That Was Then/This Is Me (in no particular order)
That Was Then
By the time I was born, in 1951, I had a fully crazed half-sister, Vikki, already 13 years older than me. And another sister, Barbara, yet to be fully crazed, 3 years older than me. It took me many years to see the cause of this craziness, and how it had also affected me.
My parents were politically active, they belonged to the Socialist Party of Great Britain. We lived in Hendon where they had a bakery. We moved to Winchmore Hill, and another bakery, when I was about 7. They’d often have friends round for a socialist gathering, and when I was about 10 I remember waiting for someone to come out of the only toilet we had, me with my legs crossed hoping not to shit myself, whilst being asked by one of their friends “and what do you think about socialism?” Thankfully the toilet became free at that point as I farted my way inside and avoided having to answer a question that I had no idea how to respond.
My dad was a baker, a very successful one, and my mum worked in the shop selling his lovely doughnuts (yes, I used to put the jam inside them) and bread and cakes. She’d wear a badge with ‘Renee’ over one breast. Often she’d be asked what the other one was called. She loved a bit of a smutty joke, despite being quite a “proper lady”. Meanwhile my dad would be sweating in the bakery at the back of the shop, usually swearing and tellingcustomers who’d look in through the coloured plastic ribbon blinds “yes it is fucking hot”. He really didn’t give a toss what people thought of him.
I was a shy child, smothered in eczema from an early age and for many years, up to my teens. Eczema behind my knees (white bandages worn to stop me scratching), on my fingers (steroid cream to supposedly alleviate the itching, cotton gloves worn at night to stop me scratching. My mum would give me enemas, as directed by Mr Vickery the naturopath. She had lost her hair years before I was born, for reasons that made no sense (as they weren’t true) and I heard her whisper to him “will she lose her hair too?”
As a teenager the eczema in my scalp was scabby and itchy - the hairdresser wouldn’t touch my hair - and in my eyebrows. That idiot bloke who wouldn’t give me a lift along with my friends due to my hideous eyebrows, much later killed himself, so I heard. Good.
I understand from old school friends that I was a funny child and teenager, making my friends laugh. I don’t really remember. I was good at English and not much else. My English teacher at junior school told me I’d be make a good writer. Maybe this is the nearest I’ve got to that. I enjoyed netball and, well, not much else.
We swapped ‘diamonds’ in the school playground. My best friend was Alison Musson who had a corgi dog that I was terrified of, as indeed I was of all dogs. I could see her bedroom window from mine and we’d wave to each other as I listened to The Beatles on my red transistor radio. Later, under the covers (after I’d kissed goodnight to my posters of Paul and George) I’d listen to Radio Luxembourg and Radio Caroline. They were exciting times.
Vikki eventually got married to long suffering Joe. My mother later wrote that it was the worst day of her life. Vikki fainted, panicked, and was quite uncontrollable. This photo was before the actual wedding.
This Is Me
And so the story really begins….
Before I knew the reasons why, Vikki always seemed demented. And incredibly annoying. Like a bag lady she’d wear everything at once; the huge straw hat, the glasses hanging on a chain round her neck, mingling with her necklaces. Bracelets up her squidgy fat arms, tight rings on her fingers that cause the flesh to bulge out around them. Handbags, shopping bags, any bag she could carry, she would. She’d never be parted from them.
She wanted desperately to be like Barbara and me. We’d ask each other if we’d seen a particular film, with a made up name to test her. “Oh yes, I saw that film in Tel Aviv, I loved it”. If we went to a pub she’d didn’t have a clue what to ask for as she wasn’t a drinker, but if it was going free she’d have it. I stood behind her once as she asked the barman for something like a vodka and wine. He gave me a look as if to say ‘what the fuck?’ and I just shrugged and pointed to my head to indicate ‘crazy lady’. She didn’t drink it, she only drank water. But she couldn’t refuse a free drink.
She was visiting the UK from Tel Aviv when my mum was first ill. She was returning with way more crap than she’d had when she arrived. Empty Paul Masson wine bottles were her speciality. She had to put the excess baggage in a locker as it was too much shit to take on board. Eventually we had a desperate, breathless and tearful phone call from the airport “The plane left without me. It left early. Come and get me.” She had actually asked to speak to the pilot to ask him to wait for her….but in his desperate rush to get away from the crazy deluded bag lady, who’d been too busy loading up the locker with empty bottles, he managed to escape. When my dad got the phone call from her, my mum - despite her brain tumour -said What the fuck has she done now?” My dad and John drove to Heathrow from Hertfordshire to go and pick her up. They managed to book a late room in a hotel above a pub in Hoddesdon. (They couldn’t have her stay with them again). Everyone was exasperated. It was way after closing hours. The pub owner was kind and friendly and as they all heaved up the top of the stairs, Vicki heavily breathing and sighing, the landlady asked if she could get Vicki anything. “Oh yes” she said with her regular pained expression ” a smoked salmon sandwich please” breathing heavily and looking febrile. The landlady explained it was now midnight and all she could offer was a cup of tea. Vicki sighed again and agreed to a free cup of tea.
While she was here, I took her to Leon’s school to pick him up. She sat in the front seat and as the children came out of school she took a photo of some unknown child. I said that that wasn’t Leon. “Oh I know” she said “I was taking a photo of the brickwork in that wall”. Never one to admit to being wrong (not unlike my dad actually, who once sat in a chair in my lounge with a trail of dog shit coming from the door to his shoe. “Nothing to do with me!” and carried on chugging on his pipe.)
On the way home from picking up Leon she demanded we stop at a sweet shop. So we did and she spent some time in there. I thought perhaps she was buying sweets for the boys, which would have been a thoughtful present, despite the fact I never gave them sweets (and they thank me for their excellent teeth). Alas, they remained in one of her many bags, never to be seen again by any of us.
When my mum was ill and dying in hospital, my dad, Barbara and I would go to the local pub for a drink and something to eat. It became a daily ritual. One day we walked in and the barman asked my dad if everything was alright. “My wife is dying” he said in his usual loud voice. My dad wanted to continue this practice after she had died. Vikki was with us after she had died and we sat down and looked at the menu. Vikki ran her finger down the right hand side of the menu, checking which was the most expensive meal; once she got there she ran her finger to the left to order whatever it was. My dad said “You’ve not lost your appetite then have you Vikki ?” She put on her pathetic face in the hopes we’d all agree she needed to have the most expensive thing on the menu. She ordered all the drinks that were offered. Her place setting looked like an advert for Woolworths glasses, “on special offer, buy the whole set now!”
All she drank was water though. Still, why not take what’s free eh? She also thought this was a good time too to ask about my mums’ fur coat, where was it, who was going to have it, gimme gimme gimme.
After my mum had died, we three sisters hugged each other at the end of her bed. They both said ‘I love you” but i couldn’t. I didn’t love Vikki. I couldn’t lie.
Eventually, thankfully, she had to return home to Israel and her long suffering husband. Vikki returned to the airport, this time on a bus from Hertford bus station. She probably was horrified to have to travel on a bus, and I pity the poor passengers on that bus. She managed to get on the plane this time but asked that we go collect her crap from the locker. I suspect the numerous empty wine bottles and carrier bags may still be there, 100s of years later.
When Barbara would visit, it was good to see her initially. But she was also difficult and annoying in a different way from Vikki. Whilst Vikki would make do with anything (as long as it was free) nothing was good enough for Barbara. Brighton restaurants weren’t really up to the standard of San Francisco. We’re kind of relaxed and casual here. There are restaurants that she might have approved of but frankly I couldn’t take the risk that the tablecloth might not be clean enough for her. So finally she agreed to one, after quite a few attempts of her walking out huffing and puffing out of cafes that simply weren’t stylish enough for her.
We shopped a lot. Or rather she did. She’d spend hours in a make up counter, much as she did when we were on holiday as children, with our parents. My mum and I would go and drool over stationery in a store in Belgium, on our holiday, while she tried on any number of lipsticks, or whatever. Back here, I lost interest and would wait outside Boots or Mac or Space NK, Nars…. endless same old same old. Then the underwear shop where she bought a designer bra for her 32a child like chest.
She followed my dads’ political views, despite ‘having’ to fly first class (“under socialism everyone will fly first class!”) and her high end taste in clothing. I’m not sure how that fitted in with the idea of equal opportunities for all.
On the few occasions when she did stay with me, I didn’t need to put newspaper down on the floor thankfully, but she did cover a dressing table in the spare bedroom with kitchen paper in order to lay out her enormous amount of make up. Made up, by the way, in order to give a natural unmade up appearance. She’d had the regular botox (“look at me frowning!”), the new teeth, the fillers etc. Never one to admit her age (oy, as if!) living a pretence of youth and with her minute bony body looking self conscious and somehow unreal, and not now the sister I envied when I was younger.
She would rarely speak on the phone to anyone, but occasionally we had a phone call together. We even had a zoom call but it took some time to get it going. I could hear her but she couldn’t hear me. I held up big handwritten signs saying ‘YOU’VE GOT YOUR MUTE BUTTON ON!” It took some time for her figure out how to do that. She couldn’t figure out WhatsApp either, despite being previously able to. I’d call her on WhatsApp and say, “Can you hear me?” and she’d say no. I’d send her a message “Are you receiving me?” “No.” She wasn’t ill at this point but seriously and worryingly lacking in technical skills.
She didn’t have a particularly fulfilling life, by most people's standards. She had one friend who, when she was ill, bought her lunch (“she had the nerve to put a spoon down on the counter and not on a plate” she exclaimed in horror to me). She wasn’t very sociable. An old friend and her husband were going to visit her from LA. She was terrified. She kept putting them off. The friend insisted, and that they’d take her out for a meal. The friend later told me she was terrified the restaurant wouldn’t be up to Barbara’s standards. It was raining heavily on the day of the visit. She told her friend it was far and too dangerous to drive in the rain. She told me she didn’t want them to visit, despite this being her oldest friend, but Barbara just didn’t want anyone in her space. I didn’t believe it was raining so hard that it was dangerous to travel. And clearly it wasn’t. The couple turned up, took her out for a meal and Barbara enjoyed seeing them after all. She rarely saw or spoke to anyone, other than the staff at the swish organic food market. She could have made use of a local support centre, offering all kinds of entertainment and contacts and, more importantly assistance for older sick people. She'd have none of it. She wouldn’t ask for help (and I admit I have difficulty with that too, at times - see later information re crummy child rearing). All she did was watch TV. Or shop.
When she later was seriously ill, she didn’t want to go to a nursing home, or have a hospital bed in her own home. She had no choice over the latter. She still wouldn’t have any organisation deliver food or care for her. She couldn’t walk around her tiny kitchen without having to sit down. She was in a bad way. My cousin and wife lived 3 hours away and came to take care of her. I had hoped to visit with my sons but I couldn’t get travel health insurance.
She was permanently angry, way before she ever got ill. On a phone call with her at the beginning of her diagnosis I asked how she was feeling ‘HOW DO YOU FUCKING THINK I’M FEELING?” It’s a fair response I guess, but it didn’t need to be yelled down the phone to me. Another phone call, a pleasant chat and suddenly my dog barked ‘WHAT’S THAT GODDAM FUCKING DOG BARKING AT?” I gently told her a leaf may have fallen off a tree. Her vitriol over the years, mostly aimed at Trump, seemed to be misplaced in my opinion, though she’d have none of that. She’d get banned from Facebook for her various aggressive comments towards the republican party. However, she wasn’t a citizen of the USA so she couldn’t vote. She’d chosen not acquire citizenship because it might mean she’d be called for jury duty and she couldn’t possibly take time off work for that. Nothing really makes much sense to me.
Eventually, and way before her illness, I tried to explain my understanding of our childhood and how we had both been affected. She wasn’t having any of it. She acknowledged that Vikki’s bizarre behaviour was as a result of her childhood, but of course that hadn’t been the same for us. And in a way it hadn’t. Our dad was our dad. We weren’t sent to boarding school as young children due to being ‘difficult to handle’ as Vikki was, and we weren’t looked after by various aunts from a young age. But we had other issues to contend with.
I've always believed that Barbara was the favourite of the family. Apart from anything else, she was left half of my parents will while Vikki and I got a quarter each - apparently because we were married. Vikki was the poorest financially of all of us, and I later divorced so really that was a nonsense.
Looking back through my old diaries it's obvious I was unhappy, confused (and seemingly obsessed with noting that I'd washed my hair) and fell in and out love frequently. Seemingly desperate to be loved and depressed when dumped, the pattern continued for years. My teenage years seemed to be, shall we say, quite "active" with various boys, some of which I hardly knew. Many of which I thought I was in love with.
My diaries also show proof that my memories about some things are fucked. Where I can picture in my head certain comments, such as "Mum and dad emigrated. Washed my hair" The actual entry, I see now, on March 13th 1972 reads "OK day. Beth came home. Went to Aunty Jo's in the evening. Said bye bye to mum and dad. Wasn't too sad!" which pretty much says the same thing. Both show my feelings were buried way way down in the soles of my feet. And they stayed there for years.
The diaries prove how often I went to get checked for breast cancer; I was a very immature 19/20 year old. Life was seemingly full of hippies. I'd walk up the street, barefoot (hippy style, but without the requisite clothes) telling myself I'd never walk these streets again. I later became a mod but it didn't stop me thinking hideous deathly thoughts. Many many years later I went into a book shop in Hampstead and saw a book called "Death". I had to leave immediately as my nerves had got the better of me and my stomach was telling me to find a toilet urgently. I can picture that scene too, where the book was on a shelf, how the title seemed more noticeable than any other book.
So I guess its fair to say I felt I was dying inside as my parents abandonment had affected me so much. But I had no understanding of it.
I loved my sister, despite my frequent rantings.
I still grieve for her recent death. She had a different coping mechanism to me.
I'm still working through how and why I have continued to feel hurt and angry at how my parents let me down, all these years on, despite doing their best. It's not about blame. It was, in my mums case, her 'stuff' that was carried forward from her history.
But for me, it's been long enough. I am 72 today. Too long to be carrying this.
It's time to move forward, before its too late.
Rest in Peace dear Barbara
Loved reading this Lou. I lived in Hendon as a student in 1982 and would have loved to see your parents shop. Despite all your childhood setbacks you managed to overcome a lot and nobody would ever have known about your early years as you always appeared confident and together, xx
ReplyDeleteThanks Chris xx
DeleteLove this Lou xx Bernie xx
ReplyDeleteThanks Bernie xx
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely loved reading this Lou, I was completely absorbed xx
ReplyDeleteBless you Sue! Thank you x
DeleteLou, I love this. You are a brilliant writer. You are always so glamorous and so funny. You always make me smile and laugh. Always be yourself - that’s why we all love you - always. ♥️
ReplyDeleteThank you Margaret! That's a lovely message xx
DeleteI’ve only just found this.. stalking you. It’s brilliant - you are a wonderful story teller! Please carry on! Xx
DeleteHow lovely to read, whoever you are. Thank you.
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