Daddy's Girls

Daddy’s Girls is a rich yet simple family tale of love, madness and spirit told in the three first-person points of view of its three women. Overlapping vignettes create a vivid patchwork of life’s defining moments to reveal dark forces lurking beneath the family’s typical middle-class veneer as they struggle to love one another. The story is fiction with a dash of magical realism, but the inspiration is autobiographical.

Daddy’s Girls recently received a glowing review from Terry Mathews of Bookbrowser.com. She calls it “A book that will speak to you on many levels...that can alter your perception of the world, broaden your horizons and urge you to think outside the box. The best book I´ve read since Cunningham´s THE HOURS.” And Ruth Williams, author of “Younger Than That Now” says “Daddy´s Girls is a luxuriant narrative, telling the stories of three complex women — two sisters and their mother — and how their lives are impacted by the mental illness of one. A fascinating and obviously well-informed look at heartbreaking realities. This is a book written from the heart.”

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Daddy's Girls

Daddy’s Girls is a rich yet simple family tale of love, madness and spirit told in the three first-person points of view of its three women. Overlapping vignettes create a vivid patchwork of life’s defining moments to reveal dark forces lurking beneath the family’s typical middle-class veneer as they struggle to love one another. The story is fiction with a dash of magical realism, but the inspiration is autobiographical.

Daddy’s Girls recently received a glowing review from Terry Mathews of Bookbrowser.com. She calls it “A book that will speak to you on many levels...that can alter your perception of the world, broaden your horizons and urge you to think outside the box. The best book I´ve read since Cunningham´s THE HOURS.” And Ruth Williams, author of “Younger Than That Now” says “Daddy´s Girls is a luxuriant narrative, telling the stories of three complex women — two sisters and their mother — and how their lives are impacted by the mental illness of one. A fascinating and obviously well-informed look at heartbreaking realities. This is a book written from the heart.”

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Daddy's Girls

Daddy's Girls

by Suzanne Gold
Daddy's Girls

Daddy's Girls

by Suzanne Gold

eBook

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Overview

Daddy’s Girls is a rich yet simple family tale of love, madness and spirit told in the three first-person points of view of its three women. Overlapping vignettes create a vivid patchwork of life’s defining moments to reveal dark forces lurking beneath the family’s typical middle-class veneer as they struggle to love one another. The story is fiction with a dash of magical realism, but the inspiration is autobiographical.

Daddy’s Girls recently received a glowing review from Terry Mathews of Bookbrowser.com. She calls it “A book that will speak to you on many levels...that can alter your perception of the world, broaden your horizons and urge you to think outside the box. The best book I´ve read since Cunningham´s THE HOURS.” And Ruth Williams, author of “Younger Than That Now” says “Daddy´s Girls is a luxuriant narrative, telling the stories of three complex women — two sisters and their mother — and how their lives are impacted by the mental illness of one. A fascinating and obviously well-informed look at heartbreaking realities. This is a book written from the heart.”


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781462832750
Publisher: Xlibris US
Publication date: 11/17/2000
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 580
File size: 783 KB

About the Author

Suzanne Gold has worked as a psychologist, professional singer, activist, artisan, teacher and writer. A portion of her profits from sales of the book are dedicated to a fund in her sister’s name to provide situational financial assistance to the mentally ill.

Read an Excerpt

A Mission From God

Allison
thirty-one years old

The last time I saw Cherie she was still beautiful. I used to envy her perfect nose, her perfect teeth. Even her artificially-straight artificially-blonde hair flattered her. I dread seeing her now. Mom says Cherie's mental state deteriorated fast after her boyfriend/cocaine connection dumped her, and soon she was seeing black helicopters following her, international conspiracies spying on her. When she ran out of money and tried to get the boyfriend to take her back— yelling on his doorstep, threatening, and frightening the neighbors— he called the police. They threw her into Egg Harbor State Hospital, where she's been for over a year, court-committed, with reviews every six months.

Lost in memory, I stare out the airplane window, barely registering the dull roar of the engines or the attendants rolling carts down the aisle. Thirty thousand feet down, barren waves of earth undulate. Probably mountains, but from up here they just look like random abstract patterns. The plane hits an air pocket and I'm falling but my stomach stays behind, leaving me that much more nauseated than I already was about making this trip.

I remember Mom calling to tell me about Cherie's hospitalization. Guilt, shame and outrage mingled in her voice.

"The New Jersey State Police, no less. A crowd came to watch." I could picture the way she slits her eyes in disapproval. "Can't say I'm surprised. Cherie always was difficult. But a nervous breakdown in public on a quiet street in Cape May. It's so humiliating!"

Mom sounded as if she'd taken Cherie's psychosis as a personal affront, and maybe it was. It was a long time coming, although Cherie was twenty-six when the first bona fide symptoms appeared. Late onset adult schizophrenia, the diagnostic manual calls it. Now Mom's torn between trying to fix Cherie and just wanting to forget she ever had a second child.

She'd asked me to come right away, as if I could do anything about it. Too busy, I said, but really I couldn't face it.

The aroma of burnt coffee penetrates my contemplation. "Like to try some of our special Starbucks brew?" A woman in a friendly-skies uniform lifts a carafe at me.

"No, thanks." I gaze disconsolately at the landscape below. We're crossing a river that looks an inch wide, but is likely the Mississippi. I glance at my watch, already set to Philadelphia time, which tells me we'll land in about an hour and a half. Even with a year to get used to the idea and as many psychotics as I've worked with, I still don't feel like I can face this. It's different when it's your own sister. Maybe I should meditate.

I lean my head against the seatback and realize I'm sucking my tongue. Mom broke me of sucking my thumb all those years ago but not of the need to suck when I feel threatened. I sigh and look for a place of peace within myself.

I can hardly keep from crying at the sight of Cherie being led into the visitors' area. A parody of her old self, she's gained at least thirty pounds. Her eyes, outlined heavily in royal blue, peer out of her round face like a trapped animal cowering in a cave. Blood red lipstick smears way past the outline of her mouth; her tentative smile reveals receding gums and a couple of lost molars. Her peroxided hair is a rat's nest with dark roots, thinning around its center part. Here and there a lock is wrapped in foil. Dressed in clothes she would never choose for herself, too-short red plaid pants and a badly pilled lime green sweater that clashes with every color in the plaid, she couldn't look more like a lunatic if she tried.

I take a deep breath and stand. We embrace. I feel myself sink into her pillowy softness, so different from the strong solid body she used to have.

"What are you doing here?" she asks. "They lock you up too?" "No, I came to visit you." "Did you bring cigarettes? Can we go outside so I can smoke?" "Let's wait till Mom gets here. Then we'll go out together." "Mommy's coming? Is she bringing presents?" "Probably, but I brought some too. Want to see?" Cherie claps her hands like an overjoyed toddler at her first birthday party. It breaks my heart. I think of times as kids when I refused to play with her and wonder if I'd been more open, more supportive, would it have changed anything? But we were programmed from day one to become competitors, enemies. Encouragement was unknown in our house. My eyes sting with bitterness.

As if she can read my thoughts, Cherie's face turns dark. She mutters about curses and devils and the wrath of God, punctuated with unearthly giggles. If it weren't for my experience working in mental hospitals and halfway houses, I'd probably run from the room screaming at what's become of my little sister.

I offer a distraction. "How about we sit down and I'll show you what I brought?"

I extract treats one at a time, cigarettes first. Cherie tears open the cellophane wrapper, sniffs one like a fine cigar. "Please can we go out now so I can smoke?" she begs.

"As soon as Mom gets here," I say, and hand her the bagel and lox sandwich I brought. I glance at my watch. "Which should be any minute. We arranged to meet at two."

"The wicked witch still lives." She scowls and looks away, then her face brightens as she catches sight of a tall lanky guy coming into the room.

"James, my sister's here and she brought me stuff. Want some bagel and lox? Or some cigarettes?"

"Not now." He scoots quickly out the door. "Is that a friend of yours?" "Mmm-hmm." "What's his name?" "James Stevens. He lives on the men's side of the ward. He likes me. Can I have that?" She points at my wrist. "What, my watch?" Cherie nods eagerly. It's a transparent Swatch, not expensive, but beloved. "Will you be able to hang on to it?" "God will guard it as He guards my life," she says. "I'll sleep with it, I promise. I'll never take it off. Can I have it, please?" I think about the time she dumped all my clothes in a pile in the middle of my bedroom floor and stomped on them because I wouldn't lend her a skirt she wanted to borrow. I feel myself flush with embarrassment at how I bought into our mother's rules about whose clothes were whose and what rituals we had to go through to borrow anything. Cherie never did stick with the program, any program. I unbuckle the watch and hand it to her.

"Really?" She grabs it and quickly straps it around her wrist as if I'd take it back if she waited another instant. "Really," I say. "It's yours." "Jesus told me all good things come to those who wait. He wants me to bear his child, and this watch is his promise. He doesn't care about my scar."

"What's the aluminum foil in your hair for?" "It helps block the surveillance so the helicopters can't find me. The Anti-Christ hired the CIA to monitor me. To separate me from the Almighty." It sounds so stereotypical it's almost trite, like a bad movie. If only it were. One of my more disturbed clients once told me outright that his daily mission was to erase the memories of where he'd come from, of what he'd done. Could Cherie have unconsciously chosen going insane as a way to avoid taking responsibility for herself?

The psychologist in me understands her mental state as the product of a distorted family dynamic combined with a chemical imbalance in her brain. The explanation buffers my despair at seeing her like this, but still, it scares me. There but for grace go I.

I notice I'm sucking my tongue again and force myself to let go. Cherie was always a devil, and overly sensitive, in the good and the bad way, susceptible to nuances that most people ignore. And so am I. I feel guilty for being the sane one, assuming that I am. I may not hear voices, but I have plenty of delusions of my own. The fundamental difference between us is that my story is more socially acceptable than hers, for which I'm embarrassed to realize I'm thankful. She examines the watch on her wrist, moving it around to admire from different angles.

"Thank you very much, sister, for this generous gift," she says. "I love you." "I love you too, sweet thing." "I know. Let's play gin."

Ruth
fifty-six years old

Turning the car into the lane that leads to Cherie's depressing hospital, I thank the powers that be for the taxes from gambling in Atlantic City that pay for New Jersey's mental health system. If it weren't for that, Cherie probably would have landed in my lap. I hope Allison's here by now. It's about time she made it to visit her sister. Cherie will be her responsibility when I die, although I'd love to be free of her while I'm still alive. I'm tired of worrying about her, but I can't just abandon her. A mother has to protect her children, like when they were in the womb. Just thinking about it gives me a stomach ache.

The spacious and grassy hospital grounds aren't bad, if it weren't for cigarette butts and foam cups everywhere, but the buildings look like a prison. What did I do to deserve this? Better lock the car. With all these crazies around you can't be too careful.

My head aches as I drag myself up the ramp to Cherie's building. I ring the bell and wait for one of the grumpy, lazy psych-techs to open the door. I'd rather turn around and go home but Cherie needs me. It seems like an hour before the door swings open. A very fat woman in stretch pants and a white lab coat glowers at me. "I'm here to see Cherie Krazny," I tell her. She shuffles down the hall to the elevator and I follow. Rifling through a bulging ring of keys, she chooses one and inserts it where the call buttons would normally be.

"Second floor, left to Ward B. Ring the bell next to the door at the end of the hall." She sounds like she's angry at me. Does she think it's my fault that Cherie's crazy?

The elevator clanks and rattles its way upward. Alone in the compartment, I wonder again if I did anything to make Cherie the way she is, and what I can do to fix her. Allison seems fine, sane enough to be a therapist at least. I'm an ordinary everyday person. And even though Warren could be infuriatingly obnoxious, he wasn't certifiable. Abruptly, the elevator stops but the doors don't open immediately. I start worrying about being stuck here. When they finally slide apart, the cold gray hallway hits me with the smell of piss and disinfectant. There's another bell at the locked door to the ward. I push it, and peer through the chicken wire-fortified window. A psych tech, a man this time, sporting a lush handlebar moustache, answers my ring, using his overly muscled body to block the entrance. I tell him who I am. "What's in the bag?" he asks, reaching for the goodies I've brought Cherie.

I surrender it, knowing he has to rummage through everything to see for himself. He pulls out the tube of lipstick, inspects it to make sure it's still sealed. "Nail polish okay, no file though. Too dangerous." He pockets the Revlon nail file, inspects the cigarette pack for forbidden matches, opens deli containers of food and sniffs them. Does he think I stashed a gun in the potato salad? It seems like days pass before he hands the bag back. Why are all these people so slow? "In there." He nods toward the entrance to the visitors' lounge. Inside, people are gathered in scattered clusters, a patient with family or friends. Allison and Cherie are playing cards at a table by the window. Junk spreads out around them, most of it looking like the same kinds of things as I brought. Damn it. I wish I'd known what Allison was bringing so my stuff wouldn't pale in comparison. I force cheerfulness into my voice. "Hi, girls." "Mommy, Mommy. Mommy's here," Cherie chants. Allison stands to greet me. She looks comfortably elegant in faded jeans, boots and a cable-knit sweater. Her hair is shorter, curling gently around her face. Cherie's still sitting, grinning at me. I can tell another tooth is gone. She's fatter than ever, and sloppy, in shabby mismatched clothes.

I accept Allison's hug, then lean to press my cheek on Cherie's head. She shrinks away, like she can tell what I've been thinking. "Contamination!" she shrieks. "The Lord Jesus Christ our Savior will condemn you for Eternity for defiling his Chosen One!" I sit heavily. "Cherie, honey, be nice. We haven't all been together in years. Let's try to have a good time." "Don't take it personally, Mom," Allison says quietly, as if I had a choice. This is my child we're talking about, flesh of my flesh. Tainted.

"It is her fault," Cherie roars. "God knows. She has never treated His Servant with proper respect. For that, she'll burn in Hell!" "What else can I do?" I ask. "I've been trying to help you." "Repent, sinner. Let the Evil be cast out from your blackened soul." "What's in the bag, Mom?" Allison interrupts in a bright tone. "Offerings for the chosen one?"

"Cigarettes?" Cherie wants to know. "Red licorice and M&M's?" "All your favorite stuff." I clear a space to empty the contents onto the table, glad to be in familiar territory. "Ooh, lipstick, eye shadow, Marlboros, nail polish, Oreos! Jesus'll cut you some slack for that."

Why does she have to do this Jesus routine? She's Jewish, for God's sake. Is she crazy because I sent them to Vacation Bible school at the Presbyterian church around the corner when they were little? Was it too much to ask to have a few minutes to myself once a day for two weeks? Cherie swivels the lipstick out of the tube and touches up her already scarlet lips, scraping unnoticed bits onto her front teeth. I pull a mirror and tissue from my pocketbook. "Here, let me help you clean that up."

"Be gone, heathen! Away!" She jumps up, knocking over her chair. Allison studies her, then turns to me. "Sometimes I think she's speaking metaphorically." Cherie stops mid-tantrum, looks interested. "You know, like poetry," Allison says. "You say you want to help but she doesn't appreciate you. Maybe, through the filter of her delusions about sin and evil, she's saying she doesn't want what you're trying to give."

"You're talking as though your sister isn't in the same room. Is this some new psychological theory?" "Just an experiment. What do you think, Cherie?" Cherie giggles maniacally. "I think, um..." She makes a deep buzzing sound. "I guess she doesn't want to talk about it," Allison says. "But you could try not nagging her for a while and see if she relates to you any better." I refuse to answer the little snot. Thinks she's so smart because she has two degrees in psychology and I had to drop out of college after one year.

Cherie takes a quick breath, renews the buzz. Nurse Humphries appears at the door to see what the ruckus is about. I look helplessly at Allison, afraid that if I try to say anything, I'll make things worse. Allison takes her sister's hand, pulls her down to her chair, smoothes her tangled hair. "Sorry about the noise," she says. "Cherie's okay now, aren't you, honey?" Cherie eyes the nurse suspiciously, then nods emphatically. "I'll be good," she promises sweetly. As the woman retreats, Cherie cocks her head like she's listening to her voices, then mumbles back at them. "I just wanted to help," I repeat. "I didn't mean to upset you." It galls me to have to apologize to Cherie's sickness, but if we don't keep her calm they'll throw us out and lock her up again. "You used to be so pretty," I tell her. "Maybe if you parted your hair on the side, went to the dentist and got a partial plate..." Cherie snorts. She looks like she's gearing up for another fit. Allison shoots me a warning look, changes the subject. "Now that Mom's here, why don't we go out? Cherie wants to smoke. Maybe we can take a ride, do a little shopping?" Cherie beams. "Can we go to WalMart and buy clothes? They steal all my clothes here." "They don't steal your clothes," I say. "You put them in the communal laundry and they get sent to other wards." "Mom, please," Allison says. I hate Allison acting like she knows more than I do about how to treat my own daughter. But it does seem that everything I try backfires. Since the day she was born, Cherie never understood how hard I tried to put her on the right path. Sometimes I think she went crazy just to spite me.

Cherie
twenty-eight years old

They're stealing my stuff. Everyone here is in on it. Even the air here is poison. Hate, fear, death floating around. Don't breathe it. Don't breathe it. Why am I here? What did I do wrong? You are not the cause. It is my will. Everything is of that. Me too? Everything is filled with my holiness. I am You? Not a loser? You are. Only those who scorn me lose. They are those you see as living dead — pretending, stumbling, blind. Then fly me to your Heavenly Palace. I'm an alien in this world. Why am I locked up with these zombies? Why am I still here? Remember...

Cherie
minus nine months

"I have an assignment for you, dear one, if you accept it. A physical manifestation." "I don't know, Boss. I don't see the value in this individual consciousness stuff. I like it here where it's all one." "I know you do, angel. But I have a job waiting there for you." "Why me?" "Only you have the particular combination of skills and quirks to carry off this assignment." "Flatterer. So what do I have to do?" "Nothing." "What do you mean, nothing? Am I going to die being born?" "Oh, no. You will have a relatively long life, although you will not enjoy most of it because of the state you will be in." "What is it? Brain damage? Will you render me paralyzed? Some great deformity?"

"Not exactly. But you will never amount to anything by that world's standards. You will choose what seem like dead-ends. You will spend time in a mental hospital."

"Why? What have I done to deserve it? What do I need to learn?" "This one is not for you, angel. It is a life of service. You will show people parts of themselves they refuse to look at. By opening to themselves, they will learn to love others."

"And I get nothing out of it?"

"To the contrary. You get the satisfaction of being a great teacher, and of returning to me with expanded wisdom and compassion."

Cherie
birth

Boss? Can you still hear me? I don't like this job already. It's getting weird in here. I'm crushed and battered by endless squeezing. I want to go Home. Isn't there another soul who can take over? Ow. Pressure on my belly, sliding across. Then an opening above me, and warm wetness. I'm lifted out. No, please, I don't want this life. Bright lights, cold, cold air, and hands all over me, moving me, slapping, rubbing... "WAAAHHH!" I scream as chest and vocal cords engage. I don't want to be here. I'm slipping into an alien realm, out of control. Please, Boss, take me back. No answer. My awareness of Before is fading fast, but I still remember that the Boss knows best. Much as I hate it, I'm born now. I surrender to my fate.

Cherie
twenty-eight years old

"Thank you Mommy and Sweet Sister Ally. I'm so excited you're both here. Can't we all just go home now?" "Right now we're going to WalMart," the queen of spades says. Cockroaches crawl all over her. "What would you like to buy?" asks the crown princess. Through the magic doors. Lights sparkle, colors, products of every variety for your home, and the smell of... "Popcorn! Extra-large! With lots of butter! Please, please can I have some popcorn?" I follow the delicious smell, pushing through piles of boxes in my path. Make way, make way. Jesus's chosen, the Empress of Heaven, is coming, trailed by pretenders to the throne, the ladies-in-waiting who conspire to overthrow her. They will not succeed. The Empress is on a mission from God.

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