The Moth - The Moth Radio Hour: Facing Off and Facing Up
Episode Date: August 23, 2022In this hour, stories about standing up for yourself. This episode is hosted by Jodi Powell. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Hosted by: ...Jodi Powell Storytellers: Harjas Singh Antoinette Marie Williams Rachel Cain Michael Donovan Eddy Laughter
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Attention Houston! You have listened to our podcast and our radio hour, but did you know
the Moth has live storytelling events at Wearhouse Live? The Moth has opened Mike's
storytelling competitions called Story Slams that are open to anyone with a five-minute
story to share on the night's theme. Upcoming themes include love hurts, stakes, clean, and
pride. GoodLamoth.org forward slash Houston to experience a live show near you. That's
the moth.org forward slash Houston.
From PRX, this is the Moth Radio Hour.
I'm Jodie Powell.
In this hour, stories of confrontation.
Growing up in Jamaica, I was so used to hearing the shots
when a fight was on in the school yard.
I would often find myself standing at the edge peering in.
And one day, I got caught in the rumble with a classmate.
And this time, it was caught in the rumble with a classmate, and this time it was me in the
center fighting.
I desperately needed to get out, but I quickly realized the only way out was to go fully
in.
And so I fought back, and the school yard sounds enveloped us.
And before I knew it, it was over.
But I was terrified, because now I had to go to the vice principal and face what I had just done.
I got two days suspension and more chores for my grandmother than you can count.
A confrontation isn't always like a school yard fight.
It can mean asking yourself hard questions, understanding and sticking to boundaries,
rolling up in a space that is not meant for you and owning it.
It can mean finding courage.
That was true for a first storyteller, Harjes Sing, who told this at a main stage in
New Bedford, Massachusetts, where we partnered with the Zyterian Performing Arts Center.
Here's Harjes, live at the mouth.
Ever since I was three years old, and my hair was long enough to be tied into a bun or a jura,
my mom and I had developed our daily ritual. I would sit down in front of her and my back towards her, and she would oil my hair, comb it, braid it, then tie it into a bun. She would then cover it with a one foot by one foot
square cloth called a putka.
But there was another daily ritual
that I would observe every morning.
I would be sitting at the breakfast table,
and I would see my grandfather and older bearded,
dumbledore-esque gentleman.
And with a bun on his head, and he would take this really long piece of
cloth, let's hear the length of the stage and you would hold one end of it, my father would
hold the other end and they would roll it from either side until it looked like a long
pipe.
He would then take it to his room and he would walk out and there would be this beautiful
turban sitting on top of his head and to, it looked like a king wearing a crown.
He almost had an aura about him.
And I would ask him, when can I wear that?
And he would say, when you're older,
when you're more responsible.
I had no idea what that meant.
I was three.
But all I wanted to do from that day on was be older and
more responsible. So when I woke up on the morning of my 13th birthday, I was bursting
with energy because today was finally the day. Today I would transition from boy to man
and it would be marked by my very own turbine tying ceremony. See, the turbine tying ceremony
is not too dissimilar from a bar mitzvah
or more religious sweet 16.
But instead of reading from the Torah,
we read from the Sikh holy book, the Guru Gran Sahib.
But more importantly, for me, my grandfather would
switch out my Patka with a 16-foot-long
the star or turbine.
So I shower quickly that morning, I put on my favorite bugs bunny sweater, and I make
my way outside, and I see my grandparents and I touch their feet to seek their blessings.
My parents, they're so happy on this day because for them, with the turbine on my head, I would be fully accepting my identity as a sick.
That I live in honest life, I give back to society, and I remember God.
And I was really, really excited, but it had also been a little while since I was three years old.
And I had seen some stuff.
Before the ceremony started, I thought back to my first day
at St. Xavier's School.
I was five years old, and I would be attending the same school
that my father had attended when he was a child.
And I was so proud, and I almost felt like I had bragging rights,
like kids who go to Harvard and say, oh, my parents went to Harvard.
And my mom and I went through our daily ritual.
Like we did every morning, she oiled my hair, combed it,
braided it, tied it into a bun, covered it with a patka.
I put on my school uniform, my navy blue shorts,
sky blue shirt, and tie, and my grandfather dropped me off
at the bus stop, me riding behind him
on his LML Westbus scooter.
And as a kid who had grown up in a sick family
and in a sick neighborhood,
I thought everyone is supposed to have a bun on their head
or wear a butt-gah or have a turban.
So it was to my surprise when I get to the bus stop
and none of these kids look like me.
No one is wearing a butt-gah,
no one has a bun on their head.
But these kids keep looking at me funny.
For all they could care, I must have looked like shrek to them.
But instead of being ugly and green and an ogre,
I was ugly and had this thing on my head, this turban.
So after my grandfather had left,
some of these kids started circling around me like
vultures.
One of them came close to me and said, hey, what's that?
What's that thing on your head?
Is that an egg?
And another kid said, no dude, that's a tomato.
And then another kid said, so you put a tomato on your head every morning and then you covered
with a piece of cloth.
Ew!
Five-year-olds can be pricks.
And then, out of nowhere, one of these kids comes
and smacks my forehead, trying to squash that tomato.
Pride turns to shame and shame turns to fear.
And it's the first time I realize in my life
that I could be hurt for no other reason than how I look.
I go back to the bus stop every morning
and this game continues and I suffer this day after day
and I don't tell anyone until one day it becomes too much.
I go back home crying to my mom and I ask her, why do I look like this?
My mom's first reaction.
She rolls up her sleeves and says, who are these damn kids?
And what are your teachers doing?
Not protecting you?
And then she calms down and looks at me crying,
wipes my tears, gives me a hug,
and she says, beta, my son, we are six.
The turbine is a part of our identity.
It's a gift given to us by our gurus.
And who are you to try and blend in
when you were born to stand out?
Easier. Easier said than done for a kid who's just trying to fit in with his friends.
But things only got worse after 9-11. It was almost as if an anti-Turban rhetoric had taken hold of the world, and it didn't
leave my small town of Ranji in India.
This game of Wackemoll that started at the bus stop continued for the next couple years.
And the more I would tell these kids not to touch my part, the more they would want to
do it.
So one day I was at school and this kid tried to touch my partka and my juda and tried
to rip it off.
And I told him, no, don't touch it.
He said, why?
Are you hiding a bomb underneath there?
I felt hurt, confused, disturbed, angry.
Why had this kid called me a terrorist when I wasn't one? I went home
crying to my grandfather. He was sitting in his reading chair in his room and I
asked him, why do I look like this? Why do I need to wear a turban? He gave me a
little bit of a history lesson. He said when Sikhism started in India five
centuries ago, India was ruled by kings,
and turbines were a symbol of royalty. Only kings and noblemen could wear them.
And these kings were necessarily kind. They would put people to death for no other reason
than practicing a religion the king didn't approve of. So the Sikh gurus had instituted the turban as a symbol of equality,
as a symbol of standing up against the injustices of these kings. This was the first time I had
questioned my religious identity and received an answer I thought I understood. But even
though I theoretically understood why I should be wearing the turban, the world
outside kept giving me reasons not to.
So back at the ceremony, as excited as I was about putting this turban on my head, I was
also conflicted with all these memories of being treated like I was an outsider.
The entire family then started the ceremony.
We moved to the prayer room in our house,
where the Guru Gran Sahib sat atop a palaki or pedestal.
My father took his place behind the palaki while we sat around on the floor as he read verses from the Anan Sahib,
the prayer of happiness and bliss.
Then from a crumpled purple plastic bag, my grandfather took out this beautiful red and golden
polka-dotted turban.
It had been custom made for me,
just like all the turbans had been made for my father
and my grandfather before me.
My grandfather held one end of the turban,
I held the other, and we rolled it from either side
until it looked like a long pipe.
I knelt down in front of the Guru Gran Sahib, clutching one end of the turban in my mouth,
and my grandfather put down layer after layer of this turban over my head.
And with each layer that he put down, the weight of the turban started to feel more real.
And I realized that it wasn't just the weight of the turbine.
It was the weight of history on my shoulders.
It was a weight of expectations that I wasn't sure if I was ready to carry just yet.
When the ceremony was over, I bent down to touch my grandparents and my parents' feet to
seek their blessings. I then went into my room, stood in front of the mirror and looked at myself with this
turbine on my head and I thought, I look weird.
I now was looking at myself like those kids had looked at me at the bus stop like I was Shrek.
And I realized, I started a question in that moment that there were other kids who I had
grown up with, other sick kids, but instead of wearing turbines now, they were baseball
caps.
Instead of keeping their hair and their buns, they would now shave their hair off. And I would wonder, is it worth continuing to fight
for your right to just exist instead of just trying to blend in?
I realized after the ceremony that the turbine
had been given to me, it wasn't something I had accepted.
My grandfather tied the turbine on me,
but it wasn't my turbine.
It almost felt like an organ my body was rejecting, but I also wanted to be proud of my religion and my culture, just like my father and my grandfather were.
So over the next few years, I tied the turbine off and on, mostly on special occasions like Friends as birthdays or family events, because those felt like safe moments where I could put the turbine on
and become comfortable with its weight.
And every time I tied the turbine by myself,
the weight of the turbine started to feel lighter,
as if the turbine itself was evolving to fit with my head,
becoming one with me.
So on the morning of my high school graduation,
I woke up and I went through my morning ritual again.
I oiled my hair, combed it, braided it, tied it into a bun.
I put on my school uniform, my navy blue pants,
sky blue shirt and tie.
But instead of choosing to wear the partikai like I had
for so many years before this,
I chose to wear my partikai like I had for so many years before this, I chose
to wear my turban on this day.
I decided I was done feeling afraid of who I was and I wanted to be proud in who I am.
I rolled the turban from either side into a long pipe.
I carefully put down layer after layer of the turban over my head.
And when I was done tying, I stood in front of the mirror again,
and I asked myself, why do I look like this?
Why can't I just blend in?
But this time, the answer came from within.
Why try to blend in when you were born to stand out?
Thank you.
Thank you. That was the hardest thing, who is now more confident in his identity, which gives him
the strength to be an active representative of the Sikh community after 11 years of being
in the US.
He is now a software engineer, but also a storyteller, and things he inherited storytelling from his
grandfather.
He still gets the occasional stare from someone who's never seen a man with a turbine
before, but oftentimes his turbine is a great conversation starter.
He'll happily discuss religion with complete strangers anytime. In a moment, we hear from a backgammon champion and a mother introduces her kids to the movie
Home Alone and they come up with a plot of their own.
That's when the moth radio hour continues. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and presented by PRX.
This is the Moth Radio Hour from PRX. I'm Jodie Powell. Our next story comes from
Antonette Marie Williams. She told it from her motorized scooter that she calls her Ferrari,
and she calls herself handicapable.
Live from our Harlem main stage at City Colleges, Erin Davis Hall,
here's Antoinette Marie.
As far back as I can remember, Rachel and Henry Williams played cards.
At 10, I listened to the laughter and teasing around the card table.
My dad invited me to play.
He needed a partner.
He taught me the rules of the game, how to win, and he also taught me how to hold the cards
in my small hands to play mid-wiss, pinnacle, and cutthroat pinnacle.
They lit up the room with passion and confidence,
and it rubbed off on me.
I learned to play back-ammon from my friend Terry,
almost 50 years ago, probably longer than most of you
have been on the planet.
Back-ammon is a board game that's been around probably longer than and found in Tudon
Commons coffin.
The game is played with 15 checkers and dice for each player.
Each player rolls the dice and moves their checkers around the board according to the
numbers on the dice. You win the game by getting your
checkers to your home board and getting your
checkers off before your opponent.
I loved back amann.
I was dying to play.
I was hungry to play this game.
I found Chess City, a few blocks away from my apartment.
They played bridge, chess, and backgammon there.
Only a few women were in the game of bridge.
I found a group of men playing over in the corner, four Bulgarians and one Haitian.
They were arguing, mostly, a Bulgarian
about the place to make.
They made some of the worst plays I had ever seen.
They were really bad.
After watching for several days,
thinking one of the Bulgarians invited me to play.
Had he read my mind,
Jesus, he invited me into this game. I was so excited.
That evening, I walked home with more duckets than I came with.
It was truly reassuring and exciting to play with them. We played several days a week,
exciting to play with them. We played several days a week, and I walked away generally with more money in my pocket.
Sometimes I lost, and my motto, it's just an investment.
Keep them coming back, putting I heard about Monte Carlo.
Monte Carlo has the largest world back in the championship in the world.
I always thought that this Mediterranean wonderland tournament was out of my reach to expensive.
I did some research.
Mine took Carlo here I come.
It was a week long tournament in July
and I went, there were over 200 people
in the intermediate division, very few women,
but I was there representing the sisterhood.
When I walked into the room,
I heard the melodious tune of the shaking of the dice.
It was music to my ears.
Most of the men there, male opponents, underestimated me.
They thought that I was a mere dilatant in the game,
but I was going there to prove that I was a winner, that I could beat them.
Day one, Pierre walked in, tall, dark, mustache, and handsome. Fine by my definition.
He sat down to play. Pierre had no chance.
I rolled like Wanda possessed and beat him 13-0.
He walked away graciously but disheveled.
I strutted to the scorekeeper's desk to claim my win.
Throughout the rest of the week,
I played all male competitors, and I beat them all.
Undefeated, undefeated, I won the intermediate division
of the Monte Carlo World Back Amid Tournament. I want a trip to Spain to use a car at the time share
a $1,200 German back amid set and a trophy
and the recognition of my peers at this tournament.
I had made it.
After playing some more tournaments,
winning and losing, there was this tournament in San Antonio.
In 2017, I was the only black female
and the first woman to ever be in the finals of this tournament.
But not only was I the first woman, there was another woman.
She and I were in the finals, both from the big apple.
We sat down to play, and Layla was feeding me 8-5 in an 11-point match.
I took a break from the defeat.
I rolled to the bathroom on my Ferrari, and I got to the sink,
and I splashed cold water on my face.
And I heard my father's voice play every game like it's your first.
I talked to myself in the mirror,
God damn it, Antoinette, you can't let her beat you.
Second place is not an option.
I roll back to the table,
people are standing on chairs and curaging.
Thumbs up, smiling at me, rooting for me.
The score was eight five.
We started to play. I rolled, I got to the best part of my game.
I turned the cube. Layla passed. The score is now 8-6. We play on. I get into a good position again. I double the cube. Layla passes. It's now 8.7. My end of
voice is saying, that's when I go with it. You've got to go and on girl. Move, move.
We start the next game. I put one of Layla's checkers on the bar. She has to
come into my home board. She can't come in.
My board is closed.
I'm rolling to take my checkers off.
I'm shaking, shaking vigorously.
I'm nervous.
My heart is pounding.
I think everyone in the building hears me.
I'm shaking the dice.
Layla can't come in.
I'm finally taking off all my checkers. Layla still is on the
bar. Oh my God, I'm winning this game. I'm winning this tournament. Before I know it,
I've won four points. Not only did I win, I back amateur, I won six points. I won the San Antonio Tournament, the first woman,
the first black woman to win this tournament
and the prizes.
I am so happy people are surrounding me with joy
and thanking me, giving me congratulations.
That same year, I won third place in the American Backham and Tour,
the first woman to ever win in that division as well,
a black woman in this game representing other women.
Finally, I got a phone call that said
that I was nominated for the Backham and Hall of Fame. I've been recognized by my peers.
I'm so happy to be recognized by my backham peers. I love the game as much as I did in 1973 when I first learned, and I'm
proud that there are other women joining in this male-dominated game. I remember
what my father taught me. I still take risks, and I still play every game like it
was my first.
Thank you.
Applause
Antonette Marie Williams is an exuberant advocate,
an educator and a world traveler.
At 75, she's still playing, and she gives free backgammon lessons
to adults and teens outdoors in the park in Harlem or in Zoom.
And according to Antoinette, she doesn't plan to slow down
anytime soon.
To see photos of Antoinette, please visit themoth.org. Our next story comes from Rachel Cain, who told this on the Annarber Stories Land Stage
with our media partners, Michigan Radio.
Here's Rachel.
All right, so my mom died when I was nine years old.
And ten years later, I was getting married and having babies of my own.
And when I put it like that, it's like, oh my God, that was way too young.
But yes.
And I found myself at this age feeling completely lost.
I didn't have a mom.
I was a mom and I was constantly questioning if I was a good
mom and if I was going to do this right. And I cared. I cared a lot and I had a lot of
really grand ideas that have gone down a lot since then. But at the time, I really dreamed
of sharing like the highest forms of art and music and literature with my children.
I fantasize that they'd be reading Shakespeare at five.
No, it's a lot of Pokemon.
It's not good.
But I had these fantasies.
And one day, in an effort to get started on this,
I brought home a really great classic art house film
to share with my two children four and five years old.
You guys might have heard of it, it's called Home Alone.
It's great, it's one of the best.
So I brought this home, my kids watched it, they loved it,
and it turned out to be a real bad movie to show them.
Because the next day they got real mad at me.
I had made cookies and I had told them, I'm a real bitch here.
I had told them, you have to wait till they cool before you
can have them.
And they lost their goddamn minds.
I mean, just lost it.
They stormed out of the room.
They slammed themselves against the wall
on the other side of the wall where I was holding clothes,
and they plotted their revenge.
And they were at this perfect age
where they didn't realize this complicated scientific theory
that noise travels.
And they were also really horrible at whispering.
And so I heard everything.
And everything was they were going to murder me.
Yeah, like full on, cally, caulkin murder me.
And so I'm sitting there and I have this dilemma, right?
Do I get up?
Do I walk over there?
Do I kneel down?
Do I tell them softly?
That's not how we handle our big feelings. We don't do it like that. We, you know, we talk it out, or do I listen
to the other guy on this shoulder, and do I just like go with it and see what happens?
I listen to him. So I wait for them to get this all set, and they had an Easter basket
that mind you, I had lovingly filled like months before but they took that Easter basket and they filled it
with stuffed animals and they tied a rope to it and they swung it over the
banister of our stairs and their plan was to do that every time I walked by
right until they got me and so I walked past I walked past the first time in
they missed which does not surprise me my son plays basketball
now when he's not good.
But they missed.
I walked back again and they missed again.
I did that eight.
F***ing times.
Until finally it hit my shoulder.
And that was it.
I couldn't do it again.
So that was it.
That was the one, right?
So I just swung back.
Now, I'm an English teacher,
so I've got some Shakespeare in me.
So like, it was full on death scene, right?
And I'm like, clutching my heart and expliquely,
they didn't hit my heart, but like, oh, oh my God.
And I lean against the wall and I sink down
because I can't do squats very well,
so I had to like, leave out.
And I sink down and I fall over, and that's it, I'm dead. I'm out. And I sleep down and I fall over and that's it.
I'm dead.
I'm dead.
And there's silence.
Just silence.
And then my five year old starts wailing.
Like he just starts running down the stairs,
tumbling over himself.
I mean, just weeping.
He prostrates himself over my corpse.
And I have this moment where I'm like,
I might have taken this too far.
But I was working so hard to hold in the laughter
that that went away really fast.
And I'm there, and I'm dead, and he's whaling.
And then my younger four year old comes down.
And there's not a tear to be seen.
He's just full on like, oh yeah, we fucking did this.
And I'm there, you know, peeking out of the slits of my eyes
because they're stupid, and they don't know that I can see them.
And I'm wondering if I am in trouble.
Do I need to find a counselor?
I mean, four-year-old's are notoriously awful human beings.
Anyways, but this feels like extra awful.
Like, there's no remorse.
And I'm wondering if it's over for me.
Like, this is it.
We've got a psychopath.
It's bad.
And then my four-year-old leans down
to my wee bean, five-year-old, and he like strokes his cheek and wipes the tears away
and just pulls his little chin up.
And he says, don't cry, brother.
The cookies are free now.
LAUGHTER
CHEERING
And that's the moment when I knew I'm doing this parenting thing okay.
By day Rachel Cain says she's a serious, bespectacled public media employee.
By night, she's a slightly less serious, bewicked content creator on TikTok.
Though those ones mischievous preschoolers are not mischievous preteens, Rachel is happy
to report they have never tried to murder her again, well not intentionally at least.
They may still give her a heart attack though.
To see pictures of Rachel and her family, please visit themoth.org and go to extras.
Coming up, a seventh grader on a live-changing school trip and an unexpected face-off with a wild cat. That's when the Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and
presented by the Public Radio Exchange, PRX.org.
You're listening to the Moth radio hour from PRX.
I'm Jody Powell.
Our next story is from Eddie Laughter, who shared it at a Moth community engagement program
showcase in Brooklyn.
The evening was presented by our friends at the Kates Bay New York Foundation.
Here's Eddie, live at the Moth.
I grew up going to a Quaker School, and I was one of the only three actually Quaker Kids there.
My dad was Quaker, so is Quaker still. And I thought that made me an expert whenever it came
up in class. I was like, interlite, I know all about that.
I've gotcha.
And I was in like fourth grade, by the way.
And I was going to, quite a good meeting for worship
every Sunday, because my dad wanted me to.
But I would just kind of sit downstairs and doodle
while our parents were in worship.
And that was just what would happen on Sundays.
And my mom is Jewish. And my connection to that side of my family
is even foggy and more distant.
I would just visit my family for the holidays
and get really confused about how I knew everybody.
And then I would come back and then go to school the next day.
Weirdly, a lot of kids at my Quaker meeting
were also this combination of Quaker and Jewish.
And we like to call
ourselves Quakersh. That was the extent of our analysis of that. And if I'm being totally honest,
all I wanted to do was when I was little was pretend to be a dragon with my friends. So religion
is not pretending to be a dragon. So it was thus not high on my list of priorities then.
But as I got older, it eventually was no longer cool to pretend to be a dragon, and it wasn't cool
to really talk about religion either.
I got in some middle school and got,
everything got more awkward, and I got less friends.
And I got really distant from religion.
I stopped going to Quaker Meeting on Sunday
because no one was really making me,
and so I'd like talked about it less.
My Quakers and Facts weren't fun or cool things
to tell people.
But I could never really get out of going to the Jewish
holidays.
They happened so infrequently that I had to be there,
and I didn't see my cousins very often.
So it was important that I went.
But I got that it was important for my mom.
I didn't get how it was important to me.
I never really saw myself there.
It felt weird and complicated.
And I just felt so awkward all the time
that I didn't understand what it had to do with me specifically.
And in seventh grade, my school took a field trip
to a Holocaust exhibit in a Jewish cultural center in Manhattan.
And I had learned about the Holocaust.
We were learning about it in history class
and we were learning about World War II in Germany
in the 30s and 40s.
And it was something to happen in the past.
This was a field trip.
We, and it was just a time and not be in class.
So we were in seventh grade and we entered the museum
in a sort of rambunctious fashion
because it's seventh grade and that's just what kind of happens.
And the museum goes in chronological order through timelines, so we're in the beginning
part, and the work, me and my two friends are just sort of like walking around, sort of
like making fun of propaganda.
And then the museum takes a hold on us as it is designed to do, and my friends go elsewhere,
and I am by myself.
And the floor of the museum is carpeted, so it kind of eats away at footsteps,
so you can't really hear anyone else around you.
And I'm by myself and I'm walking,
and I turn to my left, and I see this long hallway,
and at the end of the hallway is this wall
that looks like it's made out of a bunch of small tiles.
And I get closer and realize that they're not tiles, but they're
actually very, very small portraits of, like, photographs of people who entered and died
in Auschwitz. And there are so many of them, they go all the way down this hallway. They
turn the corner, and they're these pillars in the museum just architecturally, and they
wrap around. And I'm overcome with this wave of this urge to make eye
contact with each and every one of the pictures.
And I feel like I need to give them the space that I owe them
and take my time and try to give all of my attention to them.
And I physically cannot do that, but I'm
trying my hardest in this sort of like frantic fashion
of making eye contact with everyone.
And I think you start to feel different.
All of a sudden they feel like a mirror
and I see parts of my own face there.
I see my nose and my eyes.
Something about my bone structure and my hair.
And it's overwhelming and it's terrifying.
My mom would talk about feeling like she looks really Jewish in certain places when there
weren't a lot of other Jewish people around.
I never knew what that meant.
And then all of a sudden it makes sense.
It clicks in a crushing way.
And I was someone who was very familiar with the concept of loneliness.
I felt really isolated at school and middle school.
And I was really, when I would walk down a hallway, it felt like I was lonely to the point
where it felt corrosive in my body.
But this loneliness that I feel in this museum is not like anything I had experienced before.
It's like the museum had singled out me and like left me somewhere stranded and I was
like almost in a free fall. And it was so much that when I eventually left the exhibit all I wanted
to do was find someone to talk about this with. And so I'm going to people in my class and
trying to relay the information that this museum is apparently about me specifically.
And my classmates don't really seem to get how shocking this feels.
I feel like I'm crushed and everyone just sort of takes it like a, yeah, Eddie.
And this is the reaction I get from my non-Jewish classmates and also from my Jewish classmates.
Someone just sort of gives me a yikes face, which doesn't help at all.
And we eventually leave the museum and find our way
to a playground, because that's kind of like
where field trips always lead.
And people are running around and playing tag,
and I can't get myself to do that.
I'm sitting on this bench and this feeling
that I've found in the museum is kind of like sticky.
It feels like I can't leave the museum.
And I'm sitting there with my friend talking to me
about TV shows that I don't want to talk about watching everybody
else play tag and I feel so angry that they're able to play tag and I can't because that
was all I would have wanted to do in a normal school day.
But I'm sitting there and with this feeling that I've found this whole new piece of who
I am in that museum and I have have to hold onto it and somehow fit it
into my perception of who I thought I was.
Which is so hard, it was like my, someone,
it was like suddenly my whole face meant something different
than what I thought it did.
And like how do you deal with that when you're 13
and all you do is think about the way your face looks
and comparison to other people.
And I have just sat with that piece for a really long time and I felt it grow into myself
and I've, or maybe I've grown into it.
And I've found other people to talk to this about.
And with my half Jewish friends, we talk about how we exist in this sort of like limbo
space of maybe we're not necessarily practicing, but it's still very much in our lives.
And everybody who I talk to has their own sort of
like definition of what it means to them.
And somewhere along this journey,
I realized that I really like going
to all the family gatherings and I get upset when I miss them.
I was sick for reticiano one year
and I was just like, how am I going to have a sweet new year?
I was like, I was distraught.
But there's a lot of comfort and connection
in those gatherings.
Sometimes it feels like Judaism is a part of my body
in that very physical way that I got in that museum.
And at the same time, I have recently, after taking
a very long break from it, I've recently
become a member of my Quaker meeting.
And I'm finding that Quakerism is own piece that's
separate from Judaism in my life, but they can go.
They can both be there together and they can both exist and they don't negate each other. They're just both there.
And I don't just have that afternoon in a playground to figure it out. I can sit with them for however long I need, and I can ponder my spirituality, what being Quakerish means, and the fact that I have a heritage.
Thank you.
Originally from Brooklyn, New York, Eddie Laughter is attending Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts,
where she is studying different forms of storytelling, wandering aimlessly, and over-analysing monster movies.
Our final storyteller is Michael Donovan, who told this at a story slam in New York City,
where WNYC is a media partner of them off.
Here's Michael, live from the Bell House in Brooklyn.
All right.
I was a firefighter in New York City for, thank you.
And like many firefighters, most of us, we all had second jobs.
And my second job was I was a cop and I I worked as a copina. And a couple of
the other guys in my fire house, they were also copiners and so we would all get jobs
and if they needed help they would call me. And my friend Kurt called me and he goes,
Mike, I got a great job for us. We're going to be doing hardwood floors on the upper
east side of Manhattan and my friend Brent's building. Brent was a pharmacist.
And when you think of a pharmacist,
you'd think of a great head with the glasses
looking over the top of his glasses.
Brent, at a ponytail, he had tattoos.
He had a wife Shannon who liked to go to the strip clubs
and bring back another story for another night.
But anyway, Brent was a little different
from your normal pharmacist.
And he owned the building that his pharmacy was in.
Pharmacy was on the first floor,
apartments on the second floor,
and Brent had the entire third floor,
small building, but he had the whole third floor.
And so we called Brent and we were discussing the job
and he was explaining the apartment to us.
The apartment was one big open area,
kitchen in the back, dining room next to it, living room.
And then in the front was his bedroom.
And the bedroom had French doors, glass French doors.
And that's where his bedroom was.
And we discussed price and what we were going to do.
And Brent said to us, he goes, there's one little problem.
And we said, well, what's the problem?
He was, I have a cat.
I was like, I like cats.
Kirk likes cats, it should be fine.
No, you don't understand.
I have a wild jungle cat as a pet.
And we were like, you have a tiger in your apartment
on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.
He's, no, no, no, no, no, like a tiger.
It's more like a cheetah or a jaguar.
We were like, it's called a savant. And we had never heard of a savant.
And he said, he assured us.
He goes, when my wife Shannon is home, the cat is like a domesticated kitty cat.
But when she's not home, she's on. Anything. So.
But you really don't need to worry because Brent likes to watch TV late and then he sleeps late.
So you're probably not going to see him and we'll keep him in the bedroom which he called
the cat's lair.
And the cat's name was Slash.
So he'd say the cat will be in Slash, she'll be in his lair and the cat's name was Slash. So he'd say the cattle be in Slash, he'll be in
his lair and he'll pace back and forth. He doesn't get up till about 11 or 11 30 so you're
probably not going to see him. So, all right, all right, we're just saying to do the Floors.
So the first state comes, the first state comes and we're bringing we have to bring all our tools up to
the third floor. So we block open the door to second avenue. It was right on second avenue
of the apartment. We block open the door. We block open the door to the apartment and we
carry in the tools up. We're bringing them in and we start working. We're working on
the floor and sure enough about 11 o'clock.
Kirk gives me a little mic look.
Oh, one other thing I forgot to tell you is Brent Wanda.
He said, whatever you do with the cat,
and the cat did look like a cheetah with the spot,
but the head was smaller.
It was called a Savile.
He goes, the one thing you have to make sure you don't do
don't make contact with the cat eye contact with the cat.
So we're working on the floor. We're working on the floor and Kirk gives me a little he gives me a little elbow.
He was like, Mike, what's that?
And the two of us look up and they
are behind the glass stores.
It's the cat, pacing back and forth.
And we look and the cat kind of looks at us,
and we both diverted our eyes.
And we keep working.
And after a while, it became routine.
The cat would pace. We were working.
We would look at them.
We would divert our eyes.
So day one went by.
Day two went by.
Now the third day was going to be,
we were going to finish the job, get paid and go home.
And we chocked the doors open, a second avenue.
We chocked the door open to the apartment.
And we're bringing our tools up.
And as we're walking through
Kirk says to me he taps me again and he goes Mike what's that on the back window
cell in the living room area and Brenton his wife Shannon had great taste they
have these beautiful white lacy's sheer curtains and brownstone windows with the low cells and we could see a silhouette
behind the behind the curtains and with the tools we lean forward and
Just as we lean forward far enough a
gentle breeze blew the curtains
And they were slash
And we made eye contact with the magnificent.
And the cat freaked out.
Two leaps.
And Kirk and I were pinned to the wall.
The cat leaped halfway across the apartment,
hit the couch and bounced.
And now it was at the French doors,
trying to get into its lair.
And it kept thrown itself into the glass and hissing and spit-nat us.
We're pinned to the wall.
And Kirk leans over to me.
And we're thinking, this is $7,000 cat.
It's going to cut itself. It's going to kill itself.
Or worse than that, the door to Second Avenue is open.
This is going to be a wild jungle cat running down Second Avenue.
We're not going to get paid.
So Kirklene's over to me.
Kirklene's over and he says, Mike, one of us is going to have to open that door and
let the cat in its lay out.
And being a fireman, you have to keep your wits about you.
You have to stay calm in situations.
So I leaned over to Kirk, and as calmly as I could, I said,
well, it could be me.
And Kirk looked at me with disgust.
And he opened the door.
And the cat went in, we closed the door, we looked at each other, and we were like, we're out of here. We picked up the tools, we cat went in we closed the door we looked at each other and we were like
We're out of here. We picked up the tools we went down we told Brent
You paying us for the day
The cats in his room. Thank you very much and the moral of the story and we went to a bar
We drank for the rest of the day the moral
The moral of the story is that
Cat on the sill is worth a beer in a bowl.
Michael Donovan spent 25 years in the New York City Fire Department, finishing his career
as a captain and special operations.
He is currently retired and spends his time between South Carolina
and Vermont. Michael is still a very good friend with Teddy and describes him as one of the toughest
people he has ever known. But he has lost contact with Slash and its owners and has never had another
close encounter with a jungle cat since. To see some photos of Michael, please visit themoth.org.
And that's it for this week on The Moth Radio Hour.
Thank you for joining us.
This episode of The Maw 3DO Hour was produced by me, Jay Allison, and Catherine Burns, along with Jodie Powell, who also hosted and directed the stories in the show.
Co-producer, Fikimeric, Associate Producer, Emily Couch.
The rest of The Maw's leadership team includes Sarah Haberman, Sarah Austin Genese, Jennifer
Hickson, Meg Bulls, Kate Tellers, Jennifer Birmingham,
Marina Klucce, Suzanne Rust, Brandon Grant, Inga Gladovsky, Sarah Jane Johnson, and Aldi Kaza.
Most stories are true, as remembered and affirmed by the storytellers. Our theme music is by the Drift,
other music in this hour from Blue Dot Sessions, Neil Mukorgi, a not-coen, wolfpeck, and connect Gunn-A-N.
We receive funding from the National Endowment for the Arts.
The Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and
presented by PRX.
For more about our podcast, for information on pitching us your own story and everything
else, go to our website, thumb off, dot org.