Friday, December 15, 2006

Going Home

"That is new," I said to my wife as we passed by a large convenience store with an attached Subway. We were about to cross the river that has forever separated town from where I grew up; a little place called Cumberland Heights in Clarksville, TN. It was Christmas day, and I had returned to this community to attend the family Christmas party. I thought to myself as we passed the new store, "I wish subway would have been that close when I was growing up." This convenience store that rose up overnight out of nothing did not surprise me nearly as much as Beach's Market, the old convenience store I grew up with, being closed.


Cumberland Heights was always home to me. Visiting on holidays and summers was the only consistency for me from year to year. After high school, I joined the Army. In the Army, I would drive from Kansas to Tennessee on almost every long weekend. I would inevitably end up at some point in my stay at Beach's Market. When I asked, my aunt was able to fill me in on what had happened with the store. In her words, "those greedy Beach's moved it; they closed the other store too. Now I have to put makeup on just to get a pack of cigarettes. I can't wear my pajamas or anything." In other words, the store is not staffed and patronized by people close enough to be family anymore.


Generation after generation grew up in Cumberland Heights together, intermarrying and blurring the lines of friend and family. The feuds and politics give the area a charming simplistic feel. It is the type of place where people help others without asking for anything in return. Common courtesy requires that one offer to compensate for any help given, but the same common courtesy requires that the helper turn down the offer. People there had nicknames for each other, the reasons for which had long been forgotten. No one called before coming over, and no one expected it either. Friendship worked in circles there. People were friends for years, and then they would become enemies for a time. Eventually, given enough time, they would become friends again and forget that there was ever a period when they were not. Cumberland Heights has its problems but that only adds to the charm.


Beach's Market had that same kind of charm. A long time ago, I can remember thinking that if you stood outside of Beach's for long enough; you would eventually see everyone you knew. For a large part of my life that was true. Going into the store, there was always a person who did not recognize me until someone referred to me as Dolan's Boy. That person would then tell me how big I was and how small I used to be. Don Juan, the widowed old drunk, who lived in the burned out basement of his old house, was always standing outside drinking a Milwaukee's Best. He would call my aunt his wife, just as he did every other woman that went into the store. My dad used to go pick him up and bring him to the house. He made him sit out on the porch but he fed him exactly what we were having. Sometimes we would just take him a plate. Others in the community would do the same. As I noticed the closed store, some of the other changes started to bubble to the surface. Cumberland Heights, my sleepy little suburb of Clarksville, had grown. Where there used to be flower gardens, horse pastures, and dense woods, were now modular homes and cookie cutter houses. Front porches with swings were replaced by backyards with privacy fences. Some of the same people are still there, and then there are people with different names filling the same roles that once belonged to someone else. I was now a stranger. My dad, being dead for about 10 years, is still remembered, but it is seldom recalled that he had a son. When I am reintroduced as Dolan's boy, people give that "oh yeah" response that lets you know that they searched the vaults of their memories to verify that my dad did in fact have a son. Next-door neighbors are liable to be strangers instead of kindly old ladies that always had lemonade on hot summer days. Without the promise of lemonade the kids seemed to stop coming outside to play. I looked for the equivalent of me and my cousins, outside jumping bicycle ramps and causing mischief, to no avail. This could be a symptom of the times; maybe Beach's was just a holdout from a different time.


The Cumberland Heights that I looked forward to visiting every summer is not the same Cumberland Heights that is there today. I am not sure if it changed or if I just remember a rose tinted version of it. Either way, it is not the fairy tale that I remember. I rarely go back to visit now, unless it is a holiday, wedding, or funeral. Old Don Juan the drunk is gone, and I only realize this now while writing about him. When I would go back, I would drive by Beach's without even slowing down. My family is spreading out, everyone is doing there own thing. Most of the family did not even make it to the Christmas party. I made it, but I will be absent from other functions. I do not want to ignore my family, but an hour drive has a way of making the trip seem like a chore. When I do go back, like the store, the visit is empty. There is no longer anything there for me. Sure, my family is still there, but even they are becoming strangers. It is not that they are changing; they remain remarkably the same, but that I am changing. I have a new family just as Beach's has a new storefront. Neither of us can go back to our old location and be happy or profitable. Both of us are much busier at our new locations and often forget our roots. Even as I am complaining about the close little community from my youth, I myself am abandoning it.


As I left the family Christmas party and departed from Cumberland Heights, I drove past the old Beach's Market again. I did not notice it at all. I did not notice that the lights were not on and the shelves were empty. I did not notice the parking lot empty of everything including gas pumps. I drove by like a stranger. There was no long trained reflex to pull into the parking lot. The ghosts of my past were unable to get my attention, if they were even still trying. The demons of the present could not reach me as I barreled down the road. I was leaving this now foreign place and going home.

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13 comments:

Ross said...

As promised, I bookmarked this after you mentioned it and got around to reading this today...This is really poignant. I feel this way about a lot of the places I've lived growing up - having moved around every couple of years leaves each place you lived in full of memories but the reality is never quite the same....and in the cases where it does feel the same, you start to wonder how long it'll last, too.Thanks for sharing this. And I hope you're cultivating a home just as warm and memorable for your daughter...I know she will appreciate it one day.

Budd said...

thanks for reading. Glad you enjoyed it and that it brought back some fond memories for you.

grrrace said...

wow. i don't have any one place that i grew up in so i don't have those kinds of memories... sadly, i don't think mia will have those kinds of memories either because we live in so.cal. it's just so different out here.

Budd said...

You really don't have any place that was a constant through your child hood? Oh, I see what you are saying. The feel of the place wasn't really as important as the fact that it changed. I changed.

gamany said...

i wish i had lasting memories of the places i lived. we moved a lot, every 2-4 years because my dad was in the army. i just have fragments. i think it's because i don't think about them because it was too painful having to leave. i learned quickly that if i wanted to adjust, i had couldn't dwell on the past...or the places i called home.

Budd said...

I only spent summers and holidays there. I moved much more often. from k-12 I went to 13 different schools. I was only at 3 schools longer than a year. My wife says that I make friends very easily but that I don't get close to them. I completely agree with her. I am guessing that it is a defense mechanism from my childhood. Out of site, out of mind.

gamany said...

as much as i'm a people person, i have a hard time getting letting them in. i agree, it's definitely a defense mechanism. strangely, i find myself wanting to reconnect with people from my past but i haven't been able to. how about you?

Budd said...

I am really excited at first contact, but then, I get bored. If I lived near them, maybe it would be different. I am not good at the whole long distance thing. I actually find that I have a hard time keeping in touch with family as well.

grrrace said...

i moved around a lot as a kid... i mean, sometimes twice in a school year. the only reason why i ended up staying in the same school in HS (soph-sen years) was because i went to a boarding school. up until that point... i can't even remember the # of schools i went to... i think 12 or 13?

gamany said...

i wonder how is it that i'm always excited when i'm on vox. maybe the virtual neighborhood keeps us close in ways different from physical closeness. whatever the case, i hope i don't get bored.

Budd said...

grace, so you are distant with people as well?

Budd said...

Angela- I don't know, maybe the internet gives you enough distance to feel safe around people.

grrrace said...

i can be. i mean, i make friends pretty easily. but not "real" friends. i'm sure you know what i mean... i feel uncomfortable getting really close with people. must be from when i was a kid and getting close only meant getting hurt later when we moved and i was all alone again.