Saturday, December 31, 2011

As odd as it sounds, I want to say "Thank you, Polio."




PART ONE


Katrine Kleihauer met Ray Haurin when she was at UCLA --at the same time as Jackie Robinson.  Ray was not a student.  I think they met at a dance class, but I can’t quite remember.  They fell in love, he proposed and she accepted. But she agreed with the stipulation that she would graduate and get two years of teaching experience under her belt first.  Completely smitten,  Ray could do nothing but wait.  I always thought this decision shows how practical my mother was, and it turned out to be one of the best decisions she made.

My grandfather was less than thrilled that his future son-in-law was not a college graduate. He, himself, had a Doctorate of Divinity and his daughter’s grandfather had been a college president.  I spite of this he performed their marriage on the flagstone patio of his house near Beverly Hills.

Ray was the only child of a widow who had epilepsy and lived in a Seventh-day Adventist home in Azusa. Azusa was about an hour outside of Los Angeles and was made famous by THE JACK BENNY SHOW: "Train leaving on Track 5 for Anaheim, Azusa and Cuuuu-ca-mon-gaaa!"

Ray supported his mother and was a responsible son who got life insurance for both his mother and his new wife. Not wanting to risk passing epilepsy to any of his children, he had a vasectomy.  So two very practical people were now happily wed.

That was until December 7, 1941.

When Pearl Harbor was bombed, Franklin Roosevelt declared war the next day and immortalized the “day that would live in infamy.” Things quickly began to change.  Ray joined the U.S. Navy, as did my mother’s brother. Katrine and my aunt moved in with each other to save money.  My mother continued to teach.

My uncle, as an officer, had the unlikely posting of Arizona.  Ray was sent to Long Beach, California.  It was there that he caught polio and died within a week.  He was buried with full military honors and my mother kept the flag that draped his coffin until she died.  It is now in my attic from which I can see Pearl Harbor. I can’t bear to throw it away and my sister does not want it.

PART TWO


Katrine was devastated, but ever practical, she took Ray’s insurance money and bought a two bedroom, one bathroom home on a hill in the Silver Lake neighborhood of Los Angeles.  She paid $10,000 cash for the house. 3018 Angus Street was a rather plain house that was built in 1939 and today is worth well over $700,000. Sometimes she rented out the extra bedroom to unmarried teachers or their equally unmarried sisters.

Silver Lake was, and is, an eclectic neighborhood with a hodge-podge of architectural styles, races and, today, sexualities. There are homes designed by Richard Neutra and a nearby Frank Lloyd Wright.  Silver Lake was where Anais Nin lived with her last and very youngest lover who would become my science teacher in junior high school.  It was friendly and crime-free and a much better bet than the Quonset huts and Levittown cookie cutter homes that many G.I.s were returning to.

Once the war was over and she got used to being an independent widow, she decided to take a trip to the place she had most wanted to visit:  Alaska.  My uncle who had survived the war unscathed, the biggest threat being rattlesnakes and heat stroke, gave her some advice.

“Katrine, if you want to meet a man, don’t travel with a girlfriend; travel alone.”  And she took his advice.

PART THREE



Katrine Kleihauer Haurin headed north.  By the time she was in Anchorage, she sat on a bus waiting for it to leave the station.  A man came and sat next to her. He had wavy hair and a pencil moustache, which was the style of the time.  He pulled out a packet of gum and offered her a piece. I prefer to think it was either Juicy Fruit or Doublemint. He offered her a hell of a lot more than that., as well  He announced right then and there that he was going to marry her. He broke the date he already had for that night, and my mother became his unofficial “intended.”

There were several bumps in the road—one being that he was married to a woman in Detroit who had ditched him for someone in a cute uniform.  He had traveled to Alaska to start a new life without ever bothering to get divorced.  Other slight bumps were the religion in which he was raised, the fact that he was not a college grad (again!) and that he was fifteen years older than my mother. When he promised to go to Michigan to get a divorce, Katrine worried greatly that she would never see him again.

Then on Thanksgiving Day he showed up at Angus Street.  My mother, I believe, was entertaining a second tier man.  The man left quickly  and my mother and father were soon back on my grandfather’s flagstone patio.  My mother wore a modest white dress with eyelets and carried a small bouquet of Bachelor Buttons and daisies.  My father wore a broad, rather gaudy tie and a suit with wide lapels.

Once again, my grandfather was not overly pleased with my mother’s choice.  A man with little education, raised a Mormon and fifteen years older to boot.  My father was actually closer in age to my grandfather than he was to my mother.  But that was all snobbism.  My father was funny, kind, handsome in the look of the day, a bit shy sometimes and witty in a unique way.  He had the look of a Hollywood star when he was young and my mother was charmed. Katrine Kleihauer Haurin became Katrine Kleihauer Haurin Smithson.



Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Angels and Alpha-bits



While my mother was in the hospital for a month or more, my father, sister and I were invited by well-meaning friends and neighbors to dinner.  An ambulance on Angus Street was unheard of, and everyone seemed to know that my mother was ill and that my father had the two small girls to handle on his own.

Directly next door were a childless couple named Mac and Doris.  He owned some sort of business and she was his secretary. They had a poodle named Tammy and cocker spaniel named Shane. Movies were obviously a big source of dog names for them. I loved the cocker spaniel and my sister went for the poodle

Mac may have had a stroke, because he could not use one of his arms and walked with a limp. Or maybe he’d been injured in the war.  No one talked about it. They smoked and drank and owned a yacht that was kept at the Balboa Yacht Basin. To me they were rather glamorous.

Our dinner with them was at once odd and comfortable.  We usually only saw Mac and Doris for a party of some sort and their annual New Year’s Eve party.  Doris’ elderly parents always came and stayed in the chilly apartment they had on their lower floor.  There would be kids, Doris’s sister trying to dance the Twist and platters of walnuts with nutcrackers. People smoked cigarettes and cigars and drank cocktails.  Not like at my house where cranberry juice was the holiday libation.

The night they had us for dinner, a school night, Doris served us home made chicken noodle soup, which in itself was a novelty. But it was the big, black peppercorns floating amid the wide noodles that grabbed my attention.  I had never before seen a whole peppercorn and, oblivious to the fact that I was breathing in plenty of second hand smoke, I really enjoyed that soup.

The invitations for dinners started pouring in.  Dad knew we had to bring a gift to each and came up with a typical Al Smithson solution.  He bought pre-made angel food cakes, which we “frosted” with whipped cream.  Then we opened boxes of Alpha-bits cereal—a new item on the market—from which we picked out the sticky letters to spell THANK YOU and the names of that particular evening’s host and hostess set gently on to the top of the cakes.  The three of us got pretty good at the routine of decorating our cakes and thought we were pretty slick.

Monday, December 26, 2011

The Choice


 I don’t have many regrets in life, I am happy to say.  But a big one happened when I was in the fourth grade. I still feel guilty about it.

My mother was seriously ill and in the hospital.  She had pinprick-sized holes throughout her stomach and she was bleeding.  She had had major surgery at Ross Loos Medical Center.  Dr. Loos, himself, and the brother of writer and wit Anita Loos who penned GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES, preformed the intricate stomach procedure.  Friends, family and even our Mobile gas station attendant donated blood.

My mother lay in Good Samaritan Hospital, the same in which I was born. The same one in which Robert Kennedy died.  She had tubes in her nose and IV’s in her arms.  Above her bed the Catholic hospital had placed a very graphic statue of Christ slumped on the cross-, oozing blood from hands and feet.  It was not a pleasant place to visit.  The nuns, the smells, the hushed tones, the visiting priest—and we were definitely NOT Catholic—were not things I felt comfortable with.


One day during my mother’s time in the hospital, I received an exciting invitation.  Kayla A. was a member of my Brownie troop who had moved to The Valley.  She was inviting the entire troop to her home—with a swimming pool—for an after school birthday party.

I had a choice:  visit my mother or go to the party. This was the first time in my life I had a serious dilemma.  And every time I see, read or hear the word “dilemma” I think of the choice I made.

 I went to the party at Kayla A’s. and don’t remember a thing about it.  I do remember that I let my mother down. 

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Death, Illness and the Good Hostess




The year that my mother went back to work was a difficult one.  I was just starting fourth grade; my sister was in second. We still had our hair braided or pony-tailed in front of the pink bathroom’s large mirror every morning; our lunches were still made the night before and stored in the fridge in colorful paper sacks that sometimes had love notes tucked between the waxed-papered tuna sandwiches, cherry tomatoes and much welcomed the new invention of “Cheese n Crackers.” We still had a sit-down breakfast at the dining table that, too, was set the night before.  I had no idea at the time how stressful this must have been for my mother. She wanted to be the perfect music teacher for the Burbank School District, perfect cook, perfect homemaker, perfect wife and perfect mother.  People didn’t talk about stress in the 1950’s.

These were not the days of driving with your kids to a McDonald’s drive-thru and ordering a McMuffin with processed cheese or grabbing a Jamba Juice.  These were the days of wheat germ, oatmeal with raisins and that cereal that made me feel like puking: Cream of Wheat.  On weekends it got more elaborate.

In mid September, my mother’s beloved father passed away in his sleep. On the morning of Dr. Cleveland Kleihauer’s death, the phone rang as we were eating breakfast in the dining room. My father was reading the sports section of the LA TIMES.  With naive excitement, I ran into the hall to answer the phone.  My step-grandmother said in a flat and unfriendly tone: “Get your mother.”

For the first time in my life I went to school without my hair being done by my mother. And since then, I never answer an early phone call.

My mother blamed her father’s death on “having to carry too much luggage” on a recent tour of Europe, did not allow us to attend the funeral and very soon became very ill.


PART TWO


I don’t remember how much after my grandfather’s death that the doctor came to our home…maybe several months.  Because I do remember taking our somber grandmother on a tour of the “Apple Country” which was an annual day outing in the fall for the Smithson’s.  Day tripping with Ione was well out of the ordinary, and it seemed “forced.” She had always been the Grand Dame—head of the Kleihauer household, putter-on of dinners with silver candleholders, director of the housekeeper, wearer of fur stoles and mistress of the domain.  She had social status and let it show.  She was not used to sitting in the back seat of a station wagon with an eight year old.

I sat next to her, feeling uncomfortable at the proximity to a woman who was not, in today’s parlance “warm and fuzzy.”  It did not feel right.  Perhaps it was the proximity to death, as well, that made me feel odd.  I had never known anyone who had died before my grandfather.  Maybe I thought it was catching.  We ate fresh Red Delicious apples, visited my father’s friend named Blackie, who owned an orchard and got Smokey the Bear comics from a ranger.  I was glad to get home.  I’ll bet Ione was too.


PART THREE


When the doctor arrived at our door on Angus Street, I was oblivious as to how very ill my mother was.  She had been passing blood, all the while passing as the great mother that she was.  My father made the call and later the doctor told him that if he hadn’t my mother would have died.  When she arrived at the house, she immediately went into my parents’ bedroom.  My sister and I stayed out of the way.

But my sister inherited a super gene for hostess-ness.  She went into the freezer and dug out a frost-covered can of concentrated lemonade.  She would serve the doctor a cool drink.  Being little, she may not have been able to manipulate a can opener.  This was before the lids just could be lifted off.  So, with goodness in her heart, she got an ice pick out of the drawer and started stabbing.  She stabbed right into her finger.  The ice pick was stuck and dangling, blood was flowing and the doctor did not end up drinking lemonade.

When the ambulance took away my mother and my father followed in the car, a neighbor at the top of Angus Street swept us up and included us in her dinner.  Mrs. Clifton had raised three sons and was good in a crisis.  She told us that she was making macaroni and cheese.  I told her it was my favorite.  When we sat down at the table, I saw that she included stewed tomatoes in her version of the dish. While my sister ate gingerly with her bandaged hand, I tried to hide that this was nothing like my mother’s macaroni and cheese.

Saturday, December 10, 2011

FISHING:PART ONE




I caught my first fish when I was about 7.  It was as small as I was.  We were on a vacation—probably driving up to Seattle from Los Angeles, and we stopped at a lake.  I think it may have been Crater Lake.  For some reason unbeknownst to me now, we kept the little fellow and took it to our motel room in a milk carton.  I do believe it was flushed while I slept.

I remember fishing on a Girl Scout trip to Big Bear.  We were out on the lake in a dinghy and one of the advisors told me to spit on the hook.  It didn’t work. But a few hours later I developed a 104-degree fever and slept out the rest of the trip in the adults’ room on a canvas cot.

One summer at Manhattan Beach when I was an early teen, unable to surf and consigned to a blowup mattress, which wasn’t cool, I went out to the end of the pier and bought a drop line for 99 cents—but with the tax it was just over a dollar.  I only had a dollar and the man fronted me the extra two pennies.  I gathered barnacles from the bottom of the pier for bait and, predictably, caught nothing.

On another occasion, when I was a graduate student in Scotland, my friend and I went on a trip with the “Hill Walking Club” from Strathclyde University.  We took the ferry over to the Isle of Arran and it poured.  We walked several miles to the campsite in the dark…and it poured.  We set up our tent, which was lit by the phosphorous of the smoked kippered herring we had brought for breakfast.  And, to paraphrase, ‘the rain it raineth.’

The plan of this overly ardent club was to climb Goat Fell in the morning.  In the rain.  I thought, no.  This is just not fun. And not for a girl from LA.  When it rains we light a fire and drink hot chocolate. With marshmallows.

So on the wet morning of the proposed hike, I bailed, took my backpack and walked alone into Brodick to await the ferry to Ardrossan and the train back to Glasgow. The wait would be several hours and I bought a drop line, plucked mussels from the rocks for bait and went to the end of the ferry landing.  And caught nothing.

What I would have done with a fish I have no idea.  I hate trying to get the hook out of a wriggling fish. Add that to the fact that—to this day-- I’ve never gutted a fish and I would going to on public transport with a fish and nothing to carry it in.  Not a wise idea. But I did meet a handsome young man on the train who asked me out.  We were to meet the following Saturday in George Square.  He stood me up.

When we lived in Seattle I bought a rod, reel and salmon eggs and tried to fish in raging rivers, off Edmonds pier and out of my sea kayak.  None of these attempts were successful ventures.  But I enjoyed it, nevertheless.

Fate brought us to a summer of teaching in American Samoa; living next to the beach in Pago Pago.  To keep my almost four year old entertained, we went fishing off the rocks near our hotel room.  He caught a tiny fish. We threw it back into the polluted waters of the bay where it could live amongst the plastic carrier bags that floated like multicolored jellyfish.

When I lived for a cold and wintry year in Stockholm, a friend introduced me to Hemingway’s Islands in the Stream.  The notion of drinking rum and coconut and fighting with marlin off the back of a boat named PILAR seemed unbelievably attractive. So on our first trip to Kona, on the Big Island of Hawai’i, my husband watched our son while I ventured out on a deep-sea fishing charter. Hemingway was posthumously fueling my passion.  No one on the boat caught a thing except sunburn.

When my son was around 8 years old, and we were living in Kailua, I needed something to keep him busy during school breaks.  I bought two cheapo fishing poles at the oddly named Holiday Mart and drove him to a Heeia pier.  I taught him how to bait the hook, cast, and deal with the disappointment of not catching anything.

A few years later, now living in Honolulu, I took my son to the harbor off Ala Moana and joined a charter for an early morning deep sea fishing trip.  Again we caught nothing, but the captain brought my son up to the helm and let him steer the boat back into Honolulu. And we did see a basking shark.

On another occasion my son and I went out on a charter from the same harbor.  The seas were very rough.  We could see the whitecaps from our house. It was the only time the captain chose to go around Diamond Head and not in the other direction towards Barbers Point. All the passengers were puking their guts out.  But not us; we had Australian candied ginger as our secret weapon. This intestinal upset was a good thing because it significantly raised the odds of us catching something as the poles are divvied up.  With three of the six onboard curled in the fetal position, our chances were elevated. I honestly don’t remember if we caught something or not.  Most likely not, if I don’t remember it. The surreal thing was that one of the pukers was a former student from the Lab School with very bad eczema.


Lest this sound like a tale of fishing woe, things started to change.  One year my birthday aligned with a school holiday and I convinced my husband to go deep-sea fishing with me.  We got up at 5 and each ate a bowl of saimin because my dad always said never go out to sea on an empty stomach—something he’d been told by Italian—or perhaps Portuguese—fishermen.  Rather ironic from someone from Arizona.

As the boat was clearing the harbor and the lines put in, we all drew cards as to which pole would be “ours.”   Within seconds, my pole got a major hit.  The sunrise was lightening the sky and I couldn’t have been happier.  I had a mahi on the line and despite all the movies I seen of people struggling for hours with a fish, I pretty much knew I didn’t have the strength.  The fish was brought aboard just as the sky lit up to its fullest extent.  A mahi mahi is a beautifully colored fish in the water, but once it dies, the color fades.  I felt a bit sad.  But I guess we all fade when we die.  We had enough fish to share with the neighbors.