
The longer I stay in New York,
the more I love it.
But sometimes,
I wish I was driving down a flat country road,
counting mile-markers and reading bible verses on billboards.
City people and Easterners are so quick to condemn Middle America-
the Bible belt, fly-over country-
but do they know what it’s like to ride your bike to the library where you’ve read every book,
to grow wildflowers and tomatoes in your backyard,
to stomp loudly through the creek behind the church,
never worrying where it’s leading you or who’s property your on
or what kind of trash might be floating by?
Because after a half-mile or so,
it opens up to a rocky bed big enough to swim in,
where you can crush the slate in your hands
and build monuments out of the clay.
You can take your shoes off
and lay down in the cold water.
You can forget that your mother told you not to go that far,
because for all you know,
you might be in Indiana or Tennessee by now,
discovering new places that your older sister hasn’t even seen.
If you go even farther you’ll get nervous about the 4-feet-deep water
and how fast it rushes over the broken, concrete giants.
You don’t even know what they are or why they’re here,
but you know that you were meant to find them,
to invent secret tunnels to other worlds,
to cut your feet open and lose your friend, Laine, behind the birch trees
and get scared when the sun goes down,
trying to hurry back to a familiar-looking place
and knowing you’ll be in trouble when you show up late to dinner,
soaking wet with scraped knees and leaves in your hair.
And maybe you’ll start to resent going to church every Sunday,
and hopefully, you’ll want to leave someday,
at least for a little while,
but you’ll remember the way Laine’s tree house smelled,
you’ll remember walking to the city fireworks with Mom and Dad
and laying on the scratchy wool blanket,
holding Mom’s hand and staring up at explosions you couldn’t understand.
You’ll remember getting lost on purpose on the way home from school,
the town newspaper taking a picture of you and Laine bundled up in your winter coats.
You’ll remember the park where you and Kristi played Madeleine,
and dressing your American Girl dolls on her closet floor.
You’ll wish you had more pictures of home,
of childhood,
not just of you and your family,
but also pictures of the flatness,
the cornfields,
the highways and
the space between buildings,
the goldenrod
and the farm silos,
the bumpy train tracks,
the old Amtrak station beneath the overpass,
the playground at your elementary school,
the tiny walk-up dance studio where you learned your first pirouette,
the cobblestone road that hasn’t been paved because Lincoln walked on it.
You wish you could show these things to your friends.
You want to brag,
You want to romanticize your childhood
and show them why this, too, is America.
It isn’t conservative politics.
It isn’t fundamentalist religion.
It’s life and love and tomatoes in the backyard.