I recently read a man's journey of coming home that stirred a need to share my own story. This is a reprint of the article published in the Grants Pass Courier on Sunday, March 22,2015.
I
grew up in similar circumstances in Thousand Oaks ,
California , then a small community where my
family farmed for five generations. My family lived on a rural road, on land my great great-grandfather Borchard divided among his eight children. The elementary school I attended was filled
with first and second cousins. My roots were deep; I was twelve years old
before I ever entered a room where everyone there didn’t know and love me. I
came to see death as an occasion for grand family reunions. My world included a half-dozen Catholic
funerals by the time I was ten; elegant events for ancient, regal German great
aunts and uncles, great-grandmothers.
In 1959, Los Angeles
exploded into our farming community. We moved to a tiny town, Shandon, east of
Paso Robles, California , where my
father established a sheep farm. Shandon was a closed community that required
my six brothers and sisters and me to find a way to fit in. We were the odd, sheep-raising
Catholic family in a Protestant community of cattlemen and pioneer families
with their own deep roots. Everything in me wanted to shout, “I have deep roots,
too!” But I said nothing.
The first week in my new school the class took a field trip.
Afterwards we were required to write an article for the Paso Robles Press about the field trip. The teacher read the top
articles and after three tie votes, someone shifted their vote from the popular
boy’s to mine. When I saw my byline printed in the newspaper, I knew I had
found a way to survive my loneliness. I would be a writer.
In later years I wrote a memoir of my family roots; Branches on the Conejo: Leaving the Soil after
Five Generations. I later wrote
another memoir about the small steps of a woman’s journey: Ordinary Aphrodite. As a writer I learned to see the world with
eyes wide open. My husband and I traveled the West and I wrote short stories
and essays for print magazines.
In 2012, we saw a house and ten acres in rural Grants
Pass that we loved, but I wanted to meet the neighbors
before we made a decision. Jack and Ruth are lovely people, he in his eighties.
It turns out that he and I attended the same college, Cal Poly. But more
surprisingly, his family was a pioneer family from Shandon. He asked if I had
ever heard of Truesdale Road .
I told him that my family had lived next to Truesdale Road .
His grandfather was the Truesdale, he
said. His family is buried in the Shandon
Cemetery . I took that as a sign and
we bought the property.
When I am downtown I’ll hear it repeated five, six times a
day, the boast that someone is a lifetime Grants Pass
resident. I understand the pride, the sense of place that this feeling
expresses. In many ways I envy them. But I also understand that everyone has
deep roots somewhere. I honor mine by writing our history for other newcomers
to discover
What I have learned is that there are two kinds of joy.
There is the joy that comes from having deep roots; a family in one place for
five generations, but there is another kind of joy in leaving the roots behind.
I am an Oregonian now, one of the working people with a smile for others and
appreciation for the basic joys in life. I see bent-over, work worn men on the
streets of Grants Pass and they
remind me of my father, who passed, like some of his hard-working neighbors, of
a heart attack when he was fifty-nine.
Life is good in the woods. I live among the treetops now,
seeing life in a new and fuller way. Still, I’m so grateful for the people who
have tended the deep roots of my new home, Grants
Pass. Thank you to everyone who shares
their history with others.
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