“Well, it’s Easter,†she said, as we sat out on the back porch eating lunch. She’d fixed up some leftovers from the refrigerator, while I had a twice-cooked hamburger—left over from sometime last autumn, and kept in the refrigerator until it was re-grilled today—and broccoli-and-cheese.
“What are you thinking about today?â€
Ah, not much, I said; “just the sorts of things that drive Judy grasswire on Skins’s island nuts, when I write about them. She’s one of franksolich’s most-avid readers, and I don’t like to turn her off, but damn it, I can’t help being maudlin when I
feel maudlin.
“It’s Easter, and I’m thinking about my younger brother, who died when he was 17 years old, and I was 19.
“Despite that life had barely started for him before it all was suddenly over, even after all these years, all these decades, of knowing so many other people, he remains one of the most remarkable people I’ve ever known.â€
“I think everybody in your family was remarkable,†she said; “even the ones you didn’t like, the ones who gave you so much trouble.â€
She was referring to the six older brothers and sisters.
“Well, remember,†I replied; “it always seemed as if we had two different sets of parents, and that great difference in ages between the older six and the youngest two was significant too.
“They’d been raised by the book, the Book of Dr. Benjamin Spock, and after the first six, it was assumed there’d be no more, and the book was thrown away. Then the family moved from New York City out to Nebraska, and surprise! I emerged, and two years later, my younger brother.
“The book was by then in some landfill in New Jersey, and so the parents had to raise the last two of us purely by parental instinct.â€
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“My younger brother, even when just a small child, had a certain gift for getting along with difficult people, in this case retarded people of all ages, genders, and levels of functionability.
“I on the other hand was scared of retarded people; scared that I’d be associated with them, because of my own, uh, peculiar circumstances. Whenever I saw one coming down the sidewalk, I rushed over to the other side of the street, as I didn’t want others to associate me with one of
them.
“I think I know why I felt this way. The town alongside the Platte River where we spent our childhood, before moving up into the Sandhills, was populated mostly by Goldwater, Scranton, and Rockefeller voters, but there were a few Kennedy, Johnson, and Humphrey voters too.
“Republicans and conservatives tended to be accepting of everybody coming their way, treating all as equals, but bleeding-heart Democrats and liberals were wholly different.
“I suspect a Kennedy, Johnson, or Humphrey voter at one time or another expressed pity that I was ‘retarded’—based only upon a superficial first impression—and as it was expressed by an adult, I believed it.
“I got to become very skittish, very nervous, about being thought of as one of
them, because I wasn’t. So I avoided them like the plague.â€
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“My younger brother, for whatever reason, took to them.
“I used to get vexed at this; if he was going to be friends with the disabled, why couldn’t he at least be friends with
respectable disabilities, such as the blind or the palsied or whatever?
“And there was this disturbing thought; maybe
I, his older brother, was responsible for his being the way he was.
“As he grew older, of course he did some ‘work’ with them in organized settings, but for the most part, they were just friends of his, people with whom he enjoyed playing, talking with, and sharing confidences.
“When he became a teenager, he of course couldn’t take them to high-school football practice with him, but if one wanted to go to the golf course with him, or hunting with him, yeah, sure, no problem. And the individual went as ‘one of the gang,’ not simply as someone ‘different.’
“Of course, they had limited capabilities—some very much so—and he had to ‘adjust’ things to their level of competence and understanding, not allowing them to do certain things (such as shooting a firearm or tearing up a golf course green), but he was so patient, and did it with such sensitivity no one was offended.
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“He was of course very popular with regular people too, as everyone in family was, and it was remarked many times that he’d make an exceptionally-good teacher for the retarded, or social worker for them.
“Now, a life ended at seventeen’s too soon to speculate upon later behavior, if it had had a chance to happen, but I doubt he was going that direction.
“The two of us did have one similarity; we were both more effective when dealing with people
informally, rather than in structured or organized settings.
“He wanted the retarded people as
friends; any thought of them as being part of a job, and a job for which one’s paid, would’ve turned him off.
“I suspect if God had given him more time, he would’ve gone into some other sort of career, in no way related to ‘serving’ the retarded, at the same time in his social life, his free time, maintaining friendships with people who suited him very much.â€
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“Of course, not being a primitive, my attitude about the retarded changed, and for the better, with time and maturity, but it’s too bad I hadn’t changed enough by the time he died.
“I was under a lot of stress, and young. It was near Christmas, and the whole state of Nebraska was being blasted by
feet of snow, tons of snow. I was the only one in the family—the others being further scattered, and with spouses and small children to accommodate—who could get into the heart of the snow-buried, wind-blasted Sandhills, to make the arrangements for the funeral.
“For his pallbearers, conceited ass as I was, I selected his hip, cool, trendy, with-it, favorite high-school classmates, all of whom of course wished to serve.
“Well, yeah, that was okay, but upon later reflection, I regretted that I hadn’t instead selected six of his retarded friends, who’d had pitifully few opportunities in life to be of good to someone else, and badly wished to be.â€
to be continued