SLEEPWALKING
My brother and I were unlikely
roommates. He and I are as different as night and day. He has been
a good ole' boy from head to toe since the day he was born and I am,
well, I'm not sure what category I fit into. Bobby is four years
younger than me. Since the day he was born we were roommates until I
left for college. Something neither of us cared for.
Bobby was born not long after we
moved into a large two story house in the Paradise community.
Our room was upstairs with a
screened porch adjoining it that we played on.
When I was nine and
Bobby five, I owned a toy Roy Rogers Ranch set, complete with the
fences and buildings for Roy and Dale, Trigger and Buttermilk and all
the animals. I was particular about my toys. I would place them in
a corner and play with them for hours, keeping things nice and neat,
carefully putting them back in the box when finished.
Bobby loved
destroying things. He lost one of the horses and broke one of the
fences. He also had some pet white mice that he removed from their
cage. These critters chewed on Trigger and caused him to lose a leg.
I was furious. I told Mama that I wanted a room all to myself. Of
course, that didn't happen. I was told to just be more careful.
The summer before I went to the fourth
grade, Daddy built us a ranch style house on Jackson Street
Extension, out in the country.
It had a long hall that separated the
living quarters. There was one house on either side of us and corn
and cotton fields all the way back to MacArthur Drive. Our pasture
went all the way to Prescott Road. The house was huge. The
fireplace alone had enough bricks in it to build a small house. I
was excited because I thought I would have a room all to myself. I
didn't. The bedrooms were off the long hallway, ours first and then
my sisters. We didn't have real doors, just an accordion style
folding screen in place of one wall that separated us from the
hallway. This was so we could have cross ventilation since there was
no air conditioning. Mama and daddy were at the end of the hall with
a real door, and a small window unit.
I didn't like that my brother and I had
to share a room again and even worse, Daddy had a headboard custom
made by Leonard Lemell, our faithful carpenter, that had a shelf for
books and stuff. Our two single beds were side by side with only a
foot between us. I hated it. At least we each had our own closet
and built in chest of drawers.
My side had pot plants and
books neatly arranged.
My clothes hung in the closet with short
sleeves first, then long sleeves, then pants, all facing the same
way, neatly spaced. My underwear and tee shirts were carefully
folded in the drawers. I constantly told him, “Don't touch, that's
mine.”
Bobby had jars of pickled rats and snakes.
He had clothes
strewn everywhere, skulls of dead animals, wads of bubblegum stuck on
the headboard. His closet looked like the Tasmanian Devil had taken
up permanent residence.
After about a year, Daddy, having
gotten tired of our fighting, put the headboard divider down the
center of the room giving each of us our own space. This was as
close to heaven as I would get, daddy said. This was fine, but the
only problem was I had to pass his side of the room to go to the
bathroom. We co-existed that way for years, fighting often. I still
had to live with a brother that would place his cat on me after I was
asleep. Have you ever been awakened by a cat sucking on your neck in
the middle of the night? How that poor cat survived, I'll never
know because it was slung up side the walls too many times. He also
found great pleasure in sneaking up behind me and choking me until I
passed out.
One night, after both of us were
asleep, daddy thought he heard a burglar in the house. He walked
quietly up the hall searching.
When he got to our room he found me
sitting up in bed talking in my sleep and Bobby sleepwalking.
Bobby
became a regular sleepwalker after that night, and I continued to
talk.
Soon the trouble began.
Bobby didn't
just leave his sleepwalking to our room only. Since we had no real
door, he began wandering the hall to my sisters' room or into the
kitchen. Once he thought he was going to the bathroom and ended up
going in the refrigerator. Mama had a chain and lock placed on it
after that. Mama and daddy discussed things with our next door
doctor. He said that when Bobby was sleepwalking we were not to wake
him suddenly for fear of causing trauma. So we put up with him
wandering the house during the night. It became a game like “Where's
Waldo”. Every morning we would search closets and rooms to see
where my sleepwalking brother finally bedded down. We got used to
it.
But one night, he left the house by
the door on the hallway. He was found sleeping on the patio in the
back yard. Since we lived in the country, we hardly ever locked
doors. We had to lock the door, now. He found other doors. When
someone forgot to remove the key, he would unlock the door and head
outside. Soon, he didn't just leave the house and sleep in the
yard, he began wandering to the barn, or was found in the pig lot or
in the pasture among the animals, quietly sleeping with his pillow.
We even found him in the nearby woods off Prescott road. Mama was
beside herself and threatened to place a chain and lock on him at
night. Maybe she should have. All of us were losing sleep.
Securing the doors became a
hard-and-fast rule. But that didn't stop him. He still managed to
escape. One morning, we found him on the grass under the China berry
tree, in our neighbor's pasture, fast asleep. All the doors were
still locked and keys accounted for. This happened for several
nights. I was put on watch, after that, to see how he escaped. I
really hated that, but at least I didn't go to sleep first to have
that cat thrown on me. That rascal had found the wood box next to
our huge fireplace. The wood box opened to the den and also to the
outside so we could load firewood from the woodpile without tracking
the wood across the living room. No one ever thought that it should
be locked. Bobby had managed to crawl through that space and leave
the house.
Bobby finally stopped walking in his
sleep. The reason? One night he went outside and fell into a ditch
filled with water, frightening him alone out there in the dark. He
managed to get to the house and bang on the door until someone let
him in. Bless his heart.
I do know that after that he was always
in his bed every morning, and we continued being horrible roommates.
© Nippy Blair 2015. Posts and pictures on this blog cannot be copied, downloaded, printed, or used without the permission of the blog owner, Nippy Blair.
Great story, heart-warming, interesting and funny! Do you still talk in your sleep?
ReplyDeleteNot as much. I college I described an entire date with my roommates while asleep. Even answered questions, but never said anything incriminating.
DeleteIf it had been me, I would have been cussing in my sleep
DeleteI left out the censored parts, Becky.
DeleteI seem to recall him chaining himself to the bed....?
ReplyDeleteHe may have. I just know it was a rough time for all of us....Maybe the trauma affected him...
DeleteI seem to recall him chaining himself to the bed....?
ReplyDelete