Friday, May 03, 2013

Meeting Yia Yia

*This is a magazine article I wrote for a class I recently completed.


Y
ia Yia is a chameleon. Quiet and inconspicuous in her surroundings, she sits and watches. Her knobby aged hands are mostly motionless except when they fidget in her lap or express a point. She quietly follows conversations, but says little these days, her native Greek reappearing when English evades her memory. Yia Yia (pronounced ya ya) is 101 years old but still has the mental acuity of someone much younger. Wispy grey hair curling around her aged, olive-skinned face and lack of expression gives her a stoic weathered look. What you see – her advanced age, quiet presence, and shrunken stature – is not necessarily what you get. Her elderly simplicity masks a woman with a complex past awaiting her freedom.
Before being known as Yia Yia (grandmother in Greek), Ariadne Gagmiros was born into a world much different from today. In 1910, the Titanic was still two years from sinking, Communism had yet to topple China’s 2,000-year-old imperial rule, and the American Civil War was still a raw topic, viewed as we do the Vietnam War today – a conflict fought not so long ago that most people wanted to forget. In Greece, a poor economy generated a wave of immigration to the United States. Young Greeks streamed into larger American cities hoping to start businesses and bring their prosperity back home.
Ariadne was born in Karystos on the island of Euboea, a picturesque Greek coastal town with bright sunlit white buildings clinging to scraggly hills rising from the deep blue Mediterranean Sea. Greece was then a country still rooted in male patriarchy. Even though she was the oldest of three girls and two boys, “Boys went to college. I stayed home,” Yia Yia says.
“She was done with school at twelve [years old],” says her granddaughter Stephanie Condon, “She stayed with her mother, did embroidery, learned to cook, clean, and make clothes.” Even given the skills taught by her mother, her authoritarian father remained the central figure in defining Ariadne's limited horizon, which is reflected in Yia Yia's favorite saying, "I don’t say a nothing.”
Yia Yia expressively recounts a childhood memory with her younger rebellious sister, Pizza, an Oscar Madison to Ariadne’s Felix Unger. “She go out…play with the boys…make noise. And I’m quiet. I said, ‘Come here, Daddy’s gonna come out and stop it.’“ Pausing, Yia Yia says with a raised index finger for emphasis, “My father is a very strong.”
Strict adherence to tradition regarding the roles of men and women, especially in marriage and family, influenced Greek culture for centuries. Men dominated the public arena while women nurtured power in the private, family role. Slowly, these entrenched traditions have given way to more modern customs. Dowries and arranged marriages are less common. Equal access to education and gaining the right to vote in 1954 empowered women, who now constitute forty-five percent of the Greek work force. Yet for Ariadne, social change was decades too late.
In 1931, Ariadne's father arranged her marriage to a thirty-eight-year-old man from neighboring Katsorini. Nickolas Benakis had started several successful restaurants in Chicago, Illinois, and then returned to Greece for a wife. Several months after their marriage, they sailed to the United States. The Greece they left was evolving, from classical backwater to modern regional player.
Asked whether she remembers sailing to America, Yia Yia indignantly minimizes, “Of course I remember. It was a nice boat…it took us eleven days.” Her granddaughter Stephanie then adds, “We think they had money. They traveled well."
Yet as Ariadne and her husband processed through New York's Ellis Island, their future home was suffering. The Great Depression, which lasted over a decade and ruined banks and businesses, resulting in millions of homeless and unemployed – was just beginning. Prohibition, which gave rise to bootlegging and organized crime, would not be repealed until 1933. In Chicago, the surge of organized crime violence seemed unstoppable.
The American gangster, Al Capone, was convicted on tax fraud in 1931, the same year Ariadne and Nickolas Benakis settled into Berwyn, a suburb west of Chicago. Three miles away, or eight minutes by car, was Capone's headquarters in Cicero, Illinois. Although Capone was gone, his successor, Frank Nitti and Capone's brother Ralph, took over Capone's organization and continued plaguing local businesses well into the 1940s.
In some respects, Ariadne's life was never hers. While she had choices, she came from a country where men made her decisions. She trusted her father as he decided her future. She followed her relatively unknown husband, of an arranged marriage, to a foreign country. Although Ariadne emigrated during one of the worst social upheavals of the American twentieth century and lived with a successful Greek restaurateur, mere minutes from the center of infamous organized crime in Chicago during the 1930s; she remembers nothing. Astonished, Stephanie adds, "It's amazing. Yia Yia doesn't recall anything,"
Cloistered within Chicago's Greek community, Ariadne read only a Greek newspaper, kept mostly to their home and with a successful husband, had no need to work or drive. While Nickolas spoke English, Ariadne did not. True to Greek tradition, Yia Yia maintained their home life while Nickolas managed his several restaurants, the public face of their family. “He was all the time at the restaurant,” she says.
By 1938, life seemed assured; their three restaurants were successful, and Ariadne now had two sons, Costas and John. Stephanie recounts her grandfather’s entrepreneurial ingenuity: “He and his partners would buy the building, back in Chicago…so then people couldn’t screw with them, with their rent. So I remember my dad [Costas], even when I was a little girl; he’d say ‘if you’re going to own a business you buy the building.’”
One day in 1944, Nickolas was sitting on their living room couch, having just spoken with his business partners, after a day of managing his restaurants. Ariadne arose from sitting besides him, on the couch, to make Nickolas some coffee. Returning, she found him still sitting up, on the couch, dead from a sudden heart attack, “He come [home] to sleep. They was with him. Then he was on the couch with me…and I go get him coffee.” She shrugs her shoulders, “I come back…he was dead.”
The death of Nickolas – their family's sole breadwinner who brought her to America; the man who controlled her decisions – left Ariadne adrift. Without any ownership of Nickolas' restaurants, she was an unemployed widow, caring for two sons, without income, could not drive, and spoke no English.
Perhaps Karma pays out in installments.
Nickolas' restaurant partners stepped in with Chicago's Greek community and provided for Ariadne and her boys’ every need. Impressed, Stephanie adds, “They [the partners] really could have screwed with her.” Sheltered in this tight community, Ariadne raised her two boys. Although Ariadne never worked or drove, the support she received enabled both sons to attend college and even send Costas to Harvard Law School. By the early 1960s, Ariadne had moved into a five-bedroom house her sons built for her on land they purchased.
Ariadne's story evolves with every circuit around the table. When interviewed with Stephanie as translator, Yia Yia is more animated, more vocal, more at ease. Yet conversation dissolves into silence when her past is breached too deep.
New details, each one more painful and secretive, emerge to answer unresolved questions. After the interview, secrets begin to trickle as Stephanie mentions that, “Yia Yia did remarry, but I don’t bring it up because it shuts Yia Yia down. He cheated on her with her best friend then they divorced. Her son had to tell her he’d left.”
Stephanie describes how her father's (Costas) generosity paid for Yia Yia's comfortable mid-life, "For twenty years, Yia Yia would go to Greece for six months and live with [her youngest sister] Koula; in the summer in Greece and come back to Chicago [for] six months."
At some point, though, Ariadne's carefully dictated life flipped like a magnet, from positive to negative. The caliber of men making her decisions changed as the world modernized and women's equality gained acceptance, exposing the illegitimacy of traditional male patriarchy.
After a car accident in 1979 left Ariadne's sixteen-year-old grandson Nick mentally unstable, her oldest son John – now sole owner of Ariadne's house and land in Aurora – moved Nick in with Yia Yia. For the next two years, she endured Nick's unpredictable emotional abuse, until she discovered him sitting on her couch – dead from a sudden heart attack.
In 1998, Costas died from a sudden heart attack while vacationing in New Zealand.
Two years later, Yia Yia's remaining son John, gave her one-week's notice and then moved her from her home of the last forty-odd years into a small apartment in Aurora. Every week, he delivered food. “He’d ring the bell and hand her the groceries through the door, then leave,” Stephanie says, frowning. Still independent at 90, but now fearful of her son, she lived there for ten years. In 2010, Stephanie confronted her uncle John about Yia Yia's treatment, and then moved Yia Yia to an assisted living facility in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Stephanie visits Yia Yia daily.
The truth of Yia Yia's story presents a difficult moral. She is a product of time as well as place. For much of her 101 years, men controlled Ariadne's journey by deciding her path. A limited horizon and sheltered lifestyle insulated her from the surrounding chaos of early twentieth century, but also denied Ariadne the right of choosing to experience some of its wonders as well. The result is a woman who lived well and travelled often, but has few stories to tell. At the end of her journey, Yia Yia hopes to at least control her own death.
Stephanie stops next to her car, in the assisted living facility parking lot and tells me a final secret: “She [Yia Yia] told me she wants to die in her sleep in her bed.” Stephanie sighs sadly, and then confides, “The doctor said Yia Yia's kidneys are failing, which means it will be slow.” 

Monday, June 06, 2011

Simon

Recently, we decided to get a family dog. It had been a long decision and I was reluctant to get a dog. We already had 2 cats and two parakeets.

We eventually had to bring one of the cats (Lizzy) back to the shelter because she was tearing up the house. Later, one of the parakeets died, leaving us with just one cat and a bird.

So, we decided to get a dog.

Simon is a cool dog. Although the humane society in Coon Rapids, where we picked him up from, said he was a collie mix; I believe he is a golden retriever and German Shepard mix. He has a think coat. His head is all golden with more of a Shepard snout. His body is stocky and powerful and he has the Shepard looking chocolate brown coloring on his back that resembles a saddle.

A very shy dog at first, we had to carry him into the van and into the house. He has mellowed quite a bit and is very affectionate.

Friday, June 03, 2011

Moomies

Two-year old Bella watches me begin making a smoothie by adding strawberries and other stuff to the blender and squeals -

"Moomies!"

The Annika and Bella Goodbye

Annika is now nine and Isabella is two!

One of the most satisfying parts of parenting is watching your two children, seven years and a generation apart, say good bye to each other at the start of the day when I bring Isabella to daycare before Annika leaves for 3rd grade.

Annika goes down to her knees, opens her arms wide for a big hug, and says "Bye Bella! Come and give me a hug!"

Bella squeals "Bye!" and rushes in for a hug.

"Can you give me a kiss goodbye?" asks Annika and gets a goodbye kiss in return.

I see siblings who fight and do not like each other. Then I look at how Annika views her baby sister and feel so proud. Sure, they bicker at times and sometimes Annika gets tired of Bella clinging on when Annika's friends are over. Sometimes Annika doesn't like Bella taking one of her toys and crying "Mine!" when Annika tries to retrieve it. Yet Annika has been very loving and supportive of Isabella. Bella adores Annika and calls her "anka".

Battlefields of My Childhood

I am struggling with my past.

I wrote a paper for a current class; the paper was about what I learned from my upbringing about work and how my experience as an adult has changed (or not). In writing my paper, I briefly recounted my parents life and what I learned about work.

It has been hard for me to do this because I have had to remember what I missed and it makes me sad and angry. Positively, I also see how far I've come and have been able to work through some things:

As a teen my father offered to pay me to scrape off decades of old paint from our three-seasoned porch one year during summer break. Excited at the prospect of earning money and praise I created an elaborate time-sheet to keep track of my hours and went to work. On my own and without guidance, support, or encouragement I soon became frustrated with my progress and failed to complete the project. My learned expectation for disappointment combined with not knowing how to ask for help doomed the project. I was later shamed by my father when he chastised me for not following through. For the rest of the summer I sulked around in confusion, guilt, and shame.

I also recounted my mom and found out some things from my Aunt Carol. Mom was extremely intelligent. Carol says she had an IQ in the high 130s.

This has highlighted parts of my life I had not uncovered and I have learned from it.

I am sad because each time I uncover more of my past, I understand more that my parents never dealt with my oldest brother's death as an infant. It's tartly poignant that my parents, who had so much to offer and so much life in them withered afterwards. The consequence to my brothers' and I - who came after - was that we were emotionally neglected.

I am angry because I cannot change the past and until I learn to grow away from it, I am forced to relive parts I don't fully understand. For many years I have held shame and guilt over my perceived failure to finish scrapping the damned house that one summer. Yet I never included my parents in the blame reserving the most acidic parts for myself. Now I can mourn what I lost and move on.

What really sucks is that it feels like I'm visiting the battlefield of my childhood. Strewn with the covered corpses of my past, I uncover each - one at a time - and gasp at what I learn. As I recover that past part of me and weep for what I lost, I move on to the next. Part of me relishes the growth and freedom that comes from understanding and urges me rush on to the next and the next until I am over-gorged, over-whelmed and sick on the morbid atrocities of my past. Part of me sighs and looks to the horizon for an end.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Snow!

It's Wednesday, before Christmas Eve and it's snowing like hell outside. It is the sort of storm where, at night, street lights fade into a fuzzy blur; where everyone drives at a crawl.

They are forecasting over a foot of snow. It started tonight and should continue through Thursday and into Friday; maybe even Saturday.

Nothing is better than a cool winter storm.

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Wait for it...Wait...NOW

Men have turned waiting for their wives while they shop, into an art. We pull up, letting them out at the front of the store and then drive away.

We do so with the knowledge that we must return to pick them up.

Unless the pickup time is exact, it becomes an art of finding a parking spot where we can spy upon the front entrance. Like predator or villain in a movie, we choose our parking place, backing into it.

Waiting...

When our spouse emerges we pounce. Lights flick on as the car starts and we zoom out. If we wait to long, then the spouse begins scanning for us.

"Where were you?" Will be the question as she buckles herself in.

For the times when that perfect waiting spot cannot be found, we drive about in a general loop, passing by the entrance.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Dinner at Frans

Tonight we went to Frans for a get together with some friends. It ended up being more of a "Beavers" get together than anything.

For those uninitiated, the Beavers are the wives and friends who have become a close knit cluster. They get together and spend a weekend up North at a cabin, drinking, eating, talking and sharing.

We husbands have never followed suit to becoming a closer group of male friends. We all tend to drift like magnets, drawn in to various get togethers by the Beaver group, floating along their periphery, but never getting close enough to each other. In fact, when we do get close, something pushes us away into a solitary Beaver orbit.

I was the sole guy there, the "token" as they put it.

I just sat and listened, enjoying their camaraderie, adding a bit here or there; but never really engaging too fully.

this and that

It is almost Christmas. Annika is very excited at the prospect of getting gifts. Isabella is her normal cheery seven-month old self; burbling to no one and everyone. Kris is applying for a job as a manager in her office.

I begin my new technical writing job January 4th. My last day is New Years Eve.

I will miss not being a full time employee, but I also believe a bit of excitement never hurt; and might even lead to more interesting things.

I know I am excited at beginning the new job. Consequently, I am also anxious at doing a good job and catching on quickly. While I know I will do just fine, I am suffering flashes of insecurity; which really sucks.

This last week, I had Kris' car, which I took in to have looked at. Before she left earlier that morning, she advised me to run her car for a bit during lunch. We were in a period of arctic weather and the temp was below zero; with a windchill around ten below.

Of course I forgot to run the car.

When I left work, later that night, to bring her car into the dealership, it wouldn't start; turning over barely - the battery losing charge due to the bitter cold.

Swearing to myself, I got out, went back to my office and called for a jump from AAA.

The tow truck arrived and the guy gave my car a jump.

As I signed for the services by the passenger door of his truck, warm air teasing us; he looked over at me.

"What do you do for a job?"

I looked at him, caught off guard. Thinking for a moment I replied "I'm a Technical Writer"

"Gotta pay more than this job" he replied pointing to his truck as he climbed in and drove away.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

this and that

Things in my world are in flux; Some good, some a bit scary.

First, Isabella and Annika came down with head and chest colds; coughing and hacking. Isabella's cold has been un-nerving to me. Nothing feels more helpless than watching your six month old gag on her own phlegm and not be able to fix her. While Annika is much more able to help herself, given her age; it's also difficult watching her try to seem sicker than she is, when her younger sister gets more attention.

I kept Both home last Friday at the beginning of their colds. Hovering in the background was a worry I had, that they had the swine flu. The next Tuesday, I brought Isabella to Partners in Pediatrics to ease my concern. She just had a cold.

I have applied for a new job and have been accepted! I'll talk about this later, though; as it's getting late and I am tired.