Rivers, Memories, and The Boss

I took this photograph yesterday at Coonskin Park in Kanawha County West Virginia.  Like the narrator in “A River Runs Through It,” I am haunted by waters, especially rivers.

This moment in the final image reminded me of someone with whom I was close friends as a teenager whose life — and those lives of everyone who was close to him — was irrevocably altered by an unintended pregnancy.

Without judgment, I reflect on that summer and wonder where he is now.  I hope his dreams are coming true.

But I remember us riding in my brother’s car
Her body tan and wet down at the reservoir
At night on them banks I’d lie awake
And pull her close just to feel each breath she’d take
Now those memories come back to haunt me
they haunt me like a curse
Is a dream a lie if it don’t come true
Or is it something worse
that sends me down to the river
though I know the river is dry
That sends me down to the river tonight

Image credit:  E. Gaucher; Lyrics: Bruce Springsteen

“There’s No Crying in a Tobacco Field”

Writers participating in the 2011 Essays on Childhood may be interested in this link from the North Carolina Writers’ Network (NCWN):  Rose Post Creative Nonfiction Competition Winners Announced.  This essay sounds right in line with the work we are doing at Esse Diem around Essays on Childhood, especially the sense of place focus in 2011.

The winning essay, “There’s No Crying in a Tobacco Field,” is described by a contest judge as follows:

“This essay took me into a world I barely knew—a North Carolina tobacco field—and taught me something,” Varner said. “The writer effortlessly weaves together a personal narrative about working as a ‘tobacco kid’ in the fields and the chilling research about the unseen health hazards thousands of children surely suffered. Here is a piece wrestling with the hard lessons learned plucking leaves from the field and long-term medical concerns these former tobacco kids could face.”

The NCWN is a wonderful resource, and I encourage anyone writing for the EOC project to peruse it.  I like to think of the Essays on Childhood as one day being part of something larger that will offer even more resources and encouragement to writers, a la NCWN.

West Virginia is fortunate to have West Virginia Writers, Inc., which I am rather ashamed to say is new to me but I was quite pleased to find online today.  I am looking forward to being a part of that network, and I hope anyone participating in the EOC project will visit the WVW site and engage the resources there.

Happy writing!

Image credit:  The Human Rights Brief