The little I know of Vovó’s early
life is largely rumor and embellishment, stories retold and
misremembered. Vovó Flora grew up poor. That much is certain. She
was poor and deeply ashamed of it. When times were especially tough
she was sent to beg off of relatives who gave charity along with an
earful about the shameful and wretched state of their family. She
started working at 15 as a housekeeper for a family at the church. I
can imagine the bitterness of witnessing the inner lives of “better”
people, seeing they are no different from anyone except in how they
are treated and how badly they are allowed to treat the people
beneath them. I see a resolve growing inside of Vovó Flora, that she
would not remain poor, that she would rise above it and never look
back. It’s exactly what she did. She moved to Lisbon, worked and
married, came to America and continued working until the family had a
house and a respectable middle class life.
A lifetime later, our little
cartoon-print sleeping bags were enough to trigger her old fears. It
didn’t matter that we were on vacation at a cabin in Tahoe, which
in California in the 1980s was almost shorthand for being well-off.
It didn’t matter that no one would see us or know that we were
sleeping on the floor. She knew, and could not allow it. I didn’t
understand. I was a sheltered kid with no notions of struggle and
hardship. Only now do I see how her whole life was a fight against
the shame of being poor. She could not have overcome her past without
an intense vigilance against any association with poverty. And she
remained on guard even in her comfortable modern American life. What
I take for granted she feared could be lost at any moment. That her
vigilance seemed so absurd to her grandchildren is a testament to how
far she had come from her poor childhood. To me she just seemed like
a fussy old killjoy. But from nothing, she built and protected the
very foundation for our lives. Those trips to Lake Tahoe, the
sleeping bags we owned but never used, our spoiled whining about
being stuck in the stupid arcade while she sat trying her luck at the
slot machines, all part of her legacy.
4 comments:
That pic of you look like a slightly older Lucas in a wig. :)
I wish I knew more about my family. The closest I really get is old photos, of which we have a ton.
wat fck "unknown"? Heh. That was Cristina. Dude, make it so anyone can comment. :)
I was going to comment on that too! You look just like Lucas in a wig :)
It should be prompting you for a name/email or some kind of Google account or OpenID. You are slipping in somehow.
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