Friday, November 2, 2018

Summer Vacation, 1985



Summer Vacation, 1985

Remember that summer vacation
we took with Dad to Oak Island Inn?
It was summer, 1985. We giddily packed
our bags with or Duran Duran tees, shorts,
pajamas, pink toothbrushes and waited
anxiously for the car to roll up and wind
down the South Shore. Remember we
stopped at Lawtons on the way to check
and see if there were any new magazines
out and we hit the mother-load? A new
Star Hits and 16 Magazine full of centerfolds
and glimpses of Simon LeBon and John Taylor,
our favorite guys. Oh, and Michael Hutchinson.
We couldn’t wait to arrive at our destination
to pour over every detail and then all over again.
Remember the weather was hot and sunny? We
checked into our room that was next door to
Dad’s, our patios connected with a dull view
of the resort’s dining-room. Remember we
unpacked our treasures, plugged in our silver
ghetto blaster, popped in our new Kool and the
Gang cassette and dismantled our magazines
to decorate the desk with their glossy pages?
Remember we went swimming and exploring?
We met that creepy guy on the boardwalk. We
were positive he had a hook for a hand. When
he dared share his Oak Island theory he kept
the hand in question tucked up deep inside his
heavy sleeve. Remember we were sweating
in the summer heat and thought it strange he
was wearing a sweater? I’ll never forget the
sinister gleam in his eye each time he swept
his greasy bang away from his brow. I can’t
remember exactly what story he told to us.
Whatever it was had us running clean for the
hills and caused you to have daunting dreams
about floating heads and other body parts.
Remember the next day after hours of more
swimming and malingering Dad called you from
his patio? He was sitting in the sun reading
the newspaper. You went toward his voice
to ask what he wanted and remember you
thought the screen was open but it wasn’t
and your head bounced hard into the net and
knocked the whole panel clean from its tracks
and it toppled over the side of the balcony?
Remember how hard we laughed? Remember
how red in the face Dad was when he realized
everyone enjoying lunch in the dining-room
witnessed your clumsy gaffe? He was a little
beside himself enough to let us go to dinner
alone and order whatever we wanted. “Just
charge it to your room, have whatever you want,”
he said. And boy did we. Remember we ordered
strip loin steaks with baked potatoes, mushrooms,
and garlic bread? It was perfect meal for us two.
I felt so grown up dining alone without Dad nearby.
It felt exciting, extraordinary. I was a happy kid,
proud to sit so fancily with a crisp cloth napkin in
my plump lap across from you, my Big Sister.
Remember when we checked out and Dad saw
our dinner tab? He cursed under his breath at
the front desk but paid the kind folk without
complaint. Remember we bought captain hats
and posed for pictures together? Remember
when we got back to Halifax? Dad took us for
a walk along the waterfront. I bopped along side
you both in my humble attire without a care in the
world because I felt like the luckiest girl on the
planet. And, remember for years later we’d look
at ourselves in those pictures and reminisce? How
we’d laugh at the way Dad near dropped his paper
when you busted through the patio door and how
the only reason we even bothered to buy a
captain’s hat at all is because Simon LeBon owned  
a boat called ‘Drum’ to sail in the Whitbread race
and they capsized. Remember how scary those
news headlines were? We were so worried for him.
I remember it was one of the best summer vacation
trips I ever had. One for this history books for sure.
Remember all those Sunday dinner’s at Dad’s in
Portland Estates when we’d recall that time away
together while Dad dished up shrimp in garlic
butter just for he and I because you hated seafood?
Remember? I remember everything as if it happened
yesterday. Memory, it becomes a vivid thing when
it is all you have left.

***

One of my favorite summer memories in poem form. Keeping them all alive, forever and ever by remembering.

In propinquity,
Nic

1 comment:

  1. Memory, it becomes a vivid thing when
    it is all you have left.

    this hit me so hard ... perfect ending... heart rending though <3

    ReplyDelete