A Lifetime of Regrets
Rowley, C J
Sold by Ria Christie Collections, Uxbridge, United Kingdom
AbeBooks Seller since 25 March 2015
New - Soft cover
Condition: New
Ships from United Kingdom to U.S.A.
Quantity: Over 20 available
Add to basketSold by Ria Christie Collections, Uxbridge, United Kingdom
AbeBooks Seller since 25 March 2015
Condition: New
Quantity: Over 20 available
Add to basketAfter Dad got out of the military, we moved to Nebraska. My mother's family all lived there. My grandparents had moved out of their old house and rented an apartment. My family moved into it and it was a huge place with a basement and a big back yard. Mom loved to select her switches from the trees in the back. I remember getting a few whacks on my bare legs from them. They stung for days. Dad even raised parakeets for awhile. I can remember opening the basement door and hearing all those screeching birds. They were quite noisy at times. He had all colors and they were so much fun to watch.
The winters were so cold and the wind would whip right through you. I remember having to bundle up in a heavy wool snowsuit. I could hardly move or walk when I had it on. But it was very warm and great for playing outside in the piles of snow. My brothers were so mean and would pelt me with hard packed snowballs. They felt like ice hitting me and really stung my bare face. Soon I would be running back inside crying to my mom and telling on them. I would have so many layers on under the suit, it took some time to get everything off just to go to the bathroom. We would play for hours it seemed and my hands would feel like they had needles stinging in them when we would finally go inside to warm up.
My grandparents were quite the couple. They both were very short, but my grandpa was thin and my grandma was very heavy. They both had a great sense of humor, I guess that's where I got mine from. Grandma was a very good cook and she made the best barbecue beef sandwiches in the world. We always loved to go places with her, because we always got to stop at the ice cream shop on the way home. Grandpa on the other hand had quite the temper at times. When he watched the news on TV and heard something he didn't agree with, he was up and cursing them and calling them "Communists." Everyone he didn't like was a communist and at that time, I was too young to understand what that word meant. He had his good side, though. I remember sitting on his lap and he would bounce me up and down and he would laugh and have a big grin on his face. He loved to watch football on TV. He was quite the "Huskers" fan and so was his son. My uncle and his wife and her two boys from a previous marriage, lived here too. They would come over and visit a lot. All of us kids would have a good time playing together. My aunt and uncle eventually had a little girl. She had the most beautiful brown eyes I'd ever seen. She had her daddy wrapped around her little finger.
My grandpa and my uncle ran a dance hall together on the outskirts of town. They had a pretty big place with a raised stage for live bands to come and play. I remember my grandma getting all the big banners ready to put out on billboards and in stores to advertise all their events. They had some very big names come to play there. I met a lot of famous musicians and singers in my younger days but didn't know it at the time. My folks would get out on the dance floor and have a really good time together. My dad would let me stand on his feet and he would take me for a spin sometimes. We didn't get to go out there very often, but I can still remember the lively polka music and all the jazz playing. Maybe that's why I love jazz today. The place was usually packed with couples drinking and dancing the night away. They had a coat check lady that took care of everyone's jackets. I remember all the beautiful fur coats that came through there. I loved touching them and feeling how soft they were and wishing that when I grew up I would have one, too. On Sundays, we would go out to clean up after the parties. The place smelled so strong of cigarettes and booze, it would make you sick. But I loved looking for lost coins under the tables. I got to keep whatever I found. Usually my folks left us with babysitters when they would help out on the weekends there. They would bring candy for us and let us stay up and watch the "Alfred Hitchcock" show. I would always be scared and hide my eyes when the "boogieman" appeared.
My dad worked different jobs in his life. He worked as an ice man for awhile and I remember him working for the bread company delivering "Aunt Betty's Bread". He was a machinist, too and he made all kinds of things. He eventually moved us into a brand new home. It had three bedrooms, a basement and a fenced in yard. We had to make new friends and I started kindergarten there. I hated going to school and I had to walk with my brothers. It was a long walk for my little short legs. My mom would pick me up at noon if I made it that long. Sometimes I would just leave after sandbox time and walk home by myself. The teacher would discover me gone and call my mom to be on the lookout for me. It was quite dangerous for me since I had to cross a very busy street. But times were different then. We could run and play all over the neighborhood without anyone worrying. We just had to be home by a certain time or else. We used to play outside with the garden hose and spray each other and run through the wet yard. We threw water on each other with old coffee cans or buckets and once I fell on a can and cut my knee open. I had to go to the hospital to get stitched up. One time I slipped on the basement floor when it was wet and I cut my head on the concrete. Back to the hospital again for more stitches. I had to be held down because I was so afraid of needles. I can remember stepping on some glass and my mom had to hold me down on the bed so she could remove the slivers. That hurt so bad and she made me bite the pillow to keep from screaming.
I had a friend named Debbie who came to play with me. Her brothers were friends with my brothers. They were always getting into trouble. One day they brought home a baby skunk. It smelled so bad and my mom threw a fit. She told them to take it back to the field where they found it. Another time they caught a bunch of snakes and turned them loose in the house. They finally caught most of them and released them outside. Debbie was a little older than me and she was my first introduction to sex. We would play doctor and nurse and she always wanted me to get into the closet with her. I never thought much about my body until she had me take off my clothes and she touched me in my private spots. My mom walked in on her one day and discovered her naughtiness to me and she told her to go home and never come back. I felt so ashamed and knew I had been a part of something very bad. I had to make new friends after that. Sometimes my cousin Ricky would get to come over and we were close to the same age. He was so much fun to play with and I thought he was so cute. When he smiled he had the biggest dimples I'd ever seen. I always wanted to kiss him and he would play hard to get with me and make me chase him. Then he would let me kiss him. He was my uncle's stepson, so we really weren't blood relation. I always thought I would marry him when I grew up.
I was always afraid of the dark. Most nights I would wake up during the night and run and jump in bed with my folks. They grew tired of this since I kicked them in my sleep. They usually carried me back to my bed sometime during the night. One night I awoke and saw a horrible looking man standing beside my bed. He was so scary and ugly looking and I'll never forget the way he was looking at me. I jumped up and ran screaming into my folks bedroom. They told me that there was no one in my room and that I probably had a bad dream. To this very day I can still see that man's face in my mind. I had a professional person tell me that children don't usually remember such vivid dreams all their lives. They tend to forget after awhile. He said that possibly it did happen. I do remember the neighbors talking about a man breaking into homes in our area. I still don't have an answer to whether it happened or not. I was always very bashful and I would cry when men tried to talk to me. I would hang onto my mother's skirt everywhere we went. She didn't have to worry about me getting too far away.
One time when the babysitter was there, my brothers went downstairs to the basement and found a box with samples of wine bottles in it. My dad had received them as a Christmas gift from an employer. My brothers opened them and drank a lot of it and ended up getting very drunk. They sure got in trouble when the folks got home. I bet the sitter got an earful, too. My brothers were so sick for days after that.
My brothers were cub scouts and my mom was the leader. They would meet in the basement for their meetings and learn how to make things. I liked getting to be there and see all the boys and I had a crush on one of the older boys. He would talk to me and pay attention to me. They learned how to tie knots and earn badges to sew on their shirts. I was just a tom-boy and tried to keep up with them. I didn't know how to be ladylike.
Once my brothers were in the kitchen and I always had to be up in there business and see what they were doing. My brother Jerry had something cupped in his hand. He held it out and told me to smell it. So I took a big sniff and inhaled a handful of black pepper. Oh my, did it ever burn. I went to sneezing and my eyes were burning. The boys all started laughing and my mom came running in to see what was going on. After I told her in between sneezes, she held me over the sink and started pouring water in my nose and tried to relieve my agony. They sure got in trouble that day. Another time they were in the kitchen making a chocolate cake and they had mixed the cocoa with water. Dad came into the kitchen and they ask him if he wanted to taste it. He didn't know they hadn't put sugar in it yet. He took a big bite and lo and behold, cocoa water went flying out of his mouth everywhere. They spent another night in their room.
Every May 1st, we always celebrated "May Day". I got to decorate little baskets and put candy or flowers in them. Then we would take them around to all the houses in the neighborhood and leave them on peoples front porches and ring the doorbell, then run and hide. It was so much fun to see their surprised looks when they opened the door and no one was there but a nice gift. We did so many things as kids that no one does today. We had to make fun with what we had. At Christmas we always got together with my grandparents and my aunt and uncle and their kids. We all put up trees and decorated them with glass ornaments and threw tinsel all over them. We would string popcorn and put it on the tree. I can remember some of my first gifts from my family. I always got a baby doll and I really liked my xylophone my aunt gave me. I hated when my brothers would grab my dolls and tease me with them. Most of them ended up having moustaches drawn on them. My dad always had the movie camera rolling during most of our get togethers and outings we went on. We had so much fun watching them on film over and over. When the movie screen was damaged, we just put a sheet on the wall and kept on watching. I was pretty happy back then, except for the teasing from time to time. They were truly just being boys. We played hide n seek, barbecued in the homemade pit Dad had made, went out to drive-in movies for a special treat and enjoyed being with family. My folks would take us to the park to play and there was a big metal statue of a buffalo that I loved to get up on.
On most Sunday mornings, Mom would dress us up in our good clothes and take us to church. Dad never went with us. We always had to sit in the balcony so if my brothers got rowdy, they wouldn't be heard down on the main floor. They would accidentally drop things over the side. I can remember hearing things hit down below and Mom would be furious with them. All in all, I thought we were just a normal family. Dad worked, Mom stayed home, my brothers picked on me and we enjoyed just being kids.
Grandpa's pride and joy was his big garden. I can remember the corn stalks being so tall and they seemed to reach up into the sky. But I was so short that everything was huge to me. I was sort of afraid of my grandpa. He always made a growling noise and tried to grab at me when I walked by him. He was only teasing me, but it scared me anyway. I was so shy that I tended to be more partial to my grandma. She was kind and quiet and oh so loving to me. But she had a way to make you mind, too. She only had to give you that look with her eyes one time to know she meant business. Grandma would sit on her stool in the bedroom and undo her braid, then brush her long hair before she went to bed. She was a quilter, too and would sit for hours in her chair sewing together pieces for her quilts. She also did tatting and embroidery and I never could figure out how she could make all those little stitches in her doilies.
Her mother died when she was young and she never knew who her daddy was. She was what they used to refer to as a "Cabbage patch baby." She went to live with her uncle and they raised her. My grandma was a church goer. They would invite the pastor over for dinner after service on Sunday. She would get the boys to ring a chicken's neck and bring it in to be cooked. My grandparents ran a restaurant in town for years when their kids were young. All the kids had a job to do there. I guess that's where my aunts learned to cook so well. My grandma was a hard working woman. She would work in the cotton fields with my grandpa and the older kids. When she was pregnant, she would work right up until time to deliver, then afterwards she would return right back to the fields. My aunt would take care of the younger children. One of her younger boys died right there in the field after his appendix burst. Doctors were far and few between back then.
My dad's brother and his family lived in the same town. My uncle had a huge garden, too. He worked as a butcher and my aunt ironed clothes for people to bring in extra money. They had three girls and a boy, all younger than I. So when we went to visit them, I always had someone to play with.
I think my dad always yearned to move back to Missouri. The boys were always getting into trouble in the city and Dad wanted a farm of his own. So one day we found out Dad had put the house up for sale. We started packing and a big moving van came and packed our belongings up to make the move to Springfield, Missouri. I think we left a few snakes behind in that house. My brothers said later they turned some loose as a joke for the new owners.
We finally made it to our new home and the van was close behind. Dad had visited the place previously and found a rental house while he looked for some land to buy. I had to meet new friends and begin a new school there. We had to walk to school once again and the boys always managed to try to lose me on the way. I didn't much like my teacher there either. She yelled out commands like we were soldiers or something. I tried to go up to her desk one day to tell her I needed to go to the bathroom and she swung a big book around and hit my bottom with it and told me to sit down. I think I wet my pants that day. I hated her for embarrassing me. One boy used to chase me around on the playground. I didn't like him so I always tried to make him mad so he would leave me alone. My brothers told me that the principal had a special room for bad kids. He had a giant board that he would whip kids with if they got in trouble. So I was always trying to be good so I would never have to go to that room. Some kids said they just made that up, but I didn't want to take that chance.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from A Lifetime of Regretsby C.J. Rowley Copyright © 2011 by C.J. Rowley. Excerpted by permission of AuthorHouse. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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