A place of peace, a corner of solitude and reflection, a perch to
watch the live theater production of other people's lives, and even an
upright bed to fall asleep on under a bright sun-kissed summer day, the
front porch is all of these, and more.
Our porch at our
house on Cedar was my place for dreaming. It was my sanctuary where I
could read about and fantasize about cities far away from the small town
of my birth. On Sundays, I would scrounge some change together and book
it down to the Wallace Corner where they sold newspapers from Seattle,
Los Angeles, San Franciso, and other exotic cities, I would usually
purchase the LA Times.
Once home and settled down on
our porch on one of the chairs that we had outside, I would open up my
treasured paper, and with the bright, summer, sun lulling me into a
state of euphoric trance, the words on the paper became alive with
scenes of towering buildings, bustling sidewalks, sporting events,
concerts, theaters, food, and beautiful people. I, of course, could
envision myself in the middle of it all.
With all of
these marvelous things dancing in my head, I would nod off to sleep, Oh,
but as with all dreams and with all sleep, one wakes up, and I would
wake up, wipe the sweat off my forehead, look around a bit confused, and
it would hit me. I was not in LA, NY, Seattle, or San Francisco, no, I
was right on the good old porch at our house on Cedar Street.
And that was the way it was, growing up Wallace.
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