Undercurrent: A Memoir of Fear
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Undercurrent - Leslie Volker
Ed
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank my parents and grandparents, along with all the other people in my life who have helped me grow into the person I am today.
I would also like to acknowledge the people who have helped me with this task of writing. I would like to thank my friend Jude for sticking with me and looking at the first draft and doing all the corrections of my terrible spelling and awful grammar. I would also like to thank Roxanne Sadousky for the two plus years of editing help and teaching me how to express myself with words. Last but not least Kay for doing the last edit of the entire book, again my grammar, spelling and sentence structure. I could not have done it without them.
PART I
It’s Tuesday night and I walk into my first Al-Anon meeting. Ed has just gone into treatment for alcohol and I don’t know what it means yet. I filed for divorce before Ed went into treatment. But when he called me from treatment he said, I want to come home, and I don’t know how I feel about my religion right now. Would you hold off on the divorce while I figure it out?
For some reason, I said yes.
My stomach flutters. My fear starts knotted and painful in my stomach. My breath is tight and short and my heart pounds. I hear it. There are eight women sitting at a table in the church basement. I see Betty. She smiles at me and says, Come sit next to me, I’m glad you’re here.
Betty’s husband Gail and my husband Ed became friends after high school. We all drank together.
I am thirty years old, and for the first time in my life I think maybe things can change for the better. Until this moment, I didn’t know I had choices, that I could change what is happening in my life.
After the meeting starts and the other women share their stories, I want to share mine but don’t know how to start. I stammer. Betty says, It’s ok, I have been where you are and the meetings will help.
I feel a little bit better. My heart slows down and I start to breathe normally again, but I’m still scared. As the other women talk, I try to figure out where my fear comes from. I have felt it all my life. Perhaps, these meetings will help me understand. I recall life in my childhood family and how those events and people formed who I am. I don’t trust anyone and haven’t for a long time.
I start going to Al-Anon every week. I am hopeful for the first time in years.
Who I Am
September 11,1943, Mom and Dad bring me home from Northwestern Hospital to our little house by Cedar Lake in Minneapolis. My birthday is September 4th. My mom got to pick the day because I was born by caesarean section. I don’t know if it was an important date to her or just that she could have the surgery that day. My lungs didn’t inflate, so they put me in an oxygen tent. Because of the c-section and my lungs, we stayed in the hospital for a about a week. There are four of us in my family: Mom, Dad, and my older sister Naomi. She is three and a half years old when I come home.
Sisters
World War II has been going on for some time. Dad has left for the army. He is in the Special Services Entertainment Division because he plays the violin and can entertain the men. It’s just Mom, Naomi and me. Grandma and Grandpa Supak, my mom’s parents, live within walking distance, about a block and a half away. We spend a lot of time with them. When we are old enough to cross the street by ourselves, Mom says we can walk there anytime we want.
I have funny, pointed eyebrows with ends that grow towards each other to make a point. My father has the same eyebrows and so does his mother. As I grow up I am very proud of them because I am the only grandchild who has them.
Our tiny home on a hill has chipped cement steps from the sidewalk to the path to our front door. There is a front porch and a little woods just on the other side of our small back yard. I live there until I am seven years old. My parents sleep in the sunroom, and Naomi and I share a bedroom. We have a small kitchen and a very dark basement. The basement has wooden steps with a railing that creaks and leads to a musty space filled with cobwebs and Mom’s canned goods. I don’t like going down there.
It’s summer time and Mom takes us to Cedar Lake, which is small enough to see all the way around it. She stands me on the wood posts that hold the ropes for the swimming area, and I jump into the water. At nine months old I am fearless.
During nap time, I’d scoot my bottom to the end of the crib and put my legs straight up the end and sing the chorus of Bell Bottom Trousers
word for word. I still remember the tune. I can’t even talk. Sudie, our Japanese live in help, yells Mrs. Ptashne, come see what your daughter is doing. I think we should take her to the radio stations and show her off.
Absolutely not,
Mom says. Sudie is like part of our family, she takes care of Naomi and me and helps Mom with the house. When I am about one and a half or two years old Sudie goes away. I am too young to understand where she goes. It is not until I am much older that I understand why. Where is she? We never see her again. We never talk about it.
Sudie
Dad has been home for some time and working for my Grandfather. He has brought home a television. I sit on the floor with my legs crossed, staring up at this brand new invention. It is a big old wood box with a screen no more than ten inches square. Naomi and I get up bright and early to watch test patterns. Test patterns come on before any shows start. They are a pattern of lines that are on the screen to let us know the TV is working but no shows are on yet. We are so excited to have this and we watch because that’s all that’s on at that time. At night we watch the Lone Ranger, Howdy Dowdy, and Milton Berle. Mom and Dad watch with us.
I am five years old. It’s a beautiful summer day and Naomi and I play outside. There are two Doberman pincers that live across the street from us that are always tied up, each with a muzzle. Mom has told us not to go near them. Suddenly, Naomi runs up the porch stairs. I turn my head and look. The two dogs are charging across the yard at me. Their leashes are dragging and torn behind them. Their muzzles are off and are flapping on the sides of their faces. They are barking and growling loudly. I run up the stairs and pull on the porch door but it is locked. Let me in!
I scream at my sister, safe on the other side. I cry and pound on the door. She lets me in just as they are almost upon me. When I get in, I run crying to find my mother. I can tell Naomi doesn’t like me. I’m not sure why, but she plays tricks on me like locking me out of the porch. Is this when my fear starts?
I ride in a freight elevator with Mom and Dad. It has a creaky slat wood door that has to be pulled up and down manually so the elevator can move. We are on our way to the top floor of the Wyman Building in downtown Minneapolis. My grandfather’s business is here. I run through the factory with all the sewing machines and people working. There is a wood floor and light fixtures hang from the ceiling by chains. In his office, he sits at a huge wood desk. I run to his chair, and he lifts me up and gives me a big hug.
I stand on a toilet seat as Mom dabs Calamine lotion on my chickenpox spots one by one. She is gentle and the lotion feels so good. I hope it stops the itching. A few days later, I hear Naomi screaming as she runs into the house. She was playing hide and seek with some friends in a vacant lot and a bee’s nest fell on her. It is so awful. Mom takes Naomi into the bathroom to help her. She has red marks all over her body. I go to the door of the bathroom where she is with Mom, and she screams at me Get out of here! I can’t stand you!
I feel so sad as she slams the door in my face. Why doesn’t she like me? What have I done?
I’m in first grade, and we take the city bus to school. I climb up the steps to board the bus. I wave at Mom because she walked me to the bus stop. Naomi is always with me, but not this time. I don’t know where she is. Mom pinned tokens to my clothes so that I can take the bus home after school. At the end of the day I catch the bus home and climb those same steps. I go way to the back of the bus and sit on the long seat with black and green printed material that feels like velvet on my legs. My feet dangle because I can’t touch the floor. I don’t know where to get off because I’m alone. The bus ride seems very long compared to most days, and I’m scared, so I ride all the way to the bus garage. Tears are just inside my eyes the whole time. Our phone number is pinned inside my jacket or sweater and they call my mother to come get me. She is panicked and has been trying to find me because I didn’t get off the bus at our spot. I am six years old. I am afraid of the city bus after that.
Mom tells me she loves to cook, and whatever she makes smells good. When friends come over I hear them tell her what a wonderful cook she is. The countertops in our kitchen are very crooked. On a bright, sunny afternoon I hear her yelling, Oh! MY!
from the kitchen. I run in and what I see makes me start to giggle. Her beautiful golden brown pineapple upside down cake is upside down on the floor. It slid off the cooling rack. It truly is an upside down cake. We both start laughing so hard we can hardly stand up.
We are Jewish but don’t go to the synagogue. It’s Passover and my grandmother has set up the long table in her living room for all the people that are here. Some are relatives from New York that I don’t know. But most are my aunts, uncles and cousins. My grandmother has been cooking all day. All the smells mingle together and it smells so wonderful. I wear my special yellow organdy dress with a big hoop skirt. For once I don’t have on my cowboy boots and holster and Mom is happy. She tells me how nice I look. As I sit down on the couch, I forget to pull the hoop up from underneath me. It flies up and hits me in the face. My cousins start to laugh and make fun of me. It doesn’t feel good. I don’t like it but I don’t say anything.
Tomboy
Mom and Grandma make all the special treats for all the Jewish holidays. Homantoshen, a cookie with three corners filled with a prune apricot jelly mixture for Purim. Carrot mold, a bread made in a Jell-O mold for Thanksgiving, and chicken soup with matzo balls for Passover. Beef brisket and popovers at Hanukah. I feel so loved when I eat these wonderful things. There is always food at our family gatherings. Whenever we go to Grandma’s house there is food.
Organdy dress
It’s Sunday and we are at Grandma’s house. We go every Sunday. The whole family is here--aunts, uncles, cousins and some friends. My little five-foot grandmother stands at the stove in her housedress making the most wonderful sour cream pancakes. She uses a curved pancake griddle on the gas burner. I watch her put lots and lots of butter on the griddle each time before the batter. She tells me, The griddle is so seasoned that it is part of the taste.
I’m not sure what that means but I don’t care because they taste wonderful. She also makes enough batter to fill a mayonnaise jar for each family to take home for the week. When I’m older, I follow her around the kitchen to see if I can figure out how to make them. Her recipe starts with fourteen eggs. She says, A pound of butter, maybe a little more, two cups of sugar, maybe a little less.
When I make them, they don’t taste as good, but I don’t have her griddle. We stay all day and eat hamburgers with cold chicken at dinnertime. She always has chicken on Saturday night for dinner. We get the leftovers. I don’t see anyone helping her. She just waits on us hand and foot. I don’t see her ever sit down.
Grandpa is taking all eight of us cousins on an outing on a summer Sunday afternoon. I am the second to the youngest. He does this often when we are all together. We ride to Excelsior Amusement Park in Grandpa’s Cadillac, singing at the top of our lungs, the car windows open, and the wind blowing my hair. My feet don’t touch the floor. Excelsior is a great amusement park in Minnesota on Lake Minnetonka. I don’t like the rides that go fast and up off the ground. I like the caterpillar and the Tilt-a-Whirl. We usually spend the whole day there. On the way there my cousin Judie turns around from the front seat and says. Why are you singing? You don’t have a voice!
I get very quiet. The fun is gone for me. I never sing with them again. I am seven or eight years old.
A voice is a box somewhere in our throats that helps us make sounds and words. One way to loose your voice is through cancer of the throat. They take your voice box out but you can still talk through a tube they put in your trachea. Another way you can lose your voice is if you believe everything others tell you, you might not feel worthy of speaking. I think this is what happens to me.
The Big House
I am seven years old and we move to a new house in St. Louis Park that I call the big house. It’s a very modern home with a flat roof, lots of windows, a huge back yard and a big porch. I get to walk to school. Mom and Dad wanted a bigger house and knew the architect. As the story is told, Mom and Dad were having dinner one night at the architect’s house, which he had built for himself. Dad said, I love this house.
Harley Johnson replied,Great! You can buy it. I’ll just build myself another one.
He moved out and we moved in shortly after.
During these years my father works for my grandfather in his snowsuit factory, and our life is good. I have everything I ever wanted, but I am still afraid of everything.
We get out of the car in the garage. As we walk to the house, Dad says, Stop,
and he goes back in the garage to get a shovel. The walkway from the garage to the house is covered with black slimy lizards. The light from the street shines on them and they look scary to me. They are small but move quickly and climb all over each other to get out of there, but they aren’t going anywhere. They have come from the swamp across the street from our house. There are a ton of them. Ick! Dad shovels them into the yard, and in the house we go. Now I don’t like big dogs, I’m afraid of the bus, and really don’t like the basement. I add lizards to the list.
I walk over to Judy’s house less than a block away from mine. She has just moved into our neighborhood and we are in fourth grade. Her small house feels warm and cozy. I walk in without even knocking. I am happy. I spend as much time at her house as I do mine. Her family gives me the only nickname I ever had, Lestle. I drink so much Nestle’s chocolate drink at their house they start calling me Lestle.
I run into the house yelling at my mom, You gave me a boy’s name, you gave me a boy’s bike. What did you want? A boy!
They had given me my cousin Tom’s little two-wheeler. It is tan and about three feet tall. Leslie is mainly a boy’s name at that time, but mom named me after the actress Joan Leslie. The kids at school are teasing me about it. When Dad gets home, Mom says, The kids are making fun of Leslie because of her bike.
He takes me the next day to get my very own red three-speed girls bike. I am ecstatic. Now maybe the kids will stop teasing me.
Wonderful New Bike
Judy loves horses and we pretend we are riding. We name our bikes after horses. Her’s is Fury mine is Red. We are always together and ride our bikes all over St. Louis Park with some other friends.
I am lying in front of the fireplace in my PJ’s listening to music. My father and a few other musicians are playing string quartets. It’s wintertime and the fireplace is lit and crackling. Lots of my parents’ friends are over. As I have done many times before, I get up and go onto Forest Wiggins lap. I have known him most of my life. He is the only black man in the group. Mom has a big modern chair with wonderful big arms. It is called a Womb Chair, and when I sit in it, it feels like being swallowed in comfort. As we sit in that chair, Forest wraps his arms around me and I feel completely safe and loved. Then one day he doesn’t come anymore. I miss him terribly. I never see him again. We don’t talk about it, just like Sudie.
Mom always cooks her favorite blintzes for string quartet night. Rolled up dough with cooked cream cheese inside. Homemade strawberry jam on top. She cooks all day. The house smells wonderful, even though I don’t like to eat them. Music flows through the house, out the windows and through the neighborhood. Just about the time dessert is served and music is still being played, I fall asleep on Forest’s lap. He gently wakes me and says, It is time to go to bed.
The music drifts up to my bedroom as I fall asleep.
Everything is so sweet. Yet I wake up most mornings with a stomach ache and bite my fingernails down to the quick. I walk into Mom and Dad’s bedroom and in a little voice say I don’t want to go to school. I’m not sure why but my stomach hurts. Mom finally takes me to the doctor. I have to drink this icky, white chalky stuff for an X-ray. There is nothing physically wrong with me. They keep telling me I have to eat more ruffage.
It’s Saturday morning and Mom has made me Cream of Wheat. We are sitting in the kitchen at the table together listening to Let’s Pretend
on the radio. The show was broadcast with an audience full of children beginning with Uncle Bill Adams’ salutation, Hello Pretenders!
followed by the response Hello, Uncle Bill!
After some back and forth with the kids, the show would launch into an adaptation of classic children's stories and fairy tales like Rumpelstiltskin, Sleeping Beauty, Thumbelina and many, many more. After we are done, I go into the den. The TV and stereo are built into a little cubby hole and I sit on the floor listening to the records of Cinderella while turning the pages of the book, over and over and over. It is my favorite story. I pretend that I am Cinderella, and that someday my prince will come and get me.
Naomi and I are begging and begging to have a Christmas tree. We want to be like everyone else. There are trees and decorations all over our school. My mother gives in; she always gives in. She puts blue and white lights on the