Category: ‘Autobiography’

We’re going on an expedition you and I. We’re going into the wilderness n search of a child. It will be a difficult journey, but she’s worth it.

05/18/2009 Posted by mindsinger

You see, someone told her to hide,

and no one else told her

she didn’t have to do that..

They told her to be good,

to be helpful,

to be quiet,

to love God

and to obey her elders.

But no one told her she didn’t have to hide.

They said, “Children should be seen

and not heard.”

“I’m too busy, go play.”

They said, “Don’t interrupt when

we’re busy

or talking

or resting.”

But no one said, “Don’t listen to him or do what he says.”

So, she carefully hid herself

from them

She became a conspirator

in a game she didn’t want to play.

She’s hiding now.

Her screams are silent,

her rage is bound within

clenched jaws

and knotted stomach.

The walls of her dungeon

are thick and high.

It’s hard to see people through them.

It’s especially hard to see God.

She has left us clues

because she doesn’t want to stay there.

She wants to break out

and dance in the sunshine.

She wants to know it’s OK

to be pretty and feminine

and even sexy.

But the fear that caused her

to build her own prison

is very strong.

And it’s hard to trust those

who would tear down the walls.

After all, he might be gone

but the rage is not.

Where will the rage go?

Who will it hurt?

Will it be as uncontrollable as a breaking dam?

She has a lot to fear.

We know she’s nearby.

We can feel her trembling.

We can almost hear her

telling the story

over and

over

and over.

Endlessly repeating it

where no one hears.

Keeping the grown up child

so busy

she cannot concentrate

on important things.

The whispering child

sitting in the darkness

holding tightly to all

the feelings

I need to feel.

THE JOURNEY BEGINS by donna swanson c.2008

PISTOL PACKIN’ MAMA

05/16/2009 Posted by mindsinger

After Dad passed away Mother kept a loaded pistol in her bedside table. She was fully capable of using it as Dad had taught her how to shoot, clean and care for it. One night a guy who was living with a neighbor called the sheriff and told him Mother had been shooting at him. Mother was in her 80s at the time and not in the habit of using the gun at all. However, she had told her family that if anyone came into the house at night not to come into her bedroom without knocking if they didn’t want to be shot.

On this night two police cars came up the drive and knocked on her door at 9:30. When she answered it they asked if she owned a gun and could they inspect it. She showed them the drawer, they removed the gun, dismantled it, determined there had been no shots fired recently and left, with the gun still dismantled in the middle of her bed. My sister, Janet, who lived next door, saw the ruckus and came over just in time to see the cars leave. Mother told her what happened and Janet stormed into the bedroom expecting to see the gun still dismantled on the bed. Instead, Mother had calmly reassembled it and put it back in the drawer. Not bad for an old woman. Needless to say, the Sheriff’s department got a call from a very indignant daughter.

Even though Mother had four first names, her nickname was Bobbie. That name stuck with her all her life. She was on the baseball team with Dad and was reputed to be the best catcher they ever had. She could put two fingers in her mouth and whistle so loud she could be heard across an 80-acre field and the kids knew that whistle meant we were wanted in the house. She was a voracious reader and kept a prayer list in her Bible and she sometimes threatened to take a Preacher off that list if she disagreed with him.

One day Mother was reading the Lafayette paper and saw an article about the death of the last daughter of a civil war veteran in Indiana. “Hmph!” was Mother’s reaction. “She was not!” and she sat down and wrote to the paper informing them she was still living and her father had, indeed, served in the Civil war. The paper sent out a reporter and she got her own story in the paper. You didn’t mess with Bobbie.