Sunday, August 31, 2014

Going Back and Going Home



Nostalgia. The word is a formation of a Greek compound, consisting of nóstos, "returning home" -- a Homeric word -- and  álgos, "pain" or "ache."  I suffered from it for years, not from any pain or ache, but from a feeling of appreciation for the past or something related to the past, often in an idealized form.
A few years back, I re-visited the small Welsh village where I was sent as a World War II evacuee.  At the age of three, I could hardly have known of the events happening in Europe that woud change the world forever. Like most children, I trusted my parents to always do the right thing. My mother said I needed to leave London "to be safe."   Safety would be found in a small South Wales town by the name of Llantrisant, and translates as The Parish of the Three Saints.  (They being St.Illtyd, St. Gwynno and St. Dyfodwg.  Pronounciation is unavailable by this Cockney kid.)

. My memories of that small community were of a happy time, far away from the London Blitz. The house of Mrs. Adams, with whom I was billeted, was still there, as was the park with its trim gardens and smooth, bowling green . The small chapel still stood, although it had long ago lost its congregation. The winding road to the school at the top of the hill and the sweet shop where a penny bought a life-supply of candy were still in place.

But there were changes. It would be arrogant of me to think that none were made.  A huge recreation center had been built in the middle of the pristine landscape of the park. A busy rotary whirled in place of the quiet intersection by James' grocery store, and there was a new tire factory on the outskirts of the town. These intrusive occupants pushed my happy memories aside. I asked one long-time resident if much had changed for him over the last 50 or 60 years.

"Nothing too much," he replied in that wonderful Welsh lilt that I had adopted during my childhood stay. He had slowly accepted the changes, adjusted to them, and fitted them neatly into his daily routines.
We talked about the changes. He said that to him, and to others who lived in this village, the qualities and values that made up this town were still there. As we talked, I realized that our lives are constantly accommodating change. We may protest modern change and facilitation , but for the sake of their convenience and our comforts we accept much in the "name of progress" and the advancement of what we term "civilization."

It took a conversation between me and one of my daughters, then 10 years old, as I drove her to yet another soccer match on a Saturday, to bring home how much life has changed between my childhood and hers, indeed of all my four children. Technology, innovation, communication, and changing social customs have all contributed to dramatic changes in the way we live and interact with each other.

I grumbled about my Saturdays not being my own anymore. So Sarah asked, "Daddy, what did you do on a Saturday when you were a little boy?" It seemed as though my answer had been waiting with eager expectancy for that question for years. It leapt from my lips with an eloquence that surprised us both.
                "Ah yes," I replied. "My Saturdays. I would get my map of the London Home Counties and pore over it for an hour. Then, I would pick some interesting sounding name, circle it, and map out the route. Out would come my bicycle, and I would set off on my planned journey. Sometimes the trip was more than a hundred miles. Sometimes it would be to visit family or friend."
Sarah thought for a moment: "Your Mom let you go?" she said with a slight note of incredulity in her voice.         "Yes, of course."
                "Wasn't she afraid?" exclaimed my daughter.
                "Of what?" I answered. "There was no traffic. The streets were safe. The towns and villages that I passed through always had a small cafe where I could buy something to eat or drink."
                "But what about, you know, those guys?"
Yes, I knew. I knew she was referring to the headlines which shout that it is not safe for children to be out on the streets, or, for that matter, at home alone, that they cannot be left in cars or strollers outside a store, that leaving  children with others invites risk, and that our young offspring are marketable items, or socially manipulative objects, or future earners.

I knew that we were at a juncture where I could easily frighten my daughter, create a block of cynicism in her, or produce a hundred other negative tones in her young mind. We tread a fine line while keeping keeping our children informed of the world around them, yet keeping them innocent and blameless of the world's failings and frailties. I realized with a mixture of melancholy and hope that the climates of my childhood and my children's were a world apart. I also realized that this difference, this awkward dissimilarity of our childhoods, would not, need not stand in the way of giving them that sense of adventure, inquisitiveness, and wonder that I enjoyed in that far away Welsh village.
As an evacuee, I was shielded and protected from the ravages and horrors of Hitler's terror. What I knew about those dark days, I read years afterwards. No one in that village made it a point to tell me what I was protected from. I just was and didn't have to know from what.
Today's children cannot avoid instantly learning about the weakness of their president, of the injustices in our courts, of the revulsion of demented minds, the nature of extremes, or the brutality of today's terrorism. It is this instantaneousness that gives little time to make an honest evaluation of events and consequences in the world.

Is our task now, not so much to make these  things invisible, but to educate our children how to combat them, overcome them, or heal them? My involvement in my children's growth and progress is a hundred times more than my own parents' input in my childhood. My father left me nothing but the world to make my way in. It was a world of safe streets, kind and decent people, of  unclogged streets, respect for authority, and of TV-free living rooms. Perhaps my parents did not need to spend a great deal of time looking for negative aspects in my life or their own. The qualities they instilled would serve me well in a world that was largely congruous and amicable.

Today, I know that caring for my children's safety I cannot let them wander too far from home without some protection from the world. But I can also tell them there is much to appreciate and value. They may have to be driven to their soccer matches in lieu of walking or cycling as I did, but those moments traveling in the car are filled with open, honest and fun-filled conversations. We fill our journey with our voices in song, taking great advantage of the moments together.
Lacking a safe subway system today, I may have to take my son into town to see the sights of the city, where I once bicycled or walked; but it affords me an opportunity to share the journey with him and to contribute my experiences to the moments we share. Perhaps, just perhaps, I watched my children more than my own parents ever did, but there is a meshing of our minds that was never there when I set out on my own early explorations.

I miss those days of yore, that small village in Wales, and I miss my children, whether they are in the next town, state, or country. They are all out on their own now; half of them married with children. But when they were part of my milieu, my surroundings, they took up a lot of my time, as I took up a lot of that small Welsh village's time. 

Adjusting our love and care for children to today's world should be an affirmative journey, not one of fear, resentment, or inconvenience. I am thankful that my children do not feel restricted in their world of watchfulness and shielding. I don't know what the world will be like when my children care for their own, but I do know that the values of love, respect, courage, and appreciation for all that is good and honest, and for each other, will serve them well.


                © Roy H. Barnacle 2011

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