By Courtney Pierce
Photo: Clash of the Titans |
My 13-year-old stepdaughter rebelled about our recent move to Kalispell, Montana. She didn’t want to leave her friends, nor did she want to have to attend a new school. All her insecurities released like the Kraken. She even accused us of “ruining her
childhood.” Personally, I love to relocate. It's a chance to explore, meet new friends, and break out of stale routines.
Then I told her what I did in my senior year in high
school.
In the summer of 1976, my family moved from New Jersey to
Northern California. For most parents, it would be unthinkable
to relocate across the country prior to their kids entering their senior year in high
school, but mine did without hesitation. My immediate reaction was, “What about my friends? What about my voice
coach? What about Prom?” But deep down, I embraced the upside: adventure, new friends, a new
voice coach, and prospects for a real boyfriend that didn’t know me through any embarrassing stages of growing up.
Ahhh . . . gotta love the teenage imagination. And it only got
better.
As a serious vocal student, I immediately won favor with the
Performing Arts teachers at my new high school. These relationships also gave me the inside
track to making friends. In short order, my new voice teacher presented me with an opportunity to audition for America’s Youth in Concert, a choir and
orchestra whose members represented each state of the nation on a summer-long tour of Europe. I
figured it was a long shot, but what the heck, so I sent in an audition tape.
My crude recording won me the spot of lyric soprano in the choir,
and I would represent the state of California. After graduation, it would be off
to Europe for me with my very first passport in hand.
We started the tour in New York's Carnegie Hall, then hopped over the pond to London, France, Austria, and
Italy. While it was hard work performing every night, I had a blast. I gobbled up
the living history of every city we visited, and I swore I saw the purported ghost
that lurks in the circular hallways of London’s Royal Albert Hall. In Paris’s
Notre Dame Cathedral, I imagined the Hunchback hiding out in the bell tower to listen to our performance. In Rome, I sang beneath Michelangelo's amazing painted ceiling in the Sistine Chapel. It was a life-changing experience. It also gave me independence and a work
ethic for entering college.
I won’t kid you that the hard work balanced out with a huge amount of fun. At eighteen, my
hormones were raging during my free time, especially if those off-hours involved a male foreign accent. By today’s standards,
though, I was a goody-two-shoes, though, and I took my responsibility of state
representation seriously.
Forty-three years later, while packing for our move to Montana, I came across my
photos and yearbook from that Europe trip, the summer of my life. I ended up
sitting on the floor for nearly an hour while I relived so many long-forgotten
moments of my younger and suppler days. Even after all this time, I’m still appreciative of the opportunity my parents afforded me.
As if by design, I found out that my stepdaughter’s new
school in Montana will be sponsoring a trip to Europe during Spring Break of 2020. I signed her up for one of the twelve spots and surprised her with the news. She squealed like a stuck piglet at the county fair. Her trepidation about the move melted and, suddenly, Kalispell, Montana
was a-okay when attached with a 10-day trip to London.
But I think it was more than the trip that won her over. My stepdaughter is now focused on the woman she thinks she'll be, not the girl she left behind. The trip will help her get to that place of confidence and independence, just like it did for me. And she's looking at Kalispell, Montana with new eyes, appreciating the beauty that surrounds her.
She skips rocks
over the lake and sits with us on the porch
to watch the light-show from a thunderstorm. We gaze at the fiery stars. We run to the front window to marvel at the deer prancing across our driveway and anticipate our first sighting of a mountain lion or grizzly bear. Bald eagles and osprey circle overhead to hunt, and her Dad takes her to fish for bass in the lake while I make dinner.
I watch the two of them glide past the windows. She's going to be just fine.
to watch the light-show from a thunderstorm. We gaze at the fiery stars. We run to the front window to marvel at the deer prancing across our driveway and anticipate our first sighting of a mountain lion or grizzly bear. Bald eagles and osprey circle overhead to hunt, and her Dad takes her to fish for bass in the lake while I make dinner.
I watch the two of them glide past the windows. She's going to be just fine.
I’ve come full circle. It's time to pay it forward. The opportunity that
was afforded to me, I can now pass along to her. And thank goodness for Brexit, because the £175
that I have in my safe will still buy more than one round of fish and chips and several souvenirs.
Of course, the moving box of travel books had to be opened first. My stepdaughter has been poring through them for all the details of the Crown Jewels, Shakespeare's Globe Theatre, and chopped-off heads rolling on the dirt floor
of the Tower of London. There will be much for her to take in when she goes to go to Oxford, Buckingham Palace, and
sees a West End show in Piccadilly Circus.
It makes me squeal with delight, like that happy piglet, to do this for her. I'll never forget those stomach flutters as the plane lowered for a landing in London's Heathrow Airport. I was never the same kid again.
New York Times best-selling author Karen Karbo says, "Courtney Pierce spins a madcap tale of family grudges, sisterly love, unexpected romance, mysterious mobsters and dog love. Reading Indigo Lake is like drinking champagne with a chaser of Mountain Dew. Pure Delight."
Photo: Micah Brooks |
Courtney Pierce is a fiction writer living in Kalispell, Montana with her husband, stepdaughter, and their brainiac cat, Princeton. Courtney writes for the baby boomer audience. She spent 28 years as an executive in the entertainment industry and used her time in a theater seat to create stories that are filled with heart, humor, and mystery. She studied craft and storytelling at the Attic Institute and has completed the Hawthorne Fellows Program for writing and publishing. Active in the writing community, Courtney is a board member of the Northwest Independent Writers Association and on the Advisory Council of the Independent Publishing Resource Center. She is a member of Willamette Writers, Pacific Northwest Writers Association, and She Writes. The Executrix received the Library Journal Self-E recommendation seal.
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Available Now! Book 3 of the Dushane Sisters Trilogy |
The Dushane Sisters Trilogy concludes with Indigo Legacy, available now. There's love in the air for Olivia and Woody, but will family intrigue get in the way? Ride along for the wild trip that starts in a New York auction house and peaks in a mansion on Boston's Beacon Hill.
The Dushane sisters finally get to the truth about their mother.
4 comments:
Regardless of age, moving from one life to another can be challenging. When my dad got a promotion which meant a move from Portland to Corvallis two weeks in to my freshman year in high school, I did think my world was destroyed. I did finally adjust but not without angst, tears and some door slamming. When, in my mid-twenties, I moved from Portland to Klamath Falls, my son was 4 and I embraced that move with both hands and all my heart. Definitely a new me emerged from that experience and I've never looked back. While I've lived in my home for 44 years, I've continued to "move" by being self-employed and engaged in a wide variety of positions along with writing. Your step-daughter is going to have a wonderful time while in London. And fyi, some high schools have an East Coast Tour during/around the junior year where students can visit all those historical sights they've studied. Both my son and youngest granddaughter went on those and it changed their view of the world.
Fun post! What a great opportunity for both you, as a teenager, and now your step-daughter. Enjoy Kalispell, it is beautiful!
Great post! My father accepted a position as a Pan Am pilot on the Island of Guam. It was my senior year and I was devastated! Finally 12 way through the school year I began to really enjoy to culture and people of a. South Pacific Island.
Three days ago three of my teenaged grandchildren returned from three weeks touring London, Paris, Rome, Venice, Chur, Strasbourg, Munich and Amsterdam via train, bicycle and miles of walking every day. They and their parents had a wonderful time, and travel was an eye-opening experience. Each teen got to pick a country to visit.
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