Source: Raised to Action
My Real Memoir
The sky goes all the way down, I thought. Or at least it did where we lived. It didn’t in L.A. because the buildings got in its way. Mom used to work there, but when Dad got a new job, she quit. We were going to move to where Dad worked as soon as we bought a new home. Would the sky go all the way down there? I wouldn’t find out for another two months. So, in the meantime, I had to start Second Grade here in Downey.
I’d Always Been a Little Different
I didn’t see things the same way other kids did. That showed up the first week of school. It was Art Time, and we were supposed to color what we saw outside the classroom window. There was a lot of brown, unhappy grass, but the Big Shady Tree looked happy. And so did the honeysuckle vine that hugged the schoolyard fence. The sidewalk outside was covered with its “used” blossoms. Every kid at Gallatin School stopped to drain them of their little dots of nectar, because the most exquisite treats were the ones you could never quite get enough of.
And above all, there was the sky. Except that it wasn’t just above all. For every kid but me, sky was a blue stripe along the top of their picture. But that didn’t make sense because the sky didn’t stop at the top! I followed it all the way down to scientifically verify my findings. Yes, it definitely went all the way to the ground!
I yanked two blue-stripers out of their seats and dragged them over to the window. “Look,” I said, “the sky goes all the way down!”
“No, it doesn’t, dumbhead,” one of them explained.
“Yes, it does! Mrs. Peavey said it’s made out of the same stuff we breathe, so it has to be down here where we are!”
“It can’t be,” the other replied, “it’s the wrong Crayola color.”
Actually, the sky down here didn’t seem to be any Crayola color. “Well, that’s because it…it turns all see-throughy when it gets to us.”
“So then it’s not sky anymore, is it, dumbhead?”
The Following Week Was Worse
I drew a house on fire. Yes, I knew fire was supposed to be Red #238, but I was tired of red fire, so I drew Green fire…and Red water coming out of all the firehoses! And then I laughed.
My First Grade teacher Miss Peggy had liked that I was different. But it worried Mrs. Peavey. She took me to the school Counselor, who called my mom to see if everything was OK at home. “Yes,” Mom explained, “he’s just a little, you know, different.” The Counselor agreed.
So Mrs. Peavey put my picture up with all the others in time for Back to School Night. But I think she got a little tired of explaining to the parents, “Oh, that kid? Yes, everything’s OK at his home, he’s just a little, you know, different.”




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