Sixteen months ago, my
husband, Mike, and I moved to the City of Milwaukee, away from our ten acres in
Menomonee Falls, where we had raised children, crops, and chickens for nearly
34 years.
We were products of the
Sixties and had ingested the Back to the Land philosophy: the Whole Earth Catalog, the Mother Earth News, the solar home, the cloth
diapers, the home canning, the yogurt maker, all of it.
Our old barn and land at twilight |
Our crops came from three massive
gardens that Mike planted in spring and saluted with a “See ya later,” only to
return at harvest time. Our chickens were such a motley crew that our son’s
hens were thrown out of 4-H judging at Waukesha County Fair. Our three kids
suffered a stay-home mother who finally banned TV entirely after finding that her
hour-a-day viewing rule was impossible to enforce with three different
requests.
The kids left the nest,
Mike quit gardening, I quit canning, and poultry-raising was forsaken when I
lost heart after yet another massacre by varmints (everything likes to eat
chicken).
When Mike had quadruple
heart bypass surgery in 1996, I thought it might be wise to simplify our lives
with a smaller house. It took me 18 years to convince him of the wisdom of this
idea. The secret to digging Mike’s feet out of the Menomonee Falls soil was
finding a home for sale located in the neighborhood of his childhood.
So now we live a mile from
where Mike grew up, in the Jackson Park neighborhood on the south side of
Milwaukee. I am treated to a never-ending litany of stories about kids who used
to live in this or that house and about Mike’s adventures biking through our
neighborhood when he was a boy.
Surprisingly, neither one
of us misses our little farm. When I think about that big house, all I can
think of is work. And woodpeckers. Those
loud-knocking, head-jangling pests loved our cedar siding. I had waged a
never-ending battle with them for years, always trying new deterrents, never
winning.
I do miss Grandfather Oak,
a gnarly giant who lived halfway back on the quarter-mile expanse to the rear
of our land. Grandfather is about 240 years old, and Mike and I had developed a
ritual of saluting him with open arms every time we meandered by in tennis
shoes or snowshoes. Amazingly, just down the road from our new home, on Jackson
Parkway, we found another magnificent oak, who I named Grandmother. Like with
Grandfather, it takes three people to encircle Grandmother’s trunk. But unlike
Grandfather, Grandmother’s canopy is stunted. It looks like she took a hit from
lightning some years ago. Yet she has survived and apparently thrives. What a creature.
My greatest difficulty
adjusting to city living is that I am a lifelong north-sider now dwelling in
foreign territory. I spent my childhood in a little house on the corner of
Beckett and Glendale Avenues, where streets with names like “Marion,” “Ruby,”
Congress,” and “Appleton Avenue” were common currency. My biggest memory of the
south side of Milwaukee was when I was 14 and had to go to the airport to take
a plane to my grandfather’s funeral. I did have second cousins who lived in
West Allis, and we visited them from time to time, but I never noticed the
streets since my nose was always buried in a book.
I met Mike at Marquette
University, which is located on Wisconsin Avenue, sort of a DMZ between the
north and south sides of Milwaukee. Just as I had never traveled the south
side, Mike had never traveled the north side. We were like people from two
different cultures. Mike told me that everyone on the south side was Polish by
osmosis. My north side was very German, with synagogues here and there.
Mike and I married right
out of college. We moved to Norfolk, Virginia (in search of a warmer climate),
where we were both complete foreigners. Mike did better than I did because he
can see the world as if from the top, having a feeling for north, south, east
and west. I was lost for the entire three years we lived there, driving around
in a great befuddlement most of the time, but enjoying the fact that everywhere
was water. (And I liked the big Navy ships that I’d suddenly come upon, seeming
to be parked at the ends of city streets.)
Eventually, missing our
families, we returned to Wisconsin, where we lived in Wauwatosa, then Sussex, finally
Menomonee Falls. Poor Mike was forced to adapt. One night in Wauwatosa, I found
him sitting at the kitchen table with a hand-drawn map and streets whose order
he was trying to memorize – “North,” “Center,” “Burleigh,” “Capitol….”
Now the map is on the
other foot, and every day is a challenge. I console myself with the assurance
that getting lost and found again is good mental exercise and I may be staving
off dementia by forcing new paths to be forged in my brain. For the first three
months living in Milwaukee, I needed the GPS to get to the grocery store. I’m a
little better now. I no longer use the GPS, and some well-traveled streets are
becoming my best friends: Highway 100 and Oklahoma Avenue are two favorites,
and I like 27th Street. I allow myself to get lost because I figure
I’ll always learn something that way. My biggest confusion is that the same
chain stores fill the streets everywhere. I seek out the few mom and pop
establishments that make some areas stand out from the rest.
I will know when I have
arrived when I can master the slant streets. When I lived on the north side,
Appleton Avenue was my shortcut everywhere. I loved its diagonal-ness. Now I
want to master Beloit, National, Layton, and Forest Home, but I am still afraid
of them. It was a revelation one evening when Mike informed me that they all
slant the same way, starting from the southwest and slanting northeast into
downtown Milwaukee.
I plan to post a big map
of Greater Milwaukee on a wall in my new house. I long for the day I can see
the city as if from above.
Mike "raking leaves" on our new, smaller, lawn. Note stone house: no woodpeckers!! |
Love this, Gail. When Karl moved in with me in Waukesha the only way he could get anywhere was to start at Carroll University. One day he was supposed to meet me in Pewaukee for a meeting. He was late and when I called and asked him where he was he said Carroll. He had been on the road for half an hour and was within 6 blocks of where he started!
ReplyDeleteHaha. I can relate completely. Maybe Karl is like me and has little "spacial" sense. Or maybe I'm just a spacehead! Thanks for commenting, Pat.
ReplyDeleteYou may fine this strange but I have a map in my bathroom across from the toilet. Something for me to look at and study every time I'm in there. You'll be amazed at how quickly you will master your surroundings. Give a try.
ReplyDeleteThank you Code Man Code, oh wise one!
ReplyDelete