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When we arrive at the beach, the oppressive sun has begun his slow, creeping descent towards the gap in the dunes where, if one stood at the very crest, he might see the swampy bay, tufted in tall, thin grass and dotted with ospreys and cranes. I carry a bag depicting a bastardization of the American flag, and he tugs the narrow mesh cart with cartoon wheels across the flesh-toned sand. The crowd of hungry beachgoers is thinning, and the lifeguards have just begun to lug their tall wooden stand back from its perilous proximity to the gentle breakers. I walk just a few paces behind my father, until he stops, asking, “Is this a good spot?” I nod, never before remembering a time when he sought my approval for a seaside roost. After ******** our umbrella—blue-green, as though reflecting in canvas the fluctuating shades of the mutable Atlantic—deep into the cool sand, and setting the two chairs firmly in its chilly shade, he asks, “Wanna swim?” Again, I nod, stripping until I wear nothing but a mint green bikini and sunglasses. Leisurely, we stroll towards the small waves and wade into the just-right water gradually. Subconsciously, I am again just three or four footfalls behind his frame, as if I cannot continue any deeper until he has tested the sea, and each step forward is a promise that everything is okay, and I may proceed with caution. Our steady immersion suddenly releases in me a torrent of memories. I see myself, maybe seven, planted next to him on the beach, where the sand is only just damp, digging holes with our hands so that a small pool of icy liquid slowly emerges, and then cupping the sand and carefully dripping it along the edges to create a system of fortresses and castles melting in the breeze. I see him explaining to me, age nine, the proper way to bodysurf, and I feel once again a sudden fear that the salty water will fill my nostrils and cause that choking burn that I detest to this day. I remember him laughing that hearty guffaw as I was, invariably, thrown from my boogie board in the aftermath of a particularly large wave, skinning my knees against the broken shells dotting the rough ocean floor. I hear his careful instructions about the proper and improper behaviors when ****** into a rip tide— swim horizontally, he’d say, and if I didn’t understand the word, he’d clarify that it meant to follow the beach, because following the sea was certain death. When our waists have just begun to adjust to the temperature, I overhear the father of a girl who is about the age I was in these memories exclaim that a pod of dolphins has come quite close, and upon looking, I see their gray bodies slithering in and out of the deeper water. I nudge my father and point, and we both marvel at this rare occurrence. Thousands of seconds pass, and this time he is pointing off in the distance, saying, “They’re still hanging around. Must be a school of fish or something.” When I ask him if he knows why they are within swimming distance, he tells me confidently that it must be due to the water’s unseasonable warmth, and I know in my heart and in my brain that he is correct, as usual. After the dolphins have disappeared, I say that I am done swimming, that I want to start the Marquez tome weighing heavily upon my conscience and that, besides, we shouldn’t leave our valuables alone for too long. He simply shrugs, as if to say, “Why would you want to get out of this ocean?” almost as though he didn’t realize thievery is such a common occurrence at the Jersey shore. From my haven in the shade, I feel goosebumps emerge as my father’s shirt deepens from heather gray to taupe. Before leaving the house our family has visited every summer for over a decade, I borrowed his brand new headphones—he was so excited to tell me that they don’t knot—and their bulbous coverings, when stuck in ears on a windy beach, create the sort of howling found in 1970s horror movies, my own personal FX. Despite the fact that I have just surpassed one quarter of a century in age, I still see him, a few years past the half-century mark, turn around, squinting, until he sees me safely planted in the plastic chair, as safe as a father could hope his oldest daughter to be.
0
Jul 12, 2014
Jul 12, 2014 at 11:30 PM UTC
Swimming In The Ocean With My Father
When we arrive at the beach, the oppressive sun has begun his slow, creeping descent towards the gap in the dunes where, if one stood at the very crest, he might see the swampy bay, tufted in tall, thin grass and dotted with ospreys and cranes. I carry a bag depicting a bastardization of the American flag, and he tugs the narrow mesh cart with cartoon wheels across the flesh-toned sand. The crowd of hungry beachgoers is thinning, and the lifeguards have just begun to lug their tall wooden stand back from its perilous proximity to the gentle breakers. I walk just a few paces behind my father, until he stops, asking, “Is this a good spot?” I nod, never before remembering a time when he sought my approval for a seaside roost. After ******** our umbrella—blue-green, as though reflecting in canvas the fluctuating shades of the mutable Atlantic—deep into the cool sand, and setting the two chairs firmly in its chilly shade, he asks, “Wanna swim?” Again, I nod, stripping until I wear nothing but a mint green bikini and sunglasses. Leisurely, we stroll towards the small waves and wade into the just-right water gradually. Subconsciously, I am again just three or four footfalls behind his frame, as if I cannot continue any deeper until he has tested the sea, and each step forward is a promise that everything is okay, and I may proceed with caution. Our steady immersion suddenly releases in me a torrent of memories. I see myself, maybe seven, planted next to him on the beach, where the sand is only just damp, digging holes with our hands so that a small pool of icy liquid slowly emerges, and then cupping the sand and carefully dripping it along the edges to create a system of fortresses and castles melting in the breeze. I see him explaining to me, age nine, the proper way to bodysurf, and I feel once again a sudden fear that the salty water will fill my nostrils and cause that choking burn that I detest to this day. I remember him laughing that hearty guffaw as I was, invariably, thrown from my boogie board in the aftermath of a particularly large wave, skinning my knees against the broken shells dotting the rough ocean floor. I hear his careful instructions about the proper and improper behaviors when ****** into a rip tide— swim horizontally, he’d say, and if I didn’t understand the word, he’d clarify that it meant to follow the beach, because following the sea was certain death. When our waists have just begun to adjust to the temperature, I overhear the father of a girl who is about the age I was in these memories exclaim that a pod of dolphins has come quite close, and upon looking, I see their gray bodies slithering in and out of the deeper water. I nudge my father and point, and we both marvel at this rare occurrence. Thousands of seconds pass, and this time he is pointing off in the distance, saying, “They’re still hanging around. Must be a school of fish or something.” When I ask him if he knows why they are within swimming distance, he tells me confidently that it must be due to the water’s unseasonable warmth, and I know in my heart and in my brain that he is correct, as usual. After the dolphins have disappeared, I say that I am done swimming, that I want to start the Marquez tome weighing heavily upon my conscience and that, besides, we shouldn’t leave our valuables alone for too long. He simply shrugs, as if to say, “Why would you want to get out of this ocean?” almost as though he didn’t realize thievery is such a common occurrence at the Jersey shore. From my haven in the shade, I feel goosebumps emerge as my father’s shirt deepens from heather gray to taupe. Before leaving the house our family has visited every summer for over a decade, I borrowed his brand new headphones—he was so excited to tell me that they don’t knot—and their bulbous coverings, when stuck in ears on a windy beach, create the sort of howling found in 1970s horror movies, my own personal FX. Despite the fact that I have just surpassed one quarter of a century in age, I still see him, a few years past the half-century mark, turn around, squinting, until he sees me safely planted in the plastic chair, as safe as a father could hope his oldest daughter to be.
jeanaly
Written by
American
Jul 12, 2014
Jul 12, 2014 at 11:30 PM UTC
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