Deborah C. Grossman
My mother’s sister Goldie remained in
the old home town, or what was then the countryside to the north of it, for
several reasons, including her husband’s business and her love for her house,
despite my mother’s toxic presence on the other side of town. Goldie was as
tough as they come, though, and wouldn’t let her sister dominate. She had three
daughters, two of them older than me and one of them, Debbie, a couple of years
younger.
I had two boy cousins closer to my
age, but my mother’s psychopathic behaviour had helped influence her brother to
settle far away in Tarrytown, New York, and to visit infrequently, and it cut
off all but the most basic, unavoidable contact with my father’s sister, so I
saw my boy cousins little.
Deb and I had the sort of
friendly-but-distant relationships that girl and boy cousins not quite the same
age have. Our contact was mostly in the context of multiple family members
getting together. My only vivid childhood memory of her is of visiting at Aunt
Goldie’s house when I was a preschooler and she was a just-out-of-nappies
toddler, and she dropped trou and peed in the back yard. I didn’t know that
people were allowed to do that, but she did it as a matter of course. I’d also
never seen a girl pee before, and wouldn’t do so again for decades.
One time when I was home from the
university and hiding from my mother at Goldie’s house I was amazed, of course,
by how Deb had grown from being, as her mother had called her, the ‘little
round one’ to a person who Goldie, always a lover of words, would accuse of
being profligate for buying two new
bras when she only needed one.
As news dribbles through a family I
learnt over the next few years that Deb was getting her degree in Library
Science, had joined Mensa, and through Mensa had developed a thing with a
genuine London Cockney named John Astell. The story came to me that Astell had
visited from England , got
his papers in order, returned to Delaware ,
converted to Judaism, and they’d married.
In 1973, my first wife and I moved to Delaware and I
reconnected with Deb and met John. Astell seemed to be somewhat flabby
physically, but with an overabundance of self-assured Cockney cockiness. Deb,
despite her role-model mother’s sassy stroppiness, seemed to be in his shadow,
or at least conceded him centre stage, serving him unhealthy amounts of ice
cream whilst he told me about his love of automobile graveyards.
He also, as I recall, had one or two
uncomplimentary things to say about the Irish. I personally thought this was
somewhat silly, as I couldn’t tell the English from the Irish to look at them,
and said so, but he pooh-poohed my naïvety with a reference to black hair, blue
eyes, and thirteen kids following them down the street. Cockney
ethnic-stereotype bigotry humour, I supposed. Anyway, he laughed.
John had secured himself a job
teaching English at some public school, Cockney accent and all, thanks to
Goldie’s efforts through the placement agency where she was then working. Deb
had come up with some job with the Dupont Corporation, which wasn’t that
surprising, since most people in Delaware
work for the Dupont Corporation, or so it seems, and it sorta made sense for
them to need a librarian, being a research-oriented organisation.
We saw Deb and John a bit socially,
which in those days meant drinking, but not that often. When my beloved’s
mental health broke down intolerably – and, well, schizophrenia is often more
than challenging to live with – I slept on their couch once or twice.
By the time I just couldn’t take it any more
and left Wilmington
and spouse on a Greyhound bus, Deb had become part of what Dupont called its
Integrated Data Processing group, retrieving technical information via punch
cards – remember them? This was in 1974, before the acronym IT had been
invented.
Over the years I learnt that Astell
had become a part of her past and that Dupont had eventually moved her to
facilities it owned in Mississippi and various
parts of California , eventually in Silicon Valley , moving from computers to human resources,
where she felt more comfortable.
By the early part of this century she
had retired, comfortably, from what she calls ‘Uncle Dupy’, remarried, and
resettled in Pleasanton, an affluent town in the hills about 20 km east of the
southern part of San Francisco Bay. She helped Goldie with her autobiography, My Golden Childhood, in 2000, took up
poetry, had a book published in 2006 called Goldie
and Me that contained stuff by both her and my auntie, and had served a
tenure as Pleasanton ’s
Poet Laureate.
More significantly, from my point of
view, she has made her way into the wonderful world of writing about food and
wine, and, mostly via facebook, she has treated me to a series of photos with
her in various parts of the world with wine glasses in her hand and goofy,
this-aint-my-only-glass-today grins on her face. She was tasting some upmarket
plonk at a winery in Chile
when the big earthquake hit in 2010, and other thrills.
She’s also taken to genealogy and has
organised an association of our extended family (Yiddish: mishpukha; Kiwi: whanau)
on facebook. We two have grown a bit closer over distance over the past dozen
years or so. The importance of family – and family relationships – runs deep in
many ways.
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