19 September 2016

my homes, part 1

My first home was the drafty two room apartment my parents had moved in after they got married. I have no memories, only pictures. This was in the small, extremely catholic Bavarian town of Freising, with a large cathedral, one of the world's oldest breweries and - most importantly - the agricultural science department of the university of Munich.

Money was tight, my parents were young with two small children, my father worked as a junior researcher and my mother was slowly losing all hopes of ever returning to her university career. The story goes that I slept in one of the large wicker laundry baskets I now use in my attic to hold S's toys and a variety of sleeping bags.

There is a family anecdote whereby I fell out of the window while my big sister, who was four years old at the time, was watching me. The window was on the ground floor and I fell onto a soft lawn and my sister apparently went to my mother with the news that I had walked out. Soon after that, my father got his first car, a beige VW beetle, and his career took off.
My mother got pregnant for the third time and we moved to spacious apartment with a large garden and babysitters when my parents had dinner guests. The one vivid memory I have of this place is of the day my baby brother had an accident. In the evening, me and my sister were sent home by the neighbours, who had been looking after us and I noticed that one of the paving stones near the front door was cracked. For some reason, I was convinced that the ambulance crew had broken it and that made me mad enough to throw a massive tantrum.
Shortly before my fourth birthday, my father was headhunted away from the university and we moved north, back to my father's Franconian homeland into a newly built semi-detached house. In fact, it was still a building site. We moved during a very hard winter and during that winter, my mother's life started to unravel.



9 comments:

Ms. Moon said...

The things we remember. The things we can't.

Colette said...

That's the spirit! I'm so glad you shared this. Looking forward to reading the rest. On my own blog's home stories I'm trying to figure out a way to incorporate more regionalism.

Colette said...

I would love to hear how the different parts of Germany (or Ireland) are different from other parts. And of course, why? Why would they be different? There's always a reason.

molly said...

It's funny how the things that happen as we're growing up are the things that shape us, but so often our memories (at least our conscious ones) are so blurred and hazy. I'd like to be able to travel back in time to observe the child who turned into me. Waiting for part 2!

Steve Reed said...

Fascinating! Keep going! :)

Love the pics, too.

Anonymous said...

I like this look back at your life through the perspective of homes you've lived in. Makes me wonder what year were you born?

Sabine said...

I was born in 1957.

Taxmom said...

Enjoying this. I've been to Freising so I have a visual to go with your narrative. I am American, 5 years younger than you are, and spent time in Germany off and on from 74-93.

Sabine said...

Hi! You were with the army? My parents used to tell us of several young army couples living next door they were friends with, I have a picture somewhere of German and US mums comparing babies.