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Background
Location:
United States
School:
Indiana University: B.S.Business
Master of Liberal Sciences
Work:
Teaching Italian Language, Sales, Financial bookkeeping, Business administration
My Websites:
www.hayhouse.com
Quote:
All that we are is the result of what we have thought. The mind is everything. What we think, we become. - Maharishi Mahesh Yogi

About Me



Interests:
music: dancing , ballroom, classical music; singing ; reading, meeting people, talk groups.

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My Journals (3)

 

The small things are what make us who we are.
 
My little old Italian grandmother stood perhaps, only, four feet 7 inches tall, yet she was a little power house of passion.  Her name was Rosa.  We grandchildren called her Mamma Rosida, a Sicilian pronunciation. She looked absolutely sweet and harmless, as she sat, eyes lowered with her arms folded, or her hands clasped. The only clue of her real mental activity was that sometimes her thumbs were twiddling in expectation and awareness of some opportunity.    It was when she opened her eyes and looked at you that you felt like exploding from the energy that came shooting out of her eyes. Me, she could wither with a glance. She had amazing peripheral vision. I stayed with her all summers during  school vacations because my mother worked. I would be transported by car with some cousin from our New York city apartment to her coal town Pennsylvania house as soon as school ended in June. There was no discussion about it, it just was, and I went.
 
Needless to say, I learned most of what I know from her. There was no fooling around. She was all business. Whatever she was doing she was totally focused and distractions were dealt with immediately with a swift click of her middle finger against some part of my head, or a pinch anywhere she could reach. On the other hand, she had a great sense of humor and could tell stories that would leave her listeners doubled over with laughter. Usually the stories were about members of the family and their peculiar eccentricities which were exaggerated, as needed, for the telling. I loved her stories. Every night I would sit on a little stool, near her chair and listen to her regale about her life growing up in Italy, falling in love with my grandfather, and finally her trek to America with him.
 
She had a peculiar way of always being ready for anything that could happen. In those days, some women still wore corsets, the ones that laced up. Every morning, after washing up, and the arduous lacing of her corset, she would layer herself with the clothing she was going to wear throughout the day. I could tell what her agenda was by what she put on. She wasn't shy, she was Italian, so, she dressed and undressed in front of me quite without self-consciousness. I was only a child after all, like a piece of furniture that didn't have eyes. Truthfully I would rather not have seen the show, but there she was. She had had 10 children and everything sagged and overflowed. Over the corset, she would put a great big bloomers. Next came a slip. Around her waist she would put a homemade belt that had little purses attached to long strips of material. That's where she put her coin money, and other secret items, besides the dollars she slipped between her breasts in her bra. Over the bloomers and the belt and the slip, she would put the first layer of clothing, which is what she would be wearing in the evening, if she was going out or having company. That would be her dressy dress which was always black. She always wore black in public. Over that, she would wear her afternoon dress that would meet and greet visitors to the house. Over that she would put her house apron which she would wear to tidy things up and general housekeeping, that's keeping her under dress clean. Over that she would put her cooking apron which she only wore while she was cooking or baking. It could get wet or full of flour and taken off quickly if someone came to the door. So there she was layered up for the day. As the day wore on, she peeled.  I always marveled at even why she did that. I guess she figured she didn't have time to keep dressing and undressing with all those babies she raised crying and fussing most of the time. .
 
A day in the life of Mamasi, which is what we ten grandkids called her, began early in the a.m. I could hear her from the bed, which I couldn't get out of by myself because it was so far from the floor. I needed a foot stool to climb down on, so she took that away until she was ready for me to come out of the bed, or I would have to make a jump for it. I wasn't an adventurous little tot. I could hear her splashing the water as she washed in the only big kitchen sink. There was only  cold running water so she had to heat the water on the coal stove   She began her day with prayers sitting in her chair beside the coal stove she had just replenished. Her book of prayers was all I ever saw her read. She couldn't read English, she could hardly speak it but she could add a column of figures before an old fashioned calculator finished it’s crank. She would be in a kind of meditation for about a half-hour before she slapped her thighs and got up and went to work on the day.
 
She was like a little bundle of dynamite as she scurried around the kitchen and pantry down the hall. The pantry was in the inner wall alongside the dining room and it contained all the staples like flour, sugar, spices, smoked meats and sausages, and the device’s used to cook and clean the house. There was also a little special corner devoted to the medicine she gathered and concocted. She would put on her cooking apron over the day dress which was over the black dress which was over the corset and she collected all the ingredients on the long dining room table which was near the pantry wall, in order to start her baking and cooking. I could guess what she was going to cook or bake by the ingredients she assembled. The baking of bread and little biscotti of all types was the usual fare. I was deemed her assistant because I was there and couldn't be idle -- ever! There is where I learned never to say I was bored, even in a time of no TV and when the radio only came on occasionally in the evenings. If I said I was bored she would begin to shout out in her Sicilian accent "wash the walls" or "sweep the floors". Did I mention that she only spoke Italian dialect? I spoke Italian, which my father taught me, but it was Tuscan, what they taught in schools. She never went to school. Understanding her was another laborious task that had to be accomplished quickly or I was pulled over to a bucket or a broom and then I got the idea. I kept busy helping her until she sat down, which seemed like never.
 
Perhaps her eyes spoke such volumes because she had to use her energy some way to be understood in English. My cousins who, unlike me, understood no Italian, learned to understand her, however.  She'd make an Italian proclamation, accompanied by the relevant hand gesture and we went scooting off to do her bidding, such as getting a bucket of coal, down in the basement, or picking some basil from the garden, etc.
The company that usually stopped by in the afternoons were women, mothers who went to her for advice on their children's or family's health. She was a midwife and a wise woman of sorts. She had potions which she would concoct for specific ailments, so in those days of few doctors, she was called on frequently. Everyone knew her healing ways. The afternoon visitors would come and I would watch as she cured a kid’s worms or as she combined elements from the medicine portion of the great pantry to create a salve to comfort a wound. Most of the herbs she mixed together were from her garden. The people, who were grateful, often didn't have money to pay, so they did each other favors. They traded services instead of money. Sometimes I would get a coin or two pushed into my hands and my grandmother would object and tell me not to take it. I reluctantly obeyed, at the time, but now I realize that a debt paid with money is cheaper than the obligation it incurs without payment. It was an Italian culture lesson.
 
When the people had gone, at dinnertime, Mamasi, would take off her day dress, and put on her cooking apron and sauté a small piece of meat with salt instead of expensive olive oil, and make a salad for dinner. When dinner was over, I washed the dishes and she took off her apron and we sometimes went to visit one of her daughters, as I was struggling with getting a little dress on, she was all dressed and ready to go in her little black dress, helping me.
 
When we got home again, driven by one of my witty cousins, we would take off our day clothes and put on our bedclothes, get washed and ready for bed. She would sit in her easy chair by the coal stove and I would perch nearby on the foot stool and listen to her say her daily prayers in Italian from the book. After all the daily recitations, I learned to read them also. I asked her why she had to do it and she said that since her husband Carmino, died, when she was in her thirties, she had devoted herself to God, like a nun, but stayed in the home because she had children and grandchildren to care for. She lived frugally and in a holy way all the days of her life. The only luxury I ever saw on her was a pair of diamond stud earrings that grandpa gave her. They were her trademark, to me. A real diamond in the rough she was. The best part of the evening was when she would tell me stories about her life as a young girl in Italy. She could capture my interest and then wield my emotions as she wished, in the telling. She also told fables like parables about people, and the dangers of life and the morals you learn from them,  just to scare me into being good. Storytelling was important in the days that writing things down wasn’t common. You should have heard the one about the devil hiding behind the mirror!
 
 
Added: September 19, 2009
Views: 63 | Comments: 3 | Bookmarks: 0

That recurring dream is quite extraordinary. When did you first have that dream? How often has it occurred?

I see you teach Italian. Always thought I should learn Italian. My grandfather came from Cosenza. :-)
Posted: August 12, 2009 10:41PM EDT
DenOhio says:
Posted: May 18, 2009 5:52PM EDT
DenOhio says:
Posted: May 18, 2009 11:42AM EDT
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