#76: Madison Connector

Babel

I spent half of my first 18 years in two residences without a permanent foundation.

Until the age of five, it was a singlewide trailer.

From 14 through 18, it was a double.

Trailers (or mobile homes, if you want it to sound a little less poor) are common in rural Appalachia, as I’m sure they are in the rural Midwest and the rural other places. They’ve even become somewhat chic in parks where those who choose to live in a house on wheels, decorated with mismatched vintage furniture and adorned with strands of lantern lights, sip kombucha and jam on their ukuleles while the cool kids next door knit sweaters for their purebred ferret.  

My family didn’t have a ferret in either, though we did share life in and around the double with plenty of cats, dogs, chickens, ducks, and goats, including one who broke free from the local feed store and found his way to the land my brother was clearing for his future home – complete with a permanent foundation. The double also came with plush, blue carpet and three bathrooms. Compared to only one in the single and one in the in-between house, we were on the cusp of highfalutin. 

I didn’t, and still don’t talk about either trailer very much, but I hear it and feel it in vulnerable moments. It’s one of the subjects that’s still acceptable to joke about by those who have never known the thinness of mobile home walls or the way cold air comes up through the floor if cinder blocks and underpinning are enough to pass inspection, but short on protecting the entirety of the home’s underside from weather’s emotional baggage. 

Once upon a time, I even laughed along when I heard someone joke about the University of Kentucky basketball fans not having to worry about finding or paying for a hotel because their house could travel. I didn’t want anyone to know that two of mine had. 

At another gathering with dear friends, one I had organized at a favorite Italian spot in Nashville where I had shared birthday drinks and reunion dinners, I found myself trying to fit into a conversation about Europe. One of the women among us was planning an incredible solo adventure and others were commenting on their favorite spots in Italy or how you never know bread until you’ve eaten a French baguette – in France. As the only person at the table who had never been overseas and had barely traveled west of the Mississippi, I offered my “Oohs” and “Aahs” and, “Oh, that sounds lovely” and, “I’ll have to add it to my list!” with each passing landmark or regional wine I did not, and likely still do not know.

It is a difficult thing to be among the many who don’t speak your language, especially when you so deeply desire to be fluent in theirs. 

Or affluent in theirs. 

My sister, four years older though always much more in terms of responsibility, worked third shift at Walmart during the same years we were both in school. I was studying theology as a graduate student, and she was working on an associate degree to become a Medical Assistant. It was her second degree, too – the first having prepared her for college transfer. She had spent some time at the university where I completed my undergraduate degree, but she quickly realized that it wasn’t the right fit. Even so, she left with a 4.0.

The differences between our lives in those two years were reflective of that language piece. She went on little to no sleep from Walmart to clinicals, paying her own way through the education that would give her a career. I borrowed ridiculous amounts of money from the government to spend time in an environment where I gave into the “Walmart is the devil” mentality of social justice efforts that failed to admit or even acknowledge that shopping elsewhere is a privilege. I have no regrets about my education, but I do regret not speaking my life, or hers, out loud. 

It’s the same regret I have for forcing my accent to go away in college because I bought into the assumption that sounding Southern meant sounding uneducated. Movies and television shows will use that twang on a character to dumb them down or sweeten them up, but rarely to show a smart woman working her way through the Biblical Hebrew lexicon.

The things we do to make ourselves fit hurt our selves.

By late 2014, I recognized that the language of the city where I lived was no longer the language of my then current life. Elizabeth Gilbert talked about this in Eat, Pray, Love – about the truth that people and places have words. For Rome, the word was sex. For Liz, it was attraversiamo. For New York City, it was achieve. I was beginning to see that the word for Nashville was something like develop, though not the kind that broadens your thoughts. Things were going up for the sake of saving space. Taller. Skinnier. Pricier. 

My word was breathe, something I hadn’t been doing too well for those months I had just passed in depression and hopelessness, but it was the word I carried around on the back of my iPod shuffle. Engraving was an option at order so I did it to remind myself that in any moment, the only thing we have to do is breathe. 

On Thanksgiving night, 2014, I decided to leave development for breath. It was a spontaneous decision, but a necessary one. The day after Thanksgiving, 2014, I hopped on the #76 to start knocking out the routes I had left to ride before bidding farewell to Music City and the Nashville MTA. It had been my transportation lifeline for most of my city living and had given me opportunities to see beyond the Batman Building skyline and reflect on my own story, as well as the stories that stepped on and off at each stop.

At one of those stops on the Madison Connector, a man sitting near the front heard something familiar, an accent, when another man stepped on the bus. After establishing, in English, that the second man was from Miami, the two started speaking in Spanish. Man #1 changed seats and joined his new friend for the rest of his ride, talking up things that I didn’t understand, but could feel. It’s a wonderful thing to be among even one who speaks your mother tongue. 

Sometimes it takes a different language to recognize how much you love your own.

Maybe Babel was a gift. 

#38: Antioch Express

Salt of the Earth

Nashville MTA Route 38
Image: Nashville MTA

In the Gospel of Matthew, Jesus says, “You are the salt of the earth; but if salt has lost its taste, how can its saltiness be restored? It is no longer good for anything, but is thrown out and trampled under foot” (5:13). Salt, as Jesus proclaims, is flavor. In the south, we agree. Pots of Sunday beans and greens are often seasoned with salty pork. Whether ham hock or fatback, pintos and turnip leaves soak up the essence of their cooking company. In the south and beyond, salt shakers are a functional piece of dining room décor. Packets are included with to-go plasticware. Grocery stores sell kosher for the ideal seasoning of meat, sea for a less-processed option, pickling for cucumbers, rock for ice cream, and table varieties for my dad, who salts everything before tasting. Some companies offer bacon-flavored and Himalayan Pink options. Epsom salt, when used in a bath, is said to detoxify the body. Dissolved in warm water and gargled, salt is believed to ease a sore throat. In all of its forms, salt is part of a process. From sprinkling to cooking to eating to soaking, salt is story.

I noticed some of my own flavored memories one Wednesday morning as I cleaned tears from the lenses of my red frames. The night before, in my binge-watching Ally McBeal phase, I wept over the death of a character named Marty. He was a nursing home resident and the joy of its being. He organized dances and sported bow ties as he twirled his fancy feet partners to the tunes of Ella and Frank. To Marty, every woman was a darling, every man gentle. All were friends. And when Marty experienced (unrecognized and undiagnosed) disillusionment in the form of dragons and cyclopes and other fantastic creatures, he offered them as adventures to his lady and fellow companions. Every night at 7:30p.m., Marty and his crew would turn out the lights, gather in twos and threes, and search the home for these imaginative invaders. His friends were delighted to have a quest in a place where much of their time was spent waiting for it to pass. Marty brought life and laughter to men and women who had been missing its taste.

When Marty died, his friends and I gave our salty tears to tissues and the earth. Continue reading “#38: Antioch Express”

#34: Opry Mills

The Flood

The Flood
Image: The Tennessean

My high school art teacher, let’s call  her “Patsy,” was…artsy. She wore shoulder-length white hair that matched the flow of her long skirts, especially on windy days. Her skin was red, or so I remember. It wasn’t the red of too much sun over her years or the red of some medical something; it was the red of imagination. And she was…imaginative.

During my freshwoman year, which was enough of a departure from the safety and security of my rural community elementary school where everybody knew everybody and everybody was poor, high school brought popularity contests and different buildings for different subjects. Home Economics and Keyboarding were taught in the round building. The G.O.B. (Good Ol’ Boys) spent much of their time in the Agriculture Building where they learned to dip Skoal, skip class, and fix everything. General Education classes were taught in the main building and Patsy and her art were housed, along with the band’s classroom, across the parking lot in a small building somewhat removed from the rest of the school. I suppose the band needed the distance for practice. I suppose Patsy needed it for her imagination.

Taking Patsy’s introductory art class as a scared 9th grader was originally promising. One-fourth of my daily class time would be spent in creation. I would learn to draw, to use colors and brush strokes and most importantly, I would be in class with two of my friends from elementary school. Sweet relief.

Patsy made class…artsy. She was always flustered and looking for something that she had just placed… Where was it?… She just used it and… Oh, let’s just do something else. She was lenient with the day’s instruction, not-so-lenient with two young women who seemed to struggle with making it to class by 2:00p.m. They were late most every day and one of those every days, Patsy had enough. It was raining that afternoon, common in the North Carolina Mountains, and seeing that the two young women were once again absent as class began, Patsy made her way to the classroom door, locked it, turned around to face us with her pleased red skin, and continued instruction. When the knocks came, once, twice, three times, Patsy laughed.

“This must be what Noah felt like on the ark,” she said. “Ha! Ha!”

But was it?
Continue reading “#34: Opry Mills”