LOVE THY BROTHER
Written by Sharon Maier
As I was growing up in Florida, I did so with three brothers. My eldest brother's name was Ronnie
and he was six years older than I. Now, Ronnie and I didn't have too much in common other than
our birthright because there were too many years that gapped our ages.
My youngest brother's name is Terry, he is nine years younger than I. Again, as with Ronnie,
there wasn't much in common we had as children. Oh of course I loved him because he was, after
all, my brother but other than begging Mom to make him quit following me around or the times I sat
with him when she went somewhere, I wouldn't have known he was around. Then there was Jerry. Now, Jerry was just three years older than I and we really used to get
into some knock down, drag out fights as kids. I mean we couldn't pass one another in the hallway
without a name being slurred or a punch or two exchanged. Yes, Jerry and I gave new meaning to the
term sibling rivalry. I can't remember more than one time our mother ever, seriously, punished us for anything.
Once she told me to clean my room before I went out to play and I said,
"I don't have to!" I found out quickly I did and that was the end of the conversation.
It was the same with Jerry as best as I can remember. Now Dad, on the other hand, was a different
situation all together. We all tried to walk the line with him even though he never touched us.
It was just the threat of what he could do if he wanted to that was enough to keep us in line. In
fact, it only took "the look" to do it in most cases. I'm sure there are a lot of you who used to
get "the look" so I know you understand, all too well, what I'm talking about.
Early in the mornings when we got ready for school was the worst possible time of day to throw
Jerry and I in the same room together. Neither one of us were morning people to begin with but
the only time of day we were forced to have to look at one another was at our breakfast. Dad
would have already left for work, Ronnie was out of school, Terry was too young for school so
that left only Jerry and I at the kitchen table that time of morning.
"Creep!" He'd address me under his breath so Mom couldn't hear.
"Goofy!" I'd return.
Now, I know Goofy wasn't very original but I used to think he looked like Walt Disney's Goofy
and I couldn't resist the chance to tell him so any and every chance I got, it was part of the
routine we'd go through each day.
"I hate your guts!" He'd fire. "YEAH...well, I hate your guts more than you hate mine!" I'd always reply.
I told you I wasn't very original, I didn't seem to be able to think on my feet as quickly
as Jerry could. "OKAY, I'm tired of this every morning." Our mom would say without fail.
"From now on, every morning, you will tell each other how much you love instead of
how much you hate...is that understood?"
HORRORS UPON HORRORS! Ask us to lop an arm off at the elbow, ask us to slide down a giant razorblade into alchol but don't...please don't ask us to say "I love you." It would go against
everything we had come to believe about one another for all those years...NO, don't make us do
that! "You will do it or your dad will hear about it when he comes home from work tonight...do you
understand what I'm trying to say?" She asked us. "Love ya..." Jerry told me hurriedly as if it would be less painful to get it over with quickly. "Yeah, yeah...me too." I answered with a wave of nausea. Mother made us say those unspeakable words to one another for a solid week. I would use the
excuses I wasn't hungry, I was running late, I didn't feel well...anything to keep me from sitting
across the table from Goofy and telling him how much I loved him...it never worked bye the way, she
always saw through it. One morning as we were sniping under our breaths at one another, Jerry stood up and made his way
to the electric range where our milk was being heated for hot chocolate. He poured another cup
then leaned against the range to get a better shooting angle at me while Mom wasn't looking. What happened next I can still remember as though it was yesterday. Jerry's shirt tail was outside
his jeans and it touched the hot coil on the electric range. Immediately the back of his shirt was
ablaze with fire shooting an entire foot above his head. He dropped the milk and began fumbling with
the buttons trying to get the shirt off his body. I did nothing but scream and cry, it was as if my butt
was frozen to the chair.
Mom turned from the sink where she had been standing with a glass of water and threw it across his back
to put out the flames. What the water didn't get she beat out with her hands until, finally, the flames
were extinguished. As it turned out, except for his understandable fear, he wasn't hurt at all. The shirt, however, was
another matter but that didn't seem to bother anyone that morning. "I thought you hated your brother." Mom said to me. "Just now, when you thought he was dying,
you screamed for me to help him, that doesn't sound like hate to me...it sounds like love." OH GOD! What a horrible reality...I did love Jerry after all. Though it still took a little time
for us to adjust to it, we began a better relationship with one another after that fateful
morning. The events that morning happened forty years ago when we were children. Jerry joined the
Navy at sixteen and I didn't see him again for years. As adults we got along well and had a
mutual respect for one another. He married, had children and retired outside Jacksonville,
Florida. The last time I was able to tell my brother just how much I really loved him all
those years was in December of 1990 as he died of cancer. He was coherent until the end so
we laughed a lot about our childhood and the way we treated one another but I'll never
forget our last conversation. "I love you." I softly told him as I rubbed his brow. "I love you too, Sis." He told me as he squeezed my hand for the last time.