Things like the Truth
Things like the Truth
Out of My Later Years
Ellen Gilchrist
UNIVERSITY PRESS OF MISSISSIPPI • JACKSON
www.upress.state.ms.us
The University Press of Mississippi is a member of the Association of American University Presses.
“Living with Light” originally written for Shadow Patterns: Essays on Fay Jones, Architect, edited by Jeff Shannon (University of Arkansas Press, 2016).
“Pollen, Part II” was originally published as “Living with Sudafed” in House and Garden, 2008.
“My Paris and My Rome, Part II” was originally published as “Watching the Water Run” in Smithsonian, November 2006.
“Ode to New Orleans” was originally published in Yoga Journal, October 2006.
“Proving Once Again I Will Do Anything for My Granddaughters” was originally published as “Dancing Across the Waves” in Washington Post Magazine, March 2003.
“Being Wooed” was originally published in Harper’s Bazaar, October 2002.
“Summer, A Memory” was originally published as “On Her Terms” in Washington Post Magazine, July 2001.
“In Praise of the Young Man” was originally published in Vogue, September 1997.
“Christmas Past” was originally published as “Surviving the Holiday Season” in Harper’s Bazaar, December, 1994.
“Keeping Houses” was originally published in O at Home, Summer 2008.
Copyright © 2016 by Ellen Gilchrist
All rights reserved
Manufactured in the United States of America
First printing 2016
∞
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Gilchrist, Ellen, 1935– author.
Title: Things like the truth : out of my later years / Ellen Gilchrist.
Description: Jackson, Mississippi : University Press of Mississippi, [2016]
Identifiers: LCCN 2015039893 (print) | LCCN 2015051464 (ebook) | ISBN
9781496805751 (hardcover : acid-free paper) | ISBN 9781496805768 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Gilchrist, Ellen, 1935–—Anecdotes.
Classification: LCC PS3557.I34258 A6 2016 (print) | LCC PS3557.I34258 (ebook) | DDC 814/.54—dc23
LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2015039893
British Library Cataloging-in-Publication Data available
FOR MY CHILDREN AND THEIR CHILDREN AND THEIR CHILDREN and for all my wonderful friends and helpers. For my typist, Stephanie Meehan, and my editor, Craig Gill, and everyone who helps them be their extraordinary selves.
FOR THE HEART CANNOT LIVE WITHOUT SOMETHING TO SORROW AND BE CURIOUS OVER.
—Eudora Welty
WHAT FAMILY HAS NO MARINER IN ITS TREE? NO FOOL, NO FELON. NO FISHERMAN.
—Cormack McCarthy, Suttree
MY CREDO IS TO WRITE AS WELL AS I CAN ABOUT THINGS THAT I KNOW AND FEEL DEEPLY ABOUT.
—Ernest Hemingway
Contents
Section One—Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana, Arkansas: My Southern Home
Things like the Truth
The Family
Hurricane, 2005, August 26: Testimony of Grandmother Ellen
Testimony of Grandmother Ellen
December 29, 2009, Ocean Springs, Mississippi
Ode to New Orleans
Casting a Cold Eye
January 1, 2010
December 29, 2009, Ocean Springs, Mississippi: The Mystery of Psychotherapy; The Mystery of Transference; The Hardwired Banks of the River Memory
While Talking to Gunther Perdigao on January 3, 2010
February 13, 2010
Section Two—Mother, Father, Ancestors: The People Who Made Me
Wyoming, 1976
My Momma and Daddy Get Married in the Cathedral, Or, Forgive Us Our Trespasses As We Forgive Those Who Trespass Against Us
Further In and Deeper Out (Wyoming)
Writing Maketh an Exact Man
A Store of Treasures
Living in the Shadow of a Beautiful Mother
A Memory, The Drive-In Theatre
Summer, A Memory
Section Three—A Home in the Highland
Keeping Houses
How I Learned to Love and Trust Women, Since, After All, I Am One
Fall 2004, The Origin of Ball Games
Diamonds, 2006
My Paris and My Rome, Part I
My Paris and My Rome, Part II
Living with Light
My Paris and My Rome, Part III
February 2007, Homage to William Shawn
Section Four—The Courts of Love
An Anniversary
In Praise of the Young Man
Being Wooed
Writing Maketh an Exact Man, Part II
Meditations on Divorce
The Wine Dark Sea
Blessings
When I Worry I Run As Fast As I Can
Pollen, Part I
Pollen, Part II
The Joy of Swimming
Behaviorists, Freudians, Jungians, and Zen: A Short History of a Learning Curve
How to Have a Seventy-Fifth Birthday Party That Is a Surefire Success
Heaven, A Mystical Experience in Late October in Fayetteville, Arkansas, Or, Why We Need to Write and Read Books Until We Die, Which I No Longer Fear or Dream of Understanding
Section Five—Blessings
Christmas Past
Morality, Part I
Proving Once Again I Will Do Anything for My Granddaughters
On Becoming an Ancestor
Grandmother, Great-Grandmother, What Next?
Postscript: More Miracles, April 22, 2015
SECTION ONE
Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana, Arkansas: My Southern Home
Things like the Truth
A BOOK OF ESSAYS ABOUT MY LIFE AND FAMILY AND WORK, about the aging process and the fun of fighting to stay healthy in an increasingly undisciplined culture.
This book includes a diary I wrote during my winter vacation near my family on the Mississippi coast. I am trying to learn to love the undisciplined members of my family even though they scare me because they remind me of my own undisciplined youth. I learned. I got smarter and more disciplined. So will they. I hope.
The family members I was worrying about are a man and woman, both related to me. The rest of my progeny are healthy and well and productive. But the squeaky wheel still gets the grease, as my daughter-in-law reminds me.
Since the time when I was spending sleepless nights worrying about these two, here is what has happened. The woman has gone to a new doctor and had her blood pressure medicine lowered and changed. Now she is back to her usual, wonderful, brilliant, productive self. She is well. Did it do any good for me to have worried about her? You bet it did. We send strange vibrations to people we love when we worry about them. My messages always say, I’m mad at you for harming yourself. I’m worried and can’t sleep. Stop hurting yourself because it is hurting me.
The man I was worrying about was grieving for his dead father and two close friends who died in accidents they did not cause, one in an automobile, the other on an oil rig.
He went to AA meetings for two hundred days in a row, went back to church in a meaningful way and has completely recovered from the depression that caused his drinking. I know it helped him for me to worry about him. I am a logical positivist, but there are things we know that we cannot prove.
“For the heart cannot live without something to sorrow and be curious over,” Eudora Welty wrote. I try to let that lead me when I am worrying about my progeny. Waking up all night worrying about your children is a losing battle but we do it whether it
is wise or not. The brighter and more creative you are the harder you worry.
The thing that infuriates me is that I can’t concentrate on the two dozen young men and women in my family who are beautiful and intelligent and hard working and ambitious. I love to look at them or be in their presence. I look forward to seeing them or writing to them on Facebook or just knowing they are alive.
If one of them calls and tells me her landlord forgot to pay her water bill and she woke that morning to no water, I get very wise and tell her that most of the people in the world have always and still have to walk to the river or the well and carry water home in heavy buckets. She liked that answer and told me later she thought about it and told it to people all day.
What treasures children are. How divine when you can be useful to them.
The Family
I WOKE THIS MORNING TO THE SOUND OF SMALL VOICES MOVING toward the Christmas tree. “He ate the cookies,” the four-year-old boy said. His name is Garrett.
“He was here,” his seven-year-old brother, Marshall, answered. “Look at this.” He squatted by a package with a large card that read, To Garrett from Santa Claus. “I knew he’d come. Grandmother Ellen talked to him last night when he was over New York City.”
I got out of bed and went into the living room and sat on the sofa and watched. “Go get Momma and Daddy,” Marshall said. “I want to open things.”
They both left the room and returned with permission to open the overflowing stockings on the table. “We can’t open presents until they get up,” Garrett told me.
It was six-thirty in the morning in New Orleans, Louisiana on the twenty-fifth day of December, two thousand and nine. I put coffee on to brew, ran a comb through my tangled, blond gray hair and sat back on the sofa to watch the children tear through the things in their stockings. Then I called my brothers in Jackson, Mississippi. My brothers wake at dawn as I do, as my father did, as all the high-strung Scots with Daddy’s genes always do no matter what time they go to bed. We get up with the sun. It is always safe to call my brothers on the telephone.
“I’m in a room with little people who still believe in Santa Claus,” I told my older brother. “Although they noted he left half his milk.”
“I’ve got Little Dooley’s two-year-old and Aurora’s girls,” my brother answered. “But they’re still asleep. Merry Christmas, Sister. How’s your back?”
“My back’s great, and so far no one has done anything to drive me crazy. Call me back when the children get up.”
In our family we keep on being rich in children whether we plan for them or not. We lost a baby in the womb last year, a planned pregnancy. The identical twin baby girls my middle son lost in nineteen eighty-four were also planned. Maybe it’s better to be overcome by passion or whatever you call the fact that nature wants babies and makes us have them and makes us love them. “God makes them cute so you won’t kill them,” a black woman told me once in a Walmart checkout line. I had commented on how beautiful her bad little boy was. He was having mall fever and was screaming his head off, something I can’t help admiring in a two-year-old.
Between my brothers and myself we have fifteen children. Sometimes I wish I’d had more. When I was being cut open and sewed back up three times in five years all I wanted was a tubal ligation or some reliable means of birth control. We have all that now, but our family still keeps on delivering the babies and we keep on protecting and loving and trying not to spoil them.
What is Christmas for if you don’t have small children around to wish on stars and watch you talk to Mrs. Santa Claus on the telephone to get an update on the trajectory of the sled?
If you don’t have children of your own you should borrow some or visit an orphanage or at least go up to the local hospital and look at the newborns on Christmas morning. This is one of the great mysteries of life, a newborn child.
I had a wonderful time a few days before Christmas. I went to Jackson, Mississippi and sat around all evening with my brothers looking at old photograph albums of our exciting childhoods. When we were young my father was an engineer working for the Louisville Corps of Engineers. He was building levees on the Mississippi River. We didn’t have much money but we had an elegant mother who had gone to an Episcopal boarding school and then studied French and home economics at the University of Mississippi. No matter how small our home it was always beautiful and tastefully decorated. My father had large, state-of-the-art cameras he used on the levees and there are hundreds of photographs of my brothers and me. We were always dressed in beautiful clothes, some of which my mother made and some that were hand-me-downs from our wealthy cousins in the delta. Looking at the old photographs my brothers and I marveled at the gorgeous ways we were dressed and at the wealth of games and sports our father was always teaching us to play. Poker, bridge, Monopoly, Chinese checkers, football, baseball, ice skating, roller skating, bicycles, horseback riding, swimming, diving, stilt walking, jacko’-lantern making, the list could go on and on. I especially loved the huge, high swings my father would have constructed in the backyard anywhere we lived. There are dozens of photographs of me swinging so high it was like flying. I am holding dolls in my arm while swinging in many of the shots, my lace-trimmed underpants and petticoats, or in the winter, long underwear showing, and my little leather shoes which my mother and father polished every night.
I made up with my older brother for this Christmas. He’s never been mad at me but I’ve been mad at him all our lives because he is smarter than I am. (He can do math.) And because he was my father’s favorite and my paternal grandmother’s favorite and because he never got mad at me and always protected me. Once, in nineteen fifty-three at Vanderbilt University, one of his fraternity brothers tried to rape me. I fought as hard as I could, kicking and biting, but I was losing the game. “Dooley Gilchrist will kill you,” I finally yelled. I knew it was true and he knew it was true and he let me go and began to apologize. I didn’t tell Dooley about it but I am telling him now. “It’s not too late to go find ‘Tony’ and beat him up, Dooley, but wait until your recent eye surgery has healed.”
Dooley and I had a really nice, long night talking and looking at the photographs and somehow got to talking about how much we both loved Duane’s Depressed by Larry McMurtry. We started talking about the book and began to laugh. We laughed until tears rolled down our cheeks. My daddy used to laugh that way. I think it’s a Scots thing. Scots are so serious most of the time that when they think something is funny they laugh until they cry.
We were laughing that hard without having had a single drink. Me, because I quit forty years ago and won’t talk to people when they are drinking, and Dooley because he just had eye surgery and his childhood polio has returned and taken out one of his lungs and he is very interested in staying alive to see how his numberless progeny turn out. There are still grandsons and great-grandsons coming along that need to learn how to hunt pheasant and quail and deer and lions and water buffalo and other animals Dooley has been hunting all his life. He is seventy-seven years old and still manages to go on safari at least once a year.
Another good thing that happened was my middle son, who is a ship’s captain who has been all over the world sailing huge vessels and catching malaria while coming around the Cape of Good Hope without enough quinine for the crew, and sailing in the China seas, and finally marrying a third-generation mariner from the Chesapeake Bay and having a beautiful little boy who looks exactly like him and is fearless and wild with wide hands and high insteps and an unstoppable life-affirming attitude. Some wives in our family say he is bad, but they are just jealous because they don’t have a three-year-old boy who is a head taller than everyone in his class and laughs all the time and makes ALL THE GOALS on his soccer team and can run as fast as the wind. This middle son came home to Ocean Springs, Mississippi, last month and spent five days trying to find property to buy so he can stop being on a boat and away from his family half the year.
He has two other children who liv
e with his Bavarian ex-wife in Munich, Germany, and come to visit twice a year. His sons are so much like him it must drive his wives crazy. He doesn’t care how hard he has to work or what he has to do to support these children and I am fiercely proud of him for that. Anyway, there is a chance he is going to live near to me. He is the one who will drive me to the hospital if I get sick and he’s the one who won’t ever let anyone put me in a nursing home or be an invalid. Also, although he doesn’t like to do it anymore, he can fix anything that is broken. He sailed a thirty-foot-long boat from Florida to Saint Croix once and when the rudder broke in a storm he made one from the seat of a dinghy and sailed the boat the rest of the way to the islands with that. Also he repaired the sail with old clothes but that’s another story.
Here is a story about his three-year-old son, Sean. I came home in the middle of the afternoon on the winter equinox which is my favorite day of the year since that is when we start traveling back toward the sun and the days start getting longer. I was in a really good mood knowing the earth was traveling in the right direction and I volunteered to take the three-year-old to the park. “Get your bike,” I told him. “Let’s get out of here.” The park was full of children but they were mostly small boys Sean’s age and younger. He likes to play with older children since he is an only child and accustomed to older people. Finally a brother and sister showed up that were worth his interest. The girl was about eleven, overweight and unkempt looking, but she had a nice smile. The boy was about nine and was thin and haunted looking. Sean began to bug them, pulling their shirts on the pirate fort and taunting them. They tried to run away from him, but he kept following. Finally they left the fort and began to run all over the playground trying to elude him, but he followed them relentlessly. They decided it was funny and the race was on. For thirty minutes they ran and hid and he followed. They began to play together around a beautiful new bronze water fountain. I watched them for awhile, then went nearer to see what they were doing. Sean was sitting on top of the fountain taking drinks of water and spitting it on them. They were in hysterics they thought it was so funny. Even after I made him climb down from the fountain, he kept chasing them and trying to spit on them. I was a good grandmother and scolded him and frowned, but I don’t think my heart was in it. I had just seen a three-and-a-half-year-old discover spitting. Far out.
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