The Moth - The Moth Radio Hour: Turning the Page
Episode Date: February 3, 2021In this hour, stories of acceptance, moving on, and letting go. Growing older and maybe wiser, and stepping boldly into the future. This hour is hosted by Moth Executive Producer, Sarah Austi...n Jenness. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Hosted by: Sarah Austin Jenness Storytellers: Elizabeth Gray, Neema Avashia, Maxie Jones, Jennifer Birmingham, Susan Earley, Erik Heen
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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 Pierix, this is the Malth Radio Hour.
I'm Sarah Austin-Geness.
In this episode, facing the next step, stories of moving forward.
I've always appreciated that H.G. Wells quote,
adapt or perish, now as ever is nature's inexorable imperative.
Basically, you must change.
We cannot go back, we can only move forward.
And in the journey through the mock, maybe you'll find a story.
We start with a woman who's mourning her youth.
And just to note, it's a very funny story about the downward travel of parts of her own
body.
Elizabeth Gray shared this at an open mic story slam storieslam in Melbourne, Australia, where we partner
with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, ABCRM.
Here's Elizabeth, live with the mind.
So, this story begins six years ago when I was 38 years old.
And it was a beautiful morning because Nana Head stayed over, which meant that I'd got to sleep in.
So because I was well rested,
I actually wanted to spend time with my children.
And so I thought what I would do is I would go out
while they're sitting at the kitchen table.
And I'd jump up and I'd go,
RAAA!
So, got out of bed,
popped my dressing gown on,
strapped it on nice and tight,
um, crept out to the dining table.
And I leaped in the air, and as I leaped in the air, my breasts,
which would joist and free of any constraints,
leapt with me.
And then when I landed, they landed a second behind and they made this
enormous clap sound as they hit my torso. And my kids didn't seem to notice and if none
noticed, she didn't say anything. But I kind of crept back to the bedroom and I sat down in shock as this sound just going to echo it around my brain.
Because this thunderous clap was the death knell of my youth.
And for the first time in my life, I actually thought, maybe I should get some plastic surgery, maybe I should get a breast reduction.
And over the years, age and gravity had affected my breasts.
And not only that, but it had been 15 years of fluctuating
weight, and I'd breastfed two children.
And in addition to that, my left breast is actually two sizes larger
than my right. So when I'm naked, kind of look a bit like at Picasso painting. But I worked
out that if I stand with my left arm straight up, my right arm, 90 degrees away from my body to the right, everything evens out and takes
10 years off my breasts.
But it's a little bit hard to feel sexy when you look like you're doing some kind of kinky semaphore thing going on.
So being a good vergo, I made a list of pros and cons, and the pros were, you know, better
self-image, more confidence, and being able to buy a normal sports bra, as opposed to a sports bra which is designed by
NASA and cost about $150.
But there are quite a lot of cons, quite a lot more cons, and some of those were on
terrible with pain, I'm a terrible patient, I don't have a big disposable income, and
I have quite an addictive personality.
So I was sort of looking a couple of years into the future,
thinking that I would look, you know, great, nice and shiny and plastic,
but we completely destitute.
Sort of like, under no dumpster diving barbie,
complete with her own shopping trolley.
So, I thought, well, I talked to my husband about it,
see if he can help me with the decision.
Now my husband loves my breasts.
I mean, he loves my body and the only negative thing he said about my body is that there's
too many clothes covering it.
So I sat him down and I said, honey, I think I want to get a breast reduction.
And he was quiet for a moment and he said, you know, I love you just the way you are.
But if this is really important to you,
then I will support you 100%.
Yeah, and I felt, you know, even though I wasn't
in close to a decision, I felt better about everything.
And I went away and made us a cup of tea.
And I came back to find in the bedroom,
weeping quietly into one of my double D cup bras.
So, anyway, for the next three years, I kind of oscillated between, should I get it done,
should I get surgery, should I not?
Sort of like on the one hand, it was like, I will not succumb to, you know, should I get it done? Should I get surgery? Should I not? Not sort of like on the one hand, it was like,
I will not succumb to, you know,
this advertises cult of use.
And then on the other side, I was like,
if I think of all the gorgeous bras we could wear.
And then one day, my whole life just went to crap.
I wrote off my car, my husband was involved
in a terrible workplace accident, and this
some trip to Canada that we'd been planning for ages was at risk of being canceled.
And then I found a lump on my right breast.
And so I went to the doctor who referred me to a specialist, and then she wanted me to
get some tests and a mammogram. So I had my mammogram done by this little Scottish round lady.
And if you've never had a mammogram before,
what you do is you put your breast on a sort of square plate
and you snuggle up to this machine, which is something like out of Doctor Who.
And then they lower a perspex plate down onto your breast
and they keep lowering it until
you there's tears in your eyes and your breast is as flat as a pancake.
So right one done, onto the left one, get it up onto the plate and she goes, oh goodness
me, I'll have to get the bigger plate out for that one.
And if that wasn't bad enough, you know, she changed the plates, rest on the plate.
She was, oh, it goes right underneath your armpit, doesn't it lovely? I'll just pull that
around for you, shall I? And right then, I just wanted the ground open up and you know,
swallow me a hole. But after about eight weeks, so if you're getting, you know, prodded
and poked and humiliated and squashed, I finally got my results and the results were negative, which were amazing.
And I got out of the specials that I just cried and I cried and I cried.
And it's true that you don't realise how much you love something until there's a risk
that's going to be taken away.
So I realised that day that I actually love my breasts in all their, you know, saggy,
lumpy, uneven glory.
And God willing, we're going to both my breasts and I are going to age disgracefully right
to the end.
Elizabeth Gray lives with her husband, two sons, and two cats, and has just taken up
micro macrame as her new isolation hobby.
Elizabeth works for a small women's health organization, and she actually shared a written
copy of this story with her team.
She says her favorite response was from a colleague who read the story, strode up to Elizabeth's
desk, and announced that she had decided to stop dying her hair
and let her silver shine through.
Elizabeth's story convinced her to be brave
and embraced the gray.
["The Gray's
Love Song"]
We met her next storyteller, Nima Avashia,
at the Moth Teacher Institute.
Every year, the Moth hosts a week of storytelling workshops for 5th to 12th grade educators from around the country,
and they share best practices for using personal stories in the classroom.
Nima has been a civics teacher in Boston for years, and she applied for this Moth opportunity to join her writing life and her teaching
life and to inspire her students to tell their own stories.
At the end of the week long workshop, we record the stories from these educators, so live
from the Moth Teacher Institute, here's Nima Avashia.
So last November, on a Friday, two of my former students, Chris and Nami came back to visit.
And in general, that's not weird.
Kids kind of know Fridays are open office hours,
come back, check in with Miss Abashia.
But this Friday was different.
They weren't just coming back to Chit chat or do homework.
They were coming back to grieve.
And I didn't really know how I was going to do that with them.
And that was weird for me because I'm a civics teacher.
And that means I spend my whole year teaching kids about their rights and how government works
and how to be an engaged citizen.
And they kind of see me as this like demystifier.
And so even after they graduate, I get text.
I just got stopped by the cops.
What do I need to do?
Or my mom's trying to go get our citizenship.
What should I do?
That's kind of our relationship.
And I'm used to knowing the answers.
Or if I don't know the answer, I know how to get it.
But earlier in that week, we had all discovered
that their former classmate and my former student,
Angel, had been killed in gun violence in Arnie Warhud.
And Angel was this goofy, funny kid.
He loved everybody in his class.
He made funny faces and told Courtney jokes.
He baked me a fruit cake the day before.
Christmas, which who makes fruit cakes anymore?
You know, he was just, he was not that you ever think
any kid is going to end up in that situation,
but it just would have never occurred to me
that that was going to be a situation.
And we were all reeling, and he was the fourth former student
who had died for me in a year.
And so they were coming back and I felt this pressure of like I'm supposed to take them through this
but like I'm not through this, like I don't know how to do this.
For the first hour it didn't matter. They were sobbing and my shirt was soaked and like that's
what we did for about an hour. But they're also adolescent boys, and humor is kind of their go-to cope.
And so after about an hour, it kind of went from crying to telling stories, and then to
telling funny stories.
And they started to tell me about how, at the end of their eighth grade year, they had
this plot to spray paint the principal's car.
This particular principal only lasted a year.
He was kind of a dictator.
He liked to pick fights.
He was to spend kids for wearing a hood.
Kids didn't like him.
Teachers didn't like him.
And they wanted revenge.
So Angel decided to go buy some spray paint.
But he bought black spray paint,
and the principal's car was black.
So, this guy was not gonna work.
And Nami, at that point in the story,
and I didn't know this story until then,
opens his bag, and he pulls out the can of spray paint.
And he's like, I've been carrying this around all week.
Like, I don't know what to do.
And I say, I think I know what we should do.
I think we need to go tag something.
And you should know that I'm not just a civics teacher during the day. I'm kind of like a civics
geek at night. Like in Boston, we have an app called boss 311 where you can like report things.
Like there's a down tree. Come fix it. Or there's a dance girl in the road. Come remove. And I am
obsessed with this app. And I report things all the time.
And I read other people's reports.
And kids know this about me.
They know I don't drive more than five miles
about the speed limit.
I've never used any kind of control substance.
Any uncontrolled substance.
I just am pretty square.
They know this.
And so Chris, who's generally very quiet,
is like, what?
You're suggesting that we go do something illegal right now?
He was like, I don't think I understand.
You're a civic seeker.
You're not supposed to do this.
What they didn't know is that for the previous eight months
I had been trying to meet with city leaders,
with the superintendent, with street workers,
with anyone I could get to listen
to the fact that in Boston last year, 16 young people under the age of 19 were killed.
It was a massive spike, more than a quarter of the homicides in the city were kids, and
of that for a reminder.
And I was doing all of this advocacy and I wasn't doing anything and it also wasn't helping
me.
I didn't come away feeling better.
And then there was this spray can.
And I was like, well, nothing else has worked.
Being a civic teacher and using those strategies hasn't accomplished anything.
So here's the spray can and maybe we should use it.
So it was dark.
We'd been talking for several hours.
We went behind the school
and there was like a concrete Jersey barrier that the cops had put out to prevent people
from doing illicit things behind the school. We were about to do an illicit thing. And
we basically took terms tagging the barrier. And in Boston, I don't know if this is true
in other places. When young people are killed, they're
friends in the community created a hashtag.
So we tagged, hashtag, Angels World on the barrier.
And we put our flashlights out on our phones,
and we kind of lit it up.
And we got a broken desk, and we turned it into a tripod,
and we took pictures of ourselves.
And Chris was like, angel would fucking love this.
And he was like, oh, sorry, Abashi, I forgot
that you were my teacher for a second.
And I said, no, you're totally right,
angel would have fucking loved this.
And in that moment, that higher-archie
between teacher and student, it just kind of flattened, right?
And we were just mourning, and we were trying to figure out
how to connect with angel and how to connect with Angel and
how to connect with each other.
So we took our pictures, some with me in them, some without me in them.
And as we walked to my car so I could drive them home, I said, you better not post pictures
with me in them on the internet, that shit could get me fired.
Because at the end of the day, I'm still their civics teacher.
Thank you.
That was Nima Avasia.
Nima has worked as a civics teacher in the Boston Public Schools for more than 17 years.
And when she's not teaching, she writes personal essays, makes tons of pickles and salsa, and spends
time with her partner Laura, who is also a middle school teacher.
Angel's graffiti is still up, and when his younger cousin was a student at
Neymah's school, she says sometimes at dismissal, they'd walk over together to
pay the graffiti a visit and share a memory of Angel. During the pandemic, Neymah
thought that school closures offered some freedom
from the teacher student hierarchy. On Zoom calls with students, they saw each other's
homes, families, and bad haircuts, and everyone was much more honest about the support they
needed. She says flattening the teacher student hierarchy was actually one of the most
powerful shifts in education that happened during the pandemic.
To see a photo of Angel and his classmates with Nima, go to the moth.org.
After our break, two stories we're moving on requires a little help from a friend,
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 by PRX.
This is the Moth Radio Hour from PRX.
I'm Sarah Austin-Geness.
The stories in this hour are about turning the page and moving on.
And sometimes, to do that, you need a nudge or an energetic push from another person.
This next story from Maxi Jones takes place when he's a teenager, right after his mother dies.
Maxi told this story at an open-mic slam in Detroit, where we partner with Public Radio Station, WDET.
Here's Maxi, live at the mom.
In February of 1978, I started the second semester of the 10th grade. That was on February 1st.
On February 2nd, which would have been my second day of my 2nd semester of the 10th grade,
when I woke up to go to school, my mother didn't wake up that morning.
Now that following week, I missed school, of course, while we laid my mother to rest.
And when I came back to school about a week or two later, it was quite different for
me. I remember that when I came back to school,
I really didn't care much to be there at all.
And it was a new semester, and my teachers didn't really know me very well.
I had this one English teacher's name is Mr. Goldberg.
And Mr. Goldberg would ask the class a question, and he would call on people.
And when he called on me, he would say,
Max, do you know the answer? And he pretty much like wicked me up from wherever
my mind would be, and I would say, what, excuse me, what was that? And he would
ask me the question again, and I would always have the correct answer. So one day
he asked me to meet him after class, and I met him after class, and he said,
I don't understand what's going on.
He said, you always seem lost.
You always someplace else during the class,
but you know all the answers.
You got all you did all your homework,
and I just kind of explained to him what was going on,
and I told him that the reason I came to school
every day was because my mother made me come to school.
And now, my mother's not here to make me come to school.
And I don't really feel the need to be here anymore.
So he said, well, just do me a favor.
He said, listen, you know, a teacher teaches eight,
well, there are eight periods in the day.
A teacher teaches five periods in the day,
and there are three prep periods.
Usually the teacher will use one of those prep periods for lunch, and his other prep period, Mr. Goldberg said,
I want you to meet me in my office, six period, and so I met him in the office six period just to talk.
And then he said, meet me tomorrow, six period.
And this one on and on, every single day he had me meet him six period
during his prep period.
And I would help him grade papers, and we would talk,
and we would do whatever.
When open school night came, I didn't have anyone
to come with me.
My mother always came with me to open school night.
When open school night came, my sister, who
had just graduated from that same school,
came with me to open school night. And my social who had just graduated from that same school came with me to open school night.
And my social studies teacher wouldn't talk to her.
He said, I know who you are.
You just graduated from the school.
So he thought we was trying to play some kind of game
or something.
So when the teacher wouldn't talk to her,
Mr. Goldberg was standing outside the room.
He came in and he said, wait a minute, wait a minute.
Talk to her.
And he said, I'll explain later.
So the teacher talked to my sister
and told her about how I was doing the school and so on.
And then Mr. Goldberg, when he did after that,
was he went around to all my classes
and talked to all my teachers
and told them what was going on.
And he told them all.
He said, if you have any issue with Maxi Jones, come to me.
And so that's what he did.
And so it went that way for the whole semester. Every day I met him at six period and and he he checked on my classes
and all that stuff. What ended up happening was that the next year when I was a
junior he did the same thing. He had me meet him every single day and we talked
and he talked to all my teachers about whatever was going on with me and he kind
of let them know. Listen, if you got any problem with Maxi Jones, come and talk to me. And I didn't really realize that by the time I
graduated from high school, I never missed a single day of school. And, and, and, sorry,
I'm sorry. My high school graduation, Mr. Goldberg was there, and I asked him, I said, hey Mr. Goldberg,
how you doing?
He said, he said, this feels funny.
He said, I don't come to graduation.
And I said, why?
He said, because I teach seniors.
And he said, no, he said because I teach 10th graders,
and he said, I don't teach seniors,
I never come to the graduation.
So I said, well, why are you here?
And he said, because I wouldn't miss
senior graduate for anything in the world.
I didn't realize then what he had done.
It took me years before I finally realized that.
I graduated from high school with honors.
And I was in the top 85% out of my class.
I had a region scholarship and a full ride to college and all that stuff.
The truth is I was really always academically capable of that, but it was one of those situations where
all I needed to do was to show up for it.
And at 15 years old, having lost my mother,
not really seeing the value of education,
I was really in line to be a statistic.
A high school dropout, and who knows what would have came of it,
but the thing is, I showed up to school every single day, and I realized that the reason
I showed up was because there was somebody there who was expecting to see me, and I was
Mr. Goldberg.
Thank you very much.
That was Maxi Jones. Maxi lives in Michigan right outside of Detroit. He says
storytelling has actually become his favorite pastime and that during the
pandemic he's missing the moth stage tremendously. The quarantine was put in
place right after he told his 99th story with the moth. Maxi graduated from high school more than 40 years ago,
and Mr. Goldberg has never been more than a phone call away.
To see a photo of the lovely message that Mr. Goldberg wrote
in Maxi's high school yearbook, go to the moth.org. Next up, a story from Jennifer Birmingham, from one of our New York story slams, where
we partner with Public Radio Station WNYC.
Here's Jennifer, live at the moment.
Okay, so I was married twice in rapid succession.
Six weeks after my husband moved out,
I looked up an old boyfriend and we immediately started dating.
And a couple of years after that, we were married.
And I'm pretty sure you're not supposed to marry the recycled
rebound guy.
But I did.
Because I didn't want to fail again.
And more importantly, because I had a baby boy with my second husband, I stayed longer
than I should.
I stayed through the lies and the affairs and him losing his job and refusing to ever get
another one.
And I stayed through two years of marriage counseling.
And that's when I thought I couldn't take another day.
Our counselor asked for a solo session.
And she asked me to come in.
And she said, hey, I can see you're pretty ready for divorce.
And but I'm not sure you are. You need to be able to accept three things before you're pretty ready for divorce. But I'm not sure you are.
You need to be able to accept three things
before you really are ready.
And here they are.
One, you may lose your child.
She said, in your case, it would probably only be 50%,
but you have to be ready to give him up.
Two, you are the moneyed spouse.
So you better be ready to pay child support for someone to take
your child from you. And three, you may never find love again. These are really stark things
here, but they're real. I mean, divorce is messy, and you honestly don't know what's going to happen.
I wasn't ready to move forward for those three things,
so I went back to the marriage for a couple more years until it was completely untenable,
and I was willing to pay pretty much any price to get out.
So I got out, and happily I got 100% custody of my son.
And because of that, taking out a second job to pay child support was a moot point.
But the question of whether I was going to find love again, I decided to let that linger.
I did not want another rebound relationship.
And so I declared a six months sabbatical from dating.
And I did.
And at the end of six months, I declared another 12 months of Atticlifim dating.
And to make sure I lived up to that commitment,
I decided to get orthodontics, not the subtle invisible line
that most sane adults signed up for.
I got braces because I knew for me there was no better reminder that I wasn't ready
to date than having, then having start metal objects cemented to my teeth.
And it worked.
I stayed out a full 18 months.
But you know, eventually life calls me back.
And I decided I had to try to get back out there and I signed up for
all the usual suspects and I found myself on my first first date in a really long time
and he was a great first date, he was perfectly benign, he was absolutely not my type but
terrifically nice and we had drinks and we had dinner and I was like, woo, did it. Now I can go back into hiding.
And we walked outside and I hailed a cab
and just as the cab pulled up, the guy leaned in and kissed me.
And this kind of undid me because I wasn't ready.
And I wasn't really sure.
I wanted to go back out there.
And I jumped into the cab and I pleaded with a driver to drive.
I was like, drive, drive, drive, drive.
But he didn't move.
He just sat there, chuckling in the front seat.
And he told me that he had witnessed the kiss
and it looked really good.
And I stepped my head in that little window
between the driver and the passenger and I was like, no.
It was not good.
It was terrible.
It was awkward. And this is my first first day in was not good, it was terrible, it was awkward,
and this is my first first date in 15 years,
and it's too much.
And my driver introduced himself as Pablo,
and told me that he himself has been on a sabbatical
from dating, and yet he had a lot of dating advice
to dispense, and oh, he dispensed.
And Pablo told me all his theories on dating,
as he drove me home from the upper side to Harlem.
And then when we got to my building, he pulled over
and he turned off the meter and we
talked for another 45 minutes.
We did all the while holding hands
between that little window.
And I wish I could tell you this was the night that I fell in love with Pablo, the wise man.
Pablo the wise man of the New York City taxis fleet.
It wasn't, but it really did feel like it was that the universe had put Pablo in my path
to tell me a few things that made it easier to move forward.
After I got out of the cavern and upstairs and I wrote down as much as I could and
through the things I memorized to heart and I carry them with me,
there are three things that are a lot easier to take.
One, Pablo told me, don't ever judge a date by the first kiss.
Good ones will turn bad.
Bad ones will turn good.
Only time will tell.
Two, the only thing that matters is that two people can really talk.
Everything else can get worked out.
And three, at any given moment, God is going to smite you off the face of the earth.
He said,
Pablo said, so get out there. Life is short. Get out there. Full tilt.
That was Jennifer Birmingham. Jennifer lives in New York City and is mom to
Nikkei Lee, Aiden, and Miles. She just so happens to be the managing director of
programs at them off. We do not insist that our staff get up on stage but Jennifer
throws her name in the hat at our story slams once a year to remember how much
courage it takes to share a story with a room full of strangers.
I asked for her dating and love updates and she said, I did find love again.
It was temporary, but it put to rest any lingering fear I had that the therapist may have been
right about that never happening again.
These days, I'm running full tilt at other loves.
My kids, my work, and
hobbies like photography, writing, and traveling. My hope is that in pursuing one
of these passions, I'll meet the love of my life. To see photos of Jennifer and her
three children, go to themoth.org. In some cases, the simple act of crafting and telling a story is a way to move forward.
In non-pandemic times, the moth produces over 600 events each year, and the stories are
all told by people like you.
Yes, you.
Do you have any stories of moving on or really any
personal story that matters to you? We'd love to hear it. You can record your
pitch right on our site or call 877-7999 Moth. That's 877-799-6684. The best
pitches are developed for Moth shows all around the world. I was a mom's boy.
When I was in kindergarten, she was diagnosed with breast cancer.
She fought for five years and when I was in fifth grade, and I was there holding her hand
when it happened.
The next day, they took me away to a friend's house and they took her away, too.
Overnight, her room was transformed and there wasn't much left besides this pot I
had painted for Mother's Day and then the sheet written when the day I was baptized. After
her funeral, we never really talked much about her. But when I missed her, I read the
snow and it talked about how she knew I would grow up to be kind and strong and do the right
things. But eventually my dad remarried.
We didn't talk about mom and front of dad
because he never wanted to talk about her.
But we really felt like we couldn't talk
and talk about her in front of Susan or step mom.
So life went on, my brother moved out
and I eventually went to college.
And Susan was diagnosed with breast cancer.
I really didn't understand life and on those sad days I could have that piece of paper and I would read that I was
going to be kind and strong and that paper. I believed it, like I believed her and I missed her and
over the years I had fallen out of touch with my mom's family and they thought my dad had remarried too soon and he thought that they were annoying and moths and so eventually I
visited my aunt Laura and she went upstairs and got this notebook.
And when I saw it I realized that that was the notebook that lived on my mom's bedside
table and it was her journal and I cried. I ugly cried and that was the best
Christmas present I've ever gotten. Over the next year I could only read a page at a time
before I was so worked up. I had to stop and the journal started the day she found the
lump. I had no idea how afraid she was to tell my dad about the lump. But like with these questions answered,
I felt more comfortable asking Susan about her lump and like what her experience was like
with cancer and with my family. And the journal opened up the door for my stepmom and I just talk about cancer grief and my mom more candidly. And I got married this past year and Susan and I danced to Yolby in my heart by
Phil Collins. During that dance I was ugly crying and Susan apologized that my
mom couldn't be there dancing with me and I told her that the song was about
a stepmom and I think tear for raising me and teaching me so much.
And 14 years later I know my mom is still cheering me on, still teaching me to be kind and strong
and helping me become the man I always wanted to be.
I'm grateful I've had two wonderful female robodlists that I can call mom.
all mom. Remember, you can pitch us your story.
And when you do, here are a few tips to think about before you record.
We want to hear a short version of the plot, but also how you felt while these things were
happening.
Stories are like fingerprints.
They're unique to you.
So share a few details of these scenes that you'll never forget.
How did these moments change you? You can call us at 877-799-MOF or PigeousOnline at theMOF.org
and you could inspire someone you know to pitch to. Spread the word.
After our break, a woman plans to move through grief and a man tries to help his step-kids, but they may not be interested when the Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts,
and presented by PRX.
You're listening to The Moth Radio Hour from PRX.
I'm Sarah Austin-Geness. This is an hour all about moving forward,
even if it's only in small steps.
Susan Early told this next story at an open mic
Moth slam in Denver, Colorado,
where we partner with Public Radio Station, K-U-N-C.
Live at The Moth, here's Susan Early.
Applause
I grew up in New York City, and I came to Colorado every summer.
From the time I was six to 16, secretly sad that my grandparents didn't live in Florida,
like everyone else's grandparents in New York.
But I've learned to appreciate what I had.
My grandparents were incredible people, and I was very lucky to spend every summer
with them growing up.
And I, in college, I lived here for a summer with them, and I got to know them as adults,
and it was a privilege and quite fun.
We had a lot of fun that summer.
My grandfather passed away right before his 80th birthday.
I knew it was going to be really hard on my grandmother, and everyone else in the family had come ahead of time
to help with the arrangements and the logistics,
and so I arranged my schedule to come
and stay extra on the back end.
And it was a good plan in my mind,
because I knew once everyone left, it's really hard.
They had been married just short of 60 years.
They spent their whole adult lives together.
He had been in a nursing home the last two years,
but he always had hope of getting back home.
My grandmother, Gremma Jean,
had bought him a beautiful blue polo shirt
at Ross's on Mexico in Colorado that I drove by on my way here.
And when my mom left, she said to me, Grandma wants you to return that shirt.
I tried to return it. She didn't buy it there. She doesn't have the receipt.
You're not going to be able to do it. I was like, okay. Not a problem.
So we get up the day after everyone has left. And my grandma's like, oh, we got to run some errands.
I'm like, no problem.
What do you need to do?
She's like, we have to return that shirt.
I'm like, OK, let's go.
We're going to go to village in afterwards, which
was better than Perkins, but still.
I was more afraid of that than trying to return this shirt
to Ross's.
So she pulls up to the part at Rossas and she's sitting in her purple Toyota Camry that
she hated because it looked like a Barbie car, but it was the color of my grandfather picked
out because it was the cheapest one on the lot.
And she says, my foot is killing me.
You go in, I'm like, no problem.
So I go in, I have the bag, I have their seat,
and this really beautiful sky blue polo shirt
that would match my grandpa's eyes.
So I knew I thought she has bought them a birthday present
every year for almost six years.
Like, she was ready.
And he just, he left the earth a few days before his birthday,
but she was ready for that with a present in case he made it. He wouldn't have worn it
He didn't wear out a lot of shirts, but she had something new to celebrate with him
So I walk in and the cashier is Yolanda and I look at her and I say I really need your help
She's like what?
I'm like just see that lovely lady in the purple Toyota
Looking at us, watching us like a hawk. She's like, just see that lovely lady in the purple Toyota. She's looking at us, watching us, like a hawk.
She's like, yeah, like that's my grandma.
She just lost her husband, and I cannot walk out of here
with this shirt.
She's like, okay.
I'm like, look at it.
She swears, she bought it here.
She swears, this is her receipt.
My mom's been in here.
We can't return it.
She diligently opens the bag. She pulls out the receipt, and she's like, here. We can't return it. She diligently opens the bag.
She pulls out the receipt and she's like, yeah, we don't even sell this shirt.
I'm like, I don't care.
Give it to someone.
Throw it away.
Give it to someone who works here.
I just, I cannot walk out of here with this shirt.
And she looks at me and she goes, how long were they married?
I'm like, almost 60 years.
She's like, no problem.
She takes the shirt, she's like,
don't need to give you money back.
I'm like, yeah, can you pretend?
She's like, oh yeah.
She makes a big show, she opens the register,
she slides the money across the counter to me.
I put it in my fake money in my wallet.
I go back out, and I was like, how to go? I'm like, we're good. I got your $12. She's like, awesome. Pull it money in my wallet. I go back out. And I was like, how to go?
I'm like, we're good.
I got your $12.
She's like, awesome.
Pull it out in my wallet.
I give it to her.
We go home.
We're reading our books.
Enjoying the day.
My mom calls.
And of course, you know,
and you're having that conversation where you can't say
what you want to say because you're in the room with someone else.
You don't want to hear.
And my mom's like, I can't believe you did that.
How did you do that?
I'm like, you're right.
I said, it was kind of tricky.
And she goes, what do you mean?
I'm like, well, you're right.
And she's like, what are you talking about?
She's like, oh, you're in the room with grandma.
I'm like, exactly.
And she says, so she didn't buy it at Rostas.
I was like, no.
And that wasn't the receipt.
I was like, correct. And she's't their seat, I was like, correct.
And just like, but Grandma said you got it returned
and you gave her the money, I'm like, exactly.
And all of a sudden, you can see the light bulb
over the phone and my mom got off, she's like,
oh my God, you gave her your money.
I'm like, right.
Because it was about not leaving that shirt
in the bag in the car,
because that was a shirt that the love of her life
when she walked in the room, those blue eyes lit up
and she didn't want it, and I made sure she didn't have it.
Thank you. That was Susan early.
Susan still lives in Colorado and she continued to have adventures with her grandmother up until the end.
And she says her greatest service was to just be with her as she took her very last steps forward.
To see a photo of Susan on vacation with her grandparents in Colorado, go to themoth.org.
Our last storyteller in this hour is Eric Heen.
He told us that a moth slam in Houston, Texas, where we partner with Houston Public Media.
Here's Eric live at the Mall.
When I was 26 years old, I fell in love with a woman who was 8 years older than I was.
She had just divorced an abusive man and there was rumors that she had issues with alcohol.
So this was not a good recipe for a healthy relationship, but I was in love and I moved
in with her.
To complicate things, she had two daughters, 12 and 14 years old.
The first thing, the youngest daughter Bridget said to me, the day I moved in, was my real
dad is going to kick your ass.
I just shrug that off.
I figured the mother would take care of the daughters, and I would have not much to do
with them kids.
But almost right away, these paternal instincts just kind of kicked in and
I'd get so I would want to help them with their homework or if boys came around I'd get really
protective. That's feeling kind of fatherly there. The older girl, she was very independent. No problems at all with her, but this younger girl Bridget
She terrorized me
She'd call me names. She'd call me but much all the time
And she would she'd come up behind me and hit me in the back as hard as she could and then run off
But I always figured it maybe she's just an act
and then maybe deep down she had a good heart.
I was tight went on the mother relapsed
into some alcohol issues.
So this interfered with her parental skills.
The father was a deadbeat and he had drinking issues as well.
So I looked at this bridge and I was thinking, you know, poor kids.
And so I'd do stuff.
I bought her a guitar and guitar lessons.
I'd go to her school programs and clap for her, trying to do what I could.
But all through this, she still treated me just like crap.
And but I thought, well, it's not that bad
because at least she's on the right track.
But in the long run, maybe I wasn't doing so good there
because after a while, she started skipping classes.
She got busted for shoplifting. Eventually she was
starting to use drugs. It didn't look good for Bridget. One day, one day the
older sister called me when I was at work and she said, Bridget's been arrested
and mom is not in any condition to handle a situation.
So I rushed over to the police station.
And juvenile officer told me that Bridget had gotten into a fight
with another girl, and that Bridget had pulled out a knife.
They brought me back to this room back there, she was sitting and as soon as she saw me,
she said, get him out of here, he's not my real dad.
So they brought me back out to the front.
They said, yeah, technically you're not the legal guardian, so get out.
Well, I went home and I looked around
and I thought, what the hell am I doing here? So I didn't love the mother for a long time.
Bridget hated my guts and I wasn't her father, right?
Then I decided, people don't change
and if you try to help them change you're only gonna waste your own life. Within
24 hours I was packed up and I was gone and I cut off all communications with them.
There's a little more to the story.
Ten years later, I'm living here in Houston,
got a whole new life.
About the time Facebook came out, I joined,
and right off the bat, I get this message,
and it's from Bridget.
She said that she'd been trying to find me for years, and that she said, call me right
away.
It's very important, and she had her phone number there.
And I looked at her Facebook page.
Here she's a realtor.
She's volunteers for all these community projects that she changed. I was wrong.
So I called the number and heard her voice, all these memories, flooding back. She said
that also her childhood, that I was the only one who really gave her much time and effort.
She said when she changed, that I was her role model for that.
She said, I meant this really great guy.
She said, he reminds me of you. And she said, I want you to come give me a way
that my wedding ceremony next month.
And I said, it's hell, yeah, I'll do it.
And I said, but why aren't you asking your real dad?
And she said, I am.
That was Eric Keane. Eric is a former Montana sheep rancher who ended up in Houston, Texas
in a career as a federal investigator. Now retired, he spends his days writing stories
and volunteering his services for his public radio station.
Bridget lives in Montana and has a family of her own
and Eric visits every year.
["Piano Music"]
You can share the stories from this hour or others from the Moth archive through our website, TheMoth.org.
Find us on social media too.
We're on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, etc. at TheMoth.
This hour has been about progress.
Taking the smallest step after all is still movement and maybe you'll
tell a story about the journey. Check out the Moss schedule on our website and
find out about our online slams and throw your name in the virtual hat. We
want to hear your stories. That's it for this episode of The Moss Radio Hour.
We hope you'll join us next time.
Your host for this hour was Sarah Austin Janess, Grand Slam coaching by Michelle Jolowski
and in the
Moth Teacher Institute by Kim Lopez and Nico Williams. The rest of the Moth
directorial staff includes Katherine Burns, Sarah Haberman, Jennifer Hickson and
Meg Bowles, production support from Emily Couch. Our pitch came from Jeff
Hinton. Moth Stories are true, as remembered and affirmed by the storytellers. Our
theme music is by the Drift.
Other music in this hour from the Magic Lantern,
still wagon symphonet, Julian Lodge, Keith Jarrett,
Jan Gabaric, Polly Donelson, and John Christensen,
Dave Douglas, Blue Dot Sessions, and Bill Fruzel.
You can find links to all the music we use at our website.
The Moth Radio Hour is produced by me, Jay
Allison, with Vicki Merrick, at Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. This
hour is produced with funds from the National Endowment for the Arts. The Moth
Radio Hour is presented by PRX for more about our podcasts for information on
pitching as your own story and everything else go to our website, TheMoth.org.
your own story and everything else go to our website, themoth.org.