Posts Tagged ‘Alabama’

Hello Pennsylvania.

I’ve made my return from the south since I last wrote, and it’s been awkward, exciting, and sad at times. My family & I have reconnected, Alivia has been baptized, I’ve seen old friends, and experienced my first anxiety attack at the mere sight of the garden. Things have changed since I was last living in Pennsylvania and yet much has stayed the same. I like that.

Leaving Alabama and my father was hard, but finally being able to say that I have lived with him brings the biggest smile to my face. Some part of me feels a little bit more complete knowing we were able to truly connect this summer as father and daughter.

I’ve also made my move into the townhouse. I absolutely adore it & love biking to campus. I feel at little more productive when I work my body to get from one place to another. We’ve already had friends come by for dinners & small talk on the back patio and suddenly, this has become my home through that process. And as many have already heard on campus, Sammy has been introduced to my house-mates, friends, as well at the whole women’s soccer team. He’s adjusting well.

As I readjust to the Grantham campus , I’ll keep Philly & Alabama in my heart, taking the lessons I’ve learned from both places and working them into my final year at Messiah College. Let’s make it a good one.

I’ll leave you with a picture of Sammy:

We only get stronger from here.

It’s be rough to say the least. Two people in my life died within five days of each other. The first being a dear friend who taught me many life lessons and the other, a close friend of my mother’s who made me laugh often while I was growing up.

Because of my current location & lack of friends around, it’s been difficult to handle all of this news…so as a way to cope & truly express my feelings (since I do so better through photos than words), I took a bike ride down Route 1 in honor of Adrian (& now also Rick) with the purpose of taking photos of the surrounding environment. Here is the outcome of that ride. I apologize for how small these are. If you click on them they’ll get larger.

This one’s for you A.W.

(Enjoy this song while you look. You’ll have to go to this link.)

http://youtube.com/watch?v=AratTMGrHaQ

You are loved & missed Adrian Wilson & Rick Martnick.

fin.

& the mania continues.

A generic update…nothing special:

This is my experience ordering my first drink as a twenty-one year old:

My father came home from work during his lunch break to take me out for food. We both decided on a placed called “La Bamba” to get some tasty Mexican dishes. I decided to go for a Chimichanga and the typical Strawberry Daiquiri; simple but tasty, and I was sure I would enjoy it. No risks.

But here’s the good part– the waiter was a cock-eyed (seriously cock-eyed) Mexican who barely spoke English and lived in Alabama. Talk about strange. What’s more strange is that he didn’t card me even though the people I met at church this morning thought I was in high school. I figure the average age I appear is that of a seventeen year old girl. How disappointing.

Friday night, my dad & I dressed all “fancy-like” & attended the Army Birthday Ball. Colonel Jones, who I met the week before and absolutely adore, hosted the night with jokes & sentimental thoughts. While I’m not too fond of military talk & things relating to it, I met some really great people that work for my dad (one woman even informed me of her best friend who is looking to hire a receptionist for the summer at her hair salon…bwerry!).

Saturday, as “required” by Alabama “law” (aka–typical of the locals), I went to the gun range & shot a few dozen rounds, drank a beer with pops at home afterward, then spent two hours disassembling the gun to clean it & then reassemble. It’s actually something I missed doing—the perks of living with dad. (Below-my handiwork) While I’m going crazy here without a job yet & struggling with getting accustomed to the culture here , I’m absolutely loving the time with my dad & can’t wait for some future trips camping out, canoing, and shooting.

Life is good.

two-one

Turning 21 today (June 12) seemed more exciting when I thought I would be in Philadelphia with my closest friends.

Now I live across the street from a farm with grazing cows within my view. I think I’ll spend tomorrow night in a local bar alone getting stories from truckers, soldiers, & hunters in hopes of creating some short narratives.

There’s something humbling about this experience.

As an update:

My father was in Africa for a week & a half and I filled most of the daylight hours alone riding my bike, reading in the backyard, and watching awful marathons of the most un-inspiring, dumbed-down reality shows ever created. Two days before his return, my car battery died & a man (around my age) next door willingly assisted me to jump my car when he was clearly busy. While his courteous efforts were absolutely wonderful, it turns out I needed a completely new battery. In return, I made him home-made chocolate chip cookies & a thank you card for his efforts, hoping that I see him throughout the summer. (What? I need some people my age to keep me sane this summer.)

Needless to say, the morning of the ninth, I woke up with child-like excitment, knowing I’d be seeing my father in just a few hours. I needed the company desperately & was hoping he took enough pictures to keep me satisfied for the afternoon. He did.

Things are well. Cheers.

From my drive down. Beautiful skies.

Silence Toward the Blue Skies

Ronnie Van Zant wasn’t lying when he said the skies are blue down here in Alabama. It has yet to rain and it’s been over ninety degrees every day.

The eighteen hour solo drive to Alabama that started on Friday May 23, 2008 had me nervous. Many were telling me it was going to be exhausting, but more than anything I was afraid to fall asleep at the wheel due to having no one to talk to.

I left Pennsylvania with a stack of mix CD’s donated by a close friend of mine to keep me occupied for about nine hours of the trip and headed toward Maryland, West Virginia, and then Virginia. Once I reached Middletown, Virginia, I made a pit-stop at an Exxon gas station only to have some interesting conversation with a 275lb+, kind hearted, southern twang speaking male cashier.

Cashier: “Where’s you headed to with a full car laik that?” after taking notice to the packed car with the bike on the back, being pretty clear that I was headed somewhere for an extended period of time.

Me: “I’m moving to Alabama.”

Cashier: “Alabama?! A gal laik you juss maight git lost down there.”

And he was right. All that ran through my mind was, “I’m lost already just thinking about this summer. What the hell am I doing?” Other than building a close relationship with my father for the summer, I couldn’t quite understand my connection with southern Alabama for two months. What exactly could I possibly learn from this place? The kind cashier bid me farewell and I continued on my way through North Carolina and then to South Carolina, allowing myself to soak in the beautiful scenery and fresh air.

I turned on local radio stations (more specifically country stations) to keep myself amused, and the further south I drove, the more interesting the conversations got between the hosts. One station decided to have a contest, as many do, but this one was a bit unconventional. It involved basic math, which seemed easy enough, but this is what I heard…

“If ya’ll have a case’a Miller Lite & ya drank a six pack, how many beers to ya’ll have left.”

As any smart, beer drinking southerner would know, the answer is 18, which the call-in listener correctly answered after a four second pause. Needless to say, I got quite a laugh out of this contest as the beer problems got more “complicated” (“A case, then you drink a six pack, drink two more after the NASCAR race, and then another beer, what do you have left?”). How ridiculous.

By the time I entered Alabama on Saturday, May 24, I was sick of seeing boiled peanuts, pick-up trucks, and motorcycles, but the silence I experienced was indescribable. Not feeling obligated to keep conversation with a passenger was a new type of therapy, and allowing myself to have some time to think helped me unwind from and digest the high-energy year I just experienced in Philadelphia.

I had the chance to spend about five days with my dad before he left for Morocco, Africa for two weeks. Now, my time is spent reading Kurt Vonnegut’s “Welcome to the Monkey House”, a compilation of his short stories and ee cummings’ “i: six nonlectures”. I also force myself into the excruciating heat to jog (only to run into a three foot long snake and crickets jumping everywhere. I will take a video of this one of these days for your enjoyment) and ride my bike. The stray cat that my father has taken in as his own (which means leaving food out for him since my dad is unable to have animals in the rented townhouse) comes to visit everyday, along with the gecko that hangs out on the trash can on the front stoop.

My friends back home…I think of you constantly and wish you were here to keep me company as I have spent all of my time alone in this house, but hope your summer is treating you well. I’ll update soon with photos.

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