Summering in Cannes chez Jardin des Arbres


I thought La Jolie Grandmere had the biggest house in France, at least in Cannes. As a child it was sprawling, vast and truly magnificent. I am delighted that I can still recall her house, Jardins des Arbres -- translated Garden of Trees -- so vividly and colorfully. I am so happy, that even from the eyes of a young child I could see and truly appreciate the magnificence that was this house. With all the elegance and glorious aspects of the architecture and decor, there was still plenty of whimsy to entertain a young girl like me.

My grandmother's bedroom and bathroom were all pink. Bubblegum pink. Well, pink and white, actually. Bright pink walls with a bed made out of white trellis. It tickled my young senses. It was whimsical and yet so elegant. It takes a strong man to live in a bedroom such as this. Her adjoining bathroom matched in color and detail. Certainly this was a bedroom suite for Princesses and Queens... and Fairies.

The living and dining room area were open. There were two walls. Both were painted black. One lined with books and bookshelves. The other stood plain, save a few pieces of art. The other two sides were exposed to the open air -- to the pool and olive trees and mountains and the Mediterranean beyond and to the atrium which would later on become a glass ceilinged dining area. The furniture was white and the floor was a crisp, cool, elegant white tile. The natural light from the outdoors changed the tone of the room as the time, days and seasons changed. The snow on the pool area beyond blanketed the outdoors. Glass doors were pulled together so that no matter what the weather, one would always feel at one with the outdoors. Of course, I never experienced Cannes in the winter. I only summered there. Her house was photographed so many times that I am privileged to own these acclaimed magazines.

On the other side of the atrium with the wonderful lion water fountain built into the ivy-lined, concrete wall that constantly trickled a steady stream of water, was the tiny, plain, one car garage. There was nothing at all fancy about this concrete square with a roof overhead. Nothing unless you are a young child fascinated with over-sized turn tables!

The small garage was atop a long, winding, and very steep driveway in the mountains overlooking the sea. Perhaps this long, never ending driveway is why I thought the property to be so vast. To my little legs and espadrille-clad feet, the driveway seemed endless. I learned recently that it was not. I learned recently that my grandmother actually had a fairly small piece of property in the mountains by the sea. And together my mother and I found it with a million thanks to Google Earth. There she was, as lovely as ever! But indeed smaller than she seemed in my youth. And that long driveway? Not that long at all! But still steep indeed. And the reason for the roundabout, or turn table. Or as I liked to call it, the Merry Go Round! One simply could not back down the driveway... at least not with ease. And there was no room whatsoever to turn the car around at the top.

Charles was my grandmother's right-hand man, and chauffeur. When she did not venture out with my grandfather, Charles was always by her side. He was a wonderful man about 20 years her junior who lived in the house in an apartment on the garden level with his wife Lilliane.

 Charles and Lillianne were witnesses at Bettina (La Jolie Grandmere) and Larry's wedding

Charles and Lilliane had a small one bedroom apartment on a lower level. The apartment was small but well equipped. It was near where the gardens would eventually go. The climate in Cannes was perfect for growing strawberries, lettuces, cucumbers and other items for one's food requirements. La Jolie Grandmere had a self sustaining garden long before Alice Waters and others made this term trendy and en vogue. She also had a small vineyard. Funny how memorable that was to me, even as a child. Foretelling, perhaps, of my great love of wine?!

Even though my Nannies traveled with me to France I used to like to hang around with Charles. (Nannies were allotted time off here and there.) He was gentle and loving and treated me as he would his daughter or niece. It was not uncommon for me to end up in his apartment with him and Lillianne. Sometimes I would show up unannounced and Lillianne or Charles would welcome me in as though I was a much anticipated guest. They would offer me glasses of water or juice that they would pour into their glass tumblers. The same tumblers that they drank their wine from. Again, I am quite amused that even as young as 3 or 4 I would hone in on the fact that they drank wine not out of stemware but regular tumblers! (Quite common practice in Europe, actually.)

One afternoon I was hanging out with Charles and Lilliane in their apartment. They were enjoying a glass of wine and a cigarette. This was the early 70s and everyone smoked. My mother and grandmother both did. They smoked filterless Gauloise (strong French) cigarettes that were just nasty -- of course I had to try one at some point in my teen years! Whether one knew, in the 1970s, that smoking was terrible for you, was uncertain. I do remember thinking that people who wore deep tans and smoked were terribly glam! Anyhow, one afternoon Charles and Lilliane were enjoying an afternoon smoke with an afternoon glass of vin rouge. I must have been watching them carefully, closely, curiously, because suddenly Charles offered me a puff. I accepted.

I remember being up in the kitchen not too much after my first cigarette with Charles, my mother and my grandmother. He told them of our afternoon. Both women started to laugh. "What did she think of it?" my grandmother asked Charles. He replied, also in a tone of laughter, "Hopefully that was both her first and her last cigarette!" Yes, I took a drag and began to cough uncontrollably.  I remember being given a butterscotch candy to suck on to help the cough. The taste of the smoke and the butterscotch have left an indelible mark on my brain. I can't say it is a terribly good one! Nor did his lesson work. I smoked for some time once I hit my teen years. Perhaps my only true regret thus far in my life...

Charles and I used to play on the roundabout when my grandparents were out. The garage would stand empty. I would walk onto the large metal turntable that resembled more a record player than Merry Go Round. Sometimes my feet were clad in one of my many pairs of colorful espadrilles, other times they were barefoot. When I was barefoot I remembered feeling the pattern of the cool metal beneath me. I remember the smell of metal and leather and petrol in the garage.

Charles would ask me if I was ready. "Prete!" I would shout out to him. (He spoke no English so therefore we only spoke in French together.) And he would flip the light switch and ever so slowly the large metal disk would start to turn. And I would stand on it. Arms stretched out to my sides as far as they would go. My eyes were closed and a smile was on my face. You couldn't possibly imagine how fun this was! Charles had the patience of a saint and we would play on the Merry Go Round for what would seem like hours at a clip. Sometimes he would sing Sur le Pont D'Avignon, Alouette... sometimes I would sing Lundi Matin, Au Clair de la Lune .. sometimes we would sing together... Il etait un petit navire, Savez-Vous Plantez les Choux?

Oftentimes when my grandmother had returned home from a trip to town, Charles would look for me to see if I wanted to ride in the car as he turned it around in preparation for its next outing.

(Tomorrow photos and text from sales brochure for Jardins des Arbres!)

J'adore Paris au Printemps!

11, Quai aux Fleurs, Ile de la Cite, Paris

 I'm transcribing the last of La Jolie Grandmere's stories. This is the famed Thornton Wilder story, how she met and formed a life-long friendship with the acclaimed playwright and story teller. It's taking me a long time to copy as I have to stop frequently to decipher her handwriting.

Right now I am reading about how she renovated a flat in Paris that hadn't been used since the Middle Ages. This is typical of my grandmother. She always took on monster projects such as this. Her apartment was at 11 Quai aux Fleurs on Ile de la Cite, overlooking Notre Dame in Paris.

She stayed at a hotel about 20 minutes away while the renovations were taking place. She would go every morning to quickly check in with and oversee the workers at her flat before returning to her hotel for breakfast. This was a typical morning:

"My workmen arrived at 7:30 am and never missed a day. I was there to greet them, have a chat and discuss the work. I was living at the Hotel Crillion in Place de la Concorde, a twenty minute taxi ride away. I would pile out of bed still groggy with sleep, hike my nightgown up into a belt, put on my mink coat, then another belt, smash on a big hat, don some sunglasses and so with no makeup I was ready in minutes to go downstairs, get into a cab and arrive at the apartment in time to organize my work force while the cab waited. Then I got back in the cab and headed back to the hotel and got back into bed and rang for breakfast."

As I was typing I had a sudden urge to return to Paris. It's not in the least bit possible for me to hop on board a plane and fly over, but I did locate a photo album I had made when I honeymooned there 13 years ago.

We went in the middle of June. Paris is in full bloom and in her splendor. Except for that year. There was, I'm afraid, more rain than sun, but we enjoyed ourselves tremendously anyhow.

I had fun taking a break from typing to look through pictures of Paris!




  Our Hotel, L'Hotel du Louvre
We could see right into the museum from our bedroom! I kept looking for thieves in the night!


Notre Dame...
I can't remember, but this might be the view from La Jolie Grandmere's flat, 11 Quai aux Fleurs


 This cafe was near our hotel



Here we are in the Champs Elysees... we got totally scammed! Some "photographer" took a Polaroid of us and charged us the equivalent of $10 for it. Of course we had to buy the picture!


 I love this photo I took of the Arc de Triomphe!



We stopped to have coffee at our local cafe one day and this gentleman was thoroughly enjoying his ice cream. We were sitting a good distance away so I put on my zoom lens and took this photo!



 "Winged Victory," Le Louvre, Paris


  Venus de Milo, Le Louvre, Paris


 I was completely enthralled with the old and the new at the Louvre


La Musee d'Orsay, Paris


We had dinner on a Bateau Mouche one night. It was a blast! Here I am wearing the outfit my mother's dressmaker in Newport made me. It's a white raw silk shit with a cropped white silk jacket which is hard to tell in this picture. Very Jackie O, n'est ce pas? I still wear these from time to time!


A collage of my photography


 I'm standing over the underpass where a few short months later Princess Diana would be tragically killed.


One of the most beautiful places just outside of Paris, Giverny 
(You can't tell in the picture, but I am wearing my Tretorns!)



 

 Monet's house and gardens were truly breath-taking! 




From Paris we took the Chunnel under the English Channel to London where we visited with La Jolie Grandmere and Larry. Our last couple of days were spent at Wimbledon. Unfortunately more time was spent in the members enclosure due to the terrible rains. Our Pimm's kept us happy! My grandfather, Larry, was the only American to be granted a full membership without having won the coveted championship. Yes, I did realize what a treat it was to be with them there.


 This was the view from my bedroom, and my bathroom,
chez La Jolie Grandmere in Great Haseley, Oxfordshire



And lastly, this is for my little sis, the wonderful Queen Bee Swain...
because I know how much she loves the Sunday Styles Section.
My announcement appeared in the Newport Daily News, Providence Journal,
The New York Times and other small publications.
(I have sent QBS the actual announcement, but wish to maintain anonymity here on the blog.) 

Ok, now time to get back to work!

The boy with the red cap...

This story still warms my heart!

Some of you have mentioned that you wanted to hear stories from my single days. I have many. Very many. So many, in fact I could write an entire book about them! I was single for all of my 20s. I got engaged when I was 29 and married at 30. So needless to say, I had a lot of fun in my 20s.

Here's the story about the boy with the red cap.


Plain Summer Baseball Cap Hat- Red

I was living in Darien, a tony Connecticut suburb, just about an hour outside of New York City. I lived in a small white cape with my friends Jean and Shaun. People used to confuse Shaun and me. We were both blond, the same height and both drove red Jettas. She was on of my very best friends from college. (I had a few college besties though.) In truth Shaun was cuter and thinner... but I was always flattered by the comparison. Her name will come up often in the stories about my 20s.

I was on my way back to Connecticut after visiting my parents in Newport. I believe it was Labor Day weekend. And there was a terrible accident on 195. Terrible. The highway was closed. I had no cell phone. My parents disapproved of them. This was about 16 years ago and they were still the size and weight of bricks. I knew my parents would be worried if they didn't hear from me by a certain hour and I knew I would never make it home by that hour.

I was driving my new black Jetta. It rocked with the sunroof my other car did not have and was a total babe magnet. I no longer had the red Jetta. It had been totalled. Long story short a thief stole my stereo (this happened all the time in the 80s and early 90s) and when I lived in Boston I must have had no less than a half a dozen stolen.) You would think I had learned my lesson. But I'm not a fast learner. I had a stereo that I could pull out and was supposed to bring with me everywhere I went. "Supposed" is the operative word in that sentence.

It was a beautiful Spring day and I went to work at Williams-Sonoma in the Stamford mall. (I was looking for a "real" job, but still needed to support myself.) When I left work I saw that someone had broken into my car, taken my stereo (fuckfuckfuck) and left a couple of wires dangling there. I thought nothing of the wires and was more concerned with how long it would take me to earn money to replace my stereo.

Later that night I was heading to my boyfriend's house. (I broke up with him shortly thereafter.) I turned the car on and the wires started smoking, the car started shorting -- lights on and off like a car possessed -- and then one huge puff of smoke blew into the front of the car. I grabbed my keys and ran into the house to use the phone to call 911.

Shaun was on the phone with her boyfriend. I stood there screaming at her to get off the phone as she lazily reclined on her bed talking to her boyfriend. She waved me off like I was an annoying mosquito. "Shaun, Goddammit!" I screamed at her. "Get the fuck off the phone. My car is on fire." More waving the mosquito away. Finally Jean barged in and said "Shaun, get off the phone and move your car!" Shaun's red Jetta was parked behind my red Jetta. She looked out her window, hung up and ran.

I got the phone and called 911. Within minutes, perhaps even seconds the Noroton Heights Fire Department was there. They disconnected the ignition and battery in order to prevent an explosion. Meanwhile, I, apparently was screaming like a lunatic. "My trunk! My Trunk! My tennis rackets are in the trunk!" So the fire men removed the rackets from the trunk. And everything else I had back there. It must have appeared to these men that I was living out of the car.

The firemen remained there. They watched as the smoke turned to flames. Big, huge, red, hot flames. And they just let it burn. They did not turn on their hoses. They did not pour buckets of water onto it. Until much later. When the car was significantly totalled they doused it.

I asked one of the fire fighters why they had done so. I was told that many insurance companies would try to repair a car that that was irreparable. Cars that have had any electrical issues are never safe to drive. Great. I was now out of a car. I knew my father was going to be irate. This was entirely my fault. I should have learned the first time.

I worried about never having a car, or a Dodge Gremlin -- an ugly, hideous really, small car from the seventies.

My father was mad alright but my insurance was fabulous. I was given almost the full value of the car and was able to get a newer car that was a demo at the dealership. My new black Jetta that was even better! (Score!)

About a month after that the black Jetta and I had a small run-in on the Merritt Parkway with a Jersey barrier. Police deemed it not my fault and I got no ticket. Insurance paid the extensive damage and dropped me like a hot potato.

So you can understand why I knew my parents would be worried.

It was late after noon and the sun was just beginning to go down behind the tress beyond. It was still light out but the sun was no longer in my eyes. I really wished I had had a cell phone. And a bathroom. There was no where to go. And no where to turn. I blared the radio and bee-bopped along happily to the music. I watched the cars all around me. We were all stopped. This was a scene out of a movie, not real life! Kids got out and put on their roller-blades. People got out and started walking their dogs. Teenagers in the pick up truck next to me were tossing cans of Coca-Cola out to everyone. It was more like a party scene and no one seemed terribly annoyed or frustrated. I hopped out of my car and went to the trunk to grab a windbreaker.

I happened to see this really cute guy in the car behind me. I smiled at him and went back into my car.
I kept checking him out in my rear-view window. He was really cute in his red baseball cap, driving his silver Honda Prelude which was a really cute sporty car.

I kept bee-bopping to the music and watching him. He was that cute!

Eventually he got out of his car and came over to talk to me. To me! We started chit-chatting about everything. He was as cute in person and super nice. We happened to look up and saw that break lights were now on. Cars were starting to move. He bid me farewell and headed back to his car. Dammit!

We rolled forward about 100 feet before our cars came to a standstill again. The boy with the red cap got out again. And started to talk to me again. I found out his name, where he went to college and grad school. He was cute in the old prep school way and very smart. With a great job to boot.

Eventually traffic picked up and started to roll and the boy with the red cap said good-bye once more. He was headed into the city and I was headed to Darien. We'd never see each other again. This was truly tragic!

I noticed, as I was driving, that the cute boy in the red cap, whom I knick-named Red Cap, had started to follow me. If I switched lanes, he would. I would smile and wave to him. He made me happy.

Eventually I had get off. As I neared Exit 11, I began to pull over, switching lanes so that I could get off at my Exit. Imagine to my surprise and delight to see Red Cap following me! I got off the Exit and so did Red Cap! When he could, he pulled over and motioned me to roll down my window. I did as I was instructed to do.

"What are you doing on Wednesday night?" He shouted from his car. I had no plans. Eagerly, perhaps a little too eagerly, I shouted "Nothing!" Then he asked if I wanted to join him at the US Open. He had two tickets! We pulled over where it was safe to talk and exchanged information.

Yippeeeee!!! I couldn't contain my excitement! I was positively giddy. I ran into the house and Shaun and Jean were there. I told them all about what had just happened. They were amused but not surprised. I do lots of crazy things!

Red Cap and I had a blast at the Open. I took the train in to the City and met him and his driver (company car -- it was the early 90s, everyone was frivolous then!) and together we drove out to Long Island. We had a few more dates and had I had a wonderful time. But his work and travel schedule made it hard for us to see each other after that.

I just love this story and wish it could have gone on a little longer.

Red Cap remains anonymous because not too long ago I was telling this story to my cousin's husband and I mentioned Red Cap by name. His ears perked and his eyes lit up. He knew Red Cap! He had worked with Red Cap! (They had worked for the same company, different offices.) He did tell Red Cap, when he next spoke with him, that he was now related to me, the girl he picked up on the highway!

This is one of my best dating stories. I'm not sure I would randomly accept a date with some random guy on the highway today. But I am so very glad I did back then!

A real, live Jewish American Princess!




I've been spending the past few days transcribing my grandmother's fabulous stories for the memoir. In one chapter she talks about her own Grandmother, Jessie, after whom I was named. She was incredibly close to this grandmother. When La Jolie Grandmere moved to the United Kingdom she started to research our family history. She located my great great grandmother's birth certificate and even went to visit her grandmother's childhood home, Kingsgate Castle. The above photo shows the "house" when it was a single family home. Years ago it was turned into apartments.

From my grandmother's writings:

"Gramma spent part of her youth in a castle in Kent called "Kingsgate Castle." It is near Ramsgate on the English Channel. I went to see it one grey day. Although it has been made into apartments, it is well maintained and a handsome crenelated edifice, but alas has no towers. From the large terrace in back there is a perpendicular drop to the swirling, grey waters of the channel. It looked threatening. I wouldn't like to live like that."

I found the image of the castle easily on the internet. Gotta love modern technology! My mother is currently researching, locating old birth and death certificates of Jessie's parents to find out when exactly, and for how long they did live in Kingsgate.

I thought it was pretty fun and neat and wanted to share with you all!

And now when my husband accuses me of acting all Princess-y, I can tell him I have reason to!

Part 3 - From Prep School to Boston: Happy Endings

For those of you whom have yet to read the first two parts, you might want to skip down!
And now for the finale. (More is being written for the memoir.)

*****

The summer before my senior year turned out to be a really good one.

Almost as soon as I touched down in New York we packed up the car and headed for Newport. I spent my days swimming in the pool and playing tennis at The Tennis Hall of Fame where I had been taking lessons for years.

I took sailing lessons at the Ida Lewis Yacht club and made friends with two girls who were American but lived in London. The coincidence of it all! I put myself on a strict diet and between all the exercise and my very limited (500 calories a day) the pounds came flying off.

I was beginning to look and feel like me. I had a social life again and while my summer would never be what it was the year before – (Had it only been a year? It seemed as though decades had passed.) I started to get a little spring in my step again. I think I lost 25 or 30 pounds that summer. I still wasn’t quite as slim as I had been, but I was well on my way and almost there.

As the summer drew to a close we returned to New York to prepare for school. I was rather excited about it all. Mother had given me her credit cards so I could go shopping at Bloomingdale's and Macy’s and Lord & Taylor’s. I required a whole new wardrobe. Shopping was so very much fun! Packing to return to school in England was so very much fun. I was going to have a great year. I could tell!

The flight over was a vastly different experience from the one a year earlier. This time I had picked my room, my roommate and my dorm. Where last year everything had been so very out of my control, this year everything was within my control.


I could tell from the way La Jolie Grandmère greeted me that she was both pleased and proud of my progress. I cannot tell you how wonderful that made me feel!

She still talked about weight and calories and had a certain code. But this was how she was. She was always very careful regarding her own weight. While she adored fine food and ate only the best, she ate like a bird. She always claimed that she needed to keep her weight down so that her husband and chauffeur could better push her around in her wheel chair, though I am pretty certain that she would have eaten this way had she not been wheel chair bound. She was very conscientious about her weight, image and appearance.

This was how and who she was.

I was eager to get back to school and see my dorm and my friends. The girls were shocked and amazed at home I was able to transform myself so drastically. Compliments flowed like champagne on New Year’s Eve. Even the cold and crusty members of the faculty noticed and complimented and commended me. Everyone was eager to borrow my new clothes. How wonderful it was to be able to share clothes with my friends. How wonderful it was to be able to wear the same clothes and the same sizes!

I adapted a healthier lifestyle. The diet had gone by the wayside, but I had a decent control over what I was eating … I didn’t deny myself anything, I was just careful not to go too overboard. A few of the pounds came back on, but nothing too terrible. I was neither uncomfortable nor terribly concerned. I was having fun. This was my senior year, after all!

My friends and I played tennis in the late afternoons after classes were over. We’d grab a quite bite to eat at tea time and head out to the courts.

One day in late October or early November I had neglected to clear a ball that had landed near the net which resulted in my slipping on it and toppling over. My ankle swelled up immediately. I thought I was going to throw up and I couldn’t put any weight on it. I somehow got to the infirmary and was given crutches. The following day I go to experience the lovely British Health System and went to a doctor to have a good look at my ankle. He declared it a bad sprain and sent me on my way. No X-rays, no physical therapy no nothing.To this day I wonder if something had indeed broken.( It’s never been right and at the end of every day, especially the long ones, it blows up all over again.)

After that (and what would be the first of many ankle injuries) I led a more sedentary life once again. I began to eat again. And once again the weight returned. Somehow. I don’t remember the small warning signs I had had the year before, as this time it seemed to happen suddenly and over night. As though the very moment when my ankle went “crack” the weight piled back on. It was so maddening and disheartening. Once again I had lost all control. And of course with the weight gain come sadness and insecurity and the desire and need to have something fuel that vacancy… and food became again, my best friend.

I saw the disappointment again in the eyes of my mother and my grandmother. I didn’t know what would be done… what could be done. I was resolved to enjoying my last few months there and no one was going to discourage me. I was going to travel to Paris with my Art History class and see some sights in England.I also had to figure out this thing called College Applications.

Since I was the only American Border at the school I had no direction or guidance to help with my college applications. My Hewitt transcripts were mediocre at best and since I would not be taking my A-Level exams until the end of June I had no grades to supply with my applications. The whole thing was a sordid and lousy mess. I was absolutely positive that I would not be going to college anywhere. And I would be damned if I was going to have to end up repeating a year back home after all my hard work and efforts. After everything I had been through.

La Jolie Grandmère, of course, and Larry were incredibly well connected. I could go to Oxford University, they assured me, or RADA (The Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts) since art and drama were my “things.” Why thank you ever so much Beautiful Grandmother, and as flattered and humbled and gracious as I am by the gesture of your offers, A) I could not get into Oxford University no matter how well connected you are and no matter how many colleges where Larry is a Fellow… no more than B) would I ever make it into the esteemed and reputable RADA on my own merits even with all your clout and pull. But really even if I could, I really just want to go home, back to the States.

And I was left in a panic.

Where would I go? What would I do? Without the guise of a guidance counselor I filled and submitted my own applications. I had brought some college books with me from home and decided to send applications to those places I liked the most. I really had no idea what I was doing! In the mail my replies were the same; thank you but no thank you… we cannot make any acceptances without proper transcripts. And since no one in the UK, it seemed, knew what to do with me or what a bloody transcript was, I wasn’t going anywhere.

One day my mother happened to be talking to a friend of hers, an artist also living in the city, who mentioned this small liberal arts women’s college in the tony Boston suburb of Chestnut Hill. My mother decided to call and inquire. They had a rolling admissions policy and liked what they saw of me on paper. Sight unseen I was accepted and would be attending college in Boston in the fall.

I was relieved that I had somewhere to go and was able to enjoy the rest of the year travelling across the country, across Europe and having fun.

While my years in England were certainly not my best, I did have some wonderful experiences and opportunities that I never would have otherwise had. This experience, pain and all, was, I would one day learn, instrumental in helping me to become the person I am today.

Without the bad one does not get to experience the good. My years in England were, perhaps, one great big juxtaposition.

The following September I was to start college in Boston where I would be a freshman, a member of the class of 1989. My grandmother was thrilled. I would love Boston, she told me. Chestnut Hill was a lovely town and her sister lived just down the road from what would be my school in a big beautiful home. Her husband, now retired, was a reputable and well loved doctor, who practiced at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and taught at Harvard. I should be sure to visit them!

I was a little wary about this new school and determined to transfer out immediately to the well known college on the other side of Route 9. What I did not expect, however, was to find what I did at that small school. I found life-long friends, security; warm, caring understanding teachers and faculty that would help set me on my way. In that small women’s college I truly found happiness.

And if I needed to scream and cry and complain I found people in whom I could trust to listen to me and offer me encouraging words of support. Of course I had my issues and battles and insecurities but I wasn’t fighting them alone.

For all that I did not have in England I had in Boston. I immediately recognized this and decided I need not transfer to a larger, more competitive, more popular school…

I needed what was there in front of me. I needed to join the school newspaper and the yearbook and the tennis team. I needed to have my Freshman English teacher praise me and put me in the advanced writing section. I needed to have my Personal Journalism teacher praise my essay about La Jolie Grandmère. (She begged me to publish it in the school paper, but I declined. It was too personal and I wasn’t ready to share the story.) I needed my friends and I needed the fact that they needed me.

I needed to be asked to join the student Government Association. I needed to stay out all night long on the weekends with my friends. I needed to meet these girls. I needed them in my life. I needed the laughter we shared and the memories we were busy creating. I needed that they made me feel good and special and smart. I needed the boyfriends… the good ones and the losers!

I needed to be able to The Boathouse Bar every night during the week and then decide to stay in the dorm scrap-booking on Saturday nights with my friend Cathy while everyone else went out… I needed to go to the parties at Harvard and BU and Babson and BC. I needed to go out for pizza in the middle of the night. I needed to do some things that might have gotten me into trouble had we gotten caught. I needed to goof off and completely forget about an exam… I needed to make honor roll. In short I needed everything that small school had to offer me.

Most of all I needed my girlfriends. All of them. My girls would stick with me through thick and thin. You girls all know who you are... You all know that after 20 years I love you each as much I loved you back then. We've gone off and disappeared for a while and had careers and babies and cancer and miscarriages and we've shared laughter and tears. And when we reconnect after not seeing each other for so long, it amazes me that we can pick right up from where we left off. So if my not so happy years across the Pond meant I would find you all... then each and every second over there there... the good, the bad, the ugly and the horrific were all so very well worth it!

This small, all women’s liberal arts college built me back up to where I once was, and then something else happened. Graduation! Suddenly all that self esteem and self confidence I had when I wore my black cap and robe dissolved the moment I had to enter the real world and compete with all the other recent college graduates vying for the same position.I was facing another great period of change and unknown in my life. How I hate change! How I still hate the unknown!

At 21 I did not have the confidence to boast that my abilities were superior. This would take time and age and maturity. Furthermore, even though I was newly equipped with a shiny new BA I had no idea what the hell I wanted to do with the rest of my life.

I went on interviews that had been set up by my parents and family friends. I had some really good opportunities with some of Boston’s leading corporations and financial institutions. In the end I turned them all down. I turned down opportunities that in retrospect I shouldn’t have. My insecurity was my greatest enemy… and I was young still. More than anything I was driven by an urge to follow my creative side as ridiculous as it may sound now.

That first year, after graduation, in Boston, was a difficult one and once again I felt as though I did not belong. Boston was a strange place to be at that point in my life. I was no longer one of the hundreds of thousands of college co-eds that called the city their home, and I was not yet part of the working crowd.

Late that spring I decided to bid my college town a fond farewell and pack up all my belongings and move into to my parents home in Newport for the summer where I had a job waiting for me at The Tennis Hall of Fame, a place as comfortable to me as my own home – a place I spent much of my time in my youth playing tennis, and worked during the summers while I was in college. I was thrilled to be back there.

It felt like home. When the tournaments were over I headed over to New Haven to work for a tennis event there. That event was so insignificant in my life but yet would set the path down which I would travel and pave the way to my future.

In light of it all, how could I harbor any regrets? Sure I had some bumps in the road but who doesn't? And if not for those bumps I would not have found the happiness that ensued...in my girlfriends...and in my life, in Boston and beyond.

Prep School across The Pond: Part 2



Note: This is Part 2 of my Prep School Across The Pond Memoir. If you haven't read the first part you may want to skip down to the next post and come back to this one. Both pieces are fairly long. They are edited (shortened) versions of those compiled for my memoirs.
*****

I saw the disappointment in my mother’s eyes when she greeted me at the airport. My father was there too, but he has a better poker face. I knew I didn’t look the same. I didn’t feel the same. But I was completely unexpected to find what stared back at me in the mirror. I was aghast and horrified with myself and by myself. How did I do this? I knew damn well how I had. All those afternoon “teas” stuffing myself with loaves of bread with butter and jam or Marmite. The walks to Waitrose to pick up packages of Smarties and Minstrels and crisps of all flavors. I hadn’t given a second thought to what I was putting in my mouth. Pure unadulterated emotional eating. I did not know what it was at the time. I knew that I ate because it felt good, even though I may not have liked how I felt after. And there it was, all that food staring back at me. Disgusting. I had no idea who that person was in the mirror. The bloated, puffy face, the shrunken, sunken in eyes. Those were not mine? I had big brown eyes and high cheekbones. My body became a soft blubbery blob. My once skinny legs were anything but. My stomach and arms and breasts belonged to someone else because surely they were not mine. I would stare at myself for hours and wonder what I had done to myself and why.

My mother was no help. Well-meaning perhaps, initially, she constantly and incessantly harped on me about what I was eating or not eating. I had never had a weight problem and so this was new to both of us. I am sure that neither one of us knew how to react. All I did know that was the constant badgering was not helping me. Did not help me.

I continued to seek food to comfort me. Now away from England I was not getting the comfort and encouragement I needed either. Mother was heartbroken and terribly disappointed over what had happened to me. Of course I was as well but could not speak of it. My petite and skinny mother now had a really fat daughter. This just doesn’t look good.

We never really had junk food at home but I would find things to comfort and console myself with. I would find the carbohydrates or walk to the store and load up and enjoy them at home while my parents were at work, with no one to bother me.

I didn’t call my friends to tell them I was home. I didn’t want to socialize with them. I didn’t want to see those same horrified stares and the looks of pity wondering what the hell I had done to myself. The girl who was so on top of the world and so sure of herself just months before had come spiraling and crashing down.

To further add insult to injury my mother told me that I had to complete my year abroad. I could return to my school in New York for my senior year, but I absolutely had to finish what I started. Heartbroken I remained on my own for the remainder of my Christmas vacation not wanting to do anything or see anyone. I would walk over to the Love’s store on 89th and Madison and buy candy and magazines and Marlboro lights. I would read the magazines and stuff my face and smoke out my window. Funny thing to be a kid and in pain and not at all realize it.

I wonder, to this day, what would have happened had I not had to return to England. It’s hard not to. But we can’t go on wondering about all the “what ifs” now can we? That would not be beneficial and would serve no purpose.

So in the end, after a month, I had to pack up and go back to England.

Somehow I managed to pick myself up and make the most of my situation. The only setback was that Victoria, who had become my closest friend, who was also a new student, had chosen not to complete the year. At first I felt alone without her and I was indeed devastated, but I knew I couldn’t wallow in self-misery and mope around for the rest of the year. So I decided to pick myself up and dust myself off.

Luckily, with the semester break we also got new living arrangements.

I found a new room in a new dorm called Butler House which was just across the way. We had a new House Mother and the girls I lived with were truly my friends. I had a large bedroom that overlooked the main street below. Emma was my room-mate. She was pretty and funny and could be quite mischievous. In fact, we were all good friends at Butler House, having picked the dorm and the rooms so we could be together.

While I was homesick still, I was no longer the sad girl I had been the last semester. I continued to do well at school and enjoyed excursions in downtown Oxford and London.

I went to friend’s houses for the weekend and had friends over to La Jolie Grandmère’s house. I traveled a good bit of the country for my Art History class, and life was starting to look up again.

The only thing which would plague me was my weight which was still not under control. While I was not so much using food to fill a void, it was there all the time. And as you know when you stick your hand in to a bag of m&ms or potato chips it’s really hard to stop at just one!

Eating, as you know, is a necessary evil. One does it socially and one needs food to stay alive. While the food at school remained abysmally bad, because we had full kitchens in our dorms, we could cook and create.  I had no idea how to diet as I had never needed to in the past. My friends didn’t look at me or treat me any differently. For that I am now eternally thankful. As my struggle was a personal one, and would remain so for years, it was nice to know my friends could see past my layers.

Finally, at the end of the school year, I wore more smiles than sadness and I was beginning to feel settled and as though I belonged.

My mother had called Hewitt (my school in New York City) to get all the paperwork in order so that I could return for my senior year. Imagine my devastation when I learned that because I had missed out on my Junior Year and all the AP courses required to graduate into the 12th grade and I would have to enter the 11th grade. In essence, my year in England – where I had experienced an education so superior that one cannot even compare – did not count for anything and I would be held back a year.

The decision was entirely 100% my own. I would not be returning to school in Manhattan, but instead would finish up my A-Levels and return to England to finish up my studies.I did not make this decision hastily or with a light heart, but it was not one I regretted either. Perhaps the next year would be easier. I would no longer be the New Girl. I left that July happy to return home and sad that I would miss the girls whom I finally and truly considered to be my friends.

I was not as unhappy when I boarded the transatlantic TWA flight this time. I did have my Walkman with me and I played, once again, as I would do every time I neared home, played A Heart in New York as we sailed the smooth skies above the Hudson into home territory.

To be continued...

Prep School across The Pond: Part 1


Note: This post turned out dramatically differently than I had intended... what was to be lighthearted and filled with fun and fashion and some good old fashioned name dropping turned into something much more personal -- writing this evoked many raw emotions, and great period of personal pain and struggle that would last for several years. Many teenagers go through awkward times, but all these feelings of self doubt and uncertainty happened so very far away from home. I feel a little vulnerable and exposed but I am not going to change it. So here it is The first installment of my British Education. (It is long.)

I remember the cool air and the grey skies of that winter. The weather was milder than at home, but the lack of sunshine that week was a bit depressing. I dutifully visited all the schools and quite liked the co-ed school but was not as fond of the campus. I chose instead a posh school that had educated members of the Royal Family, Guinness family and celebrities for generations. I had not known this at the time. (But I am certain that this was the reason it was my grandmother’s favorite!) I remember visiting; and seeing girls smiling and laughing and being girls as they walked down the halls to their classes. I remember the roly poly Mrs. Johns who was the then Head of the School. It seemed to me, as I observed all around, a place I would fit in well. The girls were pretty (of course that matters to a 16 year old!) and reminded me of my friends at home.

Needless to say La Jolie Grandmère was delighted with my decision to spend a year in Europe and spend it with the “right” people.

I finished up the rest of the school year in New York without incident. I was not unhappy to leave until the summer was over.

I had had a fabulous summer – the best of my life thus far – working at the camp I had attended each summer of my youth in the Adirondack Mountains. I had found and fallen in love – My first real teen love! While we did break up at the end of the summer we remained friends and our friendship would last for years to come.

The end of that summer, for me, was filled with fear and dread. I had just come into my own. I had a wonderful group of fun and supportive friends. I had fallen in love. My self-esteem and confidence level was at an all-time high. I should have been able to move ahead with confidence and a sure foot. But I didn’t and it would be years, over 20, before I would I would have the same sense of self and confidence again.

September was fast approaching and I was packing for a new life in a new country – a journey I would be traveling, for the most part, alone without the security of friends and family, which for a 16 year old girl is hard and scary and crazy and bold, and a very grown-up thing to do.

I have never been one to embrace change. To this day I loathe it. I fear it. For a 16 year old to face such change and uncertainty is almost insurmountable. But I had committed to a year abroad and there was no turning back. My mother never let me quit which I suppose is a good thing because I am notoriously good at starting and stopping. To this day I am better at starting new projects than completing them.

So without turning back, across The Pond I flew once more. This time my parents were with me to bid me a fond farewell. On that plane my stomach lurched and churned. I suppose it was the first time I was actually fearful of flying. I wore my favorite outfit. It was one I knew I looked good in. I wore a pretty white blouse, my favorite Girbaud jeans (It was the 80s!) with a white sweater around my waist and a pair of navy ballet flats. I had my bag of tricks to keep me entertained. Paper and pens, of course, and my Sony Walkman my father had just given me for this trip. I had several tapes for listening but I am pretty sure I played the same one over and over again.

The Police had released their Synchronicity album earlier that year. We listened to it at school and at each other’s houses. The first song, I believe, to top the charts was Every Breath you Take and I remember how taken I had been with it. The Synchronicity album was one of those great works you never tired of. That summer, with my boyfriend and a friend of ours who lived in Quebec, we traveled to Montreal to see the Police in concert. It was amazing.

Everything about that summer, to me, was amazing. I adored the Police and listening to the music and the lyrics brought me back to a warm and safe place. I just couldn’t get enough of the songs.

We had arrived in England a few days before school was to begin. We would spend our days relaxing and shopping to for my room and bedding. And I would pick up a few more things for myself along the way. Most important was that I get over the jet lag before school started.

I don’t remember much about that week or the drive to school.

But once we got to school I remember the details vividly, as though it was just yesterday.

The school was gorgeous, brown red brick covered with ivy all. The old architecture was spectacular. The school was elegant, stately and warm. We arrived at the same time other young, pretty girls with beautiful British accents did… long hair flowing over their shoulders…big blue eyes and rosy cheeks eager to receive kisses from the friends they had not seen over the long summer. The girls wore their summer tans under their uniforms. Everyone seemed genuinely glad to be there. Everyone but me. I mustered all my strength to keep from busting into tears. This was not my school. I did not belong. We got my room assignment and climbed all the way up to Treetops, Lower 6th form.

We climbed what seemed to be (to me) the endless flights of stairs before we reached the top of the building in search of what would be my room. We followed the numbers on the doors and did not have to look far. My heart sank further. I mustered up more strength to fight back the tears. I didn’t have a room, I had a broom closet that someone had the bloody audacity to paint a pale pink so that one might actually for a nanosecond mistake it for a bedroom.

My bedroom, excuse me, my broom closet, was so small it did not have a closet in which to hang my clothes. A small make-shift amoire was jammed in. I didn’t have a proper desk, and the small table seemed like an exaggerated joke. This clearly was the room no one wanted. The room no one chose last spring when the girls got to pick out their rooms.

I’m sure my parents told me my room was adorable and used words of that nature. But these words didn’t help. Soon it was time for them to say their goodbyes and leave me in the godforsaken place where I did not belong. I kissed them and hugged them and closed my door and cried. And cried and cried and cried.

A short while later the dinner bell rang. I followed the girls down the stairs to the two refectories. I had no idea where to go or where to sit. There seemed to be no sort of a visible seating chart and no one to show me the ropes. I made my way into the larger of the two refectories where I was met by a tall stern woman with grey hair and tree trunks for legs. Like a bad character from a movie about a British Boarding School Mrs. Webb glared at me, then shouted “Where do you think you’re going?” More tears to control. I think my lips managed to quiver the fact that I didn’t know where to sit. It was a small enough school with very few new students, surely she could have used a kinder tone if not kinder words. There was to be no hand-holding at this school. I learned this on Day One.

I found my table and my seat which was near the head. We had assigned seats with a child or two represented from each form. Each person at the table had a duty, for example one child went to get the food, another served, another cleared, another fetched the desserts…

My First Supper, other than my Grand Entry, left no major marks on my memory. I do not remember what was served that night or whether I ate any of it. The food in general was pretty terrible British school food. There was always some sort of meat, vegetable and starch. There was salad that contained lettuce and tomatoes and some sort of a nasty yellow dressing -- and I use that term loosely -- that was thick, too thick to spread over your salad properly and had the unfortunate and unmistakable smell and texture of Miracle Whip. Aghhhhh…. And then there were desserts. They were sweet and rich and not terribly good but were perfect for filling a void.

At some point, over the next day or so, I made some friends. In the room next to me was Camilla. She had more hyphenated last names than Elizabeth Taylor would have had she strung all her married names together. That this girl was of pedigree was unquestionable. But she also had issues and I wonder how many other elite boarding schools she had been to and kicked out of. She didn’t last terribly long and after an afternoon with her I figured I had best stay away.

We had a Dorm Mother. She was an ugly, short, stout lady named Miss Willetts.She had short, chin length brown hair and bangs. She wore unflattering dresses, skirts and heavy cardigan sweaters and ugly, sensible shoes. She was a character and we loved to cause her distress. Smoking in the dorms was absolutely prohibited. Though we did it all the time. We’d cram as many girls as we could into the bathroom stalls and pass around a cigarette or two. It’s amazing she could not smell the smoke wafting out from under the door or hear the dozen or so girls piled on top of each other giggling and shhh-shing! Then we would carefully sneak out and sneak back into our rooms. Miss Willetts would then come out of her own room and smell the smoke wafting through the corridors, demanding to know who had had a smoke. Of course no one fessed up. Eventually we took to sneaking in the bathrooms and would run the water in the tub to better hide the sounds of our giggles.

St. Mary’s School Girls stood out in town. We would never be confused with the townies. We looked and talked differently and it was important, that if we were going to break a rule, like sneaking a cigarette, that we did it very discreetly. We hid behind bushes and trees and cars in the park, every so often running into a faculty member or gym teacher or such. This became a fascinating game for me. I had never been a rule breaker before.

Although I was starting to fit in and even acquire a bit of a British accent, I still missed home and my friends and New York. This place, on the other side of the vast ocean, was not my home and didn’t feel like my home.I saw my grandmother from time to time, but not very often. Thanksgiving felt cold and lonely. I went home for the weekend and my grandmother had gone to all sorts of measures to create a wonderful Thanksgiving for me. But it lacked the most important ingredient, being at home in the States. After all, wasn’t the holiday a celebration of surviving in a new country away from the English rule?

I began to find solace in food. Food and goodies began to fill a void. I began to turn to food in a way I hadn’t ever done before. I didn’t eat because I was hungry. I ate because I was bored or lonely or sad. I sought more comfort in food than I was getting in this foreign and cold land. I was being self-destructive and I could feel it. The clothes were getting tight. I was bloating and gaining weight rapidly. This upset me too and only did more to fuel the vicious eating cycle. Food was making me miserable and yet the food was the only thing that could comfort me, though I didn’t see this at the time.

Academically things were going well. In the English academic system, once you hit the 6th form you pick three (and up to five) areas of study. These areas of study are referred to as the A-Levels, Advanced Levels. One can only take her A-Levels after O-Levels (Ordinary Levels) have been completed and passed with a grade of B or higher. The grading system is much stricter than in the States. When taking these exams the actual tests are graded by special individuals who are part of the testing system and not by the school. The tests themselves are thorough and rigorous and it takes two years of study to learn and study for both the O-level and A-level exams. I had chosen to study Art, Art History and French and was thrilled to never have to look at another Math text book ever again!

My teachers were wonderful and interesting, especially my Art and Art History teachers. These may have been the only two teachers at the school who cared and gave a damn about me. They were lovely, loving, supportive and encouraging. And from these two women I learned more than I ever could imagine both personally and academically.

Mrs. Shallgosky was fun loving, fun, eccentric and an amazing teacher. She had grey hair that she wore in a chignon, she was both stylishly modern and classically hip. Mrs. Beckerleg was a very short, very round and not terribly attractive woman with a heart of pure gold. She wanted her students to succeed at school and at life. She loved all her students dearly. This was clear. These two teachers, their love of their subject, their love for their subjects and for their students may be the most important thing I brought home with me. These two teachers have a special place in my heart still, after all these years.

As the weather turned cooler and the days grew longer and darker my sadness did too. It was nearly time to go home. I couldn’t wait. I packed up all my belongings – all my possessions because I was certain that I would never return. I would stay at home in the city where I belonged.

On the airplane I was at peace and calm knowing that I had left that terrible place behind me. I sat on that airplane, my clothes uncomfortably tight knowing that as soon as I got home everything would be OK again and my clothes would once again fit. I had Simon and Garfunkel in my Walkman. The lyrics to A Heart in New York struck a chord and as I listened I cried…

New York -- to that tall skyline I come
Flyin' in from London to your door
New York -- lookin' down on Central Park
Where they say you should not wander after dark
New York -- like a scene from all those movies
But you're real enough to me, for there's a heart
A heart that lives in New York A heart in New York arose on the street
I write my song to that city heartbeat
A heart in New York -- the love in her eyes
An open door and a friend for the night New York -- you got money on your mind
And my words won't make a dime's worth of difference
So here's to you, New York There were no more perfect lyrics than the ones I was listening to… I listened to them, as I tend to do when I find that perfect song, over and over and over again.

I got off the airplane eager to see my parents and be home.
Everything would now be OK.

But it wouldn't be.