I don't usually entertain guest writers here, but I've not done a very good job keeping up with current posts lately. When my daughter read the following aloud to me on Skype, an assignment she'd completed for a class in Chicago where she's in college, I asked her if she'd mind my posting it here. As a writing teacher, I see a lot of student work, and it does my heart good to encounter something she's written that, unlike so many others, taps into a deep, emotional place where she's not afraid to tread. I am moved because I see in her the qualities of a good writer, and I am moved because the person who stitched the words together is my own kid.
To Dad,I've lived in the city now for almost a month. I'm still getting used to the idea that I'm used to it here. I've become familiar with the streets, and the trains, and the buses. I've become familiar with the steady jingle of a few cents rubbing together in the bottom of an old Dunk'n Donuts cup - a cup held by a man even more familiar with this place - and life - than me. I feel safer here than I do back in our old little railroad town. I feel safe in the detachment that swims through the streets. I'm not a face with a name and a history; just another body waiting for the light to turn green. I feel right. The rhythm of the sounds fit that of my heart, and the pace of my feet matches all the rest. I feel at peace here, because I know you did. I know there was something in the glow of the lights and the hum of the traffic that pulled you in. Just as it has done to me. I believe, in another time and circumstance, you would have thrived here. You would have made it in a way that home had no hope of offering you. Maybe that’s why I'm bound and determined to make it here. Make it for you. Live it for you.
I remember a few years ago after you came home from a trip here, and the majority of your pictures were of, or with, the "Bean" - one of every angle and side. I've been there many times now, and it's always your reflection looking back at me. I see you behind every man in a suit, and I smell you on the escalators of Water Tower Place - slapping the shooting drops of water as I ride up the floors. I hear you behind every Cub fan - angry, but no less devoted than last year.
I'll be a success here. I know it because this place is limitless. The streets run on for miles and miles, and the skyscrapers stretch high enough to meet the clouds. The rules are different here. It isn't narrow-minded and flat. It's cultured, diverse, and worldly. It's creative and loud and intense. And I'll make it. For you, and for me.
Love,Your Second Chance


Oh, wow, Cyn. She's her mother's daughter. I have to tell you that.
Tell her, for me, that she's a beautiful writer.
Posted by: Mary-LUE | September 24, 2009 at 06:58 PM
WoW~ Very impressive!
Posted by: Tammi | September 25, 2009 at 08:47 AM
Very nice...a heart that mirrors her mother's.
Posted by: Crystal | September 27, 2009 at 02:13 PM
Thank you, Crystal. I passed your kind words on to Bailey.
Hope you're well.
Cyn
To: cynkitchen@hotmail.com
Subject: [The Cynical Kitchen] Crystal submitted a comment to 'Guest Writer, Bailey Fitch'.
Date: Sun, 27 Sep 2009 12:13:12 -0700
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Very nice...a heart that mirrors her mother's.
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Posted by: Cyn | September 28, 2009 at 06:15 AM
I fell into this!! I feel like I visited you this morning!! I love both of you dearly!!! I feel like I saw you in this!! Cyn I love you and Bailey!!! You are a sweetheart too!! I love both of you deeply and dearly!!! Mom
Posted by: Anne Hall | September 30, 2009 at 09:41 AM
"unlike so many others, taps into a deep, emotional place where she's not afraid to tread."
That's the only explanation isn't it...pain on pain on pain, repeating.
But its got the sound of posterity. Future. Hopefulness. And a healthful grasp on grief--her dad is what makes her safe. Invisible, incorporeal, ever-present tho. I mean, how else could someone feel more safe in Chicago than "our old little railroad town." heh.
It's got the crackle of opportunity and growth and change and sincerity with a hint of weariness. And alright, it made me cry.
I've had dreams about Bailey's dad since he's passed. I've put myself up against him, like matching statistics of baseball players of bygone eras with protagonists of today's game...and I come up lacking. Mostly because I don't have a "me" in my life. But I've got a Second Chance of my own.
and that's a voice worth considering.
Thx kiddo.
Posted by: Ian | October 02, 2009 at 11:45 AM