Entry Fifteen
Wednesday Mon., January 15 Weather marked as Clear.
Dear Diary,
Nothing much happened today. Worked on “Love-Bug”. I asked Jean’s mother to cut my hair & she said yes. She’ll to it tomorrow.
Entry Fifteen
Wednesday Mon., January 15 Weather marked as Clear.
Dear Diary,
Nothing much happened today. Worked on “Love-Bug”. I asked Jean’s mother to cut my hair & she said yes. She’ll to it tomorrow.
Entry Fourteen
Tuesday, January 14 Weather marked as Clear.
Dear Diary,
Jean & me went to the show. Saw Joan of Ark it was pretty good. Gosh Diary, it doesn’t seem possible that in 2 weeks I’m graduating & moving. I feel kindda empty inside.
Editorial Note:
Here is a video montage made from Ingrid Bergman’s Joan of Arc directed by Victor Fleming (1948) seen by Lois on this date in 1951:
Entry Thirteen
Monday Sat., January 13 Weather marked as Clear, and annotated Windy.
Dear Diary,
Mommie & me went downtown today. I got my whole outfit. I got a tangerine Dress, a topper, a purse, shoes, hat, a sweater set, & a blouse. Man what a day. I also slept over Jeanies. Jean’s feet were extremely cold tonight. Burr.
Entry Twelve
Sunday, January 12 Weather marked as Cloudy.
Dear Diary,
Nothing much happened today. I baby sat this evening at Dorothy’s & Jimmies. Wendy and Trudy are wonderful.
Entry Eight
Wednesday, January 8 Weather is marked Clear.
Dear Diary,
We got our ribbons today. They’re nice. Went to library with Roggie & Joan. Saw Issy & some other guys there.
Editorial Note:
Featured above, for your viewing pleasure, is the original theatrical trailer for the film “Halls of Montezuma” starring none other than Jack Palace and Robert Wagner.
Entry Six
Monday, January 6 Weather marked as Clear.
Dear Diary,
Gave Ilene her morning feeding. Came home about 4:00 pm. Took a shower & got dressed. Hal & I went to show saw “Halls of Montazuma” [sic] was a good picture. Got home 10:50 p.m. So I went next door & baby-sat. (Bubie stayed there till I came)
Entry Five
Sunday, Fri. January 5 Weather marked as Clear.
Dear Diary,
We had co-ed dancing today 5th period. I danced with Joe & Andy. After school I went to Uncle Ruby’s to baby-sit with Ilene. It took 2 hrs 5 min to get there. Hal called 3 times while I was there (at night). Fed her & put her to bed. Slept over.
Entry Four
Saturday, January 4. Weather marked as Rainy.
Dear Diary,
Got my pictures out they’re wonderful got 24 of them–all gone–Went to Ross Loss [?] to get my glasses (they were broken) & make an appointment with Dr. Cornelius for the 17th.
It’s interesting, what memories remain. John Berger states in his collection of essays titled About Looking that only the frame of a life continues, while the rest, the idiosyncratic experiences that act as content, is like daily newsprint: forgotten practically before the ink is dry. My memories seem to follow suit. I remember my childhood vaguely as happy and well adjusted, but individual memories have largely become the fodder of yesterday’s news, composted into the foundation of my adult life. They are my maker, and I not their master. Blame this on one too many nights of heavy drinking during my “experimental” college years, the fact that computer memory now substitutes for its organic human predecessor, or whatever you desire. Regardless of the reason, in the wake of my father’s death I’m acutely aware of what my memory chooses to frame.
As a wee little lassie my Father would take me with him to pick up a Racing Form from the local newsstand around the corner from our humble house situated in a Horse Racing mecca at the southern end of California. I piled my gangly, uncoordinated limbs into his Acura, which always smelled new with a hint of the vanilla air fresheners so despised by my Mother, and away we’d go through traffic with the greatest of ease. He navigated using a system I would come to call ‘Blind Driving”–a technique which entailed drifting from one lane divider to the next. From the center, slowly to the left until eanh eaNH EANH!! Thwump thwump thwump. Whoops. Center again and then the process repeated to the right of the lane. Back and forth, back and forth; a relatively soothing sway to an unlicensed driver with no concept of danger.
It was during these trips that I came to understand I was special because my Father had magic powers: he controlled traffic lights. When approaching a red light, my Father merely had to blow in its general direction and the light magically turned green. My Father was the Jack Frost of traffic control. Once we arrived, I waited for him in the car certain he’d return with a treat. What would it be this time? A lollipop? A Kit Kat? No, a Snickers?! It was anyone’s guess. Inevitably he’d shower me with more candy than one kid could stomach (a diabetic vicariously indulging his sweet tooth through his daughter), and we would eat most of it in the car so my Mother would be none the wiser. While exceeding my sugar intake for the week, he taught me how to whistle and snap: two valuable assets for a tomboy living in the Land of the Boys. I cannot convey how many hours were spent snapping and whistling. Or rather my Father snapping and whistling and I snapping and spraying soundless wet air onto the Acura’s dash, much to his chagrin.
I never did learn to whistle. As for my Father’s magical powers, well, I suppose you can chalk it up to a slight of wind executed by watching the opposing signal as it turned yellow and thusly timing his gust to coincide with an inevitable green. Be that what it may, I know what I remember. I remember a life filled with green lights, free passages, and cloudless intersections thanks in no small part to my Father’s protection and guiding wisdom. And now that this memory is framed in print, saved from the cyclical scourge of forgetfulness, my Father’s magic is no longer a hazy biographical fragment but an integral component of narrative in the story of a daughter and her father. Act I, Scene I.
Curtain.