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I come from a town with no identity. It had one, once, but I think it was uprooted with Shales forest to make way for outlet malls and housing complexes. Every street, every tree, and every person was like a wrinkle on an otherwise unblemished face, marking our individuality with age and experience. It’s amazing how fast cosmetic surgery can destroy the past. I hail from the smallest large suburban town of our area. Growing up, we used to know everybody that lived on our block, and no one was in short supply of a handshake or hello. Now, social courtesy ends at the foot of your door, before you step into the world. When I was a child, every person had a sense of purpose, a contribution to the street. Mrs. Henderson made the best chocolate chip cookies around, and all summer long her house was filled with the smell of melting chocolate over warm cookie dough, a scent that would sneak out of her window in the late afternoons, when you could still see the sun setting in the sky, and find its way over to mine. Now, apartments block the view. Nick Potts had a key to the private pool, which was members only, but every weekend he’d find a new way to sneak us in. John Probst owned the pool, and would sit in the same yellow and blue striped lawn chair by the concession stand next to the diving board, laughing at each new scheme we conjured up to help save a few bucks on a humid summer’s day. Kyle had a trampoline, that despite the stupidity of all nine-year-olds, never saw a broken bone. Carl had his garden, bursting with shades of colors that could only be mirrored by the burning dusk light. Duncan had a tree fort, the Richards, a tire swing. I never knew how fast the changes would come. It started small, a simple lift here, some aging creme there, but this was just preliminary measures for botox and nose jobs. As a town, we soon became an obsession of trends. Individuality was outdated. Every driveway had a minivan, every home, a schitzu and a soccer ball. A skin graph covered the sun spot that was Mrs. Henderson. A face lift cured the sagging skin of Nick Potts. The pierce of a needle and flowing injection of toxins smoothed the wrinkles that were Kyle, Carl, and Duncan. In what seemed like a few hours time, the town that taught me integrity, respect, and the value of a hard day’s work, altered to the point of being unrecognizable. Manufactured and fake, we’re nothing more than a shinning porcelain doll straight off the assembly line, distinctively similar to all the others that follow. Every layer of cosmetics cover another part of our character, another aspect of our history. We became lost in the crowd, and in our own way, faceless.
0
Jun 2, 2012
Jun 2, 2012 at 3:13 AM UTC
Changing Face
I come from a town with no identity. It had one, once, but I think it was uprooted with Shales forest to make way for outlet malls and housing complexes. Every street, every tree, and every person was like a wrinkle on an otherwise unblemished face, marking our individuality with age and experience. It’s amazing how fast cosmetic surgery can destroy the past. I hail from the smallest large suburban town of our area. Growing up, we used to know everybody that lived on our block, and no one was in short supply of a handshake or hello. Now, social courtesy ends at the foot of your door, before you step into the world. When I was a child, every person had a sense of purpose, a contribution to the street. Mrs. Henderson made the best chocolate chip cookies around, and all summer long her house was filled with the smell of melting chocolate over warm cookie dough, a scent that would sneak out of her window in the late afternoons, when you could still see the sun setting in the sky, and find its way over to mine. Now, apartments block the view. Nick Potts had a key to the private pool, which was members only, but every weekend he’d find a new way to sneak us in. John Probst owned the pool, and would sit in the same yellow and blue striped lawn chair by the concession stand next to the diving board, laughing at each new scheme we conjured up to help save a few bucks on a humid summer’s day. Kyle had a trampoline, that despite the stupidity of all nine-year-olds, never saw a broken bone. Carl had his garden, bursting with shades of colors that could only be mirrored by the burning dusk light. Duncan had a tree fort, the Richards, a tire swing. I never knew how fast the changes would come. It started small, a simple lift here, some aging creme there, but this was just preliminary measures for botox and nose jobs. As a town, we soon became an obsession of trends. Individuality was outdated. Every driveway had a minivan, every home, a schitzu and a soccer ball. A skin graph covered the sun spot that was Mrs. Henderson. A face lift cured the sagging skin of Nick Potts. The pierce of a needle and flowing injection of toxins smoothed the wrinkles that were Kyle, Carl, and Duncan. In what seemed like a few hours time, the town that taught me integrity, respect, and the value of a hard day’s work, altered to the point of being unrecognizable. Manufactured and fake, we’re nothing more than a shinning porcelain doll straight off the assembly line, distinctively similar to all the others that follow. Every layer of cosmetics cover another part of our character, another aspect of our history. We became lost in the crowd, and in our own way, faceless.
patrick-sutphin
Written by
Jun 2, 2012
Jun 2, 2012 at 3:13 AM UTC
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