All posts by Kirsetin

In That Yard

photo by AForestFrolic

The tree in our front yard seemed incredibly high to a pair of fifth graders, but we climbed it every day after school anyway.  My mom, a glass of iced tea with mint by herside, sat out front and chatted with her friends as she watched the daredevil girls scale ever higher.  It was in that tree, in that yard, that I watched, helpless and horrified, when mypartner-in-crime fell all the way down and snapped the bone in her arm.

Her arm healed quickly and we played on.  Beyond the tree a large swath of grass gave us plenty of room to run.  On sweltering, humid summer nights we gathered our siblings and played monkey in the middle in that yard, until the street lights finally came on and our mothers called us home.

It was there, in that yard, that I watched sunflowers growas tall as my dad, by the side of the house. It was in those woods that my friends and I celebrated our inner explorers.  We traipsed and tromped.  We walked all the way through to the otherside.  We played in the heaping piles of pebbles used for construction or landscaping or who knows what.  Those piles were like snow mounds for kids in the south and for as much as we knew, they existed for our playing pleasure.

That yard was mine for six whole years, longer than anyother yard of my childhood.  As the daughter of a Marine pilot, I found myself in a new home every three years but this time my dad was assigned back-to-back tours and so we stayed in Quantico, VA for six. I ended elementary school and began high school there.  Big years.

After we moved I returned to Quantico occasionally, weaving my car in and out of the streets and memories of my childhood.  Right there! That’s where I played under the streetlight with Jessica, that night I snuck out the window.  (And got into big trouble with my parents later.) And—there!  That’s the hill where I split my knee open when I tried to ride my bike with no hands.  There—that’s the swimming pool where I morphed, before my own eyes, from a fun-loving kid who played Marco Polo with her brother to a self-conscious teen, worried about what the cool kids thought.

These days I live halfway across the country and I haven’t had the chance to return as often as I’d like. On a recent visit, though, we had some extra time and my mom drove me through the old neighborhood.

As we rounded the bend, my stomach dropped.

Gone were the woods where we ran through the creek and climbed tree houses and pretended we were Lewis and Clark.  Gone were the yards and the duplexes and the trees.  No morning glories.  No sunflowers.  Instead, shiny new townhouses rose in their place.

My childhood, I thought.  What happened to my childhood?

The houses were old, I know. I found out later that more than 1,200 homes were demolished to make way for the new.  The homes we lived in were outdated and quarters were tight.  I’m sure the current servicemen and their families appreciate the fresh new townhouses with their Pottery Barn colors. I don’t begrudge them their new digs one bit.  Life in the military is hard enough—no need to add housing trouble to the list.

But I am left alone with my memories, now.  There’s nothing concrete to validate what I knew, what I know—nothing I can point to and say, There, that’s where it happened.

I wonder if there are other events that leave us with this feeling—this dangling in space.  Have you been there?


Words, Glorious Words

My kids hate vocabulary homework.
More specifically, they detest my insistence that they occasionally—and I mean occasionally—use an actual dictionary rather than their favored online version.  “That is so dumb, Mom,” my oldest will complain.  No one uses that kind of dictionary anymore, “he insists.  “What’s the point, anyway?”
It’s at moments like these that I love to share the wisdom of experience.
First of all, my dear child, plenty of people still use a paper dictionary.  Why only yesterday I heard Steve Kleinedler, executive editor of the American Heritage Dictionary (one of several I own, by the way) being interviewed on NPR.  Enough of the 300 million people in America use a paper dictionary to justify new 7+ pound version, ten years in the making.
This is not to say I don’t use an online version myself.  I do.  I use both, depending on the day and what I’m looking for.  And I don’t mind if you use an online dictionary, too.  But I want you to be able to search through a print dictionary; I want you to use it some of the time.
Second, son, there is a point.  There are several reasons, in fact, that I’d like you to occasionally peruse the pages of American Heritage or Webster instead of click-click-clicking your way to a definition.  A few worth mentioning:
·      Memories.  Although you don’t realize it now, when the gray begins to sneak into your hairline and you’re parenting children of your own, there will be times when you suddenly recall something from long ago.  This memory will seem to come out of nowhere, but its genesis is really a scent or a tune or a phrase that instantly morphs you into a younger version of yourself.  When that happens your lips will turn up at the corners as you remember something you’d long forgotten.  Turning the pages of a dictionary is one of those things.  It’s a tactile experience.  The feel of the page and the smell of the ink will stay with you and one day, you will open the hard, heavy cover and smile as you think of these days.
·      New words.  As I sat down to write this post, I grabbed the closest dictionary and looked to see what was near where the skateboarding term “ollie” will be in the new edition.  There, I found “olla,” which I have never heard before, but is a noun that refers to an “earthenware pot or jar with a wide mouth.”  What I’ve found, over time is that once I see one of these words, one I’ve never heard before, I begin to notice it.  I see it in print or hear it on the radio.  Huh, I think.  Maybe I did hear it before, but I didn’t recognize it, so my brain just skipped right over.  I’m not suggesting you need to read the dictionary every day, but learning a new vocab word now and then never hurts.
·      Pictures, Ideas, Thoughts.  I am here to tell you that an online dictionary will not draw your attention to a new word or usage of a word with its non-existent pictures.  When looking for “ollie” I thumbed through the “P” section and saw a picture of Prometheus, which got me thinking about mythology.  One thought led to another and soon I was thinking about schools teaching mythology, then about schools pushing for more rigor at every age, and then about whether all of this supposed rigor really helps kids develop the critical thinking skills that will help them be agents of change in the future.
So, you see, son, thumbing through the dictionary is about a lot more than how to spell words.  You’re welcome.