Tag Archives: family dynamics

Family: Momma Mabley- Samuels/Smith

Jackie Moms Mabley 1968
Jackie Moms Mabley 1968

Moving forward I knew that I needed to remove myself from the environment and family of my birth and that if I remained, I would cease to exist. So, at age fifteen I developed an exit strategy. I had been baby-sitting for the Momma Mabley family for several months.  Momma Mabley (not her real name) has definite views on computer privacy. Now in her 70s she does not believe in any form of internet exposure. So, to protect her privacy and with the respect and love I continue this piece with the name we used as young teens “Momma Mabley” a name captured from a wonderful comedian Loretta Mary Aiken from the 50s who’s stage name was, Jackie Mabley, and in the 1970s, becoming known as “Moms” because she was a “Mom” to many other comedians in the 1950s and 1960s. She came out as a lesbian at the age of twenty-seven, becoming one of the first triple-X rated comedians on the comedy circuit.  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moms_Mabley

Mom’s family lived in the apartment building adjacent to our townhouse. I don’t quite remember how I came in contact initially, but at a time when I needed a job they offered to pay me for looking after the four children, Martin, Tony, Twila and Bobbie all under the age of 10. John Smith, was Momma Mabley’s partner an educated IBM employee. Mom originally from Nova Scotia believed in a strong family and she was the heart and soul of this family. She was tough, and firm when making all decisions regarding those in her world. To my eyes viewing this family from the outside in was an… ah ha moment.  This family had love, caring and absolutely no violence that I could see on the surface.  It allowed me to  believe that families could exist in a normal world free from abuse and violence and I  got a glimpse of how a normal family would interact with each other. Momma Mabley took me under her wing and provided me with a safe haven away from my violent and destructive home for even just a few hours in a week. So, I loved my times of babysitting. I cherished the normalcy.

My father was not happy with me being in someone else’s home I’m sure it was because he was worried that I might tell and I do believe he was  intimated by Momma Mabley. She was a very strong personality and not afraid to get into someone’s face, if she felt her children or her world was threatened her reactions were swift and decisive and she was well aware of my father’s tendency towards violence. One evening while I was sitting he came to the door in a drunken stupor and dragged me out leaving the kids alone. I was horrified, and didn’t know what to do or how to explain this embarrassing situation. Fortunately, Momma Mabley and John arrived home early having been told about the situation. I vaguely remember a confirmation between my father, Momma Mabley and John over this and I wasn’t allowed to babysit for them for some time.

Mom’s family moved away to Scarborough and when that move happened I knew, I had to move too. So, just before my sixteen birthday, I contacted them and went to visit and told them my story [off which, they knew most] and asked if it would be possible for me come live with them. Momma Mabley and John, took only a brief moment to discuss and come back to me with a positive yes and over the next few weeks my escape plan was implemented. The actual day of my leaving was so traumatic for my siblings I would be leaving behind. As much as, I wanted to stay for them I knew I could not, this was about my survival and at the time, I thought that if I can get out maybe I’ll be able to help them someday.   As for my father, at sixteen, his power and control over me ended and my new life began.

You would think that the transition out of Regent Park would have been easy, but it was not. I grew up for sixteen years with no social skills, running wild, escaping out of the house whenever I felt like it and basically had no rules. So, to be brought into the fold of the Mom’s family with sit down dinners, curfews, and oh my … clean hygiene I was out of my depth. I remember Moms dropping of body care products in my room and later explaining how I needed to take care of myself and shower every day. That was most embarrassing. The rules, I felt like I was smothering under them. home after school, dinner at the table, eat with the proper utensils, help with dinner preparations, and clean up after dinner. Handle my own wash and of course I was now the live-in babysitter who looked after the kids after school until parents arrived home from work. Yes, for me it was difficult, stressful and I rebelled by leaving and going out on my own, staying away for months and then returning when things got tough [which it always did] .

No matter how many times I left, I was always welcomed back with open arms and a little lost pride. It took me many years to learn that this family loved me and I was one of it owns. They acknowledged me for who I was unconditionally along with another foster sister Kathy and Mom’s had the capacity to wrap her world around each one of us wayward children and bring us into the fold and never gave up on us.

Today, this family of eight children, two of us fosters under the guidance of Momma Mabley have each grown into respectable adults with families of our own. Mom’s extraordinary family has expanded to include nine grandchildren and four great grandchildren. Our best times as a family are when we all get together to celebrate the traditions of our society like Thanksgiving this weekend which for us is a major family affair. Complete with good food, lots of children, friends and love. For me being wrapped up in all this warmth throughout the years helped me grow and become the person I am today. Love from Momma Mabley, from my adopted siblings and of life moved me forward and propelled me into being a part of life normal and I will forever be grateful for the home and sense of strong family tie. It was not the family I was born into but, it is the family I chose to belong too.

Happy Thanksgiving

Family: Hedgeman

Time to talk about my families and the process of recreating myself over the years, so let’s start at the beginning I was born into the family name of Hedgeman. My mother was born in Ireland and my father a black Canadian born in the Welland, Ontario area. His mother my grandmother and grandfather were American’s originally from the south and traced back far enough I would have an ancestor who landed in Buffalo, New York as a slave and transported to Canada through the Underground Railroad.

The story of my biological parents is a tragedy. My mother was married with two children and my father had just returned from a tour in France during the 2nd World War. However, their lives from that chance encounter would forever be changed and filled with hurt, pain and sacrifice. My mother became pregnant and unsure as to whose child it was, she and my father had to make a decision. As you can imagine, my father’s family being the only family in the area of colour how to explain, a cream coloured baby to her husband and the community that tells all and knows all at a time in society where interracial relationships were not acceptable. So, they ran off to Toronto and there my brother Ronnie was born.

Ronnie came into this world handicapped in so many ways, he was white. Which angered my father [who now feels he was duped]and he had Cerebral palsy defined as a central motor dysfunction affecting muscle tone, posture and movement resulting from a permanent, non-progressive defect or lesion of the immature brain. Cerebral palsy can occur during pregnancy, during childbirth or after birth up to about age 3. He died institutionalized and alone having been shut away by his siblings who had control of his life and finances after my mother passed away.

I don’t know when my father started drinking, but I do know that he was an alcoholic, and drank on the weekends when he wasn’t working. I’ll give him that he always worked and provided the basic necessities, but he was a very violent and angry man and took it out on his partner and children throughout the years. My mother once told me that Ronnie was her punishment and I did not understand it at the time, but do today. When I was older I remember many a night after a beating my father would throw my mother and brother out in the cold of winter, calling them white trash.

As the first child for my father, I become the number one daughter. I was his and during my early childhood, I loved him. He worked as a truck driver for the Ontario Foods terminals and he would take me everywhere all over Ontario to all the local farms. I loved meeting all the farmers, getting to taste produce fresh out the fields and travelling the Ontario Roads. This happy period lasted only until I started school and became more aware of the violence in my home.

Tom was next, the heart of my heart. He was brave, defiant, and grew up hating my mother for her weakness. He struggled during his teenage and young adult years with the violence of our environment, and drug addiction. Fortunately, for him a short stint in jail and he knew that was not a place that he really wanted to end his life and he married, got clean and settled after 25 years.

Bobbie [Roberta}, my one and only biological sister so tragic was her life. So much jealousy between us over the years with drugs and alcohol in the way running interference of any real relationship she and I could have had. Given several opportunities to get out she just did not have the strength and in the end she lost her only son and her life and I’m just glad that I had the opportunity to be there for her when she passed last year.

Terry, was unique and disturbed. As a teenager, he had acquired a ventriloquist puppet and he would go down to Yonge Street and street vend. This puppet was an extension of him and he would always talk to you through this damn puppet. He also loved to climb buildings; I’m talking about tall apartment buildings climbing from balcony to balcony and as an experiment he would lock my youngest brother in boxes, to see if he could get out like Houdini. I think it was his way of coping with the insanity of our lives and in the end his life ended from a drop of 13  floors.

And finally, the baby who unfortunately has followed in my father’s footsteps with the violence and drinking and I’m sure like my father will live a long life inflicting hurt and pain on those closest to him.

As for my mother having survived eight live births and two miscarriages, she was as much a victim and a survivor as her children, caught in an abusive relationship at a time when there was no such thing as women’s shelters, or support for women of violence. The abuse of that era was kept behind closed doors although everyone was aware. I believe now, she did the best that she was capable of and towards the later part of her life she became a pillar for her community helping initiate support programs and push through the proposal for the now Regent Park Health Centre [actually lobbying Queens Park]. At her funeral in 1997,  I was told by a number of women what a wonderful women my mother was, how proud she was of me and how much work she had done for the community and to my surprise last year I was able to see that on the wall in the Health Centre is a big mural with her face smiling down into the waiting area watching over those who come for care.

Dysfunctional was an understatement for this family and out of six children only three of us have survived. This family was toxic and destructive and survival for me was based on being able to remove myself emotionally through my dolls as a child and later as a teen through school, athletics and art. I was an accomplished track and field runner, jumper and competitive swimmer. I don’t think either of my parents ever saw me run. I would just disappear for a day and return home with ribbons and trophies for which I’d hide in my room. At our around grade four I figured out that to get out I needed to learn and with the help of Mrs. Forbes at Park School, who somehow recognized the survival need in me and showed me the possibilities of life with an education and a way to be normal. I grabbed hold and never let go and will forever be grateful to her for opening my eyes and showing and giving me a future that against all odds I survived…

Grandmother, Uncle Bob & Sheilagh
Grandmother, Uncle Bob & Sheilagh
Sheilagh, Bobbie, Tom, Terry
Sheilagh, Bobbie, Tom, Terry
Terry, Alan
Terry, Alan
Sheilagh
Sheilagh
Tom, Father, Ronnie
Tom, Father, Ronnie
Sheilagh & Ronnie  Mom Ronnie
Sheilagh & Ronnie
Mom Ronnie