quit and be quiet - a memoir
DESCRIPTION
Growing up in the ‘50’s when Ozzie and Harriet were considered the norm - this young girl and later teen grows up in a very un-Nelson-like home but never allows the severe mental illness that has swallowed her mother to steal her happiness and dreams.TRANSCRIPT
Quit and Be Quiet – a memoir
by Mary Thurman Yuhas
Chapter One
Tarnished Silver
Mom had just finished polishing the silverware, a job she performed monthly
back in the forties. Pouring the boiling water over the shiny utensils was the last step.
"Can I help? Can I? Can I?" I begged my mother.
"Pull a chair up to the sink, Mary Kay," she sweetly said as she removed the
hissing, black teapot from the stove, steam roaring from its spout.
Eagerly I pulled my chair over to the side of the sink and clapped with
excitement. To get a better look, I leaned over and placed my hands flat in the sink next
to the silverware.
As Mom drew nearer, I took in a deep breath to get more of the sweet smell that
always surrounded her. I was only four and how I loved her. I wanted to have the same
long, thick, chestnut brown hair, the same long, graceful fingers with neatly painted red
nails and do everything she did from cleaning the house to laughing delightedly at the
funny stories my Dad told us when he came home from work.
I watched Mom as she tipped the teapot towards the sink. I watched the scalding
water as it spiraled down, almost as if it were in slow motion. And I watched in horror,
when suddenly and without warning, the boiling water covered my hands and burned me
with a savageness I did not know was possible. I stood there motionless and held both
hands in the air, not knowing what else to do. Mercifully, blackness began to swallow
me, and as it did, I could hear a little girl from somewhere in that darkness hysterically
screaming, “Mommy! Mommy!” After that everything faded away.
For years I blocked the incident from my mind. To this day I can’t remember
what happened afterward although the truth is, I don’t want to remember. I don’t know if
Dad was home or if I was taken to the emergency room. I was too young to ask my
mother what she was thinking or if my father asked her that obvious question. If he did,
he never shared it with me. Most of all, I will never know if what happened was a lapse
of judgment on my mother’s part or a preview of the impending madness that would soon
consume her as completely as a spider’s silken shroud covers its kill.
My father and I − and perhaps my mother − were blissfully unaware of the
monster that was growing inside her, but nonetheless it was. And it was growing stronger
every day. Soon, it would be powerful enough to crush and tear away every thread of
reason that up to that time held it at bay.
We lived in Galesburg, Illinois, a smallish railroad town, in an old, two-story,
white clapboard house that despite its somewhat rundown condition retained a sense of
elegance that newer homes could never quite achieve. The family who owned it lived
below us, a common practice after the War due to the housing shortage. But Mom and
Dad didn’t like living with them and assured me this was temporary although at my
young age it didn’t matter a whit. “We’re building a house and just our family will live in
it,” Mom would repeat several times daily, her blue eyes sparkling when she talked about
our future home.
My father was a plumber, and I believed he could do anything. He reinforced that
faith as I watched him and his friends turn what started out as a mountain of dirt into a
house. Our ranch-style, one-story home was situated in the middle of a yard that seemed
endless, and it had a front porch so big I could jump rope or skip or play hopscotch on it.
And for the first time, I would have my own bedroom.
For almost a year as soon as Dad came home from work, the three of us climbed
into our black, Nash Rambler and drove over to the new house so he could work on it.
Mom brought along a supper she packed, and most nights we sat on the floor of our
unfinished house eating what she called an indoor picnic. Whenever Mom could, she
helped Dad. “Mary Kay, you help best help by going outside and playing with the other
neighborhood kids,” she said hugging me tightly. “When we live here, you can run and
play outside all day long.”
But the house meant nothing to the monster. It was growing restless, and I believe
the morning she cleaned the silverware is when it first showed its hideous face.
It was not until years later when I was in high school when from out of nowhere
my mother said, “I felt as bad as you did when you burned your hands,” that I recalled
that terrible day. Those few words ignited my memory and the incident flashed through
my mind as clearly as if it had just occurred.
For most of my life, I kept my childhood memories buried as if they had never
happened. It was easier that way. The exception was my greatest fear. I couldn’t tame it,
and it haunted me relentlessly during my early teen years. I was so terrorized that I dared
not voice my fear to anyone. It was knowing that I could grow up to be exactly like my
mother.
But after Mom died in 1998, something inside of me changed. My silence had
protected the monster and its carnage. It robbed my brother and me of our mother and of
our childhood. It destroyed my parent’s marriage. And it took my mother’s very being.
As I opened up, one memory after another clawed its way out.
This is my life growing up with my mother and the monster whose name I
eventually learned − paranoid schizophrenia.