欢迎来到博文网

|When we were girls

来源:www.sirhui.com 2024-07-17

We lived on the banks of the Tennessee River, and we owned the summers when we were girls. We ran wild through humid(潮湿的) summer days that never ended but only melted one into the other. We floated down rivers of weekdays with no school, no rules , no parents, and no constructs other than our fantasies. We were good girls, my sister and I. We had nothing to rebel against. This was just life as we knew it, and we knew the summers to be long and to be ours.

The road that ran past our house was a one-lane rural route. Every morning, after our parents had gone to work, I' d wait for the mail lady to pull up to our box. Some days I would put enough change for a few stamps into a mason jar(玻璃罐) lid and l eave it in the mailbox. I hated bothering mail lady with this transaction, which made her job take longer. But I liked that she knew that someone in our house sent letters into the outside world.

I liked walking to the mailbox in my bare feet and leaving footprints on the dewy(带露水的) grass. I imagined that feeling the wetness on the bottom of my feet made me a poet. I had never read poetry, outside of some Emily Dickinson. But I imagined th at people who knew of such things would walk to their mailboxes through the morning dew in their bare feet.

We planned our weddings with the help of Barbie dolls and the tiny purple wild flowers growing in our side yard. We became scientists and tested concoctions1(混合,调和) of milk, orange juice, and mouthwash(漱口水) . We ate handfuls of bittersweet(苦乐参半的) chocolate chips and licked peanut butter off spoons. When we ran out of sweets to eat, we snitched sugary Flintstones vitamins out of the medicine cabinet. We became masters of the Kraft macaroni and cheese lunch, and we dutifully called our mother at work three times a day to give her updates on our adventures. But don't call too often or speak too loudly or whine2 too much, we told ourselves, or else they'll get an noyed and she'll get fired and the summers will end.

We shaped our days the way we chose, far from the prying3 eyes of adults. We found our dad's Playboys and charged the neighborhood boys money to look at them. We made crank calls around the county, telling people they had won a new car. What kind? they' d ask. Red, we' d always say. We put on our mom's old prom dresses, complete with gloves and hats, and sang backup to the C.W. McCall song Convoy4, which we' d found on our dad's turntable.

We went on hikes into the woods behind our house, crawling under barbed wire fences and through tangled5 undergrowth. Heat and humidity found their way throught he leaves to our flushed faces. We waded6 in streams that we were always surprised to come across. We walked past cars and auto7 parts that had been abandoned in the woods, far from any road. We' d reach the tree line and come out unexpectedly into a cow pasture(草地,牧场) . We' d perch8 on the gate or stretch out on the large flat limes tone outcrop that marked the end of the Woods Behind Our House.

One day a thunderstorm blew up along the Tennessee River. It was one of those storms that make the day go dark and the humidity disappear. First it was still and quiet. There was electricity in the air and then the sharp crispness of a summer day being blown wide open as the winds rushed in. We threw open11 all the doors and windows. We found the classical radio station from two towns away and turned up the bass9 and cranked up the speakers. We let the wind blow in and churn our summer day around. We let the music we were only vaguely10 familiar with roar throu gh the house. And we twirled. We twirled in the living room in the wind and in the music. We twirled and we im agined that we were poets and dancers and scientists and spring brides.

We twirled and imagined that if we could let everything --- the thunder, the storm, the wind , the world --- into that house in the banks of the Tennessee River, we could live in our summer dreams forever. When we were girls.


相关文章推荐

07

17

|Starting Point

We are reading the first verse(诗篇) of the first chapter of a book whose pages are infiniteI do not know who wrote those

07

17

|Never give up hope 永远别舍弃期望

Life doesn't always give us the joys we want.We don't always get our hopes and dreams, and we don't always get our own w

07

17

|A Friend in Need

Brownie and Spotty were neighbor dogs who met every day to play together. Like pairs of dogs you can find in most any ne

07

17

|I will greet this day with love 1

I will greet this day with love in my heart.And how will I do this? Henceforth will I look on all things with love and I

07

17

|Are you happy?

I prefer people not to talk until the end. If you're going to tell me something, then I'll know it. Some people I can't

07

16

|孔子语录

The Master said, to learn and at due times to repeat what one has learned, is that not after all a pleasure? That friend

07

16

|The Long Goodbye

They grow up too soon, everyone told me. Eighteen years later, I finally understand what they meant.It's nearly the end

07

16

|卑微仍然可爱

However menial your life is, meet it and live it; do not shun1(避开) it and call it hard names.It is not so bad as you tho

07

16

|Life Together

One fine day, an old couple around the age of 70, walks into a lawyer's office. Apparently1, they are there to file2 a p

06

16

动物笑话|The Talking Dog

A man walks into a bar with his dog and puts the dog on a barstool. The bartender asks the man what he wants to drink.I'