Judith thinks of marriage for the first time
May 11th, 2007

This is me back in the days when the world was a mystery and all I knew of it was a small part of Lewiston, Maine. Even the other side of our block was a marvel to me when my two sisters took me for a walk to see the chestnut trees in bloom, lining and arching the street in flowery splendor.
We lived on Vail Street, in the bottom half of a two-family Victorian house. I remember a lot of that home, and when I was seventeen accidentally saw it again when I was invited to a party. We were father, my mother, two half sisters, me and a baby sister back then. I have a string of memories, like album pages that don’t connect, but that are things that impressed me in some way unforgettable. I remember walking with someone and at the corner of our street we met a neighbor walking Scotties. I remember eating too many chocolate covered cherries at one Christmas and hiding under the dining room table and being sick. I remember using my mother’s beaded felt hat to dip water from the toilet bowl to water the garden plants. I remember going Christmas shopping with my mother and longing for “The Littlest Angel” but I don’t remember having my picture taken that day sitting on Santa’s lap– the picture exists. I got the book for Christmas.
Things were changing everywhere post-war, but not as fast as people think who weren’t alive then. My mother was on a waiting list to get an electric refrigerator, but we didn’t get one until we had moved away from Lewiston. So in Lewiston I remember the big kids chasing the ice man’s truck and getting big shards of ice to suck on and I remember one of my sisters getting one for me. I also remember my uncle coming in from his farm with vegetables and honey in the comb, which everyone liked but me. I still hate it.
I have such memories of those sisters. They were eight and ten years older than I, and fascinating to me. They walked off into the world I didn’t know, had friends I never saw and could go, I believed, anywhere they liked. I am sure that wasn’t true. I don’t remember that they were ever angry with me, or mean to me, or that they ever called me a spoiled brat. From this point in my life that seems impossible, but if it ever happened I don’t remember it. I loved them absolutely and thought they were the two most wonderful people in the world. The eldest is still alive and I still think that of her. I have had plenty of time to think about it but have never changed my mind. The younger died at thirty-nine of a brain aneurysm after a troubled life.
It is her dress that I am wearing in this portrait. Both girls took First Communion after joining us when my parents married and set up a home together. I’m sure this ceremony was a mystery also to my non-Catholic mother and that my father’s sisters must have helped her figure out what to do. I know that she made their dresses and veils. I can’t ask my mother, because she has Alzheimer’s disease and can’t remember those times. Maybe I’ll ask my eldest sister.
Why did I think they were getting married? I surely didn’t know what that meant. How did I know what wedding dresses looked like? I don’t recall. But they dressed me in her gown and veil and they took my photograph and the first time I saw it as a more-or-less adult I remembered that it was the first time I considered marriage.
Of course I remember some ugly things from those years too. Autobiography is self-editing. You get to hear what I feel like telling.
The thing is that a lot of what I know about love I learned from those sisters. As I struggled through the ensuing years, my eldest sister was my beacon. I couldn’t grow up to be her, but for a long time I tried to. We don’t look alike, think alike or live like each other, but the love I have for her is so pure and uncomplicated that it serves as a standard for how to love. It’s what I try to offer the younger siblings in my family. It’s what I give my child.
Remember, the children are watching. Someone is learning about love from us– you and me.
Thank you, Freddy.
Entry Filed under: Fashion


7 Comments Add your own
1. Cyn | May 15th, 2007 at 8:06 am
What a beautifull post Judith. I always wanted a sister, but never had one (until my brother got married). I was also the youngest and tried my entire life to keep up with my brother.
What a special bond you have wtih your sister. You girls are lucky!
Cyn
2. Judith | May 15th, 2007 at 8:16 am
Thanks for coming by, Cyn. I think you are the first visitor since I started rebuilding the blog. It’s still a mess, but the work goes on.
3. Milva | May 15th, 2007 at 2:48 pm
I love the black and white photo — you were a very adorable little girl. I have a somewhat similar memory of my first communion and the idea of a wedding. I remember my parents taking me to Loring Studio in Portland for my first communion photographs and the photographer calling me \
4. Milva | May 15th, 2007 at 2:51 pm
I love the black and white photo — you were a very adorable little girl. I have a somewhat similar memory of my first communion and the idea of a wedding. I remember my parents taking me to Loring Studio in Portland for my first communion photographs and the photographer calling me a “little bride.” I then started imagining getting married just so I could wear the gown again.
5. Judith | May 16th, 2007 at 8:29 am
Unfortunately, all the indexing is gone, so it will also have to be redone. Right now my server is very troubled, but they claim to be changing it to a new and more powerful one, so considering recent performance I shall wait.
When I work on the site I get internal server errors 50% of the time. Nothing I do in those conditions sticks.
6. Julianna | May 18th, 2007 at 9:24 am
You look so innocent :) It\’s funny how disconnected and random some memories can be, and yet how they are like a quilt of your life.
7. Judith | May 18th, 2007 at 8:25 pm
I’m three, Julianna. I am innocent! I was innocent until about 35 or so.
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