Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Sparing a thought for the girl who lived up the lane

She was kind of a skinny kid with catseye glasses and a serious demeanor. She was very smart and, if it was possible for a little girl in 4th grade to be a full-blown cynic, Gail (for that was her real name) was one.

She lived up at the top of our street, which wasn’t much more than a little gravel country lane in those days, and was the same age as me. She had three sisters, but she was the oldest. And the most awkward. The other girls were very pretty. Gail too was pretty enough, but she didn’t let it show. She wore unflattering clothes, rarely smiled and fought like a hellion with her younger siblings.

Gail had a father who was a kind of glamorous man, did something for an airline and wore a dashing uniform. Her mother was extremely beautiful, with long raven hair and a propensity to exhibit herself in a manner that set the other women in the neighborhood to tut-tutting. The mother always wore skin-tight sweaters in the winter, and low-cut tops in the summer. She was very large-breasted and seemed to want to have others appreciate the fact by showing as much of herself as legality would permit. As a little boy I found this confusing. Not displeasing, to be sure, but definitely confusing.

Throughout her younger school days Gail was quiet and thoroughly studious. She read voluminously. She read adult books when other kids were perusing the Hardy Boys, Nancy Drew, or nothing more challenging than comic books. Gail didn’t look at comics. She read real books. And if you weren’t up to talking about real books, then she had no time for you, and let you know with a glowering expression.

When we were in 7th grade they had a school dance. I invited Gail. My mother said that would be a “nice thing” to do. I didn’t mind. I liked Gail and actually got along quite well with her. I was able to make her laugh. Few had that ‘gift.’ In fact, we would get into hysterics over stupid stuff, dirty stuff, word games and the like.

When we started high school, Gail once had a party. Mom was there in a low-cut cocktail dress, sporting cigarette holder and charming the bejesus out of the horny young guys there for ‘Gail’s’ party. Mom got all the attention and obviously adored it. Mom wasn’t actually a slut in a slovenly sense, actually she was very intelligent and creative, wrote devastatingly funny stories for a local newspaper, and, for a reason known best to her, decided she ‘must’ compete with her ugly-duckling older daughter. I’m not Freud and shall go no farther with that.

By the time Gail got into high school, something happened. She changed. She hung around with what was known in those days as a “rough crowd.” She drank, she screwed all and sundry, and ended up getting pregnant at least twice that I know of. After that, I lost touch. I went off to university and moved away and I thought little more of Gail.

A few years later a friend who was a navigator on an Air Force fighter left the military and got a job as an air-traffic controller at Vancouver International.

“I met another controller who knows you,” he told me one day. He also told me her name was Gail, and divulged her last name as well. I inquired after her.

“She is one of the smartest people I’ve ever met,” he recounted. “Also one of the most fucked-up.”

Yes, that would be her.

About two years ago I asked after Gail again. I asked of a former mutual acquaintance that I knew had been a good friend of Gail’s. She told me.

The tale went like this. Gail had left a number of years before, and sometime in the late 1980s, living somewhere in Europe, Gail had died. I was shocked. I asked how she had died.

“She died of everything,” said our mutual friend. “Anything she could drink, snort, shoot up or smoke, she did – all the time. I got pretty messed up too, when we were younger, but I pulled away and into a normal life. The worst mistake I ever made was hooking up with Gail when we were kids. It cost me a few wasted years.”

I have no idea why I thought of Gail today. But, I decided she warranted a thought; that little girl up the lane. The serious and sad little girl with the catseye glasses.

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19 Comments:

Blogger meggie said...

What a sad story Ian. I have known a Gail or two in my time. And the tragedy is, they are usually far too intelligent to waste their lives in that manner. It is strange.

3:31 PM  
Blogger Tai said...

"There but for the grace of (fillintheblank)go I."

4:20 PM  
Blogger andrea said...

Tragic and very beautifully remembered, Ian. I have seen (... ahem ... first hand) how a mother can feel competitive with her daughter, particularly if that daughter has a razor-sharp mind, and it's a tough thing to live with. That's the one love that launches you and if it's tainted somehow it can do the opposite. I know you've had first-hand experience with this, Ian, and your empathy shows in this post.

The boys across the street from me growing up had freakishly incompetent parents and both ended up in jail, and one was eventually murdered. But I still remember being in his baby book as his "first friend."

5:31 PM  
Blogger CS said...

What a waste. I hate to see mothers who compete withtheir daughters, fathers who compete with their sons. From my perspective, the far better thing is to revel in your child's gifts - intelligence, humor, beauty, talent, whatever they may be. And to be the parent and let your child shine with her/his friends instead of stepping into the spotlight yourself.

7:22 PM  
Blogger CS said...

What a waste. I hate to see mothers who compete withtheir daughters, fathers who compete with their sons. From my perspective, the far better thing is to revel in your child's gifts - intelligence, humor, beauty, talent, whatever they may be. And to be the parent and let your child shine with her/his friends instead of stepping into the spotlight yourself.

7:22 PM  
Blogger heiresschild said...

how sad! we never truly know what people are going thru deep within their hearts and minds to make them do the things they do. how very sad about gail; sounds like she could never get free.

7:34 PM  
Blogger Tanya Brown said...

Poor Gail, with her horribly toxic mother. Bless you for writing this memorial to her; you've told her story with honesty and sympathy. It wouldn't surprise me a bit if this is the best - and perhaps only - memorial she got.

8:44 PM  
Blogger Sam!! said...

So depressing...

Hope you're fine there.

Take care

9:12 PM  
Blogger Voyager said...

A touching and very sad tale Ian. Although I don't know much about addiction, I think it is often the most sensitive and gifted people who turn to drugs and alcohol to slow down the unbearable brilliance going on in their brain. Somewhere, I think she knows you have remembered her today.
V.

10:50 PM  
Blogger Ellee Seymour said...

There are a lot of "if onlys" which one could say about Gail, what a sad story.

1:12 AM  
Blogger laughingwolf said...

such a waste of a life, no doubt the mother's behavior played a huge role in the outcome... so sad :(

4:06 AM  
Blogger Big Brother said...

Such a waste of human potential. What she could have accomplished if she had been able to straighten herself out. In my teaching career I've seen many such students. It makes me sad every time I see them going down that road.

5:17 AM  
Blogger Jazz said...

I can't help but wonder why, when you have two people on the same path, one might get out of it and the other never manages to pull him or herself up...

What's the differenc...

6:02 AM  
Blogger Hageltoast said...

everyone seems sad and reflective today, or maybe those are the only things i'm noticing. great post Ian, everyone deserves to be remembered.

9:08 AM  
Blogger Ian Lidster said...

Rather than respond to you all individually (mainly because I have to go out), I want to thank everybody for their kind and honest sentiments about poor, sad Gail.
It was suggested by a couple of you that this provides a kind of memorial to her, and indeed it does, and I am touched by the thoughts expressed.
So, if my words are a memorial, your comments only complete it. No wonder I like all of you so much.

9:35 AM  
Blogger Janice Thomson said...

How compassionate of you to think of Gail and share her tragic life with us. Addiction is such a dreadful disease. For a young girl to be treated by her mother in this way is heartbreaking. We don't realize how truly lucky we are until we read something like this.

1:58 PM  
Blogger heartinsanfrancisco said...

What a sad but beautiful piece, Ian. There are so many mothers who compete with their daughters out of insecurity. I'm sure most of them never realize that in doing so, they rob them of the confidence to live their own lives on a level commensurate with their talents.

You evoked a precious life lost, and made us all know Gail and mourn the loss of her.

5:55 PM  
Blogger jmb said...

One wonders what was really behind this sad life that poor Gail spiraled down into. First thought, sexual abuse. I would never have thought of that years ago but the age at which she changed certainly suggests it based on today's knowledge.
As other's have said, you have paid a fine tribute to this sad young girl who never got it together at all.
regards
jmb

7:16 PM  
Blogger Eastcoastdweller said...

How very, very sad. The male version of that was my college roommate -- a brilliant, gifted sweet young man who apparently succumbed to heroin.

Thank you for sharing this tribute -- and warning. For there are surely still many such "Girls down the lane" in all of our lives, whom we might still reach and perhaps help.

5:50 AM  

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