Survivor Literacy

Breaking the Cycles that Tried to Break Us


22) Mom

Mom bought a house four houses up the street from Grandma and Grandpa, so we still spent plenty of time there. The house had an unfinished basement, so Mom and Grandpa go to work erecting some walls and running electricity.

They built side-by-side rooms for my brother and I. They put in a toilet, and a tub, and that was as far as the basement ever got. There were plans of course. There were always plans. It’s just that every time somebody moved, they would ask my mom if they could store stuff in the basement, but they’d just leave the stuff. There was a room with a table saw and lumber that was just never touched again. I never used that tub. Not once.

The basement also had the laundry room and a kiln. With me being the person doing the laundry, the basement really stopped existing to anybody but my brother and I.

When we first moved in the back yard was a dense patchwork of old elm trees, shrubs, and flowers. The whole back yard had maybe 5 square inches of sunlight that hit the ground.

Mom ripped it all out. She and Grandpa removed every single tree. We were giving away free firewood for a long time. The squirrels were traumatized, but we fed them through it. We had to. It was a condition to buying the house that we would continue to feed the squirrels, all of which were named Herman, which was later shortened to “Hermie,” by my sister.

The yard birthed new life, and Mom spent most of her time in the yard for the rest of the time I knew her.

She hated winter and despised snow. Actually, she wouldn’t even use the word, so she called it by anything else, while displaying her disgust with scrunched up nose. She loved the sun, and the heat, and being directly in it. Her skin was a dark brown, weathered from years of exposure. Every year it was remarkable, within the first few days of planting, how quickly she would darken.

There was no thought given to sunscreen and I’m still amazed she didn’t get skin cancer. I’m also amazed she didn’t get lung cancer from smoking 2-3 packs of cigarettes per day.

She liked soccer, and my brother and I both played in a recreational soccer league. My brother went on to play in high school. Mom liked it so much she became a coordinator for the league as well as a referee. We would spend entire Saturdays at the fields when I was younger. That was before Dad, but we still went to watch my brother play in high school.

She didn’t like football and if you did you were a moron. Grandpa was allowed to like football, and to the extent that you were interacting with Grandpa it was fine, but discussion beyond that would receive eye rolls and sighs of disdain. She liked to say, “real men don’t wear pads.”



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