|
A Drive
through the Old Neighborhood
(Posted: 1/28/07)

I took a
morning drive through my old neighborhood. Maybe it was the unusually
cold and misty weather mixed with my own sense of melancholy, but I
thought I saw my seven year old self walking down the sidewalk barefoot.
We were always trying to just walk barefooted on the asphalt skillet in those days. This little blue-eyed-son from
long ago was eating a cherry-red Popsicle that was melting in a Junelike
sun—more of it dripping on the sidewalk than in him.
Memories
carried my mind in their arms as I passed each of my childhood friends’ homes.
Where are they now? Who lives in these seemingly empty homes now? Most
of these parents were warriors or engineers, working at White Sands
Missile Range or Fort Bliss. They were fighting a Cold War in a
searing, burning land. Are there now slowed and aging forms sitting in those dark houses?—waiting for that call from their children who all left long ago, and
now live “anywhere” but this city?
The stream
swelled into a flood as lucid visions appeared on aging lawns. I saw my
younger brother and me sauntering away from home with kisses from our mother
on the first
day of school—our twin and blonde mop tops as shiny as our blue plastic
lunch boxes. I saw the red headed boy across the street; his feelings
stinging more than his freckled face after I smacked him with a rare
snow ball. As I remember this today, does he still feel at this very
moment, that twinge of
impersonal rejection? I then heard the pelting of a half dozen ice balls thrown at me—each one breaking apart at my feet as
the older kids desperately tried to hit me, but missed in an equal
opportunity of detachment. I saw the house of a girl with whom I was
secretly in love, but never told her, and rarely spoke to her—even all
the way through to the end of high school. Was I more in love with
my secret than
with her? I saw my teenaged ghost standing in a desert field that
suburbia somehow failed to tame. I was talking with a female friend in
the night. Each of us experiencing true and pure friendship: not in
love, but loving. No lust, no complications, no angst. Sharing the
heart, but expecting nothing superfluous in return: A conversation of innocent
simplicity.
As I drove out
of the neighborhood, I forced myself to give a sidelong glance at the
rock wall that my little brother drove through one night as he tried to
make it home. We were always trying to just make it home in those
days. The impact successfully ended his life, along with my childhood. The large,
broken stones were quickly rebuilt with no one the wiser to their deadly
secret. What would happen if I rang that doorbell and told those people
that their rock wall was once piled on my brother: a postmodern witness
heap testifying against our generation?
I took the
back road home to my place in the deeper desert. It is a forgotten road,
but I am one of its intimate and oldest friends. As a teenager, I would
almost daily take this eighteen mile route on bicycle in the blazing
summer heat. No water, no stretchy pants, no helmet. No discernment.
What sustained me then? What thirsty madness drove me out to traverse a
wasteland on this highway of death? It didn't seem as menacing today as
I drove it home with a rare cold snap enveloping it with snow flurries.
The recollections of this reclusive friend, and all I knew long ago
deluged my mind, spilling over me with a warm strangeness. The tiny bits
of ice were driven ahead of me by an iron wind, making it impossible for
me to ever recover them. Some clung to my windshield and dissipated into
oblivion as quickly as they appeared. A gust of wind propelled itself at
an awkward angle through the slivered crack of my window, scattering
some glowing-but-dying ember flakes from my cherry-wood, smoking pipe.
My tobacco reverie faded into the silver blue morning; and I traveled
down the unremembered highway turning toward my way home.
-David
 |