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A
Place For Love:
The story behind Where Is Grandpa?
by
T. A. Barron
Written for Book Links
On
the day my dad died, I came home numb. As the screen door banged
behind me, I barely heard it. Nor did I take much notice of the
plate of cold spaghetti on the kitchen table, nor even my wife and
kids standing nearby, unusually quiet. To the degree I felt anything,
it was the warmth of my father's hand still inside my own.
But
he was gone. And with him, his warm hand; his easy laugh; his rugged
leather boots he wore around the Colorado ranch; his love of a good
walk and a strong embrace; his pockets always full of chewing gum;
his playful practical jokes; his caring for children and grandchildren;
his resolute belief in hard work; his wonder at the beauty of the
world that still seemed, in this man over eighty, as fresh as if
he had been newly born.
Gone.
And
then, right there in our kitchen, a little miracle happened. My
five-year-old daughter started talking about her favorite moment
with Grandpa, when they had sat together watching a tumbling stream.
"He told me," she recalled, "that the stream has many voices. And
he also told me that if you listen to those voices, listen your
very best, the stream will tell you all the places it has been,
and all the places where it's going."
Her
words rang in my ears like the sound of a distant bell. For on a
day long past, that same man had sat by that stream with me and
spoken those same words. And I knew that my daughter understood,
in some unfathomable way, that the man we both loved had died.
Then
her two younger brothers piped up, each describing their own favorite
memories of Grandpa. By the kitchen door, several pumpkins in his
hands, and another on his head. By the old Jeep, ready to go bouncing
around the ranch. By the cottonwood tree, dreaming about a treehouse-a
treehouse he never had the chance to build.
At
that moment, as we sat encircled by so many images of Grandpa in
so many places, my five-year-old asked, "So tell me. Where is Grandpa
now?"
That
was the very last question I wanted to hear. "He's with God," I
muttered, staring down at my mound of cold spaghetti. "And where
is that?" she pressed. "In heaven," I replied numbly. She cocked
her head, wondering, then asked, "And where is that?"
I
drew a deep breath, glanced across the table at my wife, and tried
to find the words. How to answer, in a few brief seconds, a question
that I had been pondering for many years? "Well, " I replied, "heaven
means different things to different people. But I suppose you might
say that heaven is…any place where two people have loved each other."
She
considered this idea for a few seconds, then spoke again. "You mean
places like the ones we've been talking about? Heaven is in all
those places?"
"I
guess so," I replied, not sure where this was leading.
"And
God is in all those places?"
"I
suppose so, yes."
"And
Grandpa is in all those places?"
In
that instant, a doorway opened in my sorrow. Not more than a thin
crack, of course, for I still had plenty of grieving left to do.
But it was enough. Enough to change everything.
For
I finally understood something that had eluded me before: that,
even when we have lost someone we have loved, it is possible to
find them again. To hear their footsteps, to feel their presence,
to know their love. And, thanks to the persistent questioning of
a five-year-old girl, I had some idea at last where to look.
It
was two full years before I could share this experience with anyone
else. Now, thanks to my editor, Patricia Lee Gauch, and a gifted
artist, Chris K. Soentpiet, it has become a book, Where Is Grandpa?.
And although I have chosen to tell the story from the perspective
of the five-year-old child, rather than the befuddled adult that
I was on that day, the underlying ideas remain the same.
One
of those ideas is the wisdom of children. Young people, if their
imaginations have not been squashed, are brimming with wonder, and
honesty, and the open-hearted search for understanding. And something
more: the intuitive awareness that visions, and stories, carry many
levels of truth. So the power to imagine is truly the power to create.
And the ability to remember is the ability to renew.
Another
of those ideas is the power of place. My first memory of my father,
the Grandpa of the story, was of being carried on his shoulders
out to an old chestnut tree near our home. I remember him lifting
me up to peer into a dark hole in the trunk. To my surprise, a family
of baby raccoons, their eyes as bright as lanterns, peered back
at me. Whenever I think of that man, I think of all the places that
we shared. And the memories, like the eyes of those raccoons, are
lantern-bright.
Small
wonder that, for me, place is far more than landscape. Indeed, in
my own writing, I think of place not as merely the setting for a
story, but as another character. For places have all the rich dimensions,
as well as the contradictions, of human characters. My earliest
compositions, in fact, were nature writing. (At age nine, I wrote
a little biography of that old chestnut tree.) If the imaginary
worlds in my novels-places as diverse as Fincayra in The Lost
Years of Merlin and Lost Crater in The Ancient One-feel
true to the reader, I am certain it is because of my own grounding
in the natural world. And a good deal of that grounding I owe to
my father, a man who knew how to hear the many voices of a stream.
It
would not have surprised him at all that these reflections, like
so much else, have spun a full circle. For while whatever we hold
may be lost, whatever is lost may be found again. And a good spot
to look, as both he and his granddaughter knew, is that remarkable
nexus between the people we have loved and the places we have shared.
T.A.
Barron, author of many novels and nature books, lives with his family
in Colorado. For more information about his books, including an
essay about the writing process and other materials for teachers
and librarians, visit his official website at www.tabarron.com.
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