Newlywed Love (#50)

April 7, 1970

Mom wrote to us about once a week. These days she was using carbon paper to type 3 copies simultaneously, sending one to Tom in Washington DC, one to Mary and Bervin in Chicago, and one to Nate and me. Although Mary and Bervin got together with the folks regularly, Mom didn’t want them to miss her letters.

She sometimes waxed eloquent and frequently taught spiritual principles she didn’t want any of us to forget. In this week’s correspondence, Mom had chosen to write about the blessing of family, particularly her 3 kids.

Here, there and everywhere around 1140 [their address] are bits of evidence of Mary, Margaret, and Thomas, each here to warm the cockles of our hearts (whatever they are!) and to bless us with precious memories. You are such wonderful children. The only explanation for each of you is God’s goodness, plus your great, great father. As I’ve said before, we couldn’t have all the children in the world, so we just had the best!

Mom raves

Mom had married late for brides of 1941, at the ripe old age of 28. Although she had always been the life of every party, she was the last of her friends to marry. Maybe young suitors wondered if they could handle her spirited personality.

Mom loves DadThen along came Dad, 13 years older, stable and steady, and she was the one he wanted. Mom never got over her good fortune in his choosing her, and she let him know it every single day of their 50 years married – running to him with hugs, kisses, and wild squeals of delight every time he walked in the door.

Her dream was to have a house full of children, but after having Mary and I, her #3 was a miscarriage that became life-threatening when she hemorrhaged. She lost enough blood to make survival doubtful.

But Mom had a determination to live, and after massive set-backs that landed her at Mayo Clinic for months, in the end she came through just fine. Her desire for a dozen children, however, was not to be. “No more babies,” her doctor said. “You could die.”

There was no such thing as birth control in the 1940’s, but Dad wisely determined they would comply with the doctor’s orders. He began keeping a calendar of her cycle himself, not trusting Mom — with her passion for children and penchant for taking chances.

Dad’s system worked well for 4 years, but then, quite unexpectedly, news came of a 3rd pregnancy. This put Mom in heaven and Dad into the depths of worry. Though Mom never admitted to tricking him, we were all sure she did. If so, she did it ingeniously, giving birth to Tom on Dad’s 50th birthday.

At the beach.Dad was relieved that Mom had made it through her pregnancy without incident, and of course he adored his little boy. And Mom? She graciously accepted that this bonus baby had completed her family. Maybe that’s why she frequently made reference to having “not all the children in the world, just the best.”

As for Mary, Tom and I, any way we looked at it, one thing was certain: we’d grown up immersed in love – and also the responsibility to pass it on.

“Let no debt remain outstanding, except the continuing debt to love one another.” (Romans 13:8)

Newlywed Love (#39)

March 9, 1970

About this time, Nate and I received a long letter from Mom that had us laughing at the beginning but disturbed by the end:

Your father and I attended a co-ed baby shower on Friday. It was different having the daddies there, and you would have gotten some jollies out of seeing the fathers diaper and dress some large baby dolls. It was hilarious! We timed them. Those poor dolls…

Then she wrote:

From there we dropped in on Aunt Agnes and partied further. Your pa and I were driving separately, since I had had to be at the shower early. So, as I arrived home first, it was 12:30 AM. Dad was 15 minutes behind me.

When I unlocked the back door and stepped into the house, everything was topsy-turvey. Burglars!

Police.I hurried back outside to the front of the house to await your father but then noticed the front door was standing open and bedroom shades were pulled down. I ran next door where they helped me call the police, who came in just a few minutes. They asked us to stay outside while they searched the house.

When your dad finally arrived and we got back inside, we saw the definition of the words “ransacked house.” Every drawer had been pulled out and overturned, and there are many of them. The closets were torn apart, clothes walked on, boxes torn in haste. All kitchen cabinets were opened, though nothing was taken from those.

Books.The den was the worst. They had pulled every book off our wall of bookshelves and thrown stationary everywhere – looking for cash. The officer said it was strictly profess- sionals looking for money and jewels. The police found that they had removed a grate off the basement window well, broken the window, and come through.

Dad lost the new engraved watch he was given at his retirement party, and they took the treasury of my women’s club, $85 [about $575 today].

This is a jolting, revolting experience. But let me say, we are counting our blessings. It all could have been so much worse.

Then she went back to her usual jovial style of writing:

Glad you’re making a fast quarter-hundred by giving blood. Remember, “The life is in the blood.”

After reporting the family news, she ended by referencing the biblical John’s writing:

As John writes in his epistles, “my little children,” so I write. Be good. And rest assured of our love and prayers.  Mom

She was remarkable in her casual attitude about the break-in, and we wondered if recovering from the shock of it was as easy as she made it out to be. But as she had often said, “I never have to worry about a thing. Your father does enough of that for both of us.”

It was true. I saw her consistently live that philosophy throughout my growing-up years, and I suppose it’s a pretty good attitude for all of us to emulate. God instructs us not to worry about things, because the Father “worries about things” (i.e. takes care them) enough for all of us.

Jesus said, “I tell you not to worry about everyday life. Can all your worries add a single moment to your life? Don’t worry about tomorrow.” (Matthew 6:25,27,34)

Newlywed Love (#38)

March 4, 1970

Living in a university town offered us lots of opportunities to see interesting shows and hear fascinating people. One of those scheduled to lecture on campus was a famous trial lawyer Nate wanted to hear – William Kunstler.

Chicago SevenKunstler was America’s most controversial and best-known lawyer in 1970. He had been the defender of a group of young men called The Chicago 7 who’d been accused of conspiring to incite riots during the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago.

StudentsOutside the convention hall there had been hundreds of arrests and these 7 young men had passionately urged protesters to fight the police when they tried to disperse the crowds. Mayor Daly put 23,000 police officers on the street to control 10,000 demonstrators, and it had been chaotic for both sides throughout the 4-day convention.

All 7 of the “conspirators” (and later an 8th) had been charged, but thanks to Kunstler, none of them were found guilty after the 5 month trial. Nate thought it would be interesting to hear him speak, despite being the polar opposite of Kunstler’s liberal views.

At the last minute, however, Kunstler’s lecture was cancelled because rioting had broken out on our University of Illinois campus.

U. of IL

It was a raw time in our nation with young people protesting the Vietnam War and any kind of discrimination – of which there was plenty. Police weren’t helping the razor-sharp tension as they responded with too much force, often hurting the innocent along with the guilty.

Nate and I were disappointed not to hear Kunstler, but we were also thankful we lived off campus, away from the chaos. We did worry, though, that reserve troops like him might be called into service. The National Guard was already being used to join police on several college campuses. And that very night the Guard was put on duty at the University of Illinois.

Billy clubsIt was a frightening time of radical change for Americans, and no one knew where we were headed. The nightly news was full of violent video clips showing confrontations between students and police at scores of universities, something we’d never witnessed before. Watching a helmeted policeman hit a defenseless student with a billy club was a terrible shock.

The night of the cancelled Kunstler lecture, it was tempting to go to campus to see for ourselves what was going on. But Nate and I talked about Mary and Bervin’s experience in 1968 when they’d gone downtown to check on the protests in Grant Park.

Spraying maceAs police had coaxed crowds to disperse and people had refused, they’d sprayed mace into the group. Mary and Bervin had been greatly affected by the mace, despite trying to run away, in eyes, nose, and throat.

So wisdom dictated that the best thing for Nate and I to do was just to stay home.

“Those who trust their own insight are foolish, but anyone who walks in wisdom is safe.” (Proverbs 28:26)