Category: Family
…But Goodies
After my mother, brother, sister and I moved from Ohio where my father lived with his wife and step-kids to Oklahoma where my mother’s best childhood friend lived with her husband, their four kids and successful real estate business, my visitation with my less than perfect father was limited to every other holiday and summer vacations. Eight hundred fifty miles separated the town my father lived and worked in and the town we had moved to without paternal objection because he felt, however rightly or wrongly, that he didn’t have any right to object.
Fortunately, my father and his wife loved to take road trips (and apparently required little sleep) and he usually opted to cover the distance between us by automobile, driving twelve hours to pick us up, spending an hour or so at or near our home where he would load up the additional baggage of three kids spending a period of time with their father and hit the road again for the twelve-hour drive back to his house.
On some of the shorter visits, or perhaps because we were getting older and would choose working over traveling to visit the old man, he would get a hotel room, or a cabin at a lake and spend the time in Tulsa, instead of dragging us back to Cincinnati. I always dreaded getting into the car with my father because on one of his first visits, he discovered a radio station that he loved. They played the music of his youth and apparently a better mix of it than any station he heard around his neck of the woods. I hated the music of his youth, it was all so outdated and boring and the station was very aptly called “the oldies station” (said with a sneer and a mocking tone, of course!)
Today, as I was on my way to pick up my lunch, I was driving down a frontage road along side the ridiculously crowded highway and I noticed a billboard for a local radio station. I immediately grimaced at the idea of the station as the billboard brazenly described the station as “classic oldies…” I mean, ho-hum, right? How boring!
Wait! What did that say? “Classic oldies. All the best hits of the 60’s, 70’s and 80’s! ”
What happened to the 50’s? And since when are the 80’s oldies??? Pretty soon it’ll be best of the 80’s, 90’s and the aughts!
I’m beginning to feel the need to drive with two feet, carry a cane and shake my head as I tsk, “They just don’t make ’em like they used to” while Lil’B sits in the back seat and cringes at my terrible taste in music!
Updated: An Unusual Chill
Did you notice that unusually cold chill in the air this morning when you woke up? I did! I wasn’t sure at first what had caused it and then I looked at my iPhone.
My mother has started a Facebook page, and she sent me a friend request.
Sure enough! Hell hath frozen over!
UPDATED: For those of you keeping track at home, the magic number is nine. It took nine days for my mother to ask me why I hadn’t accepted her Facebook Friend request. And yes, I accepted her request.
The Olden Days
My television died yesterday. I’m sad. Now I have to replace it and money that I was going to use to pay off another credit card has to go to replacing my TV instead.
Discussing this on-line with my mother today lead to the following conversation:
Kevin says (3:45 PM):
So I’m getting a new TV tonight. My one that I’ve had is kaput. I’m not happy (except that I’m getting a new toy and that’s always fun).
Mom says (3:46 PM):
Sounds like fun to me. Do you have one picked out?
Kevin says (3:47 PM):
Yes. Vizio 37″ LCD HDTV. Pretty much the same thing I already had. I’d like bigger, but the cost is too much and since I wasn’t in the market for a TV to begin with…
Mom says (3:48 PM):
OK. That means nothing to me, except the 37″ part.
Mom is not especially tech savvy. I helped her to buy a TV on-line late last year and she pretty much just looked at the price and listened to what I had to say about the unit and took my word for it.
Kevin says (3:48 PM):
🙂
Mom says (3:48 PM):
well and the HD part
Kevin says (3:48 PM):
Pretty much the same as what you’ve got, except, I think yours was 32″?
Mom says (3:48 PM):
yep
Kevin says (3:49 PM):
I thought I was going to have to get a 32″ which probably wouldn’t really be that bad, except I’ve been looking at 37″ screen for four + years.
I think I’d notice. But then I found this TV and with my Target Visa card I get 5% off so that’s not bad either.*
I’m getting a big enough income tax refund to more than cover it so I’m not really “charging” it exactly, but my refund will probably be another 7-10 days.
The part I’m unhappy about is that I planned to use that money to pay off another credit card.
Sigh
Mom says (3:50 PM):
Things are tough all over . . .
Kevin says (3:50 PM):
🙂
yeah
Also, I paid over $700, only four years ago for the TV that died. Meanwhile, the 19″ tv I bought at Foley’s in 1994 is still going strong.
AND, the company that made the newer TV went bankrupt and was sold to Ericson who says right on their website, they don’t care about the old products and the people who own them.
Throughout the first half of my childhood we had a series of hand-me-down televisions in our house. Several of them were cabinet units as big as a couch. One of them was a mahogany monstrosity with sliding fabric panels that covered the screen and lift up doors in the top under which were an AM/FM stereo with 8-track player and a record player!!! That one was nice while it lasted. Back then no one had ever heard of such a thing as a “cable ready” television and each of these successive televisions had rabbit ears with aluminum foil flags at the ends that periodically had to be adjusted by someone for better reception.
And by “someone” I mean the youngest child.
And by “the youngest child” I mean me.
Three guesses whose job it was to change the channels…
In the mid 1987 my mother finally decided to use money from an income tax refund to buy the family a new color television. She bought a brand new RCA model that must’ve been no more than 19″ and quite possibly smaller, but it was color with working volume and it came with a remote control!
Mom says (3:52 PM):
There’s a lesson in there somewhere, Probably a history lesson. They don’t make things like the used to!
My previous TV lasted, I’m not even sure how long. Many many years
Kevin says (3:54 PM):
Oh, yeah. You had that since… Shortly after we moved to Tulsa, I think… We didn’t buy it before we moved, did we?
Mom says (3:54 PM):
No, but it was soon after we got here.
Kevin says (3:54 PM):
Remember how excited we were, to have a brand new COLOR tv WITH a remote control? Tiny little thing that it is.
Well, anyway I remember how excited III was, to have the remote control…
Mom says (3:55 PM):
Yes. Hard to believe we used to actually get up and walk across the room to change the channel.
Kevin says (3:55 PM):
We?
😛
Mom says (3:56 PM):
Hey! I was watching TV a looong time before you came along!
Kevin says (3:56 PM):
You had two other kids, too.
But yes, there was a time when you had to get up to change the channel.
Not long after I moved to California and my mother had no more tech support children at home she called me one afternoon and told me she had rearranged the furniture in her living room but now she couldn’t get her TV to work. After asking some leading questions I determined that the television was coming on but that she was receiving no channels. Back then, you had to “program” the channels in by allowing the television to “surf” through the frequencies looking for channels that came in tune.
I still remember the day you called me in San Francisco ’cause you had rearranged furniture and needed to reprogram your tv. I told you to go push the “program” button or whatever it was called and you said you couldn’t find it on the remote. I told you it was on the front of the actual television and you said, “You mean I have actually walk over to the TV???”
Mom says (3:58 PM):
Huff puff and wuff.
*For the record, I am receiving no compensation or consideration by Target, Vizio or Visa… Darn it.
A Thousand Words
I have never been a fan of paintings. I’m not sure why. My Paternal Grandmother was a painter and most of my family, including my mother (who has been divorced from my father for 33 years) has at least one of my Grandmother’s paintings in their home. I do not. I never cared and I never felt like sentimentality was a reason to possess or hang something that I don’t like.
I love photographs. I desperately want to purchase a good 35mm digital camera and take a photography class. I really enjoy a well thought out, unique photograph of a beautiful, or even just personally meaningful, vista. I have photographs all around my house, mostly images of San Francisco. I have no photographs of people… at all. I’ve never had an interest in hanging pictures of people in my house.
I have a few pictures of my nieces and nephew pinned to a bulletin board in my office, but that’s it. I’m not sure why there’s a difference, but there is.
When I take photographs, I almost never take pictures of people. Some of my favorite photography subjects have been the beach,
famous (and not so famous) San Francisco architecture,
Sculpture,
the fountains in Lake Bellagio (I still need to get that roll of film developed) and of course, Mischa.
I don’t take pictures of people. Not strangers, not family, nobody. And I sure don’t display them. I’ve never understood why people do.
I’m sure this mentality lead to my feelings expressed in my recent blog posts, but what led to these feelings? I remembered something at the end of my session with Deb; something I didn’t actually forget, just hadn’t thought about in a very long time.
When I was a kid, my father and step-monster used to take my Brother and Sister and me to get a portrait taken every year. Every. Year. Sometimes more than once. Back in the day there was a portrait studio in Cincinnati, maybe still is, called Olan Mills. Olan Mills offered free sessions to shoot your portraits and they made their money on the prints (at least that’s how I remember it.)
These experiences were always painful, drawn out and horrible. They always resulted in tears. I hated having my picture taken (some things never change) and I never wanted to do it. If, however, I was going to have to have my picture taken, I wanted to at least be able to be comfortable doing it. I wanted to wear clothes that I liked and I felt like I looked good in. My father and step-monster had different opinions.
“Don’t you want the picture to look nice?” the step-monster would ask. She always has a demeaning and over-bearing tone, even if/when she doesn’t mean to. She would stand over and lean toward me and look at me with eyes that were probably uncomprehending, but looked angry to my seven-year-old self.
“I think I do look nice,” I would answer, meekly. I meant what I said, but already knew I was going to lose this so-called battle.
“But don’t you want to look dressed up?” she would say, thinking this would clarify things.
“No!” I answered angrily. I didn’t want to look “dressed up”. I wasn’t comfortable “dressed up”. And I didn’t have any “dressed up” clothes at my father’s house.
My father’s house was always dirty, and drafty and messy. My mother says I always came home from my father’s house with a cold and with some sort of wound; a splinter or a cut or bruise. The clothes I wore would be stained and ruined with motor oil or grease from a wood shop tool that wasn’t properly shielded. So she stopped sending clothes with me, telling him instead to buy me clothes to have at his house. So I had garage sale finds and TJ Maxx Bargain Bin finds that the Step-Monster bought for me, without my presence or input. And she didn’t buy “dressed up” clothes because what would I need them for?
Their idea of “dressed up” was for me to wear hand me downs from my older brother, or worse, from one of the Step-Monster’s children who were eons older than I was. A button-down collared, Oxford cloth shirt with the shoulder seams hanging low and a large gap in the collar, and a tie, with a double windsor from my father’s collection; that was their idea of dressed up. And that was her idea of what our portrait should be.
I wanted to wear my corduroys and a modern t-shirt that I believed was stylish and trendy and would make me look better that I did on my own. It wasn’t “dressed up” but that didn’t mean I didn’t look good.
Some parents have a bad habit of attempting to reason with a child, using logic that makes sense to them, but perhaps not to a seven year old, and when that attempt fails then resort to yelling and issuing commands. And that is where we always found ourselves.
“Kevin, we don’t have time for this, go change your clothes,” my father would intone, loudly.
There was no point in arguing further and I would turn away, slowly, sullenly and drag my toes as I slunk off to put on the shirt and tie and pants that had been selected for me to wear.
And I would sob.
I didn’t want to have my picture taken. I was ugly and I didn’t want to have to see it, or have other people see it for eternity. I didn’t need a reminder of this life I was living and I didn’t want to take the fucking picture.
I didn’t want to take the picture, and I didn’t want to be forced to do something I didn’t want to do. I didn’t want to have the power and the choice stripped away from me, compelled to violate my own free will.
And let’s face it. I was seven. I believed that if I made it a miserable enough experience, they would give in and not make us do it. At the very least they would decide it wasn’t worth the trouble and never do it again… Right? Right? Hello? Is this thing on?
But don’t get me wrong. My tears were real. My anguish and desperation were real. I would sob from the moment I shuffled off to dress as my master had commanded, until the moment we got into the studio and… Well, I have to hand it to photographers who take those kinds of pictures. Despite my genuine suffering and despair, they always managed to get me to smile and laugh and dare I say it, look happy. The pictures would actually turn out as well as can be expected for a self-perceived to be ugly, genuinely UNphotogenic seven-year-old boy.
And my father and step-monster?
They never bought a single portrait. Ever.
