memories, nostalgia, remembering, Uncategorized

Thanksgiving

I love the holiday season, which begins with Thanksgiving Day. When I was pastor in downtown Oakland, the congregation marked the day of thanks by offering a wonderful, complete Thanksgiving Dinner to anyone in the community who wanted to join. Homeless folks, people who did not speak English, people without family or even friends, joined the day’s gathering to sit at a table and to be served by other grateful folks. For many years, that tradition became part of my personal Thanksgiving, as I looked out at the gathered people and said to myself, again and again: “these are my people!”

And Jeff and I mark the holiday every year now by arriving at Norman and Cheryl’s cottage on a hill in San Francisco, climbing the narrow stairs to the top of a hill, our arms filled with pies – our contribution! – and to sit at the long, narrow table filled with an assortment of Bahlert-related people every year. As the day progresses and the dusk and darkness come, families with little ones begin to gather their belongings and leave, with much ado. The tiny kitchen which produced the feast we’d all enjoyed is full of helpers bumping into each other, cleaning up, continuing the dinner-time conversation. And then – just like that! – we all descend the steps and walk to our cars on the quiet streets and drive home, mentioning to one another moments from the day, who had grown, who talked to who, how much older everyone is (except for us, of course!), and probably feeling a bit of sadness that another holiday has passed.

In the Midwest, the shorter days and long evening of dark and cold have begun by this time of year. There’s a sense of “cocooning” that we don’t know in the same way here in California. And missing now, also, is the childhood sense of a quiet and light filled season, beginning with Thanksgiving, that won’t end until after Epiphany, in January.

My mother honored the season of holidays each year by hosting Thanksgiving Dinner at our upper flat, and by creating for my sister Suzie and me a holiday tradition. In the 50’s and 60’s (of the last century), the holiday season did not officially begin until Thanksgiving. On the day after Thanksgiving, my mother and Suzie and I took the 23 bus from the North Side to downtown Milwaukee, now mysteriously decorated with lights and ribbons along Wisconsin Avenue, still a booming shopping district at the time.

We’d step off the bus at 3rd and Wisconsin to walk through the Boston Store, which anchored the downtown at that time. My mother held tightly to each one of us as we walked through the crowded store, the lights and music having followed us from the street into the store.

Then, we’d walk, first to the Wisconsin Electric Company, and then to the Gas Company, to take in the cookie displays at each one. My mother made sure that at each place, she was provided with 3 copies of the new cookie book published by each company each year. She loved to try new recipes, and she loved to re-create those that had been her favorites – or dad’s favorite, or mine, or Suzie’s. Unknown to me, she wrote notes as she baked: “a favorite,” “takes a bit less powdered sugar than called for,” “makes a big batch!”

I didn’t discover the notes until years later, when I had my own apartment in Green Bay, and when Mom presented me with the collection of cookbooks she’d saved, just for me.

I’m not a great baker, although the family in San Francisco allows me to bring pies as my contribution to Thanksgiving. My mother loved to bake: “that’s the fun of it,” she’d say. And I expect she envisioned some sort of future for me and for my sister, based on her own life. Neither of us grew to have quite that future, I expect; it was her dream for us, regardless. The year after I retired, I baked a few batches of cookies, looking for a new way to fashion my life after an adulthood of work, often in a “man’s world.” That’s the year I reached high onto the kitchen shelf reserved for our cookbooks, and retrieved the cookbooks Mom had saved so carefully for me. And that’s when I saw her notes, in her particular hand-writing, written with me in mind, written with the relationship between the two of us holding us together.

Uncategorized

Just a moment…

I shop locally at a big supermarket. Over the years, I’ve come to know who is a “regular” on staff. A favorite checker is Terri, who cheerfully greets each customer. She’s not only my favorite – lots of folks line up to go through her lane, passing up the Self Check area for a kind exchange. Terri will retire next year – and we’ll miss her.

The large supermarket chain hires “extras,” often developmentally disabled young people who stock shelves, bag groceries, and have a look out for stray shopping carts in the large parking lot. Over the years, I’ve come to recognize these workers, also, watching them grow in confidence, watching them exchange a word with the checker. Terri is friendly to them all.

Most of the time, these young people don’t look at me – at all. I am, after all, a white woman with white hair – old, old, old. “What could we have in common?” – they might think. Or rather: “what should I say?” They are comfortable with the checkers, though, carrying on quiet conversations with one another as they work. And although I like to be able to carry my groceries to the car without help, these day the rampant thefts in the city are a reminder to me to ask one of the young people to accompany me to my car. And when I shopped for more than I intended to buy that day last week – certainly more than my short shopping list! – I asked the tall young man I’d noticed many times before standing at the end of the checking line to walk with me to my car.

He walked slowly, and I walked beside him as he pushed the cart, silent. From time to time, I’d make a comment, or ask a question: “you’ve worked here a long time, haven’t you?” His answer: “yes.” We continued to walk in silence. As we neared my car, I popped the trunk before we arrived, and he and I together transferred the bags of groceries from the cart into the trunk.

As he turned away to walk back to the store with the cart, I said: “see you soon!” At that, he turned to me and asked: “when?” – I stopped short, then. “I’m not sure,” I said. He walked away.

I smiled as I walked to the driver’s side door and started the car. I smiled later when I told Jeff about the encounter. I smiled all day as I thought about that tall, hard-working, earnest young man. His presence was a gift in a city that is often unfriendly.

A gift in my day.

Just a moment. Photo by Mary Elyn Bahlert, 2022

memories, remembering, Uncategorized

“Fun, isn’t it, honey?!”

I came up with a nickname for my Dad during my high school years. I began by calling him, “FRB,” his initials. And then the nickname stuck, as others in my family began to call him FRB.

FRB loved his family, loved his work, and FRB loved “I Love Lucy.” Every week, we all watched the episodes – repeats, after the late 1950’s – on our little tv screen in the living room, FRB’s comfy chair directly across from the screen. FRB would laugh and laugh at the ridiculous and wonderful scenes of Lucy and her cohorts – all over-the-top silly folks. And vivid in my mind in those moments, FRB would turn to one of us – Suzie, Mom, or me – from time to time as he exploded again with laughter at scenes he’d seen before, and, his eyes sparkling, say: “Fun, isn’t it, honey?”

Over the years, I saw FRB angry, I saw him enjoying life, I saw him have fun, I saw him being nervous and serious, and I saw his eyes – one blue, one brown – sparkle as he looked at one of us. And I saw him cry, as he realized that the cancer he’d been diagnosed with at 65 had returned in his early 70’s, and as he realized that the cancer would take his simple, kind, and quiet life.

I’m grateful. When I think about my own life, and as my world has expanded to be able to get intimate views into the lives of many, many other folks, I know that I was raised in love. For as many things I did not receive, I received love – not always unconditional, but a good dose of love.

With a dose of fun.

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a man and his bike

After he retired, my father, Frank Bahlert, dreamt about his work in the steel factory for a long time. After he retired, he spent part of each day reading. And in those years, before his death from colon cancer in 1986, he enjoyed time with my mother. He loved to talk, and she was a listener. So in its own way, it worked.

When the weather is warm in Wisconsin, the people are outside! Long, cold, grey winters give way to a late spring and then hot, humid summer days, the humidity often broken by a thunderstorm. The best time to be out on those hot, humid days is early in the morning. And so, Mom and Dad would go out for a walk and ride in the mornings. Mom would walk, and Dad would ride his bicycle. “He follows me everywhere,” she joked at one point.

Dad had fun in retirement. One summer day in August, when the Wisconsin State Fair was on in West Allis, a suburb to the south of the city, Mom and Dad went to the Fair on Senior Citizens’ Day. They enjoyed the free entry to the Fair that day, and I can picture them, eating fresh-made cream-puffs – a Wisconsin State Fair specialty – skirting the midway to look at the animals in the rows of barns, talking to the children from towns and country-side outside the city who lived with their animals in the stalls during Fair Week. On Senior Citizen Day during Fair week in the late 70’s, the “Who’s Legs Are the Best?” contest was held at State Fair. Retired Men stood behind a curtain, their legs lined up in a row.

When I came home from work that day, I opened the evening paper, “The Milwaukee Journal”. Centered on the front page was a photo of 5 pairs of legs – men’s legs – bare below their bermuda shorts, in white socks and black shoes. The headline: “Whose Legs Win the Best Legs Contest?”

I took one look at that line of legs and saw Dad’s! He hadn’t won the contest – who cares? – but he’d had a bit of fun that day. I called my parents’ number immediately, and we had a good laugh together, the kind of fun Dad liked to have.

***

A few years later, Dad would lie in St. Joseph’s Hospital, Milwaukee, for many weeks, dying of the cancer that had struck him ten years earlier. He was grateful for those years, years he hadn’t expected after the heart attack and cancer diagnosis. But one day when I visited him that early spring of 1986, he looked at me, grief in his eyes. “I wish I could be out riding my bike,” he said.

Indeed.

Mom and Dad, circa 1980

memories, nostalgia, remembering, Uncategorized

Seems like home to me…

“Feels like home to me
Feels like home to me
Feels like I’m all the way back where I belong…” words & music, Randy Newman

Were someone to ask me the question: “where’s home?” I would say, Milwaukee, the city where I was born, went to school, and where I lived until I was in my early thirties. I suppose in a way, Milwaukee is home to me. But another place holds my heart: Door County, Wisconsin, 200 miles north of Milwaukee, the peninsula between Lake Michigan to the East and Green Bay to the West.

My father, born in Upper Michigan, grew up in Sister Bay, a village on the Green Bay Shore of Door County, the place where his mother had been born – though several of her older siblings had been born in German speaking Prussia, now Poland. And because Dad had his roots in Door County, when he had vacation weeks from the steel factory in Milwaukee, where he had gone to find work after the Depression, and during the War Years, we traveled to Door County. And I expect my love for that place settled in me during those early years.

In my early twenties, I was assigned to Green Bay, Wisconsin, in my first career as a Claims Representative for the Social Security Administration. Brown County was a short drive north to Door County, and I grew to travel that highway north many times. Sometimes I would stay with one of my beloved aunts and uncles. Sometimes, over the years, I’d rent a small cabin – one right on the shore of Lake Michigan, north of Baileys Harbor – to spend a few quiet days alone. Every time, I promised myself I would return.

And I’ve kept that promise, even as Door County has changed over the years to become a popular, populated place of exodus for folks from all over the Midwest, in particular Chicago. I’ve kept that promise – as I moved from the Midwest to live most of my life in the Bay Area on the West Coast.

I know the “old” places and I know the roads that lead through the center of the Peninsula, with its rolling hills and orchards – luscious green in the summer – where not many tourists drive during their few days in Door County. I remember the places where members of my extended family lived, and as I drive past those places now, I can see us gathered on the lawn, talking, laughing, playing.

Because so many of the people I have loved my whole life are gone now, I use some of my time in “the Door” to drive the cemeteries, to walk again among the graves to find the names of those I loved – and love.

There is a love of place. I know that love of place. As I write this now, a gentle kind of homesickness comes to me. In my mind – and in my heart – it’s been too long since I’ve driven the roads of my beloved place. My own longing brings to mind my ancestors, those who traveled so far from their beloved homelands to come to a new country, a place where they were strangers with a strange language, a place where they could only remember, but never see again, their true home. In my life of privilege and these days of fast transport, my longing can be satisfied again. Some day – soon, I hope! – I’ll drive those roads again.

Johnson Homestead marker – Gills Rock, Wisconsin, photo by Mary Elyn Bahlert, 2021