She spins. That's it. Just spins. |
I spent most days pitching baseballs, or in heated Wiffle or kickball games with my group of adventurous mixed gender friends. I had a jump rope. I guess that’s girly, but it’s also almost sports. I desperately wanted to try that double-Dutch thing I saw on TV, but we always had trouble scraping up two long ropes at the same time. Hopscotch was cool only in that you got to draw on the sidewalk with a rock. And I occasionally colored with crayons, but my art never seemed to match the image in my head. Jacks came with a nifty pouch, a bouncy little ball and a moderate challenge. I’m pretty sure my middle aged foot problems are traced to stepping on a diabolically shaped jack or two, but once you conquered foursies with pre-adolescent hands, it all felt kind of same-y.
I remember being invited to a new neighbor’s house to play when I was quite small. She had olive skin, a mysteriously ethnic name and accent, a plastic kitchen set and baby dolls. As it was the only option, we played house. I vacuumed and was mildly, briefly, intrigued with the colored balls popping around in the Fisher-Price canister. We made tea and took turns feeding the kid. I remember being bummed that the baby doll didn’t pee. Or do anything. Quite honestly, neither did my new friend. So, bored stiff, I went home, grabbed my F Troop replica cavalry hat, cap pistol and holster and jumped onto my rocking horse and played all day as Sgt. O’Rourke. There were schemes to plan, guard towers to fell with comically errant cannon balls, and politically incorrect skirmishes to have with invading wild Indians. I suppose I could have been Wrangler Jane, but though she dressed like a tomboy, all she did was moon over clumsy Ken Berry. (I didn’t get that either. I mean Forrest Tucker’s O’Rourke was tall, ruggedly handsome, brave, clever and could safely dismount his horse without need for a medic.)
Anyway, so playing house was out. What else did girls do? I honestly have no idea. Music maybe? I listened to records if I could find that weird little yellow plastic thing that went in the middle of 45s, but even my choice of music was a head-scratcher. Growing up, I wondered why I was drawn to the only NYC country station. I memorized the songs of John Denver and James Taylor while my friends were fighting over rock vs. disco. And why was I so enamored with old movie musicals? Not one friend was as excited to see My Fair Lady on TV as I was. I was different, that was for sure. My sitcom preferences never included the mellow blended family antics of The Brady Bunch and I never once mooned over Teen Beat pinup David Cassidy on The Partridge Family. I owned exactly one Teen Beat magazine, but only because it had an article on Kevin Tighe, the other fireman on Emergency. (I had an underdog thing.) My TV passions ran more toward the impossible love affair of The Ghost & Mrs. Muir and wartime adventures of Hogan’s Heroes or McHale’s Navy.
My friends and I would raid my director dad’s theatre costume trunks and play pretend scenarios of all kinds, and few, if any, of us girls selected female characters. Why? What was my problem? One pal later realized she was in fact gay, but were we all ‘questioning’? No. The simple fact was that in the early 1970s most female characters on TV and traditional girl toys and games were too passive. Worse, they were boring as hell.
Traditionally male sports, on the other hand, are are full of stories. Wins. Losses. Heartbreak and heroics. I loved that. I won countless World Series games with my golden arm and Rico Carty wooden bat. I gave lengthy head starts and chased down slow-footed Bobby Holmes from behind in the nick of time to save touchdowns, occasionally tugging desperately at the fur-trimmed hood of his green parka so that the front zipper left a jagged imprint on his neck.
One friend had a couple of toy soldiers with parachutes that we spent hours throwing out the kitchen window of my grandmother’s upstairs apartment. Would the chute open? Would the soldier waft slowly and safely down to the yard, or crash in a heap of plastic and string? Life or death. I liked that.
Who would choose a pink dream car over THIS? This guy has places to go & things to do. |
I liked shows with a good inherent conflict, one not easily solved by having Davy Jones come to your high school prom. Heroic bands of Allied soldiers giving the Axis the what for. Loved that. And I loved that both Hogan and McHale had friends on the enemy sides. Conflict and complications, proving there are victims of evildoers on both sides. Hours of pretend scenarios abound, and with the added plus of an occasional morality play. Same with those little green army men that made a comeback after being featured in Toy Story. There were trenches to dig, battles to fight, sneak attacks to plan, gruesome injuries to imagine and journeys to take along the dirt paths I made under a tree in the yard. I didn’t even care that none of the inflexible little men were posed to actually sit in the way-cool open jeeps. We made it work.The crouching radio guy could pass for sitting and drive. (Though he certainly flaunted opposition to the whole hands-free driving thing.)
I had a hundred Matchbox cars and a room of model trains. They went places. Those cars drove miles on the cement lanes surrounding our sidewalk flagstones. They occasionally crashed. Trains derailed. Barbie never derailed. Never got dirty. She had outfits, but she never had adventures. Maybe if there was a Coal Miner Barbie and I could imagine a daring cave-in rescue…but there wasn’t.
I guess my female role model was my dear Mrs. Muir. She wasn’t just in love with a charming ghost, she was strong, smart, independent and she was a writer. My first pangs of wanting to write came from watching her. She had Martha to help bake cookies and tend the kids. Mrs. Muir was busy. She interviewed people, and wrote fiction and nonfiction. She stirred things up, but always made time to flirt with the spirit of a handsome sea captain. It seemed like the coolest life ever.
Best toy ever |
God bless my parents for letting me explore the world my own way. With a beautiful cheerleader older sister and an artistic gay older brother, I was the rough and tumble wild card. We were as different from each other as you can get, but we were all allowed to be what we were. Dawn Fashion Show oddity aside, they never pushed toys on me, nor forbade me from others. (Though my dear grandmother did occasionally voice concern that if I continued to play sports I would never have children. I think she hung on until age 97 just to make sure I could actually reproduce. Nailed it. Twice.)
The problem with Barbie isn’t her impossible to achieve body dimensions or that she’s in the pink aisle. (Though they don’t exactly help her cause.) It’s that her multitude of gender-bending professional outfits are just clothes; they still don’t inspire action. We need a personality, a backstory and a mission. It's fine if you are, but not all girls who play sports or with Lego building sets or Marvel action figures are questioning gender roles or identity. Maybe they are forming values, leadership skills or simply having imaginative fun.
Wiffle ball, 1973 |
Same swing, college 1983 |
Oh and the weird taste in music thing? I took a long time to figure it out, but I did. It's not the good ole boy wisdom, pickup trucks, bar fights, fishing, cheating, mommas or getting drunk that connect with me. (Trains are excepted, they do connect. In a big way.) It's that country music uses these topics to tell stories. Musical soundtracks are filled with stories told through song.
It all makes sense now. I was not weird or challenging society’s gender roles. I was simply training to become the adult me. My sense of self didn’t really come from TV or magazines aimed at teen girls, or from fitting or not fitting into the clothing at the hottest new store. It didn’t even come from my friends, because I was more of a leader than follower. I didn’t need Barbie to tell me I could be a nurse or an astronaut. With a balance of solid parental guidance and the freedom to develop, I figured it all out. By creating, pretending, and manipulating controlled fictional situations and characters, I learned how to be in charge of my own mind, body and values. I learned what I thought about right and wrong, good guys and bad guys, life and death and fair play. I put myself into the bodies, hearts and minds of others, both fictional and real, and felt what they felt. I learned empathy. And I learned what I was interested in. I found the types of characters and stories I would be drawn to throughout my life as a consumer of literary, cinematic, musical and theatrical arts.
And I learned to be a writer. I’m proud to say that unlike my crayon drawings, my stories do match the images in my head. So thank you to my parents, to Mrs. Muir, the Mets and Colonel Hogan, to the crew of Star Trek and the zipper-bruised neck of Bobby Holmes. Thank you to my husband for loving all of me. And thank you to whomever and whatever inspires the stories of the next generation.
Still climbing mountains |