Cousin Bernie And His Institutionalized Mother: The Memoir’s Sad Note

by Barbara Fischkin

Recent Photo: Abandoned Kings Park Psychiatric Center building. Cousin Bernie’s mother was institutionalized in a building here, one of several of her placements in New Jersey and New York. This shows Building 93 present day. Photo Credit: Diana Scarpulla

Another eight weeks have passed since I wrote about my Cousin Bernie—and how, posthumously, he adds to my understanding of him. To review: Earlier this year I wrote two chapters about Cousin Bernie completely from memory. Then his widow, Joan Hamilton Morris, sent me more material—pages she’d found of an incomplete memoir her late husband pecked out on a vintage typewriter in an adult education class he took after retiring as a university professor of psychology and mathematics.

If Cousin Bernie were alive today he would be 102, 32 years older than I am now. Each time I take a deeper dive into the pages Joan sent me, I realize I have only skimmed the surface.  And so, here is my fifth take on my cousin, who fascinates me despite his evergreen persona as a nerdy, chubby, lost boy from Brooklyn. This, in part, is the saddest offering from my cousin’s own memoir. It may—or may not—be the final one. A chapter about his interest in radios, as a child—and in being a ham radio operator in his retirement— might appear one of these days.

Again, I will let Cousin Bernie tell most of his story, this time about how having a schizophrenic mother affected him, in ways both obvious and veiled. His memories also offer a look inside an earlier time when mental illness in a family was far more shameful and misunderstood than it is even today. To review more: When I was a child my mother told me that Cousin Bernie’s mother was dead. She was my father’s mysterious, absent sister, that is all I was told at first. I now wonder if my mother wanted to put as much distance between herself and this sister as she could. It was bad enough that they sort of shared the same name. Cousin Bernie’s mother’s maiden name was Ida Fishkin. My mother’s married name was Ida Fischkin. I believe my mother also wanted to protect me from fear. She apparently believed that a dead aunt was not as scary as a living ghost, locked up in an institution for years, as Bernie’s mother was at the time. Read more »

Sunday, July 27, 2025

A Warmer View of The Disturbed Paternal Grandparents I Never Knew—The Memoir Continues

by Barbara Fischkin

Brownsville, Brooklyn, New York, 1930’s. “Pushcart Market,” similar to one frequented by the shared paternal grandmother of Barbara Fischkin and her Cousin Bernie.  Source:  Library of Congress. Photographer: Alan Fisher.

Cousin Bernie’s Own Memoir Surfaces Years After His Death

(a.k.a Cousin Bernie, Free-Range Professor-Part Three)

As much as I loved my late Cousin Bernie, I figured that in regard to my own memoir, I was done with him. Cousins are great but those two earlier chapters—on just one cousin—were more than enough.

Then… I heard from Bernie.

A heavenly nudge.

Years after his death, I believed I could identify his voice with its gravelly Brooklyn twang, slightly tempered by a slower drawl acquired during decades in the Midwest.

“There is a lot more to write about me. And if it is about me, then it is also about you.”

I wish I could report that this actually came from the afterlife.

Nope.

It came from the post office.

Joan Hamilton Morris, Cousin Bernie’s widow, mailed his unpublished memoir to me, after she found it while moving to a new assisted living residence. That was about a month ago. I never knew it existed. Now, I had it in hand—Cousin Bernie’s memoir, written quietly in an adult education class he took after retiring as an honored professor of Psychology and Mathematics at a public university in Indianapolis, Indiana.

I flipped through the typewritten, hard copy pages, stopping early at a description of my Grandpa Phillip. He had died before I was born and all I knew about him, from my parents, was that he had been a handsome, drunken, sporadically employed, womanizer who beat his sons and his long-suffering wife, Grandma Toby. Nice. Grandma Toby died young. Grandpa Phillip subsequently romanced a new bevy of women and then, sort of made up for past sins by marrying one of them.

Despite being decades apart in age, Bernie was my first cousin. This explains why we had the same paternal grandparents. Except, unlike me, he had known them. And so, thanks to Cousin Bernie, I read about a different version of Grandpa Phillip. And learned more about Grandma Toby, too. Read more »