I submitted this to The Sun for their Readers Write feature. The prompt was Role Models.
Aunt Ruth used to chide me when
I complained about being exhausted after chasing my young children around. “In
my day,” she said, “we’d put the kids to bed—and then figure out how to save
the world!”
Saving the world meant throwing
herself into the fray: she’d hoist a sign, march and demonstrate in the streets—for
civil rights, for social justice, against the bomb, against the war, against
the next war, and the next. She kept her vast collection of politically
inspired buttons pinned to a large piece of felt, ready to stick on her hat or
jacket as she headed off to the next rally or picket line: We
Shall Overcome. Make Love, Not War. Another Mother for Peace.
I loved the time we spent together
during my summer visits to my aunt and uncle’s crowded apartment in L.A. During these critical pre-teen years, my aunt matter-of-factly
shared some important tips: she showed me how to apply three shades of lipstick,
how to shave my legs without nicking divots into my shins, and how to have fun
while shopping—things my mother hadn’t taught me.
| San Francisco, 1970 |
When her family moved back home to
San Francisco, my aunt began contributing articles and photographs to her neighborhood
newspaper, The Potrero View. She
subsequently took on the roles of editor and publisher.
During her three decades at the paper, Ruth was honored for her service to The View, and to the Neighborhood House, a community center where she helped organize after-school programs, classes for adults, and events that celebrated the scrappy diversity of the “nabe.”
At an event honoring my aunt for
her work, the mayor read a proclamation loaded with “whereases,” and declared a
day in her honor. When he finished speaking, my father leaned toward me and
pointed proudly at his “baby” sister. “Look at her—she’s the richest person in
this room.” And I knew what he meant.
| photo courtesy of the Potrero View |
During her three decades at the paper, Ruth was honored for her service to The View, and to the Neighborhood House, a community center where she helped organize after-school programs, classes for adults, and events that celebrated the scrappy diversity of the “nabe.”
| At the Potrero Hill Scamper |
My aunt encouraged me to write when I
first got started, and published some of my essays in her paper—my first bylines. Writing was her passion. She talked about writing a memoir, but never started it. “I’m not a writer like
you,” she told me once. “You do it for both of us.”
Ruth never pandered to anyone: you
could always count on her to be outspoken, feisty, honest but kind, and a
champion of the underdog. She would confront racism or social injustice
wherever she found it, no matter who the guilty party might be. And she mastered
the art of being cool without even trying.
| Staying cool, 2007 |
| 2011 |
I often asked myself: what would Ruth do? And I knew that she would act like it was no big deal to be sitting in workshop with students a few decades younger. I could imagine her saying, “Get over yourself and do the work you came to do.”
Now in her 80’s, Ruth has slipped
into the foggy world of dementia. It’s not the same world she tried to save for
all those years, but it’s the one she lives in today. She still does her
damndest to make the most of it with spirit, grace, humor—and that lovely smile.
I love this, Risa, especially the pictures that show the journey. Beautifully written and aren't you blessed to have Ruth in your life?
ReplyDeleteThank you--and yes,I do feel blessed.
DeleteBeautiful, Risa! Your aunt sounds like an amazing woman, and I think she's passed that along to her niece.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much!
ReplyDeleteLovely! What a wonderful woman and great relationship you two had! She is a living chronicle of recent American history!
ReplyDeleteThank you--and yes, she is!
DeleteWhat a beautiful woman to model yourself after. You, as you know, are so blessed to have had her in your life. Dementia takes so much from its victims and the loved ones; glad to read there's still grace, humor, spirit and her smile. Touching post, Risa.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much. She set the bar very high!
DeleteLovely story. Aunts can play such an amazing role in a girls life, as my aunt did in mine as well. Not mom, but a wonderful role model. I am so happy to be an aunt myself and hope someday someone might feel just a bit like this about me.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Lisa, I am lucky to have two amazing aunts who helped me through some rocky times. (In fact, one of them is named Rockie!) I tell them I love them every time I see them...
ReplyDelete