Wenona's Art
"Come on baby! Let’s get
you all dressed up in your new dress." I was hurrying to make an
appointment with one of the leaders at the Cerebral Palsy Center."Gramma
Flood sewed you the most beautiful dress. You will look like a little
doll." Talking to children was something in the personalities of the
Joneses of Wales. By the time a child could speak they did so, and in
sentences yet.
On this particular
morning my child was wearing one of her grandmother’s artful designs.
The dress was decidedly plain with no extra decoration but Wenona Flood
knew how to put color and accessory together in the most charming ways.
A striking shade of soft blue-green in what might be called aqua was
only one part of Wenona’s art. All around the skirt of the outfit she
accented with a wide band of three inches, unique, Swedish lace. The
contrast of the white lace and the color of the dress was so striking. A
simple pattern was turned into something exclusive for an unusual
presentation. The green in the color of the dress complemented the
child’s strawberry blond hair. Wenona had purposefully arranged for
this, this was her way.
This morning was sunny
and bright in contrast to the day we had first visited the center when
it was pouring rain. Bright sunlight brought out the red glints of
Rhonda’s hair.
I had been going alone
for appointments in the back part of the building but this meeting was
held in one of the front offices. In my youth I never questioned
anything so didn’t really know what was to be discussed. I carried
Rhonda wherever I went because she couldn’t sit alone and wasn’t even
able to hold her head up very well. At the moment she was sitting on my
lap and doing rather well with holding her head up it seemed to me. It
was pleasing to see what I believed to be progress in her development.
The woman who was meeting
with me was cordial enough. We exchanged pleasantries and visited for a
time. She had a stack of papers on her desk and now she lifted one of
the pages, held it in midair and turned her head to look directly at me.
I should have known from this position and attitude she would have
something to say and what she would demand of me was to shake me to my
shoes. How well she hid her intentions beneath this front of sweet
courtesy.
Were there great
earthquakes, ravaging tornadoes, deadly plague, hosts of invading
insects, famine and hunger, squalid living conditions in my upbringing?
No, there were not. We lived each day with an anxious anticipation for
what was on our plate. The joy of a struggle was with my family when I
was a girl and I knew about adversity in small ways. There was never a
holding back from what had to be done and life had been altogether
normal, whatever normal is, as the saying goes. At any rate, as
children, we learned all that goes into our make-up and our conditioning
for the way we are to perform when faced with making decisions for our
own families no matter even if an earth shattering event should happen.
Mother and Dad never hid
the daily living conditions from us. We were a part of the work, play or
anything else that was happening. Other greater dark things were hidden
and only many years later with a genealogical searching for Dad’s family
who he had separated from his own family because of fear for racial
problems were some of these frightening elements discovered. For the
moment I was blissfully ignorant of what this woman’s position was and
how she was sitting in a place to be a powerful force in my life.
Probably, this is how
youth and inexperience are protected. I was interested in the neat way
she was dressed, how her hair was obviously coiffed at a shop, and the
neatness of her desk, nothing more. The money to go into this new
building, their staff, and all the other amenities were of no concern to
me and I wasn’t even aware or interested in whom or what determined the
goals for the organization much less threatened by it.