After I picked writing about my brother as my second April A to Z blog topic, I searched my archives to see what I’d already said about him. What I thought might take fifteen minutes took half the morning. He appears in fourteen posts, with six of them devoted entirely to him. I was shocked, but it also sparked an idea for a gift I might make for my nieces and nephew. If I gather everything I’ve written about him into one place, add a few photos and a handful of bridge‑paragraphs, I could turn those memories into a short soft‑cover book. At Blurb Publishing, twenty‑five pages keeps you under the price break for small runs, which means I could print enough copies to give one to my great and great‑great nieces and nephews, too, who are old enough to remember their great and great‑great grandfather. (Is there a prize for how many times you can use the word great in a sentence? There should be. Figuring out the lineage was not easy for an old brain like mine.)
My brother and I started life during WWII, and some of the antics we grew up with—think Happy Days episodes—might seem ho‑hum to others who lived through the 40s and 50s. But in an age of helicopter parents, some of the things our parents allowed would seem extreme or even akin to child neglect. For example, several years before I was even a teenager, we could pack peanut‑butter‑and‑jelly sandwiches, grab bottles of pop, tell my mom we were going to walk around the entire lake, and she’d simply say, “Be home before dark.” What didn’t dawn on me until adulthood was that she could probably see us from the shoreline of our cottage as we made our way through alternating cow pastures and woods. Not that it would have helped if we’d gotten into real trouble. Few housewives of the era had cars while their husbands were at work, so the quickest way she could have reached us was by rowboat—assuming it wasn’t too windy. This was long before cell phones or even a landline at the cottage. When we weren’t circling the lake, we were walking five miles to the nearest store for ice‑cream cones or playing at a fort we’d built on the far side of the woods behind our cottage.
As kids, my brother and I were close, but as adults we drifted. Jerry married young—too young—and I went to college. They had the kind of marriage a lot of people have when they marry right out of high school, where both partners eventually look around and wonder if they’re missing something. Nineteen years later, they divorced.
One conversation from my mid‑twenties stands out. Jerry was trying to figure out why I seemed to have no interest in getting married. Most girls in that era listed marriage as their number‑one goal. So did I, if I’m honest, but I was stubborn and wouldn’t have admitted it short of being waterboarded. I’d had a few serious relationships, and he couldn’t understand what was “wrong” with me for not taking the next step. I didn’t tell him the first guy turned out to be an in‑the‑closet gal‑guy. And the second — well, that’s a story too long for this post, not to mention it took me a decade to figure out why exactly that relationship fell apart.
In the last two years of his life, when Jerry moved into my continuum‑care community, we grew close again. Even though he was in the Memory Care building and I’m in Independent Living, I could see him a couple of times a week and most of the time we could still talk about our childhood, our parents, our marriage and his children. We understood each other in that way only siblings can. He had a good sense of humor, loved his kids and our parents fiercely, wrote great poetry, and was a dedicated caregiver to his second wife, who had early‑onset Alzheimer’s and didn’t make it easy.
And I still miss him because some people leave a space that never quite closes, and maybe that’s how you know they mattered. ©

Your Brother reminds me of a Handsome Politician that for the life of me now I can't remember the Name of! I remember the Posts I have read about your Brother, I think Sibling History and Memories can never be replaced and will always leave a Void when any of us has Crossed Over first. My Brother and I have been Close our whole Lives, but, we both have had busy Lives and so were absent for much of it when he moved to Cali and I stayed in Arizona. So I do understand how distance and circumstances can leave gaps too. As for Parenting in our day... yeah, it would seem negligent now by Today's standards and how different the World just is. Our Parents turned us loose and didn't reel us in until Dark either. However, that said, we put limits on ourselves and actually, when I was very Young, we kept our Territory quite tight where we played and I realized how limited it was recently when I curiously went to a Google Earth Virtual Walk around places I could remember the Addresses of where we lived as Kids... many places, since, we were Global Nomads and a Career Military Family. My Dad didn't Retire until 1974. It was interesting to see some of those locations now all these Years later and as an Adult, compared to Childhood Memories. My Memories of my Brother and I as Kids are fresher than of the places we lived and all the moves.
ReplyDeleteThe trouble some siblings have as they turn into adults is the older ones assume the pecking order remains the same and the younger ones who are equal adults by then resent it. That happened with my husband's four brothers and between me and my brother when we were care sharing our dad. But we worked it through. Your childhood is as interesting as your core family now is.
DeleteBohemian, I thought Jean's brother resembled Michael Dukakis. Was that who you were thinking of?
DeleteOMG Yes Pam, that is exactly who I was thinking he resembled and yet couldn't remember the Politician's Name... Handsome Guy. Thanks, it was bugging me that I couldn't recall.
DeleteI enjoyed reading about your brother. When you mentioned the freedom to roam, it reminded me of my own childhood. As long as my brother and I checked in with our mom for lunch and supper, we could wander. I don't think we were ever afraid of anything back then. I remember when your brother lived in Memory Care, near you. It was a blessing for both of you to live near one another. Your plan to create booklets for your brother's family is a wonderful idea.
ReplyDeleteI'm always seeing things in ways you could put things together to make booklets. And sometimes I actually carry through with the ideas. I remember some bad things happening to kids when I was one but I still think kids don't get enough freedom now. But on the other hand back when I was young most mothers stayed home and they all looked out for all the kids.
DeleteI love your idea of a memory book for your relatives, but I think you should include an equal amount of space to your own life.
ReplyDeleteOne thing I regret is not quizzing my parents more about their personal lives, especially dad’s service time in WWII.
It's universal I think that kids---even adult kids---don't take an interest in their parents' younger lives until after they aren't able to tell the stories. Putting stories in a booklet keeps them available for when ancestors are ready for them.
DeleteHe sounds like a good guy, Jean, and I'm glad you had the opportunity to become close again. You're so right about people leaving a space that never closes.
ReplyDeleteHe was a good guy. I wish we would have socialized more we didn't live close enough for that and our ideas of having fun were different.
DeleteThis made me remember my brother this morning as we approach the anniversary of his death. He was 17 years older, my Godfather abd also the Godfather for my youngest daughter. Your gift idea is precious and I'm sure would be cherished.
ReplyDeleteI love it when I can trigger someone's memories.
DeleteLovely post. It’s so nice that you had the chance to reconnect with your brother before he passed. I too remember the days when parents weren’t hovering and each hour wasn’t planned out.
ReplyDeleteDuring the school year my mom did a little hovering in the form of having us sign up for a lot of after school activities. In the summer we were free as brids. A good way to grow up.
DeleteWe were wanderers, also...same era...My mom had a foghorn she'd blow to call us all back home for supper, or if for any reason she needed us. She couldn't see us when we went down to the point. But she had a good sense for trouble - rescuing my brother from hanging by his foot from a rope swing over the low tide water before the tide came in. Lol!
ReplyDeleteI think the parents of that era did a good job of ratting on us if we were needing it. We had a dinner bell for when my mom wanted us to come home. That swing rope sounds like a good story to write about.
DeleteThat's a nice post about your brother. I'm seeing more of my brother lately as he has been moved to assisted care and so I pop in once or twice a week to see how he is doing. He has Alzheimer's and so sometimes he is fine and sometimes he is so confused. It's so sad to see my older brother who was so smart his whole life go down this path. My Dad had it, too, so it's tough to go through these stages again.
ReplyDeleteIt sure is tough. One thing I'm sure of is that when siblings can visit it does help someone with Alzheimer's or dementia. We can often connect to a part of the brain not yet damaged. Even when there isn't meaningful communication at least we're there to make sure our siblings are being treated right.
DeleteI love the visual of your adventures. It sounds like a lovely place to wander around.
ReplyDeleteIt really was and I write about it depth for the letter C is for Cottage.
DeleteI, too, have a brother named Jerry. Also two others, Paul and Scott. Plus, our poor outnumbered sister, Cheryl. We grew up in the 60s and early 70s. I cherish those memories. We've remained very close over the past decades (dear Lord, time flies). In fact, we'll see each other next month at my grandson's first birthday. We're slower, but essentially, we haven't changed. BTW, I'm the oldest of the five. I guess my parents strove to finally get a kid that was right.
ReplyDeleteI can't image growing up in a big family. No one I knew back then had more than three kids.
DeleteI was an only child, so I do envy you your brother, for the companionship and the memories. And I did not know about that publisher, so thanks for sharing that as well. I have done books of their childhood for my daughters, printing one copy myself and getting it bound, but it is not very professional.
ReplyDeleteI like Blurb books. I've lost count how many I've done---well over a dozen, from 20 pages long to over 300. The do make great gifts.
DeleteI was very lucky to be the oldest child of 7, so I have 3 brothers. After my mom died from cancer at the age of 57, my dad started having family reunions every other year, so we could all get together and keep in touch. Our first reunion was in 1989, and he told us all to come and get whatever we wanted from the house, because he was turning it into apartments to rent out since by then we had all left home. We're still having family reunions every couple of years, right now we're planning the next one in June. It has become more important to all of us kids to keep the tradition going, as we get older and we appreciate that we're all still here.
ReplyDeleteMy niece is planning an reunion this summer as well for cousins and it's been a long time since they've all gotten together. I can't imagine growing up with seven siblings. glad you've all managed to stay i touch.
DeleteHappy Days kind of childhood seems almost fun. No phones seems impossible to think about not these days. I like peanut and jelly sandwiches, I always think all kids like them.
ReplyDeleteThanks for dropping by my blog.
Have a lovely day.
Even here in my independent living apartment with all seniors everyone seems to be attached to their phones. Thanks for checkign out y blog as well.
DeleteIt's good you reconnected. When siblings go in different directions, it can be hard to understand the other's choices.
ReplyDeleteThere was a period in our relationship that if felt like we both spoke a different language, but we always loved each other.
DeleteSounds like you had great companionship throughout.
ReplyDeleteWe had our moments, especially growing up.
DeleteI am a much, much younger sister to two brothers. Same parents! I was more like an only child growing up. My younger older brother died last year, which was unexpected. Not close to him, but it still feels strange to know he's not around.
ReplyDeleteYou can't help thinking about your own mortality when someone in the family dies. Having it be a younger sibling makes it especially hard.
DeleteThis was a wonderful post, made me think of my baby brother he is 16yrs younger then me and a foot taller then me, I am luck to have a good relationship with all my siblings
ReplyDeleteYou really are. Not all siblings can say that.
DeleteI had 3 sisters, no brothers, and always felt like I was missing out.
ReplyDeleteI've always wondered what it would have been like to have a sister or to have two brothers. My mom lost a baby in between my brother and I.
DeleteThank you for sharing your brother with us.
ReplyDeleteI really like this A-Z project you are on!!! I have four brothers, two that are closer than the other (youngest and oldest - although oldest passed away 3 years ago) And my sister and are are best friends. I am so looking forward to your blogs! Unbelievable you can fit this much writing into your busy schedule. 💙
ReplyDeleteI am on a writing marathon with these posts. Time will tell if I can keep it up. I think so barring no medical emergencies.
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