What Used to Be
Here's what a walk is like in your hometown, every block a memory.
There's my old high school; there's my new one. There's where I lived when I taught high school.
There's where a fellow teacher lived who gave me a ride when it was raining.
There's where my friend Joelle lives, a Bluegrass Trust beauty of a house with Buddhist prayer flags strung across the portico.
There's the bakery that I always reach 10 minutes after it closes (thank God).
There's the old house and the old, old house.
There's the rag-tag park where we used to play. It smelled of earth then, and wet concrete. Now it's filled with earth-moving equipment.
There's the steep hill to the park, down which Dad once sledded, right into the creek.
I saw plenty of new houses, new trees, new people. But I hardly noticed them.
Instead I saw what used to be.
There's my old high school; there's my new one. There's where I lived when I taught high school.
There's where a fellow teacher lived who gave me a ride when it was raining.
There's where my friend Joelle lives, a Bluegrass Trust beauty of a house with Buddhist prayer flags strung across the portico.
There's the bakery that I always reach 10 minutes after it closes (thank God).
There's the old house and the old, old house.
There's the rag-tag park where we used to play. It smelled of earth then, and wet concrete. Now it's filled with earth-moving equipment.
There's the steep hill to the park, down which Dad once sledded, right into the creek.
I saw plenty of new houses, new trees, new people. But I hardly noticed them.
Instead I saw what used to be.
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