Spooky Driveway
We were the original
latch-key kids, confined
to the house after school,
sustained on Mallomars,
Ritz and Velveeta,
Howdy Doody and the Mickey Mouse Club.
Not allowed to ride bikes
to skate in the street
to meet up with friends.
In our hunger for adventure
we claimed a New World,
christened it Spooky Driveway.
Our secret forest of dense weeds, junk trees
and mysterious sounds
faded furniture and broken bottles
at the dead end, a dark and thorny thicket.
Daily, on the walk to 4th grade
we would detour into the driveway
frighten ourselves
imagining animals or intruders
hoot and shriek and spook
each other as best we could
run out breathing hard
into our safe post-war
neighborhood of neat row houses.
By 5th grade we recognized
our claim as an overgrown,
undeveloped lot.
By 6th, our innocent taste
for adventure was cut short
by disturbing lessons on growing up female
that conjured
a kidnapper or rapist
behind every tree
and in every dark place.
We never went back.
5 thoughts on "Spooky Driveway"
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From imposed restrictions, to the fun of daring/scaring oneself, to self-imposed restrictions — progression in childhood, especially that of girls.
Living requires so much giving up until the last of what we thought was so important, or fun, or peaceful or beautiful or whatever drifts over the mountain and away, away. Your poem points that out beautifully and powerfully.
You really captured the experience of growing up in the 50s and female. Thanks.
From imagination to reality – that eye-opening journey all kids have to take. Well said!
I love the picture of the spooky driveway…and of the growing awareness of children. Thanks for this!