NO GREEN EYED MONSTER

A couple of years ago I wrote a short story, proud it was accepted in the ARIA anthology Green. Only my close friends and, of course, my sister knew it was autobiographical.

No Green Eyed Monster

Debra Zannelli

            I don’t remember my first home.  I’ve heard a lot about it.  A big apartment with a pretty good sized yard.  My mother didn’t like it because it was mostly driveway.  I only remember leaving it behind.  My sister was getting ready for first grade and my parents wanted us to go to a good school.  

            We moved to Cumberland.  This home I remember well.  Both my parents had dropped out of school.  They married young.  Mom was just sixteen, father only three years older.  They saved every penny they could and bought a converted hunting shack.  In my memory it was beautiful.  There were four of us.  My sister and I shared a bedroom.  My parents had the only other one.  The bathroom was an add on.  Unfortunately this meant the pipes were outside and froze when the weather got cold enough.  I can still see my mother emptying out the chamber pot.  No matter how miserable the job she always came in smiling.  For her children she would do whatever it took.  We didn’t have a bathtub or shower.  The farmers sink in the kitchen worked well enough.  My sister outgrew it first.  I remember the first day she went to school, leaving me behind.  I wanted to go and didn’t understand when my sister came home crying. 

            I watched the glass cookie jar.  I didn’t understand why Mom was putting her every spare dollar in the jar.  When it went from clear to green, we went shopping.  It was my turn to go to school.  It didn’t take me long to find out why my sister cried.  Poor is not something to brag about.  

            I didn’t understand why the girls laughed at me.  My clothes were beautiful even if someone had worn them before.  I was so unhappy, when it was my turn to read to the class, I couldn’t.  I knew how to read.  I didn’t know how not to listen.  The first day of second grade I heard the girls bragging about their new clothes.  I had new clothes too, well new for me.

            “Can you believe she came back.”  Diane was speaking loud enough for me to hear it.

            I knew she wanted me to strike back.  I’d already learned the very important lesson of knowing ones place.  You didn’t fight the rich.  Even when you were right, you were going to lose.  I hated losing, so I gave up.  That decision would affect the rest of my life.  I think I should have fought more often.  

            “Wait till she sees what I’m wearing.”  Diane was still speaking, her groupies surrounding her.  “I can’t wait to rub it in her face.  She’ll be so jealous.”

            I ignored her, heading for recess with my Barbie doll and her box house.  My sister and I both got brand new dolls.  I’m pretty sure my parents spent too much on them.  I had the second generation, my sister had the first.  I wish we still had them.  A lot of Barbie’s accessories were expensive.  I called my Barbie, Betty after the Archie comic books.  Betty had the nicest cloths.  My mother made them.  I know what the green eyes monster looks like.  Every girl who came over to see my set up, wanted those beautiful crocheted dresses, the ball gowns made from whatever cloth my mother could get.

            Being jealous only made my classmates meaner, but I didn’t care.  I didn’t have a lot of friends so I listened.  I learned a lot about the world.  I heard girls bragging about how they could do whatever they wanted, watch whatever they chose.  Boys bragging about the trouble they got, the things their parents didn’t know about.  To me it sounded like they were too often alone.  Sometimes the truth would come out and I would hear how just once they’d like to have their parents attention.  

            Dad worked hard.  He came home every day tired, but never too tired to pick up his guitar and play what to this day, I still think is the most beautiful music.  Mom, whether she was in the kitchen cooking dinner or doing other chores, always sang along.  Mom had a beautiful voice and when dad joined her, the harmony was something to hear.  Harmonies still make me smile, sometimes they make me cry.  My sister and I would dance, twirling our skirts around our legs, smiling when our parents applauded our awkward movements.

            Once again, my parents wanted us to have what they didn’t.  When my sister and I were old enough to be home alone, mom got a full time job.  By saving every penny, with the sale of the extra lot of land that came with the house, they were able to build a new home.  A four bedroom cape with a big living room and kitchen.  The bathroom never froze.  We had a tub and a shower.  Nobody teased me about my hair needing to be washed.  I hate that house.  It stole my parents. Dad got a second job.  He was only home between jobs, just enough time to eat, clean up and head back out.  He never picked up the guitar.  It sat collecting dust just like my memories.  Mom stopped singing.  My sister and I still didn’t have many friends.  When you start out with nothing you can never catch up, at least in the minds of those who remember.  

            I am no green eyed monster.  I’ve never been jealous of those who have more, but I’ve frequently been jealous of those with less things and more of each other.  I would trade all the green in my wallet for what I lost.

Upcoming events

I’m looking forward to a busy fall. I hope you’ll join me in Wallingford. It’s a beautiful city. There’s more to come. I’ll be at the Big E September 20th. If you can’t make it to Wallingford maybe I’ll see you there.