Saturday, August 3, 2019
The Day Elvis Almost Died :: Personal Narrative, Autobiographical Essay
The Day Elvis Almost Died        I was riding in the backseat of my parents' red Cutlass on a warm fall day in  1984. My only entertainment was listening to the sucking sound the back of my  thigh made when I lifted it off the sticky vinyl seat. I remember seeing  patchwork fields of rainbow-colored leaves resting on the yellow grass, wishing  that I could rake them into big piles, so I could run through them, scattering  them across the field again. I rolled the dusty window down to get a better look  at the pastures as the hard wind rushed in over my face and through my hair. I  stuck my head through the window and opened my mouth, so my cheeks would puff  out like Dizzy Gillespie's when he played his trumpet. Slowly, my cheeks began  to deflate, and the wind softened as my dad braked the car to turn into the  driveway of my grandparents' home, the location of our annual May family  picnic.     My whole family had already arrived when we showed up. All my uncles  immediately bombarded the car, playfully snickering with my dad about always  being late so he would not have to help them cook. My Papa Joe, with his Afro of  white hair, and my Grandma Lee Lee, who limped like a peg-legged pirate because  one leg was shorter than the other, were sitting in lounge chairs talking about  how much I had grown. My Uncle Kelly, whose left arm was shot off by his ex-wife  during an argument, was walking around, complaining about how he was going to  starve if he didn't eat soon. My Aunt Rosie, who always wore a tiny pair of rose  earrings and kept a wad of chewing tobacco in her mouth, talked with my mom  between spits of brown, runny liquid directed into her plastic cup.     Including my cousins and a few distant relatives, approximately twenty-five  people were there talking, laughing, and mingling. And there I was, all alone in  the land of giants with only my cowgirl Barbie to protect me. I felt like a  guppy trying to swim upstream with a school of trout. Even though we had only  been there for five minutes, finding my dad and leaving were my priorities.  					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.