"M'am,
I'll tell you when we get going again." White woman, black people. Well, it is a way of describing, to say black or white, Caucasian, African American, whatever.
We have so few black
people in western Canada. Here I look and look. In fact I am
pure-t momucked as some life long low country folks might say, at
least I believed that I was mommucked when I thought the word meant amazed. Actually it means harassed or bothered, and I am not bothered at all
by this broadening of experience with African Americans. Perhaps
instead I am gob smacked (a phrase Irish might say to indicate amazement
or shock) by my own ignorance, assumptions, because one has a tendency (even if
she knows better) to generalize until experience becomes personal.
Mud.
Oh yes, we sank into pluff mud on Carrott Island, and I almost lost
my niece's shoe, but we did see wild horses far off and horseshoe
crabs and egrets and the wonderful spartina marsh grass, and it was
warm enough that we could have been wearing swim suits, which we did
the next day, on Atlantic Beach, watching the surfers, the surf, the
jet trails in the sky.
Charleston! Elegant, with its own French quarter, Vendue Range, which originally could have meant selling street or row; and street after street of graceful houses, the sweet grass basket weavers on the street, the boys selling palm frond roses that remind me of Palm Sunday, and then the other world of the Islands with their newer graceful houses, some of them sprawling testaments to the hubris of owners who must feel they can defy hurricanes. Conversations employ Hugo as a reference point, as in pre-Hugo, post Hugo. Squadrons of pelicans cruise just above the water. Clusters of ibis poke their curved red bills into the sandy soil edges of the golf course.
Across the Inner Coastal from friend Susan's place is Goat Island, where a father of three young children recently hung himself. Adding to the tragedy for the family, is the fact that he hung himself from the end of his dock, the one that juts out into the Inner Coastal where barges and sail boats and yachts of all kinds can navigate from the Gulf of Mexico off Brownsville, Texas, all the way to the Manasquan Inlet in New Jersey. What did they think, all those navigators who passed, if they looked, if they saw.
On this rail journey south, my view encompasses the immediate side of the track, usually the right side, and the places I stumble upon or am shown. I can say only what I see, saw.