Pearls and Knots: Dancing on a String from the Mississippi to Lake Michigan
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About this ebook
Pearls and Knots is a grandmother’s story about her family, her life’s magical moments, and her never-too-late writing journey. Sometimes gripping, sometimes lyrical, always current and humorous, Sarah Schwarcz’s tales will hook your imagination and heart. With one foot in the real world and one foot i
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Pearls and Knots - Sarah Ray Schwarcz
Introduction
A Fish Out of Water
Watch it! Keep your line tight. There! You’ve got it. Hold on. I’ll get the net. Don’t lose ‘er," my life’s Muse shouted, as our boat rocked along on the Mississippi River.
He lunged for the crumpled net waiting by the tackle-box, and held it straight out, just as I reeled the line in quickly, swinging the fish up and over the side of the boat. Mine was a deft maneuver for someone who had never fished before. Yet his net’s too-narrow aim missed the shimmering walleye. It landed on the deck, flipping and flopping in its death duel with time.
Fishing? Of course not.
Just dancing with a metaphor of my later-life efforts to capture the images, memories and meanings of long-gone moments. I remember the feelings easily. Yet the details slip through the wide-open mesh weave of my writer’s net. They taunt me with truth and understanding, staunchly measured against my frequent fog and my questions. Those details escape just a few inches from reach, as they slither over my boat’s rail, diving deep into the wide, wide river.
I can hear laughter and a sometime guffaw while they mark their Ha-Ha, I Win!
high-point scores on my boat’s outer hull. Then they swim like crazy downstream to writers from Missouri, who are far more practiced in capture and release. They seek authors whose syntax and grammar and lyricism easily synchronize in grand symphonies to tell tales that cleverly strum words of gold, which only reflect in a few muted sunsets glancing off my shoulder.
A useless exercise …
one might say.
But that is not the one I will hear. I choose to listen to the melody of a childlike believer, who knows not the difference between fiction and non, and willingly plays in the sandbox until well after dark, long after the supper bell rings.
Dubuque Moments
YOU KNOW HOW YOUR HOMETOWN always seemed fair-to-middling? Just not the place you would have chosen had anyone bothered to ask you where you’d prefer to grow up. At a certain stage in your life, usually the teen years, it’s the place you can’t wait to escape. The familiarity, the authority and the rules seem to smother you.
Then one day you reach that magical age of awareness. You look back through today’s glasses. You realize your hometown, with its friends and lessons, was your very own Goldilocks and the Three Bears right size, on that awesome hill above the perfect river, with the bearable temperatures—most days. If you ever lived in Dubuque, you know many of those days were frigid or mercilessly muggy.
Perhaps for some of us, understanding and acceptance never arrive. For me, I think that awareness lived in my head from the moment I left town to attend college. Thereafter, life’s busy-ness happened and I returned only for short visits. Absence definitely made my heart grow fonder very early on.
Dubuque roads and sidewalks formed concrete ups and downs—straight ups and very sharp downs. Sliding on clumsy boots down those hills, from home to town, to shop in winter when I was younger, followed by my steady toe on the brakes—except for that one time—on those January hills, once I learned to drive.
I remember trying to taste each individual snowflake as it feathered upon my nose, melting quickly to a brief dart of cold delight on my tongue. High snow slushing over my rubber galoshes which I had been forced to wear that morning, by a protective mother who always won the arguments. There were strong rules-and-views parents back then, trying to squish children into seen, not heard, roles. Some of us resisted, but we learned to pick our battles.
Those were the days of fathers. Fathers had not become ‘dads’ yet. They did not seek to be friends with their kids. My father left the house for work by six each morning, six days a week, and returned after ten o’clock most evenings. That didn’t leave much time for bonding. Maintaining a structural hierarchy in the family was the result of the 1940s and 1950s disciplinary tactics to raise ‘good’ children. Spoiling was to be avoided at all costs. Yet I don’t remember a single time when my father disciplined me. He didn’t have to. I carefully avoided crossing any line which would require his participation. Dad was much more involved with the discipline of my two older brothers. I never ‘saw’ that discipline—but I know it was there. Individual family member privacy was respected in all interactions within the family. High expectations of appropriate behavior caused a high percentage of compliance.
Memory Bytes
Tiny flashes of memories and a precious few keepsakes are all that remain of those early Dubuque years—my green no-speed bicycle, the four-drawer pine dresser given to me by my brothers, my child-size table, Mom’s pearls and a few worn jewelry pieces that won’t be parted with. Watching my older brother Chuck build his house, helping brush-stain its cedar boards. Fishing the Mississippi while watching the barges drift along with their goods, seeming to move at a luxurious turtle pace, in extreme contrast to cars whizzing by overhead on the Julien Dubuque Bridge to East Dubuque, Illinois. The eight-car pileup on that same dead-fishfly-littered bridge the summer I was nineteen, their slippery winged carcasses forming a treacherous surface as dangerous as our Dubuque snow.
Driving in winters, through that slick frostbite snow over shiny ice-covered roads, with bulky metal chains on our tires, up and down the steep Dubuque inclines. Dumping bushels of our fallen apples over the fence across the street on Fremont, for the farmer’s smelly wet-wooled sheep, which had not yet been displaced by urban progress. Long, lazy Canasta-hand summers after all our chores were finished.
Sneaking in a quick Thanksgiving Day driving lesson with my patient brother, Chuck. We were on an errand to pick up Mom’s forgotten fruit salad—a salad that promptly flew off the front seat as I hit the curb, having turned the steering wheel too timidly. We salvaged the gloppy pieces that hadn’t touched the floor very long and arranged them back in the bowl with great care, laughing all the while.
Each fall, I raked leaf-house designs in our large fruit tree yard, creating outlines of rooms to play in. Toasty smells of burning leaves. Those leaves went up in smoke in minutes, but stayed in my mind for a lifetime. Some memory shots I see as clearly now as back in that 1950s day. I still envision my dad’s twelve-to-sixteen-hour workdays at the Coca-Cola plant, sending glass-bottle-packed trucks out on the Iowa, Illinois, and Wisconsin roads, then shepherding them back through the White Street plant garage doors well after dark.
Dad shoveled coal into our home furnace. He and my two brothers, Chuck and Jim, changed storm windows each spring and fall, back when men and women’s chores were sharply defined and separate. Only brave ‘advance runners’ crossed that line, raising eyebrows along the way.
Mom lived in the kitchen or in the basement most days, running endless loads of laundry through the hand-turned wringer, prior to hanging them on outdoor clothes lines. Dryer sheets were not needed. Nothing smelled as sweet as fresh air attached to our clothes. I remember Mom preparing fruit salad with gooey globs of mayonnaise, tipping healthy fare over the border of decent diet sense. Isn’t it amazing that back then mayonnaise seemed to be a food staple, akin to milk and bread, in our house with its limited steak meals. No aroma surpassed the delicate smell of my mom’s homemade caramel pecan rolls, and pungent sniffs of overdone, peppered meats. Meat that was gourmet rare in those days meant that a mom didn’t cook it long enough. It always went back to the kitchen for an added sear to change its color from danger-red to a safe coal-gray.
An outstanding southern baker, Mom could never train me in her magic. A ‘pinch of this’ and ‘add enough flour to make a stiff dough’ were too imprecise for me. The one recipe I insisted she give me in writing was for her banana bread—a card I treasure, edges worn and stained with batter dribbles over these many years. As I glance at it today, I smile. True to my memory—it includes all the ingredients except the flour.
We relaxed on prickly plush dust-catcher furniture that matched our heavy chenille robes and fuzzy slippers, which in turn matched the gently worn, soft yellow or pink-striped chenille bedspreads.
Some of the stories were harder to write, took longer to simmer, and involved greater longing for loved ones no longer with me. I was overwhelmed by how to pair my sketchy memories with fact, since fact is often only a ragged, yellow-edged recall, with impressions fading more each day.
When these memories come together, they approach fiction. Yet fiction writers have control of the timing and the results, and the characters and their motivations. The memoirist must rely on the ‘feels’ of the moments and events, as much as on the truths. Most of us didn’t take notes. Shucks!
I was told a brother tossed into the Mississippi River learned quickly to swim. As a girl of the time, my lessons were subtle, disguised as truths unwavering. Only quiet questions were permitted in those days. Prim and proper, seen and not heard topped a girl’s behavior chart. That imaginary chart floated in my mind, never written down or posted, yet waving ever strong.
We go through our lives and are bombarded with questions framed as choices, which lead to decisions. Just like those dreaded school tests, we must