Tag Archives: cemetery

Arkansas Dirt

It’s just dirt.

Just regular old Arkansas

Dirt.

But on rare visits home

I am drawn to this particular

Patch like a fish to

Water.

Their names are there,

My Mom and my Dad.

Though they are not,

I go anyway

And against all logic

I speak to them there.

Sometimes I feel like a

Little boy,

Frightened

By a nightmare, seeking comfort

At their bedside in the dark.

Other times, I am a teenager

Checking in after cruising

West Kingshighway, an evening

Spent looking for love despite

Already being loved

Deeply.

Today, I am fifty-five years old

But am channeling the teenager

Checking in.

I say,

“I’m doing good.

We are good.

And happy.”

I even employ facial expressions

To be more convincing

And don’t even feel silly.

I tell them where we live now.

I tell them about their

Granddaughters.

It is a one-sided conversation but

I sense their smiles,

And then mine.

I don’t stay long.

I never do.

I know they aren’t there,

And that it’s just Arkansas

Dirt.

But to me it is the most fertile

Soil,

And my heart grows stronger

And fuller

Every time that I go.

Home Run

25010686_659397667781726_6878480645274730496_nWe crossed the Mississippi River bridge in Memphis in the rental car, ironically a Malibu, and remembered what the Arkansas Delta looks like in early winter. Many of the trees had long ago shed their leaves leaving cold bare branches that reach toward the sky, and those still holding leaves that had only recently been brilliant reds, yellows, and oranges had faded to the color of rust and stood clustered together for warmth next to the brown dirt of the silent farmland. The winter sun was setting, and it looked as if someone had plastic-wrapped the entire pastel sky. It isn’t your typical picture of natural beauty, but I now find it strangely wonderful.

It was good to spend time in my hometown. Seeing family and old friends was special as expected, but there was something special about just being there, too. I don’t miss temperatures in the upper twenties even a little bit, but it was even refreshing to remember what home felt like on my skin once upon a time. I went for a seven-mile run one morning that gave me a good long time to remember.

My wife and I went for a drive one afternoon to remember more. We drove by her first workplace and the places we lived together and even Joel and Alicia’s apartment where we spent many an evening in the early days of our relationship sitting on the couch and talking and falling in love.

And then we drove to the grave sites of my sweet parents. I used to make a point to do this alone on each visit home to talk to them; first, my dad, who died so long ago, and then more recently to both of them, sort of like I would go to their bedroom seeking comfort following a childhood nightmare in the middle of the night—comforting even when I couldn’t see their faces. But this time I went with my beautiful wife. We walked across the crunchy leaves under a cold sun and stood there as a couple — as my parents were a couple once upon a memory. There was nothing really to do other than stare at the flowers and the name plates and silently wonder where the years go and what to think about it. It was good to stand there together, like my parents who also made the choice in life to stand together. And who now Rest In Peace together.

I developed a strong sense that someone has pressed pretty hard on life’s accelerator and that the years are really starting to fly by now. It may sound a little spooky to say such a thing, but strangely enough I find it to be a most peaceful feeling. Life is quite the ride, and fear now seems like such a waste of precious time.

I think my parents are telling me this as I still stand by their bedside in the darkness.