Bus stop

Describe your most memorable vacation

The thin winter light was brightening as I sat in the Greyhound station in Gainesville, FL. It showed the dust on the windows and in the air, but the dinginess of the bus station couldn’t dampen my enthusiasm.

The dust motes lazily floating in the air matched my feeling of freedom, of rootlessness.

The road was calling; and like always, I was answering.

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Linus from Peanuts said once that happiness was “having three things to look forward to and nothing to dread.”

By that definition, I was happy that winter morning. As I sat in the orange plastic bus station chair with my backpack under my feet, I considered things.

First, I had just completed my freshman Fall semester at the University of Florida. Despite a challenging schedule, I had successfully juggled football games, keg parties, dating, and studying. My three As and one B would please Pop.

Secondly, I was traveling by bus from Gainesville up to Tallahassee to rendezvous with big brother Doug for a few days. Although I was heading into the heartland of our most bitter rival—Florida State University—we had beaten them in that year’s football game; so it would be a triumphant visit.

Finally, we would be taking a road trip from Tallahassee to our home town of Boca Raton for Christmas. We had the trip to look forward to, as well as the holiday, being back home, and seeing old friends. My cup runneth over.

The three-hour bus trip to Tallahassee went through one of the most beautiful regions of Florida; the lowlands in the crook of the panhandle.

Sleepy little one-stoplight towns with names like Chiefland, Perry, Cross City. Rural woodlands, live oaks, Spanish moss and dark meandering rivers. This was the country of William Faulkner, Flannery O’Connor, Eudora Welty; country where the heat and humidity matched the smoldering storylines of their classics.

I looked out the window when we stopped briefly in these tiny towns and I felt like I was looking at some of the characters. Old men in stained wife-beater undershirts sitting on benches, talking. Barefoot women going into convenience stores with dirty kids in tow. Rundown houses with weedy lawns.

The Suwannee River runs 250 miles through N. Florida. Route 19 crosses it just past Chiefland.
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I walked the two miles from the Tallahassee bus station to Doug’s tiny apartment building just off campus. They were single-story units, clean and functional; but from the looks, very affordable. A Southern Rock song was blaring from one of them. 

I would have been disappointed if it wasn’t. 

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The next few days were poignant ones. We were no longer the kids who fought and bickered and had to do end runs around Mom and Pop; we had advanced. Not yet to full adulthood, but to an intermediate level.

We both knew a new relationship was dawning. What that was and how it was to function was unclear. Our discussions wandered unchecked as we spent a few days walking around the deserted campus and Capitol city.

One day, we ended up at the Junior Museum, a working farm and exhibit of early homesteading. We paused at a split-rail fence and watched some goats grazing.

It was a pivotal moment that I remember with clarity.

“What should we should do about Mom and Pop when they get old?” Doug asked. He didn’t look at me. “Put them in a nursing home?”

It was such a jarring question that I didn’t answer right away. At the time, they were in their late 40s and I just vaguely assumed things would continue unchanged. Doug, several years and a few changes ahead of me, had a better grasp of things.

My world suddenly contracted. Mom and Pop were not gonna continue forever. They were finite; one day they’d be gone. One day we’d be gone.

And it would be up to us to shepherd them through old age and death just as they had guided us from birth to the cusp of adulthood.

It was a sobering topic that needed to be thoroughly unpacked over a few pitchers at the FSU student center.

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After several days, the time came to hit the road. Doug’s car was an ancient powder-blue Toyota with bald tires and an 8-track player; the faith to embark on a 500-mile trip in such a vehicle could only be found at that age.

We drove east across the northern part of the state and as the golden-rust winter fields drifted by, we sat in a comfortable silence, listening to classic rock. Now and then, an old barn or farmhouse would appear. Sometimes we’d explore abandoned ones.

We toured Fort Clinch State Park, an 19th-century fort at the northern tip of Amelia Island on the Florida-Georgia line. In addition to the fort, Amelia Island is reputed to have scores of places where pirates buried treasure.

Fort Clinch, built in 1847, guards the St Mary’s River that divides Florida from Georgia

That night, we camped in Fort Clinch State Park. The smells from the pulp mills a few miles north in Brunswick, GA, reminded us of all the times we drove down to visit our grandparents.

In our tent, in the dark, we discussed things; some funny, some poignant, some frictional. Some things that had long festered with one of us had to be resolved before we could move on.

The next day we continued south, to Daytona Beach, to our grandparent’s house. It seemed much smaller than we remembered. The neighborhood seemed seedy; the corner store now had bars on the windows. 

We found the cemetery where they rested. Neither of us spoke as we looked at two stones, two sets of dates, both with our last name. I think we both realized one day we, too, would have such stones with our own names and dates. I thought about the poem The Dash and the brevity of our years.

We camped at nearby Gamble Roger’s State Park. That night in the tent was a different sort of discussion; it was an exchange of dreams, ideals, fears, hopes. It was a side of my brother he’d never revealed to me. 

The final day was a leisurely drive down to Boca via A1A, the road that hugs the Atlantic coast. With the windows open, the sea air swirling around us and the occasional cry of a gull, we just talked as two brothers; equals now, partners who together would ease the family transition when that time came.

150 miles along Route A1A is very therapeutic

As we came in the front door, Mom…like our grandparents’ house…seemed a bit smaller, frailer, even though I’d only been gone four months. Pop, too, rising from his easy chair to hug us, seemed older.

But the Christmas tree, the old familiar scratchy Christmas LPs, our dog…I felt something click. Home.

And home it would be until some day in the distance when it wouldn’t.

But that was OK. 

My brother and I would handle it.

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66 comments

  1. This is so lovely, Darryl. You’ve taken us along on your bus ride through Florida in such a beautifully descriptive way. There’s nothing quite as sobering as the day a grown child realizes life has changed, and will continue to change. I loved it!

    Liked by 3 people

    1. Jean, thank you so much. I really enjoy reading your comments and thoughts. I’m glad that you enjoyed it… I have another recollection of a bus trip on New Year’s eve that was unforgettable in a very earthy and humorous way. Thanks again for reading… Hope you’re enjoying your holiday. 😎

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Awww! That’s such a compliment. Thanks 😎❤️ I was blessed with a great family and boyhood, and have so many memories. I only hope my own kids feel the same. 😎

        Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks, Violet! I always enjoy reading your comments and thoughts about my posts. It is indeed a bittersweet moment to realize things will not always stay the same. Thanks so much for reading and commenting! 😎❤️

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    1. Thanks, Tim! Yeah, it was something we both recall with fondness. Mom, Pop and the house are long gone, but we still have the memories. 😎 Thanks so much for always reading my stuff and providing such kind comments.

      BTW, I’m FINALLY into Five-toed Tigress 😎 It’s been one thing after another. Excellent read, and I can’t wait to see how this dance between Hawke and Tulene is gonna work out! 😎👏

      Liked by 1 person

  2. This is beautiful and as if late, I too have come to similar terms with nature and the art of letting things take over. It’s as painful as it is beautiful. Finding a place for our words is special

    Liked by 2 people

    1. LaShelle, thanks so much for the kind words 😎 It’s true, there’s so much we can’t control and coming to peace with that is liberating, but bittersweet as you mention.

      Thanks again for reading and commenting 😎🙏

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Since I’m currently engaged in scanning old negatives, and have come across many photos of places (houses that have been sold) and people (grandparents, uncles, aunts, other relatives) I’m never going to see again, I definitely feel your last sentence there …

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    1. Yeah… sigh… as Mick said: “What a drag it is… getting old.” 🎶 We used to be way to the left of the bell-shaped family age curve… then we were in the middle… now we’re sliding down the other slope. But any day above ground is a good one!

      Thank you, my friend, for reading and commenting. Hope you’re enjoying your holiday! 😎

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    1. Oh for sure. We want to… choose to ? …believe that things will always remain the same… but then life intervenes. For us, it was thankfully a long time but eventually happened… and we got through it together.

      Thank you, my friend, for the kind and thoughtful comment! 😎❤️

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    1. Pooja, it really is. Thankfully, that time didn’t come until decades later, but it’s funny how we both remember those few lines of convo so many years ago. Thankfully you, my friend, for reading and your thoughts 😎❤️

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  4. An excellent rendition of the road trip between you and your brother, Darryl. Perhaps it was a little early to be contemplating your parents’ decline in old age, given that they were only in their 40s, but at least your brother considered the idea rather than leaving it indefinitely. A poignant story concerning embracing the idea of change. Thanks for sharing, Darryl. 😊

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    1. Thanks, Laura! Yes, I’m not quite sure how that buzzkill subject came up, maybe it was my brother “covering the waterfront” of issues… or maybe he had a friend whose parent(s) passed and he witnessed grief and indecision… but it helped me mature a bit, realizing things were not going to continue on splendidly forever. If nothing else, it made me see them in a different, more protective light. Thanks as always for reading and providing such interesting comments! 😎🙏

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      1. It doesn’t hurt to think of these things, even if a bit early. Glen had to cope with a terrible mess when his father passed, because my father-in-law hadn’t liked to think about his inevitable passing so he put off making a will. So yes, it’s better to face up to these things early, rather than too late. Have a good week, Darryl. 😊

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  5. You recount your memories in an engaging and heartwarming way, Darryl. Your writing style, especially when you write about your life, helps your readers to identify with you and relive similar memories and experiences … much like the songwriters whose lyrics speak to their fans on a personal level.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Terry, thank you so much for that wonderful compliment. I’ll treasure it ❤️ I’m glad that my writing comes across as so relatable and helps people relive similar experiences. Thanks again for reading and leaving one of the nicest comments I’ve ever read 😎❤️

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  6. You took me on a journey too. Imagining those conversations tug at my heart.
    Every time I went home I saw my parents a little older and more frail. My father was a big man and watching him grow old and a little smaller was humbling and also painful. Now I watch my mum and aunt inching towards that ripe old age, I’m thankful they’re healthy but it’s still difficult to reconcile that as we are maturing they’re also growing older…

    Thankyou for putting down words to this part of your life. I enjoyed reading this.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Thanks for the kind words and for reading 😎 It was indeed humbling and painful… later in life, my Mom would forget she had turned the iron or stove on. My Dad had some health issues and could no longer drive. They ended up going into an assisted living place and it was all downhill from there 😢 But I guess it’s something we all go through…but as you say, it’s painful.

      Thanks again for reading and leaving such a beautiful comment 😎🙏

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    1. Drew, thanks for reading and commenting. Think it was Skynyrd or maybe Molly Hatchet, can’t remember… but in those little apartments on that winter day in Tallahassee, it was perfect 😎

      Thanks again for reading and commenting… much appreciated 😎🙏

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  7. A pretty part of the country. I’ve been to Fort Clinch…have the photos to prove it! 🙂 My most memorial vacation would be hard to pin down. I’ve seen so many wonderful places. But probably 3 weeks in Italy, followed up by 3 weeks with family in Norway.

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    1. Dawn, that’s so cool! We have fam in Norway, Oslo and Stavanger…we visited them in the summer of 2023. Great time! Where is your family located?

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  8. There’s such a quiet beauty in the way you wrote this. I could feel the dust in the air, the weight of the backpack, the calm of knowing you’ve got nothing to dread. You captured the freedom of being in transit, physically and emotionally, so effortlessly. Loved the way the small towns came alive through your words.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. TetanusLull, wow, thank you for such a complimentary comment… I don’t know what to say! 🙂 I’m so glad you enjoyed my post, it really is a quiet corner of FL that has somehow escaped the crazy development that’s going on in other parts of the state. If you ever get a chance to visit, I’d recommend a trip to Ichetucknee Springs… you drift down this spring-fed stream under a towering canopy of Cypress trees in an innertube… if you bring a face mask and snorkel, you can swim with bass, bluegill and crayfish, a pebbly bottom, waving grasses and tree roots… so beautiful. I may hafta blog about it 😎 But thanks again for the kind words, you made my day 🙂🙏

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      1. Ichetucknee sounds like something out of a dream, noted. It is definitely on my bucket list now. And yeah, if you blog about it, I’m there. I’m reading. Appreciate you taking the time, really.

        Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks, Lisa! Yeah, I made quite a few trips up to Tallahassee and he’d stop in at UF on his way home to Boca. We both ended up working for the same company after we graduated…those were such great days 😎

      Thanks for reading g and commenting!

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    1. Thanks, Robin! I appreciate the kind words 😎 I’m glad you enjoyed it and I hope it brought back some happy memories. Would love to hear about them some time!

      Thanks again for reading and the nice comment! 😎🙏

      Liked by 1 person

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