Summer days were always scorching in Aurora, Colorado. We would ride our bikes through our desert-like neighborhood streets while the heat rose up from the black asphalt in waves that seemed to distort our vision. The end of our street gave home to enormous piles of dirt that we explored through, created trash museums in and escaped to whenever our imaginations called. Our backyard was a jungle of weeds, as grass had presumably never been planted, and as those weeds grew up over our heads, Dad mowed trails through them so that we could play an exciting and blind game of fox and goose, or hide-and-seek, or anything at all, really. The summer sun blazed down on us as a spectator to our many childhood adventures.
Riding a bicycle for the first time in the driveway of that Colorado home was like being given wings. I could fly through the air with speed and freedom; down the hills with wind rushing past my ears and stinging my eyes until tears leaked from them. It didn't matter that I fell from the seat of my bike daily by continually pushing it to it's limits. My bike was a good friend that always scooped me back up and took off again-ready for me to pedal too fast or corner too quickly, always ignoring the scars that I gave it.
Summer's highlight was playing outside, and then hearing the soft, distant tinkling of the ice cream truck's music. Excitement doubled with each pound of our feet on the pavement as we raced into the house to collect money from Mom or Dad, and then scurried back outside to listen to the truck draw nearer. A snow cone with rainbow stripes of cherry, grape and lime. Cool and sweet on our tongues, and sometimes, when we ate with undue enthusiasm, a brain freeze to remind us to slow down and enjoy it. At the bottom of the paper cone, all covered in melted juices lay a gumball. A prize for each moment of blistering play outside.
The world was bigger in the days of my Colorado summers. Horizons were further in the distance and backyards were larger than life. Bicycles, mounds of dirt and snow cones were all that I needed to feel excitement and joy. As two of my sons raced to catch the ice cream truck today with dollar bills clenched like treasure in their fists, I hoped that their worlds were filled with magic and endless possibility, as was mine in Colorado.
4 comments:
My Ben the other day ran from his seat at dinner with Zach & Gabbi in tow to catch the ice cream truck. I was furious, they're dinner was going to get cold. I told them I would not allow him to spend his $ on overly priced ice cream. He said "i won't buy anything" Ok I thought. Whatever. Relax mom. This is summer. Zach comes running back in the house and said "mom, Ben asked if the ice cream man took debit cards!" That's my Ben. What a goober.I laughed.
What a beautiful post! I seriously have tears in my eyes reading this (shocking, I know). ;)
One of my favorites was sleeping outside on the deck. I loved that. We did it a good portion of the summer. To think I used to be sleep comfortably on hard wood.
Like Natalie, I want to cry! Not because I remember a ton from Colorado and you brought those memories rushing back to me, but because I can't remember much of anything! Also because anything I do remember could not be conveyed with such finesse :)
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