WHAT I LEARNED BY CECILE BETTS
Probably my oldest sister, Anna, who raised me from when I was four years old, influenced me more than any other person. However, my mother-in-law, Ida Betts, also taught me a a lot.
I stopped at King Mountain Lodge every weekend the summer of 1957 because it was 77 miles from Anchorage and the children wanted Cokes and French fries to stave off starvation until we reached Index Lake, twenty miles further up the highway, rowed our boat over to our little cabin with our supplies for the three-day weekend and I could prepare supper.
We did not go to the lake during the winter months. I read in the newspaper that Mrs. Jack Betts of King Mountain Lodge died that winter. The next summer we again made our weekend trips to our cabin at Index Lake with the stop at King Mountain Lodge. The owner and I would talk while we waited for the cook to prepare the French Fries. I noticed a white haired woman usually sat at a table in the bar and Jack mentioned she was his mother.
By July, Jack asked me if he could call me when he came to Anchorage to do his shopping. A divorcee for over four years, I’d only recently dated a few times. We began dating and we married at the beginning of the next summer, May 29, 1959. Before we married, Jack made it clear his Mother would live with us part of each year. I raised no objection. Motherless since I was less than two, I thought it would be great to have a “mother” and my children would have a grandmother for the first time inasmuch as their father and I were both orphans.
Ida, 74 years old when I married Jack, had raised eight children, four girls and four boys. Before Jack’s birth, she experienced six miscarriages and still births, but after Jack, she had no problem with bearing the other seven children. She claimed that she did not ever enjoy the sexual side of marriage and that when she was pregnant her husband did not “bother” her. They were share croppers, planting and harvesting cotton and also kept chickens, pigs, and raised their fruits and vegetables, which Ida canned each season.
They lived in a two room cabin with a separate cabin for the kitchen, a well, which also served to keep milk cans cool and a root cellar. They cured their own hams, after butchering the hogs.
Ida’s husband drank, and he probably was abusive when drunk. Ida did something unusual for that time, she packed up her eight children when Jack was 15 and moved to town. Woman simply did not leave their husbands in that culture and environment no matter how unhappy the marriage. But she did it.
Jack and the two older girls lied about their ages and found work to support the family. They worked in the cotton mill in town for ten cents an hour. During the depression years after the stock market crash in 1927, Jack left home, so there would be one less mouth to feed. He joined the ranks of men who rode the rails and camped out. He traveled to most of the states in this fashion.
But, by the time I met Ida and when she became my mother-in-law, her children were grown, married with families, and she lived with Jack part time in Alaska and in Georgia with a daughter and son-in-law part time.
Slight of build, white haired, with a whim of iron, she usually had a wad of snuff in her mouth and am empty coke can nearby into which she spit the excess snuff juice. .She was illiterate, superstitious, and so bigoted she did not consider negroesos were humans. mShe created many problems for me and the children.. I finally told Jack, “I don’t mind that your mother spies on me and carries stories to you if she would only get them right. I never felt I could refuse to have her live with us because I’d agreed to it before we were married. (That attitude was probably part of what my sister Anna taught me, not to go back on a promise.)
Ida expected the worst of everyone and became so intrusive in our lives I finally said to Jack, “Your mother might just as well be in bed with us. She is everywhere else in our lives.”
It was a relief each year when she returned to spend some time in Georgia. But, one year she did not return to Georgia. She was ill and hospitalized several times. Since she had only a limited income, a pension paid by the Army after her youngest son died in Korea, we paid for her medicines and hospital stays. She liked to keep busy and made beautiful yo-yo bedspreads, one for each of her children. Jack and I purchased the yard goods from Sears Roebuck catalogs, light and dark solid colors, light and dark prints, which we cut for her in circles using a Number 2 can of fruit for the size. She would take a running stitch around the edge of each circle and gather it up and flatten the circle. Then she sewed them together in squares using five circles of one color and four of another color. The completed bedspread had 2,016 circles. As her eyesight failed, I would thread a half dozen needles for her at a time. I helped her lay out the squares so no two squares alike were next to each other.
When she finished all the bedspreads, she sat around moping and sighing. I thought maybe she could make a braided rag rug.
“Granny, do you know how to braid?” I asked.
“No,” she replied, “I don’t know how to do that.”
“Granny, you had four daughters, didn’t you ever braid their hair?”
“Oh, that was plaiting.”
She used the old English word for braiding. I bought the gadgets to fold strips of woolen material which Jack and I cut from garments we bought at rummage sales. I showed Granny how to braid the pieces, but she would call me to join pieces as she worked. Then I showed her how to sew the strips together to make a circular or oval rug. She made several small rugs and even made a runner to order for someone who saw her working on rugs in the Lodge.
Granny finally became too frail to travel back and forth from Georgia. Jack and I visited there in 1969 after we sold the Lodge. We saw all his sisters and brothers, nieces and nephews during the week we visited on our way to Mexico. That was the last time we saw Granny Betts
Looking back, I realize she taught me not to offer unasked for advice and to respect their privacy when I lived with my daughter and son-in-law in California during winter months after placing my husband in a nursing home.She taught me I should not expect to be included in all their plans and how important it was for me to make new friends and find my own activities. Yes, I learned a lot from Granny Betts about what a mother-in-law should not do
