the roof and the trees under which i grew up
by bam

i’d told myself that ever since the night my papa died, when i walked in that dark house, his tennis sweater flung over the back of a kitchen chair, as if he’d breeze through any minute, the night when i sat in the den afraid and unwilling to take in a breath, for i didn’t want to let go of the last one i breathed when he was alive, i’d told myself that house was mostly hollow to me.
it’s held a chill for me ever since.
i didn’t think i’d much miss it.
but then i drove back the other day. drove back to walk through the rooms where no sound was stirring, not even the whir of the furnace. drove back to see rooms emptied, the rugs a radiograph in reverse where the geometries of now-taken-away furniture shone bright against decades-worn dim. where you could make out the plot where my mama’s four-poster bed had been, and the circular table beside it. where the den, too, was a checkerboard of absence, chairs and a couch lifted and moved.
this week my mama moved out of the house where she lived, the house she called home, for six whole decades. long long ago, when my papa got a job in chicago (an ad man in the age of the Mad Men), and they’d moved us again from a faraway city, she’d picked that house out of many along the north shore of lake michigan because it was the house with the oaks. more than a half dozen big old oaks. maybe a whole dozen once upon a time. my mama loves big trees and big skies. the house gave her both.
my mama moved into that house in 1963, with four of us under third grade; two, still tricycle-bound. one of us, the fifth among us, was born to that house. never knew another till the day he went off to college. we used to joke that he and my mama are the only northerners among us. all the rest were born south of the mason-dixon line. we all grew up, though, on brierhill road, a winding dead end of a street carved into the woods. a golf course just across the way made for sixty years of unobstructed sunsets for my mama, who kept watch dusk after dusk through the kitchen window. the creek and the crawdads, the green pond, and the logs in the woods made for my playthings, the topography of all my imaginings.
i made my way back there this week, after it was mostly emptied, when i knew i could be alone. i wanted to walk room to room to room, and up the stairs to my old bedroom at the top of the stairs. the room where you can still find my sixth-grade scribble on the wall in the closet’s back corner. the room where so many nights i looked up and out through the oaks into the stars and the moon, where i rocketed all of my prayers and my dreams.
as i drove there, to the house at the bend in the road, i thought of all that had happened there. how i got married there, under the trees, breezing through the garden gate flanked by all four brothers. how, ten years before that, we’d sat round the kitchen table the night after my papa died, and tried to make sense. i thought how that was the house from which i was taken to hospitals, especially the time at the end of high school, and how our family pediatrician (yes, he really truly was Dr. Kamin, the most beloved housecall-making pediatrician that ever there was) came in the middle of nights when i was burning with fever. i thought how i’d close the door to my room in those sodden sulky middle-school years when i was sure no one loved me, and how during high school i’d yank the telephone cord from the kitchen round into the dining room, as far as i could uncoil it, to steal a wee bit of sanctuary amid the roar of a family of seven.
and then i walked the rooms, poked into drawers, shooshed away cobwebs, and inhaled it all one last time. when i got to the oaks out back, looked into the grove where my little girl log cabin once had stood, when i counted the feeders that still swayed in the november breeze, i felt the tears begin to pool in my eyes.
maybe the old house wasn’t so hollow to me, after all. maybe the old house where we’d all grown up, the house that had so long harbored my mama, maybe it would be hard to leave behind, to say a proper goodbye––and thanks–– to.
my tears spilled one last time on that bumpy old earth under the oaks on brierhill road.
i stooped to pluck one last acorn, now tucked in my snow coat’s pocket, and then i climbed in my own red wagon, the one that has ferried my very own boys through their growing-up years, back and forth plenty of times to their grammy’s. and i drove ever-so-slowly away.
but not without whispering a very deep blessing for the house that held us all, and mostly my mama, for so very blessedly, blessedly long.
what do you miss most about the house where you grew up?


❤️
Beautifully and tenderly expressed Barb. Those houses, they do breathe with us – all the troubles, nonsense and joys we bring to and experience within the walls. My growing up homes felt like springboards. Those homes grew with our family, welcoming and bouncing us on to the next. The longest “home” for me before bouncing out to Chicago was 10 years. The house/home that anchored me here was our “Magnolia” house which sheltered my family for 36 years. “She” (I am certain it was a “she”) was love at first sight. I walked in with our one year old to take a look and said DONE!. The house just felt so lovely happy. I can still see the light flowing in the rooms on that summer day. I also can see the light following me on the summer day as I said goodbye and locked the door. We breathed together that house and I. She was sad, but I believe she was also a bit looking forward to her next chapter. She was 120 something years old and ready. She had done well by us. Like a mother she took us in and then helped us move on. Her new owners love her as much as we did. She has had a lovey makeover, a bit fancier this time. She seems happy (even a bit giggly!) and we are so grateful for the love and care she gave us. Home is where the heart is and lucky we are to carry our hearts with us. ♥️ Prayers all round and hope your mom continues to heal up. 🙏
oh, dear holy God, this is why i love that this is a table where each and every someone can always find a seat. yours is SUCH a beautiful musing, dear lamcal. holy mackerel. i cried along with you. fell in love right with you. saw the light from first to last. i have always always had a knowing that homes have hearts, have knowledge somewhere deep in their grain and their guts that they are holding us against cold winds, sometimes holding IN those cold winds. bless you for blessing us with your story of home. love you to pieces. xoxox
This is poetry, dear Barbara. Thank you for summoning the courage to let your fingers fly across the keyboard to paint this tender canvas of your family homestead. Just 16 months ago I walked alone through my childhood home and its surrounding property, snapping photos and wiping tears. I don’t know whether I’ll ever manage to give words to what that home meant to me. I do know that if I were to do so properly, I would be writing a book… Sending so much love~ xoxoxo
thank you dear poet friend. i know this is a path you’ve just trod heavily too. sending extra big hug. xoxo
BEAUTIFUL BARBARA FROM THE LONGFELLOW FRIENDS.
thank you longfellow friend, from brierhill friend!
Idyllic description of your home and reminiscings! 💕 My childhood home was mid-century modern and to my design sense, ugly. But it held memories of coffee-and-cake birthday celebrations with a huge extended family in the unfinished basement, and pre-central air conditioning, laying in bed on sweltering nights, hoping for a breeze, and yes, listening to the lions 🦁 at the Brookfield Zoo roar after being left outside in their rocky enclosures.
i LOVE that you could hear lions out your bedroom window!!! not many can say that!!!
so i’m guessing you’ve gone as far from mid-century as is possible to go in the realm of design. i can’t say i’ve ever been too keen on eames, noguchi, and saarinen! (but don’t tell that to the resident critic in this old house!)
I miss the smell of the pantry in my childhood home. My mom was a wonderful cook and baker, and there was always something yummy there. I also miss the neighborhood and that 60’s lifestyle. Every mom on the block was your mom. Every dad there kept on eye on the comings and goings, especially if strangers were walking by. I miss walking to school and church; both were down the street and around the corner. That house held so many secrets and memories of the first 21 years of my life. It’s so interesting and sometimes sad about the way life has changed. None of my grandchildren walk to school. School isn’t in the neighborhood. It’s hard to get to really know neighbors now. Most people are far too busy for curb side chats. But I do hope that whoever is living there now is as happy as I once was there.
i LOVE that the first thing you mention is the smell of the pantry!!!! took me back to the smell of MY grandma’s buttery kitchen. she even painted it the color of butter! and your comment about every mom on the block being your mom shot a lump to my throat. indeed, indeed. now, i know there are kids across the street who wouldn’t know me if i ran and saved em from a speeding car…..(wasn’t always that way on this old block…..)
thanks for conjuring memories, dear jack. xox
holy-holy this house and oaks that kept your mom nestled in care. I loved walking through her bones with you, feeling the width of her arms that loved you all dear. Her scent of acorns. Breathing in the tucked far away corner dust hidden deep in the moldings of memories. The outlines of furniture gone and yet are still there, how does that happen? Each step holy. each a bow of gratitude to this great house-mother-other, for holding you, your joys and tears so dear too for some sixty years. an exquisite offering here. thank you.
oh, dear win, bless you, and thank you, for walking along beside and through. i know you too have just taken this walk, and i know you too have memorized every twist and turn, every nook and cranny, in the house that so long held you and all those you loved. xoxoxoxo
Oh my, Mrs. Mahany, your tender and heartfelt words brought tears to my aging eyes.
I was immediately transported back to the house that built me, a flamingo pink, cinder block house in the rural sticks of Florida where my love for ALL of God’s creation was born. I don’t remember the house, per se, only the animals,trees and wildflowers that brought my lonely heart joy and peace.
I’ve never forgotten the lessons they have taught me. The made me the person I am today, forever grateful and blessed❤️
Beverly
dear dear beverly,
first, welcome! if this is your first visit. and i love you bringing us a flamingo pink florida house to add a little color to my less-vivid midwestern tones. and i am so grateful that all of creation was there to fill your lonely heart. bless you. may you always find a place of comfort here, even on days when you come and go in pure silence….
blessings, b.
Dear Barbara,
Thank you for this beautiful tribute to your house on Brierhill and to your mom.
I have lived at 421 Brierhill for 30 years and I will miss your mom’s presence, walking up and down the street in all kinds of weather. I have always enjoyed her natural garden along the street and I will miss that too if it changes.
Reading your touching piece, it made me wonder if my children will one day feel the same way. I hope so.
Wishing her well,
Nancy Fertig
Oh, dear Nancy, after growing up on Brierhill it is so sad to me to not know all the neighbors any more, and I am SOOOO touched that you dropped in. I can barely stand to think that it won’t be “our street” any more. You take good care of that very special street. We loved it. It shaped me in a million ways……And, most of all, thank you for being kind to my mom, and appreciating her most blessed ways….Bless YOU, barbara
It was eight years ago this Thanksgiving that my boyfriend and I sat on the floor of the mostly emptied Northwest Side house that my family had lived in for 100 years (although I had decamped for the lakefront in 1973) and observed a last Thanksgiving there with (wretched) store-bought pumpkin pie, canned whipped cream and a Thermos of coffee, a far cry from the previous, final holiday groaning board with my dad. But I was lucky that the brother of a neighbor really, really wanted the house, as is, and the contract we worked out included my retaining access to the grapevine my grandfather had planted in the backyard sometime between 1924 and WWII. I continue to harvest grapes and make jelly each fall, as my dad did, branding it “2200” for the address on Lawler, and regardless of our polar political differences, the current owner and I find common ground in the garden he has expanded, his interest in antique hunting and the much-needed improvements he made to the old homestead (the TV dish antenna on the front porch roof notwithstanding—nearly died when I saw that). Still, I felt side by side with you on your final walk-through and snatch of a keepsake acorn. While I still say on my way to grape checking, “I’m going over to the house,” it’s only home in my memories.
Ohhhhhhhh I LOVE that story. And I love that you continue on with the grape arbor AND the jars of jelly that pour forth!
100 years!!!!!