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longing for my new orleans

I want to go back, back to my New Orleans

This place that I call New Orleans is actually Louisiana

But still, the gorgeousness of this dirt and grime

The live oaks stretching over the 6-lane wide streets,

Touching leaftips, making a canopy over the passerbys

Crepe myrtles showering streets with lacy pink faerie dresses

Smells of beignets and seafood fill the French Quarter

Intense, consuming, warm, loving sun burning through your shirt

In New Orleans to say horses sweat, men perspire and women glow

is to be ridiculous.

In New Orleans everyone sweats like pigs.

As for the grime I mentioned, this exists mainly in

the sidewalks cracked by live oaks which make an adventure of every walk down the street

And in any semi-deserted street

To have a Mardi Gras or St. Patrick's Day without a parade and citywide party is to toss aside traditions and the New Orleanian way

The New Orleanians are welcoming, hearty and heartwarming, tough and unafraid to talk to a stranger on the streets.

An old black man once greeted me with 'konichiwa' as I walked past

A middle aged white man once struck up a conversation with us as he realised we had shared the same ferry earlier in the day

An old asian woman conversed familiarly with our family at Cafe Du Monde simply because we are Vietnamese as well

A teenaged white boy waved at us as we drove past him jogging

A different old black man stopped and serenaded my siblings, mother and me with his trumpet just because we smiled

Several young mothers and women have stopped my mother to gush  over my siblings and me, usually when we were very small

I, myself, have given directions to a tourist or two, lost near Cafe Du Monde or the levee,

And I hope that the warm smiling spirit of the Big Easy will remain forever immortal.

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Written by
luckyqueue
American
Published
Oct 11, 2012
Lines·Words
24·318
Notes

Homesick...

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