Interview with
Dorothy Jean
When
I was twenty, I was so glad to move on with my life and get my own apartment. I
was the oldest girl of seven children and had a lot of family responsibility.
Little did I know how this would help and mold me to become the strong women
that I have been now for sixty years.
So I thank my mother, and it is true that when you are a mother and
older you respect your own mother for all she was and did for you and your
family while growing up. However, she is unable to say those words about her
mother.
I
only knew bits and pieces of my moms childhood until I had a career, was on my
own and married. Sharing her childhood memories with her own children was
something she never allowed herself to do. We did not know her deep secrets or
even suspect any parts of her life were to dark to share. Mom, with a heart of
gold and a laugh so spontaneous she would make you start laughing just watching
her. She was an only child; left by her own mother at the age of eleven with a
man she thought was her father. Turned out he was not. Eighty years old now.
She will never know who her father was. This really bothers her. She forgave
her mother when she showed up in her life when I was a baby and took care of
her until she passed away. I loved my grandma, until I knew how she had
deserted and treated my mother as a child. My grandma was from a family of
twelve children, born to German immigrants. Her father wanted the girls of the
family out the house early, being of no use to him in their family business. He
did not care what became of them and her mother was too busy and had no
choices, like Dorothy Allison quoted her mother saying in A Question Of Class
(79). That’s the way my mom tells the story anyway. I am the only child in our
family that knows this story. Hate is exhausting and my mother has chosen love,
even though I believe she learned it from my dad and his family. They have been
married for sixty-six years. That’s right, she was fourteen when they got
married. They took a train down South and then returned to Michigan to tell my
father’s family. My grandparents took them in and gave them their own space
even with their own family of six children. They finished school and my father
worked hard at Greenfield Village where he eventually became the glassblower.
My mom graduated valedictorian of her class and they started a family soon
after. Happy ending after as they soak up the sun in Arizona this February
2012.
My
mom wishes she had gone to college. The story speaks for itself as to why this wasn’t
possible. It was also an era when women pursuing an education were frowned
upon. My mom was happy, and did not really think about an education or job for
years to come. Her plate was full in every way. More than she had ever imagined
as she stood outside in the cold rain in only her nightgown, a few years before
this time. Pushed out of the house one night and the door locked behind her as
she was told that she was a burden that no one wanted anymore. She ran to her
neighbors, my grandparent’s house. They took her in and she never returned to a
house that had never wanted her. You don’t know that when you “live” there. It
isn’t until you witness life in a home that reality stuns you, and you begin
over.
My
mom taught herself shorthand and read as often as she could while raising seven
children. Her English grammar is impeccable and my siblings and I mock how she
is always correcting us and other people. It is our inside joke, but actually
when she is not around, we find ourselves correcting each other’s children.
When her last two children were home and in high school, she became employed as
a secretary for an Intermediate School. It is one of the highlights of her
life. When she has to write down her occupation on a form, she is proud to list
Secretary rather than retired or housewife. The word regret will not be used
when wishing her education could have extended beyond high school, but she made
sure that all of her children went to college and claimed their right to an
education and followed our passions. (23) I actually read her that paragraph
from our reading and she loved it. I obtained my Associate’s Degree early on
and she still proudly tells people how I had my degree by the age of twenty.
You can only imagine how proud she of me now. Preaching to all her
grandchildren about college is at the top of her list, but never making it
about herself. Her past and that house are not relevant to the life she chose
to never look back upon. Life for my mom is living for the day and being all
you can right now. I believe she is a feminist who has beat the system of
inequality for women not protected by their own mother’s or society.
.
Rich Adrienne, “Claiming an Education”, 1979. Women’s
Voices, Feminist Visions, 2012
Allison Dorothy, “A Question of
Class”. Identities and Social Locations: Who Am I, Who Are My People?
Susan 517 588 1265
I found your story very touching and thought your mom was very brave and had great courage. How many people could withstand the emotional damage that can be done when your very own leave you stranded and tell you are not wanted. I think your mom is a feminist just by being that brave and courageous women, it let her use those skills and pass them along to her children so they could continue to have more than she had, but never stating any kind of regret for her life. She did what she had to do and she did it with pride.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed your story about your courageous mother overcoming all of those emotional obstacles. It goes to show you the strength of women in those days where they were looked upon to be so weak. It is always unfortunate when someone makes you feel like you are worthless let alone your own family. She did a great job at not letting her pass dictate her future. That is something we all need to work on. Many times we use unfortunate events that happen to us throughout our lives as excuses to mess other peoples life up or even to continue to damage our own. Great success story.
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