Tears in America (10)

  • #3954078
    dust in the wind 12.***.244.21 66

    Memories of My Two Grandmothers

    Like most people, I had two grandmothers—one paternal, one maternal. Their significance, of course, lies in the simple truth that without them I would not exist. Yet what lingers most are not abstract notions of lineage, but the faint, tender recollections of the brief time I shared with them. I spent more time with my maternal grandmother than my paternal grandmother. Naturally, my maternal grandmother was woven more deeply into the fabric of my childhood, and it is her presence that rises first in memory.

    The details blur with time, but I recall most vividly the years when our family moved to the marketplace to sell eggs. We lived in a single cramped room, while my parents labored fifteen hours a day to keep us afloat. Life was heavy, and yet my grandmother—who lived nearby with my uncle—came almost daily to lighten our burden. She did our laundry, all of it, with a strength and devotion that seemed inexhaustible.

    We had no washing machine. She boiled clothes in a great pot over the coal fire, laid them on a stone slab, beat them with a wooden stick, rubbed them with soap, and rinsed them in cold water. It was grueling work, yet she never complained. Because of her, we wore clean clothes, not fine ones, but garments imbued with her care. As she worked, she often scolded us with words of love—though the exact phrases have faded, the warmth behind them remains.

    One memory, however, cuts sharply against the grain of her kindness. I was in my first year of middle school, walking home with friends, when I saw her on the street. She recognized me instantly, called my name with joy, and hurried toward me. But her clothes were shabby, and in the presence of my friends I felt a sudden, shameful embarrassment. I pretended not to know her and walked on. Looking back, I know how deeply that must have wounded her. Yet she never spoke of it, never reproached me. She continued to visit, continued to wash our clothes, until her health failed.

    She passed away while I was studying in America and I did not attend her funeral. Now, having reached the age she was then, I find myself haunted by that moment on the street. Why did I turn away? Why did I let embarrassment eclipse love? The question lingers, unanswered, a quiet ache that reminds me of her enduring grace and of my own youthful failing.

    • 유미짜장 24.***.46.114

      I can relate. I used to feel embarrassed that my mother spoke with a Honam accent. I even envied my friends whose mothers spoke the more assertive Yeongnam dialect. Now that I’ve reached that age myself, I feel nothing but deep regret and sorrow for ever feeling that way.

    • 172.***.252.119

      All the women in our family – me, my mother, my grandmother – have suffered mental illness due to paternal abuse that stems from my grandfather generation – of whose family w/o their offsprings (or my uncles and aunts) – had a bit of eerie feel. One time the 2nd wife of my ‘granddad’ was hanging their pet dog by outside the apartment veranda for me to see. I got scared, walked away and never went back to their premise ever since then.

      I is true it was my grandmother who’ve been acting as my second ‘mom’, since it was my mom who had to be the breadwinner after divorcing my biological dad.. Of whom had a lot of human faults of her own I think & can only understood by the direct family member, of which that happens to be me. ..I once got upset at my grandma believing that she forced my mom to have me and beget me out into this dreadful life with the worst man she could get for her daughter, but she wouldn’t tell further – since I was still that grandbaby to her, nothing more.

      I watch 그것이 알고싶다 or sometimes 추적 60분/창 to understand that there are others struggling besides me atm. While I do get traditional values do matter esp. in Korean society, I can’t help being young and wanting to expand upon the remaining time no matter what. That is even in a confined situation that was all throughout my life.