Monthly Archives: September 2024

My Spot

A version of this story was first published in The Jewish World in October 2015. I am sharing the article for the first time on my blog.

Up until this past May, Larry and I sat in the same seats at Congregation Beth Shalom in Clifton Park. We always sat in the fourth row, left side of the bima, on the two end seats. The Elmans were on the middle aisle, the Grossmans were next to them, and the Toubs sat behind us. 

There was a reason for our seating choice. First of all, Larry and I chose to be with close friends. Second of all, Larry liked the end seats so we could get out easily if we needed to take a break. Finally one of two memorial plaque boards were next to us, and we sat right next to the plaques we had gotten in memory of our parents and an uncle. That was our spot every Shabbat service we attended for innumerable years. Sometimes, especially during Rosh Hoshanah and Yom Kippur, we would arrive late and someone else would have taken “our” seats. I am not sure if our angry glare burned a hole in the back of their heads. It would have served them right!

Having one’s spot is ingrained in our brain from our earliest years in school. We were given seats in elementary school, but it was even more formal in the upper grades when we were always seated alphabetically. In home room,  I, Marilyn Cohen, sat behind Stephen Bullis from seventh through twelfth grade, the same place we were assigned in many of our classes. Steve wore shirts with a loop in the middle under the seam, and I remember grabbing it and trying to pull it off. I thought my attempt at flirting was cute, but I am sure his parents didn’t like the fact that he was coming home with holes in the back of those nice button downs.

However, even when we are not assigned seats, humans, by habit, tend to choose the same place out of a psychological need. In his book Maximizing Project Success Through Human Performance, industrial psychologist Bernardo Tirado gives this action a name, seat marking. It is  a way in which we humans unconsciously mark our territory. ”Think of how many years you sat in assigned seats in school,” says Dr. Tirado. “That level of conditioning continues into our adulthood, even though our seats are no longer assigned.”

Larry and I certainly haven’t outgrown the habit. We eat in our “assigned seats” at our dinner table; we often request the same table and same chairs at a favorite restaurant; we sleep on the same sides of the bed no matter where we are. And when I go to one of my exercise classes, I choose the same spot on the dance floor to follow the instructor. I like to be in the first row in the middle with a clear view of the mirror. 

Of course, all this territoriality does cause problems. While taking a  Zumba class at the YMCA just before our  move, I choose the one empty spot in the first row. A minute before the class was to start, a woman took her place next to me, literally touching my left arm. “Excuse me,” I said. “I am standing here.” “No, this is my spot,” she informed me, and refused to budge.We almost came to blows until I found an empty space in the back of the room.

In our new home, I have also found another spot that is very important in my new life. When weather permits, I move one of the patio chairs in the middle of the open part of the lanai, between the two ferns the former owners left for us. With my feet on the matching hassock and with a cup of Earl Grey tea in my hand, I can look out at “our” pond. It is the best place to observe the bird life and the location of whatever alligator is inhabiting our pond on that particular day. Larry and I have plans of getting a double glider later this winter so that we both can enjoy the view. Not since I was a teenager on Lake Champlain, when I used to sit on the rocks on Willsboro Point overlooking the lake to Burlington have I had a particular place whereI can find such peace and contentment. 

Now that we have moved to Florida, I don’t know who sits in our seats at our Clifton Park shul. Has another couple moved into our seats, or are those two blue chairs sitting empty, waiting patiently for us to return? We are too new at Congregation Shalom Aleichem in Kissimmee to have found the place we want to sit on a regular basis. On the first day of Rosh Hoshanah, we found empty seats a few rows back next to a  couple we had met, and Wendy saved those seats for us for each of the Yom Kippur services. We’ll have to see if that place continues to work out for us.

After the morning Rosh Hoshanah services, two other couples joined us for a holiday meal. As we moved from the chopped liver and Manischewitz wine in the breakfast nook to the chicken in mushroom sauce, kasha varnishkis, and honeyed carrots at the dining room table, one of my friends asked, “Where would you like us to sit? Do you and Larry have your own special spots?”  Larry and I looked at each other questioningly. This was the first time we had ever even eaten in the dining room and had no idea where our spots were. But Larry gravitated to the head of the table, and I chose the seat closest to the kitchen. We all settled into place, said a haMotzi , the traditional prayer over bread, and began our meal.  Larry and I had found our spots, and our new new house felt more like our home.

Can you hear me now?

It’s genetic. It’s a life-time achievement award. It’s inevitable. 

Choose all or some or one of the above. Along with cataracts, high cholesterol, worn-out knees, and numerous aches and pains that come with age, we can add hearing loss.

According to a 2021 study by the National Institute for Deafness and Other Communication Disorder, approximately 28.8 million American adults need hearing aids. Unfortunately, only one in six does something about it. My husband decided to be one of them. 

Larry’s problems began a few years back. His inability to hear had become a source of irritation to me, for our family, for our friends. He had to crank up the television, and his listening skills had diminished. After almost fifty years of marriage, maybe his “selective hearing” had become more attuned. But he was missing words and phrases. A recent test at an audiologist had come back showing he was on the verge of needing them. 

Finally, when we came back from Colorado in August, 2023. he decided it was time. Choosing a hearing center that many in our community recommended, Larry underwent a thorough one-hour examination and got the expected news: he had “moderate” hearing loss.

Two weeks, Larry was fitted with a pair of hearing aids. He adjusted fairly quickly, and his “selective listening” didn’t seem to be as much as a problem.

While his hearing improved, mine tanked. The volume of Larry’s voice, which was always on the quiet side, went down a couple of decibels, meaning I was constantly asking him to speak up. Also, with his new bionic ears, he could turn down the television volume so I could’t hear it. He began to complain that the music on Alexa was blaring. He suggested that maybe I needed hearing aids.

I fought it. First of all, I had been tested eighteen months earlier by the same audiologist at the same time that Larry had, and I was told that my hearing was “borderline. “

Besides, I already could not keep track of my iPhone, my Apple Watch, my Kindle, my keys, my Solivita pass, and my purse. I could not imagine adding another thing to my life that I had to find.

What concerned me most was that I remembered all too well my father’s experiences with hearing aids. When those blobs of plastic were in his ears, they buzzed. At least once, he ruined them when he jumped into a swimming pool. When he took the out, goodness knows where we would find them. On his dresser? Next to his favorite chair? Under the clothes line? 

I especially recalled the day that Aunt Pearl, who lived in Long Island, came up to visit Mom and Dad in Clifton Park. Both of them wore hearing aids, and my mother was on her way to getting them. Brian, my cousin who drove Aunt Pearl up to Saratoga County, escaped to another room while the three of them yelled to each other to communicate. Despite the distance, Brian and I heard the distinct buzzing of a hearing aide coming from my father.

“Dad, do you need to turn down your hearing aids?” I asked. 

“No,” he replied. “The damn things don’t work. I put them in my pocket.”

Oy! This is what I had to look forward to? 

But Larry was due for his six month check-up, and he strongly urged me to make my own appointment. 

“I am sure I don’t need hearing aids,” I said. “You just talk too low.” But for Shalom Bayit, for peace in our house, I signed up for a consultation. 

I thought I would breezed through the test, but I was shocked to find out that my hearing loss was “moderate to severe.” For the next two weeks, my prescription was being filled, I felt sad and—well—old!

Amazingly, I adjusted very quickly. I immediately noticed the difference: I could hear! Okay, maybe a little too loudly. But the world became hearable. My constant refrain, “Could you repeat that?” was gone. I could go to a movie or show and actually hear what was being said.

My fear of losing them also proved groundless. Between the over-the-ear microphone and the tiny receivers that go fairly deep into my ear canal, I haven’t lost them. They also are a little more waterproof than I anticipated as accidentally wearing them into the shower or even into the pool would not be a disaster

Finally, being a woman has its perks. Larry doesn’t have the hair to cover them, so they are pretty obvious. It takes a much sharper eye to detect the tiny wires in my ears when it is covered with hair.

Rather than being embarrassed or ashamed, I am grateful that my hearing is correctable, that we have the resources to make the purchase,  and that hearing aids are so much better than those huge things my parents wore.

How I wrote my first book

“It was a dark and stormy night. Suddenly shots rang out!” Snoopy

Poor Snoopy! For all his “dogged” attempts, Charles Schultz’s beloved beagle has not yet published his novel. Thanks to The Jewish World, however, I have been more successful. I have published a book.

Actually, it was a bright and sunny day in June 2013, when Josie Kivort, Hadassah Capital District’s Chapter Campaign Chair, and I paid a visit to the Jewish publication’s office. For the past several months, we were serving on the committee to plan the organization’s annual Special Gifts event. Jim Clevenson, the publisher of the Schenectady, New York,-based biweekly, Josie, and I met to discuss the timeline future press releases and advertisements. 

 I had communicated  with The Jewish World, mostly through press releases. For years, I had worked on publicity, first as a volunteer for several organizations in Clifton Park and later as part of my responsibilities at the Capital District Educational Opportunity Cente, a division of Hudson Valley Community College, in Troy, New York.. We had been in “virtual contact” as  I had been sending the newspaper  articles that I felt would be relevant to the Jewish community.

During our discussion, I mentioned to Jim that I had retired three years earlier. Jim asked if I would be  interested in doing reporting for the Jewish World. 

“I have  done enough press releases for a lifetime,” I told Jim. “However, would you be interested in publishing some short non-fiction pieces about my life as a Jewish woman, wife, and mother in Upstate New York?”

Jim agreed to give the idea a try, and he told me that I should send the articles to Laurie Clevenson, his sister and the paper’s editor-in-chief.

My first newspaper article appeared in the August 27, 2013, school opening issue. “There Goes My Heart” recalled how saying goodbye to my children—whether putting them on the bus the first day of kindergarten or dropping off at their dorms their first day of college or waving them off as they got in their own cars and drove cross country to new jobs—always brought me to tears. 

I had asked my mother if the farewells ever got easier. “Oh, Marilyn,” she said. “Every time any one of you gets into the car and drives away, I think to myself, ‘There goes my heart!’”

So started my regular contributions to The Jewish World. Every two weeks, I wrote a story and submitted it for the newspaper’s consideration. Growing up as the only Jewish family in a small Upstate New York town; experiencing anti-Semitism on my first teaching job in the Capital Region of New York; participating in a playgroup for our two-year-olds; adjusting to retirement; leaving the home we shared for thirty-six years to move to Florida—these many once-private moments became very public columns. 

Initially, I was  afraid I would run out of ideas. As the months progressed, however, I found that even the smallest event— biking up a steep mountain in the Rockies, visiting the Portland Holocaust Memorial, changing my granddaughter’s diaper—could morph from an idea to a story. Family and friends shared their experiences, and, with their permission, wove them into my articles.

Not that the stories always flowed easily from my brain to the Mac laptop. “Writing is easy,” wrote sports writer Red Smith. “All you do is stare at a blank sheet of paper until drops of blood form on your forehead.” I often found myself up at midnight before a deadline trying to polish what I had written. But, like some people I knew who devoted hours to quilting or photography or golf, I devoted hours to my writing. 

When I moved to Florida in 2015, I joined SOL Writers, a group of women who met twice a month to share their drafts or to participate in a free write. A few of the women were published authors; others, like me, had dreams of expanding their audience. I brought in pieces I had either completed or were working on for The Jewish World. The women were not afraid to criticize but they were also generous in their praise. “You seriously need to think about putting these essays into a book,” one of my writer friends suggested.

In March 2016, I got up enough courage to contact Mia Crews, a professional editor who would be responsible for formatting the manuscript, designing  the cover, and uploading the finished product to Amazon.

Nothing prepared me for the amount of work required to go from a collection of stories to a polished book. I started editing. And editing and editing. I thought I was close to finishing before we left for our summer trip out west. However, I worked on it on the plane to San Francisco, at nights in different hotels up the Oregon Coast, and during every spare minute during our six week stay in Colorado. I enlisted Larry’s help, and we sat together on the couch in our rented condo going over the manuscript with a fine tooth comb while  two political conventions and the Summer Olympics played on the television.

When we got back to Florida, Mia and I completed the final revisions, On September 3, my sixty-sixth birthday. There Goes My Heart was launched on Amazon. I had done it! I had written a real, live book with, as a friend commented, with a cover and pages and nouns and verbs and everything!

”A writer only starts a book,” wrote Samuel Johnson. “A reader finishes it.” Thanks to Laurie and Jim Clevenson for giving me the opportunity to publish my articles. Thanks to you, my readers, who have helped me reach the finish line of my lifelong dream. 

This article was first pubished in The Jewish World, soon after I launched There Goes My Heart in September 2016. is available in paperback and Kindle versions on Amazon.

Growing Up in Coney Island by Frances Cohen

I have published this blog on September 1, 2024, what would have been Frances Cohen, my mother’s 107 birthday.

I spent most of my early childhood in Coney Island. I loved living in that special section in the New York City borough of Brooklyn, especially during the summer.

We did not have many of the conveniences that we have today. Rather than a refrigerator, we had an icebox. The iceman delivered ice every other day. We
had a pan under the ice box. When we forgot to empty the pan, there would be a
huge puddle on the floor. There were no supermarkets, just local grocers. Milk,which was not homogenized, was purchased from the grocer. It was stored in a large metal buckets and ladled out. As the ladle was often left out with the milk uncovered, flies and roaches swarmed around the bucket. Mice licked the ladle until they were chased away by the store’s resident cat. When we brought the milk home, the cream was on the top, and my mother would make whipped cream with a hand beater. I grew up before radios, washing machines, dryers, and dishwashers. Even toilet paper was yet to be invented. We used orange wrappers and pages from the Sears catalog.

I lived two blocks from the beach and the boardwalk. I loved to go swimming in the ocean and walking the boardwalk. We had two big amusement parks within walking distance, Luna Park and Steeplechase. I preferred Luna Park as it had a circus. It was such fun watching the clowns, the animals, and especially the men and women on the trapeze. Nearby was the famous Nathan’s hot dog stand, where we could buy a hot dog with sauerkraut for five cents.

As there were no televisions, we went to the movies every Saturday. For ten cents, we saw a double feature along with newsreels, a serial, and cartoons. We bought a penny’s worth of candy and enjoyed the entertainment. On rainy days, we stayed indoors, drawing pictures with crayons and reading books from the library. We did not have as many toys as our grandchildren and great grandchildren have today, so we improvised. My brother made a train out of drawers from my father’s Singer sewing machine.

As all little girls, I loved to play with dolls. My mother had bought me a small celluloid doll with moving arms and feet that I could even bathe. I wanted a new doll carriage, but we were in the midst of the Great Depression, and my parents could not afford to buy me one from the store. So, we became creative. A shoebox became my doll carriage. My mother made a hole at the end of the shoebox and put a string through it so I could pull the carriage. The top of the box became the hood. She also gave me scraps of material which I made into a pillow, a carriage cover, and clothing for my doll. With a child’s imagination, I thought that my doll and doll carriage were the most beautiful in the world.

It was convenient to live near the beach, but my neighborhood was not the best. It was all pavement—no flowers and no lawns. One summer, my second-grade teacher thought it would be a good summer project to learn how things grow. The last week of school, she had us bring in a small wooden cheese box and a small potato. She helped us put the dirt that she supplied into the bottom of the box. We cut up the potato, placed it in the dirt, and then covered the potato with more dirt. I placed the potato plant on the fire escape and watered it every day. In July, I was happy to see some green leaves. My parents and teacher had never told me that potatoes grow underground. So, when August arrived, I got so angry that no potatoes had grown on the leaves, I just dumped the plant. I was so surprised to find four little potatoes!

Looking back, I had a very happy childhood. Although we did not have much money, I never felt deprived!

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My Mom the Story Teller

Ever since I could remember, my mother, Frances Cohen, was the family story teller. Give her an opening, and she would regal any audience with stories of her grandparents’ and parents’ lives in Russia, of her early years of marriage to “My Bill,” of their life in small towns and smaller apartments in the North Country, and of raising four children, watching them leave for college and for marriage, and their returning with her grandchildren to visit her and my father in their beloved cottage on Lake Champlain.

For many years, these stories were always told orally. Mom shared them when the family got together around the old oak table in the dining room, when she visited friends, and when her children’s friends came to visit. What was fascinating was that no one ever got tired of hearing them.  As a matter of fact, she was highly regarded as the family historian.  If anyone needed to know who was related to whom and how my father’s side was related to my mother’s side and what really happened between those two cousins—well, you just had to ask Fradyl, and the truth would be known.

As my parents got older, my mother realized that she needed to record these stories.  We never were one for video cameras and tapes, so she began writing them down on lined paper, usually from the six by eight notepads. .  The writing was messy, with words misspelled and whole sections crossed out, but she began to put them down on paper.  

My parents retired in 1981 and spent the next nineteen years living six months in Florida and six months on a cottage on Lake Champlain.  As it became too difficult to maintain two homes, they sold their cottage to my brother and sister-in-law, and my parents lived in Florida permanently.  When I went to visit, my mother would tell me the stories as I transcribed them onto paper.   Unfortunately, these scraps of paper remained in their original state for several years.

In 2007, after a number of health setbacks, we children insisted that my parents sell their condo in Florida and move back up North to be closer to the family.  Everyone decided that the best location would be close to Larry and me, and on May 1, 2007, they moved into Coburg Village, an independent living facility only four miles from our home.

Initially uncertain about leaving Florida, their friends, and their independence, my parents soon realized that this was an ideal living arrangement that provided nightly five-course dinners in a lovely dining room, a shuttle service that brought them to grocery stores and doctor’s appointments, live entertainment and numerous clubs.

Soon after moving in, my mother called me to tell me she was joining Coburg’s monthly writing group to polish all those stories she carried in her head and on those scraps of paper.  The night after her first meeting, however, she phoned to tell me she wasn’t sure she would fit in.  “Most of them have college educations and write beautifully, Marilyn,” she lamented.  “They will look down on my family stories as being silly and boring.” However, when she brought her first story to the group, her accounting of why she and my father moved to Coburg, she was surprised to find that the group enjoyed her writing style.  “They loved my story, Marilyn! They said I have a real flair for story telling!” After that, my mother’s voice in phone calls after the monthly Wednesday meetings was filled with pride.

Mom rarely had difficulty finding a topic and writing it down with paper in pen. However, the group leader requested that the stories be typed so they could be published in the semi-annual collection and distributed to Coburg resident.  My mother asked me, “my daughter the English major,” to type them, and, while I was at it, to do some proofing and minor revisions so that they would read more smoothly. 

Thus began our five-year collaboration.  Every month, about a week before the group met, my mother would give me her hand-written story, and I would bring over the typed version by Sunday afternoon.  If I didn’t have it done by Sunday night, the phone calls would begin.  “Marilyn, if you don’t have the time, just bring back my copy and I’ll read it from the original.”  I would assure her that it would be delivered in time for her meeting, even resorting to sending the final copy to her via the Coburg fax machine.

The oral stories evolved into written documents, always original, always entertaining. She wrote about the Old Country: how her mother’s mother died in childbirth and how the two children were raised at first by an uncaring stepmother and then by a loving women who raised them and the seven others that followed; how my father’s father escaped from Russia in a cart filled with hay; what it was like living in Regalia and Vilna at the turn of the century with the fear of pogroms always on the Jewish population’s mind.  She wrote about her mother’s family coming to America:  how her Uncle Sam saved enough money to bring over his sister Ethel; how Aunt Lil turned down a job at the Triangle Shirt Factory a month before the fire because she thought it looked unsafe; how Grandpa Joe left his future bride at the jeweler’s as collateral until he got a second opinion of the diamond ring they were purchasing.   And she wrote about our family: how she and Bill met on a blind date; how they raised four children in various small towns in the North Country, and, and how they came to buy their cottage on Lake Champlain.  The stories were funny, sad, and painful, but they were always ready the first Wednesday of every month for her meeting.

When my father passed away in November, 2008, my mother’s contribution for December was an open letter to my father. She wrote that she was moving into a smaller apartment down the hall, but “Wherever I go, you also go in spirit.” Grieving quietly, she continued with her life at Coburg, going to the concerts, visiting with friends and family who were always stopping by to see her, and continuing with her writing.  All of the children asked her to write about our birth and early childhood, but she always postponed those stories, focusing on the Old Country, her childhood, her Bill. 

On December 22, 2010, my mother had a heart attack. The doctors recommended Hospice and living her remaining time to the fullest.  She complied, enjoying visits from the children, grandchildren, her cousins, and the many friends she had made in Coburg and Clifton Park. She kept writing, and in February, with my sister Laura and I sitting close by, she shared her story: “The Birth of My First Child,” in which she described her joy in having a beautiful little girl and her fears that she would not be able to be a good mother.  The last words, written in pencil on the bottom, were “To be continued……” She died four weeks later, one day before the March meeting.

My parents were not wealthy people, and had little of material value: a wedding ring, two beautiful framed pictures of my father at thirteen and my mother at six, a few nice dishes.  As my siblings and I sadly dismantled Mom’s apartment, my daughter was surprised that I wanted so little.  “It’s ok, Julie,” I said, “We have her stories.”

And we do….Over one hundred typed pages as well as a file of her handwritten notes that she had kept over the years. What a gift to her family, her friends, and all who knew and loved this amazing woman!