Confessions
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Some say
confession is good for the soul, and growing up Catholic, I’m a believer. Here
is something I seldom talk about. First, though, the catalyst.
For the past
week, on my sunrise walk with Lola, I’ve been singing. Here is what you need to
understand. I don't sing. Ever.
I love
music. Songs weave through my days, mostly in my head. Silently. I don’t allow
the songs to exit my mouth. Unlike bad words which squeak through frequently
and often appropriately. My fear of being caught singing is more than any fear
of ugly language.
This fear
began at an early age. It started with my Grandma. In her defense, she had no
notion of the damage she was doing. “Don’t sing. You are just like your
mother.”
My mother
left home for the State Hospital when I was four. That was 1949. State
Hospitals in any state were not a nice place to be in those days.
I suspect
everybody watched me like a hawk, looking for signs. I lived with that fear. My
mother never left State Care. A counselor whom I was seeing in the 80s
explained to me that if I were like my mother, it would have shown up in early
days.
You cannot
imagine the freedom, the relief, the right to live given to me by that lovely
woman that day.
I have my
own problems, of course, my own ways of going do-lally. Most of them quite fun.
Back to
singing. Grade school, music class. “Honey, maybe you should just mouth the
words,” as the teacher stood me in the back row where I wouldn’t be noticed. I
noticed. I also noticed the pretty blonde girls with curly hair and starched
store-bought dresses in the front row. I have no defense for that.
High school
choir in Church. I was in the choir loft because I was expected to be. Praying
that nobody could hear me as I sang as quietly as possible. One day somebody in
the congregation told me, “I heard you singing this morning and your voice is
so lovely.”
It wasn’t
me. It was Janet. Janet really did have a lovely voice. I don’t remember my
reply. I remember the shame.
I sang to my
babies. Always. Every day. They didn’t mind. We sang together. Until a certain
age.
This singing
to the sunrise is a strange anomaly. The first three days it was, “What the
world needs now, is love, sweet love.” I knew most of the words.
Following
mornings brought forth “Let there be peace on earth,” and we all know the words
to that catchy tune.
“Look for
the bare necessities, the simple bare necessities,” from “Jungle Book” came
next. “Forget about your worries and your strife. The bare necessities of life
will come to you.” Words of wisdom from a round bear. This song always makes me
want to sing. And dance. Following that brown bear’s jiggling bottom through
the jungle, picking bananas.
Today was
Cat Steven’s “Morning has broken, like the first morning.” I love that song.
“Blackbird has spoken . . .”
Nobody is up
and about when Lola and I walk the sun up through the trees. Nobody can hear
me. Well, Lola, but like my babies, she doesn’t care. She thinks it is normal. I
am glad for the songs and for the singing.
I don’t want
you to think I have a sudden case of holy-tosis. I’m still the same petty,
critical, flawed old woman.
I’m probably
a lot like my Mother. I’d like to think so.
In a group
situation, should I ever find myself in such, I promise to stand in back and
mouth the words.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
How can it
be second week of Feb already gone?
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