Summer officially arrives tomorrow. I am dreading it. I will be counting the days until the
anticipated arrival of the cool crispness of autumn. My house doesn’t have central air
conditioning, and summers in Pittsburgh are most often hot, sticky and extremely
uncomfortable. I will walk out of my air
conditioned bedroom in the middle of the night to use the bathroom, and as I
enter the hallway, the heat and humidity will hit me like a discourteous slap
in the face. Mother Nature will taunt me
by causing a jungle to grow in my small yard.
I’ll fight a losing battle with her using a lawnmower and weed whacker
as my weapons of choice. Then I’ll add
to the work by planting a small garden only to be disappointed when the weeds
overtake the flowers and vegetables despite my efforts to keep them at
bay. Daylight pours into my window at
5:00 AM to disrupt my dreams. If I can
make it to 6:30, I consider it to be a good night’s sleep.
I was thinking about my dislike of summer this morning and wondering when this transition occurred. As a young boy, summer used to be my favorite season. School was out, and those long, hot summer days beckoned to me. They were so full of possibilities. Back then I could sleep till 9:00 or 10:00 even with the translucent curtains my mother hung in my bedroom. Back then it was fun to get up really early once in a while to enjoy the cool and quiet of the morning. On hot summer days, I’d ramble in the woods near my home. One of my favorite spots in those woods was a spring that formed a small pool. Many times my friends and I tried to dam up this small pond to create a swimming hole, but someone would always seem to tear down our makeshift structure before the water got deep enough for anything more than wading.
I was thinking about my dislike of summer this morning and wondering when this transition occurred. As a young boy, summer used to be my favorite season. School was out, and those long, hot summer days beckoned to me. They were so full of possibilities. Back then I could sleep till 9:00 or 10:00 even with the translucent curtains my mother hung in my bedroom. Back then it was fun to get up really early once in a while to enjoy the cool and quiet of the morning. On hot summer days, I’d ramble in the woods near my home. One of my favorite spots in those woods was a spring that formed a small pool. Many times my friends and I tried to dam up this small pond to create a swimming hole, but someone would always seem to tear down our makeshift structure before the water got deep enough for anything more than wading.
Other days, I’d grab one of my brothers to play home run
derby with a wiffle ball and bat. I
learned to throw a deceptively slow pitch that, when it was working, guaranteed
a swing and a miss. When it wasn’t
working, my brother would hit it a mile.
When we tired of wiffle ball, we might just lie in the grass watching
the fluffy, white clouds float across the sky to the distant roar of a neighbor’s
lawnmower or the occasional humming of an airplane heading toward the county airport.
There were chores, of course, but for most of those hot
summer days, we were left to our own devices.
On days too hot to do anything else, I’d spend hours lying on the glider
on our front porch engrossed in a good book from the local library. We never had air conditioning to cool our
house or our car. We just slowed
down. On hot, humid nights my father
would bring out the hose and sprinkle my brothers and me as an excuse to water
the lawn. Then when it got dark, we’d
play games under the street light in front of our house with other kids from
the neighborhood while my parents sat on the front porch talking quietly. We played tag, hide & seek, release,
mother may I and various other games passed down from previous generations of
kids.
A few times each summer, we would pack up the station
wagon and go on an all day picnic to a nearby state park. There we’d swim, fish, throw Frisbees and eat
a delicious meal of hamburgers, hot dogs, potato salad and baked beans. Mom would bring a jug filled with Kool-Aid
for the kids, and Dad would sneak a few beers when the coast was clear of park
rangers. As dusk was approaching, we
would carry everything back to the car and head home.
As I thought about the lazy, hazy summer days of my boyhood,
I wondered if I could recapture my youthful love of this season. So rather than lament the coming heat and
humidity, I decided that I should learn from the lessons of my youth and
consider all the ways that I might begin to enjoy summer once again.
You paint a picture. It took me back. Our subdivision in my hometown had been part of a farm that was sold for housing development. On long summer days my friends and I would head out to what was left of Anderson's farm. This is where a patch of woods grew on the side of the hill that was never brush hogged; it was too steep and too rocky. Wild grapevines grew thick there. We all had a blast swinging on them.
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