Time of happiness, cz.1

Stanisław Barszczak; Time of happiness

I remember Times full of happiness, simple pleasures, and giving-despite how poor I was. At Christmas my memory was clouded by my innocence. So, I remember the friendship I had with Miss Lucy. The 40-year-old homely dressed aunt from Ząbkowice, then Szczecin, considers 7-year-old Stasio her best friend. We spent time with each other because we had had no other friends or less than several. She called me by my real name always. The aunt get out much, cares a lot for her appearance, is watching television…We begin the routine by gathering pecans for the fruitcakes. Once day with the aunt and the uncle Georg her husband we went to a village behind the city and spend three hours in the forest filling an old baby carriage with the nuts that have fallen on the ground in the friend’s orchard. The next morning the aunt and I go to buy the cherries, pineapples, raisins, walnuts, and other ingredients. We also pay a visit to Miss Greshta to buy the whiskey, necessary for the fruitcakes. Buying alcohol is illegal where they live. The aunt says the fruitcakes must have whiskey…She takes me to bar and buffet that Miss Greshta owns. It is public knowledge that people have been murdered and cut up there. There were many people there. But these empty people had had nothing to do at that time.

By Christmas Eve the aunt and me are broke. I draws paper ornaments. The aunt cuts them out and hangs them on the tree. Once we finish decorating, the aunt declares it is the most beautiful tree. We make presents for everyone. Women relatives get color scarves. Male relatives get syrup that can be used to clear a cough or heal ailments after hunting. Although we would love to get each other elaborate gifts, I and the aunt secretly make kites to give each other for Christmas. For the past two years we have given each other kites, so it isn’t a huge surprise. The aunt is a little hurt at only being able to get me a kite. Nobody understood the working of fame, upside and downside, better than the aunt. That’s right, I confirmed, and didn’t need to add nothing. I like to remember an aunt Lucy the way she was in those last years, the years of her marriage and greatest happiness, when she became the world’s most dreamed about woman, not just Poland’s Sweetheart like Christine Janda but the beloved of the whole aching planet. Her bright hair would never escape hairdresser. Now what’s gone is gone, aunt Lucy would say without regret of the old days. Those were the days when the first crossover stars were making their way through the firmament: Anna Nehrebecka, Anna Seniuk, Francis Pieczka, Janus Gajos, Thadeus Lomnicki, Georges Stuhr, Peter Fronczewski. Then, I would say, Christmas morning our pair suffers through a huge breakfast with relatives. I remember from my childhood a visiting of Daniel Olbrychski in our common house- Community center at Ząbkowice a few days after display, making of movie titled ‘Deluge’ of Henrik Sienkiewicz. I have a several movies with his roles on alive memory, but it has returned no justice him. I think humor is a way of holding off how awful life can be, to protect yourself. Somebody like Mark Twain thought life was awful, but held the awfulness at bay with jokes and so forth and finally couldn’t do it anymore, but of course his wife died, his best friend died and two of his daughters had died. If you live long enough, a lot of people close to you are going to die. What do you think happens when we die? For a few days I’m watching the results of the Haiti’s earthquake on television and I can change my mind. For we behave from time to time as well as we can without any expectation of rewards and punishments and an afterlife, and so I don’t think there is one. My mother didn’t think there was one; my friends didn’t think there was one; it was enough that they were alive. I love sleep, don’t you? It’s been possible for politicians and movie-makers to encourage us we’re always good guys. Somebody says: the Second World War absolutely hat to be fought. I wouldn’t have missed it for the world. But we never talk about the people we kill. This is never spoken of. God knows, that’s the soul seeking some relief. There are places they have no conscience. Is it possible to relieve in our hospitals of today? We are saying laughter is health. I suppose there was laughter of a very ghastly kind by victims in Auschwitz. There is a superficial sort of laughter. There’s terrible tragedy there somehow, as these people are too sweet to survive in this world and they are in terrible danger all the time. They could be so easily killed. You imagine I’ve been in Warsaw by the train for the first time in July 1978 year. I saw that city with my friend Adam T. Warsaw’s condition during the world war II was particularly interesting. German engineers undermined all the prominent buildings. That’s why there was nothing left. The German wanted a Slavic capital. I think I was the luckiest guy in the world. I wouldn’t have missed it. I got to see so much. I had to be successful, and I had to be successful early. As I mentioned already I later credited Joseph Mikolajtis, an Polish teacher at Minor Seminary School in Częstochowa, with being the first person to recognize my writing talent and to give me guidance. With his encouragement I wrote poems and stories for myself. Later on the parsonage still, I was fortunate to have it, especially since I was determined never to set a studious foot inside a college classroom. I felt that either one was or wasn’t a writer, and no combination of professors could influence the outcome. I still think I was correct, at least in my own case. My first text was published in the school paper while I was still in my early twenties in Seminary, but I squandered lots of my time, talent and health on the pursuit of celebrity, riches and pleasure. The think about people like me is that we always knew what we were going to do. Many people spend half their lives not knowing. But I was a very special person, and I had to have a very special life. I was not meant to work in an office or something, though I would have been successful at whatever I did. But I always knew that I wanted to be a writer and that I wanted to be rich and famous. My texts were most of the volumes of short stories, reportage and novellas that followed, including “Cousin of flying Escadron”. But a book that perhaps will solidify my claim to literary fame wouldn’t still go on. On the parsonage of Konopiska I met Miss Helen G. who lived for the church. Several things about her life irritated me. For instance, her voice: she sounded always as though she were bidding in a poker game. Miss Helen went to me at Rzasnia also to include to role of Saint Nikolai. Once I remember the priest John Czajor from Rzasnia he has spoken directely to the child with a special emphasis about Christmas Eve, as if he would have been told about my way of arts in the future. But now you imagine a sun morning in late August more than eleven years ago. The scene is a kitchen of a rambling house in a small town of Ząkowice. I stand at the kitchen window and proclaim that it’s lovely weather. This is delightful news to my friend, Richard S. who today with his car went to me. Such weather signals the beginning of the holiday season for all my best friends-priests. On year 2005 my mother died. In that period I felt like “a spiritual orphan, like a turtle on its back.” I was so different from everyone, so much more intelligent and sensitive and perceptive. I was having fifty perceptions a minute to everyone else’s five. I felt yet that nobody was going to understand me, going to understand what I felt about things. I guess that’s why I started writing seriously. At least on paper I could put down what I thought. My texts were an attempt to exorcise demons: an unconscious, altogether intuitive attempt, for I was not aware, except for a few incidents and descriptions, of its being in any serious degree autobiographical. Rereading it now, I find such self-deception unpardonable.” Many of my stories, notably “Song of a proud knight”, which paid loving tribute to my mother, who succored me in my childhood loneliness, were based on my recollections of life and around Ząbkowice. On August 2007 year I have been in the holy Land. I conceived the whole pilgrimage as a short book titled “Petra and the holy Land”. That book was an important event for me. While writing it, I realized I just might have found a solution to what had always been my greatest creative quandary. I wanted to produce a novel, something on a large scale that would have the credibility of fact, the immediacy of film, the depth and freedom of prose, and the precision of poetry. Now I try to be careful. But I still get mail. And my fan mail is the size of Quick Study of the Hembree’s family from USA (see biblediscoverytv.com). The whole bible is here. Today I’m completely in print and how the hell I did it, I don’t know. I am trying writing another book. I didn’t expect to live this long. As you know it’s far from me a remembering of the details. In a usage of metaphors I was not led a part of a bright jokes or grotesquely a darkness. I express it I feel, I suppose, with an extreme truthfulness and a receipt. It’s seemed me always I’m more informed than others about a battle of life. So, I wanted to say something even imperfectely. As one truth exists, one pacience, mercy and courage. For that reason something must recede for a goodness of all. Unfortunately I am too young to be indifferent for a calling of politics but too old that stand in range or remain insensitive. I have a considerable talent, but I am forty nine years old. You may accept this blush of an inconvenience of sincerely you devoted me. For I wrote these words in worry and devotion, towards the reinforcement of hearts.

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