|
|
|
|||||
Register Your Emailto Receive Journal Updates Significato Journal About Us & Contact Us Email Whitelist Request Form |
Top Page of Journal
:: view all articles in:
Columns :: From the Back Porch Mrs. Mike and Growing Up August 10, 2003
![]()
People accumulate things. In many families, those things become the inheritance that is passed on. A grandmother's ring, a favorite table, a set of silverware or china are the heirlooms bequeathed with love and pride from one generation to another. Belongings of the ancestors are precious to the descendants. In some cases, even if the family line dies out, the property goes into museums, because it represents the life and times of people of a former age.
In my case, when my parents died I wasn't settled, I didn't have anywhere to put their belongings, I didn't have a household. My relatives were scattered, my siblings far away. So the things that represented my parents' lives were disseminated at yard sales. Aside from a couple of pieces of jewelry, a pocketknife and some photographs, I don't have anything that belonged to my parents. It's all gone. All the things that they touched and used in their lives were either destroyed or are being used by other people who never knew them. When I was in my twenties the lifestyle I chose was foreign and strange to my parents. I didn't really comprehend then that one day I would understand them and that they would understand me too. I don't think I'm the only person who has experienced this. I was raised Catholic and when I turned 20 I volunteered to do missionary work for another church. The result was a profound gulf of loneliness on both sides. There arose within me a two pronged focus to develop a relationship with God and do His will as best I knew how, and to still be my parents' daughter and to fulfill their hopes and expectations at the same time. A long time ago I read the book, "Mrs. Mike" by Benedict and Nancy Freedman. It's the story of a 16 year old girl from Boston, Katherine Mary, in the year 1910. She goes to Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, to live with an uncle, where her mother believes her chronic health problems will improve. After a short time living with her uncle, she meets and marries a big, handsome Canadian mountie named Mike Flannigan. They dogsled 700 hundred miles north into the wilderness and settle there for four years. She lives an eternity in those four years, witnessing things that most ordinary people never face in a lifetime. She sees little cemeteries full of people who died in epidemics, she bears her babies with the help of a midwife. Faced with a forest fire, she stands in a river up to her neck all day, choking on ash and smoke, huddled together with wild animals and Indians and white settlers, all waiting for the fire to burn out. Her friend, Sarah, the midwife, has a son who inadvertently steps in a bear trap one day while hunting. They can't get the trap off, and Sarah has to saw her son's leg off, while he lies on the kitchen table screaming. More traumatic things happen to her. Katherine Mary decides she can't go on anymore and travels home to Boston to see her family. She secretly doesn't know if she will return to her husband, because the calamities they lived through put such a strain on their marriage. She stays in Boston for a couple of months and when she gets there she's surprised to find out that she has in a way, outgrown her family. She can't relate with their petty fears and prejudices, and the things that occupy their thoughts and their time. She realizes that her home is with Mike, out in the wild, living on the edge, taking care of the Indians and settlers in their territory. She loves her family, but she has grown beyond their scope. When she realizes that she can't stay in her childhood home any more, she goes back to Mike. Looking back on all of the collected data of my life, I think that even though the roads diverged, I ironically have fulfilled the hopes and dreams that my parents wished for me -- a committed marriage with beautiful children and a life focused on specific values. I only wish they were here to share it. A lot of people have had a similar experience. We're born and we grow up and we search for things that may not be apparently there in our immediate enclave. Sometimes we upset those whom we love during the searching process. And yet like Dorothy from the Wizard of Oz, we end up in our own little bed at the end of our travels. I believe the unuttered prayer of most people is that eventually all the tears will be wiped away and humanity will resonate in a common, loving empathy. That's the outcome I'm betting everything on.
Kimmy Sophia Brown has loved humor and music for as long as she can remember. She writes the column "From the Back Porch" as well as reviews of music in her column "MusicViews". Her goal in her music reviews is to introduce music she loves to people who may not have heard that particular artist or CD. For information about how to submit a CD for review, click here.
|
![]() Drive Traffic to Your Site! Exchange Links with us (Significato) in Our Resource Catalogue! See the text at the bottom of our web pages. This man is not only capable of speaking to a national audience but he has 'world-class' ability in public speaking .” Senator Larry Pressler, former US Senator from South Dakota
The World Community Press does not have any control over the content of the ads below, and does not necessarily endorse each ad. |
|||
|
General Content © 1980-2008 The World Community Press ~ All Rights Reserved Worldwide ~ All Other Writing Copyrighted by Individual Authors REPRINT RIGHTS If you are interested in Reprint Rights please contact us at peterbrown@worldcommunity.com. You may not reprint any of the content on this website without written permission from the World Community Press or an Individual Author. Reprinting includes reproduction in any form, including posting content on the Internet. Note that some written items on this website include permission to reprint in their footers. For other articles, reprint costs range from free to typical syndication rates. Permission is granted to print a copy of any article for personal offline reading. You may also post a printed copy on an office bulletin board. You may quote brief excerpts in articles for review. You may not post a reprint on an Internet forum or any other web page. However, you may freely link to any of the content or give out a link to the content. In fact, we hope you do so! If you link to an article, you may include a brief paragraph of the article text with your link. These Reprint Rights may change at any time. |
|||||