My Mom’s mom, my Mimi, was born in Little Rock, Arkansas. They were dirt poor, meaning the floor was dirt in the one room cabin their father had cobbled together from found materials. He was often gone for days or weeks at a time following any work he could get. When Mimi was seven years old her mother died giving birth to a baby boy. Unable to care for him, the infant was adopted by a neighboring family and my grandmother, Mary Katherine, was raised by her older sister, Nellie, who was 11 at the time. The two girls were alone most of the time and had to trade or forage for any food they couldn’t grow.
That is all of their childhood story I know. I sure wish I knew more, but I was young when told this little bit of history. I didn’t know to ask more questions. Neither side of my family talked much about anything. Bits and pieces of that scarlet thread wended through conversation occasionally, only to be quickly brushed aside. There is so, so much I will never know.
I do not know how Mimi ended up living in Michigan, or married to my grandfather. Mimi retained somewhat of a southern accent all of her life. We kids teased her about it, but we loved it as we adored her. Whenever we did ask a question she couldn’t answer she responded, “I am not knowing.”
What is the question I didn’t want to ask? Oh, there were many, and I want to ask them now. Now that I am not afraid. Now I want to know everything. Every little thing about you, Mimi. Everything about you, Mom. Dad. I want to know my darling brother’s thoughts. Surely he had hopes and dreams he never shared. I never heard them; I never asked. Why didn’t I ask?
I can look back from the wisdom of today and know that I was always defensive. I was always being picked on, ridiculed, told that I was stupid or silly. In many ways I’m sure I was. I filled the role of family scapegoat exquisitely. They’re called family dynamics for a reason. They were not a safe space for me. I was not a safe space for them. Certainly I realize now that perhaps a braver approach would have shifted the dynamics, but hey, I guess we were all doing the best we could.
“They” say you have to drop your attachments to gain enlightenment. I don’t believe it. But I don’t believe much I hear anymore. I believe my body, my sweet animal body. Now I want all the stories. The happy, sad, true, or imagined stories. I don’t need to hold them, I just want to feel them move through me, to deepen my love for you, to know you better. I am not in the habit of asking. Please tell me.