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Repent, repent, repent!
Stop those dirty little doings
That are screwing up your life.
Comden & Green
When I was young all things functional were always accomplished
behind closed doors. The actions we consider commonplace today were only exposed
in those books the librarian kept locked in her Special Request cabinet.
In my home, we all received equal displays of affection. My father kissed each
of us in the vicinity of our ears when he came home from work and my mother
folded her arms and turned away lest we ruin her make up. I thought we were
making love.
When I was thirteen, my mother gave me an involved lecture that described the
technical aspects of human reproduction. She discussed ovum, sperm, fallopian
tubes and my uterus in great detail, but she never mentioned desire or need. She
finished her speech with the warning: "Nice girls don't do it, Lynn Ruth."
What wasn't I supposed to do? Hold hands? Kiss? Menstruate? What nasty behavior
led to the shadowy result so terrible my mother refused to name it? I was
convinced that I must never indulge in any impulse that involved anyone's nether
parts. Should I dare to do such a thing, I would spend the rest of my life in a
detention home for wayward girls. Gone my dreams of a college education.
("College women know how to behave.") Marriage? No longer in my cards. ("No man
wants anything used, Lynn Ruth.)
That one really puzzled me. What did I have that was brand new? Everything I
knew about on my body had been around at least thirteen years. I blamed the
gradual changes in my physique on not getting enough sleep and carefully limited
my communication with all things human to casual verbal exchange. As I
approached my middle teens, my mother increased her warnings of the dirty doings
that lay in wait for me. I concluded that sitting next to any male animal
including the dog was tantamount to rape. Every date became a threat to my
virginity. If the young man at my side dared hold my hand, I blushed with shame.
If he brushed my shoulder, I was humiliated.
Not everyone in the fifties had a mother as vigilant as mine. When a group of us
went to the drive-in theater, everyone else ignored the movie. While they were
grunting and pawing one another, my escort stared out the window and I huddled
next to the door discussing the intellectual implications of Kim Novak's
shameless behavior toward Humphrey Bogart.
When I became sixteen, my mother decided I was a time bomb about to explode and
accordingly tightened her control of my behavior. However, my inner turmoil had
more to do with her iron grip on my actions than sex. I wasn't sure what it was
much less how to do it. I was still trying to figure out how to convince my
mother that my undershirts were inadequate.
That year, my mother was so certain I would be violated when I left the house
that she imposed particularly rigid curfews for me. Even though all dances ended
at midnight, she demanded that I come home at 10:30. "The dance doesn't begin
until nine," I cried one day when I gathered the courage to dispute her. "Billy
will have to take me home just when the band gets hot."
My mother reached for her nail polish and touched up my thumbnail. "Right," she
said. "I know you teenagers. The minute those chaperones turn their back, you
start all your dirty doings."
"That's impossible," I said. "The dance is indoors."
My mother polished another nail. "You know perfectly well what I mean, Lynn
Ruth," she said.
My uncle was sitting in our living room listening to this conversation and
decided to come to my defense. He looked up from his magazine. "You know, Ida,"
he said. "If she wants to, she can do it before 10:30." he said and he winked at
me.
"Do what?" I said.
"I think you need to have a talk with your daughter one of these days," said my
uncle. "And be more specific about all the nasty things boys have on their
minds."
"She doesn't have to tell me, Uncle Philly," I said. "I know all about boys.
They hate books, they love to fight and they never ever take baths."
"Right!" said my uncle. "Aren't you glad they finally turn into men?"
"Is there any difference?" asked my mother
"Well, I hope so," said my uncle.
My mother was slashing nail polish on my fingertips and my uncle was laughing. I
couldn't figure out why my mother's face was red as the polish on my fingertips
or what was so funny. "Oh mother!" I said, "You know perfectly well that men are
nicer than boys. Daddy is never without a book and he takes showers at least
twice a day. It's you who gets angry all the time. Will that happen to me when I
become a woman?"
"Only if you aren't getting any," Lynn Ruth," said my uncle.
"Getting any what?" I said.
My uncle was laughing so hard I could barely understand his words. "Ask your
mother he sputtered.
But of course I did no such thing. This was the fifties when everyone believed
mother knew best.
Sex is only dirty if it's done right
Bumper Sticker
See Lynn
Ruth's website
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