On the door
was the logo of my dad’s company:
Automotive Electric.
It was maroon,
and we could sit
four across in the cab,
even in our puffy winter coats
with faux fur-lined trim
and Moon Boots,
while sliding around
on the slush-filled
streets of Spokane.
In summer,
I’d lay canopied in the back
during long drives—
comics, coloring books, and Judy Blume’s spread out.
Once, on the way to the drive-in
I sat in back in a lawn chair
(it’s as redneck as it sounds)
and slid across the bed
when we nearly wrecked,
Mom fretting my injuries
through the connecting window,
Dad smoothing and “soothing” with a growl.
I wish I had it now,
to kick the tires
like my dad always did,
to pop a sleeping bag in the back
for the drive-in,
wearing my pajamas
like people do on airplanes now,
and to feel that Automotive Electric fly
just one more time.
© 2025 Jennifer Wagner
This tells the most wonderful story. I look back at those no seat belt days and am amazed at how resilient we all were. Smiles. I love the visual details! Loved this!
ReplyDeleteI love every bit of this poem, for the memory, how it's told, and how nostalgia plays its part!
ReplyDeleteI take it that you have no dad now, as I lost mine and Mom too. I still have that feeling of "I've always had a mom and not I have none." Just a strange feeling of what? Aloneness? , Well, missing her the most and things we could write tales like you did.
ReplyDeleteBYW I did write of one experience of riding to Missouri to get some fence post in a 1934 Chevy putlling a trailer.
Come read.
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p.s, Jennifer, welcome to writing, I like the bunch and I think you will too.
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