WHAT
CHILD IS THIS?
It is a pleasant exercise to look back on your
own childhood, extracting the memories that are pleasing to remember. Recently I have been looking back at my
young self in a more objective way, as if I were not seeing myself, but some other
child. This puts a new perspective
on things.
I grew up in the 1920's and 30's when child psychology had not advanced to
its present level and my mother had grown up in the late Victorian era. A vignette begins to take shape in my
mind. There is a scene of my
mother sitting at her dressing table.
I am very small and I am standing near her and I say something to her
that I do not recall, but I have
never forgotten her words. She
said, "You are
adorable".
That
I have remembered and treasured those words all these years tells me how
desperately the human psyche craves validation and nurturing.
I grew up in an atmosphere of love--one does
not need words to transmit love. It is in every look, and every touch, but
there is a very great need for vocal reinforcement while a child is in the
process of growing and becoming.
This child I see was timid and unsure, overly
eager to please, and afraid of displeasing. My parents had a strange notion that to bestow compliments
on a child might give a false sense of importance, or cause the child to become
arrogant or egotistical. Therefore, as we grew older compliments were given
indirectly—my parents would praise my brothers and sister to me, and they would
praise me to them. (I have often
discussed this phenomenon with my sister and it is true, but we were unaware of
it then) The result was that we
grew up thinking our siblings were the more loved and favored.
I had no idea what image I projected to the
people around me. The mirror could
not speak, and without verbal feedback I did not know if I were pretty or
not. It would have helped if
someone had pointed out my good qualities--the color of my eyes, or hair, or
had said "you are adorable" to me when I was old enough to know what
it meant.
One day I overheard my friend Evelyn's mother
say that she thought I had a nice personality. When I got home I asked my mother what 'personality'
was. My mother's answer raised my
self- esteem several notches. How
I longed to know myself! How I
needed this validation! I
fed off this meager compliment all my life.
The education
of a child desperately needs to include assertiveness training. I certainly could have benefited from
it. Any idea or opinion, however
immature or misguided deserves consideration, and this begins at home. This is where critical thinking and
debate can become learning tools, and where a child begins to see that being
wrong is not fatal, and that is it OK to have a differing opinion. In my era, a child was chastised
for speaking out. (it was called ‘talking back’ )
Long after I was grown, in talks with my mother
(she was a wonderfully wise woman) I was told that there was concern that I did
not have a musical ear because I did not sing at an early age. The truth was that my musical ear was
so sensitive that music was almost painful for me to hear. A steel guitar and close harmony could
make me weep. It was in the 3rd or 4th grades that I learned that I was a
natural 'alto'. Under the tutelage
of a marvelous Italian teacher named Mrs. Sarconi, I finally found my
voice. She also informed my mother
that I was 'plodding along' scholastically. That stuck with me too.
But this
child loved to read. Reading came
easily for me in school, and I think that should have been a positive
sign. Reading was a natural
activity at home. No television,
of course, in those days, and we children made regular walking excursions to
the Public Library, which was a good distance from our house. My parents insisted that we speak good
grammar, and we were very much aware of those who did not. I point out here that there was no profanity in our house. I never ever heard my parents curse or swear!
My latent artistic desires lay smoldering
within. I tried to draw but unless
a child exhibited a natural ability there was not much encouragement. I encountered this strange attitude all
through school. Today all children
are encouraged to express their ideas and feelings through art, and drawing
ability is not the criteria.
As I matured I found ways to express my creativity. I learned to sew, and I painted on
glass and tiles and finally the whole world of china painting opened up to
me. I discovered that it is
possible to learn to draw, and to 'see' all over again, and never to ignore
that little voice inside that tells you to try.
I plodded along painfully through Jr. High, and
through a wonderful math teacher I found that I could grasp the concepts of
algebra and for the first time got straight A's in math. It was in the eighth grade that I
discovered the beauty and the delights of language and began to develop my
vocabulary, and the love of writing was born.
My brain kicked in during the
high school years and I discovered literature and history and earned a place in
the National Honor Society. I
worked on the school newspaper, and participated in all of the choral musical
groups available to me. I earned a small Scholarship to the Colorado
Woman's College, but did not get encouragement from my parents. My father was ill, and there were boys
in the family who had priority. It
was the end of the depression era, money was scarce, and war was looming on the
horizon.
. Singing ultimately
became a passion in my life. I
sang in church choirs, Community Chorales and with the Sweet Adelines barbershop
group.
After
graduating from high school I found a job as a switchboard operator at a little
flying school on the outskirts of Denver.
There it was that I met Claude, and my destiny was sealed. The rest is history.
I have absolutely no regrets.
I do sometimes wonder. . . IF I had lived in a
time when marriage was not the ultimate fate for a girl, and IF my parents had
had the money to educate all of their children, and IF the war had not come
along at that time to change the course of all our lives. . . . . .
Who
would I be now?
Betty L. Owen, journals
Updated August 2005
1 comment:
So old article but still very interesting
Peter von renovierung fenster
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