Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Reflections of Personalities from the Past


The following is a grandson’s reflection of someone who was thought to be something they were not and instead a realization of who they actually were.




The following is a grandson’s reflection of someone who was thought to be something they were not and instead a realization of who they actually were.

There is another side to Grandpa that people don't see, Grandma.  

Grandma, her influence and effect she had on him.

The best way to describe her influence on him was that she kept him constantly irritated, and for many years unstable with respect to the relationships within the family.

Since they were married she would get him wound up, get him upset, get him seeking an oasis of sorts to be free from the "word daggers" she used to stab him with. He lived in the constant threat and instability of his wife always resenting him for one reason or another and wanting to leave. She transformed him into a person that he never used to be, nor presumably, wanted to become.    Over the years it ended up changing him into someone very different, it was as if she eroded his soul. She did this by introducing stress and anxiety to his life, in the form of constant dissension which slowly killed his spirit. She frequently threatened to leave him and take the kids with her, which would have been a shameful outcome in those days where divorce was the outcome of failure. She was the mother of his children who openly and publicly criticized him to everyone who would listen including sharing this with their own children. Who could live a balanced life knowing his wife thought the worse of him and was constantly putting him down both to his face and behind his back. What drove this in her?  

Only she could answer this and maybe she never came to terms with it herself, BUT perhaps it was due to her being unable to marry the true love of her life. The resentment that instilled knowing she had to settle instead for him as her husband and the father of their children rather than who she wanted.  Perhaps this resentment was her driving force that fueled such negative energy towards him.

But was it his fault she couldn't marry who she wanted?

Was it his fault that her own family refused to allow her to marry the person she wanted, an event that took place before his involvement? Or was it really his fault that she accepted his proposal for marriage and agreed to share a life together? If only she had learned to work it out and love the one she was with, they could have set the stage for a healthy next generation.

But who could he have discussed or shared this with to help him learn? Especially to anyone that he could to trust while continuing to maintain his dignity, for he was an honest, proud and dignified person at heart.  To the best of anyone’s knowledge, he discussed it with no one and he internalized it all. 

The results were Grandma instilled a deep rooted discord between Grandpa and his children which embittered them, so they never really understood who their own father really was. And today, at the very core, it is much of what his children struggle with, an inner questioning of their father's love.

I was the only person of my generation that lived with Grandma and Grandpa for almost the first 6 years of my life, so I have a unique perspective from others in my family's generation. For this reason, I do not agree with many of the examples presented to me as their childhood trauma’s. Even though I was much younger at the time, I too lived with Grandma and Grandpa, shared the day to day routine, the very  same living as my mother, aunt and uncle’s talked about. It while was true that Grandpa was a different person, mostly he was misunderstood.

Consider that, he lived through the depression, had very little, so everything had a nominal value. He demonstrated this by collecting things that no one wanted thinking that bulk weight for certain materials could at some point be sold. Piles of objects were collected and sorted based upon their composition in hopes that one day they would reach the minimum weight limits set by recycling centers for payment. Today this is common practice around the world and nothing unique to him or where he lived. Yet they referred to him as a pack rat and called him a “hoarder”.

He lived a hard life, worked for what he had and built what he had on own with little to no help from his parents. He worked hard, knew how to work effectively and how to conserve resources. He kept lights off, electrical appliances on only when needed and always mindful of waste. He used everything such as clothing and machinery until they were literally falling apart for they were precious commodities to him and when they were no longer usable, their materials were stripped and placed onto the appropriate categories for recycle. Yet they called him “eccentric”.

And he experienced true hunger in his days, so he wasted nothing. This is an experience that molds a person. Afterwards people are never the same, no matter the current circumstances. He came from a time when personal hygiene was not as paramount as is with the next or current generation, yet he was considered to be “odd" and some questioned "autism”.  
Since these are experiences that none of the next generation shared, it was hard for them to truly understand and difficult to relate to the basis for his behavior. Not to mention these traits served to paint a negative personality portrayal, a bias his own wife had placed upon him.

Yet take into consideration that if someone from Grandpa’s generation was to look at the modern generation’s ways of life, the current abundance of every basic need from food, clothing and living conditions which enables the primary focus on life to be centered around personal comfort and entertainment, they too would find it hard to understand this behavior. The sheer abundance and consumption the modern generation has, the callous disregard for natural resources, the volume of waste generated from packaging of staple food products,  gluttonous over consumption and the loss of some of the most basic skills that served all generations of the past so well, not to mention the closeness of the family unit which needed to work together in order to make ends meet. With this perspective, no longer is there clearly a right or wrong, it is about communications, empathy and understanding.
Funny, but this understanding was never portrayed to me by anyone. I came to realize this on my own, largely by maturity and by discarding the negative biases in order to see the depth of a person never seen before.

Even though his character was poisoned in a way that turned teachings into trauma, care into callousness and affection into affliction, Grandpa loved his family. While he did not use words, he showed his love, by providing for his wife, children and grandchildren so they never knew hunger, were never deprived of basic needs or a home to live in. He also proved this when he passed away by giving his earthly possessions equally to all his children, without bias. 

Strange however, it seems I am alone with this truth. And while I never let it take focus off my present family, I do listen to all events of my families past and learn from them to strive for a better future.