LIKE MOST PARENTS of a teen, I worry about our daughter’s future romantic relationships. So far, she’s done quite well. Her first love who was not her Daddy was someone who would make the heart of any mother just soar: Tall, Jewish, part of a large family, he doted on the needs of my child and encouraged her to eat her vegetables. But there were problems, not the least of which was that he was imaginary.
We were driving home from school when I first heard about him. My little girl said that she had a new friend.
“How nice,” I said, half-listening in that end of the day kind of way.
“He hangs out by the playground,” she told me.
I listened a little closer.
“He talks to me all day,” she said. “Only me.”
Now she had my attention. I had read the books. I knew I was not supposed to show them any fear, no matter what the topic. But I also read the news and I didn’t like the sound of this at all.
Tentatively, I asked, “Do you know his name, sweetie?”
Her eyes locked onto mine in the rearview mirror.
“Of course,” she said, like I was denser than overnight Playdoh.
“It’s Bibi Geggy,” she said.
“Geggy,” I said? “Bibi, you say?” I scribbled it down while still driving.
“He brings his dog,” she told me. “It’s a really nice dog.”
“What’s the dog’s name?” Something made me ask.
“Walter Fleischman,” she said, and then she clammed up. Couldn’t get another word out of her all the way home.
There were no Geggys in our local phone book and no Fleischmans of any spelling. The next day her teachers told me that of course no one hangs around the playground and that certainly no one had been talking to our child day after day.
Perhaps another mother would have figured it out sooner. I mean, his name might have given him away, but remember for a moment the likes of Bebe Rebozo and Bibi Netanyahu–now there are two names kids could really love–and experience, like I did, the joy of the plain old fun at the sound of something. Bibi Geggy. What a great name.
My child was delighting me, making me laugh. And not from a pratfall or some cutesy kid thing, but from deep within the vast magnitude of her imagination.
My child was delighting me, making me laugh. And not from a pratfall or some cutesy kid thing, but from deep within the vast magnitude of her imagination.
When I called my sister I got my reality check. The conversation went something like this.
“You had an imaginary friend.”
“I did?” When? I was genuinely stumped by this suggestion.
“Ah, Andy?”
“Andy Hattenrash? He wasn’t imaginary.”
“Yes, well…”
Perhaps my daughter originally intended to keep Bibi around for a short while; maybe he arrived packed-and-ready-to-go after a month or two, but with just the eensiet bit of encouragement from her mother, my daughter’s friend stuck around long enough for us to get to know him real well, and I don’t regret a minute of it.
Pablo Picasso is well known to have said that he spent his adulthood trying to get back to painting like a child. It’s always been one of those quotes thrown into feel-good books and make-art-from-the-science-side-of-your-brain books but it never meant so much to me as it does when I ponder Bibi and what his extended family brought to mine. And there was an extended family. There are babies–sometimes five, sometimes 10, depending on the day, whom he cared for with his sister, Acalcia; at some point Walter Fleischman found honest work as a police dog in Schenectatoad before finding Mu Shu, his soulmate, and being transferred to Queens; Bibi took up with the ever-unsteady Rosie, who wanted to have children, and then he broke it off with her, a decision we all came to agree was best for everyone involved.
And along with his own concerns, it came to be that some issues that were presented to our family got processed through Bibi and his.
For instance, a friend walked out of a bad marriage and came to stay with us. She was in rough shape.
About two days into her visit my daughter asked me, “What’s divorce, Mommy?”
I explained it.
“Well,” she said, “Bibi Geggy is divorced.”
Didn’t know he was ever married.
“Oh yes. To Acalcia.”
“His sister?” I was a little alarmed.
“Well, they were married,” she explained, almost whispering, “but now they are traveling as brother and sister.” And she nodded very knowingly.
The otherwise-intelligent book I once used through my child’s development was full of admonitions about providing other outlets for her imagination, not letting her get too dependent on the imaginary friend’s existence, and how not to let him take the heat for any of her bad behavior.
That book missed the point of our Bibi. He was never held up against her bad behavior. He was always held up to mine. He was patient, made perfect banana-clam cookies, led a daily parade playing the trombone, and never rushed dinner or bath time to get back to work, or so I was told on a fairly regular basis. That means he was a good listener, a creative playmate and available even on deadline. He still sounds like a much better parent than I am.
And because of that Bibi and me, well, we got along like peanut butter and jelly. I mean, who doesn’t need a role model? I did. Still do. And even though one day Bibi did get packed off with the pacifiers and the pull-ups, he continues to remind me—well into adulthood as I am—to appreciate the rewards of thinking like a child.
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Thanks to painter Amanda Blake for the art used here of Charlotte and Her Imaginary Friend. A show of Amanda’s work is a must-see in the TSP Galleries.
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{ 13 comments… read them below or add one }
Oh I love this post. I too had an imaginary friend. Linda was simply amazing, she could do anything! Her Dad was Buck Owens. I suppose I watched too much Hee Haw as a child. Linda’s house was on a big hill, it was a big white mansion in Lenox, MA. To this day, my family teases me about Linda. When we drive by that big white house (the house is real…) they still point and ask me if we should drop in and check on old Linda. LOL
My friend Annie, named after my grandmother, had pink hair and pink eyes and wore black lace underpants and bras under everything. She had a place at the breakfast table for years. She ate breakfast in her black lace lingerie, lucky girl.
I love learning about other kids’ imaginary friends. Makes me feel normal for socializing with mine: So-So and Marlena. My brother had Pumo and Goya; they wouldn’t hang out with me.
Mine was Dottie Didi (until right now, I don’t think I ever thought much of how to spell her name. Was it one name or two? Hmmm…) I loved her. I don’t remember when she arrived or when she left, but I remember that I loved her!
My eldest daughter’s friend was named Itzy G’bitzy, and I did recogize her right away, since the name seemed every bit as silly as the friend I had once had. We all love “Itzy” though we don’t hear from her much anymore. When she was around she was silly, confused, smart, alive, dead, alive again after being dead, sick, well, hot, cold… How wonderful to have a friend that can change states of being with the wind!
Hi, Renovation Therapy: Oh, Linda! Oh, that’s wonderful, wonderful and I am forever in your debt for telling it. I have always wanted to collect these tales. Elizabeth (above) comments here http://thesisterproject.com/roach/in-the-matter-of-andy-hattenrash/ that she thinks people with imaginary friends are very special. I agree. Linda will stay forever with all of us who read about her.
Hi, Elizabeth. Annie is divine, hilarious, saucy and damn, girl, that is some wardrobe. A place at the table in black lace. Wowza. She and Bibi, I think, well they would get along just swell.
Hello, Michelle. And welcome. I can’t tell you how rare it is that anyone tells me I help make her feel normal. So lovely. As is So So and, of course, Marlena. That your brother would not share his with you is a detail worth its weight in rubies. Oh my. There’s a novel there. Or a memoir. Please visit often. I’m typing up some more imaginary friend memories.
Hi, Jean L. Lovely to see you here. Yes, that spelling of the imaginary friend’s name is a funny thing to ponder, isn’t it? Bibi Geggy took me a while. I just spit hot tea through my nose (I am not making this up) reading again the “confused, smart, alive, dead, alive again,” life of Itzy. I’ll never be the same in the very best of ways. And Long Live Itzy!
I had several imaginary friends when I was little.
Boy was my age and he was known for maybe making some messes and not wanting to take naps.
Sister was very quiet most of the time because Boy was always in the middle of everything. She might have been a little older than Boy and me.
George was a grown up and he was the one that would answer questions when you had them.
When it was naptime, I would make sure that George and Boy were napping in my brother’s beds (since they were at school, they didn’t need them!) and then, and only then, I would take my nap too. I don’t know where Sister was – apparently she didn’t have to nap.
We still talk about them sometimes – my mom brings them up more than anyone.
Hello, Roadchick. Thanks for resting your weary self here and telling us about your pack ‘o pals. Nice. I particularly like the rules, the “then, and only then,” you applied to the nap. It makes perfect sense to me. Yes, I bring up Bibi Geggy more than anyone. I miss him every day. Travel on back here, Roadchick, and keep checking in.
My daughter told me the most astonishing things from the backseat. And her questions were always ones I’m glad she couldn’t see my face for. She’s 12 now and I’m letting her sit upfront with me. The conversations are much more adult, I’m Lorelei to her Rory. (Sorry – we’re immersed in the Gilmore Girls these days. Now, there’s a mother-daughter team that act much more like sisters.)
Hi, Elissa. Yes, the backseat allows for some comfort with the uncomfortable. I noticed that, as well. The marvelous thing, the real gift, is to be there to catch the questions, the tales, the discoveries–painful though some may be. And then, oh-my-goodness, yes, those things and friends that percolate directly from the imagination, well, I think that early on kids get this great sense of the difference of eye-to-eye and back-of-the-head conversation, learning to float the truly wild stuff when our heads are literally turned. So glad you shared that. I love it. Thank you.
That is *such* a wonderful story. My son had an imaginary friend named John. They were best friends for years. John apparently moved a way but from time to time, my son will ask if I remember John, and of course, we reminisce.
This is a good reminder to ask my son a little more about John. I didn’t read books about IF’s and was always a little afraid to ask too many questions…for fear of making my son too dependent on him.
Thanks for the remembrance!
Hi, Lisa. So glad you like Bibi and Andy and our pack of friends. John, huh? I love that, and the fact that you were afraid to ask too many questions. I understand that. it’s almost if we get too close to the wonder of our kids’ minds that the magical will evaporate under the harsh lights of our scrutiny. I know, I do. Please come back for more.
I know this is an old post, but I have to share my sorrow. My son told me a few days ago that his imaginary friend (whom he acquired from his sister a number of years ago, don’t ask me how!) died — of swine flu. Kaka joined our family when my daughter was around 2 and while he/she (it changed constantly) had many friends that came and went, he/she was one of the ones that stayed around. When my son started playing with imaginary friends, apparently his big sister shared Kaka with him. Kaka and his friend Kiki were constant playmates and I always looked forward to hearing about their adventures.
Kiki is sad that Kaka has died, but my son seems okay with it. His big sister whispered to me, “Don’t worry Mom, Kaka will be back.”
Hi, Lori, and welcome to TSP, where imaginary friends are one of our very favorite topics, and mothers who write about them among our favorite people on the planet. This is a wonder. Yes, sad, but oh my, oh my, oh my, look how your son is filtering the news. Poor Kaka, poor dear, poor you, though I think your daughter may be on to something here, and I do hope you’ll write back with what I hope will be the continuing saga of Kaka, who all of us will keep in our thoughts. Let us know how it goes, please. We’ll be hoping to hear.