суббота, 13 апреля 2024 г.

My mother's stories (chapter twenty nine)

 

chapter 29

The village that I lost

       


       I don't know exactly why my mother felt the loss of her new-born son so keenly that she decided once and for all not to have children any more. After all, she lived in the village till the age of 21 and had to be hardened by that experience. I think it was that damn C-section that did it. My mother was told, of course, that after such an operation she wouldn't be able to have another child without going through the C-section again. But at the very thought of it she always felt a thrill of revulsion. I think in the past people weren't so sensitive or, at least, nowadays we believe they weren't. God gave and God took away – was it not their usual consolation for a woman who lost her baby?

       To my mother's misfortune she spent her childhood and teens in a shabby hut that was situated not far from a local cemetery. It was not a pleasant experience and perhaps that's why she was always so perceptive to the dark side of life. I remember her complaining to me how she couldn't help hearing all that crying and sobbing because by rural tradition it was a proper behaviour for close relatives. “Such hypocrisy!” my mother used to tell me with bitterness. “At first they made me listen to all of that and then after a few drinks at the funeral banquet most of them forgot what all that was about and were almost ready to dance.”

       Nevertheless, even my mother with her flat rejection of rural customs had to admit that it was not always the case. Sometimes one person's grief was so strong that nobody could be left unmoved. It was definitely so with that poor mother whose babies lived only a few months after they were born. Villagers were whispering, telling each other that she lost 13 or even 17 of them. I believe they exaggerated the number, as rumours usually do, but there was no doubt about that inconsolable mother's grief. At first, she tried to be patient, listening to the old wise women's advice. But, in the end, something snapped inside her and to people's horror she suddenly started shouting offenses to the sky, shaking her fists and asking God why He was so cruel to take all her babies away from her. Everyone stood there rooted to the spot, expecting that at any moment the lightning would flash from the sky and incinerate that lunatic of a woman. But it never came. What is more, the poor soul came to her senses in the end and afterwards had two or three children, who all lived to grow up. It really looked like a miracle after all her previous losses.

        My own maternal instinct has never been as strong as that woman's. Actually, it was a bit slow to reveal itself. I have never been one of those girls who like to play with somebody else's kids, and was already 25 when, to my surprise, I suddenly understood I'd like to have children of my own. Still, even before that time I had always felt that the ending of this story was extremely comforting. The poor woman wanted to have children so badly, and she got them in the end. When I am thinking of it nowadays, I usually feel a pang of regret that I have never been able to overcome my atheistic up-bringing. In such stories I feel the presence of God. Here He is as I'd like Him to be: strict but at the same time kind and understanding.

       I don't really know when and why Christian tradition was broken in our family. Most of my playmates were baptized and had godparents in spite of official disapproval of such things. I remember when we were already at secondary school one of my friends told me in secret: “You know, my mother and I discussed it all and decided it's the right thing to celebrate Easter and Christmas. Just in case. They say there is no God. But who really knows?” Actually, it was a wide-spread attitude towards religion in the USSR, even among communists, I suspect. Only they, especially those of higher rank, couldn't afford to show it in public. There were no communists in our family. So why was it so uncompromisingly atheistic? My mother used to bake Easter cakes every spring. But she always emphasized that it had nothing to do with religion, that she just loved the taste of them. As for making them in the shape of prolonged rolls, according to her words, she was simply incapable of baking them thoroughly in their traditional cylindrical form. Yet, I am not sure it was entirely true. Perhaps it was that aspiration of hers for being different and her desperate desire to forget her old rural customs.

       It was not so with my great-grandmother Euphemia, who taught my mother to say her first prayers. As far as I can remember my mother's stories about her: she was devout, hard-working and had immense knowledge of life that was really priceless during those hard times. If to think about it, she was a typical representative of rural women of her generation. Besides, she belonged to that part of the female population, who were tough and resilient enough to live till old age in spite of poverty, hard labour, famines and epidemics. But what frightens me most is those poor women's fate to give birth to a lot of children knowing that as likely as not only some of them will survive.

       Euphemia, or Euhima as everybody in the village called her, was born in 1870. I believe that after the revolution of 1917 and the Civil war that followed it all old records were lost. Not to mention that all the churches, where they usually kept such documents, were ransacked during that awful time and later were closed or turned into store-houses by Bolsheviks. Anyway, it was the year that Euhima remembered and always gave as her year of birth to her relatives. The same year when Lenin was born as my mother liked to emphasize. It was the easiest way to remember it. Everybody, who finished school in the USSR, knew when the first communist leader was born, especially taking into account that every April Soviet propaganda made a great fuss about it.

       Unlike her grandchildren, Euphemia was ignorant in such matters. She had never attended school and couldn't read or write just like most of her contemporaries from the lower classes. Actually, from an early age she had to work and take care of her invalid mother. Soon after her mother's death, when Euhima was about 16, she was forced to get married. In her own words it was not something unusual, because at the time of her youth parents didn't pay much attention to their daughter's actual age. If a girl began to look more or less feminine, it was a sign that they could marry her off and preferably without delay. After that her main task would be to have children and bring them up properly, that is to ensure the continuation of her kin. And hasn't it always been the main part of any female in human society or in the wild nature?

       Euphemia undoubtedly followed this tradition. But when she was over 30 and already had five children an epidemic of typhoid fever or some other intestinal infection rolled over the villages. All five of her children died, including her elder girl, who was at least 16, because she was just about to get married at that time. Euphemia herself was close to death and it seemed there was little hope for her recovery. Still, she obediently followed a local doctor's strict orders not to eat anything at all. I suppose her husband watched her in secret, because the doctor definitely warned them that eating in that state would mean the death of her. Nevertheless, the time came when Euhima couldn't stand it any longer and surreptitiously stole into the inner porch, where a big barrel with sour cabbage stood in the corner. As she confessed to my mother many years later, she had never had more pleasure from food than at that moment when, after breaking the thin crust of ice, she started gobbling the icy cold sour cabbage. After eating her fill, she resignedly hobbled to her bed and lay down to wait for her death. Miraculously, it didn't come. What is more, it was the beginning of her recovery, and it only confirmed my great-grandmother's inner belief that nature had always had some hidden wonderful remedies. The only problem was that very few people were able to find them.

       After her full recovery, Euphemia didn't fall into some incurable nervous break-down or anything of the sort but continued to work as hard as before and gave birth to four more children who all lived till old age. Even her two sons survived, although they fought Germans during the Second World War.

To be continued...

(c) Anna Shevchenko

среда, 7 февраля 2024 г.

My mother's stories (chapter twenty eight - the ending)

 

chapter 28

The study in dark colours

(the ending)


       Sometimes I think that perhaps my fate in that gloomy yard would have been easier if I had had a brother or a sister, even a younger one. At least it would have taught me responsibility from an early age. And, who knows, maybe I would have learnt much earlier how to defend not only my sibling but myself too. On the other hand, I am not sure that it would have really changed my destiny very much. I used to believe that as I had two children, they wouldn't share my psychological problems. However, my younger son has always had the same difficulties with socializing. Actually, it's quite understandable as he, unlike my daughter, has always been much closer to me by nature. And that explains, I think, why we still live under one roof.

       By now I have learnt that I can rely upon my son when I am in a tight corner. Still I regret that I have never had a brother or a sister who I could ask for help or advice when I desperately needed a friendly shoulder. And how nice it would have been to have tea together, discussing our everyday life, occasionally reminding each other of something that happened in our half-forgotten childhood. Surely, we would remember different details and it would be most curious to compare our memories. I understand that it's some kind of idealization but that's how I imagine having a sibling nowadays.

       But back then, that is in my early childhood, I didn't feel like that at all. I suspect I felt rather irritated when various adults asked me if I would like my mother to give me a little brother. At that time people believed that it was a proper question to start a conversation with when talking to a little girl, especially if her mother was somewhere nearby. I think I was about three when I was asked about it for the first time, or at least it was the case that stuck in my memory. I remember I felt a bit confused but blurted out “no!” without thinking. My parents' acquaintance was so obviously startled by my reply that I ran away from her, still shouting “no,no!”, before hiding behind my mother's skirt. It was long and wide enough to give me a good shelter but it didn't save me from a little lecture that followed. The woman, who we so unluckily met in the street, told me with some heat that I was completely wrong and explained to me what a blessing it would be for me to have a little brother to play with. I was sharp enough to understand what was expected from me and after that never failed to answer “yes” when some smiling woman pestered me with that question.

       It can seem incredible but only after I wrote the previous sentence did it suddenly occur to me how painful all those conversations must have been for my mother. I used to listen to a lot of her stories, and one of them was about my poor little brother, who was born when I was about two, and who lived only 15 minutes after his birth. There was something wrong with my mother's second pregnancy, and it was one of those unfortunate cases when doctors had to choose between a mother and her baby. Perhaps she had some foreboding of it because she delayed going to the maternity home until my father led her there by the hand. My mother knew beforehand that she was going to have a C-section but she was not ready for what happened to her after that.

       My mother had never liked official medicine – first of all because her own mother was so fond of it. But this time it was the closest collision with the Soviet health service that she couldn't avoid. After her operation she was lying in a hospital bed, completely helpless and entirely in their power. She couldn't just leave and slam the door behind her back. Personally, what I always disliked about Soviet doctors was their manner to communicate with their patients. As a rule, they were frowning and scribbling something in your medical card, explaining to you as little as it was possible, even if there was nothing life-threatening in your diagnosis.

       Still, I believe my mother's doctor didn't tell her at once about her baby's death for a different reason. He saw that she was extremely weak, recovering longer than usual after anesthesia, and, in spite of everything, impatient to see her new-born son. So he decided to tell her later, and it was a real shock for her when some nurse came and asked her rudely why her husband hadn't taken her baby's body away. No wonder that after such a brutal revelation my mother had a fit of hysterics and couldn't be calmed down for a long time. The doctor scolded the nurse furiously but it looked like he didn't have much power over his nurses. For instance, he knew that my mother suffered from constipation after her operation. Every morning he ordered a junior nurse to give an enema to her. Every time one of those unpleasant middle-aged women who usually did that kind of work in hospital answered “yes” but did nothing afterwards.

       It was going on in that fashion for a few days until my mother's ward-mates explained to her in secret that the nurse was just waiting for some money offered to her for her services. To my mother's distress her young naive husband and younger sister refused indignantly to give money for that, saying that in the USSR, thank God, they had free medical care. Weren't they taught at school that such habits were just the vestiges of capitalism that had to be rooted out? She didn't waste much time, trying to dissuade them, but unexpectedly quickly found a way out of the situation. It was really simple. By that time her bedside-table was packed with apples, oranges, cookies, and sweets, because in her state she had no appetite for all those tasty things that her visitors had brought to her. So, without further ado, my mother gave all of this to the nurse and, sure enough, she got the prescribed treatment that very day.

       Hypocrisy – that's what I have always hated about the USSR. I understand, of course, that any human society is partly based on it. Yet the Soviet system was one of those where it flourished most lavishly. We were taught from an early age that our country had free education and free medical care. But everybody knew it was not really true. If you wanted your child to enter some prestigious university or get good medical care in hospital you had to be ready to pay or, to be precise, to bribe, because such payment was forbidden in the USSR.

       Luckily for my parents I wished to become a physicist, and the physics department was one of the bribery free ones at university. Although, all our neighbours, as my mother sarcastically informed me, refused to believe that I joined it without greasing somebody's palm. But there was no doubt that the Medical University was one of the most corrupt in our city. There were scary rumours going around that it was completely impossible to join it without a hefty bribe. I remember one pitiful story that was popular when I was just finishing school. A poor girl, who was obsessed with her desire to become a doctor, tried to enter the Medical University for free for seven or eight years. Miraculously, she did succeed in the end but relinquished her studies some time later. Maybe she really had a nervous break-down, as people believed. But I suspect the girl had just discovered that she had to pay for every single exam if she wanted to finish her education. And, perhaps, her parents just couldn't afford it.

       No wonder that after such an educational race, doctors were eager to get some extra money in addition to their more than moderate salaries. Actually, a lot of people in the country were looking for some illegal or half-legal ways to increase their small incomes. All that talking about equality and the bright communist future, when everybody would have everything in abundance, didn't deceive most of the people. They tried desperately to get some extra money or creature comforts at any cost. As a result, our medical personnel were frowning and often rude, our shop-assistants were usually rude and malicious. What I especially hated about doctors, nurses and, strange to say, hairdressers, was a widespread custom to put surreptitiously some money into one of the big pockets of their white uniform. I have never been good at it. As for me, it was humiliating for both: for those specialists and for their patients or clients. I am glad that those times are over and that nowadays I can look a doctor in the eye and ask how much I owe him or her. If they offer me a choice to pay them or to go to the cashier, I always choose a doctor because those 35 years that I lived in the USSR taught me not to trust the state.

       But coming back to my 28-year-old mother, as she told me later, she left the maternal house extremely thin with big gray patches in her beautiful auburn hair and with a firm decision in her sore heart not to step over that threshold ever again. For some reason she believed those health problems that she developed after her ill-fated C-section were caused by the anesthesia or narcosis, as she always called it with distaste. But I believe it was just bad treatment and her grief because of the loss of her baby-son. As far as I can remember my mother had always had a soft spot for boys.

To be continued...

(c) Anna Shevchenko