Who Lives Inside of Us?

Who lives inside of us?

Those we love, for sure.

The ones who supervised us and taught us, and those we trained and took under our wing.

Those we dislike? Some, for a time or for years. It would be best if we could vanquish the fire within ourselves and place the disliked inhabitants in a safer, quieter location.

To do otherwise means to hold anger and burn away the days of our lives. We are distracted and sleepless, and think of how to return the hate in kind.

The old saying goes that if you want revenge, dig two graves. The second will be your own, since the wrath leaves a scorched earth and continual unhappiness. The flames rob us of the world’s beauty, a chance to grow, and the emotional room for fraternity and love.

One other group of those who live inside.

The departed, some living, others not. They include the recalled faces of youth and the years past. Add the corner grocer, the third-grade friend who moved away (Joel Lee), the neighbors who offered kindness, and our favorite teachers.

I am thinking of myself in this and those around me a while ago.

Not least, relatives played a part in my life. The way they hugged, put an arm on my shoulder, and smiled or winked, as if the two of us had a secret.

Include the grandmother who gave me a coin each time she came to our house. Add Steve Henikoff’s mom, too. Mrs. H. introduced me to Toll House Chocolate Chip cookies. They were so delicious, I wouldn’t have traded them for a trip to heaven!

Nor have I forgotten the neighborhood cutie (Susie D.) who always smiled at me, as if waiting for me to wake up and spend time with her. 

She died too soon.

A 5th-grade girl named Marilyn lost a parent. Heart disease felled the breadwinners in family after family in those days. So it appeared to me.

Polio terrified parents, too, until Jonas Salk developed a vaccine in the mid-50s. Few recall that Dr. Salk tried the vaccine on himself during his experiments.

Think of it.

In fifth grade, I discovered girls. Female classmates had been masquerading as males, but wearing long hair and dresses, until the day everything changed

My eyes, on their own, traveled to Sharon’s underpinnings. Limbs, my eyes reported, didn’t just prop you up and help you to walk.

Sharon and I were invited to a boys’ and girls’ party and participated in a game of Spin the Bottle. A minute later, she and I found ourselves in a dark room alone. 

“Gerry, do you know that the most beautiful girl in the world is deaf?”

No, I answered. 

“What did you say?”

Good legs and funny!

That was many years ago. I wonder if the charmer is still alive. A witty young woman.

I remember Bob Hanel’s father, a tall man with a small dog—chatty and kind. The man, not the dog.

Mrs. Schallmoser emigrated from Germany and babysat for my brothers and me. One day, sometime later, I asked her about Hitler. The family left Germany before he took over, she said. A gentle woman.

Mr. Sharon, no relation to my girlfriend, owned a candy store. The kind man called me “son.” He and I talked about the Chicago Cubs, our favorite, hometown team.

Jerry S. moved into the neighborhood as a seventh grader, a year older than me. Jerry and I attached a long string to two empty cans and kept the string straight across and above the alley separating his house from mine. Of course, we didn’t displace Thomas Edison’s work, but we talked a bit about our creation.

Kenny Shively, another friend who lived nearby, played the accordion. Johnny Costea, a year or two ahead in school, introduced me to swearing instead of Ken’s squeeze boxes.

Johnny was a fan of Batman, the comic book hero who later made it to the movies. To John, Batman’s town wasn’t Gotham City but “Goddamn City.” 

Imagine a time when the brazenness of those words packed a whallop.

Much of what I am talking about happened in the alley between Washtenaw and Talman, the 5700 block, in Chicago. The city’s residential blocks are full of those alleys, about 90% of them. Along with empty lots, the alleys were like a second home for boys who lived for softball in the summertime.

These concrete playing fields included garbage cans, telephone poles, and the malodorous deposits left by the dogs their owners walked.

The poet Carl Sandburg called Chicago the “City of the Big Shoulders.” Bruised one’s, too, if you ran into the closed garage doors that governed each side of your alley or lost your balance and said a hard hello to the concrete beneath you.

Please allow me to leave you with this.

Let me start with an old saying about memories and the people we recall. The words take many forms, but the essence is this. We don’t die until the last time someone who remembers us mentions our name.

But here is a sunnier version of the importance of carrying another with us and in us. The punctuation below the YouTube reading is the poet’s:

[i carry your heart with me(i carry it in]

i carry your heart with me(i carry it in
my heart)i am never without it(anywhere
i go you go,my dear;and whatever is done
by only me is your doing,my darling)
                                                      i fear
no fate(for you are my fate,my sweet)i want
no world(for beautiful you are my world,my true)
and it’s you are whatever a moon has always meant
and whatever a sun will always sing is you
 
here is the deepest secret nobody knows
(here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud
and the sky of the sky of a tree called life;which grows
higher than soul can hope or mind can hide)
and this is the wonder that’s keeping the stars apart
 
i carry your heart(i carry it in my heart)
===========
The top photo includes Materials Used During the “Claiming Our Memories” Session at GLAM Wikii in Montevideo, Uruguay by Pribellini. The second photo is Election Night in Barcelona by Marc Lozano. Both were sourced from Wikimedia Commons. 

When Boys Discover Girls

Life is full of the before and after of things: before and after you begin to walk, start school, and mingle with the opposite sex.

It’s hard to remember what life was like before. How was it before you had children, for example? Most parents can describe it, but kiddies make some memories seem like they happened to someone else.

This brings me to those days before I and my friends made actual, palpable physical contact with young women, other than walking into them by accident.

Life was simpler without thinking about girls.

It didn’t make a difference how you looked or who looked at you. One grudgingly talked to girls but not with the joy you had conversing about baseball with Ron, Steve, or Uncle Sam.

You didn’t play ball with young ladies and got the creeps when they were fond of you—something in their saucer-eyed, admiring gaze.

Yes, some fellows teased girls to show interest. Perhaps they were testing what they could get away with, trying to see where their boundaries were and what mischief was possible. Hardly a reckoning with romance or a lesson in lust.

Anatomical curiosity was present but didn’t require attention to body parts beneath undergarments. Or maybe it did, as in, “I’ll show you mine if you show me yours.”

The kid who got the most playground notice from the Jamieson School first-graders enjoyed flipping back one of his upper eyelids (turning it inside out). At the same time, he crossed his eyes, thus provoking an occasional howl from a squeamish classmate.

He would put on the show for free if you were his friend and flip the second eyelid, too. Others were charged a nickel.

Today, he’d be running for President.

At home, there were only occasional allusions made to throbbing physical attraction. Take the viewing of the Miss America Pagent on TV, an event not to be missed by my father or Uncle Manny.

When a curvy contestant sashayed across the stage in her bathing suit, my dad’s raised voice blurted, “Holy Criminy, hung to the gills!” in a half-humorous hoot never created at any other time.

The otherwise refined man wasn’t talking about fishing. Few use the same reference to a woman’s bosom today.

In fifth grade, my eyes were drawn to a girl’s legs. One girl in particular. What was this about? I asked myself. My little mind found it illogical.

Those female underpinnings no longer appeared as a simple necessity designed to keep the girls moving forward and avoid a significant reduction in height.

My new attention to a distaff body part was involuntary and alarming. It was the first sign my body was taking possession of my brain. Adult women know about this masculine flaw, but as a kid, I had no idea.


At about the same time, some females invited classmates to boy-girl parties. Spin-the-bottle was a highlight, although the darkened room the chosen couple entered — the one who had done the spinning and the opposite-sexed person at whom the bottle pointed — was an innocent place.

The girl with the beautiful legs, who would soon be my girlfriend, asked me a question in the dimly lit cell we inhabited for a few minutes:

“Gerry, did you know the most beautiful girl in the world is deaf?”

Ever the straight man, I could only answer “No.”

“What did you say?”

In other words, attractive legs and clever.

I never heard my folks talk about sex, but on occasion, a question would be answered in an informative way. Watching The Untouchables TV series with my father, I heard the word prostitution about one of the illegal businesses the Capone gangsters operated in Chicago.

When I asked Dad what the word meant, he said, “It’s when a woman sells her body.”

My head buzzed.

For what?

To whom?

At the grocery?

What aisle is that?

I knew he would say no more, so I refrained from asking.

By the end of sixth grade, I was hip-deep in the latency period. Freud labeled this as the time before puberty when your sexual preoccupations go to sleep.

Although Sigmund’s thoughts on the subject are not current gospel, I recall losing interest for a while. I submit as evidence a party to which I was supposed to accompany a charming lass named Heidi, about whom I forgot while riding bikes with my friend Jerry.

An hour after the get-together started, I awakened to my faux pas.

I apologized to the poor girl, realizing it would be best not to tell her what caused me to lose track of time, my desire to be with her, and my obligation.

Whatever earthly urge bubbled down below was sublimated into alternative activities and interests. Perhaps they fueled my school work or athletic endeavors.

One of my friends displayed more interest in lunch than ladies. Neil pasted a magazine picture of a hamburger, fries, and a coke on his bedroom ceiling, so it was the first thing he saw every morning. A few years later, Marilyn Monroe took its place, I imagine.

By age 16, I was slightly jealous of the two friends who had started going out with girls. The guys had no appeal distinguishing them from the rest of us, which puzzled me.

Their relative success, however, did reinforce my esteem for the illustrious Sigmund Freud,  who must have been as stunned as I was when he asked, “What do women want?”

Not these guys, I thought. Yet the facts suggested otherwise.

To their credit, those pioneers on the route to consequential sexual contact introduced me to the fact that success is often a matter of showing up and saying something. They’d asked girls on dates; sometimes, a female said yes.

The lesson was simple. You get to first base occasionally, even if you swing at a baseball with your eyes closed.

Taking the initiative was all you needed if you were male and the other Y-chromosome types were holding back. Much later, I was told most of the girls were waiting by the phone, as desperate for a date as we were terrified of calling.

Of course, the alternatives for the most insecure males were begging and pleading, but one still required enough courage to get within whimpering distance of the selected damsel.

Where could you be with a girl in private? Not at home, where curious parents and evil siblings might spy on you. My friend Alan didn’t want anybody to see the three-ring circus he lived in, at least not someone he hoped to impress.

Even so, he arranged for his date to be dropped off at his house one Saturday. As they prepared to leave for a movie, Alan’s father asked, “Where are you two going?”

“We’re going to a show.”

“Why are you going to a show? You’ve got a show right here!”

One of my regular compatriots at  Mather High School would bring the daily Chicago Sun-Times to the lunch table. Soon enough, we were all drawn to the part of the paper advertising movies, theater, and especially the burlesque shows of South State Street.

The Rialto Theater’s ad acted like a magnet because it reported there would be:

MIDNIGHT SHAMBLES EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT. BRING THE LADIES!

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/88/Loie_Fuller_Folies_Bergere_02.jpg

Substituting for the possibility of fondling an agreeable female, we spent many lunches pondering what midnight shambles involved. The group discussed it so often that, for convenience, we made it into the acronym MSBTL.

Since none of us were old enough to attend, my buddies had no alternative but to think about it and talk about it.

Suffice it to say, had the Rialto Theater somehow charged our group for the time we spent fantasizing about naked, shambling women, it would have generated more money than it derived from box office receipts.

The premarital sex thing remained mysterious to most of us, impenetrable in every sense, and immoral since it was the early ’60s, a time still in thrall to the culture of the ’50s. The sexual revolution hadn’t quite begun.

At the same time, the topic was mystical and quasi-religious, the kind of subject spoken of by hooded shamans in hushed voices while incense burned. Quite different than today, in other words.

The actual idea of intercourse suggested lots of moving parts you didn’t yet know how to move or where to move them, like the tabs and slots I wasn’t adept at working with when I tried to follow the directions for assembling model airplanes:

Insert tab A into Slot B.

What?

Carnal knowledge also demanded technical skill in dark places without the miner’s helmet I was inclined to wear to improve my chances. Notes and diagrams might have been helpful, but without the light, well…

Why didn’t a girl’s body come with instructions written on the package, like a box of aspirin? Luminous lettering and diagrams would have been a welcome addition.

Many of us were in the dark, literally and figuratively, lacking the required touch — deft and sure — that was far more challenging to acquire than the ability to hit a line drive to right field or throw a curve ball. Nor was sexual mastery a talent you could perfect on a public baseball diamond.

All the while, a ten-foot-tall sasquatch-like entity named INSECURITY, who had a chair at our Mather High School lunch table, instilled whispered self-doubts into whoever sat beside him:

Aw, jeez, why did you say that?

Does your hair look OK?

Are you sure your fly is zipped?

How did we survive all this? The way most other young men do. The procreative urge and a little courage find a way to carry the day.

We are all the descendants of people who had sex.

I have told you, friend, the last bit of information in confidence: the bit about actually “doing it.”

Your forbearance would be most appreciated because I’m sure my adult daughters still don’t want to think about their parents having sex.

==========

The top image is Hawaiian Boy and Girl, a 1928 mural by Arman Manookian. Next comes a photo of Kids by Guilherme Moreira.

The Untouchables Cast, 1960, follows from left: Nicholas Georgiade, Paul Picerni, Robert Stack, and Abel Fernandez.

City Lou, Sonoma, CA: Hamburger, Fries, and a Coke is the following image, photographed by Missvain. Sarah Stierch (CC BY 4.0)

An Indian Air Force Model Airplane, photographed by Nikolaevna Romanov, is the succeeding offering.

Finally, the author of the bottom poster of the Follies Bergere is Pal. All the images come from Wikipedia Commons.

In the Days Before Girlfriends

Life is full of the before and after of things: before and after you could walk, before and after you began school, and before and after you started to mingle with the opposite sex.

It is hard to remember what life was like before. How was it before you had children, for example? Most parents can describe it, but kiddies alter life so that such a before feels distant — as if it happened to someone else.

This brings me to those days before I or my friends made actual, palpable physical contact with young women, other than, perhaps, walking into them by accident.

Life was simpler without thinking about girls.

It didn’t make a difference how you looked or who looked at you. One grudgingly talked to girls but didn’t enjoy it, as you did when conversing about baseball with Ron, Steve, or Uncle Sam.

You didn’t play ball with young ladies and got the creeps when they were fond of you—something in their saucer-eyed, admiring gaze.

Yes, some fellows teased girls, perhaps to show interest. Some were testing what they could get away with, trying to see where their boundaries were and what mischief was possible. Hardly a reckoning with romance or a lesson in lust.

Anatomical curiosity was present but didn’t require attention to body parts beneath undergarments. Or maybe it did, as in, “I’ll show you mine if you show me yours.”

The kid who got the most playground notice from the Jamieson School first-graders enjoyed flipping back one of his upper eyelids (turning it inside out). At the same time, he crossed his eyes, thus provoking an occasional howl from a squeamish classmate.

He would put on the show for free if you were his friend and flip the second eyelid, too. Others were charged a nickel.

Today, he’d be running for President.

At home, there were only occasional allusions made to throbbing physical attraction. My recall of this, because it happened every year, was viewing the Miss America Pagent on TV, an event not to be missed by my father or Uncle Manny.

When a curvy contestant sashayed across the stage in her bathing suit, my dad would yell out, “Holy Criminy, hung to the gills!” in a half-humorous hoot never uttered at any other time.

The old man wasn’t talking about fishing.

Few use the same reference to a woman’s bosom these days. Dad might have invented the phrase since he was an avid fisherman.

In fifth grade, my eyes were drawn to a girl’s legs. One girl in particular. What was this about? I asked myself. My little mind found it illogical.

Those female underpinnings no longer appeared as a simple necessity designed to keep the girls moving forward and avoid a significant reduction in height.

This new attention to a distaff body part was involuntary, not to say alarming. This was the first sign my body was taking possession of my brain. Adult women know about this masculine flaw, but as a kid, I had no idea.

At about the same time, some females invited my classmates and me to boy-girl parties. Spin-the-bottle was a highlight, although the darkened room the chosen couple entered — the one who had done the spinning and the opposite-sexed person at whom the bottle pointed — was an innocent place.

The girl with the beautiful legs, who would soon be my girlfriend, asked me a question in the dimly lit cell we inhabited for a few minutes:

“Gerry, did you know the most beautiful girl in the world is deaf?”

Ever the straight man, I could only answer “No.”

“What did you say?”

In other words, attractive legs and witty.

I never heard my folks talk about sex, but on occasion, a question would be answered in a way that was nonetheless informative. Watching The Untouchables TV series with my father, I heard the word prostitution about one of the illegal activities the Capone gangsters operated in Chicago.

When I asked Dad what the word meant, he said, “It’s when a woman sells her body.”

My head buzzed.

For what?

To whom?

At the grocery?

What aisle is that?

I knew he would say no more, so I refrained from asking.

By the end of sixth grade, I was hip-deep in the latency period. Freud labeled this as the time before puberty when your sexual preoccupations go to sleep.

Although Sigmund’s thoughts on the subject are not current gospel, I recall losing interest for a while. I submit as evidence a party to which I was supposed to accompany a charming lass named Heidi, about whom I forgot while riding bikes with my friend Jerry.

An hour after the get-together was to have started, I awakened to my faux pas.

I apologized to the poor girl, realizing it would be best not to tell her what caused me to lose track of time, my desire to be with her, and my obligation.

Whatever earthly urge bubbled down below was sublimated into alternative activities and interests. Perhaps they fueled our school work or athletic endeavors.

One of my friends displayed more interest in lunch than ladies. Neil pasted a magazine picture of a hamburger, fries, and a coke on his bedroom ceiling, so it was the first thing he saw every morning. A few years later, Marilyn Monroe took its place, I imagine.

By age 16, I was slightly jealous of the two guys I knew well who had started going out with girls. These friends had no obvious appeal, setting them apart from the rest of us, which puzzled me.

Their relative success, however, did reinforce my esteem for the illustrious Sigmund Freud,  who must have been as stunned as I was when he asked, “What do women want?”

Not these guys, I thought. Yet the facts suggested otherwise.

To their credit, those pioneers on the route to consequential sexual contact introduced me to the fact that success is often a matter of showing up and saying something. They’d asked some girls on dates, and sometimes, the female targets of these requests said yes.

The idea was simple. You sometimes get to first base if you swing at a baseball with your eyes closed.

Taking the initiative was all you needed if you were male, and most other Y-chromosome types were holding back. Much later, I realized most of the girls were waiting by the phone, as desperate for a date as we were terrified of calling.

Of course, the alternatives for the most insecure males were begging and pleading, but they still required enough courage to get within whimpering distance of the selected damsel.

But where could you be with a girl in private? Not at home, where curious parents and evil siblings might spy on you. My friend Alan didn’t want anybody to see the three-ring circus he lived in, at least not someone he hoped to impress.

Even so, he arranged for his date to be dropped off at his house one Saturday. As they prepared to leave for a movie, Alan’s father asked, “Where are you two going?”

“We’re going to a show.”

“Why are you going to a show? You’ve got a show right here!”

One of my regular compatriots at the Mather High School cafeteria would bring the daily Chicago Sun-Times to the lunch table. Soon enough, we were all drawn to the part of the paper advertising movies, theater, and especially the burlesque shows of South State Street.

The Rialto Theater’s ad acted like a magnet because it reported there would be:

MIDNIGHT SHAMBLES EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT. BRING THE LADIES!

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/88/Loie_Fuller_Folies_Bergere_02.jpg

Substituting for the possibility of fondling an agreeable female, we spent many lunches pondering what midnight shambles would involve. The group discussed it so often that, for convenience, we made it into the acronym MSBTL.

Since none of us were old enough to attend, my buddies had no alternative but to think about it and talk about it.

Suffice it to say, had the Rialto Theater somehow charged our group for the time we spent fantasizing about naked, shambling women, it would have generated more money than it derived from box office receipts.

The premarital sex thing remained mysterious to most of us, impenetrable in every sense, and immoral since it was the early ’60s, which remained in thrall to the culture of the ’50s. The sexual revolution hadn’t quite begun.

At the same time, the topic was mystical and quasi-religious, the kind of subject spoken of by hooded shamans in hushed voices while incense burned. Quite different than today, in other words.

The actual idea of intercourse suggested lots of moving parts you didn’t yet know how to move or where to move them, like the tabs and slots I wasn’t adept at working with when I tried to follow the directions for assembling model airplanes:

Insert tab A into Slot B.

What?

Carnal knowledge also demanded technical skill in dark places without the miner’s helmet I was inclined to wear to improve my chances. Notes and diagrams might have been helpful, but without the light, well…

Why didn’t a girl’s body come with instructions written on the package, like a box of aspirin? Luminous lettering and diagrams would have been a welcome addition, as well.

Many of us were in the dark, literally and figuratively, lacking the required touch — deft and sure — that was far more challenging to acquire than the ability to hit a line drive to right field or throw a curve ball. Nor was sexual mastery a talent you could perfect on a public baseball diamond.

All the while, a ten-foot-tall sasquatch-like entity named “Insecurity,” who had his chair at our regular Mather High School lunch table, instilled whispered self-doubts in whoever sat beside him:

Aw, jeez, why did you say that?

Does your hair look OK?

Are you sure your fly is zipped?

How did we survive all this? The way most other very young men do. The procreative urge and a little courage find a way to carry the day.

We are all the descendants of people who had sex.

I have told you, friend, the last bit of information in confidence: the bit about actually “doing it.”

Your forbearance would be most appreciated because, whatever you might think to say, I’m sure my adult daughters still don’t want to know at least about their parents.

==========

The top image is Hawaiian Boy and Girl, a 1928 mural by Arman Manookian. Next comes a photo of The Untouchables Cast, 1960. From left: Nicholas Georgiade, Paul Picerni, Robert Stack, and Abel Fernandez. Finally, the author of the bottom poster of the Follies Bergere is “Pal.” All the images come from Wikipedia Commons.