from Google images
From six to 58 degrees—in just a handful of days.
From an icy attic to one comfortable to work in, to re-store Christmas
decorations.
When the weather read single digits, I allowed the 3
feral cats to come inside with the 3 tame ones. Three of them chose to go to
the attic. One of them stayed for over a month—food, water and a litter box
provided. Finally, the cat came back, uh, down, and spent days and nights
hidden in one corner or another of the front rooms. Then, after two weeks, it
finally arched its black, longhaired tail and walked out the front door where it's been ever since.
Children that I know (including me) have always been
fascinated by the attic. At the last, Mom refused each request for permission
to go there. But I remember the pleasure of going up Grandma Flossie’s back
stairs.
When I was a child, our attic was not safe for anyone
but Dad. Two-by-fours (insulation I don’t remember) and a few one-by sixes laid
over them comprised the flooring.
An
ancient typewriter sat on that floor that somehow I managed to get to. Hmmm. A
budding writer at that age, do you suppose? We’ve heard stories about Dad
tossing an old wall-hung telephone out the attic window. For the longest time,
a Victrola graced one corner.
At
some point, Dad floored the entire place and sheet-rocked the sides and
ceiling. Probably when we needed more bedroom space. But he assured us until
his dying days that a bathroom could NOT be built into the attic. And, he
added, he was a carpenter and knew what he was talking about. God rest his
soul.
For
many family members, using the attic for storage was a given, whether you lived
here or not. A port-a-crib belonged to a sister whose boys are now in their
forties. An over-sized runner-up trophy from a Miss Benton pageant so long ago
the two sisters (60-somethings) who had entered could not remember to whom it
belonged.
Dressers
and books go back four generations––some from my maternal grandmother’s, some
from who-knows-where. Cardboard boxes are full of Mom’s college papers and
projects. During the 1960s, she attended ASTC (UCA) on Saturdays and in summers
while she taught first grade on an emergency certificate. This, after her eight
children were in school. God rest HER soul.
Kid Billy
and I hauled down a coiled wire bed spring that went to ABC Salvage. A metal
bed frame and mattress—now quilt-covered—lean against a wall.
Two
ironing boards—mine and Mom’s—are set up. One is for stacking stuff on and the
other to use as intended.
Old
copies of Better Homes and Gardens
and Look are worth a bit online, some
issues more than others, of course.
In the
few weeks of spring and fall, the attic makes a good writing space. Windows on
the north and west provide plenty of light during the day.
Here is an attic poem
written several years ago that won two first and two second places when it was
new. It also scored a 4HM in NFSPS’s contest, which is a feather in my cap, so
to speak.
THE
ATTIC – (a Foster Sonnet)
“With restlessness of childhood, underscored
by weeks of ice and snow, no school demands,
I beg for Grandma’s leave to
spend some time
beyond the mystifying door. “We
climb
the narrow, testy stairs where treasures’ hoard,
in paint-peeled chests
and mothballed trunks, is stored.
When eyes adjust to garret’s gray, on hands
and knees we snake across the hinterlands,
dirt daubers’ buzz in dormered
warmth no threat,
spy shoeboxed photographs./“In
flannelette,
I sit on Grandma’s lap. Her stories spill
like water from the
back porch pump until
the clump of boots in lower hall cuts short
our winter
trip to attic’s warm resort."
--PL, c 2014, lovepat press
6 comments:
What a lovely poem and post. It reminds me of the attic at house where I grew up. My dad and uncle, who was a carpenter, made half of it into a third bedroom when Will and I got old enough to need our own spaces. The other half was always filled with treasures similar to yours. There was an old typewriter there!
Attics are wonderful, mysterious places when you're a child, but when you are in charge of one, not so much, except in possibilities. xoxo
True, cleaning out my folks' attic and basement was a walk back in time -- So many good memories! Afterwards, I cried for three days. Is that really your attic? It's so bare! :)
No, that's just a pic from many on Google Images. I couldn't retrieve the one I wanted, so picked the one that shows the plywood floor. Also, mine's not that long--more wide and square than long.
My sister and I often played in our attic and it was very un-fit for playing. Nana and Papa had the coolest attic of all, perfect for teenage games of spin the bottle.
I just now took a battery-ed clock off an attic wall, replaced the battery and hung it in the bathroom. Tho' it's black, it runs--which is more than I can say for the one I took down. Thanks for commenting.Someone ought'a do a poetry/essay publ. on attics, huh?
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