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Mennonite in a little black dress : a memoir of going home  Cover Image Book Book

Mennonite in a little black dress : a memoir of going home / Rhoda Janzen.

Janzen, Rhoda. (Author).

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780805089257
  • ISBN: 080508925X
  • Physical Description: 241 p. ; 22 cm.
  • Edition: 1st ed.
  • Publisher: New York : Henry Holt and Co., 2009.
Subject: Janzen, Rhoda.
Poets, American > 21st century > Biography.

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  • 1 of 1 copy available at Town of Orford Libraries.

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Orford Free Library A F JAN 34446000015482 Adult fiction Available -

Syndetic Solutions - Excerpt for ISBN Number 9780805089257
Mennonite in a Little Black Dress : A Memoir of Going Home
Mennonite in a Little Black Dress : A Memoir of Going Home
by Janzen, Rhoda
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Excerpt

Mennonite in a Little Black Dress : A Memoir of Going Home

ONE The Bridegroom Cousin The year I turned forty-three was the year I realized I should have never taken my Mennonite genes for granted. Iâ€TMd long assumed that I had been genetically scripted to robust physical health, like my mother, who never even catches a head cold. All of my relatives on her side, the Loewens, enjoy preternaturally good health, unless you count breast cancer and polio. The polio is pretty much a done deal, thanks to Jonas Salk and his talent for globally useful vaccinations. Yet in the days before Jonas Salk, when my mother was a girl, polio crippled her younger brother Abe and also withered the arm of her closest sister Gertrude. Trude bravely went on to raise two kids one-armed, and to name her withered arm Stinky. _____ Yes, I think "Stinky" is a cute name for a withered arm! _____ No, Iâ€TMd prefer to name my withered arm something with a little more dignity, such as Reynaldo. Although breast cancer also runs in my family, it hasnâ€TMt played a significant role. It comes to us late in life, shriveling a tit or two, and then often subsiding under the composite resistance of chemo and buttermilk. That is, it would shrivel our tits if we had tits. Which we donâ€TMt. As adolescents, my sister Hannah and I were naturally anxious to see if we would turn out more like our mother or our father. There was a lot at stake. Having endured a painfully uncool childhood, we realized that our genetic heritage positioned us on a precarious cusp. Dad was handsome but grouchy; Mom was plain but cheerful. Would we be able to pass muster in normal society, or would our Mennonite history forever doom us to outsider status? My father, once the head of the North American Mennonite Conference for Canada and the United States, is the Mennonite equivalent of the pope, but in plaid shorts and black dress socks pulled up snugly along the calf. In the complex moral universe that is Mennonite adulthood, a Mennonite can be good-looking and still have no sartorial taste whatsoever. My father may actually be unaware that he is good-looking. He is a theologian who believes in a loving God, a servant heart, and a senior discount. Would God be pleased if we spent an unnecessary thirty-one cents at McDonaldâ€TMs? I think not. At six foot five and classically handsome, Dad has an imposing stature that codes charismatic elocution and a sobering, insightful air of authority. Iâ€TMve considered the possibility that his wisdom and general seriousness make him seem handsomer than he actually is, but whatever the reason, Dad is one of those people to whom everybody listens. No matter who you are, you do not snooze through this manâ€TMs sermons. Even if you are an atheist, you find yourself nodding and thinking,Preach it, mister! Well, not nodding. Maybe youimagineyouâ€TMre nodding. But in this scenario you are in a Mennonite church, which means you sit very still and worship Jesus with all your heart, mind, and soul, only as if a snake had bitten you, and you are now in the last stages of paralysis. I may be the first person to mention my fatherâ€TMs good looks in print. Good looks are considered a superfluous feature in a Mennonite world leader, because Mennonites are all about service. Theoretically, we do not even know what we look like, since a focus on our personal appearance is vainglorious. Our antipathy to vainglory explains the decision of many of us to wear those frumpy skirts and the little doilies on our heads, a decision we must have arrived at only by collectively determining not to notice what we had put on that morning. My mother, unlike my father, is not classically handsome. But she does enjoy good health. She is as buoyant as a lark on a summerâ€TMs morn. Nothing gets this woman down. She is the kind of mother who, when we were growing up, came singing into our bedrooms at 6:00 a.m., tunefully urging us to rise and shine and give God the glory, glory. And this was on Saturday, Saturday. Upbeat she is. Glamorous she is not. Once she bought Hannah a black T-shirt that said in glittery magenta cursive, NASTY!! She didnâ€TMt know what it meant. When we told her, she said sunnily, "Oh well, then you can wear it to work in the garden!" Besides being born Mennonite, which is usually its own beauty strike, my mother has no neck. When we were growing up, our motherâ€TMs head, sprouting directly from her shoulders like a friendly lettuce, became something of a family focus. Weâ€TMd take every opportunity to thrust hats and baseball caps upon her, which made us all shriek with unconscionable laughter. Mom would laugh good-naturedly, but if we got too out of hand, sheâ€TMd predict that our Loewen genes would eventually assert themselves. And they did. Although I personally have and appreciate a neck, I was, by my early forties, the very picture of blooming Loewen health: peasant-cheeked, impervious to germs, hearty as an ox. I rarely got sick. And the year before the main action of this memoir occurs, I had sustained a physical debilitationâ€"I wonâ€TMt sayillnessâ€"so severe that I thought I was statistically safe for years to come. I was only forty-two at the time, but my doctor advised a radical salpingo-oopherectomy. For the premenopausal set, that translates to "Your uterus has got to go." A hushed seriousness hung in the air when the doctor first broached the subject of the hysterectomy. I said, "You mean dump my whole uterus? Ovaries and everything?" "Yes, Iâ€TMm afraid so." I considered a moment. I knew I should be feeling a kind of feminist outrage, but it wasnâ€TMt happening. "Okay." Dr. Mayler spoke some solemn words about a support group. From his tone I gathered that I also ought to be feeling a profound sense of loss, and a cosmic unfairness that this was happening to me at age forty-two, instead of at ageâ€"what?â€"fifty-six? I dutifully wrote down the contact information for the support group, thinking that maybe I was in denial again. Maybe the seriousness and the pathos of the salpingo-oopherectomy would register later. By age forty-two I had learned that denial was my special modus operandi. Big life lessons always kicked in tardily for me. Iâ€TMve always been a bit of a late bloomer, a slow learner. The postman has to ring twice, if you get my drift. My husband, who got a vasectomy two weeks after we married, was all for the hysterectomy. "Do it," he urged. "Why do you need that thing? You donâ€TMt use it, do you?" In general, Nickâ€TMs policy was, if you havenâ€TMt used it in a year, throw it out. We lived in homes with spare, ultramodern decor. Once he convinced me to furnish a coach house with nothing but a midcentury dining table and three perfect floor cushions. You know the junk drawer next to the phone? Ours contained a single museum pen and a pad of artisan paper on a Herman Miller tray. Nick therefore supported the hysterectomy, but only on the grounds of elegant understatement. To him the removal of unnecessary anatomical parts was like donating superfluous crap to Goodwill. Had the previous owners left a beer raft in the garage, as a thoughtful gift to you? No thanks! We werenâ€TMt the type of people who would store a beer raft in our garageâ€"not because we opposed beer rafts per se, but because we did not want to clutter an uncompromising vista of empty space. Nick led the charge to edit our belongings, but I willingly followed. Had you secretly been wearing the same bra since 1989? Begone, old friend! Were you clinging to a sentimental old wedding dress? Heave ho! Nickâ€TMs enthusiasm for the hysterectomy made me a little nervous. I kept taking my internal temperature, checking for melancholy. The medical literature I was reading told me I should be feeling Excerpted from Mennonite in a Little Black Dress: A Memoir of Going Home by Rhoda Janzen All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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