Monday, February 28, 2011

The Indians in the Closet

My Grandmother Mattson and her big house on little Twin Lake held many memories for our family.  The front porch and the beach were two places that I remember as a place for reading, swimming, and of course imagining.  But there was one small space in her big house that held history, and stories beyond the imagination of most children.  That was where the buckskins and other Native American regalia were hung and there my cousin Gail, or one of my sisters and I would hide away on those rainy days when we were little.

The closet was more a narrow room with long oak wood boards that were smoothed by the many feet that wandered up and down the long rod that held a multitude of clothes, searching for what to wear.  It was a long room with a window at the end so it certainly wasn't dark, and there were so many places to hide with a book if I wanted to escape when my own family was there. (When you have many sisters you needed some time alone!)  

But my best memories were made with the soft smooth buckskin dresses and leggings that draped gently over the wire and cardboard hangers that lined the way back in this closet.  There were many days three or four of us would sit on the floor dressed in deerskin and leggings whispering and stroking the soft subtle folds of those clothes with their tiny colored beads lining the neck and sleeves of many of these garments.  The fringe was always too long and often tickled our arms and legs if we stood and paraded back and forth down the center of the long closet like models on a runway.  With heads high we'd walk proudly like we thought those tribeswomen might have and the images we created with the stories we imagined as we sauntered up and down as if on some forest path were alive with created lore and magic for us.  

If the light streamed through the small north window, as it often did in the summer we felt our skin get moist under the skin gowns and sometimes the fringe dripping with sweat would make us itch and scratch as we grew hotter. The window never could open, so it often got hot there but it never really bothered us because our imaginations were walking through our warms woods in summer, or riding horses with buckskin clad friends in long ago times.

The winters were the very best time because then we climbed the many old hat boxes to stretch carefully up to the long shelves above where the handmade blankets of red and yellow were kept, and with them we were transplanted into teepees where smoke rose high from the fires that warmed those rooms of buffalo hide, or long houses of wood and bark.  We each knew just enough native lore from grandma's stories to create our own that often could last all afternoon on those weekend days at Grandma's house.

As we grew older, we even got to wear those fragile gowns on Halloween evenings as we went door to door to get candy, and money for UNICEF.  I can still smell those velvety deer leather clothes that were so soft from the sweat of many years with my Great Grandfather's circus.  The smells and feel of those old memories filled what we wore and cemented like the sap of the pines that surrounded my grandmother's home the dreams we created so many years ago.  It gave us visions of what it might have felt like walking the Michigan forest paths with the Potawatomi, Ojibay, or Ottawa as we set our feet on paths toward our own adult lives.  It truly gave us dreams to live and revel in as we grew.

10 comments:

  1. The Indian clothing sounds much more fun to dress up in than mom's dresses and shoes! Your wording is such that it transplanted me into the closet. My mind could see you and your sisters sitting and parading in the Indian clothing. What a wonderful childhood memory!

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  2. Thanks, Linda. The stories and memories of my Grandma and the items that gave us kids those images and bits of her life are so special to me.

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  3. What a treasure trove for kids and for kids' imaginations. I can see why it was so special.

    I think this is one of your best pieces!

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  4. Thanks so much ChrisJ. I have been working on putting a few of these memories to paper and having a really good time doing it.

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  5. What a wonderful rich memory. Do you know whatever became of those clothes?

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  6. Yes, those memories are very wonderful for all the cousins. Sometimes Grandma would sit cross legged on the floor with us and tell stories of her life with the native Americans as well as the lions, elephants and alligators.

    What is left of the very thin buckskins are in my sister Tracy's home. They were well loved and though worn often were well cared for by my Grandmother.

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  7. This is an amazing story. I can feel getting into that room with on window at the end too. I can imagine the times when you were a kid which was probably better than these times. Yes with a book in hand. How magical. I can sense that your writing will someday be compiled into a book :)

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  8. Beautiful reminiscing, Ciss B! You describe everything so vividly. The story of your Great-Grandfather's circus would probably make a wonderful historical novel.

    I'm wondering if the memories were cemented by the smell of the pine sap? Scent has a way of doing that for me.

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  9. What sweet memories, Chris, and so vividly told! I can picture so clearly the scenes you describe. The richness of childhood can never fade away, however distant its echoes.

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  10. What beautifully written memories. Yes the Indian costumes do sound so much more fun than my Grandmother's dresses and hats.
    I also escaped to closets to read as a child.

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