My first day in kindergarten, I was talking to the little boy   sitting next to me in the semi-circle. Albert Fish didn't say much, I think, but   teacher, Miss Scocroft, was suddenly standing over me with a hand   towel.
  Well, poor Albert was punished in spite of his innocence. Miss   Scocroft tied the thin white hand towels over both our mouths and made us stand   in the centre of the room. My very first day in kindergarten, humiliated and   terrorized for speaking out of turn.
  As far back as I can remember, I talked. I always had a lot to   say and endless, endless questions. My Pop, George Rubin, was the target of most   of my questions - "Daddy, why? Daddy, why?" And often, "Daddy, buy."   
  I walked by my Daddy's side all the time. He took me on long   walks and we talked. I think these walks were in part for him, in part for me,   and in part to give my mother a break from my pestering. 
  Pop took me to second hand book stores, and we talked. He   took me to the movies, and we talked. "Ssshhh!". "Daddy, why? Daddy, who is   that? Daddy, why did the bad cowboy do that? Daddy, can we get   ice cream afterward?"
  When I was eleven, my Pop went to work at Metropolitan News at   1248 Peel Street at the corner of St. Catherine in our hometown, Montreal. I   called it "The Crossroads of the Nation". Our international newspaper store was   known all over the world. We received postcards addressed to "The news stand,   Montreal, Canada." Some compared us to the news stand at Times Square in New   York City, but our store was bigger than that and we carried much more   merchandise.
  After school, I would go downtown on the streetcar and work by   my father's side. I met people from all over the world and I started reading all   the magazines and digests and comics and pulps. 
  At fourteen I quit high school and went to work at Metro full   time. It was my alma mater, and my Pop was my mentor, my shelter, my teacher, my   friend. I was always with my father and I was always asking   questions.
  Uncle Sam, the owner of Metro News, disapproved of my talking   with the customers - movie actors, opera singers, politicians, impresarios,   writers, world travellers, animal trainers. So much to learn. Sam seemed to   always disapprove of me. He scolded me every time he caught me talking to a   customer. "Next! Next!", he would demand. "Serve the next customer." So I   questioned my own instincts and when I opened my mouth, I felt guilty - and   afraid Sam would send me home.
  It took decades, but I eventually began to see that people   valued what I had to say. Important people - a judge, a lawyer   - told me that people wanted to hear, to read what I had to say. Some   people started paying me to speak, and learned people   from far away places - doctors and scientists and ministers - started   paying me to teach them public speaking and even to help them write their   sermons and university papers. 
  And, as I studied the world and talked with many learned   people, I became acutely aware of how wrong, how dangerous it is to be silent,   how urgent and vital it is to speak up. I started to understand   that what I had been saying and writing for decades was important and   useful and respected. 
  The scared little girl in kindergarten could not have realized   that she was like an acorn, a young sprout, and time and experience would   nourish her skills, so that she might have important things to say to the   world.
  And then came the computer and the World Wide Web and blogs.   No more handwritten letters to the editors. No more typed articles in triplicate   with blue carbon paper. No more waiting to see if The Montreal Star or The   Montreal Gazette editors would publish. No more silence.  Although the   newspapers published hundreds of my Letters to the Editors, I was still limited   by the whims of the editors. 
  Now I write and publish my blogs day and night. I speak   without a muzzle. I write about what I think, what I know, what I have learned,   what I believe. As of today, more than 115,000 around the world have read my   blogs.
  Silence just won't do. 
  Phyllis Carter
  REMEMBERING MY FATHER, GEORGE RUBIN
http://phylliscartersjournal.blogspot.com/2011/04/remembering-my-father-george-rubin_768.html                     
http://phylliscartersjournal.blogspot.com/2011/04/remembering-my-father-george-rubin_768.html
METROPOLITAN NEWS AGENCY - AT THE CROSSROADS OF THE   NATION
http://phylliscartersjournal.blogspot.com/2011/03/metropolitan-news-agency-at-crossroads.html
  http://phylliscartersjournal.blogspot.com/2011/03/metropolitan-news-agency-at-crossroads.html
MEMORIES AROUND PARK AVENUE 1940's - 1950's. 
http://phylliscartersjournal.blogspot.com/2011/06/memories-around-park-avenue-montreal_8498.html
  http://phylliscartersjournal.blogspot.com/2011/06/memories-around-park-avenue-montreal_8498.html
UNCLE SAM AND THE BESWICK HORSE 
http://phylliscartersjournal.blogspot.com/2011/04/uncle-sam-and-beswick-horse_18.html
  http://phylliscartersjournal.blogspot.com/2011/04/uncle-sam-and-beswick-horse_18.html
A THING OF BEAUTY
  
1 comment:
Correction: The number of readers of my blogs (not including Mr. Nostalgia, Cliff Carter at http://cliffcartermrnostalgia.blogspot.com) as of today - October 10, 2013, is more than 114,700, not yet 115,000.
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