xlovebecomesher: (Default)
This is for LJ Idol's Season 11 Open Topic and it does deal with the topic of drugs. If you like this story, please consider voting for me when the polls go up on Tuesday night (I won't be able to post the link as I will have most likely just given birth to baby Squishy) and please check out everyone else's awesome stories!
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I had a revealing conversation with my father several years ago via telephone; maybe a year or so after he was deported. He called me to catch up and talk as he normally does and began to tell me about his sleeping problems. My Aba does tend to struggle with normal sleep schedules as he spends so much time overanalyzing and losing himself in his memories. He told me he had a lot on his mind so I told him to tell me what he was thinking about. His answer: “Hillary, drugs are bad, you know.”

Really Sherlock? You don’t say. Curious about where he was going with this subject, I snarkily prodded him with “Yes, I know. Are you going to give me a drug lesson now that I’m an adult?”

He chuckled, “no really. I’ve been thinking about this for awhile. Hear me out.”

He told me what I already had gathered from my mother and family members. “I was a good child,” he informed me proudly. “I did everything in the world for my mother and father. They asked me of something and I wouldn’t think twice to do it for them. I was never the child to talk back to my parents (which is true even to this day – he abhors it when he hears children talk rudely to their parents and both my parents made sure to raise me to treat them with respect), I listened to my parents and to my teachers. I did well in school and I had a lot of friends growing up. I went to the army and I was proud to serve my country.”

“You ran away from the army once,” I reminded him. An 18 year old in Israel is automatically required to enlist in the army (unless you meet one of the exceptions to the rule). Like most young Israelis, he was quite proud to enlist and serve in the army. My uncles fought in the Six Day War of 1967 but by the time my father enlisted, the war was over and life was relatively calm (he would come to the United States a year before the Yom Kippur War of 1973 and thus has never fought during war time). By the time he was 18 though, his parents and brothers had decided to follow his sister and her husband and move to America. He was all alone except for an aunt and a girlfriend. The army in turn provided him an extra stipend for being what is known as a lonely soldier. He did a lot of border patrol work which according to him wasn’t very exciting and played poker to pass the time with his buddies. One day, he decided he would request a leave from the army for a few days to go visit his aunt and his girlfriend. The army refused to grant him his leave…thus he left on his own. Who is the army of all people to tell my father what to do? He hid at his aunt’s and his girlfriend’s house for several weeks enjoying his stay. Eventually the sergeant came knocking at the door searching for him and he gave himself up voluntarily. His punishment: jail time. That would be his first jail time but certainly not his last.

“Eh, big deal,” he brushed that aside. “I served my country regardless and I’m proud of my time served.  I was a good person. Money came easy to me because of my parents, my brothers and sister, and then with the army and maybe I took advantage of that. But in general, I was a good person.” He placed emphasis on the fact that he was a good person.

“Fair enough. So what changed?”

“Drugs.”

“What about them?” I had known he smoked weed before, that he had a pill problem when he had met my mother, and he had made previous comments in the past to smoking crack but I wanted to know where he was going with his line of thinking. I wanted to hear the words from him rather than making my own inferences.

“They fuck you up, Hillary.”

“Yes, yes, they do. Continue with your story, Aba! I know you said you smoked cigarettes when you were in the army. Did you do anything else during that time?”

“Not in the army but after.”

I remembered conversations in the past of references made to easy access to weed in the 1970s. I questioned him about this. “Oh yeah,” he replied. “I used to have an ice cream truck that I would drive around selling ice cream to the neighborhood children. I would drive all around Baltimore selling ice cream to kids but I’d sell weed to the adults who would come to the truck. Everyone smoked; your aunts and uncles, ex-wife, friends. It was easy access. Eventually though, weed was not enough.”

“They say weed is a gateway drug,” I commented inanely based on my limited knowledge of drugs.

“They’re right. Had it not been for weed, I probably wouldn’t have tried other drugs. But as I said, weed wasn’t enough. Eventually I started with Quaaludes which your mother found out and got angry with me about. It was hard but I broke that habit…only to start with crack. I kept it a secret for a long time. Eventually, your mother found that out too.”

“Not surprised,” I commented.

“No, she has that way about her.” We both laughed, thinking about her and her penchant for getting information.

“Were you on drugs around me?” I asked curiously. “Not that it matters now.”

“I honestly don’t think so. Maybe? I didn’t do it around you if that’s what you’re asking. But I can’t tell you if all the times you and your mother came to pick me up from the Villa if I was or not.”
The Villa was a house in College Park that his friend owned that he stayed at from time to time. His friend was a short, friendly, Greek man who said the house reminded him of his days in Greece and thus the house got the name. I don’t remember much about the house except that there were random people my dad knew that would come and go, living there for short bursts of time (and apparently doing a lot of drugs while staying there).

“Is that what you did at the Villa?”

“Mostly,” he was quiet. “Stupid, isn’t it? If it weren’t for the Villa…”

“Would you go back and do it differently?”

“Yes…. no. I don’t know. I’d like to think I would. I should want to do it differently if I could. For me, for you, for your mother. I’d have more money that’s for sure.” I smirked as I thought back to when friends and family used to comment that if he only used his brain in the right manner, he would be a millionaire and how much he would brush that comment aside. “What does it matter though? You can’t go back in time.”

“No, but you can learn and change.”

“The problem is that it’s not that easy to learn and change. And you have to want to.”

“You didn’t want to…. You don’t want to.”

“I live a good life and I have everything that I need,” he said proudly. I rolled my eyes. At this point, not only had he been deported but at the time, was living in a tent in the middle of Rothschild Boulevard in Tel Aviv. He was doing it because he was homeless, but it was also the middle of the housing protests where other people were protesting by setting up tents in the middle of the street so it wasn’t like he was the only one living in a tent (also how I assume he got his hands on a tent because I can’t picture him camping otherwise). “Why would I change now?”

“Why indeed,” I murmured. We hung up a few minutes later and I laid there in bed pondering if only he had been willing to change...just a little bit, how different our lives would have been.


My Aba (on the left) at 18 or 19 with an army buddy.

My Aba and his girlfriend that he ran away from the army to spend time with (both pictures are courtesy of the girlfriend who I am friends with on Facebook who was kind enough years ago to post these pics for me - they actually got back together for a short awhile after he returned to Israel but that didn't last). 
xlovebecomesher: (Default)

Several days before Lucy died, she made her husband, James, promise that he would never love anyone else like he loved her again. She made him promise that he would never get remarried or be with another woman. Laughingly, James promised her that because they were going to have a long life together and nothing was going to come between them. They were young, they just got married, what could possibly go wrong? Lucy frowned, concerned that he was not taking this seriously enough. She made him take a blood oath which he thought was a bit strange but he appeased her. While he might have thought she was joking, Lucy had worked too hard to make him hers and if she couldn't have him, no one could.

What James didn't know about his wife was the lengths she had taken to become his wife, the powers she had. Lucy and her identical twin sister Hailey were born with a special power to take over people's bodies. They could inhabit other people's thoughts, control their bodies, and even take over and switch bodies and push the original owner out of the body. Hailey was always the good sister, wanting to do good in the world. She would never dream of using her powers for darkness. But Lucy knew the power, embraced it, nurtured it from the time she was a little girl. She used it to get out of trouble, change her grades, make people be her friends, cause havoc for others who angered her. She never resented her sister or hated her sister until they met James. James, math and computer genius, all around Golden Boy and everything Lucy ever wanted in a man. Lucy was in love. Unfortunately, James never gave her the time of day as more than friends as he had fallen head over heels for Hailey and Hailey for him. No matter how much Lucy yelled, screamed, pleaded, and devised ways to break them up, nothing came between them. When Hailey came home glowing and beaming with a Tiffany's diamond ring on her ring finger, Lucy snapped. He was supposed to be hers, she cried! Hailey pleaded with her to understand their love but Lucy had enough. With a snap of her finger, Lucy's old body was lying in a heap and Lucy, now as Hailey, walked out of the house smiling and whistling as she gazed at the diamond ring on her hand picturing her future.

But what Lucy didn't account for, not long after the wedding, was the drunk driver careening into her car on her way home from work.

...

Lucy stared down at her body from above, as she sat in Hell's waiting room waiting her turn to find out her fate, waiting to see if she could argue with one of the devil's minions to get herself back down to James. She was never under any impression she'd go to Heaven so she wasn't shocked to find herself in the waiting room as she admired the plush, red velvet chairs with a fire emblem on each chair. Finally it was her turn as they called number 69420. She smirked at the number on the tiny piece of paper in her hand as she got up to the front desk.

"I need to get back!" she cried prettily as soon as she got to the desk. "I need to be with James. He needs me! I need him! We were meant to be together forever! This is not forever!"

"Oh, you'll get back," the minion cackled.

"I will?" This was easier than she thought and quickly wiped away her fake tears. "Great, send me back now!" she demanded, sure she had the upper hand.

"It's not that easy. It'll take a couple of months," he smirked. "You have to prove yourself. And you know.....you don't always come back in the same form you died in and things are not always the same when you go back."

"I don't care! I want to go back to my James! I need to make sure he's loyal and true to me! He'll recognize me no matter what!"

"Okay then." The minion whipped out some forms. "Sign here...here...and here." Lucy signed frantically, whatever it took to get back to her James.

"You really should have read the fine print," he commented as he looked over all the forms.

"No one ever reads the fine print, you stupid beast, so why would I start now?"

"Why indeed?" The minion whistled as he sent her to her new job cleaning Hell's toilets with nothing but a tiny toothbrush.

....

Those long months in Hell were no joke, she reflected as she stared at her burnt, dirty hands. But today was the day she was going back to her beloved James! How he must have missed her so. Lucy sat there in Hell's waiting room again like she did that first time, assigned to that same number as she pictured how happy he would be to be reunited with her.

"69420!" The minion waved his claws over her face, snapping her out of her daydream. "Follow me."

She stood and followed him into a small room with a video machine set up. "What's this?"

"We make sure everyone watches what has happened while they've been...," the minion gestured around, "here." He pushed her into a seat. "This way, it's less of a surprise for you when you make your arrival." Lucy sat down eagerly ready to see her love but her grin quickly turned into anger as she watched that after a few months, James met a young woman, named Laura, who moved into the neighborhood. They bonded over their love of cats, board games, and traveling and quickly fell in love and got married. They adopted four cats, Gizmo, Sangria, Andy, and Hera and lived happily in a suburb traveling and playing games when they weren't working.

"Who does that tramp think she is?!" she roared. "I'll show her what it means to mess with my man! And that asshole, he couldn't even keep his promise! I'll show both of them! Just wait til I get back with my powers even stronger!"

"Oh you'll be with them alright but not as your original form."

"What?"

"I told you to read the fine print," he admonished her. "People always get these high hopes of what they'll do once they go back but no one really ever stops to read Hell's fine print. We have the final say and we can alter your form to whatever pleases us."

"But you said I can go back!"

"And you said you don't care what form you go back in when I informed you that you don't always go back in the same form." He rolled the footage of their original meeting to remind her of her statement.

"Yeahhhh," she sputtered. "But I was a good girl in Hell and I cleaned your fucking toilets! ALL THE TOILETS! DO YOU KNOW HOW MUCH YOU DEVILS STINK UP THE PLACE? I WORKED MY FUCKING ASS OFF! I DESERVE TO GO BACK AS ME! MAKE THAT HAPPEN NOW!"

The minion rolled his eyes. "So dramatic, you are. You'll be going back but that poor family, they lost one of their cats."

"So? Who needs five cats? No one that's who. What does this have to do with me?"

"You'll be one of their cats. A black cat, of course."

That wouldn't be so bad if she had her powers. She could make that intruder disappear quickly and painfully.

"Oh and those powers you had?" It seemed that he read her mind. He snapped his fingers. "Gone!"

"Wait, whaaaat?" she yelled as the ground around her dissolved and she found herself in a box on a driveway.

...

"James!" Laura called out excitedly as she came back into the house. "Look what I found! An adorable black kitty! The neighbors said someone just threw out a box of kittens onto her driveway and this one just clawed her way up to my face and tried to smack me in the face with her paw! I think she likes me!" The kitten hissed but then purred as James walked in. "Can we keep her? Look how tiny she is!"

"Sure!" James walked over and scratched the kitten's chin as the kitten looked up lovingly at him. The kitten jumped into his arms and snuggled up under his chin. "What do you want to call her?"

"How about Luna? It seems like a good name for a black cat."

"Luna, it is," James answered as he sat down with Luna draped around him like a scarf. "I think she likes me too," he remarked with a smile as he stroked her fur as she couldn't help but purr at his touch.

This wouldn't be so bad, Lucy thought to herself. She could figure out ways to take out this Laura person while she slept, ate, drove, walked .... all while curled up with her precious James.  Maybe she could put in a request with the Hell Network to get her powers back if she could be a good cat for a few months. The possibilities were endless! James would then figure out that the two of them were meant to be together and after she put him through pain and suffering for breaking their oath, she would forgive him and shower him with love.

"Hello, Lucy," a grey striped cat sauntered in.

"Oh look, it's Hera! Here Hera, come meet your new sister, Luna." Laura exclaimed as she scooped both cats up in her arms.

The cats stared at each other for a moment. "Oh shit. Hailey, is that you?"

Hailey as Hera grinned as much as a cat could grin. "I won't let you mess with my humans. I'll take you out before that happens."

The cats hissed and swiped at each other as they squirmed out of Laura's arms and ran after each other. "Look, sweetie," Laura called to James. "I think Hera and Luna are going to be besties already!"

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Note: This was written for LJ Idol Sudden Death Write Off #2. This story was inspired by a conversation with [livejournal.com profile] lyssa027 about how her cat, Litten, is probably convinced that she is her husband's true wife and would kill her if she could and take over her body. Out of that conversation, came this story! If you like this story, please consider voting for me and check out the other awesome writers!

xlovebecomesher: (Default)
Having a father in jail, I have discovered, becomes a child’s deepest, darkest secret. It was mine for the longest time. When everyone else around you seems to have the perfect family, you begin to feel as if you’re the only one in the world with such a life. You begin to wonder what exactly is wrong with you that you don't have the family that everyone else has. What did you do to deserve this becomes a recurrent question in your mind and not a pleasant question at that. It eats at your soul as you wonder about the unfairness of it all and the secret digs itself deeper and deeper inside of your skin clawing at you trying to escape. You realize even if you wanted to talk, who could you even talk to? Who would be able to understand what you were going through? You can talk to your mom but she doesn’t truly understand the fears coursing through you about how you’re afraid that you might turn out just like him. She doesn’t share his blood. Your extended family knows but to them it seems to be a joke something to be talked about flippantly and laughed at or they may be the type to be afraid to talk at all in front of you about him. Maybe they want to pretend that he doesn’t exist. Your friends wouldn’t get it – they have normal families. The isolation envelops you more and more.

The worst is when the people around you start assuming that because your father is in jail, you’re going to turn out exactly like him. I’ve heard my own family member say to my mother: “watch out for Hillary – the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree. You think she’s a good girl but just wait until she turns on you because she will.” You want to scream on the top of your lungs that you are not your parent – but no one listens. I’ve also heard, “Oh, Hillary just got lucky turning out the way she did despite having a father in jail.” My determination, hard work, and perseverance didn’t count for anything – just luck it seems.

Everyone else seems to know better than you about who you’re going to turn out to be. Many of my life decisions when I was younger were made (either consciously or subconciously, I'm not sure) for the fear of what people would say – from not getting a second piercing in my ear or a tattoo, to the clothes I wear, to even not traveling to Puerto Rico when I was 18 with my boyfriend at the time despite his offer of paying for me even though I wanted to travel so badly. God forbid someone was going to speak negatively about me! I wouldn’t be surprised if other people with a parent in jail base their own life decisions around the actions of their incarcerated parent.

I never felt truly comfortable as a child or young adult talking about him and his past and in turn, my childhood, as one intertwines with the other. My friends in school would ask why I didn’t live with my father and I’d tell them, “oh, my parents are separated and my father lives in Baltimore.” They would frown, sympathy on their face as they would quickly change the subject uncomfortable with the idea. To this day, there are very few of my friends who have met my father. Some have not met him due to timing and circumstance – my father and my friends rarely had a chance to interact. I can probably count on one hand the friends I have today that have met my father. Others, it’s a matter of trust. For me, introducing you to my father is a complete trust issue – if I can’t trust you with the little things, how can I trust you not to judge me once you meet my father or worse yet, judge my father by his actions and thus give him a cold shoulder and in turn, turn on me. Now sadly, with my father having been deported to Israel, any chance of introducing my friends to my father is gone.

The friends I have introduced him to though have adored him to my surprise. In 9th grade, a good friend of mine at the time happened to have met my father without me being present. He was over at my parents’ friend’s house as he was best friends with my parent' friend's son and my father came by to visit. That night, I received an instant message from him exclaiming how he met my dad and how cool he seems to be. Shocked, I asked why is that? "It’s the clothing," he told me. That day (as I had seen him earlier), he was wearing a grey and white striped shirt with a yellow Old Navy jacket vest, red pants, sneakers, and a red hat. It had been the same outfit he had been in all week. My Aba, as he lived a nomadic lifestyle going from hotel to hotel, never had a place to keep his clothes and thus buys clothes, wears them for about a week or so, and then discards for a new outfit. I casually mentioned that fact, oddly trying to provoke a response of disgust or horror. I paced as I usually did while talking to my friend online waiting for a response. After a few minutes, he typed back, “no big deal as long as he’s comfortable with what he’s wearing and he gives the impression that he doesn’t give a damn what you think about him. That is what is so cool about him, Hillary.” That utter acceptance of who my father is by my friend astounded me. That is what I search for when I take that chance to introduce my friends to my father.

A couple of years ago, I had a friend travel to Israel to visit her family in the city of Ramla. Before she left, I gave her my father’s contact information along with some clothing he requested (he has a love for all things Puma) and pictures that he wanted from me of the family. While she was there, she contacted him and he traveled from Tel Aviv to Ramla (about 25 minutes away from each other according to Google Maps) to visit her. They had lunch and made the gift exchange: she gave him what I brought and in return, my father sent a few gifts for my mom, sister, and I. After their lunch, my friend returned to her grandmother’s house and Facebook chatted with me and proceeded to tell me how awesome he is and how talkative he is. It’s nice to know that some things never change!

The first time my friends began to reveal their own life stories about their fathers; one father was released from jail after serving more than ten years for robbery and manslaughter, another who knew their children were being molested by a family member and did nothing about it, to another who had her father who abused her mother and brother and then walked out on the family when she was 5 years old, all I could remember is feeling is a sigh of relief. Not for what they went through as I wouldn’t wish that on anyone but that relief that I was not alone. A weight had been lifted off my shoulders as I realized that there was no such thing as that perfect family. I was not the only one in the world who kept secrets. My mother and grandmother both taught me a valuable lesson as a child about how you never know what goes on behind closed doors. What might seem perfect on the outside may not be so much on the inside. For the first time, as my friends, one by one, revealed their stories, I was genuinely able to see what was meant by that saying.

I realized though as I thought about their stories in depth about how much it took for them to come out to me about their parent’s troubles how much I was not alone. Slowly I began to open up about my father to my friends. I tell his story, all the reasons he ended up in jail over the years, sometimes with a laugh because if nothing else, my life was never boring with him. Sometimes I tell it with pride because I have to admit, I have some amazing stories about my father that make me proud to be his daughter. Besides, I am proud of what I overcame with my father. Sometimes, I tell his story flippantly daring someone to judge me and my life and in turn, judge him. There are times I tell his story to friends who don’t think I could have a father crazier than theirs – for awhile,  it was a recurring competition to see who has the best story about their father! My father wins hands down. Other times, such as when I sat with a student of mine who also had a father in jail, I told his story honestly in fear of watching my student go down our father’s paths. And yet other times, I tell his story in manner of: “You too? I thought I was the only one with a father like this!”  And while it may appear simple enough to think logically and rationally to recognize that I'm not alone, emotions tend to be much more powerful and overwhelming. It took me years to truly feel comfortable in my skin to tell my story and to truly recognize that I am not alone. But if it has taken me so long, how many other people have felt alone like me? How many others are keeping their secrets like the proverbial skeleton in the closet afraid of it jumping out and scaring people? If by telling my story, and his, helps one person feel more comfortable with their past and helps them come to terms with their parent’s actions and behaviors, if it makes one person feel less alone, then I’ve achieved my goal.
xlovebecomesher: (Default)
I got the offer for the job two days after I interviewed for the position. It probably helped that my friend from high school was working there and put a good word in for me. For someone with a Master's degree, it wasn't an ideal position, assistant teacher with low pay. But I was interviewing at the end of April for a position that was only until the end of the school year. The director swore with my credentials, once June came around, she'd put me into a teacher position for July (it was an 11 month school). All I had to do was finish out the year and I'd have a better pay check and I needed the job. I signed the contract and started in May.

...

June came around. It had been an interesting month working in a 3rd-5th grade combination special education classroom. I started there with no desk or chair or any supplies. My first day, my new coworker came in with a catalog and told me to choose things to order like pen holders, organizers, whatever office supplies I thought I'd need. My friend who helped get me the job went with me to Ikea to buy a desk and a chair and we built it together. A day later, one of my students dropped a holepuncher on my new desk and made a hole through the desk. I used that desk despite the hole for years. My students overall were pretty awesome....except for the one who threw a tantrum and tore apart his workbooks when I asked him to keep working. And the 3rd grader who growled at me, plotted my death by pointing pencils at me like it was a gun. The classroom teacher, while lovely, had no concept of classroom management. She would tell me however, "you know, you're really good at your job. When I retire in 5 years, you should take over for me."

Overall, I felt confident when I walked into that meeting with the director. Why would anyone go back on their word, I wondered especially when I've been doing a good job. How naive, I was.

I sat there and nodded as she explained while she was going to give me a raise, my friend from high school who had been there for years would be promoted, funnily enough to take over for the classroom teacher who I was currently working with (she was being moved to be the reading specialist),  and I would be moved to be her assistant. It wasn't like I didn't understand, she had been there for years and she deserved the promotion. Besides, we would make for an awesome team. Next year, Hillary, she promised me. I signed the contract because I needed the job and where else was I going?

...

We did make for an awesome team, her and I. Our kids made so much growth and we had so much fun together both working together and outside of school hanging out. I was sure I was proving myself even if slowly i began realizing the dark side of my work place. The lies, taking in students who did not belong in the school simply for the money that the state would pay, the administration who played favorites and used others as scapegoats. My friend tried to shield me as best as she could but I learned quickly that I was a scapegoat. In a small school, rumors amongst staff fly quickly. I'd hear about how I'd be blamed for this student's behavior or that student's actions. I heard that I was mean, I was this, I was that. If you can name it, I heard it about myself.

Needless to say come June, no matter what I did to prove myself, to show my students' progress and share the good moments, they told me I needed another year at my position. Meanwhile, new people who were hired on after I was who I knew would not last were promoted. I seethed silently but signed the contract. Where was I going? I needed a job and no matter how hard I searched, I had no luck with getting a new job. I felt cursed.

....

I was right. The two people promoted to the teacher positions quit within two months. They couldn't handle it, they said. I smirked in secret but kept a solemn face at their going away parties. It wouldn't behoove me to brag that I was right even if I wanted to shout it from the rooftop.

In April of that school year, my friend decided to quit. She had enough and she was going to California to chase her real dream of being an animator. I encouraged her to chase her dream, because who was I to stop my friend, even if I wanted her selfishly to stay with me. On the flip side of that, I figured this was the moment I'd finally get promoted. I mean who better to take over my own class than me?

That wasn't the case. The assistant director sat there and told me I just hadn't completely proven myself even after two years. This was after he watched a 4th grade girl threaten to throw a chair at me while I stayed calm and documented her behavior as I was taught to do by the school. I followed the exact protocol as we had in a training not too long before. I was shaking on the inside but I couldn't let it show. I heard later on that I was "triggering" her by following protocol and documenting her actions and I didn't do my job correctly. Never mind that she never threw the chair at me and I talked her down and I sat with her as she cried, calming her telling her she was going to be okay. Never mind that she had a documented emotional disability and none of us were ever given appropriate training for working with students with emotional disabilities (after all, we prided ourselves on being a school for children with learning disabilities). Never mind that no one stepped in to help me in the situation.  It was inferred that I just was awful at my job. They were going to hire me a sub. The sub lasted for three weeks before she ran for her life. Good riddance. The rest of that year, other staff members helped to run my class while I kept on doing my job.

One day, I called out. My glasses were broken over the weekend; a child who I worked with as a behavioral therapist broke my glasses in half and there was no way I could drive to work. The next day, new glasses and all, I walked in and my coworker pulled me aside. "Hillary, I'm sorry for all of the shit I've said or talked about you over the years."

"What do you mean?" I knew she was talking about me behind my back; she was extremely two-faced but I wanted to hear what she had to say.

"Everyone says you're just mean and you don't do your job and I believed it. But I was you yesterday in the class, and the kids tore apart the classroom and no one provided me any support. You're doing the best you can and no one seems to see it."

"I know. Thank you for acknowledging this."

That June came around, I was paired with a different teacher. A 6th grader teacher. The teacher pulled me aside and told me, "I know what you want and I see your skills and ability despite what they say about you. Stick with me this year, do what I say, and I promise you'll have the teaching job."

...

That year, I worked my ass off. Not that I hadn't before but being paired with the administration's favorite teacher, I knew she had the power to make my year great or miserable. For the most part, we got along super well to the shock of most people who didn't like her either (she was seen as a suck-up and as someone who was a stickler for the rules). While we still had behavioral concerns in the class like  my 3rd grader who plotted my death with pencils was now my 6th grader who still plotted my death but this time verbally. There was also a student who almost bashed my head in when I accidentally let the microwave get to zero and it made the beeping noise (he was extremely sensitive to sound and I got distracted grading papers that I forgot to keep an eye on the timer). But this time, I had someone who not just had my back but someone who actually had power to sway the directors.

It worked too. Not that I didn't hear the talk behind my back from my coworkers: I was mean, a bully, I wanted my own way, I talked about people, I didn't stay in my lane, whatever that could be said about me was said. None of that stopped. But that June came around and I was told potentially in September I would have a classroom of my own depending on the enrollment, I just needed to survive a summer in high school and she would let me know. I held on to hope.

That July, I was told come September I would have my own classroom as a 3rd-5th grade teacher.

....

Everyone was sure I was going to fail and that I was going to run when I got my own classroom. Other people did. But other people weren't me.

I wonder if bets were placed on me and how many people lost?

I started that year similarly to that first day of work years ago. My classroom was being painted and I had to teach in the conference room around a table for a week with no access to materials. My first day, my new third grader took off his shoe and put it to my new assistant's face and told her to, "Sniff!" We looked at each other in horror and I think we both wanted to run in that moment. We didn't.

That year was rough. We had by February that year three students with emotional disabilities who were insistent on either cursing us out or tearing apart the room or a daily basis. The school paid for a food behavior program in which they could earn a meal of their choice from outside each day if they could get through the day before without cursing (my assistant and I spent a lot of time running to McDonalds and Baskin Robbins). There were days where both of us at the end of the day wanted to throw in the towel. But we didn't. Despite it all, our kids made progress. My third grader who at the beginning of the year who removed his shoe so kindly for my assistant to sniff, who barely knew his alphabet, had already improved to reading on a 1st grade level in just a few months. Two of my kids who came to us with behavior plans, never had to have their behavior plans used and they were the leaders of my class that year. Even my kids with emotional disabilities, including my tiny little second grader who spent more time than not cursing everyone out, was learning to read. Both my assistant and I had flawless observations and our students were growing and thriving.

Throughout my years both as an assistant and as a teacher, the rumors and misconceptions about me never did stop. At one staff meeting that I had missed, I was apparently commended for being the only person with a perfect observation. I was also told that someone called out, "that's probably because she puts movies on all day and never teaches but just makes sure her room is perfect." The common theme was I was loud and mean and never taught until anyone actually spent time in my room and would then come to me and apologize. I could be rich for everytime someone told me they were sorry about believing the misconceptions about me after actually seeing me working. Even the assistant director who was now director apologized at one point for not getting to know me better and going with the misconceptions spread.   Despite the rumors, despite the setbacks (like the year where my assistant teacher was caught sleeping with a 16 year old student, she got fired, and I ended up being the only person in my room for 3 months while also facing being subpoenaed if there was a court trial - there wasn't), I continued to get perfect observations for my teaching and classroom management. I'm sure that pissed people off to no end that I didn't run, that I didn't fail. On the plus side, I did hear someone say that our directors were wrong those years I didn't get the promotion and that I should have had the job earlier than I did. My last year as a teacher there, I even ended up getting the largest classroom in the building with the best view after spending years in a classroom with no view. I'm sure people claimed that was unfair but I also got a student that year in a wheelchair and that was the most navigatable classroom for his chair. Nonetheless, that didn't stop the whispers that I didn't deserve to have the classroom or to be where I was.
...

June came around again. It was the end of my 7th year there but this time I was done. I finally at this point not just had my provisional teaching certificate but my Master's in special education and actual teaching certificate. Despite my degree and teaching certificate, there was to be no salary adjustment, just the same pay to keep surviving in a toxic environment. But unlike the previous years where I had no options and signed my contract resentfully, I had an offer from another school closer to home, an interview with another school, and a screening with the public school system....all with better benefits, better pay, and out of a toxic environment.

That day when I walked in for my contract meeting, my director informed me that there would be no raise but oh and now we'd have to be at work even earlier and those breaks the staff takes to leave work to get lunch by walking to 7-11 next door, the company is frowning on that. He pushed the contract forward to me to sign because why would he expect me not to sign. I've signed all those years.

I held back a grin as I informed him that while I've been thankful for this job and growth, I would be putting in my resignation effective at the end of that summer.  Oh I was kind enough, I offered to train whoever he wanted to hire so that whoever took over my classroom would be set up to go. I wasn't going to be a jerk and leave my students who I adored without being prepared. He stared at me quietly for a few moments trying to process what I said. "You sure you really want to leave?" he asked solemnly. "I mean I get it, there's no raise but maybe we could make something work? What am I supposed to do with so many other people leaving" I nodded. He sat there with his face in hands as I walked out, relieved that I was finally escaping and knowing that there's nothing he could do to make me stay.

That following school year along with me, the school lost 18 staff members. All to various schools/school systems that would treat us better than what we had known. I ended up passing my screening that summer and getting hired by the county as an elementary school special education teacher.  There are things I recognize in myself that I've taken from those seven years that I wouldn't have had without that experience (I do pride myself on my ability to write a damn good IEP, work with kids with various disabilities, and have familiarity with special education that I would have never had otherwise) that in many ways I wouldn't trade now including some of my closest friends who are still by my side years later. The scars linger but there's something gratifying to know that no matter what, I will never return to where I used to be and tolerate what I put up with for all of those years.

I walked out that last day in August with a smile and haven't looked back since. 
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This week's [livejournal.com profile] therealljidol is an intersection, where we work with a partner to create something for two different prompts. I worked with the wonderful [livejournal.com profile] flipflop_diva, who wrote for the prompt "I'm the Usain Bolt of Running From My Problems".
--------

She watched the little girl rummage through the old chest with a smile. “Ooohs” and “awwwwws” were heard at every item she held up — old dresses, scarves, a necklace long forgotten, baby shoes, dolls. The little girl would pick up an item, look at it for a moment and toss it aside in excitement to see what else was in the chest.

“Grandma!” The little girl looked up at the old woman, her face full of curiosity. “Who is this?” She held out a photo. It was clearly old — the colors were faded, the edges bent. But in the photo was a young man, dressed in a uniform, standing solemnly but for the twinkle of humor in his eyes.

The old woman smiled fondly as she looked down at it, memories rushing back as she studied the picture. “That,” she told the little girl, “is a story from long ago.”

The little girl scooted into the old women's lap. "I want a story!"
....

She sat dejectedly on the front steps of her new house with her face in her hands. She was turning 5 in less than a week and life was changing fast. She moved away from her best friend, Lizzie because Mommy and Daddy got new jobs, she was going to big kid school as her Mommy told her proudly and not going back to her old school she loved, and as her sister reminded her daily, she'd have to do homework in Kindergarten! She held her doll closer to her chest and tried not to cry when she heard a voice next to her. "Are you ok? Do you want to play?"

She turned to look at the little boy who sat down next to her. He had a smile on his face and he seemed friendly. Lizzie and her promised each other that they'd never play or talk to boys because boys were gross but...Lizzie wasn't here and she did want to play. "Who are you?" she asked, holding her doll for protection.

"I'm Ryan and I just turned 5! I live over there," he pointed to the house across the street with blue shutters. "I have a swingset in my backyard and a sandbox! What's your name?"

She hesitated for a moment. On one hand, she didn't know him and boys were icky. On the other hand, she loved sandboxes and building sand castles and it was really tempting. Besides, what else did she have to do? Sit home and be sad? She had an important question though before she agreed.  "I'm Hannah," she responded and held up her doll, "and this is Mary. Can I bring her with me?"

"Sure!" He leaned over and whispered, "my brother says dolls are stupid but I don't care! We can play with her and my dolls. C'mon!"

Hannah giggled, feeling hopeful again. "I have to go ask my mom if I can go." She ran inside as quickly as she could. "Mommy, can I go across the street to play? I'll be good, I promise!" Her mother nodded distractedly which she took to mean to go and she ran back outside. "She said yes! Do you like building sand castles?" Ryan stood up, ready to go.

"I do! I just got some new sandcastle toys too!" He put out his hand for her to hold and after a moment of staring at it, she grabbed his hand and they ran across the street.

...

"He sounds like a nice kid," the little girl commented with a smile. "I'd be friends with him too!"

"He was a nice kid indeed," the old lady woman nodded her head. "The best."

"So what happened?" The little girl questioned.

"Yeah, what happened?" An older gentleman came in the room and sat down next to them.

...

She sat all dressed up for the dance, sobbing on her front step. She was supposed to go to the dance with Brandon, the cutest, most popular guy in their 10th grade class but he called her up and told her that he got back together that night with his girlfriend, Julie, and he wanted to go to the dance with her instead. "Nothing against you or anything," he told her before he hung up. Nothing against her? If only she was a little blonder, a little skinnier, a cheerleader...this wouldn't have happened to her.

"Hey," she felt a familiar presence sit down next to her. Ryan. Her best friend, her confidante, of all of these years. They had been inseperable since that day they met, always there for each other. He stood up for her when some of the girls in their class became bullies; she stood up for him when he was teased for his glasses. They were always together and sometimes, deep down, she wished for more but she never wanted to ruin the best friendship of her life. "What are you still doing here? Why the tears? Aren't you supposed to be with what's his face?" He put his arm around her and pulled her to his chest as she sobbed against him. "Shhhh, I've got you. It's okay."

"He....He....He...." he patted her back, "He got back together with Julie Martin. And now they're together at the dance!" she cried. "Why not me? Why am I not pretty enough for him?"

"Did he tell you that you're not pretty enough?" Ryan replied angrily, ready to go kick some ass. He knew that Brandon was not good enough for his best friend, no one was in his mind....except maybe him, if he could bring himself to confess his feelings.

"Nooooo, but he made me feel that way. He went on and on about how pretty she is and how good they look together and .... and...and he thought he had a better chance of winning Homecoming King with her than me!"

"That bastard," he held her tightly against him and kissed the top of her head. "I told you, you could do better than him. He doesn't deserve you."

"Who does then? Obviously not him and the only person who I really want to be with, I'll never tell him because he never would want to be with me." Oh shit, she didn't mean to blurt that out!

"What do you mean?" He asked her quizzically.

She sat lost in thought for a moment. She could backtrack and say never mind, and get out of it. She could make up some guy she had a crush on in their class. That way nothing changed. Or she could just take a chance and tell the truth as much as it would suck when he told her that he didn't like her back. It would be awkward for a few days but she somehow knew instinctively that they would never let this come between them. "Well, I like this guy who is gorgeous, funny, kind, and the best person I know. But I'm afraid that he doesn't feel the same way because we've been best friends forever. So I've never told him how I felt...until now."

He smiled, getting the hint. "That's funny. Because there's this incredibly smart and beautiful girl I know who I've known forever and been in love with forever but I was always afraid to tell her how I felt because I didn't want to ruin the best thing I have in my life. But if this boy and this girl took a chance on each other, I bet they'd be amazingly happy together."

She wiped her tears away with the back of her hand. "Really?"

"Really," he smiled, leaning his head down for a kiss.

....

"Awwwww," the iittle girl sighed, "that sounds soooooooo romantic! So what about this picture? Why is he dressed like this?"

....

She couldn't believe he was leaving her to go off to fight in another country. She understood why he enlisted even if it felt like he was abandoning her. He wanted a better life for them, an education, a direction in life that he felt was missing.

"You're going to write to me and I'll write to you. Every day," he swore. "We're going to make it through this. It's only a couple of years and I'll come home when I can and we will be together."

She adjusted his army uniform coat on him. "But what if something happens to you?"

"I will try my hardest for nothing to happen to me. How could I something happen to me when I have the most beautiful girlriend waiting for me at home. You will wait for me, won't you?"

She stood back and looked up and down as she held the camera in her hand. How could she wait for him at home and have her life on hold while he traveled and fought? What if something G-d forbid happened to him? How would she live with herself? But what if she didn't wait for him? Would her life be the same without him in it? He was her only constant in her life, her soulmate.

"You look so handsome," she murmured not answering his question. "Let me take a picture of you so I can remember how gorgeous you are at this moment. He stood there on her front step, wanting to smile, but feeling the solemness of the moment. She quickly snapped the photo and then ran into his arms. "I love you," she whispered in his ear and held onto him for as long as she could before he was taken away from her.

...

"Did you wait for him?" The little girl asked, enthralled with the story.

"Yes and no," she smiled at the little girl and at the man sitting besides her, who had been besides her for all these years. "We broke up for awhile. I traveled, and partied, went on dates, almost got married to one of those men I went on a date with. But I realized quickly that would have been a mistake on my part and his so we ended it."

"So who is the guy in the picture," the little girl asked. "You didn't say!"

"You haven't guessed, silly girl?" The old man smiled and tousled her hair. "It's me, your grandpa!"

"OHHHHHH!" The little girl jumped off her grandma's lap and gave her grandpa a hug. "I'm glad you two are still together! Now I'm going to go play!"

The old couple leaned back against the couch, reflecting in the shared memories that they had made over the years. "Are you glad things ended up the way they did?" he asked her. "No regrets not living the single life or marrying that other man?"

"None, whatsoever. How could I regret anything when everything led us to our amazing lives together? I wouldn't have it any other way."

To see another way Hannah's life could have gone, go read [livejournal.com profile] flipflop_diva's entry here!
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I stood there on the high dive shivering with knees knocking. Everyone made it look so easy. You just point and raise your arms above your head together, bend over, and go off the diving board. Even the little kids younger than me could do this!

"C'mon already, go!" another child yelled. "You got this!" I heard a cheering voice encourage me. I tentatively raised my hands, stared at the water for a few moments. Why was this so hard? I got this, I told myself. And then I imagined crashing my head into the cement ground and I shuddered at the image in my head. Disappointed, I turned around and climbed off the diving board while the next person in line ran up the stairs and executed what looked to my untrained eye, a flawless dive. I sat down at the pool chair dejectedly. All I wanted to do is dive like the other kids. Why was it so hard?

...

My mom used to tell me and anyone who would listen this story of a friend of a friend's son. Now, I wonder how true it was or was it just a story she heard. To be honest, I don't even know if she even knew this person.  But the story she told went like this. A friend's son, not much older than me, used to love to go swimming and diving. The family even had a backyard pool so that he could practice.  One day, he went diving into the shallow end and cracked his head on the cement floor of the pool. From that day on, he was paralyzed from the neck down unable to move. That story terrified her and in turn me.

...

For the most part, I taught myself how to swim as a child. My Aba would lay outside by the pool all day tanning but I have very few memories of him actually in the water with me. My mom, I only have one memory of her in the pool with me. I was maybe 4 or 5 and we went to a local indoor pool with her friend and her friend's daughter who is two years or so younger than me. I remember being jealous that the daughter could swim better than me but she received formal swim lessons. I never did.  I'm not a very good swimmer but I can get across a pool and back (I'm great at doggy paddling). I can tread water. I can jump in a pool . I can float on my back.

But don't ask me to dive.

....

I stood on the diving board again. This time a little older, maybe 10 years old. My friends convinced me to at least try jumping off the diving board even if I couldn't dive in. I bounced gently on the diving board, blocking out the image in my mind of hitting my head as best as I could. If I could jump in, I could finally figure out how to dive, I rationalized. I held my breath, bounced once more, and jumped in. As I tucked my knees beneath me, hitting the water, I felt the rush of relief crash over me that I finally jumped off the diving board.

A few minutes later, feeling empowered by my jump, I climbed back onto the diving board determined to figure out how to dive. I stood there quietly bouncing on the diving board, feeling the wobbly board beneath my feet. I got this, I told myself. I raised my arms shakily above my head as my friends had modeled for me, leaned forward, and that image of an unknown child hitting their head on the cement floor, paralyzed, crashed into me. With wobbly legs, I straightened back up, turned around, and climbed back off the diving board.

...

I floated in the deep end of the pool waiting for my turn. My friends came up with the great idea the summer before 9th grade to become lifeguards to make extra money that summer. I was in. Never mind that I can't swim well, I liked the idea of hanging out at the pool and making money. To do so, we had to take a test: be able to swim across the deep end in a certain amount of time, tread water for a minute, and dive in the water. This was going to be the summer, I figured, that I would finally learn how to dive. I watched my friends swim gracefully across the pool. I wasn't going to look as graceful but I could get across the pool. I practiced treading water and I could do that for however long the lifeguard wanted. We got through the swimming and the treading water parts. It was time to dive. I stood at the edge of the pool, just like my friends had modeled for me, raised my arms, looked down at the bottom of the pool...and then shaking, turned around and sat back down. I never did get that job.

...

I deal with a lot of my fears on a regular basis. I have a fear of needles but going through regular bloodwork, IVF, and especially being a diabetic will make you face that fear of needles. I now give myself daily shots of insulin and check my blood sugar and while I will flinch, I can look at the needle and give myself a shot (my next needle phobia I need to work on is getting over my fear of the IV but in fairness I've had a traumatic experience with an IV). I have a fear of falling down stairs (and falling up) and especially stairs where I can see through them but I don't stop myself from going up and down stairs, even if you will see me either holding a railing tightly or my husband holding my hand. I also have a fear of ladders but it won't stop me from climbing a ladder even while knees shaking and wanting to cry because I don't want to miss out on whatever the view is at the top.

Yet, I've never actually been able to face my fear of diving which I've also realized as an adult has translated into a fear of snorkeling and scuba as well. I get sad still to this day when I watch my husband and/or friends dive in the pool with ease and without an anxious thought in the world because I don't think I'll ever get to that point. As much as I love the idea of scuba and snorkeling, you can't pay me enough to put my face underwater and stay underwater long enough to look at fish, let alone deep sea diving. The idea terrifies me even if logically I know that you can't hit your head in the ocean on a cement floor.

However, the one thing I'm determined is that my son not acquire this fear from me. I want him to have swim lessons as soon as he's old enough to be able to learn to swim and dive lessons as well. And while I know I will cringe and worry as I watch him on the diving board, but I will cheer him on in that first dive and every dive he makes.

Just don't ask me to dive with him.

Note: This was written for LJ Idol's Week 23 intersection where we had to pair up with another person and write based on two given quotes: "I'm the Usain Bolt of Running From My Problems" and "If you don't live it, it won't come out of your horn." I paired up with my awesome BFFL [livejournal.com profile] lyssa027 who tackled the other quote where she actually faced her fear and won which you can read here. I recommend checking out her story along with all the other awesome stories!
xlovebecomesher: (Default)
Note: Aba is the Hebrew word for Dad. Weirdly, despite speaking Hebrew fluently, I did not often call my mom Ima, mostly calling her Mommy or Mom. Aba however, has always been the only word I've ever used to call my dad and because I only ever refer to him as Aba, I use the word here as well.

As we took the hour long bus ride back to Yafo after a long day of exploring Jerusalem and the Wailing Wall, each of us with a earbud in one ear listening to Israeli music on my iPod, my Aba turned to look at me and said, "I never thought that one day I'd be sitting on a bus with you after going to Jerusalem with you." I smiled, content in the moment, because I would have never imagined this moment either. I never even realized how much I would have wanted such a moment.

....

Despite my parents both being born in Poland and having spent the first few years of their lives there (Aba was 6 when he immigrated to Israel, my mom was 9),  my parents rarely ever associated themselves being Polish. Aba to this day refuses to speak Polish if he doesn't have to (the only person who he will speak to in Polish is his sister but that's only because she doesn't speak Hebrew fluently). Mommy only spoke Polish to her mother; she would attempt to speak Polish to Aba when they were around their Hebrew speaking friends and she needed to say something for no one to understand or if she didn't want me to understand but that was a fruitless effort as he would answer her in Hebrew. Neither one of my parents had many positive memories associated with their time in Poland; this was most likely due to being Jewish in Poland right after World War II and the rampant anti-Semetism they experienced.

The only time they ever showed any kind of pride in being Polish was when they were the only Ashkenazim (European born) among all of their Sephardic friends (i.e. people born in Morocco, Egypt, Iraq, Iran, etc.) and it became a heated discussion of Ashkenazim versus Sephardic Jews.That was more due to the hierarchy of social classism among Israelis than any genuine pride. My parents always first and foremost, no matter what, identify as Israelis. Israel was and is the country of their heart and soul. It didn't matter to my mom that she only spent 9 years of her life in Israel and hadn't been back to Israel since 1977 (which sadly would be her last time there in her lifetime as she passed away in 2016). Prior to Aba's deportation in 2010, he hadn't been back since 1972 which was when he finished his required time in the IDF as a soldier. No matter how much time had passed, Israel was their country and they would sit for hours with friends, family, with me talking about their memories.

Mommy would speak longingly of her days growing up near the Kinneret (the Sea of Galilee) in the town of Tiberias in northern Israel, playing with the neighborhood kids, growing up without a TV, in a one room house with her parents and two sisters. When I went to Israel the first time in 2006, she told me if I got a chance, to stand on the banks of the Kinneret and wave to Syria. It didn't occur to her as she had left Israel prior to the Six Day War that all of the Kinneret now belongs to Israel. In her mind, she could look across the water and see Syrian children playing on their side, as she swam on her side. Aba would tell me stories of growing up in Ashquelon, in the south of Israel, with his older siblings, and his dog, Aza (the Hebrew word for Gaza - growing up, Aba lived about 15 minutes or so from the border of the Gaza Strip), running around the neighborhood, and of his father baking while his mom stayed at home taking care of the children.  To them, they both had the most idealistic childhood in the country that they love.

....

I don't remember who bought me my first globe but I had this amazing Fisher Price Globe that I got when I was four or five years old that you could plug in and you could see pictures inside of the viewfinder of places all over the world. Aba would lay down on the floor with me and we'd spend hours looking at the pictures. He made sure that the first country I could identify on the globe after the U.S. was Israel. He would lay there with his pillow as I curled up next to him reminiscing of all the places he had seen in Israel and tell me stories of Ashquelon, Tel Aviv, Bat Yam, and his time in the army. I would lay there and try to picture all of these far away places in my mind, swearing that one day I would get to go see where my parents grow up.

My parents never had the money however to travel to Israel like their friends did. It didn't help that unlike their friends who had all of their families back home in Israel so they had the incentive to go (and family who would help pay for tickets), both of them had their entire families here. They swore up and down that one day that they would take me but that day never did come. I went on Birthright in 2006 and while they were both so proud of me for going, I know they had a sense of regret when they dropped me off at the bus to go to the airport, that they never got to take me themselves to explore. I got to see the cities that both of my parents grew up in. I stood in the Kinneret, went to Hamai T'veria (Tiberias Hot Springs) where my Bubby worked and got to swim there. I got to volunteer in Ashquelon. I got a glimpse of what my parents' childhood was like and I was in love.

It wasn't though until I went to go visit Aba that I got to see the country through his eyes and his heart. I only wish I could have taken Mommy with me but at that point, she was struggling with dementia and no one was sure how she would react to the long flight and change of routine for those 10 days. I wanted to know what every day life was like. Initially I was afraid of getting on the bus (a knife attack in Tel Aviv on a bus had happened a few days prior to my arrival) but by the end, I was able to navigate the bus system conversing with the bus driver in Hebrew as I paid the correct amount of shekels. I made friends with the Lotto lady that Aba was friends with, went to the market, the dog park so his dog could run around and made friends with the lady who brought her dog there every night, listened to the cheers from the nearby soccer stadium when games were going on, tried different restaurants, walked along the beach, went to the bank, and even a stop at the courthouse.

One of the days that I was there, I made it a point to ask him to take me to see his childhood house if it still existed. We took the bus to Ashquelon and in my mind, I figured he should know where to go to find the neighborhood. Instead, we wandered around by foot, stopping in seemingly random places, to find directions to an old friend's wood shop. But it wasn't just asking for the name of the shop and how to get there. That would have been too easy. Instead, Aba walked around asking "do you know Eli who owns a wood shop? How do I get there?" I rolled my eyes but to my shock after three tries, we managed to find someone who knew this Eli who then drove us to this shop to meet said friend who then pointed us to the neighborhood and the house. We stood there in front of his house for a few moments as the neighborhood children played and adults stood around chatting. He stood quietly lost in thought and for those few moments, I looked at him and tried to envision a little version of my Aba running around, playing. I smiled at the image in my mind.

Aba never could have never imagined sitting on a bus with me after spending a day in Jerusalem which I could not either; but to me, I truly could have never imagined the moment happening of standing with him looking at his childhood home and being able to see his home through his eyes, not just the stories but being able to get a true glimpse of his past.
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The humans joke like I can't hear or understand them. "Hobbes, your life is so easy. You don't know how good you have it." They laugh uproariously like they think they are so funny, scratch my head or my ears, and walk away to do something else. I cover my head with my hand, amazed at their lack of understanding. They can't even begin to comprehend how hard my life is.

I live with one other like me and two humans. The other one like me, they refer to as Calvin sometimes but mostly she goes by Callie. She's okay. I like her for the most part except when she plays on my fear on climbing places and climbs high, taunting me. She wasn't there though the time I fell off the desk chair and the female human worried that I had traumatic brain injury and both humans took me to get checked out. Of course I was fine, stupid human, but the fear of climbing has stayed with me since. That's the only thing she's not scared of. Otherwise, she's afraid of her shadow most days. I tell her that there's nothing to be scared of, that we are in charge not them. She nods and I remind her to be ferocious as we were taught by our parents, to scratch and hiss when threatened. She says she remembers those lessons but as soon as another human that she doesn't know comes in, she runs for her life screaming, "Stranger Danger!"  She's a disgrace to our species, I tell her as I saunter out of the room greeting my minions.  I want the humans to know I own this place even though inside, I feel the fear.

Every morning, I have to make sure the humans are still alive. They pass out for what seems like forever and many a morning, this obnoxious buzzer goes off and they don't even hear it! How do they not hear it? So I do my check-ins, nevermind my hunger pains. Some days, I tap them on the shoulder and nothing. Callie does the face sniff to see if they're breathing. Other days, I scream so loudly only for one of them to roll over and go, "Hobbes, stop!" and they close their eyes again.  That's when I start running across their bodies and jumping on them until one of them, usually the male one, will get out of bed.  Do you think they are grateful for my checking in on them? Not at all. There's always grumbling as Callie and I lead them to the kitchen. And if that's not enough, before I can even eat my breakfast in peace, I'm forced to take this awful medicine. I really need to call the doctor and put a stop to this. Have the humans ever stop to think, "maybe I like my stomach bald?" Never mind my 10 different allergies to the world outside. Oh yeah, did I mention I'm allergic to: pollen, dust mites, and most things outside? Sure, it makes me itch and that's why I have no hair on my stomach. But that shouldn't stop the humans from leaving the window open, yet it does for some strange reason.They don't care that I need fresh air and to hear the bird chirp as I plot my bird annihilation plan. They just worry about my bald stomach and how it affects me. Worry about other things, like maybe going out of the house once in awhile and having a life!

I used to love the days where the humans left Callie and I alone for the day. They'd go out and we'd conference about how to run the place, improvements needed, practice our cries, make plans on catching birds, and then we'd nap in peace wherever we want. However, lately, the humans lately haven't been going out; probably fired from their jobs, those useless fools. They stay at home all day and seem to pretend to be working but they talk to each other and talk to other humans on the computer while doing other things. What do they know about actual work? The female human seems to get annoyed everytime I go into "her" work chair to sleep. She says, "Hobbes, you have every other chair to sleep in. Why mine?" I look at her with one eye open. Doesn't she understand that everything is mine? I wish they would leave us alone and stop referring us as their new coworkers. If Callie and I are their new coworkers then we need a raise! I find a different chair though to sleep in. The joy of being me is that I can sleep anywhere and everywhere.

You would think though with them being home more, I'd be fed more, right? When I was little, they used to let me eat whenever. Free feeding, they called it. Whatever it was called, those were glorious days. But then the doctor told them I was too fat and they put an end to that. If only I could go back in time to tell that doctor what I really thought of him, he would rue the day! Alas, they feed me on a schedule! The disgrace!  They eat whenever they want and rub it in that they're eating while I have to beg for scraps. Sometimes they are kind enough to drop us a piece of cheese or cold cuts; Callie and I have memorized the sound of the bag opening and those are special  times.  Other times, there's treats which I do love. There's one that tastes like lobster with macaroni with cheese, mmmm! However, they have Callie jumping for treats! Jumping! They praise her for catching it in midair like that's something special. Crazy fool, I shake my head in disgust. I wish she would learn that they should be honored just to feed us but she loves to perform.  I would never deign to even think of doing tricks for my food like a lowly dog creature.  I do have my own special treat. In the morning, if I'm lucky, the female human will let me finish her bowl of cereal. I do love milk with a little bit of Rice Krispies. But she gets mad if I help myself to her bowl while she's eating! I have to wait until she's done and hope she passes the bowl to me because she doesn't do this everyday. How selfish is she?! I just want to help her finish her food! And do you think they even appreciate me reminding them of the dinner and midnight feeding schedule? I even am kind enough to start early for them so that they don't forget! I tap them politely, I sing for them, and I will even cry. But do they care?  "Hobbes, it's not feeding time yet!"  Geez, who died and made you the ruler of when feeding time is? I decide these things, not you! But as I have no opposable thumbs as they remind me, I have to depend on them to open the can and am at the mercy of "feeding time."  I shudder to think of the inhumanity of it all.

I guess, if Callie makes me be honest, maybe it's not all pain and suffering and hard work. But don't tell my humans that! They do make sure that there are cat-nip treats at every turn, boxes to investigate, feathers to attack on the floor, scratching posts, Callie to chase around for exercise, and the humans are a sucker for cuddles and purrs. Callie has learned if she lays on her back with her chin to her neck, the humans will stop what they're doing to pet her stomach.  If I lay just right, they scratch my chin and ears and if they try to stop, I pull their hand back and they keep going. They even give us hugs and kisses which I will never admit to liking.  As Callie also reminds me when I'm waiting for sustenance, it's better than some of our species who hunt for their food outside. I have to agree. I'm not heartless, I feel for my fellow species who are outside while I'm not. My allergies alone would kill me before anything else would! And the best part is there are places to nap everywhere, on the floor, in a bed, on a chair, or on top of a human. Speaking of which, I see a sun beam calling my name for a nap.... but don't think my list of grievances is over with!


Hobbes waiting for cereal                    Callie showing off her belly


Hobbes napping in a chair!                  Callie napping after a hard day!

Note: This is for LJ Idol's Sudden Death Write Off. If you like this story, please vote for me and please check out the other 6 stories as well and give their stories love!
xlovebecomesher: (Default)
My mom and aunts would always tell me stories of my grandfather who I never met. His big sticking point to them had always been family stays together, no matter what. He would remind them that they were three sisters and they only had each other. It became a mantra that was drilled into them and they could recite long after he was gone.

As he and my grandmother both lost almost their entire families to the Holocaust and as my mom and aunts had grown up first in Poland and then in Israel without knowing what it meant to have grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins, he wanted them to promise to stick together no matter what. It wasn't until my mom was eighteen and the family moved to the United States in 1965 to meet her father's long lost brother and sister (who had escaped pre-war Poland) where her and my aunts learned what it meant to have an extended family. All of a sudden, they had to learn to call family members by Aunt and Uncle and Cousin, words that had no meaning to them. Growing up, my mom and aunts were insistent that we did not grow up the way they did; they wanted us to find the meaning that they never could grasp in extended family.

I've always grown up surrounded by extended family. I had sleepovers with my Bubby, nights spent with my cousins running around the neighborhood and spending time with each other's friends, older cousins who baby sat me, and unfortunately my mom and I even lived with one of my aunts for three and a half years. As a family, we used to get together for everyone's birthday to celebrate with presents and cake. My cousins and I still all joke about how we had to make the "blow face" for pictures in which we had to pretend to blow out candles so an adult could take a picture of us before we could actually blow out the candles. Every holiday, we got together to celebrate. I smile when I think at the times we all snuck into the synagogue on High Holidays because no one wanted to pay the exoberant price for tickets (we were told to say that our family already saved us seats and we were just getting there). We all have our scars from Passover 1989 in which no one got to eat dinner until 11 PM because my uncle was insistant we do ALL parts of the seder. I particurly remember bawling when we got to the singing part and after practicing the songs in nursery school, everyone was singing in a tune I didn't learn and 4 year old me threw a tantrum pissed and cranky that I couldn't sing along. We used to go out to lunch, dinner, get together randomly, shopping together, and enjoy each other's company.  We all went to get our nails done at the same place. My mom was successful in making sure I found meaning in the family she didn't have growing up.

Currently, I live within 3-10 miles of almost all of my mom's side of my extended family (not including her second cousins and minus a first cousin who lives in Boston). Cousins, aunts, I can get to anyone easily.  We could be doing all of the same things of my childhood with my family of get togethers and I could be raising my son the same way exposed to all of my family members. Yet, I don't speak to several of my family members. I decided after my mom passed away that I didn't need toxic family members just to say I had family. I learned that family is what you make of it.

See what I didn't mention in all of the idealistic moments I think about fondly is also the emotional toll it took on my mom to keep her father's word. My aunt was and still is an awful human being who put my mom through hell with emotional abuse (and in turn me) and my other aunt, often would play along with her adding to the emotional toll. The two of them excluded her from things they'd do together, talk about her, have events without her.  The amount of times I've seen my mom cry, break down when no one was looking, rant, vent, haunts me. My mom used to say, "I love her because she's my sister but if she wasn't my sister, I would want nothing to do with her."  Her friends became the sisters and support to her that she didn't have from her family. Yet, my Bubby would remind her of her father's words everytime she would vent: "You only have each other and you need to stay together." So my mother kept her connection despite her bitterness and resentment eating at her. I learned to do that too because I wanted to keep to her word that she was taught so long ago despite the amount of yelling, name calling, and abuse I took especially in the years of my mom's dementia when she needed family the most (not that they were particurly there for her but made sure to tell me everything I was doing wrong)....

Until I couldn't anymore.  Getting berated, harrassed, yelled at, and degraded throughout the week after my mom's passing by my aunt was my final straw (actually my final straw was 30 days later at the Shloshim - 30 day memorial - in which I gave a eulogy for my mom and in all my speaking which was off the top of my head and not planned, made sure to leave her out of my speech). Until my one cousin told me my miscarriage was G-d's will because I didn't deserve to have children and yet she has four, so look how much of a better person she is than me. Oh, and my favorite was how I should be deported (I was born in this country just like the rest of my cousins and don't have citizenship to any other country- not sure where I would be deported to) because I don't support Trump or Bibi Netanyahu. I cut my ties with them and the family members that are the closest to then and rationalize their words and I haven't looked back.

I know these family members don't understand my decision - because to them, despite all of what they have said and done, family should come first and I should be honoring my grandfather's words. And maybe they are right in some ways. My grandparents lost so much in the Holocaust and I understand his insistance on family staying together. But at the end of the day I have to choose what is best for my mental health and for my family. As I think about this while I'm pregnant, I was originally worried that he would never experience family like I did until I realized, he will have it so much better than my mom did and even better than I did. My son will know family who will love him without reservation and judgement and want the best for him. He will have cousins on both sides of the family to play with and baby sit him, aunts and uncles who adore him, grandparents who can't wait to spoil him, a great aunt who is so excited to tell him stories of her sister, his Safta (grandmother) and her parents, and friends who already consider him part of their family. Hopefully, he will never know what it's like to ever not have extended family like my mother didn't or have toxic family like I did.
xlovebecomesher: (Default)
My Bubby collected little glass figurines that she kept in her curio. Elephants, flamingos, little tea cups, she had it all. She was also fond of ornate lipstick cases that she carried her red lipstick in. I swore when I grew up, I was going to be just like her and carry my lipstick around just like her just so I could have pretty cases. She had these two gigantic framed needleworks of fairy tale scenes elegantly framed that she adored. She had an old fashioned record player with a radio that she loved dearly that she always had oldies music or classical music playing softly in the background no matter if she was alone or with company. And let's not forget her collection of hair scarfs for nighttime to cover her hair so that she did not ruin her perm.

When she passed away in 2006, my mom, my two aunts, and I went to her nursing room to clean out the room. My mom decided to keep the curio with the figurines; she figured it would go nicely in our living room (it did) and may be worth something one day. As I don't wear lipstick, I never did have a need for those elegant cases that I loved so dearly as a child. The needlework, no one wanted but my mom took out because she couldn't bear to part with it. But who needs an old record player when no one even owns a record? Sadly we donated it, along with her beloved handkerchiefs, lipstick cases, and other collectables. My mom and aunts fought it out over her jewelry; all I wanted was her photo albums (one that to this day I'm not sure which of my family members has) which no one wanted as there was no value to them.

As we sat there cleaning that day, all we could talk about is how sad it is that you spend your life collecting and buying items, only for it one day to be discarded after you've passed away because someone else did not see the value in what you had.
....

My mom was the type of person who counted on her collection being worth something one day. Her Avon statues that she got in the 70's when she was an Avon saleslady? She swore they would be valuable one day and that people would want them. Same with the figurines she took from my grandmother's curio. She was also convinced that McDonalds' toys of the 90's would be collectors items and make her tons of money. To this day, I have case full of unwrapped action figures that are sitting in my spare closet that I can't imagine are worth the time to figure how much they are worth. Maybe one day.

Several weeks ago, I sat down at my father in law's house and began sorting through everything I had packed up of my mom's (and Bubby's) stuff and began weeding through what was still worth keeping and what to get rid of. As a packrat myself, it's hard to get rid of anything but it was time to begin making a dent (and to make room for things we'll need to store in the future). I stared at the old picture frame with the needlework and I texted my aunt (who texted my other aunt) and no one still found value in that needlework. "Sell it on Ebay," my one aunt replied. Who would even want it, I wondered, but yet oddly I can't seem to part with it. So they they continue to sit, leaning against my husband's broken pool table. I then began digging through the Avon figurines and all of the figurines from the curio (which the curio itself got donated after my mother passed away back in 2016). Out of curiousity, I began searching Ebay if there was any worth to them at all like my mother was so convinced were worth something. Turns out, in 2020, there's really not much of a value placed on Avon figurines. Sadly I created a donation box and put it all for donation minus a few that stuck out to me as being cute.

All that time and money that my mom and Bubby put into collections? Donated because I have no room or need for them and no one in my family wanted them and all I could think about in my head was the conversation we had back in 2006. Nothing you buy can go with you to the grave, I pondered, as I put things into boxes for donations.

...

The first time my cousin came over to my apartment, she commented, "wow, you guys have a lot of collections going on!" It's true, we have bookshelves filled with old books, retro video games and systems (you name it, my husband probably owns it), Funko Pops, Amiibos, figurines. Under our bed, you'll find my old Barbie collection and collection of Baby Sitter Club books. I have boxes of jewelry that I've acquired from my mom, my Bubby, and my own collection. Notes galore from middle school and high school friends, birthday cards, photo albums, stuffed animals from childhood, Washington Capitals and Philadelphia Flyers gear, we have it all. We are a sucker for a good collection and we're both the kind of people that if we start collecting something, we go all in (i.e. our trip to Disney, we spend a good amount of our trip collecting and trading pins - which now sit in cups that are never touched).

As I sit here 28 weeks pregnant, staring around my living room at all of our collections, I can't help but wonder about what my one day grown up son (and any other future children we may have) will decide is valuable and worth keeping and what will he say isn't worth it, or doesn't need.  What will he end up doing with all of our collections that we have spent years and money on? What of his own things will he one day not want anymore that he will have loved so much? I want to tell him one day to keep everything, everything of ours has value and you'll never know when you need something or want to reminisce.  I can't force him to do that; just like I couldn't keep everything of my mom's or Bubby's and that is a strange feeling to have to come to terms with that my child is going to look through my things and judge their value, just as I did to my mother and Bubby.

February 2022

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