A Native Son of the North Carolina Piedmont

My name is Rocky Hall. I live in the central piedmont of North Carolina. This blog was created out of a need to write and tell a story.

I was born to good fortune. As a small child my days were spent in the shade of white oak and hickory with family as strong as those trees. Water came from a bucket drawn at the well, and we drank from a dipper that hung on a rusty nail driven in the side of the well post. We had a coal stove and an out house. No phone. We didn't need one. But we did have a TV.

We had wonderful neighbors. Folks you could count on. Among them were tobacco farmers, mill workers and mechanics. Old women wore sun bonnets and children were taught to mind their elders.

Summers were spent in the tobacco fields. Or if you were too young to prime you worked at the barn. When we weren't working we romped through the countryside with siblings and cousins, went fishing, swam in ponds, caught crawfish in the spring branch and swang on the porch swing. My shadow would often be cast long at night as I played by the spark of Grandpa's stick welder making repairs for neighbors.

Sunday was for church and visiting.

My parents had me young. We lived with my Grandpa at first, Mama's Daddy. Mama was pretty and Daddy was strong. I can still recall the smell of him as I sat on his lap after he got home from work. Sweat, oil and gasoline were badges of honor for a young mechanic. Around the supper table there was talk of family, neighbors and work. Everyone laughed and sang while Earnest Tubb crackled on the radio. On weekends Grandpa would go out and sit in his old Chevy and read for hours. He loved to read. I can see him now in that faded old car, head just above the window's beltline, eyes looking downward in concentration, fedora pushed back on his head.

That was a magic time. Un-hurried. Even the sunlight was different then.

So now you see. I was indeed born to good fortune.







Friday, January 25, 2013

mama's soup dream

I dreamed how good it felt to sleep and that everything in the world was on one inch white ceramic tiles. I bought a Duke Power building even though I really didn't want it and sold the copper contents to cover the cost. The duke Power tile was smooth and slightly rounded with a faint silver cast to it. I bought the Parthenon and kept it in my pocket so I could pull it out and look at it whenever I wanted. Thieves tried to steal Chef M's Mercury Mountaineer but couldn't because Chef M. had a key in his butt that started everything he owned. The thieves persuaded me to go for a ride with them in a gold Corolla convertible with yellow hounds tooth interior. The wind during the drive was soothing as I pulled the Parthenon from my pocket and rubbed it's cracked, bone like surface. I dreamed my sleep was warm and sleek and compact. And the Parthenon was mine to keep forever. 

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