Today is my Grandmama's birthday even
though I doubt I will get this posted today. I have mentioned her in
dozens of my blogs and have spoken about her at length with my
friends. I was around her for the first part of my childhood (the
smart years) and learned a lot from her that I would later apply to
my adult life in terms of attitude and how to behave with
people...good and bad. This is going to be Five Things I Learned From
Grandmama.
It is gonna be hard to write that few
so I'm gonna try and write about the ones that impacted me the most.
A little information about Grandmama. That is her name. Grandma was
my father's mother and Grandmama is my mother's mama. She was born in
Texas. She outlived all of her 10 other brothers and sisters. She was
Native American. Had red hair that she finally stopped coloring once
she was in her 80's. She loved cooking, the Los Angeles Lakers, and I
once saw her launch a boy off the porch. She loved smoking cigarettes
and Diet Cokes. She was very sweet, could be funny, but refused to
take shit from people.
If You Don't Want To Do Something Then
Don't
This was one of the best and worst
things she could have told me. At the time I was working at the
hospital like she had in the past. She told me that she hated doing
it so she stopped and told me that if I didn't want to do something
then don't. She said that it was better to not get involved then to
do it half-assed.
At the time I was living a life of
making sure that everyone was comfortable before I took care of
myself. I was always someplace I didn't want to be doing things I
didn't want to do and helping people I didn't care for. After she
told me that me head exploded and my face melted off. I was just so
used to not being happy doing what I was doing it never occurred to
me to say no. I thought that that was what being an adult meant.
Doing things for others and not yourself. I was wrong. If she hadn't
told me that I think I would not still be around right now.
Pick Up After Yourself
This is one that I didn't start doing
until I was around 8 or so but once I started I kinda didn't stop. My
Grandmama hated a mess but what she hated more was someone who would
make one and not even attempt to pick it up. She kept vampire hours
so she was constantly having to pick up after a house full of
grandchildren which sucked. So I would help with the dishes or run to
the store to get her “sugar water” or as we call it “soda”
and cigarettes.
Nothing Wrong With Staying Home
I used to talk to my Grandmama when I
worked at the porn shop. Yeah, I know how that sounds. I would call
her in the early afternoon and be at the front counter talking to her
for a couple of hours about what it was like growing up (she didn't
like her father's mother) and laugh at her anger towards Kobe Bryant
for making Shaq leave the Lakers.
She also told me that she enjoyed being
home and left alone. She lied when she used to be able to leave and
pay her bills in person when she could but enjoyed sitting at home
and watching TV or sitting on the porch smoking. She didn't like
being dragged out of the house unless it was to go grocery shopping
or to church. I have very few mental images of my Grandmama not being
at home shuffling from her room to the porch or the kitchen humming
to herself.
If You Can Do It Do It
During one conversation with my
Grandmama I was taking to her about not wanting to draw anymore. It
wasn't as fun as it used to be and nothing looked how I wanted it to.
She told me that she used to draw. I had no idea. She said that her
father made her stop because it wasn't “ladylike.” This totally
blew my mind because I would have loved to see what she could do
artistically.
She told me to draw if I could because
it was something that not everyone could do. I disagreed and told her
that anyone could if they really tried and she just said “Umm”
which was her disagreement sound effect. I knew better than to argue
with Grandmama and continued drawing.
Say Thank You
This is another one that always stuck
with me...because I was a rude dick. I would get stuff and not say
thank you unless it was a present or something I really wanted. But
after being popped a few times with a switch things tend to finally
stay with you. To me thank you was something you said because you got
what you wanted. Not something you said because someone did something
nice that they didn't have to.
I know a lot of these sound like basic
life lessons and while they are, not many people live by them or they
are afraid to. One day my Grandmama told me that she was “ready to
go” when she was in her early 80's. I laughed and told her that she
would outlive some of her grandchildren. It turned out to be true.
She made it to 95 years on this planet and had a sharp memory. Even
though since I was little she would always call me my cousins name...
Click here for previous Five Things I
Learned.
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