Today I want to share with you a cool experience that I have
had twice over this last week: I have travelled back in time to another century
and another generation.
The first trip was to the 1930’s Industrialized
America. There, I met seven ragtag
pipefitters. All of them were in torn or
tattered work clothes; and absolutely everybody wore a hat. Beneath their burley mustaches, two were
nursing cigars, one a corn cob pipe. (Who knew anybody besides Frosty actually
used one of those?) The men are all lined up symmetrically and posing for a
camera, complete with pipe thread cutting dies and wrenches centered perfectly
in front of them like a giant X. They clearly
worked hard, were proud of their profession and well-seasoned at that. I saved the best part for last: the clean
shaven man peering from around the back of the group looks an awful lot like my
father; in fact, he is my paternal grandfather whom I never met because he died
over 20 years before I was born.
While I will never know my
grandfather, the cool thing about old photos is we can really study them and
almost climb into them much like the storied Mary Poppins and her paramour Bert
jump with both feet into Bert’s chalk sidewalk drawings. Once inside, everything comes alive with
explanation. Heavy clothes means the
pipefitters spent a lot of time working outside in the elements. Worn shoes reveal they were probably men of
little means. From their collective stance
they all seem strong and content. However,
they each have different facial expressions – matter-of-fact, smirky, serious,
and my grandfather with a soft smile. Of
course out of each observation grows even more questions…did these men like
each other? Would they go to the local
pub after work and grab a beer? Did they
spend their lives working as pipefitters and were they happy about it or was
there something else they’d prefer to do?
The second trip I took this week
was to New York family life in the 1940’s.
You see, a distant cousin of mine wrote a song and created a video as a
tribute to 8 sisters from Italy who grew up in the first half of the 20th
century. One of the women is my cousin’s
grandmother; another is my grandmother.
Eight sisters growing up in one small house in New York City. Two generations later, we are blood relatives
that don’t even know each other. This
time through the photos of our common ancestors, not only are we connected to
them and the little details of their lives, we are connected to each
other. From our parents we have been
told different stories and therefore different parts of the pictures speak to
us but always the one thing we have in common is the knowledge that at some
point we came from the same place and the same time.
So twice this week I have been
brought to places I have never known, but yet were still simultaneously
familiar. Every piece of information one
gleans from his/her past is a part of ones’ self -discovery.
Thanks for traveling with me.
-- Eve. Christmas Eve.
Thanks for traveling with me.
-- Eve. Christmas Eve.
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