“That’s vulgar,” my mother would say. Oh. Well then. That settled it; I wouldn’t dream of doing anything vulgar.
My mother died when I was twenty-three, before we had fully recovered from my adolescence. I grope in the dark to understand her. Much of what I think I know is probably wrong.
I was reminiscing with my sister-in-law, Esther. “And what’s wrong with vulgar?” she said. “It just means common.” Though I was past fifty, and had long since shattered every one of Mother’s taboos, I had never questioned that vulgarity was shameful. It was a powerful moment, and I began thinking of all the things that Mother considered vulgar.
Dangling earrings. Pants worn with high heels. Bikinis. Clashing colors. Chartreuse. Fuchsia. I was in 7th grade when I got my first sexy bathing suit: an orange tank with broad fuchsia stripes up the sides. Everyone knew orange and pink clashed, as did red and pink, green and blue. I have to assume I chose the bathing suit, and I admire Mother for buying it. She was encouraging autonomy. Or maybe she was just tired.
DANGLING EARRINGS ON VULGAR RED LACE
The word Mom. In 1955 Phillip Wylie coined the term momism in Generation of Vipers, an astonishingly misogynistic (and extremely popular) book. Mother absorbed his loathing, and I can see her mouth stretched in an exaggerated O as she spoke the word Mom with contempt. As children we called her Mummy, nicely British, therefore not vulgar. (My father was an extreme anglophile.)
New York accents, nasal voices, loud female voices, crude language. “Gentle voices,” my father would say, if Luli and I spoke too loudly, and he frequently spoke of Esther’s melodious voice. I never heard “shit” until I was 12, and was astounded some years later when I realized Mother knew the word.
Carmen Miranda, Las Vegas, blondes. Ginger Rogers was only saved from vulgarity by her elegant pairing with Fred Astaire.
Fried foods, chewing gum. “It’s like a cow chewing her cud.” And Mother would do a wonderful cud-chewing imitation.
Fat women in stretch pants. Fat women. Fat. My father felt fat women were a personal insult, as they apparently did not care to attract him. My sister Luli says Mother was terrified of becoming fat. Luli was fat for many years, distressing my father, as she was his favorite.
I learned the concept so well I can apply it to things my mother never mentioned. Tap dancing is vulgar (except for Fred Astaire); ballet is not. Why weren’t Broadway musicals vulgar, full of flashy colors and blondes? Probably because my mother and father enjoyed going to an evening of dinner and theater in the city.
It’s hard to know where my father’s thoughts ended and my mother’s began. The only subject on which I know they disagreed was Eleanor Roosevelt. My mother admired her; my father dismissed her. She was homely, and her voice was horrid.
Mother was the daughter of a distinguished professor, whose specialty was southern agricultural history. Professors were respected, but ill-paid, and her mother taught piano. Mother grew up in the south, went to college at George Washington, and belonged to Kappa Delta. She dropped out after her junior year to marry my father, a Jew from New York. He was six years older than she.
Dad was ashamed and contemptuous of his father, but he was proud of his mother. His father was an entrepreneurial merchant whose business failed, a man full of life and bonhomie. Her family were sugar barons in Colombia, where she was raised rich and sent to a Jewish boarding school in London.
I believe Dad was quite young when he began denying he was Jewish. He dropped his father’s name and took his mother’s, changing his surname from Jacobs to Eder. He was over 90 when he told me my mother’s parents didn’t like him because he was Jewish. It was the first time I had ever heard him acknowledge it.
My father was successful as an international corporate lawyer, and my parents lived the high life in South America and Long Island. But Esther once described my father as a man standing outside a beautiful house, with his nose pressed against the window.
I think my mother also felt like an outsider. Yearning to be not just respectable, but aristocratic, my parents had to guard against any taint of the vulgar.
I try to find a common thread in the things my mother identified as vulgar. Anything flagrantly sexual was certainly vulgar. Anything which suggested Jewish. Anything from poor southern culture, which would include anything Black.
The other day in Cordele, Georgia I met a woman in the motel breakfast buffet. She was a very fat woman, with bleached blonde hair. She told me she is raising five foster children – a 17-year-old whom she’s had from birth, two three-year-olds, and two four-year-olds. They live out in the country, so there’s plenty of room to play. She loves having foster children. Her face glowed as she talked of them.
She, her husband and some in-laws were on their way from Michigan to Florida to take a Caribbean cruise, and she was very excited. I asked if the children were in respite care. “Oh no, my daughter and her husband are keeping them.”
My mother would consider modern-day cruises vulgar, though ocean crossings in the grand style of the first half of the twentieth century were fine. Yet Mother valued kindness above all. Would she see past the stretch jeans, the dyed hair, to the generous heart and patient spirit of this woman? I like to think she would.
MOTHER
Nice post. Your mother sounds like mine in many ways.
When I go visit my 96 year old great uncle at assisted living, I have to throw my gum away before I get there or he will look intently at me and say “Ladies do not chew gum”. It is such a joke at the facility that the receptionist now reminds me to get rid of it if I forget!
This is a tangential commente, but I post it here for fans of herstory. This interesting essay reminded me of a book I haven’t thought of in 60 years: GRANDMA CALLED IT CARNAL, by Bertha Damon, published in 1938. Bertha was raised in Bridgeport, Connecticut by her grandmother, a devotee of Henry David Thoreau, whose aim was that they be vegetarians and live on 27cents a week, a goal she never quite achieved. It is a delightful read. Thanks for this herstory, Liz.
I love the photograph of your mother, which accidentally, I suppose, captures the shadowness of her personality as you describe it and the faint regret in her face. Julie
Mother had some big sorrows in her life. I love that photo too.
Arupa, thank you for the book recommendation – I wonder if Books Inc has it before they close.
If you were mean and wanted to stir him up, you could tell him you are NOT a lady. Lady was a fighting word when I was a young feminist, but it takes a lot more than that to start a fight with me now.
Wendy – Thanks! Mothering is a very complicated job.
love this one, ms liz. i like what esther said, and i think she’s right. but omigoodness how that automatic “vulgar” comes into my head from time to time. another i remember is using “passed away” for died, “home” for house, “lay” instead of lie. such a precarious tightrope to walk through life, with a scented hankie to one’s aristocratic nose keeping out the stink of hoi polloi.
you are such a good writerator.
luli
Damn, Liz, your mother must have died shortly after we lost touch. I loved your post.. it’s warm, funny and ultimately respectful. And, tangentially, back in 1970 I packed 4 other people in my VW bug and we headed out for ice cream in Ann Arbor. I got on US23 and started driving south and decided I’d turn back as soon as anyone suggested that we do so. No one did. We ended up in Key West. We all looked like hippies (I’m sure that was vulgar) but stopped in Cordele (of all places) for breakfast…where the waitress, who was very nice, walked up to us and said “we don’t see things like this in Cordele everyday.” Keep on posting; you are indeed a wonderful writer… David PS: I’m assuming Esther is Richard’s spouse??
David – I hope the poor pal in the middle of the back seat had stronger fortification or sedative than ice cream!
(Yes, Esther is Richard’s wife.)
Liz: I remember your mother. We had lunch in NYC. She gave us black bean soup. And one time I saw your parents in Cambridge, with you — so long ago. I am very glad to read your blog and to find that you are alive and well. Your blog is so terrific, I can’t stop reading it, and I’ve got things to do!
Dar
Dar – wonderful wonderful to get a note from you!! I’m so glad you like the blog, and I hope you’ll tell your 10,000 friends (I remember you as gregarious.)