Tuesday, October 9, 2012

In Memory Cathy Spivey


In Memory, Cathy Spivey, 
Senator Street, Brooklyn NY

In 1984 I moved onto Senator Street.   This Brownstone lined block was a very Brooklyn block with residents who had spent most of their lives on the block.  By 1984 most of the children of the block had grown up and moved away.  Most of the residents had European descendents, Irish, Norwegian, German and others.  At the top of the block was the old Bay Ridge Girls High School.   In the court yards were years of gifts from graduating classes of the past.  By 1984 the girls were gone and High School of Telecommunications was established.  To accomplish this transformation, a renovation was planned for the school.   This renovation would cost the city millions of dollars and would take over 25 years to complete (still in progress).

The first house next to the school belonged to the Spivey family.  Dorothy Spivey was nearing 65 in 1984.   Cathy was still living at home and was in her 40's.  Cathy was a misfit child.  Her overweight posture and whiskers made her homely and unappealing to the man who might be seeking a wife.   Her voice was often a nagging whine that made conversation difficult.   By 1984 she lived with her mom and best friend Pat from High School.  Her friend was shorter and wore glasses and was in part a good fit for Cathy.  Pat went to work everyday in Manhattan.  As best friends, they went everywhere together.

Because of Cathy's stature, she was not able to work.   She did work at home making hand made Jewelry which she would sell at fairs.   She also created beautiful artwork of her animals.  Most of all she loved animals.   She had cat collections, both indoor and out door.  She also bred show dogs of the most unusual types.   A few dogs were allowed to live inside and others were kept outside.   Neighbors would complain about the barking dogs.   Some threatened to shoot the dogs after they shot Cathy.   To cart the dogs to the shows she had a green dodge van.   She would back the van into her driveway.

Cathy was one of our friendliest neighbors.   She loved to talk about her dogs and she was a good source on caring for any pet you might have.   Over the years she guided me as to how to car for my dogs.   My first dog, Misty was a gentle soul.  When she passed away, Cathy was there with a beautiful sympathy card.   It captured the feelings that we were all going through at the loss of our family pet.   My second dog was the polar opposite.  This dog bit everyone.   Cathy's best advice was to kill the dog.  The dog never bit Cathy.  When Texas died, Cathy was there with another sympathy card (perhaps a little less sympathetic than the first card).

Encounters with Cathy could be very interesting.   I often whistle.  I do it without thinking.  Evidently my whistling over the years would awaken her dogs into a rousing round of rough barking that would disturb the neighbors, whom I mentioned above wanted to kill her and the dogs.  One Sunday morning when I was at church she rang our bell and woke Rob, my son, out of a drunken sleep.  Upon answering the door, he found Cathy reeling about my whistling and how it had to stop.   If I continued she would have me arrested for harassment.  Robbie was not sure how to deal with Cathy and simple closed the door and went back to sleep.

Shortly after the construction on the school started, Cathy became relentless on stopping the project at any cost.   First it was the continual noise,  then it was a dirt and heavy machinery.   Then they destroyed all the gardens that the graduating classes had donated.  As a final hit against Cathy, in the midst of all the noise and dirt flying, her mom passed away in her sleep.   She then set out to sue the school for her mom's death.   For 15 years the noise and dirt never stopped.

Over the years Cathy became a loyal friend.   She had an urban garden in her front yard.  She grew all sorts of plants and told me to help myself to her herbs.   She had a variety of mint plants, including a chocolate mint. 

At one point, social services made her work.   That lasted for a summer.   She would go into bodegas with a teen to try and buy beer.  Of course she was the spy, who no one would ever suspect as Drug and Alcohol enforcement.   She really liked that job and was a hit for her unit.   However, funds ran out and she was out of a job.

In recent years I did not see Cathy much.   I had moved across town and rarely got back on the block.   About 5 years ago I happened on the block and Cathy was outside.  She did not look the same, she really seemed to be failing.  She announced that her best friend and supporter of her home had passed away during a routine surgery.  Evidently infection had set in and she died in about two days.   With her mom gone and now Pat, she had no one to help her with her life.   Several neighbors tried to be with her.   Her finances finally were running out to the point where she had no more lights or heat and barely enough food.  In Early April she was found dead in bed by a neighbor who occasionally would check in on her.  I was on the block the day after she was found.  My heart was deeply touched by her death.   She was a good friend and a great neighbor.   Her laugh and insanities will never leave my mind.

Her relatives quickly moved in on this home.  Her mother specified in her will that Cathy had rights to the house until she died.  Now they were able to take over the place.   The weeks that followed were spent in carting all of her earthly possessions away.  Six 30 yard dumpsters were filled with all of her possessions.   Watching this was difficult.   Everything that was hers was deemed of no value to the relatives.  They ripped away all of the flowers and a big center bush and left the outside yard baron.   They will sell the home for about one million dollars... that is the fix me up price.   They had finally won this prize with little reference to the real prize that had passed away.   In memory of Cathy, oddly enough, flowers began to grow in her front yard.   No one has a clue how they got there or how they managed to grow without being watered.   But as you walk by there they are for all to enjoy, sporting the memories of our dear friend Cathy Spivey.

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