Its only
me.
Extracts from the novel Pienin yhteinen jaettava

Pirkko Saisio
Photo
Pirjo Honkasalo
|
Changes of self and perspective and even of gender
fascinate the chameleon-like writer, dramatist and actress Pirkko
Saisio. Set in Helsinki in the 1950s and 1960s, her autobiographical
novel Pienin yhteinen jaettava (Lowest common multiple,
1998) was on the shortlist for the Finlandia Prize. We look
into the mirror, she says in this introduction to her writing,
to wonder at the fact that we have the ability to divide
in two, into she who looks and she who is looked at.
Extracts from Miten kirjani ovat syntyneet (How my
books have been born, edited by Ritva Haavikko, WSOY, 2000)
On the top shelf of the bookshelf in my childhood
home were about thirty volumes of the collected works of Vladimir
Ilyich Lenin. On the bottom shelf were the same number of the collected
Stalin. Between them were A Young Womans Cookbook and
Dale Carnegies How to Win Friends and Influence People,
which my father had had to study in order to graduate from correspondence
school as a commercial technician.
My family, my relatives and my parents
extensive network of friends, acquaintances and fellow members of
organisations rambled in the countryside, raced bicycles, sang in
choirs, practised athletics and wrestling in the Workers Sporting
Associations local championship competitions, played the mandolin,
ciné filmed their family and their dogs, trained the Alsatians.
No one read books.
No one taught me to read, except for
the Finnish primary school institution, for which I shall never
cease to be grateful. I learned to read at eight, and the same winter
the big girls of Fleminginkatu street took me to Kallio library.
I was given a library card and borrowed
my first book. Unfortunately, it was not Chekhov, Cervantes, Aleksis
Kivi or Dostoevsky.
It was a popular girls novel
about a tomboy called Tiina. But the effect was the same as that
of Dostoevsky and Chekhov was to be years later: the characters
in the book were more real than the people among whom I lived. The
world of the book was more real than the world I thought I knew.
The first book I read changed by conception
of reality, permanently. I came down with a dangerous illness: the
world of fiction became realer to me than the real world.
I decided to become a writer, someone
who invents reality.
I was an only child, brought up by five adults.
My father, too, was an only child,
so that for his parents I was the only grandchild. My mother had
an unmarried sister, who from time to time lived with us.
I was paid a lot of attention.
According to the child-rearing principles
of the time, the adults expressed their demands and wishes directly,
and by the age of ten I knew that I was expected to be a physical
education teacher, a member of parliament, a doctor of commerce,
a good organisation person and a mining engineer. I was not a particularly
quiet child, but I learned to keep my counsel over my own intentions
and plans.
My home was communist and atheist.
The Finnish educational institutions of the 1950s and 1960s upheld
Christian, patriotic, bourgeois values. The value-conflict between
home and the outside world widened into a chasm when, at five years
old, I became passionately interested in a person to whom I had
been introduced at play-school, someone who lived among us unseen
but seeing, loving and interested in everything and everyone.
This was Jesus, whose entire existence,
past, present and future, my home denied. Religion and prayer became,
for pre-school me, a personal refuge. By the time I reached puberty,
I knew how to use my religious ideas to rebel; I knew that when,
at a relatives confirmation, I went to kneel at the altar
to take communion, I was doing it more to humiliate my father than
out of a desire to participate in this strange metamorphosis of
bread and wine, blood and flesh.
I had much to hide, things I could
not talk about. In the years that followed there were more and more
of them.
At home, no one knew that I prayed
secretly, believed in Jesus, and as late as seventeen was still
seriously considering a job as a Salvation Army officer. I spent
six summers as a child-minder at the Salvation Armys summer
camp, and one summer in a Swiss childrens home. I participated
in the Salvation Armys devotional meetings, liked their spiritual
music, which was and is defiant, compy and humorous. The decisive
disincentive to my joining the Salvation Army was not religious
conviction or any lack in my desire for self-sacrifice, but the
bonnet which the women were supposed to wear, that awful, stone-hard
cap which was tied under the chin with a giant bow, like a kitten.
If women had been allowed to wear the handsome officers cap
and epaulettes, my destiny would have been different: it would at
least have made a detour via the Salvation Army.
In the playground and at school, no
one knew I came from a communist home. The recent war and hatred
of Russians and communists were visible in the daily life of the
1950s. Every family had a blue-striped, grey army blanket, suitable
for use on picnics, and a nervous father, home from the front, who
easily lost his temper and whom his secretly weeping wife understood.
Communist children were tormented in the schools of Kallio, the
working-class area of Helsinki, in which I lived throughout my schooldays,
right up to the end of the 1960s.
I did not speak about my home background;
I did not speak about my fervent religious feelings; I did not speak
about my decision to become a writer because it was something that
did not seem to interest anyone in my environment.
Before long, I also had to keep silence
about my intentions to become a boy. This happened about the time
when my green velvet cap disappeared, the one with the yellow plastic
aeroplane I had got from Pappa, fathers father.
Pappa was the first and only innocent
anarchist I have ever met in my life. According to him, people,
and for him children were also people, should be allowed to do what
they wanted; to eat even though it was not a meal-time, not to eat
even though it was a meal-time, not to go to school, not to learn
to read, to be a girl or a boy, according to their free-will.
I was perhaps five years old when
those around me began to be disturbed by my spitting, my swearing,
my cap, my plan to be a father when I grew up. I was forced to wear
a skirt, plaits and an apron and to answer to a name which I have
never felt to be mine: Pirkko.
Those who are forced to be silent
learn to observe.
In the 1950s and 1960s, when I went to school, there was no collaboration
between home and school. If a school contacted a pupils home,
the reason was a serious breach of etiquette on the part of the
pupil. Homes had no opportunity to influence the world-view taught
by schools, to demand respect or consideration for the pupils
social background or the parents political or religious beliefs.
The pupil lived two realities, had
the opportunity of living them. What he or she thought of the paradox,
decided through observation, remained his or her own business, often.
As a mother, I have tried to give
my daughter the same privilege. I have not attended parents
evenings or kept in touch with the school. I have not worried about
the influence of teachers whose social, religious or ethical ideas
in general differ sharply from mine. I have sometimes regretted
that todays teachers are evidently not permitted to show their
political colours, prejudices or passions as openly as before. The
softening of conflicts does not remove them, but blurs the vision
of those living at their centre.
Living in conflict, observation, realisation,
the concealment of the real self and its real aims, the fear of
injury and revelation, keeping silence over all the most important
things did not make me a quiet or lonely child.
I learned role-playing early.
All children love acting, most adults
love masks, or at least dressing up, make-up, dyeing ones
hair, growing or cutting a beard or moustache in other words,
changing ones outward appearance, which also offers an opportunity
for inner movement.
We do not look into the mirror, many
times a day, to see whether our tie is straight or our lipstick
in place. We look into the mirror to see our life-partner, our only
permanent companion, to wonder at the fact that we have the ability,
and even the necessity, to divide in two: into she who looks and
she who is looked at.
I made the decision to split in two
when I was eight years old. That was the beginning of my career
as a writer, and for that reason I now quote myself, an extract
from my novel Pienin yhteinen jaettava (Lowest common
multiple):
I was eight when it first happened.
It was a November morning.
The road was black and shiny. It
swelled behind the sleety, wet windows.
I saw myself through the window.
I was plump and bad-tempered.
I pulled a pair of too-tight woollen
socks on to my feet.
There was a button missing from
my suspenders. Mother took a five-mark coin from her bag to replace
it.
And that was when it first happened.
I wrote in my mind the sentence:
She did not want to get up.
I altered the sentence: She did
not want to get up yet.
I added another sentence: She was
too tired to go to school.
I improved the second sentence:
She was far, far too tired to go to school.
I looked triumphantly at my father, who was reading the Workers
News in his shirtsleeves and drinking black coffee.
Mother was spreading red from her
lips to her cheeks in front of the hall mirror, and humming.
No one noticed that I had become
she, a subject of continual observation.
The she-form inner monologue, which thus began
about forty years ago, has never paused. Its tone has changed, surprisingly
enough, from the objective to the subjective. In the early days
of my career as a writer, when there were still almost two decades
to go before the publication of my first book, my inner voice still
represented an omniscient, objective narrator who had no difficulty
in moving, all-seeing, through time and space, and entering in anyones
consciousness.
When I had to leave Kallio comprehensive school, although I really
didnt want to, just as I do not like to leave any place where
I feel at home, for the simple reason that I matriculated, I had
been persuaded that one could not study writing.
I ended up at Helsinki University,
wandering and reading subjects that did not lead anywhere. I myself
dealt the final blow to my academic studies myself, concretely,
one Friday night when, probably by mistake, I flung my bag down
on the base of the statue of the 19th-century writer Zacharias Topelius.
In the bag were a bottle of red wine and my academic records book.
The bottle broke and erased all the ink-written records.
A survivor from those times is a rather
shapeless poem, which shocks me slightly after all these years.
I complain that someone has placed a glass cheese-dome on top of
the world, beneath which I sweat and cannot breathe.
My complaint was answered. In the
colonnaded corridors of the university I met a red-haired girl who
fell in love with me and snatched the dome from over me.
It was 1970, and homosexuality was,
in Finland, both an illness and a crime for which one could be imprisoned.
I fought against my feelings and their recognition for three days
and nights in a high fever. When I relented, the fever vanished.
I had found the key to myself, the answer to the question why I
had always, for as long as I could remember, felt myself to be different,
lonely in a way that had nothing to do with non-sociability.
In a fit of self-confidence induced
by falling in love and being the object of love, I applied to the
Theatre Academy. I got in at my second attempt.
I wanted to become something different;
now I wanted to do it for a living. I wanted to find someone else,
other people, inside myself.
I am a storytellers daughter. It could be claimed that my
mother was a chronic liar, for she never allowed mere truth to spoil
a good story....
Pienin yhteinen jaettava (Lowest
common multiple, 1998) tells of a fictive child named Pirkko
Saisio whose life bears striking resemblances to and differences
from my life. I have few living relatives; thus family stories are
important to me.
After my fathers death, I inherited
an envelope full of documents which I read with astonishment. The
facts did not accord in the least with the detailed family stories
on which I had unconsciously leaned for decades.
My grandmother, from whom I believed
I had inherited my reckless courage, had not, after all, eloped
from Karelia to Savo with her decorator sweetheart, but had legally
married the same man at the age of 24 and he was not an older
seducer, but a lad five years younger than herself.
I see no difference between the family
stories of Eva Wein [one of Saisios alter egos] and Pirkko
Saisio; both are equally invented. Their truth value is not to measured
by official documents and the authors name as it is printed
on the cover of a novel.
How is it to be measured, then?
I do not know. But I do know that
if, in a years time, I were to be asked how my books are born,
I would tell a completely different story about the influences,
structures and subjects of my books from now. It would be true then,
I hope; this is what looked true today.
Top of page
|