Thursday, September 20, 2007

Ruth and Ernest go out to lunch


inspired by my own damn blog, i'm reading a wonderful memoir right now called "Metro Stop Dostoevsky: Travels in Russian Time," by a woman named Ingrid Bengis. her parents were russian immigrants to America, and she now lives in both Maine and in St. Petersburg. (she must like winter.)

her memoir is about being in russia in 1991--the same year i was there--and so in my self-absorbed way i'm finding it fascinating, finding all kinds of little connections between her trip and mine, places she and i both visited. (the admiralty bar in leningrad, for instance, where i had drinks with three young people who were leaving the next day for their compulsory month of picking potatoes on a communal farm. or the dom knigi book store, where i bought a giant triptych propaganda poster of mother russia. the poster now hangs in the garage of my friend roadguy, because there is no wall big enough in our house for it. in this picture, it is hanging in my beloved hilltop house in duluth.)

a passage that bengis wrote about a russian friend being overwhelmed with choices when visiting america reminded me of something that happened when ernest and ruth were in town.

as you recall, ruth and ernest came to minnesota in the summer of 1992, after a lifetime in russia. one day we went to Sir Ben's for lunch--a casual, faux-british pub. you can sit at umbrella tables outside and watch the sailboat regatta on lake superior on summer wednesday evenings.

it seemed a relaxed and pleasant place to eat. but from the moment we walked in the door, i could feel their unease. it started when we walked up to the deli counter. spread before us were all kinds of meats: ham, turkey, pastrami, salami, roast beef; and vegetables: tomatoes, sprouts, lettuce, cucumbers, onions, green peppers.

ernie said, "gimme a cheese sandwich." he sounded more abrupt than usual; usually, he was a charmer with women, calling them "lassie," and smiling his comical smile.

the woman behind the deli counter said, "pumpernickel, whole wheat, deli rye, or white?"

he looked confused. "white," he said, and i got the feeling he said it only because it was the last thing she had named.

"what kind of cheese?" the woman asked. "swiss, american, pepper jack, or mozzarella?"

ernie was quiet a moment. i looked at ruth, but she was staring off into the distance and was clearly not going to be any help.

"just give me a cheese sandwich," ernie said.

the deli woman looked at me. "swiss," i said.

"mustard, durkees, mayo, or --"

but ernie was gone. he just walked away, and now he was standing with his back to us, staring out at the boats bobbing on lake superior. his hands were jammed into his pockets. i could tell by the set of his shoulders that he was tense. "put mustard on it," i said, guessing. "and some tomato."

i'd been to russia twice by then, and to cuba once. i'd watched people line up on a leningrad street, not knowing what they were queueing up for, just assuming that whatever it was would be something they could use. i'd walked down the street in petrozavodsk and noticed that every single woman i passed wore the exact same shade of lipstick. i'd been in stores where the shelves were virtually empty of consumer goods, and i'd wondered how people got along in a place where there was nothing to buy.

it had never occurred to me to consider the opposite: the reaction one might have in going from a place where there was no choice to a place where there was nothing but choice. i suppose i thought it would be something wonderful, the freedom to choose, the abundance to choose from. but how do you suddenly make choices after a lifetime of not being allowed to? it's not necessarily freeing; it is more likely to be frustrating, overwhelming, even paralyzing.

i don't remember, now, what ruth ordered. i do remember that she was able to handle it with a little more grace than ernie. she and i brought our red plastic baskets of food over to the table where he stood, and after a moment he sat down. he picked up his cheese sandwich and took a bite. i didn't know what to say, so i didn't say anything. after awhile, he did. "there's just too much," he said. and i didn't have to ask him what he meant.

22 comments:

willowtree said...

I'm afraid I have to agree with Ernie on this one.

Jim said...

First I'll say that, as you know, I love these Russia stories, even though there are no dogs in them, and I love this one too.

Second: Very, very cool new header, or whatever that thing at the top is called that has the blog title and the photos of Riley and Boscoe.

Rima said...

So? where's the latin post? quid pro quo... I can't even remember what this one means.

congrats on your very handsome award, created by my very good friend Frances, a very handsome woman herself, in more ways than one.

Very interesting post - I can completely relate to how overwhelming it can be to observe "normal" life when you come from (for lack of a better phrase) a parallel universe, at least in my case. I mean that figuratively, I'm not technically insane :-)

Enjoying your blog, lots to catch up on.

Bobbie said...

We do have too many choices here. I can sort of understand what Ernie was feeling because I get overwhelmed myself at times.

Flowerpot said...

yes, I know that feeling of overwhelment - er have I invented a new word?!

Posie Rosie said...

It must have been difficult on so many levels, faced with so much choice and such a vast array of food, when in other parts people are starving, to see such excess, must have been completely mind boggling. The rain has arrived here too, just like your little video.

Crystal Jigsaw said...

We take too much for granted. Some people don't have that choice.

Crystal xx

Flowerpot said...

laurie pls come adn pick up an award!

wakeupandsmellthecoffee said...

Americans are very spoiled for choice, and can forget that it's not like that in the rest of the world. Is Ernie still alive? Do you keep in touch with them?

laurie said...

ruth and ernie came over as part of a group of a dozen american finns. i remember being with another woman in the group when she went to a drug store in duluth to buy a toothbrush. she actually got angry at the array of dozens of kinds of toothbrushes, all colors, all different bristles, etc., and swept out of the store in a huff without buying anythiing.

it's interesting to me that so often their confusion and feelings of being overwhelmed came out as anger.

jim: thanks--i've been wanting to put a picture in that header for months, with no success. it finally occurred to me yesterday to try firefox instead of safari, and it worked no problem.

rima: welcome! tell frances for me that that award is beautiful.

coffee: ernie died a couple of years ago. i stay in touch with ruth. she sent me his memoirs earlier this year, and i am working with her to try to get them published.

they are unfinished, so it's going to be tricky.

flowerpot: wow! thanks! i will!

Sweet Irene said...

Yes, there is just too much, that is a very astute observation and there is so much of it going to waste. Half eaten every things, because there is just too much. Over abundance, A cornucopia of food, a never ending banquet, an abundance to end all abundances. America the land of more than plenty, you don't know how good you have it there, with your huge sandwiches and your big shakes and your pickles and onions and bags of chips. And all the ketchup and relish and mustard you want, just throw the rest away in the garbage. Food basket of the world, remember how lucky you are while you overeat your too large portions of food. Your Mega size burgers and burritos. Don't forget that too much is too much in any part of the world. even there where you are.

ped crossing said...

It makes me think of the people that go on organization shows that don't even know what they have. We just have too much stuff and I think that is partly because we have so much choice that we buy too much because we can't decide.

I am working on only have the things I need and the things I really love.

Kaycie said...

My mother is a strong, choleric person and I am laid back and phlegmatic, which resulted in a childhood without many choices. When my daughter was born, I resolved to let her make her own choices from an early age. Being American, I cannot understand exactly what Ernie and Ruth felt, but I do understand what it is like to move from having no choice in the matter to a crippling array of choices. Sometimes when I'm faced with a decision, it is still a bit much for me.

laurie said...

irene, you're right. in this case, of course, it was just a typical deli "build your own sandwich" bar. never occurred to me to take them to mcdonald's! that would have been even worse.

ped, those are good goals. i remember the first time i visited ruth in her apartment in russia. she had strung a little line up in her kitchen and she had plastic bags hanging from it--bags she had rinsed out and planned to use again. and when i was in cuba, i threw a dead ballpoint pen into the trash, and the maid in my hotel room fished it out and kept it. reminded me how thoughtlessly wasteful we are.

kaycie, me too. we grew up in a crowded house with little money. ten kids, one income, lots of sharing. i still have a strong socialist thread running through me.

Beccy said...

Sounds like a very overwhelming experience for Ruth and Ernie, I'm not surprised at his reaction.

The Rotten Correspondent said...

I've felt that way myself at times. Choice is good, but being overwhelmed by something so unfamiliar must be quite offsetting.

Absolutely love the new header. Isn't that strange? I find that I can only do some layout changes in Firefox. And it took me forever to figure it out.

Who knew?

Bookwoman said...

Indeed we are a society of excess. I met a gentleman on a weekend retreat last fall who had spent the previous six months working in an orphanage in a small Mexican village. He was so troubled by the abundance and resulting waste of so much food that he had a very difficult time remaining at the retreat.

My mother, who passed away last year at the age of 93, always rinsed and reused aluminum foil and plastic bags. She cut up the backs of envelopes she received in the mail and used the pieces to write notes on. There were rubber bands and string in every drawer in the kitchen. Her generation recycled long before it became the thing to do. And, although she always considered me wasteful, I'm certainly not as wasteful as I might have been without her example.

Like ped crossing, I am trying to simplify my life and my surroundings. But it's awfully hard to part with "stuff" sometimes.

Beverley said...

Interesting. It's like people without much who I have heard of going to a expensive restaurant for the first time and not being able to enjoy it because of all the money that was being spent on it. I suppose its a bit like being institutionalised and on release finding the outside world overwhelming.

Amy said...

I think the abundance of choices has its effects on Americans, too, but it is less obvious--aside from our expansive waists. We want to make the one, right, best decision and once we've decided, finally, we second-guess ourselves constantly. The result is we're never satisfied, so we keep going back for more.

Even silly things involve too much choice. Can't order a 65-cent coffee anymore, have to order the tall skinny mocha latte with nonfat whip and a swirl. My cell phone came with an instruction booklet three times as large as the phone. I just wanted a phone! I didn't want to have to do research before deciding on one and then spend two days reading the damn manual.

I feel bad for Ernie and Ruth. It must have been overwhelming.

laurie said...

i love the way this conversation turned--all of your observations about excess and wealth and choice and greed.

tomorrow i'll write about the flip side of all this: me eating out in Russia.

-Ann said...

I've been reading the blog lines, so I'd missed out on your new header. Fantastic picture.

Good post too - very interesting story. A friend of ours married a girl from East Germany. (Even though she was born just before the wall came down.) whenever she sees a line and doesn't know what it's for, she always jokes 'must be for banananas'

elizabethm said...

so utterly with Ernie on too much choice. It is almost obscene when you have seen poverty. great blog and fascinating comments too.