Lake Martin

Lake Martin. Alabama. The sun rose over the distant tree line. The sky changed from pink sorbet to the same blue as my aunt’s ‘62 Eldorado, a car roughly the size of a Waffle House.

I heard a common loon. The birdsong bounced off the smooth water, and I was all smiles.

I haven’t heard a loon since I was a boy. It was such a lovely song that it was almost eerie. A lonesome sound. The sound of the lake. The sound of bygone memories. And most importantly, the sound of expensive lakefront real estate.

I’m getting closer to the age my father was when he died. And this feels weird because, in my heart, I’m still a puppy.

I’m not a boy, of course. Not even close. I don’t remember becoming middle-aged. But it happened. There are slight wisps of white in my beard. And when I wake up most mornings I feel like someone has beaten me with a length of rebar.

But deep inside, my childhood isn’t that far away. I can still remember wearing clothes with my nametag sewn into the collar. I still remember damming creeks and building forts.

Swinging from rope swings. Jumping from branches. Riding bikes down impossible hills and trying seriously to give myself a subdural hematoma.

I remember each dog who slept at my footboard. I remember how my mother made Spaghetti-Os on a stovetop, long before microwave ovens ruined the world.

I remember Swanson TV dinners in tin trays, cooked in range ovens. The mashed potatoes were always partially frozen, and the apple cobbler was boiling magma.

I remember playing in the woods until sundown, listening to loons on the creek. I remember smelling like dirt and sweat and stale Kool-Aid.

We lived outdoors as children. We stayed in the woods until everyone’s mothers emerged from tiny, distant houses and shouted out their nightly songs.

You’d hear Mrs. Fisk sing to her daughter “Margaret,” and stretch Margaret’s name into four or five syllables. “Maaahh-gahhh-rahhh-ett!”

You’d hear Adam’s mom call him home using a special tone that often sounded like Adam was about to fall victim to corporal punishment.

And whenever you heard your own mother’s voice, you ran toward it. No questions asked. It didn’t matter what you were doing. Didn’t matter where you were. You simply gave your friends a parting glance, then raced home.

My mother called me home every night except weekends, when she worked the midnight shift at the hospital.

On weekends it was my father who called me home for supper. And whenever it was him shouting my name, this meant two things. It meant that: (a) my father had cooked supper, which meant that (b) my supper would consist of beans and franks and sips of his Natural Light.

I can recall hearing his tenor voice in the faroff, calling my name. I would drop what I was doing. I would look at my friends, who were all knee deep in creek mud, and say, “Gotta go!”

And I remember my heart would be filled with a lot of joy. Because that’s the thing about childhood. Even if your childhood was less than optimal, even if your childhood stunk, children still feel more joy than adults.

Childhood is nothing but a continual buzz. A non-stop adventure novel.

I would run through those black woods until I neared our house. I’d see Daddy standing on the porch, shirtless. His silhouette in the bright doorway. A dishrag draped over his left shoulder. He’d be smiling at me. As though watching his little boy run home gave him pleasure.

I would sprint even faster once I locked eyes on him. I remember feeling happier than I have ever felt in my entire life. Just because. Everything was perfect. Boyhood was eternal.

And sometimes, here on this pristine lake, I wonder if that’s the way my father felt when God called him home.

7 comments

  1. Terry Holloway - May 22, 2024 12:34 pm

    My Father just said be home before dark never called

    Reply
  2. Julie Hall - May 22, 2024 12:51 pm

    This is so beautifully written. It makes me remember my childhood and mourn the loss of joy we experience. Oh, that we could capture it on this side of Heaven. Thank you Sean, for this. May God bless you with more loon calls soon!

    Reply
  3. Jim - May 22, 2024 3:31 pm

    My mom’s call was “Jimmmmyyyyyyyyy, dinner”. I’m 63 now but I was just telling my wife about that last weekend. It took me right back.

    Reply
  4. pattymack43 - May 22, 2024 6:27 pm

    Of course he did! Being called to our eternal home is the hope of all of us who breathe air. Thanks for a beautiful musing. Blessings!

    Reply
  5. Melika - May 22, 2024 10:28 pm

    Thanks for taking us back to simpler times, Sean. They really were the good old days, before screens took over. I never even saw a television set until I was 10 and luckily my mom refused to buy one so my siblings and I never became zombies sitting in front of one and we played outside from dawn til dusk. I loved you mentioning the call of the loon. It is so hauntingly beautiful and you can hear them for miles across the lake.

    Reply
  6. Ruth Eaves - May 24, 2024 2:56 am

    Such wonderful memories! I remember playing until the fireflies flickered. Then I would find my way across several neighbors’ yards. The porch light on. Sadly I don’t remember my Mother’s voice calling me to supper. Her depression after my father’s death at age 40 seemed to keep her in a fog. She just assumed I guess that as a 7 or 8 year old I would figure out when it was time to come in. But there was always a warm bowl of soup waiting for me.

    Reply
  7. stephenpe - May 24, 2024 12:28 pm

    Childhood. Ignorance was bliss. Dad honked the horn for us to come home. Wonderful story, Sean. Somehow I missed the last two days.

    Reply

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