Friday, February 21, 2014

Muddied History


This week I had every intention of writing on the history of my place: how it came to be, what the future holds.  I went through all the motions: met with one of Mortar Board’s faculty advisors, took pages of notes in my tiny journal while I listened to plans and stories.

Information in hand I arrived at the garden while the longer lasting sun began to sink.  I hopped over puddles to stand on the now exposed mulch they piled on the path before the heavy snowstorms started.  Even in today’s Fall/Spring weather the pathway still feels frozen. 
So I stand on the frozen-maybenot-mulch covered trail and consider history.

History…..
           
            History…..
                       
                        The history of this place?

                                    The history of this place within the history of Chatham.
                                               
                                                            The history of Chatham?

                                                                                                History……
                                                                                                           
                                                                                                            History…..

Right now the consideration of history feels about as muddy as the melted snow-soaked lawn in front of me.  I balance on my left leg and tentatively tap my right Minnetonka clad food against the muggy ground.  Though I hope for a
tap
tap
is instead I get a
squish
glop.
                                                                                                                        Squish
                                                                        How did the garden get here?
                                                            Glop
            What will become of this garden?

And just like that the ideas about history fall under my moccasin, which squishes them into the goopy, grass bits.  Like the ring a scorned woman of a sappy movie throws to the storm.  Or my dog’s favorite toy she forgot outside when called in for the night.


I suppose if I swam in lakes as a child I might compare the mucky lawn to the water’s ground.  But I had—and still have—an aversion to lakes. 

It’s not the idea of the floor, squishing beneath my bare feet.  In fact, I run through lawns on muddy, summer days.  A slip in my step with toes curled as they kick and flip clods of dirt to the back of my calves and thighs.  With excited screams drowned out by the thunder my friends and I try to out run, flip-flops in hand. 

            No, It is not the feel of the ground between my toes, but rather the in ability to see my toes.  The uncertain murkiness of the of the lake’s water.  I can’t watch whatever watches me.  I step blindly towards monsters that snap, stab, and slither.  The debris that never settles, camouflages the world below. 

            This fear is not irrational.  At too young an age I was sent to Lake Rickabear, a Girl Scout Day Camp.  Where swimming lessons in the questionable lake were not a suggestion but an enforced requirement.  I wasn’t too keen on the idea from the start, but the day a snake stealthily swam beneath camp-goers for a day on the beach, I completely gave up on lakes.

In long, I suppose, I dislike lakes.  But it’s not just lakes.  I never venture into bodies of water farther than I can see my feat.  Lakes, the ocean, or rivers, I often tread water at a V to keep my feet in view.  Why are my feet more important than my ass?

The muck can grab me either way
                       
                        Pull me back to the goopy grass
                                   
                                                Where my foot muddles the history
                                                                                   
                                                                                    With a squish and a glop.



I’ll leave this idea of the garden’s history hidden in the mud
 and wait for the debris to settle. 

4 comments:

  1. I think you'll know be able to come back to this post with these memories and have that invaluable first impression. I enjoy the history break in form, as you've created an echo. I also appreciate how the sound effects are scattered just as real sound effects are.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Now* (typing from my phone like a dummy) again. Also, sideways, but I'm so obsessed with form and the freedom of it lately I forgot to say that the look-backs at Girl Scout Camp, dislike of lakes and "Why are my feet more important than my ass?" (Ha!) were nice to read as well.

      Delete
  2. Beautiful Ash, It's so interesting to look at the ways in which a lone bad experience can shape your psyche out into adulthood.

    Also, watching as your original writing intentions were pulled away by your fearful memories, into a place you felt more inclined to naturally explore, cool.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I like the play with form. I hope you do do some research on the history of the place but stay committed to evoking so strongly the sense of place.

    ReplyDelete