Two Women, Two Worlds: Friendship Swept by Winds of Change / Edition 1

Two Women, Two Worlds: Friendship Swept by Winds of Change / Edition 1

ISBN-10:
0966689607
ISBN-13:
9780966689600
Pub. Date:
01/28/1999
Publisher:
Hillwinds Press
ISBN-10:
0966689607
ISBN-13:
9780966689600
Pub. Date:
01/28/1999
Publisher:
Hillwinds Press
Two Women, Two Worlds: Friendship Swept by Winds of Change / Edition 1

Two Women, Two Worlds: Friendship Swept by Winds of Change / Edition 1

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Overview

A U.S psychotherapist-writer adrift in a personal crisis meets Pirip, a feisty mountain dweller in Papua New Guinea (PNG) who is striving to lead traditional women into the modern world. They develop a compelling friendship that bridges their separation by language, eons of tradition, and 10,000 miles. The author's urge to understand Pirip's strivings fuels seven month-long journeys to PNG during thirteen years. Dense rain forests and precipitous mountains have spawned countless distinct cultures and over 800 different languages in a nation the size of California. The author and her husband see people existing in harmony with the natural world, living richly textured lives without manufactured goods. Yet wherever they venture in this young nation, the clash between ancient and modern is the central drama, played out against a backdrop of sexual tensions. At first, McCollum supports Pirip's goal of bringing rural women into the spreading cash economy. Then doubt began to stir. Rapid Western-style development is stripping influence away from women and a sense of significance away from men. But when Pirip finally confides her private story, McCollum sees why her struggle is needed. She also fathoms the central question for Pirip, for herself, for PNG and the USA; namely, how can the exhilarating possibilities of change be balanced with the sustenance of tradition? The author's friends are asking, "Why do you keep going back to New Guinea?" The effort to understand her attachment to Pirip pulls her into a quaking bog of childhood memories, and then guides her onto firm ground again. In the end, that courageous mountain woman's affection lifts a timeworn veil of guilt and brings the author a calming self-acceptance.

About the Author:

Audrey McCollum was born and raised in New York City, where turmoil in her family sparked her drive to become a psychotherapist and writer. Educated at the Brearley School, Vassar College, and the Simmons College School of Social Work, she became a family therapist and research associate at the Yale University Child Study Center and Department of Pediatrics. During those years, she married and began rearing her daughter and son--trying to combine effective parenting and professional life when that was still uncommon among women. Her first book, Coping with Prolonged Health Impairment in Your Child was described as "the best book in the field with the worst title!" Expanded and updated, it was later published as The Chronically Ill Child: A Guide for Parents and Professionals. A move to New Hampshire rekindled her childhood curiosity about personal transition. Her groundbreaking book, The Trauma of Moving: Psychological Issues for Women was followed by Smart Moves: Your Guide Through the Emotional Maze of Relocation, co-authored by Nadia Jensen and Stuart Copans. Still available, it has earned accolades in the media and is described as "the bible" of relocation.

An avid traveler, drawn to the beauty and mystery of tropical coral reefs and rain forests, McCollum became fascinated by Papua New Guinea -- a nation in the midst of tumultuous change. During repeated visits there, she and a mountain woman, Pirip Kuru, developed the complex and ever-deepening friendship described in Two Women, Two Worlds.

McCollum practices psychotherapy, writes, skis, hikes, and lives happily with her husband in Etna, New Hampshire.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780966689600
Publisher: Hillwinds Press
Publication date: 01/28/1999
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 214
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 1.25(h) x 9.00(d)

Read an Excerpt

Pirip leaned back ... and let memories stream out. "In my life as a child I was told by my parents to look after the pigs; we had many pigs and they never stayed inside the fencing. Sometimes they went out destroying our neighbor's garden and the neighbors demanded compensation from us." ... Pirip and one brother, her father's first wife's second son, looked after the pigs belonging to all three wives, she said. Their gardens were in the "big bush"-- the forest, far away from the place where they lived. "My parents told me that their work was to make new gardens and look after older ones. My work was to look after the pigs, and to break firewood and fetch water."

"How did you break the firewood--an axe?" No, Pirip explained, she gathered fallen tree branches, made them into a bundle, and carried them on her head. She fetched water for cooking and drinking from far away, collecting it in a length of bamboo. All those responsibilities held her back from going to the meeting places and the market--until the missionaries came.

"How old were you then?" ... "Maybe seven years old. A year later my parents decided to put me in mission school. But my father was worried about me. Sometimes he stopped me from going to school because he thought the white-skinned people might take his daughter away. Later he realized that they came to be missionaries here and would not go back, so he let me go on schooling."

"So your father cared for you well." "He did. Everything he owned was all mine. Sometimes he thought that I was the only one in the family." The memory brought a glow to her face, and she paused for a moment, as though to relish it. "Yes, Father loved me very much, so sometimes he cut ripe sugar cane or banana and asked me to come in the haus man and sit down and eat with him--sometimes I sleep with him in the haus." "Even at night?" "Yes, sometimes in the night. My father's love and concern was on me so much that he did not have concern about the seven brothers of mine."

"What work did your brothers do for the family?" I wondered. "They would get slingshots and go out shooting bats and wild pigs and cuscus. They never listened to their parents, they went to find girl friends."

"So your father loved you more, but he made you work harder than your brothers?" Pirip smiled but didn't answer. Questions ... crowded my mind but it was futile to push. Pirip and I were separated not only by language but by thought as well--different ways of finding meaning in our lives. ... [Yet] when we began our good-byes, I sensed my growing affection for this woman from another world. But I had let her down, and for me that's the stuff of nightmares.

My father had been cursed by inherited wealth. When his fortune shrank in the 1929 stock market crash, he couldn't manage a transition from playboy to salaried worker. One night I saw him teeter on the windowsill, bellowing in a whiskey-rasped voice, "Look out below, here I come," while Mother clutched his ankle. Then he left and came back, left and came back, then left again--I never knew when it would happen or why. ... Like many children of turmoil, I sometimes imagined that it was all my fault and it was up to me to fix it, whatever "it" might be.

My sister, Jackie, woke up sick when she was ten and a half. When I told our mother about Jackie's fiery spotted skin, she began phoning to find a doctor. We had no regular doctor and, in fact, no regular phone. In her slow slide into madness after our father left for the final time, Mother reclined all day on the living room sofa garbed in a rosy rayon negligee--lost in a reverie that gradually became demonic. She feared opening her mail, so the bills piled up unpaid. Utilities in our Park Avenue apartment were often cut off (Tennessee Williams would have loved the scene).

Waiting for the doctor, I dressed carefully in a clean blue pinafore--it had been my uniform as a summertime city hospital aide. I filled a small glass with rubbing alcohol, covered it with a Kleenex, and plunged our thermometer into the sterile bath. It looked quite professional, I thought. Jackie had German measles, the doctor said. After listening briefly to Mother's torrent of agitation, he turned to me. I was fourteen, after all.

He glanced at my thermometer, although he didn't use it, and quietly told me what could be done to soothe Jackie while rubella ran its course. "She shouldn't read much," he cautioned. Her eyes were inflamed.

"But my homework!" she moaned. Our school had high standards. "Don't worry," I said. "I'll bring your assignments home, I'll read to you, I'll help you keep up." But I usually lingered at school--it was a better home than home--and then there was supper to fix. Mother hadn't been reared to cook, and our older sister was away at college. When we were short of groceries because the Gristede's bill was unpaid, well, the corner delicatessen made up a fine muenster on rye.

The night before she went back to school, Jackie impaled me with her gaze. It was clear blue again. "You promised to help me with my homework every night. You didn't do it."

That wasn't the only time I failed to deliver some help I had promised. The promises were well-meant and she trusted them; but then, absorbed in my own concerns, I would disappoint her. And when she died an unnaturally early death, I wondered if my neglect had played a part.

Now, years later, did Jackie's shadow lie across my relationship with Pirip?

Table of Contents

Map of Papua New Guinea

Prologue

Chapter 1 -- Payback

Chapter 2 -- Bilums, Bride-price, and a Woman's Dream

Chapter 3 -- Dreadful Desire

Chapter 4 -- Searching for Connection

Chapter 5 -- Pirip Persists

Chapter 6 -- Haus Win

Chapter 7 -- Paradox in Huli Land

Chapter 8 -- The Zest of War

Chapter 9 -- Making Men

Chapter 10 -- "We Are Their Sisters, Their Mothers"

Chapter 11 -- Magical Rivers

Chapter 12 -- Spirits Old and New

Chapter 13 -- Reunion with Pirip

Chapter 14 -- Fresh Perspectives

Chapter 15 -- The Circle Begins Closing

Chapter 16 -- The Heart of the Story

Epilogue

Bibliography

Glossary

What People are Saying About This

Tobias Schneebaum

An intriguing memoir...McCollum's relationship with the people of Papua New Guinea was intimate and fascinating, particularly when it involved women who are trying desperately to become part of the modern world....This book is by no means limited to the women's point of view.
— (Tobias Schneebaum, Author of Where the Spirits Dwell: An Odyssey in the Jungle of New Guinea)

Audrey McCollum

From the Author:

Two Women, Two Worlds is a travel memoir with a difference. It illuminates the rarely-described world of women in Papua New Guinea (in most books about this fascinating nation, women are shadowy figures in the background). Furthermore, since Papua New Guinea is emblematic of all nations being propelled into the modern world, the story shows the human face of globalization; that is, it highlights the impact of western values on a developing country, and it questions many of our beliefs about progress. A major challenge in the next millennium will be to transcend barriers of language, culture, and geography, reaching for common understanding. Two Women, Two Worlds shows how struggles to maintain cross-cultural friendships can deepen our understanding of ourselves, as well as of "the other."

Elaine Babcock

Thoughtful, evocative, moving, Two Women, Two Worlds traces the painful transition of a "primitive" culture into a cash society and questions some of its new values. Along the way, McCollum focuses on male-female relationships, skillfully drawing parallels between Papua New Guinea and the United States...As founder of the Women's Network of the Upper Valley and the Women's Information Service, I identified with Pirip's struggle to build a center for women, and was profoundly affected by her story. I strongly recommend this book. It is a good read. (Elaine Babcock, Delegate to the United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women)

Charlotte Houde Quimby

The truth of Audrey McCollum's experiences in Papua New Guinea rings loud and clear in this remarkable memoir. With the heart of a mother and the attuned intellect of an experienced psychotherapist, McCollum explores the life of Pirip Kuru, a strong native woman dedicated to leading her highland sisters into a brighter future. McCollum reflects on experiences that contain threads of similarity and difference between Pirip and herself, holding a mirror for all women reaching across vastly different worlds to find a common understanding....Her poignant personal memories lend an incredible strength to the story.
— (Charlotte Houde Quimby, MSN, CNM, FACNM. International consultant on women's health).

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