It amazes me to look back to those years when we 5 grown people Jerry, Steve who was 16, myself and the two inlaws all traveled in our cab over camper truck the entire approximately 1800 miles, one way. Today, Jerry & I have another new luxurious 40 foot motor coach, with slide outs for travels, our retirement house on wheels. But back in 1980 we thought we were right uptown with the camper. There is no way I would squeeze into any such accommodations today to travel and certainly not with four others, but back then we did. Steve rode mostly in the back except when he shared in the driving. We had 4 drivers, Jerry, Lyman who drove bus in Los Angeles, myself and Steve, so we planned to drive right along through the night, alternating drivers, stopping only for gas and making the journey in two days.
Arrival in Minnesota, left to right Lyman, Jerry and Florence |
Our return trip involved sightseeing stops and overnight rests at motels; we were not in such a hurry to return home and Lyman had wanted to see some of Yellowstone and other sights. He was enjoying not having to drive for once in his life and maybe a rare if not the only trip where he could just sight see. We returned through the Black Hills of South Dakota, the badlands, and Yellowstone. We have many pictures of this trip, but the following photo is one that sticks out for Jerry and me after something I read early this year, 31 years later. Lyman died in 1990 but Jerry's mother, Florence is still alive at 95, in the local nursing home with dementia but physically pretty good.
1980 at Yellowstone Lyman, Jerry, Florence |
Here is where appearances are most deceiving and most unrevealing. Florence had been in some sort of snit after we left Minnesota, none of us knew why, but she made it her mission to make sure everyone became miserable. When her misery was not shared by the rest of us, she declared herself ill and demanded that we get her home to California quickly. Jerry vehemently told her that we were going to see some things as planned and that we could stop at a local emergency room to determine what was wrong with her. Suddenly she was no longer ill. We never knew what had set her off, but went along our way and did tour Yellowstone, enjoying its wonderful sights.
Flash forward to 2011, when early in the year I was browsing through some of Florence's writings in the calendar/journals she kept, before we tossed them. There it was 1980, June and so I thought maybe she had some reflections about the trip. She had written very little about her sister's Golden wedding anniversary and other visits. But, she bitterly wrote how she did not want to leave Minnesota to just drive and see sights as Lyman and Jerry planned. This was not a surprising statement because she is a very self centered person, quite selfish at times, has been all through her life. Jerry recalled many bad decisions she made, over the years always thinking of herself and her needs. But then, reading the remarks she made along the journey home, came the revelation of how twisted and evil this woman could be.
It was in the South Dakota Badlands when Jerry, Steve, Lyman and I left the camper to walk along an area and just observe the vultures circling. Florence intended to suffer and had been saying very little, but said she did not want to see the dirty birds or the hills. So we all left her in the camper at the parking lot. And she wrote...."..Well I tossed his damn camera in the trash and I covered it up so they could not see it. While they walked along I saw to it that he would not have any pictures......" Although nothing really surprises me about MIL at this point, I was astonished and called Jerry to read it himself. He too was astonished and commented something like, "Well that old witch did it, that's what happened to Lyman's camera!"
She never said a word when the four of us searched and backtracked several miles looking in vain for that camera. Yet she very well knew what she had done. Why? Who knows? Jerry said, that explained her "tantrum" along the trip, not getting things her way. And yet, he admitted over a lifetime now he can look back and see how she was manipulative and vengeful. I consider it downright mean. So today when people may think, what a sweet old lady, we know differently for many reasons, one being the missing camera. While we wondered if she ever told Lyman what she did, we think not. That is the story hidden behind this photo. We will never look at it the same way again.
As always, click on the title to this post to go over to the Sepia site and see others' photos and tales.