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Monday, September 28, 2020

What comes to mind when you hear the phrase…“run into town”

What comes to mind when you hear the phrase…“run into town”
 

This thought ran through my mind, and then, I thought of the Bill Holland, aka billybuc, Writing Challenge to ‘write about your childhood.’ My problem was, I have (In my mind, anyway) almost no recollections of my childhood, except those prompted by photos… and there are not a whole lot of them, to tell the truth. Now, if childhood includes High School, then, there are quite a few more memories. I’ll let that mull a bit, as I consider the phrase, ‘run into town.’

My use of the term “run into town” was in the context of needing to pick up a prescription from Walgreens in South Town Center of Hollister, about 5 miles away, with no other reason to go out. By the way, ‘run’ implies drive the car, not literally run… for you purists out there! ;-)

I have better photos of me and the 49 Chevy, but this is what popped up when asked; kind of liked the end of the slide film effect!! ;-)

I have become increasingly aware of phases used throughout a long life that make little real sense standing alone to be analyzed but seem perfectly logical in context, in conversation. Larry used one last week that was new to me, but perfectly meaningful to him, since he had heard it his entire life. He put a rock behind the camper so it would not roll away, he ‘scotched it’ he said. I had never heard the term, but he had… We always called the accelerator pedal in the car a ‘foot feet’ - now, where did that come from???

From 1942 to 1957 I lived on my Mom and Dad’s farm that was four miles east and three miles north of Coon Rapids, Iowa (“town”). From 1942 to 1952, while the school I attended, Willow #3, was open, I had thought that going into town was mostly a Saturday night grocery shopping and social evening. However, in reviewing the diaries my Mom kept (from 1932 to 1999) I got a very different impression. My Mom was a town girl, a Coon Rapids girl. Her mother and father lived in Coon Rapids. The rental farms my Mom and Dad, Eileen and Pete, lived on were closer to town by about half. It turns out from reading the diaries, there was a constant back and forth among them throughout. “I’m going to ‘run into town’” happened with great frequency, not just when needing a part or some grocery item. Often I was carted along, outside of school times, into town and dropped off at grandma’s house… much more than I would have guessed.

This just confirms my lack of memory of those early years. Once schools consolidated and I went to town for eighth grade, I remember these things occurring regularly. Both Mom and Dad were active in school board business, in the rural district and in the consolidation. Dad was President of the Coon Rapids School Board the year I graduated, in May 1957, and handed me by diploma. I do have many memories of those last five years in town school. I’ll have to be selective at that point if I write something about the time.

With these caveats in mind, I think I can respond to the challenge from Bill Holland, aka billybuc, to write a HubPages article: Childhood - a Memoir - Response to a Challenge. I am certainly going to give it a try. I’ll come back and post the link here, if I do! ;-)

See you down the road… ;-)

Monday, September 21, 2020

The Next Day of the Rest of My Life

 The Next Day of the Rest of My Life

 


My first blog post here on my Retirement Blog was 7 Jun 2008, “The First Day of the Rest of My Life.”

It was then just a year ahead of my retirement in June 2009. I maintained the blog, which became a Travel Blog, as well, through 14 Oct 2015, a trip to Silver Dollar City. It featured Nancy, she loved visits to Silver Dollar City!! ;-)

Nancy left us on 31 Aug 2020 (just had a nice little cry writing that phrase), of course, and now with Fall officially starting tomorrow, the “Next Day” title of this post was created.

I have already pledged to get back to posting in my Ancestor Stories blog.

This will get me back, likely to weekly posts, here in the Retirement and Travel Blog. Not too much traveling, but certainly keeping up with family and personal activities. These have been, since that Oct 2015 post, recorded at Facebook, mine as well as those of Annette, Allison, and Arrion, among other.

Annette and Larry just spend a week with me here in Hollister. Allison, who just lives down the street, fully participated, as well. I’ll be visiting Austin to see the rest of my family 15-19 Oct, so that will complete the loop until Christmas. Kaylee will turn 13 on November 8, if I am correct.

I just took the one photo as Annette and Larry were leaving to go back to Utah. It seemed an appropriate title photo here, but you can draw your own conclusions…

See you down the road… ;-)