
Fall has arrived and the breezes this weekend cleared away most of what was left of summer. Last week at home I walked along the river like I always do this time of year when the water laps at my feet, it is warmer than the air, inviting, deceiving, teasing me into thinking summer will push back on autumn and maybe even win out. I don’t mind the change so much; I’m not bothered by the passing of time as much as how I spend the passing of time.
The truth is, some things need to change. Even with resistance, sometimes it is the only way to make room for new growth.
For me even the seasonal change from summer to fall is often troublesome. Again, I don’t mind fall—my days in western New York and Massachusetts are most memorable for this time of year. And obviously I know it is going to happen. I watch the weather, I mark the calendar, I see the leaves letting go. But still it always takes me by surprise. I wake up one day and I need to wear more clothes, or I no longer feel the sun so strong on my shoulders, and I am saddened.
So when a change is even more unexpected, like anyone else I wonder how I am going to handle it. And the surest way—for me anyway—to gauge my reaction to life being different or accepting some sort of radical, unexpected shift in existence is to look back to when these things have happened before.
I’ve never lived a conventional life.
Like that time we moved away from what had been “home” when I was eight or so. In kindergarten I liked a little red-haired girl, Kathleen. Just like Charlie Brown I was afraid to approach her. We were in the same class until third grade when at the end of the school year my family moved much further out on the Island. Instead of saying goodbye to her I made a card that said, “I love you” and threw it at her in the hallway. I think she got it. Now I wish I had just handed it to her politely and said I was sorry I was moving. I never saw her again. I probably didn’t handle that relationship well.
But I liked moving. I liked heading to somewhere new, and even at eight I sensed the need to see it as an adventure instead of a radical shift in life. Man, was I innocent. Again, I was eight. But the times were simpler, not because of how old I was but how more focused we were, as if we still were growing, getting stronger. I don’t feel that way about society anymore. It’s like we peaked quite some time ago, and now we keep trying to invent new ways of regaining that hope we had. A line from a favorite song of mine says, “Can you picture a time when a man had to find his own way through an unbroken land?” Imagine that for a second. No satellite photos, no GPS, no maps and indicators, no sextant, nothing but perhaps some paths beaten by cattle or floods. Wild, but filled with hope.
In some ways that’s all of us in our youth. Personally, I often ignored advice of my older siblings, examples set down on television or in school. I simply preferred to assess a situation and have at it on my own terms, even if it meant complete and utter disaster. Once I walked three blocks from home just to play with a friend’s plastic bowling pin set. I was eight. Another time I decided to hike into the San Jacinto Mountains outside Palm Springs without telling my parents, or anyone for that matter. I missed the small sign that said “Danger: Rattle Snake Area. Keep Out.” What a beautiful hike that was until I fell into a Saguaro cactus and spent an extra hour on a rock pulling thorns out of my leg. What a great day. I think there are too many signs telling us what not to do, too many limitations, and maybe that’s from the technology; I really don’t know. But I know this: we went outside and escaped the very notion of limitation. Our imaginations were limitless, and we “searched” the wilds of our world. Okay, I suppose it was more dangerous. But as Lily Meola wrote of daydreams and imagination: “It’s not big enough if it doesn’t scare the hell out of you.“
So maybe I should be dead. Or abducted. Or in juvi for harrassing an eight year old girl. Instead, I gained that small bit of confidence we used to earn out on our own, trying and failing, fantasizing and acting and pretending. You simply never know when those youthful lessons will return to come in handy, see us through an unexpected left-turn, help us through the changes.
I thought about those years, my early youth in Massapequa Park on Long Island, and how innocent it all was; how we flipped baseball cards and played stickball. We had block parties where the block would be closed to traffic and we all put picnic tables and grills out and walked up and down the street talking to everyone else and sharing food, and riding bikes, and the adults had drinks and the kids had fun. Television went off the air at night, just a fuzzy white noise until the early morning when a black and white flag waved across the screen and some dude said, “We now begin our broadcast day” after the National Anthem.
This was the age of my youth. It was innocent and tech-free and filled with hippies and protests and flag-burning and marches and sit-ins and rumbles. The laughable Mets became the champs and we walked on the moon. On the moon, for God’s sake. How can you possibly not understand why at the core of my generation is some semblance of hope, still simmering. We were not a generation of followers staring at our hands; not by any stretch of the imagination. So when the times were a ‘changing, we changed—or we were the ones causing the change to begin with. And as we grew older, those organic traits became part of our DNA.
Note: No, I’m not reminiscing or longing for the days of my youth. Not at all, Just the sense of hope we had that seems to be missing now. If there was anything I look back there for, it is that. Part of who we are is absolutely dependent upon how we were when we were young. And when I was young I was restless, always ready for something new. I didn’t mind our move away from the Little Red-Haired girl. I didn’t mind the move to Virginia. But I’m saddened by the slow erosion of hope, the dilution of imagination.
Everything needs to change, and it scares the hell out of me, so I could use a bit of that eight-year-old gumption right about now.
“If you do not change direction, you may end up where you are going.”
–Lao Tzu


Bob, Well said!! You and I come from the same generation. It is hard to imagine how our children and our children’s children will become one day. There seems to be so much desensitization and hopelessness in the world today. Little wonder that depression and anxiety have become the “norm”. Best wishes to you and Michael. Your Urbanna and now Harrisonburg fan, Diane Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android
LikeLike