Wednesday, July 16, 2025

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HomeLife In the Berkshires'Phantom Pain': Remembering...

‘Phantom Pain’: Remembering my father, a veteran

The artist, Marilyn Kalish, remembers her father on Veterans Day: "Occasionally, I would glimpse
 him getting dressed for work, hopping across the bedroom to grab one of the legs leaning against the wall."

My Father lost his leg in Normandy during World War II. No one in our family ever talked
 about his missing limb, though I grew up surrounded by heavy wooden prostheses. (He insisted on keeping the old ones for some reason.) Wooden legs stood behind every door in our house, and they were always falling down unexpectedly. We would be eating dinner, perhaps, and one would crash like a giant redwood.

I didn’t like crossing the street with
 my father. He would hold on to me for balance and limp across, never fast
 enough for my taste. I would watch in a panic as the cars came toward us.
 We are going to die, I’d think. From the
 safety of the far curb, my mother would chide him: “Leo, come on. You can walk faster than that.”

My father was a salesman at a men’s clothing store and stood all day long at his job. Occasionally, I would glimpse
 him getting dressed for work, hopping across the bedroom to grab one of the legs leaning against the wall. He would start by putting a special sock over his stump, to make the leg fit better. Those thick, funnel-shaped socks were always drying in the bathroom, hanging in a
 neat row over the shower rod. I would see them every day as I got ready for school: a row of hand-washed socks with faded brown stains. I saw them so often I barely noticed them.

Years after my father died, I remembered those socks and the brown stains. How could I have been so oblivious? The brown stains were blood, so much that even my mother’s constant hand washing could never fully remove it.

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The Edge Is Free To Read.

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BITS & BYTES: ‘Romeo and Juliet’ at Shakespeare & Company; Red Clay Dance Company at Jacob’s Pillow; Movie and TV stars at The Clark;...

Shakespeare & Company presents an outdoor production of “Romeo and Juliet” at the Arthur S. Waldstein Amphitheatre, recently named one of the “Top 10 Outdoor Performance Venues in the U.S.” by Newsweek.

BITS & BYTES: Sondheim at Glimmerglass; Jason Carter at Fisher Center; Erica Feldmann at MASS MoCA; Bill Bowers at Chester Theatre; Third Thursday at...

Nominated for 10 Tony Awards and Winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, Sondheim’s innovative score explores pointillism in sound before opening out into one of the most glorious choral finales in the repertory.

THEN & NOW: Great Barrington Savings Bank

Great Barrington Savings Bank merged with Berkshire County Savings Bank in the 1990s to become Berkshire Bank.

The Edge Is Free To Read.

But Not To Produce.