When I was 6 or 7 I went up to Lake Christie in Michigan with my
grandma, Nana. Her favorite sister, my
Great Aunt Jo was up at the lake every summer with her daughter Virginia and my
older cousins from Chicago. Their cabin
at the lake was the same one my mother went to as a teenager. Mom and her sister would periodically go
‘back east’ with Nana from California to visit their cousins in Chicago and
Michigan. To the end of her life she fondly
remembered her trips to the lake and was always plotting one last visit. When we lived in Ohio, we went there several
times, as well as up to Minnesota to see my Dad’s folks and south to Tennessee
to visit the Stanley kinfolk – we were well situated for seeing grandparents on
both sides. In the fall of 1957, my
folks relocated to California once more and visits became less frequent.
In 1956, Mom was pregnant with twins due to be born in early August, in
1957, she was juggling three infants in diapers and whichever the year, was happy
to have Nana take me away to the lake. My
Grandma and I were roommates in our home in Columbus and needed no arm twisting
to hit the road together on an adventure. I am pretty sure Nana drove us, I vaguely
recall her commenting on place names and which road to turn on – so I don’t
think we took a bus. I wish I could
remember the car ride better, I think we drove straight through. It was almost
a 300 mi trip and manageable in a day - albeit a long one. I also cannot recall whether my brother went
with us – of course I was pretty self-absorbed and pretty young then. I remember my folks coming up later on - perhaps
bringing him then with the babies. I get
confused about which trip was when and have only a few unmarked photos as
reference points. I know that Mom had
the twins in 1956, and that we went up to Minnesota that summer while she was
very pregnant and that I had my birthday at Shady point, ( which is another
tale) so I am thinking this was not the same year. – it’s all too hazy now,
suffice it to say there were many visits to lakes and relatives while we lived
in Ohio as well as a trip or two down to Florida (again another tale). Our
route to Aunt Jo’s lake took us through Battle Creek Michigan, that mystical
place where my brother and I sent our accumulated cereal box tops in order to
redeem fabulous prizes displayed on the packages. It was a disappointingly
normal looking sleepy little Midwestern town.
There were no gaudy warehouses brimming with unredeemed frogmen,
patches, magic viewers, submarines and gyroscopes - only grocery stores and gas
stations like everywhere else. I could cross
Battle Creek Michigan off of my life-list of destination cities. We drove on through fields of corn on tiny
country lanes– a strange sight to me since we rarely left the city limits of
Columbus. As we approached the turn for Aunt
Jo’s – I was astounded by how on earth Nana knew which unmarked back road was
the right one. The air smelt green, the
countryside silent - but for the distant sound of an occasional passing truck
and the constant buzzing of insects. Then
suddenly, past a few trees, we saw the lake.
The cornfields reached right up to the backside of their property and we
would wander through them on occasion picking their miniature young ears,
nibbling bits off of the tiny cobs in imitation of those cartoon chipmunks
‘Chip and Dale’. The lake had a dock and
boats and minnow buckets and all those things mucky and interesting to a
landlubber. Cousin Harry (two years
older than I - which was WAY older when you are little) was always going out in
the rowboat to catch turtles and explore amongst the rushes and cattails - it
was kid heaven for a nature enthusiast. My
older cousins would tell us little ones ghost stories up in the communal
sleeping quarters. I especially remember
one about ‘bloody bones’ who lived in their dark basement and crept up step by
step to ‘get us’ – we shrieked with panic and hid under our covers - then
begged to hear it again. Being budding teenagers,
they had movie magazines and stacks of 45’s in their recreation room. The Everly
brothers, Buddy Holly, shoo-bop and rock in roll continuously spinning on the
turntable. I, who had memorized the
lyrics of ‘Big Rock Candy Mountain’ singing to my record player at home was
suddenly in the world of big kids and tried hard to love the music that no
longer revolved around candy and hippity hopping down bunny trails. It was a strange new land which both
intrigued and scared my youthful mind. I
was relieved to escape the teen’s hangout and wander over to the docks and
watch the minnows circling in the bucket or poke at the snapping turtle to make
him bite my stick. Growing up looked way
too complicated, and the songs that described adolescence were so filled with
sorrow and emotional complications that I was happy to drift back into the main
house and help my grandma and her sister make carnations out of facial tissue,
tying them and fluffing them and then dipping the ends into a dish of food
coloring to give them raspberry edges.
When you are little, you need that sort of simple repetitive activity –
the older kid’s world was just too complex. Nana and Aunt Jo and I made hundreds of paper
carnations – I can’t remember what for, either for leis or to cover an aircraft
carrier – who cared! It was fun busy
work that my little hands could master.
I recall one evening we all went into town because the older kids were
dying to see the new Elvis Presley movie Love MeTender. They shrieked periodically throughout the tedious
movie, their reactions providing more entertainment than what was on the screen
- at least in those days they had a cartoon first.
As I stare at this hazy old photo of me with a twig and cousin Harry in the rowboat – we both look so little, yet we were allowed to wander our end of the lake, taught early to be careful of various dangers, looked after by lenient grandmas who gave us far more latitude than our parents. My Grandmother was about the same age I am now when she and I went up to the lake. I can understand her eagerness to visit her sister and have time to chat and just be together, remembering their past while enjoying the present with a new young generation.
very lovely...glad you chose the record cover from Loving You...I know I wore that particular record out. The picture of you and your cousin, so evocative of that period.
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