“Have you all gathered your things? “, my mother would holler up the stairs to all of us. “I’m ironing your blouses and shirts. Did you get the extra sneakers from under your beds?”That was my mother’s battle cry for organization as we all collected the toys and books that we wanted to bring to Maine, which took us weeks to prepare for. One by one we cleared our rooms, throwing everything into a big pile in the hallway, before some of it was stuffed into an old Amelia Erhart leather suitcase or brown paper bags, later retrieved by my father and in an organized manner put into the station wagon..
Summer began the day after school got out so with the car loaded up we would drive “up to Maine” from wherever we were living. After buying a New Hampshire State Sweepstakes ticket at the green toll booths that spanned Route 95 near Rye, we approached the border from New Hampshire, driving over the iron draw bridge in Portsmouth that spanned the two states. If we were lucky we weren’t backed up for hours while a slow moving tug was making its way down the Piscataquis River where the drawbridge lifted its massive carriage, allowing boats and ships to move through.
Once our car tires were over the Maine border it always felt like a thaw loosened my emotions. I was set free. My wonderful, dreamy summers in Maine allowed me to forgive and overlook the chill that made our family life in all the other seasons so inexplicably complex and enigmatic, making our place in Maine the most significant and secure footing in all of our lives. As the car rolled along into Maine first through Kittery the complex entanglements of my parent’s marriage lifted from our tribe the same way that morning fog lifts, disappearing into vapor as the sun warms the air. Arriving at the lake the doors of the car were thrown open, disgorging us kids as we’d eagerly shake the miles off our small limbs. Everything became clear. We were free and our paths became unrestricted from the debris and detritus that tethered all of us emotionally during the year. Our eight weeks of Maine summer bounty cleared our complex and entangled interior landscapes, allowing all of us to thrive. It felt like an eternity where fresh air and uninterrupted fun was the back drop for the freedom that our parents imparted upon us. Continue reading