The Roots Is The
Toots: The Music That Got The Generation Of ’68 Through The 1950s Red Scare
Cold War Night-A
Misstep- With Elvis’s That’s When Your Heartache Begins In Mind
That's When Your Heartaches Begin" was written by Fisher, Fred /
Raskin, William / Hill, William.
If you find your sweetheart in the arms of a
friend
That's when your heartaches begin
When dreams of a lifetime must come to an end
That's when your heartaches begin
That's when your heartaches begin
When dreams of a lifetime must come to an end
That's when your heartaches begin
Love is a thing you'd never can share
When you bring a friend into your love affair
That's the end of your sweetheart
That's the end of your friend
That's when your heartaches begin
When you bring a friend into your love affair
That's the end of your sweetheart
That's the end of your friend
That's when your heartaches begin
If you find your sweetheart
In the arms of your best friend, your brother
That's, that's when your heartaches begin
In the arms of your best friend, your brother
That's, that's when your heartaches begin
And you know, when all your dreams
When all your dreams of a lifetime
Must, must all come to an end
Yeah that's, that's when your heartaches begin
When all your dreams of a lifetime
Must, must all come to an end
Yeah that's, that's when your heartaches begin
Oh, you see love is a thing that
That you never can share
And you know, when you bring a friend
Into your love affair
That you never can share
And you know, when you bring a friend
Into your love affair
That's the end of your sweetheart
That's the end of your friend
Well, that's when your heartaches begin
That's the end of your friend
Well, that's when your heartaches begin
…Laura
Simpson and Fiona Sims were inseparable friends from that first day in ninth
grade at North Adamsville High School in 1960 when due to the vagaries of the
alphabet and homeroom class row seating rules they sat one in front of the
other in Miss Williams’ home room class. Maybe it meant nothing in the great
mandela of things but neither Laura , named after the title of the 1940s film
noir thriller Laura starring Gene
Tierney which her mother had seen three times
nor Fiona, named after great stonewall cottage Irish Fionas going back a
few generations, liked their first names and that had been their first
substantial conversation once they left Miss Williams’ convent-like homeroom
and got a chance to talk in the second-floor girls’ “lav” that had been beyond memory set aside
as the freshmen girls’ lav (others might enter as needed depending on urgency
and no one would have crabbed if they had used other lavatories in the building
but that was acknowledged freshman girls’ headquarters. Oh, wait a minute, they
and sophomore girls as well, were not permitted under penalty of death in the
fourth floor junior and senior girls’ lounge, not if they wanted to live to
tell the tale since those girls guarded their prerogative as fiercely as anyone).
[This
Miss Williams as both Laura and Fiona would be the first to tell you once they had
completed four years of her home room craziness had been a Miss for a reason,
not so much because she was one of the plainest women in America and wore no
make-up to wash away some of that plainness but because she demanded, demanded
do you hear, that everybody be absolutely quiet in homeroom, homeroom for
chrissake. It was not until years later when the winds changed in a more
confessional age that these young women found out that as a result of her own
youthful indiscretion Miss Williams had secretly befriended many girls, some
known to them, who had gotten in “trouble,” gotten “in the family way” and she
had helped them out. Sometime somebody from North Adamsville should write that
story, write it in big letters too.]
So
Laura and Fiona sat next to each other and sensed in each other that subtle
fear of the unknown that every, or almost every, freshman has felt since, well,
since Socrates’ time, maybe before. So they sought shelter from the storms
together, and later with a small coterie of other adrift teen girls who gathered
round them when those other girls sensed that they were not alone in their
angst and ignorance and that Laura and Fiona seemed to have a better grip on
what ailed them collectively. Why they also had that subtle fear but this story
is about Fiona and Laura so we will let that latter settle in the background.
And of course since they were teenage girls they all were bothered by the same
set of anxiety associations that have bothered teenage girls since about
sixteen hundred or whenever teen-age hood was developed. You know about boys, about
their fearsome sexual appetites and cunning ways to get nice girls in
compromising situations, about expectations in being girls getting ready to be
wives, mothers, helpmates and every other menial task that his lordship
“delegated” to them, about getting recognized for serious achievement in a
male-dominated world, especially the professional world where there were few
role models but where they wanted to head, about sex, not the boy part, that
they had down as well as could be expected, but what to do about those raging
hormones that were causing them sleepless nights without “getting in the family
way,” having to go to Aunt Ella’s for the duration.
We
moreover are concerned not so much with Laura and Fiona’s high school days
except to note that is where their huddled friendship started and to note some
of the highlights that strengthened their friendship, not always in good ways
but who knows maybe in not so bad ways. You know getting through that first few
months of freshman year in one piece in an anonymous big high school
environment after the incubator closeness of junior high school, preparing for
that first school dance, that first high school dance where they got all
dressed up, bought new shoes and all, and doubled-dated two older guys from the
school, two seniors who were known around school as nothing but skirt-chasers
but who had a car and both girls decided to fling caution to the wind if it
came to that (it did and they did although keep that to yourself since they
both had reputations in freshman year of being “unapproachable,” meaning in the
language of the times virginal), latter getting caught up with each other’s
single date sexual escapades what with little trysts down at the secluded end
of old Adamsville Beach (the Squaw Rock end where only teenagers trended, no
nosey cops, no ill-disposed families with children to spoil the mood), then
senior year after both got accepted to the state university the few wild
parties they attended before graduation where when drunk they got carried away
with some unusual behavior, for them, which maybe foretold what might happen in
the future. That last set of escapades included an exchange of boyfriends, not
those long gone seniors from freshman year but fellow seniors, for the night on
a lark (those boyfriend who were more than willing to go along, did not have to
be coaxed into doing that task).
Both
later said nothing had happened with the other’s boyfriend, noting sexual
anyway, and maybe nothing did, but a very slight wariness set in between them
after that night, especially on Laura’s part who was somewhat possessive of her
men. (Later Ben one of the boyfriends, Laura’s, bragged about how he could
hardly keep up with Fiona’s urges once
he got her into bed but that was in the Monday morning jock locker room
talkfest and could be discounted as so much bravado, and has been since
Socrates’ time, maybe before.) But that was a mere bump in the road for both
were excited about finally graduating and heading away from home and on their
own (this getting away from home was epidemic among the early 1960s young
including the writer so he knows how important learning to fly on their own was
to Fiona and Laura). Moreover having both grown up on the “wrong side of the
tracks” (although in different sections of that wrong side) with tough family
lives including drunken fathers they were more than ready to move on.
Duly
noting those high school experiences, for good or evil, we are rather more
concerned with their young adulthood, the time when in 1964 and later they came
of age, came to able to carry on their own affairs after leaving home for
college, the state university at Amherst with all its possibilities and with
all its anonymousness. One thing that both Fiona and Laura had agreed on after
graduation from high school was that they would start college unattached. And
they did so shedding their boyfriends, their lukewarm boyfriends by August when
they went up to freshman orientation and dorm selection (they had already
signed up as roommates). (Those boyfriends, Ben and Alex, by the way who maybe were or maybe were not
sorry for the break-ups but one wonders whether they were left unhappy about
that future of no prospects of being exchanged on a lark. We will never know
since we are following Laura and Fiona and the boys’ whereabouts were unknown
when this story unfolded.) When the big day came they were both excited,
excited to be on their own, excited that that subtle fear that both felt, felt
as every, well almost every, freshman, has felt since, well, since about
Socrates’ time, if not before would find them with a known kindred spirit when
the hugeness and anonymousness of the place got to them.
This
tale however is not about surviving in an alien environment with a cluster of
friends or some sociological study about the mores of 1960s youth and their
reactions to the jailbreak wave that was cresting over them with newfound
liberties and freedoms (for a while anyway) that earlier generations could not
dream of but rather about how a firm female friendship got blown to the four
winds when one of the friends got her wanting habits on. As one might figure
with young women away from home (or men, for that matter), consciously
unattached, and with broods of males everywhere one looked that two
good-looking, smart, adventuresome young women would have no trouble finding
male company. They didn’t lack for company or invitations to frat parties and
other bashes. Didn’t suffer that lack from that first Freshman Mixer when they
again like some high school deja vu double-dated two fellow freshman from one
of their classes (College Math) whom they met after class in the dorm cafeteria
where the guys worked behind the counter and they “hit” on the two most
beautiful girls in any of their classes they said through to a couple of
serious affairs, one by Fiona with a married man, until the time of this part
of the story junior year.
Fiona
tended to be flirty and, well, not monogamous. Laura somewhat the opposite,
although that usually depended on whether she had a steady boyfriend or not. At
the time we are talking about, junior year, Laura did have a steady boyfriend,
Lance Taylor, a senior at Williams, located some miles up the road, who planned
to go to graduate school, and who had plans, sketchy plans, that involved
marriage to Laura at some future point. Laura having met Lance at the Art
Museum out in Williamstown while doing a project for her graphic arts design
class, assumed that same thing, except hungrier for security, her plans were far
from sketchy as she practically had them in that proverbial white house with
picket fence, three kids, and two dogs. And so she dreamed. Now this Lance,
naturally, as with all guys named Lance or so it seemed was good-looking,
smart, came from some money (important to working-class town Laura) and was a
go-getter. Just the things that Fiona found appealing as well. So anytime Lance
showed up at their dorm room and she was around she would get very flirty with
old Lance. Laura had to warn her off a couple of times but Fiona dismissed her
concerns as nonsense that she was just having fun with her new
“brother-in-law.”
Things
settled down for a while until toward the end of junior year Laura took a trip
to Boston in order to interview for a senior year internship with an
advertising company to spice up her graphic arts resume. She had expected (and
Fiona had too) to take three days for the trip but the firm after the first
interview decided to take her on as an intern and she headed back early.
(People who know knew she was an exceptional up-and-coming graphic artist and
that proved true later before she gave it up for marriage and kids.)
Well,
you already know the rest, and if you don’t you really haven’t been paying
attention, Laura caught Lance and Fiona in
flagrante in their dorm room. You also know that was the end of the long
friendship between Fiona Sims and Laura Simpson. What you don’t know is
this-ten years, ten long years later at their high school class reunion, Laura
Taylor, Lance in tow (the details of their after dorm reconciliation need not
concern us here except that somehow Lance convinced Laura that Fiona had “made”
him do it which for her own white picket fence reasons Laura was willing to
accept)not even drunk but cold stone sober, tossed a drink, a whiskey sour,
down the length of Fiona Sims shiny shimmy dress and then walked out of the
hall. Jesus.
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