I got homesick. It could be that I’m old. Or, in Orlando
in January, it was cold and rainy. It could be that instead of spending three
days hanging out with my daughter, Hope, during her last week of interning at Walt
Disney World, I spent three days in bed with a headache if my head hit the
pillow or nausea when I stood up, accompanied by vertigo returning from a three-year
hiatus.
I got homesick. I had big reading and writing plans when Hope was working. I had mother/daughter shopping plans when Hope wasn’t working. My only interruption was to be football.
Instead, I watched only the second half of the Outback
Bowl. Luckily for me, it was the right half, the one in which the Gamecocks
decided to win. I drove eight miles to
Wal-Greens and bought over-the-counter medication, crackers and Ginger Ale. On the
way home, I stopped at a Chick-fil-a drive-thru for soup, shivering when I rolled the
window down. This took an hour and a half.
I stayed awake for the first half of the Sugar Bowl, then tossed and
turned all night, waking every two hours with a headache, wondering the outcome
but too miserable to check my phone.
I got homesick before the virus, though, which is rare
for me. I’ve always enjoyed traveling, and
we’ve been to Walt Disney World many times. But I got homesick in that city that
week.
Maybe it was all the lights on all the buildings or
all the people in all the lines or all the noise on all the attractions or all the
hours spent writing at a tiny desk in a tiny hotel room while all my family took
naps or all the cars on all the crowded roads or all the minutes (three was the
average) at all the traffic lights or all the frost on all the windows in the parking lots.
Whatever it was, I couldn’t wait to be back in
Anderson, South Carolina. I drove
myself, Hope, and the contents of her apartment to Anderson/HOME on a cold
January Thursday, stopping once in the nine-hour trip.
Arriving home at 4:30PM, I went straight to bed. I stayed in bed all day on Friday. Saturday, I went to primary care, where I blacked
out twice in the waiting room. I had
lost three pounds in one week, and the nurse thought she had misread my blood pressure.
It was 80/60. I was severely dehydrated, which explained the return of vertigo.
I welcomed a steroid shot. There was a shortage of
fluid, so I was sent home with Gatorade instructions. I felt better for two days, then returned to
the doctor again for another shot and more hydration instructions.
When you’re sick, you have time to think. What else
can you do when you’re curled up under blankets drinking all that water and
Gatorade not feeling well enough to read?
This is what I came up with. I learned something about
myself in Florida. I’m a South Carolina snob. No, I’m an Upstate South Carolina
snob because I’m also a four seasons snob.
What else did I learn?
I’m a small-town snob and most definitely an Anderson snob.When I go to bed at night, my street and my home
are dark and quiet. My drive to work is twelve minutes. It could be shorter,
but I don’t drive over the speed limit anymore. Speeding tickets, I
tell myself, are for the young and impatient; plus, I’m determined to keep my
safe-driver discount. The longest red light in my day is the one-minute light next
to Westside High School. I used to roll my eyes when caught there. Used to.
When I got homesick, I made a decision. I will NEVER (I’m old enough to say never)
live in a town bigger than Anderson, S.C., unless Anderson gets bigger than Anderson. You know what I mean?
I like to go. I like to travel. In fact, I have a long
bucket list of destinations, but I know that Anderson, Home, the Electric City with
four seasons, will be waiting for me.
Yet we fret over fickle weather predicted,
Oh, how you jest.
Some groan. Some dance,
At your attempt to make us rest.
And we delight in the early aroma, knowing you tease,
Then marvel at the pink, yellow, purple, and white blooms.
Oh, how you renew.
Some drive. Some walk,
On your streets lined with the softest hue.
But we gather, splash, sweat and play,
Then smack the mosquitoes and search for relief indoors.
Oh, how you ignite.
Some travel. Some stay,
As your landscape bursts at daylight.
For we lengthen our sleeves and watch our teams play,
Oh, how you submit.
Some retire. Some pray,
In your early evenings, cool and moonlit.
Your seasons electrify our community,
Then open our hearts and minds, and smile content.
Oh, how you grace.
Some ridicule. Some cherish,
Within your city of familiar face.