THE NEIGHBORHOOD

I grew up in a semi-rural nook in the middle of Queens, New York. The city had surrounded us leaving a tiny enclave walking distance from the subway.

The house was more than a hundred years old. It had been changed by each family who had lived there, so much that I doubt the original builder would have recognized it. From its birth as a 4-room bungalow in the 1800s, by 1951 it had become a warren of hallways, staircases and odd rooms that could be hard to find.

96-Holliswood1954

It sat at the top of a hill amidst the last remaining mature white oaks in New York city, the rest having fallen to make masts for tall ships. The shadows of the oaks were always over the house. Beautiful, huge and a bit ominous. Some of the branches were bigger than ordinary trees. I remember watching the oaks during storms, how the enormous trees swayed. I wondered if one would crash through the roof and crush me.

I was four when we moved into the house, five by summer. When the weather grew warm, I was told to go out and play. Like an unsocialized puppy, I had no experience with other children, except my baby sister and older brother and that didn’t count. Now, I discovered other little girls. What a shock! I had no idea what to do. It was like greeting aliens … except that I was the alien.

First contact took place on the sidewalk. We stood, three little girls, staring at each other. First on one foot, then the other, until I broke the silence with a brilliant witticism. “I live up there,” I said. I pointed to my house. “We just moved here. Who are you?” I was sure they had a private club into which I would not be invited. They were pretty — I was lumpy and awkward.

“I’m Liz,” said a pretty girl with green eyes. She looked like a china doll, with long straight hair. I wanted that hair. I hated mine, which was wild, curly and full of knots. She gestured. “I live there,” she pointed. The house was a red Dutch colonial. It had dark shutters and a sharply pitched roof.

A dark-haired, freckle-faced girl with braids was watching solemnly. “I’m Karen,” she said. “That’s my house,” she said, pointing at a tidy brick colonial with bright red geraniums in ornate cement pots on both sides of a long brick staircase. I’d never seen geraniums or masonry flower pots.

“Hello,” I said again, wondering what else I could say to keep them around for a while. I’d never had friends, but something told me I wanted some. We stood in the sunlight for a while, warily eyeing each other. I, a stranger. I shuffled from foot to foot.

Finally, I fired off my best shot. “I’ve got a big brother,” I announced. They were unimpressed. I was at a loss for additional repartee. More silence ensued.

“We’re going to Liz’s house for lemonade,” Karen said, finally. Liz nodded. They turned and went away. I wondered if we would meet again. I hadn’t the experience to know our future as friends was inevitable.

Summer lasted much longer back then than it does nowadays. By the time spring had metamorphosed into summer, I had become a probationary member of The Kids Who Lived On The Block. I did not know what went on in anyone else’s house. I imagined lights were bright and cheerful in other houses. No dark shadows. No sadness or pain except in my scary world where the scream of a child in pain was background noise, the sound of life going on as usual. Behind it, you could hear my mother pleading: “Please, the neighbors will hear!” As if that was the issue.

Across the street, Karen’s mother was drinking herself into a stupor every night. The only thing that kept Karen from a nightly beating was her father. He was a kindly older man who seemed to be from another world. As it turned out, he would soon go to another world. Before summer was ended, Karen’s father died of a heart attack and after that, she fought her battles alone.

Three friends

October 1952

In the old clapboard house where I thought Liz led a perfect life, battle raged. Liz’s father never earned enough money and their house was crumbling. It legally belonged to Liz’s grandmother. Nana was senile, incontinent and mean, but she owned the place. In lucid moments, she always reminded Liz’s dad the family lived there on her sufferance. Where I imagined a life full of peace and good will, there was neither.

A lovely neighborhood. Fine old homes shaded by tall oaks. Green lawns rolling down to quiet streets where we could play day or night. I’m sure the few travelers who strayed onto our street, envied us.

“How lucky these folks are,” they must have thought, seeing our grand old houses. “These people must be so happy.”

I have a picture in my album. It’s black and white, a bit faded. It shows us sitting in Liz’s back yard. I’m the tiny one in the middle. A little sad. Not quite smiling.

We envied each other, thought each better off than ourself. It would be long years before we learned each other’s secrets. By then, we’d be adults. Too late to give each other the comfort we’d needed as we grew up. Lonely in our big old houses, all those years ago.



Categories: #Writing, Life

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17 replies

  1. Ah, I recognize this passage from your beautiful written book! Such a really moving chapter, Marilyn; one that has really stayed with me.

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    • Yes, it is the same story, though substantially rewritten — and shortened by a couple of thousand words. Thank you for reading my book. I’m always surprised when I realize someone has actually read it, and it always gives me a thrill 😉

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  2. HI, Marilyn. So glad that you’re sharing scenes from The 12-Foot Teepee! I’m so glad that we’ve become friends and I thoroughly enjoy your blog. I’ve just nominated you for the Super Sweet Blogger award and thank you so much for inspiring and supporting me, my friend. You’ll find out all about it at http://4writersandreaders.com/2013/12/29/super-sweet-blogger-award/ Have a wonderful Holiday and a Happy New Year! Blessings, Bette

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    • Thank you so much Bette for your kindness. I have a bunch of awards that I plan to address in January … right now, I’m actually out of town, visiting my friends … but when I get home again in a few days, it will be time to start. Thank you again. You always make me feel good 🙂

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  3. You “liked” My Story-About Me on my blog (New Journeys on Old Roads); I am following yours and spent some time perusing it tonight. Your photography is lovely; I’m a novice photographer & blogger but you certainly make it all come together beautifully on Serendipity. I’ll be back often…thanks!

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  4. True — you never know what goes on behind the closed doors in your neighborhood. I was fortunate to grow up in a neighborhood where people got along with each other — outside and inside their homes. I remember a lot of fun and am grateful for that.

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    • We had fun too. But there were a lot of unhappy families. The best times were outside, playing with each other when we could live in imagination. Like Peanuts, but with unhappy families. Maybe Peanuts kids had unhappy families too. You never saw the adults, after all 🙂

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  5. Beautifully expressed, Marilyn, and so moving it has made me cry a bit. You look so sweet and brave and sad. Such an excellent point you make, though, because you are so right: we frequently assume that a happy appearance means all is well underneath – and, as your piece shows so starkly, we are often wrong. Thank you for sharing this memory. xxx

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    • And thank you for getting the point. You can’t see happiness, but you know it when you finally get some! How are you doing? I’ve been worrying about you. I hope you were off somewhere taking a well deserved break from life! We’re going away for a few days too … like in a couple of hours, but I’ll be off and on checking in. Not going all that far 🙂

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  6. Marilyn, I don’t know what to say. (I’m a writer, so of course I’ll not leave quietly)
    That is a beautifully remembered and written story. I have to share this!

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    • Thank you. I appreciate your appreciation. Funny how the years give one perspective. If you knew as a child what you know when you are mature … how wouldlife have been? Thanks again!!

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      • You are very welcome!

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      • Lovely, poignant post. Think I read something like it before but it still resonates. So very, very timely. I couldn’t sleep this overnight , tossing and turning with my own memories of those years in Queens. Childhood scenes returned in very clear vignettes. Very , very timely. I’ll probably fade into oblivion sometime later today, hopefully after we’ve reached our friends in Hadley.

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        • You have read versions of this … heard extended versions of it (with considerable color commentary) … and you were there, too, though by then the house had changed a lot, if not the people in it. You’ve been in my life a very long time. Not much about me you don’t know.

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  7. A few years ago, my parents moved out of the house that I few up in. They still own it, but they rent it out. Strange seeing someone else live there.

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    • I’ve been told it’s always a mistake to go back and see what happened to the place you used to live … but I think if we can, we all do. It is very disturbling, especially when the place has been totally changed.

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