Taking Steps

Trouble ensues when you let monsters talk pretty. Reach me at takingsteps at gmail dot com!

Name:
Location: Portland, Oregon, United States

09 March 2009

no regrets no looking back and no goodbyes

I get so homesick.

I'm a country girl. We know this. And I ache sometimes for the hot breeze and tobacco-colored rimrock cliffs, sitting on my dusty car's hood looking up at a sky bigger than anything, somewhere on a potholed back road out at the edge of the big pines. For soaking in the river and baking on a boulder till dry, scrambling over the jumbled basalt with skinned elbows and a big pocketknife in sturdy jeans. For walking up logging roads and past split-rail ranch fences, sometimes with an eye to where I might park with a girl once the moon came up. I knew every flower by name, could tell you which bird just by its silhouette.

Back home, past the rusted-out stacks of the empty mill, you can see the Milky Way oozing glitter across the arch of everything. The train tracks go forever and so does the horizon, except where stretching calderas come up, a great cradling hand, to hold the boundaries of the knowable.

There's a soda fountain that makes its own chocolates and milkshakes, down there, and you can smell their caramel corn all the way down the street at the little restaurant we all went with our prom dates. Both of the old florists continued to not hire me every summer.

I don't get to go back. Maybe ever. I'm gone from there. I kicked the dust from my boots, packed everything in a station wagon, and ran. As far as most anyone knows, I might be dead.
And I might be, if I did go back. You never know. I did famously at cutting and running, and sometimes that cuts back.

The river cuts through everything there, and everything leads down to it. You just look for the green. We used to jump off a bridge in the summer , where two X's had been scratched into the rail to tell you where was deep enough, and crawl back up through the rocks and shady wild mint patches for another go. You just shucked your shoes and jeans and went, though I was always a big chicken about it.

Quaking aspen and knobby juniper tell you where you are, out there. We don't get those where I live now.

I say awful things about my hometown, bitter, narrow-eyed. Fair enough. It hurt me, bad. But some days, it's just to get away from loving it, from feeling rootless with my feet on all this cement, grasping at bluegrass music and "ain't" and typing inside to stay out of the weather.

I used to dangle my feet over a clifftop, rolled-up jacket for a pillow, and make sketches of every growing thing. I knew what time of year the dragonflies would have their highspeed aerial junctioned relations. Sitting up on my parents' roof in the snow, I'd watch the first melt sigh and plop off the branches. I'd shoo the deer from the summer garden, see if the coyote'd come by, and head down the road to town, singing.

They hurt me, and I ran, and I can never go back. But I can't honestly say there's nothing for me there.

I live in a city with art museums and film festivals and statuary. There's a queer community, and your choice of Thai restaurants, and roses everywhere. There are actual other Filipinas. There's opera. There's my little creaking house with its overstuffed bookshelves and ancient stove. There's the woman I'm marrying.

But I've never yet seen an osprey stoop for a steelhead trout here. It's been years since I've pulled off the road, sat up on the hood of my truck, and named constellations like old friends.

Maybe I'm just not a teenager any more, and don't notice these things. Maybe, in a world that seems a little grimmer and more complicated, I've just let my sense of wonder slip, let the sky get a little less big. But maybe I'm just homesick for a home that didn't want me, an old lover that'll never take me back.

Nostalgia is foolish and dangerous. I've made a new home and a new life, with plenty of joy in it. The riotous wealth of subcultures and body-mods, the sidewalks that don't roll up at seven, the new places to go that don't run out, the people, all matter. I get giddy at the press and smells and close-in messy human wonderfulness at Pike Place Market, grin affectionately at the ornate Victorian houses Southeast Portland has long since rented out for duplexes to college kids and station-wagon dykes raising kids. I can rent Bollywood movies, for Gods' sakes. There's colors here I never knew existed, before. Besides, nobody pretends that my hometown is still what it used to be, anyway.

Nostalgia is foolish and dangerous, and I have the scars to prove it. Life goes on, often into something richer, fuller, more honest, more whole. But a leopard can't change her spots sometimes, and for everything that's changed, some things never do, and I can't shake the feeling, some days, that I'm in exile.



(This post had a soundtrack, on the train when I wrote it. It's Kim Richey's "A Place Called Home," for the record.)

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13 Comments:

Blogger Unknown said...

this piece is beautiful.

10/3/09 18:02  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

This is lovely, friend.

I get a similar feeling visiting the rolling hills, gnarly oaks and foggy beaches of northern California: like I could just fall back into that life. It's one that doesn't really exist anymore, or not the way I imagine it. But I envision my (future) kids climbing the oaks and making houses in the cypress, wandering the yellow hills and picking blackberries like I did.

And then this city happens and I remember all the good, noble reasons why I want to live here and raise kids here -- oddly, similar reasons that my ancestors avoided the cities. I'm stuck, and I think that's good, but sometimes the California countryside just pulls on me.

10/3/09 19:05  
Blogger Weasel said...

I can't lay claim to being as affectionate about where I came from as you are here, but you've hit the feeling dead-on.

Beautifully written.

11/3/09 01:39  
Blogger Chloe said...

Wow. Home was not as pretty, but I cannot help but feel the same way about it. To be back on the land...

11/3/09 14:19  
Blogger mai'a said...

this is the way that i feel when i go back south...even though i cant stay there for long...the land does it for me...

16/3/09 07:37  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

this is so incredibly beautiful.

17/3/09 16:42  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Beautiful post.

I get the same feeling, sometimes. I grew up in a little town on the coast, and a large release I had when I was younger to get away from town, out on the beaches, with no one around, and just the ocean and the salty air. When I moved inland for four years to get out of that town, there's some things which you just don't stop missing.

When I moved over here a month or so ago, some friends took me down to the ocean, first time I'd seen it in those four years, and I just about cried, even it wasn't the places I grew up with, it was something.

18/3/09 10:48  
Blogger Professor Zero said...

Nostalgia is foolish and dangerous, yes, but I enjoy it sometimes. As in this post.

24/3/09 00:47  
Blogger Nanette said...

This is so gorgeous, little light. I've come back to read it a couple of times, just because.

We moved a lot when I was young, from the time I turned 7, for various reasons so I really have little I look back to - lots is a blur. One place is much like another, to me.

Still, with this *I* miss your former home and I realize I miss mine too, even if I don't even have a clue where either one of them is.

1/4/09 14:43  
Blogger Beth said...

Beautiful writing about something hard that I understand very well. Thanks.

3/4/09 02:39  
Blogger LQ said...

Late to the game, but wanted to reiterate that this is such a beautiful piece.

15/4/09 07:14  
Blogger commissar-priest Ted said...

It must be nice feeling nostalgia for your hometown, I'm either far too young, or my hometown was just that bad. Every time I visit in the winter when the fog rolls in it feels less like home and more like visiting silent hill.

8/12/11 15:02  
Blogger Christie McCormick said...

Such a lovely, painful valentine to our town. You are (as ever) an amazingly talented writer (just look at how your graceful prose in this little essay resonated with those commenters above). Also, even in your small town childhood home things are getting better--slowly but surely. My LGBTQ club was one of the most popular groups on campus last year, with strong, open voices challenging the safe status quo at every turn. Our conservative Christian principal backed down quickly when my transgender student (supported by a diverse posse of peers)said she wanted to use the girls bathrooms, and would not be relegated to the staff bathroom in the office, thank you very much. The stars are still sparkling; the Juniper-scented breeze still cools those adolescents climbing out of the river; the mainstream still pulls most people along with blinders securely fastened. I'm so genuinely glad that you have moved on and out, and so utterly proud of the good work you are doing. Hurrah!

27/6/15 22:30  

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