Spring is here and this is the time of year that I get itchy feet. I left Hutchison, Kansas in 1977 with my then husband and with everything in a U-haul we moved to Pueblo, Colorado. Since he had lived here before, it was a returning for him, but for me it was a leap of faith and a complete 180 degrees from my life in Hutchinson. I gave my mother the keys to my little Lou's Kitchen on 4th Street and fired up the engine on my 1973 Chevy and headed West to seek my fame and fortune. I was one naive little girl back then. The husband turned out to be a little less then I hoped. We did start a business so I had a job to do.
The husband soon became an ex husband and the job a former place of employment. At that time I thought about pointing the (now a Cadillac) east and leaving Colorado, but I could not go home a failure, so I stayed. I went to College and got a degree in Finance while waiting tables at a small cafe in Bessemer. I married a local guy and divorced him 2 months later. Then I met and married Kenneth. The rest is history. Through all the years, I made trips to Kansas in the Spring to see the Lilacs.
And, of course, a trip to Hutchinson also called for a stop at Skaets Steak Shop on the corner of 23rd and Main which is the entrance to the State Fairgrounds. That was the first place I ever worked and a member of my family (sometimes more then one member) has always been on the payroll there. My sister, Dorothy, had a heart attack and died there. Luckily they hit the restart button on her and she lived several more years.
I would meet my friend Joe there for a 2-3 hour coffee. That was always fun. I do have a gold elephant I need to send him someday.
But, those days are behind me. The days of throwing the pistol in the suitcase and driving 8 hours to get anywhere are now behind me. Water under the bridge. Lately I have been studying the family tree and I was surprised to find that I am now the top nut on the tree. I used to ask someone older then me about our lineage, but now I find that the buck stops here. There is no one to ask. Damn! When did that happen?
I think about the trips to Hutch and I get sad that they are no longer. I have my own Lilac in the back yard. I feel much like Robert Frost must have felt when he wrote this poem. Am I really done? Is this where it ends. Wait! I have so much left to do...….
Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening
BY ROBERT FROST
Whose woods these are I think I know.
He will not see me stopping here
My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.
He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sound’s the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.
The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.
So, from someone who knows, life is short. Love your neighbor, brighten the corner where you are and if perchance you think the grass is greener on the other side of the fence, stretch your neck over there and have a bite! You may be right.