Objects in Mirror Are Closer Than They Appear: A Memoir
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About this ebook
In this memoir, Johansen presents a collection of stories gleaned from living in a large family, where nothing is sacred and the unusual is seen as typical. The story Getting to Know the Virgin describes growing up Catholic in the 1950s and 60s. Once Upon a Time tells how house fires became a way of life. Poor is a Four-Letter World shares tales of camping trips that went very wrong.
Both heartbreaking and humorous, the stories in Objects in Mirror Are Closer than They Appear are remembrances of events that occurred, an attempt to make sense of why they happened, and a familys responses to both the tragic and the mundane. It explores the past with a view to answering the question, How did I get here? It also demonstrates there are many ways to be family.
Pauline A.G. Johansen
Pauline A.G. Johansen, the fourth of twelve children, was raised in a Catholic immigrant family. She has one daughter and lives with her husband and Priscilla the cat in Delta, British Columbia.
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Objects in Mirror Are Closer Than They Appear - Pauline A.G. Johansen
Copyright © 2010 by Pauline A.G. Johansen
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The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
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ISBN: 978-1-4502-7305-3 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-4502-7307-7 (hc)
ISBN: 978-1-4502-7306-0 (ebook)
Printed in the United States of America
iUniverse rev. date: 2/14/2011
With love to
my Family
I didn’t remember it all…
but I remember the love.
And
Arne and Samantha
You know why.
Table of Contents
Getting to Know the Virgin
What Have You Done for Me Lately?
But Can You Clean?
Jack-of-All-Trades….
Once Upon A Time
You Are What You Eat
What Doesn’t Kill You…
Poor is a Four-letter Word
This Way Home
Just Like Everyone Else
Driving Crazy
Surprise
Gone Cruisin’
It’s a Long Way to Tipperary
Afterword
missing image fileAnita, Peter, Dad (with John), Eileen, Mom (with Tony), Helena, Pauline
Getting to Know the Virgin
Our Lady of Sorrows lived in an alcove on the second floor of my elementary school. Taller than any woman I knew, she wore a long blue gown over a white shift and held baby Jesus in her stiff, unmotherly arms. Her gold-crowned head was slightly tilted, looking down in abject acceptance of her lot. Her tight-lipped smile spoke of all the pain she had suffered. Standing there greeting us every day, her unspoken message was, You did this; you broke my heart.
And everything we heard and were taught every day reminded us we were dirty, filthy little sinners who broke Mary’s heart and we could never make it better. But we damn well better try.
Sometimes I used to just stand and stare up at her in her tiny home and wonder what happened at night. Did she put down that chubby old man/baby, stretch her arms high above her head, sit down on the edge of her alcove, dangle her legs back and forth, sigh and wish for a different fate? Did she wish herself away from there? I did, every day—to anywhere else.
I began biting my nails shortly after starting school. I bit hard and often, and none of the usual remedies helped. My mom tried pepper, disgusting clear liquids guaranteed to stop the urge,
socks tied on my hands and the usual round of threats. There were no bribes; our family didn’t believe in bribes. I was made of strong stuff, though, and I bit anyway until they bled. I bit the nail and the skin around the nail, and I continued to bite even when there was nothing left to bite.
I had a reason to bite. I had to go to school. This instilled stomach-churning, cramping fear, because I knew that what lay ahead would make me feel stupid and worthless and that there would be no way out.
Home, on the other hand, was loud and confusing and a constant swirl of busyness. Before my school days, I often hid behind a couch or in a cupboard. Even though I was only five, Mom would find me something to do, like holding the bottle in the baby-of-the-moment’s mouth, or drying the dishes. But I wanted to talk and sing all day. I danced around in my socks and spun around on the linoleum floor on my bum in my flannel pyjamas. Mostly I sat and did nothing. I got hugged, and yelled at. I got fed and I slept. I didn’t know it, but that was as good as it was going to get, because then school began. I was not prepared for what today we might call the lifestyle change.
I started Grade 1 when I was five, but I was more like a three-year-old. In addition to biting my nails I still sucked the two fingers on my right hand at night. I had thick, raised calluses there. The sound drove my sister Anita crazy. I never heard myself, but she told me it was a bit like wet nails on a blackboard. Poor Anita; because she was closest to me in age she always got to sleep with me. My eldest sister, Helena, and Eileen, the youngest girl for the moment, at least slept together. They listened to Anita’s complaints with smug smiles.
The anxiety began the moment I woke up and realized I had another school day ahead of me. When you’re five years old, one day seems forever, a school year an unimaginable length of time stretching ahead farther than you can see. Like thinking about infinity, it gave me a terrible headache. The one or two moments of grace before I got up in the morning were squandered on a prayer to have a truck run over my thumb. This would be painful, yes—debilitating, even—but not life-threatening. It would guarantee I could stay home.
I pictured my thumb hugely bandaged, throbbing; the pity I would receive and the soup and tea in bed. It would be a terrific way to avoid the yelling, humiliation and fear that came with school. Getting your thumb run over made a lot more sense than, say, your toe. Sure, you would get some sympathy for that, but let’s face it: they would still send you to school and you would still be expected to do your work. There would still be the big, fat pencil, the paper so thin it ripped the first time you erased, creating a big hole. No, it had to be the thumb. No other body part would do.
If I was scared I couldn’t control my bladder. Most of the time I just wanted to have a nap. But it was true I could read and my mother had other babies around, and so I went to school. Beyond being able to read I had absolutely no school-ready skills. I had no idea how to hold a pencil, use a pair of scissors or any notion at all about what a number was or what you did with it.
Then came Our Lady of Sorrows Parents’ Open House. The idea was for parents to accept the nuns’ invitation to drop in any time during the day and witness the stellar learning experiences their children were having. For many parents it was probably also a chance to see their kid shine at something. The plan was that when a parent knocked on the door, someone would jump up and invite them in. Then the lesson that was being taught would be used as an excuse to call on the parent’s child.
Mom knocked. We were doing math.
Welcome, Mrs. Go-jev-ik. Pauline, stand up and count backwards from forty-nine,
she said sweetly.
I was confused. She didn’t talk like that. I stalled. I looked around the room. I opened my eyes wide.
Me? You mean me?
I gave a look that was meant to signal surprise and great, good humour. Then I glanced over my shoulder and all around the room, pretending there was another Pauline in the room and another Mrs. Gojević. I was hoping she would get frustrated or bored and call on someone else. Right.
Stand up, Pauline. Count backwards from forty-nine,
she repeated just a bit more loudly and a bit more in the voice I recognized. I stood up.
What’s a forty-nine? We could have been talking quantum physics. I launched into a stream of numbers I did know.
Uh, seventy-seven, twenty-nine, thirty-one?
I tried as many numbers as I could, hoping I might just hit on it by accident. I didn’t, but she wasn’t going to let me off.
Come on, dear. I know you can try harder than that,
she commanded.
Dear?
Is she talking to me? And, no, I couldn’t try harder. The effort was already making me want to throw up.
So I continued. Fifty, forty-six, eleven?
I didn’t look at the nun or my mom. I stared hard at the floor, hoping for inspiration. My mom put an end to the agony.
Oh, that’s all right, Sister. She can count with me when she gets home.
I looked up at her. She looked like an angel. But she was certainly not a happy one.
But really, Mrs. Go-je-vik, we should insist; this is very important,
the nun said with barely controlled fury.
Well, we will get to it, I assure you,
Mom said in her very best plummy British accent.
She looked so beautiful that day. She had her hat and gloves on, and her red lipstick—the only piece of makeup she owned was perfectly applied. I felt so proud of her, and so ashamed of myself. And then my mother left.
She never mentioned it that night, but I am sure she was thinking, Well, there goes the cosy retirement.
Obviously, I didn’t shine at school, and, next to my eldest brother, Peter, I had the worst reputation for misbehaving. The nun who taught Grade 1 was a caricature of an angry, bitter person. How could anyone always be so frustrated and disappointed? You would think that at least once during the day she would find a moment of happiness and it would be reflected in her eyes, and maybe even in the way she treated a bunch of little kids.
Her face was tanned, and I think she may have been of Mediterranean ancestry. She looked like an evil Mother Theresa and was in fact capable of inflicting harm. She seemed to resent us, and she liked to show it in hands-on ways. I have a memory of her grabbing my ear and pulling at it until it bled. I’m sure I deserved it—no doubt for some transgression like laughing or talking, both of which were forbidden and both of which I could not stop doing.
There were fifty of us in that classroom—fifty crying, pant-wetting, totally uninterested noisy kids. To deal with us she devised a scheme worthy of any Third World tin-pot dictator. It worked like this: if you transgressed during the week your name would go up on a board. For every misdemeanour a tick went next to your name. Often only my name and one other child’s would be up there. The week went on, the ticks grew. Friday was reckoning day, when you went into the cloakroom at the back of the class and received hits from a long wooden ruler on your hand equal to the number of ticks. It was the perfect punishment, combining day-to-day worry and fear with the culminating beating. I spent a lot of time in that cloakroom. Today, if I catch a whiff of a certain smell that hung over that space—a mingling of musty coats, rotten banana, dust and old cardboard boxes—I am back there with feelings of the same fear and loathing.
Sometimes I managed to convince my mother I was sick on a Friday. This was a real sacrifice on my part; that usually meant she would keep me in bed on Saturday too. It was a tough decision, but the thought of another beating was enough incentive to tolerate a day in my room.
I was clearly a kid in distress. In addition to biting and sucking my fingers, I ate things I shouldn’t. At home I ate dirt—not big handfuls of it; it was more dirt that was stuck to other things. At least my mother said I ate dirt. Otherwise, why did I have worms?
Have you been eating dirt again?
she would ask, watching me absentmindedly scratching at my bum, a telltale sign. Of course I denied it vehemently; I knew the cure.
The usual remedy for worms was to drink something really nasty, which apparently scared the worms and sent them running out your bum like cowards. Then you had to lie over your mother’s knee while she pried open your cheeks to look for escapees. Sometimes she showed them to me. They were little and white and wiggly.
I’m surprised that anything still embarrasses me. You would think that having someone root out worms from your bum would make everything else seem like a mere nothing. But I guess, like your nose, which keeps growing until you die, you just never lose the ability to feel the burn of shame. Indeed, I kept embarrassment and shame close at hand as a kid through a series of small and large ridiculous behaviours, either on my part or on the part of others.
There was, for example, that little matter of my eating in school. I ate mostly erasers, paper and glue. I ate a really incredible amount of glue. With that lovely peppermint smell that glue was almost like food. The erasers had a smell, too: a soft, pinky smell just a little bit like strawberry ice cream. In the case of erasers it was more the texture I was after. You could chew and chew and chew one eraser all afternoon. You could break off small pieces and stick them between your teeth and then dig them out and chew. All of this was time-consuming and required commitment to the task. While I was busy chowing down on a Pink Pearl or a sheet of lined foolscap, I wasn’t thinking about anything. I was lost in the moment of smell and taste and swallow. I needed those moments of escape.
It could, however, be difficult when you were loaned an eraser and you ate it and the loaner wanted it back. I’d lie and say I gave it to someone else. That