One
of the joys of reading occurs when a sentence or even a phrase triggers a
personal memory. One of the books I’m reading now (I always have one nonfiction
and one fiction going) is Whistling Past
The Graveyard, by Susan Crandall. It’s a story told from the viewpoint of a
ten-year-old girl in Mississippi during the racial unrest of the 1960’s.
Last
night as I was reading in bed (my favorite time to read) these two sentences
took me back to childhood, just as Proust’s first bite of a madeleine cake released
a flood of memories:
“I thought about the swings at my
school. Everyone always raced
out the door to get one at recess.”
Suddenly
I was a grade school kid back in Odessa, Missouri, racing across the playground
toward the swings. I was ungainly, but long of leg, and I was in the lead of a
pack of kids who, at that moment, wanted more than anything to get their butts
on swing seats.
My
heels were winged, but at the last moment before I grabbed for a swing, Patsy
Shaw, who was on my heels, gave me a shove, propelling me directly into one of
the steel bars that supported the swings. When my forehead struck the bar I was
knocked out cold and landed on my back.
My
mother, who taught high school history and geography on the school’s second
floor, happened to be adjusting the blind on a window overlooking the
playground at the very moment I flopped backward onto the ground.
Wearing
her signature three-inch-high-heeled shoes, Mother raced out her classroom
door, down the hall, down the stairs, out the door, and across the playground.
Upon returning
to consciousness I opened my eyes. The first thing I saw was my mother’s
anxious face peering down at me. My forehead sported what Mother called a
“goose egg,” and I was whisked home to rest in bed with an ice bag on my
forehead.
I
don’t recall the recuperation, but I clearly remember the miracle of
Mother’s caring presence when I needed her most.
Copyright 2015 by Shirley Domer
1 comment:
Thank you for sharing this lovely memory! I remember hearing about that ol' Patsy Shaw pushing you, but I missed the visuals you just described! I'm so glad you're enjoying the book!
Love you, Mamacita!
Nanjo
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