Today is the ninth anniversary of my grandfather’s death.
Reggie was my
mother’s father, but he was more than a grandfather to me. I am not sure quite
how to describe our relationship: if I say he was my second father, it sounds
disrespectful to my stepfather, but in all honesty he was the most consistent
father relationship I had in my life. My mother separated from my biological
father, George, when I was only 11 months old, and he had very little to do
with me or my sister from then on.
But Reggie is a
big part of my memory bank. My mother was quite young when she married and had
children; she was only 22, with two kids, when she left my dad. We moved in
with my grandparents for a while, a pattern which continued throughout my life.
I honestly can’t remember how many times we moved in and out of their house,
but the precedent was so firmly established that after one particularly nasty
fight with my stepfather when I was away at college, my sister moved in with my
grandparents permanently. At any rate, even when we weren’t living there, we
were at my grandparents’ house every weekend. It was clean, and quiet, and the
fridge was full, and hugs were plentiful.
I remember
helping Reggie rake leaves, shovel snow, wash the car. He made snowmen with us
in the backyard. He took us around the neighborhood and hovered at the ends of driveways while we trick or treated. He taught me how to ride a bike. He taught me how to drive a
car. He insisted we go to summer camp. He paid for braces, and bikes, and ice
skates, and God knows how many other things. When he peeled an orange, he would
peel it in one glorious long peel and then cut teeth into it with a paring
knife. He would then put the orange teeth into his mouth, bare his teeth in a
horrible grin and chase us shrieking through the house.
He was very
reserved but then would turn unexpectedly goofy; he liked to joke a lot. While
he was nowhere near as demonstrative as my grandmother, who was very loud in
her loving of us, we never held back with him. My sister and I would fling
ourselves at him and squeeze him with our skinny little arms and screech how
much we loved him until he finally said, “Ditto,” laughing almost bashfully at
letting us pull it out of him.
Reggie was the
grandson of slaves, and impressed upon me early the importance of education and
of getting good grades, of working hard and doing the right thing. He graduated
from college during the Depression, and recounted how there were no jobs back
then, especially if you were a black man. He went back to school and got a
Master’s in Education because he wanted to be a teacher. He served in the Navy
in World War II, and as a light-skinned black man was accidentally assigned to
a white unit. In retelling the story, he said he believed they thought he was
Italian, but as the military was still segregated, as soon as it was discovered
he was summarily reassigned to the “Negro” unit. As he described it, it was a
humiliating experience.
He met my
grandmother on shore leave in Virginia in 1944. She said he was “soooooooooooo
handsome” she couldn’t even understand why he was talking to her (which is
ridiculous, because she was gorgeous). “In that uniform, oh! He was soooooooo
handsome,” and of course he was. (Throughout my childhood, he was always
beautifully groomed and dapper, even in his pajamas.) They were married in 1945
and settled in his hometown, Boston; and welcomed their first and only child,
Cynthia, in 1947. He worked for the government for 40 years, retiring at 70.
He had very high
expectations of me and would examine each report card with care. He was always
trying to teach me something, and those lessons stuck, but I would say the
greatest lesson was his example. He was hard working and thrifty, and he took
care of everything he loved. He was fiercely proud of his lawn – having not
been able to afford a house until he was in his 50s, he was extremely house
proud. He was financially savvy but cautious. He did not live beyond his means,
he chose his words and his friends carefully, and he always put family
first.
When he was
alive, life made sense. And after he passed, the family was flung into chaos.
All along, I believed my grandmother was the rock, the hub around which we all
revolved – but after Reggie died, I realized that the hub was the two of them
working in tandem, as a team. She was devastated when he died – we had to take
her to the funeral in a wheelchair, she was that overcome – and honestly never
recovered.
I really miss him
today. I’ve had a lump in my throat all day. I hope he and my grandma are
together, cracking jokes and sitting comfortably side by side, reading the
paper or watching baseball. I hope he occasionally peeks down here and smiles at what he sees.
Some of us have great runways already built for us. If you have one, take off! But if you don’t have one, realize it is your responsibility to grab a shovel and build one for yourself and for those who will follow after you.
- Amelia Earhart
2 comments:
Oh, my. What a wonderful, loving tribute to a great man. Thank you for sharing that, Lisa. You made my evening. I'm sure Reggie's watching over you and everyone you love.
And yes, your grandmother was right. He's a VERY handsome man.
Thanks, Bridget. I was really missing him this week and hoping I am living up to his standards (! yes, even at age 44). I thought this was the best way to process that.
He is so young and cute in this photo - I really love it!
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