What We Sew
In the current version of my life with its inefficiencies and endless unfinished book projects, home improvements on hiatus, music in my head, itineraries and symphonic lapses... it occurred to me to attend to the small of pile of 'things for mending' I keep on a bench in the bedroom. I am surprisingly able to thread a tiny-eyed needle and one by one I attempted to manage missing buttons, small legging holes, cloth strap repairs, unravelling sweater edges, etc. There was something not just satisfying but 'connecting' about it. I thought, of course, of my mother, who sewed and knit with great mastery and excellence. She taught me-- patiently and humbly, with that sense of one woman handing down generational secrets of the sex.
My mother's sewing box-- like a kind of doctor's bag filled with threads, needles, patches, ribbons and bands... pin cushions, and most memorable of all-- the darning egg on a stick which resembled a rattle or Caribbean percussion instrument. With this she deftly repaired holes in socks; my father had several pairs hand-knitted by mothers and in-laws during the war-- argyles and striped... woolen for warmth and insulation inside his cold paratrooper boots as he marched or jumped into surf and swamp. Why, I would ask her, do new and few and pew not rhyme with 'sew'? I am not smart, she would tell me. You will be smarter.
Who repairs socks these days? My son often disposes of them after sports; I used to buy them in huge packs of a dozen. I don't have a 'darner'. My mother was given an old Singer machine-- one of the ones with a kind of foot treadle. She never got the hang of it, but preferred to hem, baste and hand-backstitch in what I can only recall as something approaching perfection. Those nights by her side-- with my girls' painted wicker basket and the colored spools-- well, they felt so 19th century, in a good way. And it is not coincidence that my recent sewing evening was close to Mother's Day. I felt her presence more strongly than usual, as though she was approving of my feminine task, and the metaphorical resonance of a needle and thread, like a kind of penance.
Recently the discontinuation of the penny was announced; like many things these days, more trouble than worth. We had our little banks as children; mine was a kind of ceramic doll-head-- very 19th century, with the porcelain hair done up in a bun, the coin slot in the back, and the topknot itself a pin cushion. So my bank had a duel use. Sometime in the 70's I went to my mother's house and retrieved and dumped the bank; they were all wheat pennies... quite old... I have them still, in a box here... waiting to be devalued, I suppose.
Our lives in those days were filled with things-- things had the properties of people, in a way... we looked at them , we took them to bed, we spoke to them, we passed them around. To make a telephone connection, one had to pick up a heavy handle, rotary dial a bunch of numbers, extend a curly cord a foot or two and sit, close to the wall jack, speaking in one end and listening with the other.
In the 1960's and 70's, women in the city often had an answering service. When you left your apartment, you dialed in and somehow magically the operators would receive your calls. When you returned you'd phone in and they'd read out the messages. You had a little relationship with your operator; mine was Grace-- a different woman at night, but Grace knew everything. The cost of this service was small; you''d send a monthly check and they'd clip the hand-written message sheets together in your bill. Besides her perfect cursive, I had no idea how tall Grace was-- old or young, black or white.
One could easily go a day now without actually speaking to anyone... our lives are so enmeshed by social media and all of these time-consuming communication platforms. I have only a few friends who make telephone calls; we still have landlines although these get little use. I work at a gallery Saturdays; it specializes in vintage mid-century French design. People are most fascinated when the furniture is staged with period objects.. old radios and televisions... it seems that much of our nostalgia revolves around objects. Our former lives were filled with things-- notebooks, pencils, rulers, book bags, stuffed animals-- scrapbooks and photographs, postcards and stamp collections-- souvenirs, dolls, shells, rocks.
I worry about losing my memory; my mother lost hers, could not identify many of the photographs she loved to pour over in her album. My sister cruelly destroyed mine, effectively wiping parts of my own memory by removing associated images. I wonder when I will forget my grade school teachers, the seating order, the classroom numbers... my childhood dogs who haunt my dreams. It will happen, one day.. or I will not recognize my own neighbors and friends.. I will forget song lyrics and confuse Beethoven and Mozart sonatas...
As addled as she was in later life, my mother did not forget how to sew. I wish I had more of the skirts and dresses she hemmed with such skill, the knitted sweaters and the vests, for warmth. She sat at the piano, at the end, surprised by the sound of the notes, and for seconds her fingers formed chords, but then it all disintegrated.
We had these handmade rag dolls-- one side was a sleeping face, and the other awake. We'd change their bonnet in the morning, as kind of wake-up ritual, and put them to bed at night. I wonder how many children will save their obsolete pennies in a porcelain bank, will learn to sew with needle and thread and will be able to identify a darning egg. For a couple of hours the other night, I created a 'mended' pile and felt accomplished in a way-- my stack of repaired patched leggings and tights felt like a kind of badge. My mother might have nodded her approval.
So many things have been lost along the way-- left in other countries, missing or stolen. I know as we age we do not log the things we forget; they simply disappear without ceremony or conscience. This terrifies me... who will remind me of what I no longer recall? My mother wore a thimble; I never mastered the art of using one.. kind of like playing the bass with a pick... I still have a thumbpick Johnny Winter gave me once... another of these tangibles that seem more meaningful as life goes on. One watches celebrity possessions being auctioned for vast sums these days... even clothing. It seems when human company becomes less available, things provide comfort... connection. And some of them, like the poor penny, while non-functional, do not die.
I have no daughter to whom I can hand-down my dwindling skills. My son will not pick up a needle and thread and remember moments. We do have some hand-made souvenirs and old photos-- paper ones. My old rag doll still sits on the bed in which he has not slept for decades. She has a clearly sewn heart beneath her old clothing; it serves.
Labels: answering service, Banks, Beethoven, darning socks, dementia, Johnny Winter, Mother's Day, mothers, Mozart, nostalgia, pennies, pin cushions, rituals, sewing baskets, Singer sewing machines