{"id":136,"date":"2006-05-21T12:41:23","date_gmt":"2006-05-21T12:41:23","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.buffyholt.com\/blog\/?p=136"},"modified":"2006-09-18T04:48:27","modified_gmt":"2006-09-18T04:48:27","slug":"rehash","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.buffyholt.com\/blog\/2006\/05\/21\/rehash\/","title":{"rendered":"rerun"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>I&#8217;m away and the blog&#8217;s on autopilot.  This means reruns.  Looking for feedback on that which has none.  Criticism.  Construction.<\/p>\n<p>From the novel&#8230;.it&#8217;s <strong>death and dumplins&#8230;.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>When I was three I began gathering flowers from the mountainside; placing them into open caskets of distant cousins.  I ate chicken and dumplings in parlor rooms beside dead uncles of other uncles at least once a month when I was five.  During a wake that same year I hid my cousin Dewey&#8217;s General Lee Matchbox at the feet of our great grandmother&#8217;s sister.  She was dead and he never found it. <\/p>\n<p>Death was never new or upsetting.  My family was an old one and people had been dying all my life.  It was the course of things.  People<em> were<\/em>.  Then they <em>were not<\/em>.  Grown ups shied away from children to cry.  They hid in bathrooms or basements and came out with hush on their face and said &#8216;be quiet&#8217; and &#8216;don&#8217;t run&#8217;.  <\/p>\n<p>Death was never frightening.  At its worse, it was only silence and <em>we&#8217;ll never see her again<\/em> &#8211; but we never saw her very much anyway. <\/p>\n<p>Grandma said death was angels and lambs and chasing honey and warm biscuits with mason jars full of buttermilk &#8211; for those the Lord called home.  She didn&#8217;t say anything about the ones who died because someone else didn&#8217;t want them to live anymore.  The women of penny virtue who walked the streets and got spit up by the river.  The men who put a gun against their head because life was too hard and they were too weak.  Or the boys children sometimes find in the wood because&#8230;.<\/p>\n<p>Mr Avis, a spirit-whipper-upper at one of the town&#8217;s Free Will establishments, said death was the womb, where you&#8217;re born all over, onto one side or the other.  He and his deacons were black and white with no shades of grey.  They preached <em>hallelujah<\/em> or <em>the fury of God <\/em>in loud angry voices, like it was their job to scare you half to death and make you glad you were a Baptist.  <\/p>\n<p>Grandma, I didn&#8217;t understand.  She was sugar and spice and a little bit of slaw (&#8217;cause slaw was good on everything) and that kind of talk just didn&#8217;t make any sense to me.  <\/p>\n<p>I ignored Mr Avis because my mother always told me to, and because everyone said he sweat too much for an honest man. <\/p>\n<p>I asked Pa,  because he&#8217;d know and he&#8217;d know right.  He came by all his sense the hard way.  Like when someone put a pillow over his sister&#8217;s face and smothered the life out of her.  Or when his daddy stopped living right in front of him, with a bullet and a bang, because he didn&#8217;t have the patience to hate himself in the other room.  You <em>think<\/em> and you <em>know<\/em> more about things when they happen to you.  And just about everything had happened to Pa.  But whenever I questioned him he never said much. He&#8217;d just give me a dollar and go play Amazing Grace on his organ. <\/p>\n<p>So I never really understood.  Not until&#8230;&#8230;<\/p>\n<p>All those bodies.  In funeral homes and my grandparents&#8217; living room.  They were never dead.  They were what happened after death had left.  When the thing that comes after, had been and gone.  <\/p>\n<p>The kid in the crabapple bush wasn&#8217;t that way.  He wasn&#8217;t a body at an all night wake, or someone to write an obituary about.  He was dead.  I knew it even though he didn&#8217;t.  <\/p>\n<p>I saw death in a child&#8217;s face for the first time in my life, and I understood.  It hurt me and scared me and followed me around in a dream&#8230;where it lay beneath my bed, dressed in red with one torn eye.  A young body over an empty grave full of hands and hell and things I couldn&#8217;t see, reaching for me, to pull me into something that <em>wasn&#8217;t. <\/em>  <\/p>\n<p>I never grew out of it, because its not the kind of thing you do; and when i got older, I was never sure the thing that tried to swallow me whole as a child was kept away.  So I went away&#8230;.from everything and everyone it followed.  <\/p>\n<p>Death became a stranger to me because those caught up in it were strangers.  <\/p>\n<p>Until Belle died.  Then I had to go.  Pa asked me to. <\/p>\n<!-- AddThis Advanced Settings generic via filter on the_content --><!-- AddThis Share Buttons generic via filter on the_content -->","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>I&#8217;m away and the blog&#8217;s on autopilot. This means reruns. Looking for feedback on that which has none. Criticism. Construction. From the novel&#8230;.it&#8217;s death and dumplins&#8230;. When I was three I began gathering flowers from the mountainside; placing them into open caskets of distant cousins. 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