You know when
you go to hear a band play and the music is fast and upbeat and everyone is
dancing. Then the lead singer walks up to the microphone and says “Ok folks, we
are going to slow it down for you now….” And they play this slow song that brings
everything into a tender, softer mood. Well consider this entry my slow song.
Not romantic, just more calm and hopefully touching. (I waxed sentimental after
being snowed in for two days.)
I want to
write about my family (parents) today. My family name is a source of great pride
to me. I’m quite sure it is the same for most people. We place value on our
heritage. I actually looked up the definitions to both legacy and heritage to
see what the distinct differences were. Legacy being something handed down
through the generations. A trait. Maybe in our family that trait would be
stubbornness. Or I could be kind and say tenacious. I love the definition I found for heritage;
“events or processes that have a special meaning in group memory”. That term
‘group memory’ is so moving to me; like the very interpretation of FAMILY
itself is an ensemble of group memories. We had a family reunion a few years
back. It was awesome. My parents are both deceased, but I have three siblings
and all (or most) of their families came. We represented from all over the country.
And altogether we embraced and celebrated the often quoted ‘rich heritage’ of
our parents/grandparents. It was heartwarming. It saddens me when I hear about families that
are fractured with jealousy or hatred or biases. Don’t get me wrong, we are not
a perfect lot. But by and large we are a pretty tight crew.
My parents’
story is of more value and note than a brief blog entry. However I feel drawn
today to record some of it here. My father was born in 1915; my mother in 1921.
(Yes, they had me later in life, your math is correct.) Their respective families
actually lived in very close proximity even though there was a time when they
did not really have much to do with each other. As you can tell from the date,
my parents were young children being raised in the Depression. They lived in a
poor, rural corner of eastern North Carolina. Times there were very, very
difficult. In a far reaching turn of events my mother’s mother died and my
father’s father died. Out of financial necessity and practicality more than any
actual romance, the two households joined up and my mother’s father married my
father’s mother. (When I actually tell that story to people and say it quickly
without giving them time to truly digest the information, they will invariably
tilt their heads a little, squint their eyes and produce the most perfect
perflexed expression.) My parents became step brother and sister. True, it has
been the source of a cute joke or two. A raised eyebrow here and there. But in
reality it was a grueling existence.
My father did
not live at the ‘homestead’. He and his brothers had to quit school and go live
on another’s farm to work to help support the family. He only saw my mother
when he came home to visit his own mother. I believe with all my heart there
was a protective, sheltering characteristic about my father who wanted to
rescue this scared young girl thrust into a very unfamiliar and harsh living
arrangement after losing her mother and her home. It didn’t happen immediately
of course, because they were still growing up themselves. Their story is quite
remarkable and I am unable to chronicle it all here. However the time did come
when he would return to take her away. Carve a new road. Begin a new future. Start a new family. Our
Family.
I wrote at
the beginning that this was not going to be a romantic entry. But I think I was
wrong. My thoughts, which then became words, took a different path as they
tumbled out of the keyboard. What started as just a toss of gratitude at my
family legacy turned into the telling of a love story. Not traditionally
romantic. Not commercially romantic. But at the end of the day and at the core
of every little girl’s dreams is the prince rushing in to save the day. I’m
quite sure my mother had no time for fairy tales and would never consider
herself a princess. My father probably didn’t quite fit the mold of a prince
either. But for today, for this entry, that is exactly what they both are in my
eyes. And their ‘fairy tale’, born out of grief, poverty and pain turned them
into the ‘tenacious’ matriarch and patriarch of MY heritage. One that has taught me to stand strong, persevere, love unconditionally, value people more than things. It is a new light
on an old story; even for me today. I feel very blessed to be the one sharing that
story, their story, the beginning of MY story.
Hope Out