Host: Jay Allison
[Uncanny Valley by The Drift]
Jay: [00:00:12] From PRX, this is The Moth Radio Hour. I'm Jay Allison, producer of this radio show. And today, we'll hear about lessons our parents teach us, whether they mean to or not.
Our first storyteller is Bridgett Davis. She told her story at The Ford Community and Performing Arts center in Detroit, Michigan, where The Moth was presented by Michigan Radio. Here's Bridgett Davis, live at The Moth.
[applause]
Bridgett: [00:00:41] I was in my first-grade class one day, and I had just shown my teacher, Ms. Miller, an assignment. We had to color paper petals, cut them out and paste them onto a picture of a flower. And as I'm returning to my seat, Ms. Miller stops me and she says, “You sure do have a lot of shoes.” The week before, she had asked me what my father did for a living. And I said, “He doesn't work.” And she said, “Well, what does your mother do?” And I froze. I knew I could not tell her that my mom was in the numbers, which was a lot like today's lottery, except that it was underground and [chuckles] it really existed for decades before the state basically took it over. [audience laughter]
My mom was a numbers runner. That means that every day, except Sunday, she would take people's bets on three-digit numbers, collect their money when they didn't win, pay out their winnings when they did and profit from the difference. And the thing is the numbers was wildly popular. It generated millions of dollars in every major city in the country. And so, you can imagine that a lot of that money circulated through the Black community and those dollars turned over many, many times. I mean, numbers money helped to provide services that Black folks desperately needed. It really helped with launching small businesses and providing college scholarships. It helped folks get home loans and it even helped a fledgling NAACP stay afloat for years.
My mom was high ranking. She wasn't just a numbers runner. She was a banker. And that means that she didn't just have her own customers, but other bookies turned their business into her. She was the only woman in Detroit operating at that level for a long time. That's how she was able to give us a solid middle-class life. A solid middle-class life. And so, you can imagine that I was really, really, really proud of my mom. I just thought, this is really incredible that she's able to give us this middle-class life. But what I loved most of all was, I mean, I can do it now. I can conjure the sound of her voice on the phone taking her customers bets. She would say, “Okay, Ms. Queenie, I'm ready to take your numbers. Six-nine-two, straight for 50 cents. Seven-eight-eight, box for a dollar.”
And folks had these really creative ways of coming up with numbers to play. They had all kinds of ways they would think about what three digits they wanted to play. They could play their birth dates, or their anniversaries, or their addresses or their license plates. Some people even like to play their favorite Bible verse. [audience laughter] And for me to just hear my mom reciting those numbers every morning, it was like a daytime lullaby, because it meant that everything was right in the world, because my mom was handling her business.
On the other hand, it is true that it was a livelihood based on a daily win or lose gamble. So, yes, I also remember how we would all gather around and wait for that phone call every evening that would announce the day's winning numbers. They were based on racetrack results. It was like this tense silence moved through our home like a nervous prayer. When we actually heard the winning numbers, we took our cues from mama, either she looked relieved or she looked worried. Either, she'd been lucky that day or one of her customers had been. It wasn't that she ever resented her customers winning. She would always say, “Folks play numbers to hit, so you cannot be mad when they do.”
I was so proud of my mom. I knew she was not like any of my friends’ mothers. I knew she was running things. And one day, I decided I was going to organize all of her numbers running materials. Yeah. [audience laughter] And so, I went through the house gathering everything into this shallow cardboard box. Her spiral notebooks, and her white scratch pads, and her black binders and her red ink pens, and then I very carefully painted on the side of the box, Mama's numbers. I used bright pink nail polish. I was so impressed with myself, because I remembered the possessive S. [audience laughter]
So, I proudly show this to my mom. She takes one look and says, “You cannot put my business out in the street like that.” That's when it hit me that I had to keep my admiration for my mom private. It's not that she was ever apologetic or embarrassed about what she did. There was no shame attached to it. My mom made it very clear that the numbers was a legitimate business that just happened to be illegal. [audience laughter] She had all of these ways to help to mitigate the risk of exposure.
My mom basically lived a low-key lifestyle. She never flaunted her wealth. Yes, she always drove a new car, but it was a Buick Riviera and not a Cadillac. We lived in a lovely home on a tree lined street, but we did not live in one of the big houses in an exclusive enclave in Detroit. We were well dressed. My mom was the best dressed of all, but her style was understated. She was classic and classy. No one would have ever described my mother as flashy.
My mom's edict was, “Keep your head up and your mouth shut. [audience laughter] Be proud, but be private.” And that's why when my first-grade teacher asked me what my mom did for a living, I knew I could not tell her the truth. I knew I could not reveal the family business. We all knew to keep that secret. The only problem was I hadn't been told what I should say. So, I said to Ms. Miller, “I'm not sure what my mom does.” And after Ms. Miller said to me, “You sure do have a lot of shoes,” she said to me, “Before you sit down, I want you to name every pair of shoes you have. Go ahead.” I was so nervous, because it felt like a test and so I didn't want to get it wrong. I went through this mental inventory of all the shoes that lined my closet shelf and I just started naming them. The black and white polka dotted ones with the bow tie, the buckled ruby red ones, the salmon pink lace ups.
I managed to get through 10 pairs of shoes. And Ms. Miller said to me, “10 pairs is an awful lot.” I could hear something bad in her voice, as she ordered me to take my seat. And then, the next day in class, Ms. Miller called me back to her desk and she said, “You did not tell me you had white shoes.” I looked down at my feet and I felt like I had been caught in a lie. I knew I had disappointed my teacher. And the rest of the day, I was so worried that I was in trouble.
And so, that evening, after my mother was finished taking her customer's bets and before the day's winning numbers came out, during that brief expectant pause in the day when she was least distracted and still in a good mood, I told her what happened at school. I confessed that I forgot to tell Ms. Miller about the 11th pair of shoes. I have never seen my mother get so angry. She was furious. And I thought, I am about to get a spanking. But in fact, my mom said to me, “That is none of her damn business. Who does she think she is?”
And then, my mom stood up and said, “Get your coat.” And I thought, oh, my God, we are going back to school and she's going to confront Ms. Miller. But in fact, my mom took me to Saks Fifth Avenue, [audience laughter] where we made our way to the children's shoe department. [audience laughter] [audience applause]
She pointed to the most beautiful pair of yellow patent leather shoes, and she said, “Those are pretty.” I'm telling you, I still can remember when my mother pulled out a $100 bill and paid for those shoes, the saleswoman looked at her the way Ms. Miller had looked at me. On the way home, my mom said, “You're going to wear these to school tomorrow. [audience laughter] And you better tell that damn teacher of yours that you actually have a dozen pair of shoes. You hear me?” The next day, I wore my new shoes with a matching yellow knit dress. And in class, I was so nervous, but I did as I was told. I walked up to my teacher's desk and I said, “Ms. Miller, I have 12 pairs of shoes.” She looked down at my feet, and then she leveled her blue eyes at my face and she said, “Sit down.” [audience laughter] Ms. Miller never said another word to me.
Sending me to school that day in those decidedly unsubtle, bright yellow shoes, my mom really did risk raising Ms. Miller's suspicions. But she did it to make a point. And it was one that I understood and heard loud and clear, “No one can tell me, ever what I'm entitled to.” My mom used material things as armor against a world designed to convince us, Black, working-class children of migrants that we didn't deserve a good life. And her mission was to make sure we knew otherwise.
So, yes, 12 pairs of shoes for a six-year-old girl who's going to outgrow them in a few months might seem excessive. But for my mom, it was an investment in how I walked into the future with my head up. But I did continue to keep my mouth shut. For decades, I never told anyone what my mother did for a living. Not even after Michigan's daily lottery became legal, [audience laughter] and not even after my mother died, which means I never got to tell anyone how proud I was of her until now. Thank you.
[cheers and applause]
Jay: [00:14:59] That was Bridgett Davis. Every day, Bridgett plays the New York Lottery game, which is actually called Numbers at a bodega near her home. She plays six-seven-five, her home address, which according to her favorite dream book, also plays for her mom's name, Fanny. Since publishing her memoir on this subject, Bridgett has received dozens of emails from people of all backgrounds Greek, Jewish, Irish, Italian, Polish, Lebanese, Panamanian, Ukrainian and more, revealing how their family members once played or operated the numbers. Nearly all were sharing their stories for the first time.
To see photos of Bridgett and her mom, along with a picture of her mother taking a customer's number over the phone, visit themoth.org.
Coming up, the surprising lessons of a nine-alarm fire, when The Moth Radio Hour continues.
[calm and peaceful music]
The Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. And presented by the Public Radio Exchange, prx.org.
This is The Moth Radio Hour from PRX. I'm Jay Allison. Our next story in this hour about parental lessons comes from Ellie Lee. A couple of minutes into her story, Ellie talks about a coat her father designed for her when she was a kid, and she holds it up for of the audience to see. We don't want you to feel left out, so if you want to see a picture of the coat, it's on our website, themoth.org
[cheers and applause]
Here's Elie Lee, live at The Moth.
Ellie: [00:17:13] So, there's a wisdom that fathers have and then there's the wisdom that my father has. For example, when he does things, he thinks he's totally brilliant and I just think he's crazy. For example, when we first immigrated from Hong Kong, he thought it would be a good idea for all of us to have American names which would make sense, because it would make the transition a lot easier. And so, my dad chose the American name Ming, [audience laughter] even though it's like not even his Chinese name. It's just like another Chinese name. It's like a dynasty.
So, when we came over to this country, we really had nothing. We were penniless. So, in order to save money, my dad thought it was a really smart idea to make and design my first winter coat. I was three years old. And to this day, he thinks it's like the best design. There you go. [audience aww] [audience laughter] But seriously, he thinks it's like, “Oh, this is great, we should market this.” So, anyways, that's the wisdom that my father has.
One more example of his wisdom. One day, he came home and there was a sale on belts and he bought a monogram belt and he was so excited. He's like, “Look at this.” It had this big shiny letter A on it even though our family name is Lee. And I was like, “Dad, why did you get a letter A belt? That doesn't make any sense.” He's like, “Oh, I got A because A is for Ace,” [audience laughter] which is-- You have to understand something about Chinese people. Chinese people are obsessed about being number one like, “I have a belt now that says, so I'm number one, Ace.” If you never noticed in Chinatowns across the country, Chinese business people, they always have to find the best number one name for their business in order to bring in all the money and the good fortune, which is why everything's like an imperial dynasty, lucky dragon number one kitchen. That is my dad. That's his mentality.
So, in the first few years of being in this country, just he had no time off and worked crazy and managed to save up a little money to start up his own business. It was a very modest grocery store in Boston's Chinatown. And of course, he called it Ming's Market. But in Chinese, the name of it was piányí shìchǎng, which literally means cheap-priced market. And it was that. Even as a little kid, I didn't understand, like, literally he told me one day that he would mark up something by 5 cents, mark up another thing by 10 cents, and I was just like, “How are you ever going to make money? This business model is insane. What's the wisdom of that?” But strangely enough, almost immediately, he developed a really loyal following in Boston's Chinatown, because for the first time, I think working families and working poor families actually had a place where they could buy affordable, healthy, good groceries and eat well, which is no small thing when you're poor.
So, my dad, after about 10 years of having this grocery store, he built it up to be a very successful business. And by 1989, he had moved into an enormous space. It became New England's largest Asian market. And at the same time that year-- I mean, I was a snotty teenager. I still thought, well, you're crazy. You're a successful businessman, but you're nuts. You have crazy ideas. At the same time, he'd been renting a first floor in this vacant building that had been vacant for 20, no, 30 years. And the landlord was trying to renovate the other floors to try to rent it out as retail space, but he was doing everything on the cheap. So, instead of hiring a contractor, he was welding and renovating on his own without pulling permits.
So, one day, as you can probably expect, something got out of hand and this big fire broke out as he was welding. But it was okay. They evacuated the building, about 150 people, and the fire trucks arrived immediately, and everything was fine until the fire department hooked up their hoses to the hydrants and there was no water to fight the fire. They were like, “Huh, that's weird.” So, they went down a couple of blocks and tried the next hydrant, and it was totally dry. What had happened was that the city of Boston a few months prior, they were doing road construction. Generally, when you drill, if they drill deep, they turn off the water pressure in case they hit a water main. When they sealed up the road, they forgot to turn the pressure back up. So, the firefighters had no tools to fight the fire.
It was just a disaster. It was just like an hour later, the building's still on fire and there's no water. They're trying to jerry rig something from a nearby hydrant, like 10 blocks away. If things couldn't get worse, the fire jumped an alley and the building next door caught on fire. And on the top floor was 10,000 square feet of illegally stashed fireworks. So, firefighters couldn't scale the ladders. I mean, it was a surreal moment, because things were exploding in celebration, you know, you'd have fireworks. As my dad stood there completely helpless, watching his life's work just be destroyed in a moment through no fault of his own.
So, I got a call. I was a sophomore at the time in college, and I went out to the store the next day when it was just smoldering. It wasn't on fire anymore. As I made my approach to the store, I remember seeing three elderly women across the street and they were crying. And so, I went up to them and I said, “Is everything okay? Why are you crying?” And the lady looked at me and then she looked at my dad's store, burned down store, and pointed and teary eyed said, “Where are we going to go now that we don't have a home?” That was like a turning point for me. I hadn't really thought about my dad's store in that way. I just thought it was something he was doing to provide for the family. But in fact, he was providing for a greater community.
These elderly women, they didn't have a community center to go to. They didn't have a public park in Chinatown. This was the only place where they would actually run into their friends and they spent a lot of time there, in a way, it was like a second home. I guess it is true. It sounds corny, but you only really do realize what you have when you lose it. And so, in the months that followed, I kept begging my dad for more stories. One time, he told me a story about how a little boy--
I asked him what he did with people who were shoplifters, because I was really curious. And he said, “Well, one day, I caught a kid shoplifting. He was only 10. He didn't know who I was. I was following him around. He was just taking stuffing it in his bag, putting it in his pockets. At one moment, he actually took a break from stealing, and sat down and started eating the food he had stolen.” He was just right in the middle of an aisle. My dad came up to him, and he didn't know who he was. He said, “Hey, little boy, have you had enough to eat?” And the little boy rubbed his belly. He's like, “Almost.” My dad's like, “Hey, so, where are your parents?” He's like, “Well, they're at work.” He's like, “Oh, why aren't you at home?” He's like, “Because there's no food at home.”
And my dad said, “Well, you know, when you take stuff, especially if it's at a store and you don't pay for it, it's actually stealing.” And the little boy starts getting really nervous, like, “Oh, my God, this guy's going to get me in trouble.” He's angling for a way to get out. And my dad's like, “So, in the future, if you don't have anything to eat at home, you please just come and find me and ask me for whatever you need. If you ask, I'll give you whatever you want. Just don't steal, because stealing is wrong.”
And in the months that followed, I think my dad really looked forward to seeing the little boy. It was these stories that I was craving, and I was asking my dad, because in some way, I think I was trying to recreate something that I had lost or had taken for granted. So, whenever we went to Chinatown, I remember lots of people would come up to us and say, “Please, we need a store like this again. When are you going to open up your store?” And it was hard, because my dad was basically penniless. The fire had caused about $20 million worth of damage, and he barely had enough insurance to cover it. I mean, it was not just inventory, but the bean sprout machine, like the machine that he leased to wash and dry bean sprouts. I mean, stuff like that.
And so, he really had no money, but he had this idea that maybe he could pool together what little money he did have with a lot of the original employees, people for whom they were immigrants and they got their first jobs through my dad at the store and had been working there since the 1970s. So, they pulled together. It was a big risk. The only location they could find was just on the outskirts of Chinatown, which in the early 1990s, during the last recession in, it was like a no man's land. It's like this area, really-- It was so unsafe, and the only reason you would ever go there is to get a prostitute or drugs. It was so unsafe.
And at the time, I remember in college thinking, what's the wisdom of that? Why are you going there? It's so unsafe. No one's going to go. You're going to lose your life savings. But he did it anyways, because he's crazy. Almost overnight, the place was revitalized. There were really loyal people that families from the suburbs came and gave patronage to my dad. People walked from Chinatown. And then, soon thereafter, more and more businesses started popping up, and then there was more and more foot traffic and then families started moving back into the neighborhood. It was an amazing thing. He helped revitalize his neighborhood to the point that then 15 years later, it became one of the most valuable pieces of real estate in Boston, which is why my dad got an eviction notice from the owner, because he wanted to kick my dad out and knock down the whole block and build luxury condos. This was a few years ago.
So, I remember my dad at the time was 70, and I said, “Dad, what do you want to do? You have 90 employees, and they're all in their 40s and 50s. They don't speak English. They're very hard to employ. What's going to happen to them?” I remember at the time, my dad said, “I'm 70 years old. I'm too old for this. I'm too old to fight.” I understand when my dad says that. But at the time, I decided that I wasn't too old to fight. So, I organized the community and-- Sorry. I organized the community and led this grassroots movement to fight city hall and fight one of the largest developers in all of Boston to try to hold ground. [audience cheers and applause]
At our first public hearing, it was a really amazing turnout. We got enough that even the mayor changed his tune and started supporting where we were coming from. It was an incredible thing. So, after the first initial hearing, I remember going to the store afterwards. Immediately when I walked in, there was these two older women who were my dad's employees, and they rushed right up to me and I said, “Thank you so much for what you did last night. We normally don't think that we have a voice and we normally don't think we can advocate for ourselves in that way. So, thank you for doing what you did.” When I looked into their eyes, I think I felt like the same feeling probably that my dad felt when he saw the boy that once shoplifted or saw the old women outside the store weeping. When I looked into their eyes, I saw so much compassion and humility and grace. It was at that moment that I understood the wisdom that my father had given me. Thank you.
[cheers and applause]
Jay: [00:28:26] Ellie Lee is an award-winning director, writer and producer of fiction, animated and documentary films. She is a five-time national Emmy award nominee. Currently, she's writing two screenplays, one of which is loosely based on her family's stories in Boston's Chinatown in the 1980s. The fire in her dad's store was a nine-alarm fire, one of the biggest in Boston's history.
Ellie's parents immigrated to Boston from Hong Kong when she was a baby. Her father picked Boston, because he wanted his kids to get a good education. And the only schools he'd ever heard of were Harvard and MIT. Ellie is a graduate of Harvard University.
Coming up, a rebellious teenager and a bipolar mother, when The Moth Radio Hour continue.
[soft piano music]
The Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. And presented by the Public Radio Exchange, prx.org.
You're listening to The Moth Radio Hour from PRX. I'm Jay Allison, producer of this show. Next up, Jason Schommer, who told this story about his mother's wisdom in the Twin Cities at a Moth GrandSLAM. The theme of the night was Growing pains. Here's Jason, live at The Moth.
[cheers and applause]
Jason: [00:30:37] Growing up, we never fought. But the few times we did, it was off the charts. I was furious. I grabbed a handful of money, I stomped out of the house and I walked all the way to Pamida. [audience laughter] Once I got in that store, I headed right to health and beauty and I snatched a home perm kit right off the shelf. [audience laughter] I was going to perm my hair for my senior photos and no one was going to stop me. [audience cheers and applause]
Not even my mom, who said it was a terrible idea. [audience laughter] Now, growing up in a small town, I was different. I stuck out like a sore thumb. Back in the fourth grade, my parents moved from Minneapolis to Little Falls, Minnesota, a small, conservative rural farming community. My life was basically footloose. [audience laughter] Only we could dance and I didn't look like Kevin Bacon. [audience laughter]
Now, I just did not fit in with my peers and my classmates. Every day, walking through the halls of school, I was lost in a sea of mullets and Wrangler jeans. [audience laughter] Two different worlds colliding. They liked to smoke in wood chop class, I liked theater arts. They headbanged to ACDC, I vogued to Madonna. [audience laughter] They wore cowboy boots, I had penny loafers. [sighs] So, as I left Pamida, I called my friend, Heidi, from the payphone on the street corner, and I told her, “I'm coming over,” and I hung up. [audience laughter]
Now, Heidi was the queen of bad decisions. [audience laughter] Heidi loved to skip school, and she even failed gym class. [audience laughter] She was also dating a boy from juvie. [audience laughter] Heidi opened her door before I could even knock. She knew something big was about to happen, and she wanted in. [audience laughter] So, I threw that perm box on the table. She grabbed a towel. We were doing it. [audience laughter] So, we did the perm. Let me tell you this, it took hours. It was a nightmare. I almost lost an eye. [audience laughter]
Chemical was everywhere. My scalp was burning. We lost a couple of chunks of hair, but I knew it would be worth it, because I figured I am changing my identity. I'm going to be a new person. When I go to school, all the kids are going to stare as I walk in slow motion, [audience laughter] and they're going to be thinking, “Wow, who's that new cool kid, and how can I be friends with him?” [audience laughter] Sadly, it was just me getting high from the fumes from the perm. [audience laughter]
So, the next day, my mom and I drove over to the portrait studio, so I could have my senior photos taken. The silence in that car was deafening [audience laughter] as my mom was mute with seething rage and I was smug with victory. [audience laughter] Now, prior to the perm, my hair was long, straight and brown. I had an asymmetrical haircut, which was where one end is a lot longer than the other end. It flipped over to the left. It was very flock of seagulls, 1980s. [audience laughs] So, once I permed it, the length of my hair caused these giant ringlets that bounced like crazy every time I took a step or snapped my neck. [audience laughter]
My hair had so much drama, Beyoncé would be jealous. [audience laughter] So, once we were in the portrait studio, I took a can of mousse, I flipped off the cap, made the giant mound of foam, worked it into my hair and it was frozen in time. [audience laughter] A few minutes later, it was frozen in eternity as the flashbulb, and my senior photo was taken. My mom hung the photo up in our living room and displayed it prominently. She never missed an opportunity to tell anyone who came over to the house, “Oh, have you seen Jason's senior photo?” [audience laughter] “Yes, it is a perm. It is. Uh-huh. Yeah. I told him not to, but no one listens to mom, right, Jason?” Which I always responded with, “Okay, okay, listen, it was popular at the time.” But the sad reality was the perm was never popular and I was never popular.
One day, I finally admitted to my mom, I go, “I get it, mom. It was a mistake. Can we just take the photo down?” She looked at me and she said, “Oh, honey, we all make mistakes. That's how we figure out who we are in life. Unfortunately, though, sometimes mistakes live in a frame on the living room wall, forever.” [audience laughter]
[cheers and applause]
Jay: [00:36:49] That was Jason Schommer. Jason is a standup comedian and storyteller. He spent two years as the opening act for comedy icon Louie Anderson. Jason says, 14 years ago, his mom unfortunately lost her battle with cancer, but she would have been proud to see how things turned out and would have loved this story.
Jason: [00:37:11] Everyone always asks, they're like, “Where's the picture of the perm now? Did you put it back up?” I can honestly say, “Yes, the picture of me in the perm is back up on the wall where my mom would want it to be.”
Jay: [00:37:25] To see photos of Jason and his mom and of course that perm photo, visit our website, themoth.org.
Our final story and parental lesson in this hour is from Louise Newton-Keogh. Louise told this story at an open-mic StorySLAM competition in Melbourne, Australia, where we partnered with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, ABCRN. Here's Louise.
[cheers and applause]
Louise: [00:38:12] Okay. So, when I was younger, whenever my mother would say the words to me, I love you, I would die a little bit inside. Not because she didn't love me and not because I didn't love her, because she did and I do, but because that meant she was starting on another manic episode.
You see, my mother struggled all her life with bipolar disorder that was undiagnosed and untreated until she was in her 50s. And it made for an interesting upbringing. Some of it was a lot of fun. We had some wacky times, like when she dragged us out of bed at 02:00 in the morning to worship the moon. I don't know how she did it, but she got a whole stash of fireworks and we had our own fireworks night in the backyard. Neighbors didn't like it, but we loved it.
But for the most part, growing up with a parent with a mental illness was really tough and challenging, particularly after my dad left. He had his own set of circumstances and he left when I was 10. Particularly, after that it was just us and her. It was a really steep learning curve. We learnt more from mum than I did in 20 years of schooling. We learnt that every year or so, this sweet, gentle, kind, beautiful woman would have what was termed then as a nervous breakdown and would transform into someone we didn't know. It was a bit like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, only it was mum and what we called nut bag mum.
We learnt that it was possible to have nut bag mum scream abuse in your face, steal from whatever meager little bits you earned from your paper round or whatever jobs we got from the neighbors, call your teachers to tell them what a terrible, horrible human being you were. She even called one of my uni lectures once. I don't know how she got his phone number, but she did. It was possible for her to do all that, and for that to be okay, and for us to get past it and to forgive.
We learnt compassion. Because for as much as we suffered and we did, it was obvious even from that young age that there was nobody who was struggling more than mum, that she and she alone bore the brunt of this and she would have done anything to rid herself of what she saw as a curse. We learnt that the medical system fails people with mental health issues, it did then, it does now, nothing's changed. And we learnt to rely on each other. We knew from a very young age that the only way we were going to get through this was if we rallied together, my brother and my three sisters and I, and protected ourselves and our mum.
So, my brother, when he was in year seven, took over all of the finances. That included talking to bank managers about the debts mum racked up, organizing how to pay bills, organizing a budget for the weekly shopping. My sister Mary, at about the same age, started taking a Nano Jeep and going down to the supermarket and buying things, so we had food, so that mum couldn't spend it all on nothing. My job was to make sure my two younger sisters did their homework, so the school wouldn't come knocking on our door to see what was wrong.
We learnt to look after each other and we took it in turns to look after mum, to bear the brunt of the rages, to make sure she was okay, to just be there for her when the inevitable collapse came. But we also learnt to be vigilant, because even in the stable times, and there were a lot of very good stable times, we were always on the lookout for the next time, the next episode.
And unfortunately, one of the main pointers for that was I love you. I've lost track of the amount of times I'd had conversations with my siblings and I would go something like, “Hey, mum loves me again.” And the response would be “Oh, crap, here we go.” And it didn't just stop there. The I love yous got more and more, extreme, the further she elevated, often coming at the end of some hideous insult, you know, “You're a horrible person and I wish you'd never been born, but I love you,” as if that made it okay, but it didn't. It tainted those three beautiful words for me, and it made it almost impossible for me to be able to say them back.
I don't know what it was, but it stuck like a block in my chest. I'd find myself if someone said, “I love you.” “Yeah, thanks for that. That's good, cool. Great, yeah, good on you.” But I wasn't able to say-- It was hard until a few years ago, my mum had what we thought was the mother of all episodes, but it actually turned out to be an even worse condition. She had developed a condition called Lewy body syndrome, which is a form of dementia that is rapid, and unrelenting, and has destroyed her body and her mind in equal parts.
She now is in a really lovely care facility. She can no longer walk or feed herself or clean herself, and she could barely talk. I see her every Sunday and I hold her hand and sit with her. Sometimes I talk, and sometimes we listen to music, but most of the time, mum and I just sit in silence. It's very healing and it's very peaceful. I know she likes me there. But the lessons still haven't stopped, because my mother says two things to me, and she said only two things to me for the last year.
The first one is when I get there, and she says, “Ah, it's you,” in great surprise. She's so pleased. I say, “Yes, it is me” and we sit together. And then, when I'm leaving, she holds my hand and she smiles with her eyes and she says, “I love you, Lou.” Somehow, it doesn't hurt me anymore. It doesn't make me cringe. It actually feels right. It feels perfect. It feels beautiful. So, I guess the lesson I've learned, perhaps the last lesson I'll ever learn from my mother is how to hear those words, I love you, and how to say them back, I love you, mum. See you soon.
[cheers and applause]
Jay: [00:45:14] That was Louise Newton-Keogh. Louise is a freelance writer and university administrator from Melbourne, Australia. When she's not working, Louise spends her time writing, reading, baking celebration cakes or walking the beautiful tree lined streets of her neighborhood. She says her driving passion is family and she's the proud mother of four mostly adult children and a Spoodle called Atticus. Louise has always been the teller of her family's stories, a role she cherishes.
Louise: [00:45:47] Mum died early in the new year of 2018. It was a gentle death. She slipped away in her sleep without pain or struggle. My last visit to her was on New Year's Eve. I held her hand, played music to her and read to her a chapter of her favorite book, Little Women. By that stage, she had virtually lost the power of speech. But she did smile often. And as I left, she looked into my eyes and whispered, I love you, one last time.
It has been nearly two years now since mum passed away and I still miss having her in my life. But I like to think of her as free now. Free of the mental illness that she fought so bravely for so long and the dementia that cruelled her final few years, and that somewhere, somehow, she is smiling at having her story told. I will be forever grateful that the last words she heard me say, “Well, I love you too, mum.”
Jay: [00:47:02] To see photos of Louise and her mother, you can visit our website, themoth.org.
Do you have a story you'd like to tell us? We welcome your pitches. You can record them right on our site. That's themoth.org. Or, call 877-799-M-O-T-H. That's 877-799-6684. We listen to all of them. The best ones are developed for Moth shows all around the world.
Peter: [00:47:32] Hi. My story is about my ill-fated attempt to help my 11-year-old son Luke get over his fear of being beamed by a baseball. It involves me taking him up to the point operated batting cages in San Rafael and forcing him to watch me get voluntarily struck by a pitch just so that he could see that it wasn't that big of a deal, except of course, that it was a big deal. I don't think either of us will ever forget the sound that ball made as it ricocheted off my elbow. I know I'll never forget the pain, it was so exquisite. I'll never forget the fact that my son saw me cry for the very first time. Not my best day.
Even worse, that little incident did not help Luke get over his fear of getting beamed. In fact, if it accomplished anything, it's that we're both now terrified of batting cages. He's 15 now and he's free of the tyranny of organized sports. But I hope that he knows he has a dad who, while often misguided in his attempts to find solutions, is still very eager to help his son with life's problems.
Jay: [00:48:48] Remember, you can pitch us at 877-799-M-O-T-H or online at themoth.org. You can share these stories or any others from The Moth Archive and find out about Moth storytelling events in your area, all through our website, themoth.org. There are moth events year-round. You can find a show near you and come out and tell us a story. Find us on social media too. We're on Facebook and Twitter, @themoth.
That's it for this hour. We hope you'll join us next time. And that's the story from The Moth.
[Uncanny Valley by The Drift]
The stories in this show were directed by Catherine Burns and Meg Bowles, with additional coaching by Michelle Jalowski. The rest of The Moth's leadership team includes Sarah Haberman, Sarah Austin Jenness and Jenifer Hixson. Production support from Emily Couch.
Our pitch came from Peter Rudy.
Moth stories are true, as remembered and affirmed by the storytellers. Our theme music is by the Drift. Other music in this hour from Julian Lage, Tin Hat Trio, Blue Dot Sessions and Lotus. You can find links to all the music we use at our website.
The Moth Radio Hour is produced by me, Jay Allison, with Viki Merrick at Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. This hour was produced with funds from the National Endowment for the Arts. The Moth Radio Hour is presented by the Public Radio Exchange, prx.org. For more about our podcast, for information on pitching us your own story and everything else, go to our website, themoth.org.