LAS CRUCES – If you really can go home again, summer seems
like the time to do it.
Thomas Wolfe, in his famed novel “You Can’t Go Home Again,” coined
a catch phase and philosophy that seemed to touch subsequent generations of
ever-more-mobile Americans.
As we mature, it seems that many of us have a quest to
return to, or at least touch base with, our roots.
For years, I’ve listened to a cosmopolitan colleague’s tales
of a happy annual reunion in the small New Mexico town where he was raised.
There are gatherings of family and friends that he always looks forward to
attending. (I won’t reveal the name of my colleague or his town, because it
sounds like a celebration residents would just as soon keep to themselves.)
It was nice to learn that the summertime is a favorite time
for class and family reunions and homeward pilgrimages in my adopted homeland,
too, even though the hot summer months are not the favorite season for many in
the Land of Enchantment.
There is something universally seductive about summertime, and
for the majority, especially those of us who grew up in colder climes, summer
is the source of many of our happiest memories.
It always helps that school is out, but even if we squeeze
in an extra summer term, it somehow seems that the living and the schoolwork is
easier, and we often get to hold class outdoors.
Everything seems easier in the summer, in fact, from
seasonal jobs to all the basics of daily life.
In Michigan, it meant we could spend the whole day in shorts
and a swimsuit, or a floaty summer dress, or T-shirts and cutoffs and sneakers
and sandals. Or, better yet, bare feet. Snow suits, sweaters, ski parkas,
boots, mittens, cumbersome layers and anything wool and scratchy…all were a
distant memory.
There were no furnaces to turn on or wood to chop or fires
to stoke, unless we wanted to gather driftwood for a beach campfire, or
charcoal for a backyard barbecue.
Cooking was easier in the summertime, too. Nobody wanted to
heat up the house-or themselves- with complicated baking or cooking projects.
Fresh salads with grilled trout, tomatoes straight off the wine with a
sprinkling of salt, corn on the cob and watermelon for desert seemed perfect.
It was also, it occurs to me, now, a lot healthier that the heavy traditional
Midwestern diet we consumed most of the year. We went paleo before we’d ever
heard of the concept, and as a result we were leaner and happier in the summer
months.
Even those of us who were athletic enough to earn letters in
high school probably got more exercise during the summer. But it didn’t seem
like exercise: swimming, tennis, beach volleyball, canoeing and walking on
sunny shores for miles and miles, with our friends or a summer love, was pure
fun.
And summer romance, carefree as it may seem, may start out
casually but end as a profound and life-changing experience. Don’t forget about
all those June – and July and August – weddings and subsequent anniversaries.
Amidst terrifying times, we still manage to sing silly songs
and do silly dances and feel free to indulge in silly fads and fashions.
I suspect even those who have survived dysfunctional
families or childhood tragedies can conjure up some happy memories of bygone
summers and the persons and places that helped form those memories.
If you’re determined to embark on a sentimental journey,
this is the season to revive and maybe even relive the shiniest aspects of
those golden days of yesteryear.
And whether or not you have travel plans this summer, it’s
never too late to make some new memories with those you love, or find those old
photos and souvenirs and savor your personal collection, on your own, or with
family and friends.
S. Derrickson Moore may be
reached at 575-541-5450, dmoore@lcsun-news.com or @derricksonmoore on Twitter.
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