Wednesday, March 5, 2014

THROUGH A GLASS DARKLY

"For now we see through a glass, darkly....." this is a Biblical quotation from the beginning of a scripture in 1 Corinthians.  I have always loved how evocative and poetic a phrase it is......simple, perfect, no way to improve on it.  Enough to impress Ingmar Bergman to use it as a movie title, and others to use it as the name of episodic TV, songs, and  seven novels since 1950 published with that same title.

Recently I had a dream that reminded me of the same phrase.  I have long dreamed in Technicolor panoramic dreams.  I won't digress to begin to recount them here.  But my dream was like looking through a lens of a camera into my childhood, like deep within my psyche to retrieve a long lost memory of my youth.  Not one from my cognitive memory, but one from that hazy time before that, when I would have been around four or five.

The dream started out with me in present day, finding an old 8 mm Kodak film canister tucked away into the buffet in my Dad's basement.  I wondered out loud what was on it.  I turned to ask my Mother, and paused as I remembered that she wasn't there to ask any more.  I put it into a magically appearing device (dreams are cool like that) and started watching it.  I was shocked at the clarity of the recording!  It wasn't faded and orange tinged like our old family movies.  It was crisp and clear as High Definition televisions are now.  It was as if I was there IN it, looking out of my eyes viewing myself, not as in a movie, but actually on the scene watching.......invisible.

The scene was a small lake near Cleveland, Ohio.  The lake had a section of sandy shore that faded into marsh lush with tall green grasses and cat tails.  I was there with my cousins Laurie and Debbie and my brother Dave.  Dave and I had on matching orange, brown, yellow and white striped seersucker "sun suits".  His was the boy version with shorts and an overall top with straps that crisscrossed on the back.  Mine was the girly interpretation with ruffles on the bum.  We were giggling and running through the grass towards the water.

My cousins had on their swimsuits and their hair was wet from playing in the water.  I can see their childish faces as clearly as the computer on which I am working.  I was chomping at the bit to get into the water and looked back at my parents………and there they were…….young and laughing with dark brown hair and slim waists.  My Dad standing there with his clip on sunglasses and my Mom with her hair pulled to the side and in a page boy.  It was like a gift!  I was in a photo/movie and got to SEE them again like that.  My dad was carrying a silver Coleman Ice Chest and red plaid Thermos drink dispenser.  Mom had a blanket and my little brother Tom was on her hip.  She called to me, “Wait Sissy, we are going to eat first, you and Davey can go in the water later.”  Davey……I hadn’t heard my brother called that in years, and wondered when we out grew being Davey and Sissy.

Then I saw my Uncle Bob, tall and thin with dark hair and that somewhat sly mischievous smile, and twinkle in his eye as he said, “Hi ya Chucky……..it is about time!”  And my Dad responding with, “Whaddya mean old man?”  My mother used to tell me that when she was in The Rainbow Girls affiliated with the East Glenville Methodist Church in East Cleveland, all the girls knew the Delamater boys.  Bob was the handsome one, and Chucky was the cute one.  As I looked at them, I could see what she meant.

When I saw my little brother Tom, I knew how old I must have been in this scene.  He was just over one year old, so I would have been close to 5 and my brother Dave close to six.  My Mom put “Tommy” down on a blanket and started feeding him watermelon.  My cousins ran up and we all clamored for watermelon.  There is such a wonderful freedom being a kid, in a park, near water and eating watermelon.  Being able to bite into it and let the juice run down your face and arms to your elbows.  The warm sun shining down on your skin, the sweet taste of the watermelon, the sticky juice getting everywhere, yet knowing you can run over to the lake and wash it all off.  Maybe next you could get into a watermelon seed spitting contest…….or fight with the other kids.  Simple, silly fun…….with no electronics involved!  No devices, no chargers, no tweets or texts, no interruptions.
My Brothers and I as children, around the age described.

I looked over at my cousin Laurie and she had short little bangs and was laughing at her little sister Debbie, with her hair in pig tails and eating what looked like a giant piece of watermelon.  Then I saw my Aunt Ethel, young and tan with short blond hair pulled to the side.  There was a certain sophistication of the women of that era, and my Aunt Ethel was no different.  She always had a type of cool elegance about her, a certain confidence that she exuded.  She had it there too, wearing pedal pushers and a crisp white shirt.  I looked over at my Mom, with her long dark hair and pretty white flowered sun dress and noticed her matching earrings and necklace at this picnic at the park.  Pretty young women, mothers and wives that I so wished that I could ask questions and talk about life. 
Next thing I knew, I was in the water splashing with my cousins.  Dave (not ever keen on water) was sitting on the shore with a stick poking into the marshy area.  Tom was up by my parents playing and laughing.  I remember at that moment thinking, “Oh Tom will get such a kick out of seeing this movie”.  It was like an aside to me in my own dream.  Dave called to us to come and look at the frog he found.  We ran over to him, and as I felt that cool silt-y bottom of the lake, I could also smell that mossy, not quite stagnant water scent.  It smells at the same time good and bad, the aroma telling you that something unknown might be lurking below, and the slimy mud enticing you to squish it between your toes!  I marveled at this sensory experience and at the childhood wonder that I felt in looking at the frog.

I looked back at the grownups, they were talking about work and rent and all the boring stuff that grownups always talk about.  I remember thinking that if my grandparents were there, they would also be talking about who was in the hospital and had something taken out of them.  I remember thinking how sad it was that they couldn't do cool fun stuff like us kids…….I was at that moment carefree.  No worries, no stress, blissfully unaware…….it was delicious.

The next vignette was of packing up to go home.  I turned to look back at the lake and saw my Uncle Bob standing there.  I wondered what he was looking at, and then I SAW it, albeit with my grownup eyes.  He was looking at the view and it was amazing.  The early evening sun cast an orange glow in the sky and the green of the grass was stunning against the navy shade of the lake.  Big billowy white clouds were in the sky.  I was at once struck with the intensely overwhelming beauty of the moment!  I turned and looked back at my folks.  My Mom handed my Dad a thermos, his hand touching hers momentarily, and the sweet knowing smile that they exchanged put a smile on my face and tugged at my heart.  My brother Dave was running off ahead and I yelled, “Davey, wait for me, don’t get too far ahead!”

And then, suddenly, I was watching myself play in the living room of our big “double-decker” house on E. 123rd Street in East Cleveland.  The sun was streaming into the dining room and I was playing with toys and watching TV on our very old black and white tube TV with the screen with the rounded edges and big ROUND knobs.  I was wearing a nightgown with a satiny light blue quilted bathrobe.  We always had bathrobes.  I never remember running around with just pajamas, we always wore bathrobes, even in the summer I had a light weight cotton bathrobe, and summer pajamas too.  How had I forgotten that? 

I looked down at myself, lost in playing with my dolls.  “HOUSE” was my favorite thing to play.  I would lose myself in the details of the game, often recruiting my brothers (under protest) to participate in the elaborate scenarios swirling in my brain.  Alas……Tommy was ALWAYS either the baby or the little brother!  And Dave was ALWAYS the Dad or older brother……..but LESLIE – she was without a doubt THE MOM – and running the show!  HA HA!  I saw my light brown hair and short  bangs and thought to myself, “Aww, you pretty little, sweet little thing – I just want to give you a hug.”  So I sat down next to myself and reached out and put my hand on my little girl arm, only to have my little girl arm shake it off and start wiggling around.  She yelled to my Mom………”Mommy, someone is touching me and it gives me the creeps!”  My Mom walked into the room, “lickety split” (one of her favorite sayings, that also described her quick natured ways) in her navy shorts, plaid shirt tied at her waist, hair in pin curls covered by the pink silk scarf that my Dad bought for her on their honeymoon in Niagara Falls and said, “Well come here honey, I will take a look at it.”

And then…….. I woke up…………………

I was, at once, overwhelmed by feelings.  Was it real? Was it a memory?  Was it my imagination?  I felt both happiness and sadness.  I was happy to have been able to go there and sad at missing my Mom, Uncle and Aunt.  Was it a dream, were they there, was I?  I don’t know.  But it was kind of like looking through a glass darkly.