Galoshes and IKE, a comment about growing up in Oklahoma

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Galoshes and IKE
(A comment about growing up in Oklahoma)

Janelle Meraz Hooper

I woke up this morning thinking about the first election I can remember. I was about twelve and we had moved into a new development outside the gates of Fort Sill, Oklahoma, where there was an Indian reservation. The Kiowas weren’t happy because the developers had cut a road through the new houses that went straight through the middle of the clay deposit they used for their pots. I walked that road to school every morning and didn’t see any difference between that unpaved road than any other except that the clay was a deep red. Then the rains came and I saw that clay with a new perspective. Before I went out the door that morning, my mother made me put on my new red galoshes. She’d bought them several sizes too big so they’d last a long time. Everything I wore was too big, even the hand-me-downs from my cousins. The boots looked dumb and I knew the kids would laugh at me. I was glad I had that I LIKE IKE button someone had given me to balance things out. I was the only one in my class who had one and it made me the subject of envy among all my classmates. I wore it every day. On my way to school the new road looked fine but, when I stepped on it, I sank into thick red clay that was deeper than the tops of my galoshes. About halfway to school I noticed that one of my galoshes was missing and the sock on the bootless foot was as red as the road and was half off. I clomped into school with one cold, wet and muddy bootless foot that stayed that way all day. I was sure glad I hadn’t lost my new sock (not realizing that it would never be white again) and I still had my I LIKE IKE button, so I thought I was in good shape. And I was–until I got home and mom noticed I’d lost a brand new boot and one of my socks. Not even IKE could help me then.

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The author, Janelle Meraz Hooper, grew up in Oklahoma and is the author of The Turtle Trilogy (A Three-Turtle Summer, As Brown As I Want, and Custer & His Naked Ladies). See all of my books on Amazon. PB & Kindle.

Note: Geronimo, Life on the Reservation, is a one-man show I wrote for Rudy Ramos (Now on Kevin Costner’s Yellowstone (Paramount Channel).

My Newest novel
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Thanks for stopping by! Janelle

Taazslath, one of Geronimo’s wives

I found this photo when I was researching the one-man show I wrote for Rudy Ramos. I love vintage photographs!

I found this picture of Taazslath, one of Geronimo’s wives with her child, Chiricahua, taken at  Fort Bowie in 1886, courtesy of Pinterest’s archives. Thanks, Pinterest. I’ve seen this skirt material on other Native American women. In his show, Rudy mentions the Apache women shopping in the trading post. Could it be that the material was really curtain material and no one told them? Or, maybe they knew and the bolder print suited them better. Myself, I like it!

In Rudy’s one-man show, Geronimo, Life on the Reservation, he mentions how exposure to the trading posts has changed the Apache women:
…When the Indian scouts have their payday their women dress up and head to the trading post to shop. It’s a big deal. They go crazy in there. Things that are normal to the soldiers and settlers are luxuries to us.
   Our women have always worked hard but they are working even harder now that they get to spend their pay at the trading post. They have gotten used to having the same things the white women have. I don’t know if they could ever do without them now. It makes me sad because every time our women go to the trading post they come back a little less Apache and more like a white woman. I can’t blame them. I see the light in their eyes when they get something new – something they have never even seen before…”

Geronimo, Life on the Reservation
Starring Rudy Ramos
Directed by Steve Railsback
Written by Janelle Meraz Hooper

Rudy’s schedule:

April 6 & 7- Santa Monica, CA Playhouse
April 19- Roxy Theatre, Muskogee, OK. The next night, at the same theatre, Rudy will be inducted into the Oklahoma Film Hall of Fame.
In August, for 2 shows, Rudy will be at the Western Legends Roundup in Kanab, UT. Dates to be announced.

See the other books and stories I’ve written

My newest novel

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“Trust your instincts, then follow them.”

Maku, a rebel leader somewhere in the middle of the dark jungles of Nigeria, has just placed an order for a young woman who lives in the United States. It was easy. He did it  with his iPad. He orders and pays for all of the women he buys and re-sells that way–over the Internet–without ever having to leave his Hummer. New Adult (New Adult is the age-group after Young Adult, ages 18-29 and up). Suspense/romance. Kindle.

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Many thanks, Janelle