I pass this house at least once a week, usually on the way to take my girls to piano lessons. Some months back, a truck lost control coming down the hill, flipped, and landed on the woman who lived there. She was outside, perhaps working in her yard. People stopped, worked at lifting the truck, and to help the driver. Even the woman’s husband had no idea he was helping to lift the truck from his wife’s body. I never knew this woman or her husband, but I cannot drive past the house without feeling a sense of loss and a lingering sadness. She was only in her early 60’s I believe, and I think of her husband, alone now. Her grown children left without their mother or a grandmother for their little ones. Today the driveway was full of cars, and I felt less sad for the man left to mourn his wife. It was as if it confirmed that with his friends and family supporting him, I shouldn’t feel that sadness anymore. Then, as I turn the corner, I see the daffodils blooming in her yard, imagine her planting the bulbs in the fall, and become sad again that she never got to see spring.
"I think there is just one kind of folks. Folks." from Scout Finch, To Kill a Mockingbird
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Saturday, March 27, 2010
Just One Kind of Folks
To Kill A Mockingbird is my favorite book of all time. If I were to ever have a son, I would want to name him Atticus, because no other character in literature is as good or honest as he is. Scout, though, is the one who said this (and if Demi Moore hadn't named her daughter Scout, it was at the top of my list too). Who can't love Scout? Such wisdom for one so young....thus, the name of my blog.
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