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1. You can never go home, not to the home you left. When you leave, you get bigger. Not necessarily in girth, but in consciousness. When you come back,  everything, even the walls of your parent's house, seem to have shrunk. 2. Look..... Here comes the parade. With its paper mache floats and twirling batons. Cub scouts and boy scouts, all in a neat blue and drab green row, followed by a high school marching band playing "Stars and Stripes Forever". From bygone wars, limbless surviving soldiers flinch with every cymbal crash. 3. I watched billows of cottonwood clouds swirl down a summer hometown avenue, they met on the street corner for a song........ "Alley Oop", or "I Like Bread And Butter" These ghostlike voices will live there forever, innocent, asleep, numb, waiting. Soon, the postman will bring your future. Soon, you will be just a number on a lotery ball. Soon, you will have to dissect luck or fate. 4. I took my 87 year old Father to gather his tools from his long time place of work. The instruments of his livelihood. He did not need them anymore, he had retired. Some tools he had used since World War II, some he made for a specific job.... never to use again. All neatly placed in toolboxes built in the 30s and 40s, yet not a trace of rust. These were the tools of a tradesman, a (Tool and Die Man). He once told me, “Son, if I can’t fix it because I don’t have the right tool, I will make the tool”. I thought him to be Superman. But there I was, loading up my Father’s history, to take home, to be sold to the highest bidder.   I myself have made my living playing music for audiences. I also have tools. Guitars, amplifiers, harmonicas, microphones. There will come a day, in the not too distant future, when I will have to “retire” the instruments of my livelihood. Though I will not be as stoic as my World War II Father, I will go kicking and screaming to the pawn shop, remembering every song that fed me, and every chord that made people dance.
0
May 29, 2014
May 29, 2014 at 8:38 PM UTC
A Visit Home (in 4 Acts)
1. You can never go home, not to the home you left. When you leave, you get bigger. Not necessarily in girth, but in consciousness. When you come back,  everything, even the walls of your parent's house, seem to have shrunk. 2. Look..... Here comes the parade. With its paper mache floats and twirling batons. Cub scouts and boy scouts, all in a neat blue and drab green row, followed by a high school marching band playing "Stars and Stripes Forever". From bygone wars, limbless surviving soldiers flinch with every cymbal crash. 3. I watched billows of cottonwood clouds swirl down a summer hometown avenue, they met on the street corner for a song........ "Alley Oop", or "I Like Bread And Butter" These ghostlike voices will live there forever, innocent, asleep, numb, waiting. Soon, the postman will bring your future. Soon, you will be just a number on a lotery ball. Soon, you will have to dissect luck or fate. 4. I took my 87 year old Father to gather his tools from his long time place of work. The instruments of his livelihood. He did not need them anymore, he had retired. Some tools he had used since World War II, some he made for a specific job.... never to use again. All neatly placed in toolboxes built in the 30s and 40s, yet not a trace of rust. These were the tools of a tradesman, a (Tool and Die Man). He once told me, “Son, if I can’t fix it because I don’t have the right tool, I will make the tool”. I thought him to be Superman. But there I was, loading up my Father’s history, to take home, to be sold to the highest bidder.   I myself have made my living playing music for audiences. I also have tools. Guitars, amplifiers, harmonicas, microphones. There will come a day, in the not too distant future, when I will have to “retire” the instruments of my livelihood. Though I will not be as stoic as my World War II Father, I will go kicking and screaming to the pawn shop, remembering every song that fed me, and every chord that made people dance.
Middlesboro, KY May 29, 2014
ld-goodwin
Written by
American
May 29, 2014
May 29, 2014 at 8:38 PM UTC
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