I MOVED!
I finally moved into a retirement facility. Moving is something I have
experienced frequently, even learned to do it well. After our first move from
Cincinnati, Ohio to the big
beautiful State of North Carolina, my husband and I
became old hands at
this moving thing. That was good because we did it often.
In North Carolina we not only learned quickly about the
responsibilities and burdens of a
Rabbi and spouse, but along the way, we learned, quickly
about parenting.
By the time we got to North Carolina we understood that we
could not make babies!
We determined that we would
adopt children, family life without them was
inconceivable. Our entire family did not agree, but we had
left our school days. We were
adults who needed to satisfy
ourselves by making our own
choices. If Erv was
man enough to choose his lifelong calling and I was woman
enough to support and work with him, we were adult enough to
decide about kids.
We moved fast.
"Too fast" said his mother "whatever you wish" said
mine. We moved
to Winston-Salem in June 1949 on the heels of Erv’s ordination.
January 1950, we brought Jeff home. He was eight months old
and was ready to
stand up straight and tall. What fun we had with this happy, giggling
baby.
The social worker told us he was fat, I had nightmares about
his size. He was chubby,
the way babies are supposed to be. But the night before his
homecoming I was worried,
and anxious: was he elephantine, would he like us, maybe even
learn to love us? My
anxiety reached a fever pitch and suddenly I was truly suffering. My ache turned into
serious pain, we called a doctor: phantom labor pains, not
to worry they would
vanish when I held my baby, and they did! Eighteen months later
we brought Jeff’s sister
Judi home. Our happy
family was complete and it flourished.
My intent when I
sat down to write was to talk about moving, not about children.
We moved about six times during our marriage of more than 62
years. My
recent move to Seacrest Village is my last. I have said frequently that if Seacrest
Village does not meet all my needs it remains the last
stop. It has to be the last time that I
sort through my
belongings to pick and choose what stays, what goes. During the two
months I have been here, I have thought of many items that I
failed to take with me.
Not one is vitally important. There are pots and pans that I loved using, some were
favorites, others were just pots and pans. By now my favorites are about to become
precious to other people. I will learn to live without so
many “things”.
Yes, moving is
hard to do. When depression hit, we moved from the city and its
luxurious apartment to the country home my grandfather had
bought in 1905. I learned
then that as long as
we were together, we were home! That
has sustained me.
Things are
different now. I have moved because my beloved has died and I must
truly make my own decisions. One day recently, I awoke to the facts of my life:
I was alone and I was sick and tired of cooking for
one. All the short cuts, all the frozen
meals for one, the packaged dinners for one, all the
advertising about the easy way to
cook for one person, failed to resonate for me, failed to
entice or enhance my deeply
rooted loneliness.
So I moved to Seacrest Village.
It is nothing like
a dormitory. I have my own living room,
bathroom, bedroom and
no kitchen! How great is that? I have a frig in which I keep milk, juice, bread, cream
no kitchen! How great is that? I have a frig in which I keep milk, juice, bread, cream
cream cheese and ice cream.
I fix (?) my own breakfast and depend on the chef at
Seacrest for the rest of my meals. The food is good if not great, I would in fact, get
fat on great food.
There are good people here and they seem happy to call me friend.
I was not overwhelmed nor smothered. We are all in the same boat and therefore we
understand one another.
We take turns listening because everyone has a story and
everyone here has the time to listen. Our old, oft-told stories are new here and everyone
has lots of time to listen. Moving is bad only when you leave loved ones behind.
“do-it-yourself”
concepts.
And so we moved:
from Cincinnati, to Winston-Salem, then from an apartment to a
house in
Winston. Then we moved to Scranton,
Pennsylvania and from there to an
apartment in
Westchester County, NY and then we bought a house, a pink house. I was
told I looked
pretty in pink! From Westchester we
moved to California to an apartment
in Encino, then
to a house in Westlake Village and from there to San Diego. In San
Diego County we
lived in an apartment, then a house and finally I landed here at
Seacrest Village,
comfortably ensconced, satisfied that Erv would agree, I made a good
decision.
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