My book club is reading A Severe Mercy, a memoir by Sheldon Vanauken. The author describes going back to visit his boyhood home, called Glenmerle, after a decade of being away. Vanauken lived there through his early 20s until they lost the home after his father's death in WWII. That his home had a name should evoke a certain image of just how grand it was. Here are some excerpts about Glenmerle and his childhood:
"On either side beyond the poplars lay the gate meadows where the wild strawberries grew. An image leaped into his mind of a sunny white tablecloth and a blue and white bowl heaped with small exquisite red strawberries and flaky shortcake in the thick yellow Jersey cream from the near-by farm..."

"He remembered as though it were but a few days ago that winter night, himself too young even to know the meaning of beauty, when he had looked up at a delicate tracery of bare black branches against the icy glittering stars: suddenly something that was, all at once, pain and longing and adoring had welled up in him, almost choking him. He had wanted to tell someone, but he had no words, inarticulate in the pain and glory. It was long afterwards that he realized that it had been his first aesthetic experience. That nameless something that had stopped his heart was Beauty. Even now, for him, ‘bare branches against the stars’ was a synonym for beauty."
First, as a military family we never live anywhere long enough for the boys to collect memories of “that one special place” that will mean everything to them looking back as adults. For me, that place was (and remains) the lake in North Carolina where I spent summers visiting my grandparents (and now my parents). There’s something about the continuity of not just people, but a place, that anchors a soul.
In contrast, I think about the settings and the "scheduled-ness" of our lives, where children rarely spend a whole day playing in the woods, certainly not unsupervised. Instead they have play dates at parks where they climb jungle gyms, not trees. An hour or so later, we cart them off to the next thing, soccer or tae kwondo or a fast food dinner eaten far too quickly even by fast food standards. Our time with extended family is precious but infrequent, and I fear that the memories, so few, will fade from, rather than imprint onto their hearts.







I don’t know how to recreate that time, but I’m glad we had it.