Spent a good part of the morning going over my list of things to get done. I didn’t get any of them done, but I did a fine job of going over the list.
While I was doing so, a guy called and asked for directions to my place here at Stone Mountain. I told him that this area is a bit rural and that it might be a good idea for him to use a GPS.
So he did.
But it turns out that the GPS he used was one of those where the voice is that of a young British gal, speaking the Queen’s English. Turns out, also, that the young gal didn’t know her way around this part of Carolina.
When the guy finally got to my place, he was tired, worn out, and fairly well ticked off… not just at the British gal, but also at the whole of rural North Carolina. He was mad at the narrow roads. He was mad at the deer. He was mad at me. He was mad at the hills and hollers. And, judging by his use of four-letter words, he was especially mad at the number of gray-haired men who drive old trucks.
Being a gray haired man myself, and one who drives an old truck, I could have taken a measure of offense, but I didn’t. I let it pass. I suppose, as a guy’s hair gets grayer and grayer, he gets harder and harder to offend.
As I thought about the goodness of letting things pass, he looked at me, and asked, “Why didn’t you just tell me to drive to nowhere and look smack dab in the middle?”
Myself, I’ve never thought of this place as being nowhere. Even before the gray hair, I understood that places like this are the ones where a guy can gather up the goodness of living. He can pass his time in a pure and right way, with nothing more than a wide porch, a piece of apple pie, and a pretty woman wearing blue jeans. He can get a reasonably priced cup of coffee at a bona fide country café and have it served to him by a sweet lady who calls him darlin’. He can take a rod and reel out on a beautiful stream and never be disappointed…even when he doesn’t catch a fish.
So I judge the guy was wrong. This place isn’t nowhere. To some, it’s our everywhere. To some it’s our home. To some, it’s that one place that, when we get there, we realize we’ve hit it big.
But, the truth is, there’s no sense in a guy like me trying to explain such a thing to a guy like him. Judging by his BMW and necktie, he wouldn’t get it.
So again I let it pass.
Maybe the idea, then, is that we love what we love, and those of us who love old trucks and apple pie and women in blue jeans don’t necessarily feel the urge to argue with the people who don’t. We can, instead, sit on the porch with a glass of sweet tea and get a good bit of satisfaction out of watching them leave.
And if they wonder whether we're doing ok, we can assure them all is well, the woods haven’t yet been overrun with neckties, the mountains are alive with the sweet smell of pine, the streams are nearly ready for trout fishing, the list of things to get done will eventually get done, and the old truck will get us to the café in time for a cup of coffee.
And when a guy has an old truck that will get him to the café in time for a cup of coffee, he won’t give a thought to the things he might be missing out on elsewhere.
The first photo was taken by Charles Talbert, at his place, on the day my truck arrived in North Carolina.
The second photo is what I see when I sit on my front porch with my pretty lady in blue jeans
While I was doing so, a guy called and asked for directions to my place here at Stone Mountain. I told him that this area is a bit rural and that it might be a good idea for him to use a GPS.
So he did.
But it turns out that the GPS he used was one of those where the voice is that of a young British gal, speaking the Queen’s English. Turns out, also, that the young gal didn’t know her way around this part of Carolina.
When the guy finally got to my place, he was tired, worn out, and fairly well ticked off… not just at the British gal, but also at the whole of rural North Carolina. He was mad at the narrow roads. He was mad at the deer. He was mad at me. He was mad at the hills and hollers. And, judging by his use of four-letter words, he was especially mad at the number of gray-haired men who drive old trucks.
Being a gray haired man myself, and one who drives an old truck, I could have taken a measure of offense, but I didn’t. I let it pass. I suppose, as a guy’s hair gets grayer and grayer, he gets harder and harder to offend.
As I thought about the goodness of letting things pass, he looked at me, and asked, “Why didn’t you just tell me to drive to nowhere and look smack dab in the middle?”
Myself, I’ve never thought of this place as being nowhere. Even before the gray hair, I understood that places like this are the ones where a guy can gather up the goodness of living. He can pass his time in a pure and right way, with nothing more than a wide porch, a piece of apple pie, and a pretty woman wearing blue jeans. He can get a reasonably priced cup of coffee at a bona fide country café and have it served to him by a sweet lady who calls him darlin’. He can take a rod and reel out on a beautiful stream and never be disappointed…even when he doesn’t catch a fish.
So I judge the guy was wrong. This place isn’t nowhere. To some, it’s our everywhere. To some it’s our home. To some, it’s that one place that, when we get there, we realize we’ve hit it big.
But, the truth is, there’s no sense in a guy like me trying to explain such a thing to a guy like him. Judging by his BMW and necktie, he wouldn’t get it.
So again I let it pass.
Maybe the idea, then, is that we love what we love, and those of us who love old trucks and apple pie and women in blue jeans don’t necessarily feel the urge to argue with the people who don’t. We can, instead, sit on the porch with a glass of sweet tea and get a good bit of satisfaction out of watching them leave.
And if they wonder whether we're doing ok, we can assure them all is well, the woods haven’t yet been overrun with neckties, the mountains are alive with the sweet smell of pine, the streams are nearly ready for trout fishing, the list of things to get done will eventually get done, and the old truck will get us to the café in time for a cup of coffee.
And when a guy has an old truck that will get him to the café in time for a cup of coffee, he won’t give a thought to the things he might be missing out on elsewhere.
The first photo was taken by Charles Talbert, at his place, on the day my truck arrived in North Carolina.
The second photo is what I see when I sit on my front porch with my pretty lady in blue jeans
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