Going Home?
North on 85 from Georgia
where Flannery O’Connor’s mother is still alive
and a blank space in the family plot
patiently waits for her
I leave the city and head north into the deeper south
I sweep through Greenville
and roam on as night falls
the windshield littered in small winged deaths
I leave the wipers off
let the bugs rest in peace
I stop in North Carolina for my mother
relocated to the pace from her childhood
Where men meet every night at the county airport
to gossip and chew ‘bacca
argue the success of the Burpee or Rocky Ford
cantaloupes and lament they still
can’t beat a Turberville melon
My mother’s husband was born here
The locals call him R.L.
but she forgets and calls him Bob
and then hastily corrects herself
Bob’s best friend is Snoot
whose father worked for Bob’s
But when he calls on the phone
he is William
My mother and I drive on to Poquoson
to Little Florida Avenue to visit another generation
Their speech is that of the old and toothless
even though they have them
Instantly
unconsciously
my speech alters
its cadence slows
enunciation softens
reversing the years’ effects since moving
to Northern Virginia in the middle of fifth grade
when I purged my drawl
to quell teasing's talons
I fool no one
least of all myself
that I belong here
We drive downtown before leaving and find
the waterfront altered from my mother’s memory
Not remembering it myself
I agree with her
and am struck by the memory of riding in the car with her
accusing her of running red lights when she made left-hand turns
We are here to ride the carousel from the
Buckroe Beach Amusement Park
Its original home a ghost long demolished
replaced by condominiums
blocking the view to the water
We used to walk to the park
from my father’s mother’s house on Second Avenue
steps from the beach
My feet prickle and cramp from the echoes
of outdoor twilight showers to banish the sand
gumball landmines unavoidable in the mad dash
to warm towels from the dryer on the back porch
At the ride’s entrance I pay my fifty cents
The middle-aged woman reminisces with me as she
hands me my ticket and I select my horse with care
The carousel spins and boisterously croons
the stallions prance
I cannot remember this from before
I should
Leaving
holding my mother's hand
I keep turning back
not wanting to go
or to let go
This feeling
I remember
We say goodbye to our family
Elder cousins Charlotte
Freeman and Roma
Papa and Aunt Jeanette
We stand reluctantly to leave
their warm
soft embraces lingering
beckoning us back and not so long between visits
I return my mother and wend myself back
to Atlanta and then to school in Tallahassee
I cannot call these places home
anymore than where I was born
Home is a place I’ve yet to discover
Written in December 1991 with minor updates today.
25 June 2007
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6 comments:
Loverly. And, Bob was sexy; he
met all the Sweet Potato Queen's criteria.
Carolina Mom
His keeperness was never in doubt, CarolinaMom!
" . . . outdoor twilight showers to banish the sand
gumball landmines unavoidable in the mad dash
to warm towels from the dryer on the back porch . . . "
These lines found me. Descriptions so vivid that they trace a time and place that I can feel and smell--and I was never there : )
This is beautiful.
Thank you, Kristin. Vividness is indeed something I seek in life. Vividness sneaking its way into the words that pop out of my pointy head? Bonus!
Classic Cheek. :-)
This skill with words is something that I've admired for some time.
"Classic" and my moniker, when combined, usually have a negative connotation. Spanks for the positivity, whitenoise.
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