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Auntie Died With Her Heels On E-mail
Saturday, 01 September 2007

by D. Cashon Klein

Aunt Esther was my Mother's Mother's sister. They were Calvins before they were married. They were Calvins of the John-Calvin-Protestant-Reformer variety. You couldn't tell it by Auntie, who I always remember in high heels, slacks, harlequin glasses and either blue or purple hair. John Waters would have loved her, except she wasn't fat.

My grandma Helen, her sister, was an exemplary Calvinist. She went to church every Sunday. She worked the farm in a dress, girdle and hose… usually held together with safety pins. She never touched a drop of alcohol or placed a cigarette to her lips. Helen and Esther were polar opposites, kind of like those little black and white Scottie dog magnets commonly found in highway restaurant vending machines.

Aunt Esther and her husband Phil, who was a baker, lived in our little town. Her kids had moved to California. She had a beauty parlor in the front room of their house and the robot-like dryers and medusa perm rods were fascinating to me. I'm not entirely sure she was fond of children, so I never pushed my luck when visiting. There were plenty of other people's houses where I could be a kid, like the one in which I fell three stories down a laundry chute. But we needed to be well behaved at Auntie's. She styled my hair once. I was about 5 or 6. I looked like a tiny Anita Bryant with my helmet-head bouffant. Mercifully, I was too young to be mortified.

We sometimes had family dinners there. If it was casual, we ate off the copious fiesta-ware. The food was pretty good at Auntie's, especially Phil's pastries. There we'd be, seated around the long table, the slight aroma of perm solution and cigarettes mixed with the smell of turkey and dressing. Grandma would grimace and wish she and grandpa were back at the farm. The food was picture perfect. Esther would set up the camera equipment and the tripod and the lights. We could not eat until everything was documented on film. After several "cuts" and "roll films," we were allowed to pass the cold food around to eat.

I usually sat next to Grandma. Her throat made funny gurgling noises sometimes. Auntie's throat made those noises too. It was the only thing, aside from parentage, that they had in common. Unfortunately, my throat makes those strange, gurgling noises also. Actually, come to think of it, the three of us could probably have become Tuvan throat singers. Whenever my throat makes the strange, involuntary sound, I am reminded of my lineage. (Why couldn't I have gotten Grandma's legs? Or Esther's ability to walk in heels?)

We have choppy documentaries of dinners and cousin Audrey modeling mink coats in front of the fireplace. There was an exceptionally long film of Esther and Phil's Indian-guided fishing trip to Canada. It consists mainly of about a ten-minute shot of a fish, maybe walleye, maybe trout, frying in a pan over the campfire and LOTS of shots of the Indian guide. (It was rumored that Auntie really liked him.) There she is in the film modeling a stylish camping ensemble, obviously instructing Phil how to hold the camera. I wondered how she'd get away from bears in her heels.

Esther and Phil moved to California to be close to Audrey and her husband Harold, a gifted architect who designed their home on the side of a canyon in Corona Del Mar. Audrey always reminded me of Doris Day and Harold of Frank Lloyd Wright, although I had no idea what Frank Lloyd Wright looked like. But I knew he was a famous architect, so Harold must look like him. After all, both of them had built homes around trees. Every year we would receive pictures of Audrey and Esther modeling new outfits in this home fit for movie stars. I think grandma was relieved to have the rest of her family all to herself and only have to see her sister every few years. It's kind of like when couples only see each other once in awhile because one drives an 18-wheeler. They get together about once a week, so they get along fine. I think I need a truck driver…

When grandma died we called Esther to break the news that her sister had passed away. It is my recollection that she said , "Well, so you think YOU had a bad day… let me tell you what happened to ME today…" That was Auntie; she was the original it's-all-about-me person.

Auntie turned 104 on July 25th this year. She died a few days later. The birthday card I sent to her, in time, came back yesterday with an error in the address. She outlived her husband, son and daughter. She had been living for many years in a congregate, adult facility in Huntington Beach. One of her friends was Steve Martin's mom, who came to her 90th birthday party. The nurses told my sister that she talked non-stop and insisted on wearing her high heels even after she broke her hip and became bed-ridden.

She died with her heels on.

Debbie Cashon Klein is a Safety Harbor resident.

 
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