Read I'm Down: A Memoir Online
Authors: Mishna Wolff
I remember it starting shortly after my sixth birthday. Without looking up from his dominoes game, he said to me, “You need to stop tryin’ to hang out with grown folk and get out and play with the neighborhood kids.” The four learned black men he played with sat at the dining room table nodding in agreement, but I wasn’t thrilled with the idea. I didn’t really know the neighborhood kids, but they all hung out on the end of the block, being bigger than me and knowing each other really well. What I was a fan of was hanging out with my daddy. Mom drove a city bus and Dad took care of me and my little sister, Anora, during the day. Sometimes he would have a job doing construction, and we would go hammer nails and stuff until someone got hurt. But usually he was entertaining these four guys from the neighborhood: Reggie Dee, Eldridge, Big Lyman, and Delroy. And I just didn’t get why he wouldn’t want me there, too—I was fun.
My first birthday
.
My dad put his dominoes in order as he continued, “You know what you need to do?”
I had a feeling he was gonna tell me.
“You need to get out and make friends with the sisters.”
“You mean the girls out front of Latifa’s house?”
My dad nodded.
“Why?” I asked.
“You may need those girls someday, and . . . your neighborhood is where you live.”
“What do I do?”
“Just go introduce yourself,” he said. Then, waving his hands around, he added, “But not like you’re scared . . . like you’re doing them a favor.” I knew this had something to do
with being cool, but I was scared and I didn’t see how I was doing anyone a favor.
“Those girls out there would be lucky to have you hangin’ with them,” Reggie Dee said.
“How come?” I asked. I liked Reggie.
“Well . . . ,” Reggie said, thinking.
“I’m smart,” I said. “Pretty smart for six.”
“Yeah,” Reggie said apprehensively. “But that’s not something you want to brag about.”
“Oh.” I didn’t get popularity at all. “Then what do I have?”
“Well . . . ,” my dad said. “You’re my daughter, for one. That’s one thing right there.” I waited for “two,” but he just looked angry that I was still there.
I walked out of the house toward the corner, where I saw a group of kids. The clear leader of the group was a chubby girl we called Nay-Nay. She had her honey-colored thighs shoved into a pair of Day-Glo bicycle shorts two sizes too small, and her fat piggy toes peeked out of a pair of matching plastic jellies. Jellies were a plastic ballet-style shoe that was popular in the neighborhood, but my mom wouldn’t let me have them, because she said they were bad for my high arches.
“Hi,” I said. “I’m Mishna. I live up the street. Do you want to be my friend?” Awful—I didn’t say it as though I was doing them a favor. I said it like I was scared.
Nay-Nay looked me up and down and then said, “Do you have any Barbies?”
“Sure,” I said. Then asked, “What’s a Barbie?”
Everyone looked at me like I was on crack, and Nay-Nay condescended, “Barbie is a doll. Do you have any Barbies?”
“Yes!” I said defiantly. “I do!”
“Well, get them . . . and you can hang out.” Nay-Nay said, putting her hand on her hip and blocking me from addressing anyone else in her group. But I stupidly stood there, not realizing that the conversation was over. I didn’t exist until I had that doll. Nay-Nay smacked her lips.
“Oh,” I said nonchalantly. “I’ll go get my Barbie.” And crept away.
I tore through the house past the dominoes game and into my room and began rifling through my dolls. I set them all on the bed in order to pick which of them, if any, was a Barbie doll. It was hard for me to tell what any brand-name toys were, because my mom didn’t let me watch commercial television. She said it rotted my brain, but I half suspected it was because not seeing commercials made it easier to be poor.
Making a quick and instinctual decision, I grabbed my favorite doll to bring back to the girls, which was Tommy, a stuffed turtle that someone had made for me. I tucked him carefully under my arm being very mindful of his head, because that’s where turtles are most vulnerable. And I hurried back upstairs—scurrying past my dad, who was in a shouting match with Lyman over whether or not he was cheating, and back out the front door. I didn’t know if I had the right doll, but I was carrying the best doll I owned, and I was pretty sure that everyone would be impressed with my hot-shit turtle.
The neighborhood kids were all standing in front of Latifa’s house fully into some sort of Barbie orgy. Hot, wild, Barbie-on-Barbie action, complete with sound effects like, “uh, uh, uh.” And besides discovering lesbianism, I found that what I was holding could not have been further from a Barbie.
“What’s that, whitey?” Nay-Nay asked, pointing to my doll.
“Tommy,” I said. “He’s a turtle.”
“You thought you could bring your broke-ass turtle down here to play Barbies?”
I shrugged.
And with that, Nay-Nay began cackling in a way that quickly caught on with the rest of the group. I just stood on the corner holding Tommy the Turtle as five black girls holding plastic white women laughed at my stupidity.
I was desperate and argued, “Mine’s a Barbie doll, too. . . . It’s just a different kind of Barbie!”
To which Latifa, a girl a year older than me, exclaimed, “That ain’t no Barbie doll! That’s something out of the Goodwill goodie box!” And when I didn’t walk away, Nay-Nay called me whitey again and gave me an embarrassing little shove in the direction of my house.
I marched back into the house and straight up to my mom, who had just gotten home from work. She was still in her work uniform, snacking on cheese and crackers at the kitchen counter, wearing her usual after-work expression of tired mixed with worry and coffee. She was deep in her cheddar and Ak-Mak, and looked surprised when I pounded the counter next to her and exclaimed, “Mom, I need a Barbie!”
“What about Tommy?” she asked, gesturing in the direction of my turtle. I threw Tommy on the ground.
“What about him?” I asked in a tone I hoped Dad didn’t overhear.
“You know, now you’ll never make turtle mother of the year.”
“I don’t care about my dumb turtle anymore!”
That got her attention. My mom turned to me and shook her head almost as if she knew this day had been coming and
said in a calm and sincere voice, “Honey, oppressed people of the world make Barbie so a big corporation can get rich. Now, is it really worth that kind of karma for a doll?”
My mother, father, and baby me—looking skeptical.
I tried to respond. “Um,” I said. “Well . . .” But I knew I couldn’t argue with karma and oppressed people in the Philippines.
A few days later, I walked out of the front door as my dad was putting the finishing touches on a tire swing in the front yard. “What’s that?” I asked.
He finished his knot and said, “Tire swing. I thought it would bring some other kids over here to play with you.” He added, “You’ll see. This’ll be
the spot
.”
“You think this will help me make friends?” I asked.
“Hells yeah,” my dad said. And then pointing to the swing, asked, “Who wouldn’t want to be on that swing?”
I guessed
me
was the answer, because
that swing
scared me.
But my dad really knew about this stuff. So even though
that swing
just looked like something that was too high off the ground and not really
clean
clean, I knew its secret would reveal itself. And, sure enough, before my dad was done testing out his knot, Latifa had come over.
“So,” I said, looking awkwardly at Latifa. “You wanna go first?”
“Okay,” she said, and got on the swing. She swung for a little bit and then helped hoist me up and pushed for a while. And I was surprised to find that hanging out with Latifa when she was away from Nay-Nay was pretty nice. I also learned that her favorite word was
daaang!
She started every sentence with it. “Daaang, you sure have some nappy hair.” Or, “Daaang, why your parents dress you like a boy?” Or, “Daaang, you don’t got no booty at all!”
Latifa and I spent an afternoon on the swing. I even tried throwing
dang
around a couple times, saying, “Dang, I like swinging—dang.” Or “Dang, I’m swinging fast—dang.” And when it started to get dark, I climbed into the house exhausted from fun.
But the next day, Latifa came back with Jason, Nay-Nay, Dorina, and three new kids. They immediately made it clear “my turn” was never again, and they found every way possible to turn a swing into a weapon. First they invented “swing bombing” where one person hurls the swing at a
friend
, causing them to bruise or fall over. And then they changed the game to twisting the rope up as tight as possible, and everybody piling on the swing and releasing it to let it spin. They spun at a nauseating speed while simultaneously trying to throw each other off onto the sidewalk. Then they would laugh and wipe their wounds and get back on to go another round. Nay-Nay pushed Jason
so hard that with the added centrifugal force of the swing, he cleared the parking strip and landed in the street. “Dang!” he said. “I just got my hair cut!” Then he grabbed her by her shirt and tackled her to the ground. I stared as Jason and Nay-Nay took turns smushing each other’s head into the parking strip. That is, until Jason looked up at me and said plainly, “What are you looking at, whitey?” And I answered his question by running into the house.
That was when Anora, my three-year-old sister, tottered out the front door, consumed with excitement, and began crawling down the front steps feetfirst as fast as she could. She was wearing a striped T-shirt and her curly dark hair was pulled in a ponytail over her head like Pebbles from
The Flinstones
. And, having cleared the stairs, she instinctively moved to the center of the action like a tank. Her blue eyes were ecstatic. I watched her from the dining room window, afraid that she would get hurt or banished or made fun of. But she just stood next to Dorina clapping her hands together, laughing, “Again! Go again!” In fact, she was being so adorable that Latifa walked over to her from the opposite side of the swing to try to help her up onto the swing. But Anora just screamed and hit Latifa’s arm. And rather than getting angry, Latifa begged Anora to let her pick her up. And watching the scene in front of me I couldn’t figure out how Anora was a sister and I wasn’t, but she was my sister. And then Mom got home.
Her expression was already frustrated as she pulled her car up to a gang of rowdy kids playing king of the mountain on my tire swing. And as she parked, her face went from frustrated to frightening. She got out of the car, glared at the kids, and silently picked up my little sister as she marched into the house. She set my sister down in the dining room before she walked up to Dad.
“John, what’s going on outside?” she asked.
“Oh . . . that’s Mishna’s tire swing,” he replied, not looking up from his paper.
“How is it Mishna’s?”
“Well, damn,” Dad said. “It’s not my fault that she’s up in here!”
“John, those kids have taken over our front yard!” Mom was usually afraid of Dad, but the fact that he was still reading emboldened her. “Is that your idea of helping Mishna?”
“Listen,” Dad said, “the girl needs to learn how to fight for her shit.”
“There are six of them,” Mom said. “And they are twice as big as her.”
Dad looked up from the paper finally—to make a point—and said, “Yeah . . . that’s how life is.” And with that, Mom walked out the door, grabbed a saw from the garage, marched through the gang of kids, and cut down the tire swing. I guess she didn’t care about popularity as much as Dad did.
This wasn’t bad news to me. It meant the next day I got to stay in the house with my daddy, which was all I had wanted to do in the first place. And while Dad and his main crew sat and played dominoes, I tried to make myself as small and fly-on-the-wallish as possible, while still pretending like I was one of them. When beers were passed around, I shook my head as though I were declining their invitation. When they picked their dominoes, I was always, “Just sitting this one out.” And when they yelled about football or politics, I scratched my chin as though they had a good point, but was still forming my opinion. There was also a lot of yelling at Dad for cheating.