Monday, February 23, 2015

My First Job at Lerner's in Downtown Providence


You had to be sixteen to be officially employed in a store in the early 60's. I took my first step in the working world at a department store in downtown Providence, R.I. I felt so grown up, dressing up, riding the bus, walking into a store that would open me up to the world of shoppers, hagglers, spenders, and fashion focused ladies.  Occasionally a gentleman would venture in, usually for a gift or on an errand for his wife. Men were always bigger spenders.  They just seem to want to buy and get out as quickly as possible.
It was a time in history when silk nylons came in square boxes, wrapped in tissue, sorted by size and color, all with unsightly seams down the back. They were attached with garter belts which had metal clips for fastening the top of the nylon. Every women who wore a pair of nylons asked the same question to her friends, "Are my seams straight?" Heaven forbid they looked like a curved highway.
I loved people and I loved selling. In fact I was somewhat of a star. There was one three fourth length checkered coat that came in and I fell in love with it. My passion translated to so many sales they they had to keep going to the back of the store  in the lay-away area and pull them out, just to keep up with me. I sometimes wonder if my long career in sales and marketing started right there in Lerner's Department Store.
I was the youngest on the staff, and quite green behind the ears. Since the older ones had in addition to their pay, a commission, they did not take kindly to my pursuit of a sale. Unlike them I was non aggressive and really wanted the customers to be happy. I think my co-workers came around and stuck to their regulars while I looked eagerly for fresh faces.
I met my first "foreigner" in the store. A lovely young girl from Columbia. She spoke little English and I was all to happy to help her. Another portent for my future of being around people from many countries and cultures. I developed a lovely friendship with her and met her family. Such nice people, like so many immigrants, starting a new life in the land of opportunity. There was opportunity every where you looked. You didn't have to "look" for a job, you just had to want one. There were signs in every window that read Help Wanted. With hard work you could start off as a worker bee and rise to the top. It was a time of great work ethics, and benevolent bosses. Corporate greed did not have it's nasty choke hold around everyone's life.
The first paycheck I received was so thrilling that I wanted to buy something special for my mom. I walked the downtown streets looking in the windows and feeling wealthy as a Rockefeller. My eyes fell on a beautiful, pink, crystal looking rosary bracelet displayed in a store window. That was the very first thing I bought with my new found wealth. I learned early the great joy of giving and my heart was singing all the way home on the bus. The gift was laid out stylishly in a delicate box and wrapped with tissue and a bow.
I ran into the house with my gift for mom. Her eyes lit up like a sky of diamonds, and her smile was like a blast of warmth from the oven of her heart. I was so elated and then looked around at all my siblings with their mouths opened and wondered how long it would take me to get through the list.

Monday, February 16, 2015

Louie's' Lemon Freeze


We were living in the small rural town of Harmony. The provincial village which dates back to the beginning of the 19th century was adjacent to a busy highway that started in Gloucester and ran to Putnam, Connecticut. It was called the Old Putnam Highway or Rt. 44. There was not a lot of traffic in those days so when my one sibling and I were playing in the yard we could hear a car coming from a long way, it's tires growling at the surface and then fading into the distance. We wondered with our little minds what was off in the distance. Our imaginations could conjure up all sorts of things, but we didn't take long to get back to playing in the wooded yard and listening for the next whisk of tires. I particularly remember that along side the road were tall wooden poles that had electric wires strung from one to another. There were small posts that were markers for people to find your house since addresses could be a pole number. Life was uncluttered then, few cars, few neighbors, and lots of trees.
We did have a neighbor who lived in a trailer across the way. His name was Louie. He lived alone, wore old dungarees, a checkered shirt, and always smelled like pipe smoke. He tended a small garden which grew copious amounts of tomatoes and cukes which he generously shared. On occasion  he would  bring us over the most delicious treat called Lemon Freeze. He made it in ice cube trays and our taste buds exploded with happiness when he shared his special recipe. I'm guessing he was lonely since I never saw any body visit him but our family always gave him a big welcome and enjoyed his visits as short as they were. It was a win win situation all around. Today he would probably be looked at askance but back then kindness and sharing was the order of the day.
When company came, mostly family, mostly unannounced, it was a treat. The car pulling in the driveway, the crunching sound beneath the wheels,aunts and uncles piling  out with cousins right behind them, ready to play and explore in our country setting. It was really a small rented house, my parent not long married and only two of us to share our toys and adventures. The old folks would sit around the "parlor" talking about the cost of bread, state of the union, and the latest Hollywood gossip. There always came a point in the conversations where they would discuss their aches and pains which amused us to no end, thinking to ourselves 'I'll never do that when I'm old.' Huh!
Families visited often then, partly because they lived in close proximity, there was far less formality, and adding another few meatballs in the sauce was no big deal. Family was important, it was tribal identification so inborn in all of us, it was the safety net for rainy days. We got to know our aunts, and cousins and they got to know us. Most families stayed in the same area because there were jobs to be had. What a difference a half century has made. People go were the jobs are, families are scattered all over the states and world. Aunts and Uncles have become sporadic names brought up in conversations and the connections that were so dear and constant are disappearing. The 50's decade was one of family dinners, family gatherings, cousins playing, spontaneous visits and a sense of community. I miss it. My children miss it, because now the Aunts and Uncles are all over the globe. Their children have to be very careful of strangers and dangers. A different world today, a different time.

Monday, February 9, 2015

#Comic Books, #50'S heroes






How well I remember the joy of Comic Books. Our first foray into the world of super heroes, fantasy, and wanna be adults. The girls were very partial to Betty and Veronica and we would lie face down on our beds, feet crossed in the air and study the clothes, hairstyles and lifestyles our our imaginary friends. It didn't stop there, the comic books were piled up in a corner, shared with friends in exchange for others like; Archie, Superman, Mega Man, Bat Man, Popeye, Jessie James, Toy Guns, and Sea Monkeys. Clearly the writers were geared to the male population but that was alright back then. It was in the days before equal opportunity, and sexual discrimination, and whatever other rights were being trampled upon.
For our part, young and guileless, we sucked everything we could out of these out of home stories. There was no hidden messages, or Sunday Sermons, or parental lectures embedded, just pure make believe.
I was always drawn to the back cover where offers of wonderful prizes were there for selling subscriptions to the magazine or some other product. It was truly the beginning of my career in sales. There was a microscope that I thought would make a great gift for my sibling so I signed on to sell the prescribed amount of Christmas Card boxes with thinking of the euphoria  when you are going to give something special to someone you love. I loved all my siblings and surprising them was like kindling for the fireplace of my heart. In our family there was no doling out of money to buy a gift for the family. You earned it, made it, or faked it. So much thought went into the process because each of us had our own interests and unique personality. One brother loved books, another building ship models, one was for physical activity, and my sisters were all into dolls, and toys. Mom and dad suffered the usual tie and cheap perfume gifts which they received with a great demonstration of happiness. After all is said and done that is what it was about, making others happy. Comic books gave me the possibility to enter into the world of earning prizes and rewards. Nothing has changed in the world today, we still prey fall to prizes and rewards from airline tickets, to credit cards, and numerous other offers of a free lunch.  I am not sure though, that we derive nearly as much satisfaction as before the days of good and plenty.

Wednesday, February 4, 2015

#Playing in the Woods #50'sChildhood play #Hide and Seek

There was nothing more thrilling than to leave the confines of the house and run into the woods outside of our home. To  us it was a veritable forest, but in truth it was probably a few acres of trees, brooks, and untrod-en paths. It meant for the Gabriel siblings adventure with a capital A. Most of the time I went barefoot, sometimes alone and sometimes for the sake of games, usually cowboys and Indians, with my brothers and sisters.
Alone I was an amazing Indian woman who could walk without making sounds. I could feel the gnarled roots of the giant trees underneath my feet. I could curl my toes to prevent from slipping on the green moss that grew abundantly by the brook. The brook was strewn with large rocks which I could step upon and reach the more remote areas of the woods. Oh yes, adventure everywhere I turned and my mind conjuring up who I was, and how nature was at my beck and call. I sometimes would find a grassy plain with occasional lumps of grass grown tall. I sat on them and imagined I was a queen on a throne. There was a copse of trees that bordered a river. One of the tree branches extended out over the river. I became a Columbus climbing up the tree and perusing the distant lands. Sometimes I would lay on the ground and watch the parade of clouds go by. There were trains, there were animals, there were ships and there were menacing dragons sticking out their tongues. I could handle it all because I was all powerful.
When all of us entered the woods we played hide and seek. I was clearly the most clever, in my mind of course. One person would close their eyes against a tree and the rest of us would scatter, finding the best hiding place we could. I remember once climbing a tree and after every one had been found they all conjured beneath the very tree I was hiding in. I was thrilled with my ingenious hiding place when suddenly a beast of prey hiding in the tree made a loud noise. I screamed and jumped down. "We won", they all shouted, "because you didn't stay put."
I looked at them and would not let it go. You all definitely did not win. That big bird in the tree did!                    

Monday, February 2, 2015

#Work Ethics and #Lemonade Stands #Childhood in the #50's. #work ethics, #lemonade stands, 3

Our work ethics were planted at a tender age. We siblings all had responsibilities and chores to perform every day. My own included washing dishes, washing clothes, hanging out clothes, bringing in clothes, and most of all baby sitting. My brothers' were more into the lifting, and yard work, and assisting dad in the more "manly" chores. I was a worker bee, although my creative nature and senior status allowed me to delegate to the younger ones while making them feel they were very lucky to have been "chosen". My oldest brother, on the other hand, was a money maker from the word go. He started a lawn mowing business and even hired a couple of kids from the neighborhood which he supervised. He supervised and they worked. A beautiful business formula. His pockets were always full of money. It was a precursor of what was to come. Looking back the elements of our future were all there. M, K and G all doodling and drawing with raw talent. R starting up businesses and making money, K loving drama, and me, always telling stories and creating plays with my siblings forced to act out. L was the youngest and she was probably trying to find her own niche in the power wielding forces about her. What I remember of D was his brute force. He was the muscle guy.
We certainly were a tribe, each vying for their own identity and power. I remember I was a bit of a general, because I was the eldest. That worked beautifully until my brothers were stronger than me, then I had to step back from my leadership position.
Between the chores, the little lemonade stands, the grass mowing business, selling for prizes on the back of the comic books, we were all learning the meaning of hard work and the value of money. Good lessons that fared us well in our adulthood. Lessons that not all of us passed on to our own children whom we wanted to  hand everything to on a silver platter. The pendulum swings both ways. Our children's generation were not so motivated and eager as we were. Let us see how this will influence their offspring. Every generation leaves its mark. Our parents generation was a good mark.