A Smell of a Memory

Ahhhh, summer.  Blue skies, monkey in the middle, running through the sprinkler in the side yard.  When I think back to the hot, humid summers of my childhood, all of these things come to mind, but they’re not the first memory to emerge.  Before all of those thoughts, comes the earthy scent of freshly cut grass.  I hear the mower, I see my Dad, I smell that distinct, just-cut grass smell.  To me, that scent has always signaled freedom:  freedom from school schedules and cliquey groups; freedom to play and swim; freedom to read and dream; freedom to just be.

My childhood summers, mind you, weren’t spent in one place.  I didn’t have one of those childhoods where I made fast friends with a girl in kindergarten, endured the middle school years with her, then hugged her dramatically as we graduated twelve years later.  I did meet a new girl in kindergarten, and another in second, and fourth, and sixth, and ninth, and however many more you want to throw into the mix.  It was more of a vagabond sort of childhood, but my family was stable and sensible and we made the very best of it.  And one of the things that remained constant through all of the change, through the new schools and new friends and new towns, was the grassy smell of freedom, signaling the endless days ahead, all mine for the lounging.

There are other memories, to be sure.  We mostly lived in the south and I treasure the years at the beach, walking as far as I could along the shore, looking out beyond the farthest waves, considering all of the possibilities of life.  In high school, my girlfriends and I would slather on the baby oil and hit the pool, at once completely sure of ourselves and completely unnerved by the coolness of everyone else.  My grandparents and extended family lived in Pennsylvania, and I would go, for a week or two at a time, and spend time with family there, building priceless relationships with my cousins and aunts and uncles.

My summer memories are an amalgam of all of these things; I almost cannot separate them.  And, always, when I think back, the memories are scented with that grassy smell of freedom.

-Kirsetin

For this week’s Blog Blast, the Parent Bloggers Network is asking us to share our memories of our family’s summers.  To participate, click here for details.  You can win prizes from Huggies Little Swimmers, including beach towels, pool toys, and of course, Huggies Little Swimmers products.

2 thoughts on “A Smell of a Memory

  1. Great post. Thanks for sharing your summer memories with us. I, too, moved around quite a bit. But for me, swimming pools and slumber parties are strong summer memories.

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