Hometown - Tumblr Posts - Page 2
a girl chamber:
Evening
to anyone who read my original addition, NO YOU DIDNT. I obey parent old internet rules.
Twenty One Pilots - Hometown
saw people posting love letters to appalachia on @intheholler and all of them made me cry!considering that iâm leaving my hometown for college in about two weeks, i decided to write my own! also def go check out @intheholler âs blog, itâs awesome!!
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brought up in the rolling hills of greater appalachia, there were scarce times, there were good times, and there were rough times. just like anywhere else. but at all times there was hope and community, no matter the circumstance.
as many negative things as i hear about the place i live and as many experiences i have had that align with such criticisms, there were a thousand more instances where i was blessed with an enchanting, community enriched childhood. i will never forget or under-appreciate the closeness of neighbors despite our long lengths from one another.
what i mean to say is, appalachia, they could never make me hate you.
my Daddy is a pastor and my Mama the most down to earth pastorâs wife to walk this sweet, dark-soiled land we are so blessed to live on. even though my father and i donât always get along, my mother and i are and will forever be the most kindred of spirits. through her wit, her will, and her wisdom, many traditions of appalachia have been passed down to me.
your porch ceiling best be haint blue, and you had better never close another personâs pocket knife. always gift a hand-quilted or crocheted blanket at every baby shower you ever attend. sprinkling salt at every doorway while squeaking out a hushed and hastened prayer for protection.
even those are just a few traditions that i can credit to my culture and my mother who instilled it in me. and that installation is so incredibly important. so as not to lose our rich, beautiful, and complex history.
the first rumblings, the soft spot
an important experience that i would argue helps many appalachian children to realize their culture and heritage is when they, for the first time, listen in to the kitchen talk among cousins. how Papaw canât read so well because he never got to finish up school and why Uncle Rick got this new job manufacturing cars. how Meemaw lost her baby to scarlett fever and how Miss Deretta down the road worked at the childrenâs home where your cousin Thomas got dropped off in a cardboard box after a flood that demolished the apartments uptown. slowly, piece by piece, your young mind starts to understand the ebb and flow of unspoken community support. the gentle hand holding taking place through the entire mountain range. the interwoven families that arenât any kin.
running interference
as you grow up, unfortunately, the world seeps in, slow and clever as a fox in the hen house. making your own out to be some sort of gnawing hillbilly that donât know their ass from grass. and suddenly when someone asks where youâre from youâre ashamed to admit it. the only thing that you and friends talk about is getting out and seeing new places, away from the parents and the gossip pew of your respective churches. on friday night you all meet up in the Dollar General parking lot and carpool to your schoolâs football game so that you can shout wildly inappropriate cheers at the rival of the night from the student section. you run into Mrs Connor while washing your hands in the restrooms behind the stadium and when she tells you vibrant stories of your Pa in high school, skipping for deer hunting season along with half of the class of â68, you appreciate her. and you donât know it, but every interaction like that, grows your mountain heart bigger, making more room for story after story.
one of my friends is now engaged to the man who was their starting quarterback. the two of them are the sweetest of couples. the world is perfectly small here.
weeks-long revival and a singing every night
after an innocent turned passionate kiss in your church crushâs car, you find space on the pew with the rest of your youth group, leaving room for jesus, of course. Aneoumes (an-nay-mus, unique name, i know) the church Dulcimer player brings out his fine jnstrument with Mrs Dorothy, the pianist and the previously mentioned Mrs Connor on the organ to do their own mesmerizing renditions of When the Roll is Called up Yonder, Iâll Fly Away, The Gloryland Way, Mansion Over the Hilltop, He Set me Free, Heavenâs Jubilee, and the baptist favorite, Amazing Grace making for a beautiful night of harmony among voices. anymore you werenât sure what you believed (not that you dared to tell a soul, or even say it out loud) but you knew good and well that church brought people together and helped those in need, and both of those were things you could get on board with. of course the politics were messy, but you could mostly keep your lips sealed. your home church certainly did more to feed the hungry than the government officials who were supposedly all libbed up, or at least that is what theyâd pushed.
suddenly, this place didnât seem so bad. you were worn smack out but only because of the late company, which you certainly didnât mind in exchange for a typical night of hot, early sleep. when you got home Todd Lee your neighbor was still cutting hay and so the putputput of his tractor lulled you off to sleep. he told you âit keeps the sugar in, seeingâs that itâs nice and cool out in the darkâ he had told you when you let him know that his lively tractor sounds put you at peace every night.
something about this place felt more special, fonder, than what you had understood in your younger teen years.
the first leaving
your dad received a stimulus check during the pandemic and decided to go visit his aunt Barbara on the northeast coast. being away from home a whole week felt like a pig being gutted and packed, still warm in the patties. it was awful. every night you cried, holding your younger siblings who did the same, no one here smiled or talked to you and the rain didnât smell right, the food was bland and blended all together in taste, worst of all there was nowhere to be that wasnât covered in concrete and where there was, you had to pay for access. when the mountains finally came back into sight, your heart leaped and tears fell from your eyes. that moment was as close to divine intervention as youâd felt since your baptism. gratitude overwhelmed your senses and you thanked jesus for being born where you were. where people were friendly and food was good and friends were close and everything was wide open.
for a moment you wondered if when David wrote âThe Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down in green pastures. He leadeth me beside the still waters. He restoreth my soul.â if he too was experiencing the peace of returning home after a tumultuous time away.
the second leaving and the excited return
now, youâre headed off to college. it grips at your heart that you wonât be with the supportive community around you that youâve always had. but this time the leaving makes sense. youâll educate yourself on how to teach and help others, youâll take extra, unnecessary classes on heritage and both cultural and natural history. upon your return you get to take all that hurt from being away and pour back into the place that has loved you so well. and you get to be the next generation to tell your own kiddos to keep the haints from their houses and their hands to the knives in their own pockets.
hopefully your loving will look a bit different, cast a wider net so that those kids who werenât as lucky as you feel accepted in the community of people around them.
most importantly when you return with your degree and your license to teach, you can instill pride in those children, let them know that these lush hills and woods and creeks and mountains they call home really are some of the most wonderful places this world has to offer up. encourage them to believe that professional speaking is not removed from their dialect but rather in their clarity of conveyance. uplift the idea that time spent with family and friends, neighbors and strangers alike is to be valued. and most importantly in my book, teach them to appreciate the stories they are told, to remember them whether mentally or by doing some manual record keeping. our stories are our testaments to the fulfilling life that can be lived here. and the stories of our neighbor may have a great impact in our thinking.
what iâm trying to say is, appalachia, they could never make me hate you.
~ with much love,
addybug
I see right through me
âIn this bright future you can't forget your past.â Â - Bob Marley
second pic
photo by @alice-apsxâ
âLights will guide you homeâ - Fix You, Coldplay
photo by @alice-apsx
Iâm going away to college in nine days. I have trouble believing that my life is going to change so much- denial seems so be a useful tool LOL. As I wait, I spend my time drinking coffee and watching tv in my room. I am not sure why I am treating college like going to Mars, but I know that next time I am in my home town, in my childhood bedroom, everything will be different. The only way I can think to fully appreciate my time left is to spend it exactly was I would if I had all the time in the world.