to know if there are any new men in my future."
"Well, you don’t need a fortune teller for that. With your track record, I’m sure there are a lot of new men in your future," I said. "I don’t think Evan would want me to go. Why don’t you ask Maggie? I think she’s into that stuff. She’ll probably go with you."
We lived in the heart of the Bible belt. Fortune-telling was considered the work of the devil. Gypsy palm-readers traveled with carnivals, and a lot of black ladies read cards for extra cash. A few years before, I’d encountered one at a neighbor’s Halloween party. Some of what she said was eerily accurate, but other things were open to interpretation. For instance, she told me there was something going on in my stomach area, but it would all turn out fine. I was two months pregnant at the time. Seven months later, it turned out fine in the form of twins.
Maggie came over to talk to me after Carolyn asked her to go. "It sounds like fun," she said. "I’ll go if you will. My husband knows what Carolyn is like. He’ll have a fit if I go off with just her, but if he knows you’re going, he’ll be all right with it."
"Did Carolyn say how much she charges? I don’t need to be wasting my money on that phony stuff."
"I asked her that. She said this lady works cheap. Sometimes she does it for a piece of clothing or a purse. Carolyn says she never charges over five dollars. Let’s go with her. It’ll be something different to do."
"Well, maybe I’ll go just to watch. I don’t know if I want her to tell me anything."
Sunday afternoon found us in a run-down section of the city searching for the house. It was painted a Pepto-Bismol pink and had a swing hanging from the ceiling of the tiny front porch. A large dark-skinned lady with a colorful scarf tied around her head sat shelling butterbeans, on the porch-swing. She appeared to be about fifty.
"Is this where the lady lives that tells fortunes," asked Carolyn.
"Yessum. I’s Miss Lena. Yaw’ll wants yaw'lls' fortunes read? It’ll be five dollars a piece."
We nodded, and she rose and put her pan aside. "I’s gonna takes yaw’ll one at a time. One of yaw’ll come on back wit’ me. The rest of yaw’ll, set thar on that swang and wait."
Carolyn moved forward, and they went into the house together. When she came back out, her face was wreathed in smiles. "You both have to do it," she said. "It’s worth the money."
Maggie went next. She returned wearing a frown. I could tell she was concerned about something, but both girls insisted I go and see what she would tell me.
Reluctantly, I got up and followed Miss Lena. It took several minutes for my eyes to adjust to the gloom. The only light came from a small curtained window. The room contained a soiled print sofa and a couple of stuffed chairs. She led me to a card table with two metal chairs.
As she spread the cards across the table, she started to talk. "You is married to a good man. He be a mighty fine man. You is lucky. He ain’t never gonna leave you. Yaw’ll gonna to be together fo' a lot of years. How many chillen’ yaw’ll got?"
"Three," I anwered, wondering why she needed to ask.
"Well, deese cards here say yaw’ll supposed to have five, so I reckons yaw’ll gotta have two mo'." I started to tell her about the baby I'd lost, but she continued quickly without interruption. "Dey’s a black-headed woman what comes to yo' house some times. She thank mo' about yo' husband than she do about you."
Hmm..., That had to be my sister-in-law, Shirley. She did date Evan before I met him. She’s the only lady with black hair who’s ever been to my house. Nothing to worry about there. He thinks she’s silly.
"Dat place where you works at, dat job ain’t gonna last. You be changin’ jobs pretty soon. I thank you be movin’ to another state befo’ too long." Oh well, I wouldn't be surprised. Changing jobs seems to be the story of my working career. But moving? I can't imagine leaving Mississippi.
Her next statement shocked me. I wasn't expecting her to go into anything about death. "I sees an old man. He ain’t doing so well. He gonna be dying fo' long."
"Other than them few thangs, you got you a good life. Yaw’ll all gonna be happy and yaw’ll gonna have enough money. I don’t see no sickness comin’ on. Tha’s about all what deese cards say."
I gave her the five dollars and walked out dazed. I hope she was wrong about those two kids, I thought. Susan has to be one of them. I didn’t tell her my first child died. I’ve given birth to four children. That is enough. I sure hope we won’t be moving. We’ve only been in our new house a year. And who is this old man that’s going to die?. Evan’s Dad did have a heart attack a few months ago, but he’s doing fine now. Get a grip, Beth. You don’t really believe this crap, do you?
We compared notes on the way home. She told each of us our jobs wouldn’t last. According to her, all three of us would be moving away. Carolyn was thrilled to hear that she would soon meet a very rich man and get married. Miss Lena told Maggie that she would marry again in the future.
"What will happen to the husband I have now?" Maggie asked her.
"He may have to die, Honey," Miss Lena told her. "But you gonna be alright tho'. He gonna' leave you wid plenty money. You gonna have another baby with that new man."
Evan wasn’t happy with me when I told him about having my cards read. He grinned, however, when I told him the lady said I was married to a "really good" man and we’d have a lot of years together.
Within a couple of weeks, Evan’s father suffered another heart attack and died. After eight months, our company declared bankruptcy and began selling off their equipment. I found a job with another printing company.
Carolyn moved to Memphis. Maggie’s husband was transferred to another Mississippi town. After she moved away, I lost touch with both girls.
Rumors begin circulating that Evan’s company would be relocating to New Orleans. The company would be laying off some of their personnel and retiring others. Would we be transferred? Evan didn’t think so. Neither of us wanted to move from our new house. We liked where we lived.
The cards had been right on many counts, but the move was still to be determined, and I had no intention of getting pregnant again. Only time would reveal whether or not all of the predictions would come true.
As for me, I’d decided to opt for the surprises life has in store. The idea that a deck of cards could predict my future wasn’t a possibility I cared to explore further. Some time has past since that day, and I might as well admit those last two predictions did come true. Still, I never had the desire to learn of my future again.
Author Notes | Black dialect and bad grammer are intentional |
By BethShelby
My son, Don, was born with a lust for adventure. No family vacation we ever took could quite satisfy his yen for excitement. During the 80's, we were living in New Orleans. Most people could have found adequate stimulation around there, but Don felt the need to seek his thrills a little further away from the watchful eyes of his parents.
During the summer months, he worked at summer camps in Florida, Texas, Arkansas, and Virginia; leading a group of innocent pre-teens into a series of capers their moms probably would have been horrified had they only known. Don tended to be reckless and accident-prone. The hair-raising tales of his close calls usually filtered back to me long after the incidents had passed.
During his first year in college, his best friend was a boy from California. Even after he changed schools, he and Rick remained close. One summer, he decided to go to California with Rick to work a construction job with the boy's father. The plan was to work a couple of months doing carpentry work and finish the summer counseling at a California teen camp. This was a bit further than he'd gone before. We weren't convinced enough to fund this venture.
"You'll have to pay your own way," we told him.
"Oh, no problem. Rick and I have enough to get us there, and then I'll be earning money. Rick's dad will pay us for the work we do."
Somewhere between New Orleans and Las Vegas, Rick's truck started giving them problems. They were able to chug their way into Las Vegas before the truck completely died. Neither of them had much cash left at that point. Not wanting to wire home for money or to beg on the street, the two of them decided to try out their salesmanship skills. Rick happened to be carrying a lot of his dad's tools in back of his truck. I don't know if it was their sales ability, or if the deals were too good to pass up, but they were able to obtain a little cash that way. At least, that is what we were told later. It occurs to me, they may have pawned them. We didn't always get a totally factual story.
At any rate, they hadn't raised enough for the needed repair work, so their next move was to use the money to hit the slots hoping to increase their cash. (It would have been interesting to hear the conversation that likely took place later between Rick and his father. I'm sure those tools weren't cheap.)
They were down to their last three quarters, when they decided to pray about the situation, thinking maybe, since all else had failed, God would bless their gambling efforts and help them produce some real cash. God had other plans. He wasn't a likely one to endorse the vice of gambling. Foreseeing what lay ahead, He must have known it wouldn't be the last time that summer His assistance would be needed. With the last of their change gone, they were forced to call Rick's dad and have him wire them enough money to get home.
It was a couple of years before we learned that Rick's father wasn't too happy with our son's carpentry skills. It seems Don broke most of the bases of the commodes he was supposed to be installing in an apartment complex by tightening the bolts too tight. This might have been why he had enough time on his hands to go sightseeing alone.
Clad in khaki shorts and a T-shirt, he borrowed Rick's mountain bike and decided to explore the countryside. After a few hours, he was hot and tired and a long way from Rick's house. He realized he needed to find a shortcut back. He wasn't deterred by the fact that the shortest distance back lay across a hill that had "Government Property-Keep Out!" signs posted. He could see a path, and there were no people around to stop him. That seemed like an open invitation, as long as he could manage to get his bike and himself on the other side of the chain-link fence.
After riding what seemed like miles across the deserted property, his legs were numbed to the point they had little feeling left in them. He thought he felt something brush against his leg. Looking around, he saw a huge coiled rattlesnake. The snake fascinated him enough that he got off the bike, pulled out his camera, and took a picture. As he got back on the bike, he glanced down at his bare leg and to his horror, he saw fang marks and two rivulets of blood streaming down into his sock.
Panic set in. "I'm gonna' die. There's no one around for miles. No one will even find me." He jumped on the bike and took off pedaling as fast as he could, determined to get somewhere close to civilization before he succumbed to the rattlesnake bite. It seemed he'd ridden forever before he saw a way to exit the government land. There was a house in the distance. When he got there, he managed to get someone's attention, but he was so out of breath. he could barely speak. He could only point to his blood-stained leg and get out the word "rattlesnake." Alarmed, the people called 911, and help was on the way.
We did get a phone call this time. He needed me to give them our credit card number so the emergency service could be paid. After taking his vitals the EMT told him, "Son, you're lucky it was such a large snake. Evidently he didn't release any venom. The younger snakes can't control it. If he'd released venom, you'd be dead by now. All that exercise would have pumped the poison straight to your heart."
That may have been the worst fiasco of his summer but certainly not the last close call. Rick's father gave him another shot at construction, and this time, a large beam fell and hit him on the head and knocked him out. While technically, this wasn't his fault, it may have been the way the universe went about paying him back for breaking all those toilets.
It was at that moment, the building inspector came to check out the work progress. I'm not sure how he reacted to having to walk around a young man still struggling to regain consciousness. At least, he wasn't the safety inspector. Luckily, this was Don's last day on the job before heading to camp. It was a good thing, or he may not have survived the summer. His guardian angel was working overtime.
The following day, still sporting a sizable knot on his head, he stopped for lunch at a greasy spoon and ordered Mexican food. Our star-crossed son was served some of the cheese that made national news when it was recalled for causing food poisoning. He arrived at camp too sick to venture far from the rest room. Aside from being the sickest he could ever remember being, he did recover. Every phone call we got from him that summer involved a new disaster that caused my hair to go a bit grayer.
At the close of the summer camp session, all of the campers and staff made a trip to Colorado. Don's funds were running low again. He and a friend from camp hiked up a mountain and found some vintage iron railroad spikes. They carted them down the mountain and spray-painted them gold and sold them to the campers for souvenirs. He netted enough cash for the plane-ticket home. He was told later that even though they were abandoned, it is illegal to take anything belonging to the railroad.
With the summer behind us, we felt we could relax a bit. Of course that was a ridiculous idea, because when you're raising a son, even if he's legally considered an adult, it is best to keep your guard up at all times. But for a day or so, we relaxed under the false assumption that maybe the summer had afforded him enough adventure to get him through another year in college. Time would prove us wrong.
By BethShelby
Let me start by saying my heart has never been truly broken; bruised maybe, during my pre-adolescence early years, but nothing a good night's sleep and a pint of ice cream couldn't fix. Don't tell me there aren't some advantages to getting married young to the first guy who ever says he's in love with you. Still, I wouldn't recommend that for everyone, because I've noticed it doesn't always work. The world is full of jerks, and I guess I just got lucky. So since I've never had a broken heart, what qualified me to share my wisdom with those who have? I'm glad you asked that question. I'm the mother of four children, all of whom have had their hearts shattered so many times they look like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. Nevertheless, their Humpty-Dumpty hearts keep getting put back together again, and life goes on.
Nothing can be worse than a teenage boy in love for the first time, unless it is a teenage boy with his first broken heart. Everything is so magnified out of proportion you might as well forget about trying to see it from his perspective. He is viewing the world from a roller coaster while you are riding on the back of turtle, so he doesn't even expect you to understand, much less offer any helpful advice. It's enough to be there to listen in case he wants to talk and to have something he likes available to fill his empty belly. (Usually, boys' appetites aren't seriously impaired. That's the female department.) Also, you might want to keep your schedule open to run him to the hospital in case he tries to put his fist through a wall. Males tend to get a bit physical sometimes, but broken bones mend at about the same rate as broken hearts at this stage. They heal after a few months, and the second time around, it is usually less severe.
Girls are another story. I had three of these, and while they tend to become less physically violent, they are a lot more verbal. Get used to seeing puffy eyes and tear-stained pillows. Their story is the great tragedy of the ages. During this time, they may lose weight and start to take on the appearance of someone from a famine-ravished third world country, but with any luck, they'll survive to love again. There is only one way for the grief to work its way out of their system. They must relive the whole affair six million times, dissecting it in a different light each time. Finally after all their friends have gone into hiding, and you are about to check into a rehabilitation center, one day they wake up and look at their emaciated body and decide they like themselves that way, and they need a whole new wardrobe.
There are worst case scenarios. Most tragic of all is the one who somehow escapes heartbreak until they are well into their ninth year of marriage, and to complicate matters, don't even see it coming. Such was the case with my firstborn. Heartbreak is like chicken pox. It's a lot easier on you if you get it while you're young. Still, the process is the same. It just may last a lot longer. You might as well forget offering advice. They are in no frame of mind to even hear you. "Get a lawyer and take the bum for all he's got" isn't even going to compute, if they've already made up their mind they are somehow to blame and therefore deserve what is happening to them.
Sometimes, they feel they need more than Mom's shoulder to cry on. This is where counselors and support groups come in. Of course if it comes to that, you might as well know in advance that the problem always stems from their childhood, and somehow you're always going to get the lion's share of the blame instead of the jerk who really deserves it. Still, don't feel too bad because it's all part of the process, and so what if they beat you up in effigy. After all, isn't that what moms are for? Eventually the day will come when they decide to reinvent themselves and get on with life. It may involve a new look, a new job, or sometimes, a whole new personality. The point is, that heartbreak doesn't last forever, and there is life, even after divorce.
How can you help a person get over a broken heart? Don't flatter yourself into believing you have that kind of power. It's their heart, and there is very little you can say or do that is going to make much of a difference. Healing comes from within themselves. Like the childhood disease, it's just got to run its course, and all you can really do is stand by with a pot of chicken soup. If there is any message you can convey to them at this time of personal tragedy, none is any better than the little four-word cliche that my grandma used to utter, "This too shall pass."
Author Notes | I haven't written anything lately, and those of you who have been reading my story, will find this goes along with it, but offers a more humorous take on the heartbreak that my children seem to experience. |
By BethShelby
You are taking a big leap of faith when you leave a recently retired husband home alone on a rainy day. If there is nothing interesting on TV to entertain him, he might find a way to make himself useful, which could cause you untold complications.
To begin with, I was alarmed when my husband informed me at age fifty-six, he was retiring. Visions of homelessness and soup-kitchens surged through my mind. No one retires that early. He’s too young to draw Social Security or retirement benefits. How are we going to survive? We’ve still got children to educate. He must be having a mid-life crisis.
Luckily, he’d thought of all of that. He’d been dreaming of retiring since his first job. He wasn’t lazy; far from it. He just didn’t like working for someone else, and he wanted to be free to pursue his own thing. Since I wasn’t inclined to live in the sticks while he raised cattle, he made sure he’d invested enough over the years that we’d survive. Although I’d protested, I knew when to shut up. All my dire predictions of being on the street didn’t occur and life went on. I chose to keep working, just in case. Unlike him, I actually enjoyed my job.
Most days, my husband was happily involved in something out in the yard, making a garden or building something. He kept busy and never regretted a day of retiring early. But then one rainy day, he decided he would do something to make my life easier, or so he thought.
To say I’m not the most organized person around is a gross understatement. My husband, on the other hand was meticulous and organized to the hilt. One rainy day, he took a look at my closet and my library and decided it was time to organize me.
The problem was his idea of organizing was all about the aesthetic looks of things. He was a neat-freak. I had a huge walk-in closet in which I stored things of all sizes depending on whether my body was holding water or had been on a 20-day fast. I also had clothes for all seasons and all occasions. They ranged from brand-new to twenty-five years out of date. To him, it looked like the chaos of a mad woman. The things I grabbed to wear each morning were the things I liked best. They were in season and they fit, both my body and my needs for the day.
When I came home on that ill-fated day, he took my hand and proudly led me upstairs to see his handiwork. To my shock and horror, my clothes were all color coordinated. My closet was lined up like a rainbow. Everything I’d ever owned was with its matching color. My new blue winter suit, my blue robe and my blue spring dress from ten year ago all hung neatly side by side.
Next, he led me to my library. It had been a long day, and he’d worked fast. I had hundreds of books on every imaginable subject like self-help, inspiration, medical, classics, mysteries and encyclopedias. He had them neatly rearranged by size. Apparently, he’d found it offensive to see a 10-inch-high book with brown jacket standing next to a 6-inch x 12-inch book in a blue jacket, even when it was written by the same author. Apparently the tops of all books needed to even and the colors consistant in order to look neat on the shelf.
He looked so pleased with himself, I found it hard to burst his bubble. I did most of my crying in private.
I discovered there was one area in which his organizational ability did come in handy. Every time I loaded the dishwasher. He would go behind me and remove everything I’d put in and rearrange it. He was genius when it came to loading a dishwasher. He could get three times as many dishes in as I could, and they all came out sparkling. I assigned him that task permanently and asked politely that he steer clear of my closet.
He agreed to allow me to be a slob, and he would look the other way. It worked well, until he became bored again and drew up plans for a third story sunroom with views of Lookout Mountain. When the time came to build it, he informed me half of my closet had to go so he would have an area in which to build the stairs. The room turned out beautifully, but sacrificing my closet broke my heart. All of those clothes I didn’t wear had to be packed away.
I had to admit his talents as designer and carpenter were much more desirable than his organizational skills. This time he actually did accumulate some brownie points. That room became a family favorite.
By BethShelby
Life was so much simpler before the invasion of self-help books. Before everyone who believed they had experienced a unique revelation concerning their own maladjusted psyche, decided they could write a formula that would cure the most deranged member of society and earn themselves a generous profit as well, we somehow managed to cope. And we did it with a lot less stress, I might add.
We didn't have to deal with the possibility that somehow we might be suppressing our inner child, or heaven forbid, even more sinister, perhaps multiple personalities might lurk in our tortured brains. We didn't spend our precious leisure moments contemplating ways of becoming the "total woman" or fretting that we might be suffering from the "Cinderella complex". It didn't occur to us that self-hypnosis or yoga might correct our bulging waist lines or that chanting "Ummmm" sounds could release the power within us.
There is a plus side, of course. At last, we can excuse the temper tantrum by mentioning PMS or referring to our hormone imbalance. If we totally lose it and hurl a plate of food at the wall on Christmas Day, you can't hold us accountable because dinner is late and our blood sugar level is low. If our children tie the teacher up and threaten to burn the school, they are likely either hyperactive or suffering from attention deficient disorder.
In those good old days of "Take two aspirins and call me in the morning," most of the ills that beset us fell under the mysterious heading of "Virus". The family practitioner could usually set our minds at rest by nodding knowingly and assuring us that it would probably pass in 24 hours. Alas, those days ended when the Disease of the Month books hit the shelves. Now, we have to deal with hypoglycemia, chronic fatigue syndrome, toxic shock syndrome, and an endless parade of possibilities that might account for the fact that we aren't feeling quite up to par.
Perhaps not everyone haunts the libraries and book stores in search of answers, but I'm blessed (or cursed) with two daughters who do. Both have assured me that they have discovered that I am the root cause of all their problems.
One daughter attributes her low self esteem to the fact she lost her identity as the baby in the birth order, when I schemed to replace her by giving birth to another child when she was ten. She refuses to believe me when I tell her it was more a leaky diaphragm than a deliberate plot. She's an active member of the Disease of the Month club and calls regularly to inform me that she has finally isolated her problem and will be totally healthy soon. I can't wait.
The other daughter's accusations I take more seriously. She was once confident, well adjusted, and a delight to be around. After her obsessive compulsive husband of eight years decided he was suffering from marriage burnout and bailed, she began to suffer serious self doubts. Her friends rushed to comfort her with arm loads of literary insight to help her deal with grief and determine what went wrong. After discovering that "Men are from Mars" and we would all have been better off if they had stayed there, she was hooked.
Her latest passion is the Codependency craze. Codependency, as nearly as I can determine, has to do with needing another person to meet a need that you may have, or allowing yourself to meet the needs of a person who needs you. It's like "needing a hug" is a bad thing. "People who need people," according to the authors of these books, "are not the luckiest people in the world." In fact, they are downright sick. It seems to me, that automatically puts all parents and most married couples in jeopardy. If you've ever read their list, you probably know that almost everything that involves interaction with another human being qualifies you as a certified card carrying member of the Society of Codependents. In order not to make the dread list you would have to be a hermit, preferably on an isolated island near Atlantis or some other lost civilization.
My once helpful, caring daughter has become so afraid of needing or being needed by someone that she can no longer talk on the telephone without analyzing her motives to determine if she really wants to have this conversation or if there is another motivation. Naturally, the problem stems back to her early childhood when I was, more or less, still in charge.
If I give financial help or other aid to any of her siblings, I'm an "enabler". If I offer a suggestion, I'm a "controller". It's depressing, but then that's not allowed either. There are numerous "how to" books to help me cope with that.
As far my daughters are concerned, perhaps there is hope for them yet. To paraphrase the wisdom of Erma Bombeck's mother, maybe when they hit menopause, it will take their mind off their problems.
As for me, things are definitely looking up. My son, the chiropractor, who is into astrology, numerology, biorhythm, and other pseudo-sciences, assures me that my problem lies in the fact that the stars aren't lined up just right for me. I should be coming into a new cycle soon that will assure me of health, happiness and material prosperity. As long as I keep my vertebra aligned, massage my pressure points, and look into the joys of jogging, life will be sweet.
Author Notes | I wrote this piece several years ago in response to a frustration over the advice I was receiving from my children who were very much a part of the culture of their day. |
By BethShelby
I think my husband suffers from selective amnesia. If it weren't for a handful of isolated incidents forever etched into grooves of his brain, one might conclude from his recollections, he was probably zapped into existence as a full grown adult.
I don't have an exceptional memory, but I have retained bits and pieces of almost everything of any significance that happened to me from age three on, and some things earlier than that. It seems to me, short of being dropped on his head and thereby erasing whatever happened up to that point, there should be something more in his memory bank other than the pain of being teased about the hole in the seat of his pants at the tender age of five.
Truthfully, there are a few other things. He remembers being reprimanded by a teacher, for standing up and yelling at someone outside the window while class was going on. He remembers being scolded by his father for scooting across the floor on his behind. attempting to impress his uncle's new bride. (That may be how he got the hole in the seat of his pants.) He hasn't forgotten the time he was late for class and nearly decapitated himself by running into a clothes line. He also remembers the time he ran half a mile home, fleeing the slingshot hanging out of his back pocket, while thinking he was being pursued by a deadly rattler. Then, there is the memory of "Katsy" or rather, he remembers begging to go to "Katsy's" house. Nobody in his family ever figured out who Katsy was, much less where she lived, but those meager anecdotes about sum up all that's survived of his childhood.
The next time his train of recall starts up, he was a full grown soldier boy, heading for war. He remembers the war years well, mainly because he had knots in his stomach for two years from fear of flying shrapnel or the possibility of stepping on a land mine.
As nearly as I can determine, in order for him to consider an event memorable, it must involve pain, embarrassment, fear, or something totally non-existent. Given that, I have to consider it a positive thing that he remembers so little of our courtship and our numerous years of marriage. All the adorable things the children did or said are part of my memory, not his. He remembers their accidents, the skeletons they dragged from our proverbial closet and displayed for the amusement of our friends, and the fights in the back seat when "I'm going to count to ten" stopped working, and he occasionally managed to subdue them by threatening to stop the car.
However, what stands out more vividly than any other tidbits of family history, in his cache of recollections are our vacations, or more accurately, selective parts of them. He can conjure these jewels from the depths of his grey matter with total recall, causing all the emotions he felt at the time to come flooding to the surface. Those are times we tiptoe and try to stay out of his way.
I guess the reason these memories are so much clearer than the others are because they involve a combination of stimuli. Pain, from the inescapable headache that follows a day of driving and listening to me yell at four hyper children, who were attempting to destroy each other, in the back seat. Fear, that maybe he might totally lose control and actually do bodily harm to one of them (or me). Embarrassment, caused by the likelihood we might be evicted from a restaurant, because one of them had initiated a food fight. But central to all, is his creative, but paranoid, imagination, which convinces him that I once deliberately set out to cause his demise, by nearly running out of gas in the middle of the scenic route, and then, choosing not to find a motel room instantly, when he informed me that his head was bursting, and he didn't think he was long for this world. Even Alfred Hitchcock couldn't have devised such an ingenious murder plot.
Since that time, every year when vacation rolls around, we've had to deal with the resurrection of this cerebral demon of his, which threatens to call a halt to any plans I might have to get away a few day. Personally, my own demon sleeps. I remember peaceful mountains and carefree days. Reality sets in some time later, usually when we've traveled too far to turn back.
So be it. Perhaps I have my own brand of selective amnesia.
Author Notes | This was written years ago when my husband was living. |
By BethShelby
By BethShelby
Author Notes | A few of you have read this oldie already. I am promoting it again because it is one of the few stories in my book "Chasing the Elusive Dream" that hasn't yet reached the magic 26 reviews that gives it a higher rating. |
By BethShelby
As far as I know, no one who matters ever said raising twins is easy. Sometimes, it's even harder when they're away at boarding academy with someone else theoretically raising them for you. Donald Ray and Christi Faye were the two of my four who gave me the most headaches.
I had my reservations about sending them away to another state to go to school. They could manage to get into enough trouble at home with me there to keep an eye on them. Let them get that far out of reach, and the potential for problems was immense. Nevertheless, it was their senior year in high school, and this boarding school was about as strict as they get.
The male half of the pair had already ventured into the world the year before. Even though the school he attended was the one assigned for students in our church district, it was over 10 hours away by car. I had barely driven away from the campus, when my son discarded the class schedule I had so carefully worked out with courses he needed, to at least, give him a fighting chance of getting into college. The classes he substituted were an assortment of non-academic fun classes that would qualify him for nothing in particular. It was obvious he wasn't there to study, and I was furious with his advisors for allowing him to get away with it.
After two months away from home for the first time in his life, he was anxious to touch home base. During fall break, busses were provided to transport the students to their respective districts. As anxious as he was to get home, you'd think he would be there when the bus was ready to roll out. Not! My husband and I had figured he was about an hour into the ten-hour trip home when the phone rang. The shaken voice of our male heir came on the line to inform us he had overslept and missed the bus. As usual with most of the phone calls I got that year, it was a crisis situation, and he expected us to come up with an instant solution from our corner of the world. This time, luck was with him. The school policy was to call roll before heading out. Since someone had neglected their duty, the school was forced to fly him home at their expense. He arrived home several hours before the busload of exhausted students and was rather proud of himself for being so clever. It takes real talent to miss a bus.
Every time I heard from him after that, either he needed money, was in trouble or was about to embark on some caving or mountain climbing adventure. The school seemed to encourage the students to live dangerously. Somehow, he made it through the year without any lasting ill effects other than low grades, in spite of his chosen fun classes. Even so, my nerves were frayed, and I vowed to have him closer to home the following year. His twin sister, who didn't feel ready to go away at fifteen, decided he wasn't leaving again without her.
This time, we chose a closer school which wasn't a part of our district. Still, a hundred miles is out of reach of the apron strings, a lot of things can happen. In spite of the fact Don was the veteran, he was the one that the things generally happened to. He was a gymnastic star that year, and it wasn't unusual to see some part of his anatomy sporting a cast. Regardless of what was broken, he'd leave a cast intact just so long. By the time it has gotten wet a few times and started to itch and smell, he'd head for the woodworking shop to rid himself of the offensive bit of plaster, despite doctor's orders.
He was in "luv" that year. I can think of nothing that is more nauseating than the first time a guy falls hard for a girl. Rational behavior isn't even in the picture. One of his most bizarre accidents involved several crushed hand bones, the result of trying to run his fist through a metal door. The cause being that the dean had forbidden him to see his fair lady for a week as punishment for being in the wrong place at the wrong time. The dean, realizing that blow was directed, at least symbolically, at him, considered sending him home for good.
His twin sister, comparatively, was having a relatively good year. Aside from the usual money and boy friend problems and the weird hyena shriek she had developed at the first hint of something amusing, all was going well. Graduation was only a week away, and we almost had it made. Then came another call from the school.
My daughter had stayed out of trouble just about as long as she could tolerate. No offense carried a stricter penalty at this school than that of a student daring to invade the sleeping quarters of one of the opposite sex. This was the rule she chose to violate. She and another friend decided, it would be a great sport to sneak into the room of a sleeping male student, seize his covers, yank them off, and yell "Trucking" and bolt from the room without being caught. The trick went off as planned, but word got out and someone squealed. Now, I was being informed I should come immediately to get my wayward daughter and take her home.
A hasty meeting of the staff convened. They decided perhaps expulsion might be too stiff a punishment since this was the first offense. Besides, you never know how a parent might react at seeing so much hard earned money escaping down the drain. Therefore, although she wouldn't be allowed to participate in any of the graduation parties and activities or be on campus, she could return for the actual graduation ceremony to receive her diploma. Under no circumstances would she be allowed to attend any of the other functions.
I was making arrangements to leave my job to go after my mischievous juvenile offender, when I got a call from the father of an off campus friend. "There's no point in you having to make that long trip," he said. "We'd be delighted to have her stay with us a few days." I considered his proposal and agreed, luckily for her, because I wasn't taking any of this too lightly.
Saturday night was class night, and at least one of our children was participating. Don had parts in several skits and an Elvis impersonation for the talent portion. Since Christi was banned from the campus, we went straight to the auditorium. The program was starting when we noticed a strange looking little old lady, wearing a long dress and pull down hat, enter leaning on her cane. She kept her head down to avoid eye contact with anyone and sat down quickly. It wasn't long before whispered messages were being passed from one student to the next. Heads turned and giggles erupted. Finally, I got wind of what was going on. My daughter, this time with the blessing and aid of her friend's delinquent father, was once again defying the school by masquerading as an old lady. I was horrified. I'm sure someone in authority must have learned of my daughter's latest escapade. Too many students were willing and anxious to tattle. I fully expected the diploma to be snatched from her grasp at the last minute. For the fact it didn't happen, I am truly grateful.
The following year, they went on to college and no, it didn't get that much easier, but gradually I got more seasoned. They're a long way from seventeen now, but they're still capable of providing me with amusing anecdotes to tell my grandchildren. If there's any justice out there, maybe somewhere in the future there will be twin grandchildren to whom I can tell those stories
Author Notes | This is a really old one. There is a somewhat similar story in my later book, but I told this with a bit more humor. |
By BethShelby
Author Notes | I'm reposting this older one because I think it belongs in the book "Chasing the Elusive Dream" and I hope to get a few more reviews on it. |
By BethShelby
Author Notes | This is a true story written for a writing prompt for a club of which I'm a member The prompt subject was "Luck". |
By BethShelby
Growing up in Mississippi, which has towns bordering the Gulf of Mexico, you would think my parents might find a reason to drive the three hours down state, so their daughter could dip her feet into the waves occasionally. Unfortunately, they weren’t inclined to leave home just for pleasure. I could only dream of seeing the sea.
When I got married at eighteen, I’d only seen the Mississippi Gulf Coast twice, and on neither occasion did I have a chance to exit the car. I had swum in a few lakes, rivers and ponds, but those can’t compete with water reaching as far as you can see. My husband and I did take a short wedding trip to the Gulf in Pensacola, Florida. I loved it, but two hours was just enough time to realize my new husband wasn’t really a beach person.
It was years later, when we moved to New Orleans, I was thrilled to learn the seashore was nearer than it had ever been before. Living a block off of Lake Pontchartrain, I did get the pleasure of viewing water as far as I could see. I enjoyed hiking the trails along the lake, but it wasn’t for swimming or digging your toes into the sand. The water was dirty, and often, dead fish were washed up on the rocks lining the shore.
By then we had three children, and soon after moving there, a fourth child was added. We often drove over to Gulfport or Biloxi on the weekends. The children loved the gulf waters as much as I did. The drive took only a little more than an hour.
After a few unfortunate faux pas, my loving brood decided their mom was an accident waiting to happen, and they surmised, it was likely to be a weird one at that.
They never stopped teasing me about the time my husband and I changed drivers on a road trip. It wasn’t my fault, but I was the one left standing barefooted on the side of an interstate highway. I’d gotten out of the driver seat to walk around the car and get back in on the other side, when my husband, who had simply moved over, drove away before I had a chance to get back in. The kids thought it was so funny they couldn’t stop laughing long enough to tell him what happened. He had to drive 20 miles to turn around.
There was the time my shoes went down the Ocoee River, when a friend talked me into getting into the water with her to cool off. How was I supposed to know at certain times the upstream dam was opened to create more water pressure for the white-water rafters? The water increased in depth and swiftness so suddenly there was no time to rescue my shoes, camera or reading material. Fortunately, I stopped chasing my shoes down the river in time to save myself.
I could go on, but let’s just say I’d had enough embarrassing moments to have earned myself a reputation for getting into trouble. The seashore should have been a place where I would be safe. I wasn’t a risk taker. I hadn’t even waded out past my shoulders in the water. My feet were firmly planted on the solid seabed.
I was peacefully enjoying the lap of waves, the gulls overhead and the feel of the sea breeze caressing my face, when I thought I heard shouts from my children who were playing in the shallow water on the shore. I turned just in time to see an out-of-control sailing dinghy heading straight toward me. The guy and girl in the boat were trying their best to turn the sail.
Moving through the waves quickly enough to avoid a collision was impossible. The pain of the impact was an unpleasant jolt, which came close to knocking the wind out of me, but it wasn’t life threatening. The couple, seeing I was still upright, yelled apologies as they continued on their way, trying desperately to keep the sail from dumping them into the brine. I limped out of the water with a rapidly forming bruise on my side.
After seeing there was very little blood, my loving kids started to laugh. My youngest was the one to proclaim “No one but Mom could possibly get run over by a boat.”
By BethShelby
Author Notes | WC 863 |
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