Friday, July 4, 2008

4th of July

Here in the valley the sound is deafening. surrounded by rogue fireworkers lighting incredible light shows that we catch a glimpse of here and there - some to our north, some directly above from some guys in the church parking lot next door, most to our west for the shows on Flathead Lake.


We spent the day a lot like we did in Clatskanie... we walked downtown, watched a small town parade (the highlight of said parade being a young boy wearing a superman outfit, strapped to the roof of a car at an angle, and in all seriousness holding out his arms as if flight. Second place, a man dressed as Marilyn Monroe), we hung out in the village for a while looking for some lunch (sat in the Wild Mile Deli for a while waiting for service which we never got), and then we came back home to get some relief from the heat. Took off later for a bbq with Art and Joy and Barbara, later standing on the porch with coffee we watched a HUGE thunderstorm on the horizon. We lit some sparklers for the girls, we drove home looking for fireworks to watch.... and now here i sit. Listening to the BOOMS echoing off the mountains and missing my old home town.


We try to make it seem as if we belong here and yet we really didn't know what to do with ourselves. We learned where NOT to stand for the parade, we learned where NOT to eat after the parade, we learned where firework displays might be showing but that the really good one starts at 11:00 which doesn't work for little girls who are dead tired and are asking to go to bed.


We used to know what to do. We'd make food at home, open our doors and welcome in any and every one, set up a chair or two in front of our house and watch the parade - bags filled with candy - clowns from Astoria, horses, firetrucks, logging trucks, and usually some old cars. We'd walk to the park, Joe would sing the national anthem, throw an axe or two, we'd go get lutheran pie and talk to everyone, walk back up to our house where people are sitting around on the lawn, on the porch, in our house, eating food, visiting, talking, and being together in a community of trust and familiarity. Later that night we'd carry a few chairs across the street, set up on the corner, and look a bit northwest for the one and only show in town - over the river. knowing that everyone else in town is looking at the same firework display and ooohhhing and aaaahhing in synchronicity


This is what i miss... i miss knowing what is expected. i miss the park full of old cars, the familiar faces that are slowing turning red in the heat. i miss people just showing up with a watermelon or a salad or chips and adding to the already full table full of party food. i miss just being myself, and being a hostess of sorts to the myriad of people that we came to know as our friends.


i realize that some 4th of July in the future we'll realize that we are at home, and we'll know what to do, and we will have some sort of tradition that we've been doing forever and all will be fine. I may still be sitting here in this same chair, listening to the booms... but i'll be ooohhhing and aahhhing with lots of other bigforkers, looking at different fireworks, in all sorts of directions, and i'll find that community of trust and familiarity.

i'm looking forward to that future synchronicity.

2 comments:

g said...

Wow - that brought tears! We all missed you too! We drove by the old stomping grounds (your old house, next door to our old house) to drop Kasidy off to be in the parade and there sat Mary Reinbold and Patti Salo. Just sitting and waiting for the parade to start - looking kind of lonely in front of your old house. :( We also found out where NOT to sit for the parade. We moved downtown to sit with the Mitchell family in front of Sterling Bank. BAD spot! Way too many people, kids, not enough candy and we waited until 11:15 before we even saw a glimpse of the parade. Next year.....back up the street! We actually know the people who live in your place. Kasidy and Kerissa played softball w/their daughter. It was a different day! We spent most of the day at the carnival after the parade. Mullins's went home to nap, didn't see Haas's. Came home to eat cuz we had a fiasco in the park and several of my family members had their feelings hurt and ended up angry. It certainly was a different day!!! Hoping next year will be better!

Pastor Andy Arnold said...

I'm a little late catching up on blog postings, but as someone who was with you NOT doing the right things (both literally and figuratively) and someone who is learning at about the same rate and stage of "new life" as you and your hubby, I concur wholeheartedly. I used to know where to go fishing and where to catch the fish I wanted to eat. I used to know who to call if I wanted to ride my snowmachine (which I have to call a snowmobile now). I used to know where to park on the lake to watch fireworks (on New Year's Eve, when it was frozen solid...we parked right in front of Gov. Palin's house, actually).

Someday. Probably not someday soon, but someday. I'm also trying to remember how challenging some of the first years were in Alaska and how challenging some of the last years were as well, in different ways. I, and we, do like it here, but there are certainly plenty of things to miss from there.