When my parents separated, and ultimately divorced, I suddenly found myself no longer in Arlington, VA with my friends, dog Tammy, and cat Mosby, but living in Tulsa, Oklahoma with my grandparents.
We’d stayed there in past summers, so
I was well acquainted with my Uncle Sam’s old cache of Pogo books, tucked away
in a cupboard under the eaves. But this was for the long haul, with no apparent
end date.
Fortunately, my family were readers
and so was I. My mother’s attitude was that all reading, even if it was the
back of a Kleenex box, was fine, so I had free rein of the books in his old room, most published
in the ‘30s and ‘40s. My Uncle had at one point been bed-bound with polio, so
there was plenty to pick from.
I worked my way through, among others,
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, The Thurber Carnival, Bill Maudlin’s book of
WWII cartoons, The Egg and I, Gone with the Wind, and even Andersonville.
I enjoyed them all even if at 11 years old it’s certain that I missed many
of the references and most of the nuances, but they got me through a long
summer.
One of my favorites was Cheaper by
the Dozen, an autobiography written by two children of efficiency experts Frank
and Lillian Galbraith, pioneers in industrial engineering who tried to apply
the same principles to their family of twelve kids.
It was when my knee (which is still
deciding day-to-day whether it will cooperate) was at its worst that I was
reminded of the Galbraiths.
I became my own efficiency expert.
How much could I carry in one trip? Phone can go in pocket, book
under arm, reading glasses on head, plate in left hand, tea mug in right. And
the odds were better if this occurred after the mug was empty.
Did I reeealy need that loaf of
bread all the way downstairs in the freezer?
And why walk the four steps around the couch that it would
take to turn up the thermostat when I could use the
Nest app on my phone?


I read "Cheaper by the Dozen" when I was an adolescent too and remember enjoying it better than the movie, actually. I like how you related your own efficiency musings back to it!
ReplyDeleteYes, I liked the book better, too, although I did think the first movie version of it did a great job capturing the nuttiness of their lives.
DeleteGod, I haven't thought of some of those titles in ages. I read "Gone With the Wind" in the sixth grade and LOVED it -- and I think I understood even the nuances because I'd seen the movie. But who knows.
ReplyDeleteI remember a "Cheaper By the Dozen" movie, but I'm not sure I even knew it was a book first.
I read a lot of my uncle's and grandfather's old books when I was a kid -- "Lad, a Dog" and "A Night to Remember" among them.
Nothing like finding shelves of books waiting to be read.
DeleteSO sorry Henny, Debra, Ellen and Abby!! Thank you so much for stopping by and leaving comments. Unfortunately, Blogger decided to eat them instead of posting them the way I told it too! Ain't technology great?
ReplyDelete