Sunday, November 18, 2012

writemuch: sing around the campfire, pt. 2, or an ant, a leaf...

writemuch: sing around the campfire, pt. 2, or an ant, a leaf...: this fall day had me thinking about something i wrote long ago. ' in strictest confidence' running through a shower of autumn t...

writemuch.blogspot is the original work of author susan byrum rountree. all written work and photography is copyright protected and can only be used with written permission of the author.

sing around the campfire, pt. 2, or an ant, a leaf, a feather — there's a story in there somewhere

this fall day had me thinking about something i wrote long ago.

' in strictest confidence'

running
through a shower
of autumn tears
shed by seasoning trees
snuggling, thick-sweatered and listening
as fall whispers
her first, crisp secret
makes me want to be
a tattletale.

— seb '77 

i wrote the poem as a sophomore in college while taking my first creative writing class. i had the best professor in the world, who on the first day sat us on the front campus of our small woman's college and told us to find a poem.

find one? lord. this would be impossible. the only poetry i had written up to that point was about jim croce's too-early demise, or a pretty awful attempt at a love poem to my boyfriend that i am sure i copied from some song i'd heard but felt the lyrics needed to be rewritten.

i remember sitting there by a huge old oak, studying the grass like i used to do as a child, when i invented tiny cities of people living like ants below the weeds and moss in our side yard. 

that day i found an ant, an amber ant as i recall who scurried, a lot (i was into verbs then, as now), and he meandered, and required a lot of adverbs (which i later learned to lose, thank goodness.) 

but something big happened that day. that fall, in that class, i felt as if someone had taken the stitching out of the top of my brain so all my inside thoughts could pour out. nobody had ever given me that kind of permission before. and pour they did, into stories and poems and half-started novels. i wrote some pretty bad stuff, but some things i am still proud of, like the poem up there, and i found myself lost in time, doing exactly what i had gotten into trouble for in school and at home — daydreaming, my head gently floating with the clouds. imagine. being given permission to do that! and it was bliss.

this month, our entire parish has been reading one book — Joan Chittister's Following the Path. It's a simple book about how God equips us for special work, about how it's a pretty good idea to pay attention to the signals we get from God along this path of ours. she writes about decisions we make as young adults, when we can make them for ourselves for the first time — and the forks we take in the road in those years that change everything, sometimes in a moment. 

i'm way past that one, of course, but wouldn't you know, just when i hit the age of the speed limit on a country road, she poses a question: when was the last time you lost yourself in something you loved so much that you lost all track of time?

i can remember it happened in that class, and in other writing classes i've taken over the years. in a weeklong writing residency back at that same college 15 years ago. it sometimes happens on a rainy afternoon when my head is stuck in a really good book. happened when i was having a good conversation with a friend or my kids (so rare) but whenever it has happened, most often, words have something to do with it. i can tell you it never once happened in math class.

a few weeks ago, it happened again, in the middle of doing something i thought i would hate. i went back to camp. yes, 40 years after that most harrowing of experiences, my friends of the friendless forced me to face my fears. 

this time, i volunteered to do something i love, in hopes of warding off any homesickness that might come about from sharing bathrooms and bunkrooms with strangers — writing of course! but when they scheduled it for 9:30 PM!, i politely (i hope) said that nobody (not me anyway) wanted to take part in a writing class when it was practically (my) bedtime.

when morning broke, a whipping rain meant i could have a morning class after all. so i gathered up my idea bag and hoped someone in addition to my FoFs would be there sitting on the other side of the table from where i stood.

a few ladies dribbled in, strange but hopeful faces, and then my FoFs walked through the door and i felt a little bit safe. answers varied for why they came, but most have felt that pull of the story, somewhere in their lives. they just didn't know how to find it.

before camp, we'd been challenged to make a headdress for that night's competition, and so i had a bag full of colorful feathers in my grip. each woman took a feather and as she studied its form, i hoped (prayed) i could be like my favorite professor and coax a story out.

i started with a simple question, really. one that works if the writer is five or 55. look at the feather. what does the color remind you of?

the writers made long lists, but among them were these jewels, one from each:
  • a cashmere sweater. a favorite sweater. bought in ireland. which the writer did NOT want to write about!
  • a hurricane warning flag. (the writer is a sailor)
  • a cat collar. (for a cat whose name is Tina Turner)
  • a daughter's tea set. (just recently passed down to a cousin who is hoping for a baby soon)
  • a mother's iris garden (similar to irises this gentle-natured writer had beheaded as a girl when challenged by a friend to follow suit)
  • a green sweater. (the writer knew her mother would not it consider 'servicable')
  • a old Renault (no more reliable than the husband who bought it)
  • blown glass (in an historic home the writer decorated)
  • a grown son's 4-year-old red sneakers (from a mother who taught that son to appreciate really great shoes as a way to show his personality)
  • thunder clouds (clouds that later brought trees down at a single mother's home while her daughter was home alone)
and so they wrote those stories. or at least started them. and shared them. and we talked about what we loved and what we were curious about, and i tugged tightly at what was holding the story in until i could see in their eyes that it was coming right on out of them and onto the paper. 

the cashmere sweater was the go-to garment for comfort and for feeling beautiful. for years. the sailor had only ever written a really great grocery list but she had a novel in her head, so why not begin each chapter with a provisions list? Tina Turner, it turns out, was the first cat the woman now known as the 'cat lady' in her town had ever rescued. and green sweater? my dear friend had just spent days cleaning out her mother's closet before moving her to a nursing home, and she found a strapless 40s-era dress that must have been more than serviceable once upon a time. the stories grew on.

over two hours later, i looked at my watch, lost, i had been, in not my story, but theirs. after class, i had trouble calming down, i felt such energy from this trading of tales, from helping these women see something new.

it wasn't until later that i realized i hadn't felt so lost in time in a very long time. but this two hours on a rainy saturday morning far from home reminded me how much i love poking my head around not just my story, but others' stories, too. (that night, they asked me to tell the story at the campfire. imagine! and i told my first camp story, which helped, in a way, to finally get over it. for the record, they GASPED when i told them of my mother almost leaving me in her dust. so sorry beety jean.)

this week i paid a short visit home, and found the poem about the leaves hanging in the same place where it has been for all these many years — on the wall right next to the washing machine. (that Christmas my friends and i were in a counted cross-stitch phase, and i had stitched the words out for my mother as a gift. she hung it right where she spent large parts of her days back then, and now, come to think of it. penance for the camp thing? maybe.)

and so i am back at it, the thing that makes me lose all track of time. it's a meandering story, but i've found that it's in the meandering where the story usually lies.

i'm late for supper. (fixing it, that is.) i'd be late for most things, if i gave into the words and let them meander whatever path they choose.








writemuch.blogspot is the original work of author susan byrum rountree. all written work and photography is copyright protected and can only be used with written permission of the author.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Sunday, November 4, 2012

sing around the campfire, pt. 1

when i was 9 my my sister came home from a two-week sleep-away camp. she talked about the campfires, the dances with boys, the group picture, something called canteen, the sailing and the songs, and about all the people who were now her friends from other places. she didn't mention kp.

i didn't know anyone from another place besides a couple of cousins, and wondered what it might be like to meet folks i hadn't known all my whole nine years.

the week before she left, she packed a footlocker full of shorts and matching tops, sneakers and bathing suits — another thing i couldn't imagine — packing your whole self up and willingly spending 14 days away from family. where you hadn't already figured out that a witch did not in fact live in the linen closet. where you couldn't fall off to sleep listening to the sounds of your parents in the family room. she was the bravest girl i'd ever known.

i must have asked to go. surely they wouldn't have just sent me to camp without my permission. parents didn't do that, did they? but there my mother was, washing and pressing all my clothes into crisp squares (she has this habit), and we packed the metal trunk full, with socks and clean underwear, stationery and stamps, leaving just enough room for the sweatshirt i was bound to want from the camp canteen.

i had never been away from home for more than a night or two.

but we set off through the countryside. it was a long way, turning down a sandy road in the middle of pines, tall and straight. we drove by a spot in the sandy pine forest where my sister said the devil left his footprints. right outside an episcopal church camp? i hoped there was a fence strong enough to keep the devil out.

suddenly, we were there, driving through the gate, and i looked up at the sign: camp leach. leach. would there be leeches in the water? I wondered. (i doubt i'd learned to spell it right by then.)

we were barely passed the first cabin when my sister jumped out of the car, headed to find her counselors. i stayed close to mama, unsure. i could see the river before me, white clapboard huts scattered about, the masts of small day sailers peeking up from the water. 

i don't remember much about that day. just mama making up my bed and me climbing to the top, where i could see into the bathroom and the showers where there were no doors.

i did know somebody — a girl in my class from church — she was supposed to be my friend— but i was scared of her most of the time. i looked around at the strange faces that would be my cabinmates for the next two weeks and missed the faces of my friends from home.

i think it must have been at supper when the end of my adventure began. i don't drink milk, and so when they put a carton in front of me at the table, i ask for water. nothing doing. drink the milk. and then i started thinking i'm sure about how mama would put a little vanilla and sugar in my milk to get me to drink it. that thought led to watching mama fix supper and the softness of her apron and it was all pretty much over by then. and the tears fell.

somehow i got to sleep that night, and by day things seemed just a little bit better. i met a girl named penny and took her picture with the camera i had brought. 

i can't tell you when it turned again, but somehow i found myself on the phone with mama, and i was wailing. despite the fact that the counselors had taken me sailing and swimming and walking around the camp on my own personal tour. we'd had our camp picture made and heard ghost stories by the campfire and i was there for all of it — for a whole three days. but by that time i'd had enough of trying not to miss home, so there i was again on the phone, begging, pleading. come get me. i'm dying here.

and so she did. 

oh i know you're saying right about now that the only thing to cure a homesick camper is to leave her there and make her tough it up. well, that's probably what my mother should have done, but i can pretty much bet that even when she wasn't on the phone with me she could hear my crying, two hours away, through those pines. and you can bet that i was making everyone around me miserable.

she drove the wagon into the camp yard and i was waiting, my trunk packed inside the cabin. my sister once again combed the grounds looking for her counselors, drinking in the smell of the Pamlico, begging just as hard that my mother let her stay in my place. 

go get your trunk, mama said, and her words melted into me. i was going home. finally. I ran up the short steps and somehow filled with a new-found strength lifted that thing up by myself and straggled out the door.

that's when i saw the dust clouds. clouds kicked up by mama's station wagon, headed toward the gate. she was leaving me. it was not her finest moment.

i guess she thought seeing her would be good enough medicine, that it would buy her another three days without me at home. days of quiet. if i had been my mother, that's what i'd have thought, too. 

but that's what you get for thinking. i was what today would be called a high-strung child, and that translated into a loud and crying one most of the time. at that point in my life, i hadn't found my writing voice, but i had found my voice, surely i had.

so i saw those dust clouds, and i used that voice. screaming. don't. go. don't. mama. wait. please. take. me. home. it embarrasses me to admit what a baby i was.

and i ran. faster than i had ever tried, ran to catch up with her. i can't tell you whether i was running with that damn trunk or if i dropped it in the sand. 

then i saw the breaks, lit up like the tree in the early hours of Christmas.

she stopped, and i got in the car, satisfied that i would no longer be held prisoner in this place where i couldn't get so much as a glass of water, and i was going home.

whether you are the mother or the child in this story, there are no good answers. yes, she should have made me stay (probably never should have come in the first place, or shouldn't have thought i was ready or whatever. ) and no, i shouldn't have cried until all that was left was the driest of sobbing in order to get my way. i don't know about you, but i've been that mother who no matter what i did, it would be the wrong choice. and as for the child, sometimes there are no good answers there, either. no good way to get around what you're feeling except feel.

i was grounded for the rest of those two weeks, where i was content never to be too far from my mother's soft apron as she stood at the kitchen sink. i never went back to camp — never wanted to — but i suppose i am glad to have provided my family with a source of laughter whenever we gather around the holiday table.

my children went to camp and loved it, though when i left them each time, i spent the first 10 minutes crying my eyes out, imagining them feeling abandoned. but they never called home.

in the years since, i've found my voice and learned (sometimes) to temper my tears, so i could leave home, finally, for more than a sleepover. and on a warm July day in 2001 i dropped the kids off at camp and went on an adventure of my own. for five days i traveled coastal north carolina and virginia, promoting my first book. 

on the third day of the trip, i stopped in a small bookstore in elizabeth city, where a line had already formed near the door. i began signing books for students at a local school, one of whom had the last name 'spence'. oh, i knew a girl once named penny spence I said aloud. a suddenly a voice near the back of the line lifted above the din.

'i'm penny spence,' said the brown haired girl i had photographed in front of our cabin way back in 1967. 'do i know you?'

'well, probably not,' i said. 'we went to camp together, but i only stayed three days.'

she didn't remember me, but that was ok. that meant she didn't go home from camp telling her mother about the crazy girl who cried all the time and ran after her mother's car, screaming to beat the band.



writemuch.blogspot is the original work of author susan byrum rountree. all written work and photography is copyright protected and can only be used with written permission of the author.