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MY HEROINE


Most of us had heroes and heroines when we were young.  People such as the Lone Ranger, Penny from Sky King, move stars, presidents, etc.  I know I adored Doris Day.  I loved her freckles, her voice and her musicals.  Back in my day, there were movie magazines.  I remember cutting out pictures of my favorite stars.  I also liked Ike - I actually shook his hand as a child, at a rally by our town hall.  I was thrilled and declared I would never wash my hand.

 

My most important heroine, however, was my maternal grandmother, Nana, who lived with us.  She was a bright light in my life and the memories I have of her are both cherished and forever in my mind and heart.  She passed away when I was 12 years old but the time I had with her was golden.

 

My childhood was not the happiest time of my life.  I had a mother who was abusive but not at home much.  My father, although another light in my life, was wrapped up in his job and even worked on Saturdays.  I did have an older brother but he, of course, had his life and friends and I could not count on him to be there when I was lonely and afraid.

 

Nana was there for me and probably was the one who kept me from being a lost little girl. More often than not, she was the one who greeted me when I returned home from school.  I was always grateful to find her there and not my mother.  I was happy and felt secure when she, in her quiet but secure way, gave me a hug and offered me my afternoon snack.  She would sit at the kitchen table with me and inquire about my day, examine my drawings and work with great enthusiasm and even if I had not done well in some test or homework, she encouraged me and made me feel better.  After I changed my school clothes and donned my playthings, I would go to her room and settle in for whatever school work I had and then we would either read together or I would listen while she spun the most wonderful fairy stories or tales of her childhood.

 

Nana's room was magical to me.  She had the most wonderful possessions and would often let me play with things and admire her knick knacks.  Her room had a delicious aroma of lavender and even today, the scent will take me back to that sunny room.  There were several windows that had sheer curtains hanging but they were pulled back so I could sit and watch out the window.  We lived on the fifth floor of an apartment house giving us a marvelous view of the busy street below.  Nana had a big armchair from which she could sit and watch the traffic and passing and I would pull a smaller chair over to join her there.  Often we would see the same people coming home from work, getting on and off from the frequent buses stopping right below where we were perched.

There was a wonderful view and it gave us a glimpse of our neighborhood and its inhabitants.  On warm afternoons or in the summer vacation times, we would often go out of doors and sit in the little park behind the building.  Most of the people there were older retirees and I would sit with them and listen to their conversations. They always tried to include me and I felt very grown-up and a part of the group.  They fussed over me and made me feel very important. Nana seemed to be very popular with her peers and I felt pride in that.  My Nana was not only precious to me; others enjoyed her company as well.

I was not always sure that my Nana was a well liked person since my mother and she did not get along well.  No reflection on my grandmother.  My mother had a mean streak and often took her ill temper out on her mother.  It upset me terribly and I always had angry thoughts about my mother when she mistreated my heroine.  When I was very young, I was afraid other people felt the same way.

 

Having a vivid imagination, I would spin tales about fairy princesses and far off lands.  Nana loved to hear these and at my urging, would participate and play parts.  Then too, I loved playing with my many dolls.  I had a whole family of babies but was lacking a husband due to "his" tragic death while fighting in WW II.  I would visit Nana who was a pretend neighbor taking my children with me.  My name was Mrs. Uppington and I was an active member in the community and even was a member of my pretend club, Pink Gates.  I have no recollection of the function of this club but I do know I would dress up in some of Nana's fine dresses and clump around in her high heels. 

 

Nana suffered from a stroke when I was ten years old.  I will never forget it since she fell outside of my room during the night and I found her helpless on the floor.  I ran to my parents and she was rushed to the hospital in an ambulance.  As my parents were not one to discuss ill health in the family, I was not told what had occurred and I had terrible worries that I would never see her.  Children were not allowed to visit people in the hospital.  So I was left to imagine what had occurred in that hallway.  Later I was told she was coming home but that she was not the same.  I was to discover that "not the same" meant she had trouble with her speech and was partially paralyzed and confined to a wheelchair needing a great deal of care.  I think my mother could have been the one to administer some of that care but nurses were hired to be there from early morning till bedtime.  I grew to love those nurses.  They were wonderful people and attended to my grandmother with the utmost of dignity and love.  I learned early on that Nana could speak fairly well if she tried hard and spoke slowly.  My mother had no patience with her and would get exasperated when trying to converse with her. I hated that behavior and was always pleased when she would leave the room.  My father had a great deal of compassion for his mother-in-law and would often sit with her in the evening after the nurse left for the night.  He would hold her hand and talk quietly with her, listening intently to her slow speech and often causing a brief smile when he told her something funny. I would sit with them until my bedtime and enjoy those quiet moments with my two favorite people.

 

In the good weather, the nurse would take my Nana out of doors for some air.  I liked to walk along and even pushed the wheel chair a bit and felt so helpful.  I carried Nana's bag with her tissues and necessaries, which was the word she used for whatever was in her handbag. It bothered me that she was not able to do so many things like crochet, feed herself well or tend to other personal needs, but I loved her so and accepted her disabilities.  I wanted to spend as much time as I could with her and she never asked me to leave the room nor did the nurse scoot me away.  I think she realized we both needed those times together. 

 

Nana suffered another stroke when I was twelve and again she was taken to the hospital.  I was devastated and missed her so much.  I did not know the severity of this stroke and waited patiently for her to return home.  She never did and it was not until the day after she passed that I was told I would never see her again.  Similar to my mother's views on ill health, she had the idea that children didn't need to know about death so it wasn't explained to me and I did not attend her wake or funeral.

 

So my beloved Nana was gone from my life and I did not quite understand what that really meant.  I dreamt for years that she returned to life and was there for me once again.

It was not until later in my teens that I could fully grasp the finality of death.

 

So even now, I miss her kindness, her love, her acceptance of a life with her daughter that was not happy, and especially the good times we had together.  She was a blessing to me, a savior to me when times were rough, and my best friend.  She is still my teacher as I remember her dignity, her patience, her honesty and her acceptance of things she could not change.  She is my heroine

52 Comments

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I wish I could've known her. She sounds lovely. Thanks for sharing your memories, Mum.

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You are always my fan - and so it is that I am yours too - all in the family!!

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Similar to my mother's views on ill health, she had the idea that children didn't need to know about death so it wasn't explained to me and I did not attend her wake or funeral.

I was significantly younger when my father died - with the same result. I admit I didn't understand it then, still, hindsight being what it is, I wish I'd been able to both attend and comprehend.

My mother's funeral was the saddest day of my life.

The empty spaces people leave in our lives...

Thank you for your personal memory, Maggie.

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Isn't it sad that grownups sometimes have no idea that death is a natural part of life and that it helps children to face that fact. It made it harder for me at the first funeral I attended later in my teens.

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You scared me Maggie. I go to the post and it says like:

THIS PERSON IS NOT HERE

or some such warning. ha

"Having a vivid imagination, I would spin tales about fairy princesses and far off lands. Nana loved to hear these and at my urging, would participate and play parts."

I gotta give you the Dayly Line of the Day for this here TPMCafe site of course for that gem given to all of you from all of me.

Brings a tear to my eye. And why? I mean what a happy scene.

The elderly and fit, taking time for the small and helpless. Ha!!!

And I get down on Humanity from time to time!!

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But DD - if I wasn't here - where was I? hahahaha

I am beholden to all of you for your prestigious award and thank you from the bottom of all of my heart.

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My maternal grandmother was one my most favorite people in the whole world. She was amazing, elegant, a real 'lady'. Thanks for making me think of her today.

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Sweet memories are golden nuggets in our lives. I think my Nana was a real lady too.

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Oh, this was wonderful, Maggie Two Shells. Migwetch (thanks) for telling the story, passing on your history for those in the future. Now I have this piece of you to add to the whole of me. :o)

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Thanks back - I love that a piece of me is a part of you - you are such a peaceful person -

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The Christmas before my mother passed away, my mother said, "I still miss her." Mom was talking about her immigrant mother who'd passed away 24 Christmases before.

I try to reserve a few moments each day to thank my mother and tell her how much I love and miss her. Still. And I always will.

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Thanks for sharing that Sweet Molly - my nana passed many many years ago and I cherish those golden moments still.

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Mema, this was such a beautiful post even though I know it was both a cherished and difficult memory. Nana sounds incredible. It's been a real pleasure to read both Aunt Lis and your posts, and have the chance to learn more about both of you this way. Love you :)

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Oh Jen - such a lovely comment - I love it that we are together in the chat room - Love that you are teaching me so much about health coverage...Bless you, Mema PS - love you too.

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Wonderful Maggie, thanks for letting us also know your Nana in a special way by this story.How fortunate you were to have her and her influence which is so evident in you today.That is a far greater heirloom than any material possession she could have given. I notice that you also carry on Nana's ability with story spinning very well and I am happy to be a partaker of that.

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Oh Dondi - she was a marvelous story teller - I wish I had written some of them down. Who would think of doing that as a child. If only I could remember them - thank you for your kind words.

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Maggie, I am so sorry that you did not have your Nana longer than you did. But the time with her you did have was not only precious, but also pivotal.
Our grans live not only in our hearts but also in the lessons we learned from them that we can give to our own children and they to theirs. Your Nana taught you that you mattered. What more important lesson for a child is there than that? Except that to honor our grans matters, too.

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Where would we have been without our Grans?
My father's mother -- straight-laced (really - due to a back injury, she wore a corset) but that did not stop her from saving rainwater in which to wash our hair, or from cultivating a garden that was beyond imagining in its color and scent sensorama, or from drying flowers from that garden to throw in the dryer so that our sheets would smell of hollyhock and lilac and peony. "Burr" blessed my life, forever.
And then there was Gran -- my mother's mother, one of the smartest women ever who married an Alabama lawyer/judge twenty years her senior when she was only eighteen, gave him three children, made him laugh every day, and outlived him by sixty years. She who, without any further education, read everything, remembered everything, and dazzled intelligent men everywhere so that, in the end, she was married three times, if widowed as often. She was the "Auntie Mame" Gran who sent me seamed stockings from Paris when I was six -- because, although she loved me, she could not be bothered with my age and stage. And I genuinely loved her for that because she connected to people based on their level of curiosity and passion, for whatever, in the moment. She was an irrepressible force, into her eighties. Tall and straight into her dotage with bright green eyes, a generous smile, and a quick wit that acknowledged no boundaries per gender, age, race or religion.
And always, my mother. A Zoe-eyed reddish/blonde, alabaster-skinned Lee Remick lookalike whose pride was not that she was every man's fantasy (which she was for her generation) but rather, that she was a member of Mensa. So passionately committed to political cause that she was not necessarily cut out to be a wife or a mother, but nonetheless one who gave it her all, domestically, because she accepted the mores of the time and place and did not stint. A woman who might have had a very different life, in a different time, but who maximized the life she had, every day, not only for herself, but also for the people to whom she was committed. And also a woman who devoted four hours a day that could not be tampered with, or interrupted, to write letters to the editor on subjects about which she felt keenly -- not least of which was civil rights -- or to write Plath-like poetry that was then relegated to a box I only discovered after she died. (In fact, I only got to know my mother as an individual, really, postmortem, from the revealing margin notes she wrote in her books.) How I wish she had lived long enough for me to tell her how much I admired the private person she was.
What a legacy, eh? How lucky was I to have these women as role models, each of whom, in her own way, spared nothing to make the world a brighter, more beautiful, more caring place?

Thank you, Maggie, for the opportunity to remember and honor.

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Wendy - thanks for sharing the wonderful attributes of the women in you life. To have such role models - you are indeed blessed. My Nana was so special to me. I wish my mother gave me such cherished moments - alas - she didn't but she was not a well person and so I forgive that.

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Wendy, I hope you write a book of your memoirs someday. I truly do.

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Only if you do, LisB. Whatdaya say?

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oh Wendy - do get her to write a book - at least of her poetry if not a novel...........

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Wait....a novel?? It's either poetry or memoirs, for me. And considering most of my poetry is already published on the internet, I'm guessing my book will be memoirs, Mum.

Skeered?? Heh heh heh.....

Just kidding. I'll write nothing but good stuff about you.

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No Lis - you must be honest - just way until I have gone to be with my Nana.

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wait, even

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Deal. I'll write it when I'm 100. Promise.

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This is lovely. It warrants its own blog, don't you think? (I do!)

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So even now, I miss her kindness, her love, her acceptance of a life with her daughter that was not happy, and especially the good times we had together. She was a blessing to me, a savior to me when times were rough, and my best friend.

From the sounds of it Maggie Two Shells, the blessing went both ways and you helped her get through that part of her life with an unhappy daughter, as a savior and best friend. 'Tis true, I think.

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What about your Gran(s), Seashell? Someone was a fine influence in your life -- related or not.

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Oh I hope you are right, Flower......I would feel such delight in knowing I was a blessing to her also. And we were talking in chat about your name for me - LisB decided it was my Indian name. My Nana had some Indian blood in her family - way back and can't recall the tribe. Must find out someday...............

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Beautifully written. Thanks for giving me a peek into your childhood. My grandparents were not a part of my life. Most of them died before I was born. The only one who knew me was my mother's mom, who died when I was an infant ... I think my interest in genealogy first sprang from wanting to know my grandparents.

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Most of my other grandparents died when I was very young and I don't recall much about them. I hope you can learn from what you find. My Nana had an interesting family history which I keep out discovering.

Thanks for you comment!

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If I may paraphrase the words of Eleanor Roosevelt, "The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their memories."

Thank you for sharing yours.

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Thanks for sharing Eleanor's thought - those are beautiful words to remember.

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Thank you for your lovely story, Mags...Being a "Gaga" now, I hope I will be remembered w/ such fondness...

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Stilli - thank you for being here - and I just know that "Gaga" will be rememberd with love and great memories of a beautiful soul.

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Beautiful! Just Beautiful, Maggie!

I've saved this so I can read it again when I have more time. What a tribute! And it says so much about all the beauty I've found in you from your writings here on these pages. Methinks you are your grandmothers child, and what a blessing it is for all of us.

Thanks for this Maggie. Beautiful!

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Oh Sleepin' Your kind words mean so much to this old gal - I admire you so and your writings too. Miss you in chat - do stop in and say hi......

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I've been thinking more about this and decided to revisit, MM. Good posts - and yours certainly are among them - make me want to do that.

When my dad died, we moved in with my grandparents and my mom's brother and his family lived upstairs. (Typical Chicago brick two-flat.) Three generations in the same place, multiple adults and kids - a very richly textured environment for a kid to grow up in, and see all sorts of interactions going on, not just two parents with each other.

It's been in the last few years that I've really appreciated that complexity of environment for the gift it was.

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Thanks for revisting, OG - your comments are always so welcome.

You touch on something I did not mention in my post. My great grandmother lived in the same apartment complex as we did. She was my Nana's mother. While Nana lived with us, Great Nana lived on her own. She lived to be ninety nine and I can recall being so disappointed she didn't make one hundred. Someone had told me the President would have sent her a birthday card commemerating this great milestone and I had plans to take it to school for show and tell. She was very Irish and with a brogue that was very thick. She did not have the sweet personality of her daughter however. I was about eight when she passed away.

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So now I get to know my Nana! Yes, she was beautiful indeed, and when we hear these accounts, it is no longer a case of was, she IS beautiful.

Thanks, Mum! LuvYa!

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Gregor, my adopted son - how good of you to comment - yes - you are getting to know many of your "family" now. Will try to post about my Dad - he was quite the person too. Luv ya too!

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Maggie, damn! You almost had my crying with this. Beautiful tribute!

Thanks for it! - O.T.

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OT - thanks for stopping by - You almost made me cry cuz you almost cried. You are a good friend to me.............

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Maggie: Thanks for sharing. It was very moving and beautiful. I have tried to instill in my children that your friends come and go but you always have your family and to cherish them. Aren't good memories wonderful? I cherish mine and am so fortunate. I often think "if only i could just give my Mom one more hug." My Nana was Scotch and a real spitfire. She taught me to be a survivor, for which I thank her.

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Oh thanks Joane - you are so kind to comment - I wish the same with many of my loved ones - one more hug - one more "I love you" but I am sure they all know that and look down on me with love.

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Grandmothers are a treasure.

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Indeed they are, ProfB. I hope one day my dear Granchildren will have good memories of their "Mema".

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Maggie, number one, again if memory serves.

THIS IS GREAT AND EVERYBODY LOVES IT!!!

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Thanks DD. It is gratifying to me that some many people care so much for their grandmas. I just hope, being one myself, that I will provide good and fond memories to my grandkids!!

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oops - so many people - darn typing again!!!

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Thanks Maggie. I think you point to something important - a gift that is well within the capacity of each of us to give.

What we generally carry through our lives and in our hearts are those who embraced us as we are and encouraged us to dream. It is somewhat frightening how rare those experiences are. However, we have the capacity to offer that to each other. Imagine what the world would be like if we did.

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Maggie

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I'm a retired mother, grandma and great-grandma living in the boonies who likes cats, books and music.

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