Monday, August 31, 2009

From a safe to a scary world

From a safe to a scary world



“In my day, there were grass widows and there were sod widows. I was a grass widow. My grandfather went to his grave not knowing I was divorced.” – Virginia Bennett


Simple, happy times

During her growing-up years in tiny Marshall, Missouri, Virginia admits she was the “silliest thing ever.” She never studied but instead concentrated on clothes, dancing and boys. She was pinned five times. And she married J.B. Bennett because he was “good-looking, had a great car and was a good dancer.”

J.B. was a traveling salesman who, it turned out, “did everything you hear traveling salesmen do.” She was a proud young woman whose family disapproved of her marriage so she did everything she could to make it work. In the end she left J.B., not knowing anything about her future except she wanted out. After her marriage went south, so did she.



Welcome to Dallas, the 1950s working world


Never did she think she’d be a working woman, much less a divorced one with two young daughters. Her first job was at Delta Airlines as a ticket agent. “I had no idea what I was doing and that part never changed. I’m sure there are still people flying around up there because of what I did wrong.” In today’s parlance: Not a good fit.




Her second job was at The Dallas Morning News, a major metropolitan daily right up from the grassy knoll. At work, she kept to herself, not wanting to explain her shameful status of divorcee. “All I did was work and raise kids. I’d work on Sundays at The News to make ends meet. My parents, my sister (divorced with two kids) and the three of us shared one apartment.” She didn’t care about dating, outside activities or anything else. She was bone tired.


But things got better. She opened up a bit to strangers. She made casual friends at The News and did well in the Petty Ledger department. Passed over and moving on But when a promotion she should have received went to a man, she applied for a secretarial job in the newsroom and got it.

Her bosses in Petty Ledger told her she’d be back – she’d hate the big, bad newsroom. They didn’t know: you don’t tell Virginia Bennett what she cannot do. And even if she hated her new job, no way was she going back. Her pride wouldn’t let her.

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