So, my wife, who grew up on an orchard in West Virginia, convinced me we needed to move to a safe, secure, piece of land with real Americans.
We sold our house in Mt. Airy, rented a farm house for a year, and went house hunting.
But we persisted and doubled down. My wife, having grown up on an orchard, loved the orchard areas we found in Berkeley County, WV.
One Sunday she saw a sign for a yard sale. Thinking it might mean a house was for sale, she pulled into Mountain Crest development. It is surrounded on two sides by orchards, had an equestrian center at the entrance, and a wildlife preserve on a huge mountain behind it. Not surprisingly, many Veterans live there.
So we just bought a house and a plot of land in Martinsburg, West Virginia.We are currently having it painted, the electric redone, and conducting other home improvements to move in soon.
As my wife and I both work from home, it is good to have separate rooms for our work. We even have a spare bedroom for when our grandson visits.
And there is a pool out back for him to enjoy. What a great land America is. When I was in grade school, I delivered the Philadelphia Inquirer to a rich guy who had a pool. As long as I cleaned it every time I used it, he let me, and my friends use it...as he rarely used it.
Now I have a home with a pool. Never thought I would see the day.
We were actually looking to downsize and purchase a small one-story home. The market offered nothing, and God had other plans for us apparently.
We look forward to enjoying our children and grandchildren on this land and surrounding wilderness. There is a HUGE wildlife are just behind us we look forward to exploring.
We are in the discovery point and enjoying the wonder of it all.
We meet new people like the hard working brothers painting our house. As one said, "My Dad always said we need to paint each house like it was our own." YES! Old timey values.
Billy and the Curley Brothers, coming off their wild success playing in Frederick for the past two years, will soon be playing live music in the Martinsburg area and advancing American culture.
The family diner where we ate had traditional Christian sayings on the wall. The traditional diner downtown Blue and White actually had a pay phone in the corner.
More importantly, he will have a quiet studio to record his new songs. What a gift to observe that creative process.
Eamon will join us in the basement to live for a time to pay off his truck and save money to buy a house.
We are going out on weekends and fixing up the house and property.
Busy working on the house each weekend, especially Robin cleaning the interior until it is immaculate, we have had to find new restaurants as there has been no time to cook.
I even now have a man cave. The prior owner ran electric to the shed to do serious woodworking. The shed was a total mess with saw dust and wood pieces everywhere, but it had potential.
For weeks I been able to clean it out, added Reflectix insulation material to the walls, and am now at the point where I can create my tiny world to share with my grandson.
As a student of history, especially Western and American history, I look forward to learning the rich history of Berkeley County.In 1748 George Washington, at the age of 16, surveyed present-day Berkeley Country for Lord Fairfax. A drive around the Washington Heritage Trail inspired by General and President George Washington's horseback explorations will be a great introduction. It follows two historic east/west passageways into America's first frontier: the Potomac River and the Alexandria Warm Springs Road that is now WV9 crossing the WV panhandle. What a deeply meaningful area to explore and learn old timey, traditional, Christian, Constitutional Republicans...we are free.
At the Diner
love, hope and
tragedy,
faith, broken lives
and buckets of warm
coffee,
but most importantly,
fast and cheap good
food
all mingle in cosmic
proportion
to the big-tipping
customers
and life-giving
waitresses
who pass their
moments in space
and time co-mingled
in experience
of talk and talk and
food and drink
and talk and talk and
talk there.
At the Diner,
When the waitress
says,
"What'll it be,
Hon!" she knows
what it will be but
still asks
and you still reply,
"Usual. Number 3."
you know it will be
as good as before
and lickety split,
three stacks wheat pancakes
golden brown and
fluffy upon which you drop
a half stick of
butter and a carafe of syrup
with marble sized
blueberries inside
and toasted scrapple
and easy over country
eggs
with buttered toast
before shoveling in
the Pennsylvania
Dutch scrapple
with Heinz "57
varieties" catsup
as a roof on top.
As the first juicy
pancake slice
slides down your
throat
to your famished
stomach
you start to hear
Frank Sinatra's
"Strangers in the Night"
and it seems as if love were
possible tonight,
right here, right now,
maybe you and the
waitress or the
girl much younger
than you in that booth
with the unjilted
smile and honey hair
that might consider
you, Yes You,
in her life and
dreams and future.
At the Diner,
so many memories
crash through
the minds creeping
depression to reveal
cracks in the thick
walls of melancholia,
and openings where
light and therapy from waitresses
who double as mothers
and nurses bringing
good hearty food to
souls who, due to life's
machinations, often
forget to eat.
At the Diner,
so easily and
languidly...
the mind drifts,
and my father sits in
that booth over there!
I am five, and we
have stopped
for lunch in the
middle
of the beer truck
delivery run
and I have his
undivided attention,
one of the few times
that would ever
happen --
and he is regaling me
with stories of his
childhood
of how during the
Depression
he had to go to
school
with orange shoes his
mother bought
cheap and put black
shoe polish on
except it rained and
washed the shoe polish off
and all the kids
laughed at him
and he was so
embarrassed
that even as a kid he
always worked two jobs
so he could afford
good clothes,
and the time
they rolled so many
old tires
down the street they
were able to hold off
a squadron of police
only to find
the police knew their
parents
and they returned
home
thinking they got
away with murder
only to find their
parents on the doorstep
waiting to give them
a licking
because the police,
who belonged to their
same parish,
had visited before
and tipped off their
parents
to do the punishing.
At the Diner,
in another booth,
Tony Fondots and I
have stopped at a Circle diner
in
coming back from the
shore
and young and drunk
and laughing
and goofing with some
young girls who respond,
"I have my
doubts about you Fondouts!"
in a play on Tony's
name
and we all begin to
laugh so hard
the tears run down our cheeks
and this was way
before a guy
who didn't like
government employees
saw Tony had on a
Postal Service shirt
and tossed him from a
bridge in
causing his pelvis to
fracture in 186 places
and then got off
because his Dad was able to afford
a better and slicker
lawyer than Tony
and offered this wisdom afterwards,
"Why do you
think it's called
the criminal justice
system?
It's justice for the
criminals."
At the Diner,
in another booth,
My body is old and
spent
like that guy at the
end of the movie "2001"
and does not respond
too well to stimuli
like talk or thought,
but the food
warms my mouth and stomach,
the coffee is good
and hot,
the waitress is kind
and funny
and ignores my
drooling on my plate.
The pancakes fill my
hunger
just before my heart
stops
its power-plant
strength contractions,
and it is all over...
(Or so I thought...)
...Until, at Heaven's
Gate,
I'm hungry and tired
from too many years
on the road
and stop in this
diner where St. Brigit
immediately brings me
ice water
and hot coffee,
winks, and says,
"What'll it be,
Hon!"
and I wink back and
say,
The usual. Number 3.
"Pancakes and
scrapple.
And another cup 'a
java, please?"
and she smiles back
and says,
"You betcha! It
so happens
I just brewed another
pot
because we were
expectin' ya, Hon!"
and we both laugh in
that Diner
and let the tears run
down our cheeks
to bring water and
love and strength
to all the diner customers on earth.
At the Diner was first published in Lynx Eye, “At the Diner,”, Vol. III, No. 1,
Winter, 1996, pages 79-83, Pam McCully, Editor, 1880 Hill Drive, Los Angeles, CA, 90041.