BORN
TO CONFUSION – DEDICATED TO WOODY ALLEN
I
was
born from a womb of confusion.
An
American Jew. A Jewish American? I can never get it straight.
We
were poor Jews.
Five
people in two bedrooms, one bath, a kitchen, and a living room.
I
slept with my apnea-snoring grandmother until I went off to college.
A
Beatles-crazed only child of an off-the-boat family.
I
was born into English at school, Yiddish at home.
Hebrew
National hotdogs.
Never
Oscar Mayer.
Talmud
by day. Chaucer by night.
Holy
days surrounded by thick-accented relatives, who pinched cheeks and
adulated me as the first fruit of Columbus's paradise.
They
wept over family that was marched off to gas chambers and crematoria.
Shuddering
with guilt over what more they might have done to save them.
My
grandfather spent every penny ransoming relatives from Hitler's
grasp.
He
was a well-dressed, shiny-shoed womanizer.
My
Uncle Joe. He married frigid Aunt Rhoda.
My
Uncle Joe. The only one who ever took me to a ballgame.
(The
Sox, remember, won the pennant in '59.)
My
Uncle Joe. He traveled from Gary just to entertain me, until the day
he embezzled too much from the IRS.
My
Aunt Minnie. Succeeded in the diamond trade, but never was lucky in
love.
My
Aunt Minnie. Family whispered that she never got over losing my dad
to my mom, so she played Scrabble with him, instead.
My
Aunt Minnie. I suspected her of being a lesbian.
My
Aunt Minnie. She hated dogs.
My
Aunt Minnie. We named our puppy in her memory, Minnie.
I
was fathered by a flag-flying army colonel.
Everything
by the numbers, everything empirical, everything perfect.
My
father, the seat of intellect.
He
won first prizes for me by doing my science projects and essays.
Once,
he even wrote me a great paper on Silas
Marner.
“Daddy,
what if someone found out?”
“Nonsense,”
he would answer.
My
father, the arbiter of culture.
He
impassively changed the channel just as the Beatles debuted on Ed
Sullivan.
We
watched Lawrence Welk.
I
was born to a Jewish mother.
Smothered
me with love, then threatened to withdraw it every time I stepped out
of her line.
Forbade
me from making friends with kids she thought were dangerous.
Later
on, she did it with girls, too.
I
dated clandestinely.
I
lost my virginity on my wedding night.
I
spent a lot of time alone and lonely.
I
was born to a mother who spoke in euphemisms.
Women
were never “homely.” They were “handsome.”
Women
were not “lesbians.” They were “special friends.”
And
masturbation, if it ever came up, was delicately called “relieving
yourself.”
I
was a castrado.
Every
day mother was tormented by my live-in grandmother.
Mother
once beat me for saying that I didn't love the mean old lady.
But,
mother smiled, spoke sweetly, and took it for thirty years, then
exploded in wrath the day after the old lady died.
I
was born to a mother who defended the faith.
Despite
eight years in seminary, I don't claim to do it any better.
Her
kitchen was the bastion of faith, where food was a final defense
against assimilation.
“Beware
of the things that goyim eat,” she would say. They are all
“spoiled.”
Fried
chicken – spoiled.
Wonder
Bread – spoiled.
Cream
gravy – spoiled
Rare
steak – spoiled.
Grits
– spoiled.
Barbecued
anything – spoiled.
Chinese
– OK. It's a Jewish thing.
My
mother suffered from Xenofoodia.
It
was her legacy to me.
Finally
unfettered, I cook and eat as I please.
But,
if you find me OD'ed on rare roast beef, don't blame it on my mother.
She
paid her dues.
She
defended the faith.
Now
I am suddenly an old man, more decades behind me than in front, and I
have yet to figure out the oxymorons and confusions of a muddled and
befuddled coming-of-age.
O,
could I only be 14 again, eat something that wasn't spoiled,
listen unimpeded to the Beatles, and contemplate my imminent
redemption.