


The month of May has always been a busy one. Full of birthdays, end of school-year preparations, and Memorial day, our family scarce could take a breath. Especially adding in the chores. Spring cleaning, gardening, (Mother’s day flower planting as well), and, for a season, refreshing a chicken coop. This was my summer hearkening. Yet the brightest moments in May which shine to the front of my mind – is helping my momma fill her clothesline.

I have no calendar year to mark my first laundery day. I remember my favorite textile to hang were the sheets. Row upon row of soft cotton polyester blend, some less wet than others – all tenting perfectly across my parents’ back yard,
The clothesline hung north to south on a slightly raised hill. Adult Lydia would define it as a ‘mound.’ But our child hood definition still lingers. Racing down the hill by way or running or rolling was a near-daily occurrence. That is – unless the clothesline was full. Sheets, pants, shirts, it mattered not. A banner was above my head And it would not be ignored.

The sunlight, fresh & warm from a long winter sleep, dried the sheets in a series. The thick, damp/possibly dripping season was (a) cave under a war zone. The near-dry but still very much not time was after a storm on the high sea. At last – the final hour or so before they could be harvested, the sheets were castles and woods and starships. How could I resist? I was never alone on these journeys; at least, not for a long long time.

Perhaps you, reader, may observer how little hanging the clothes & such on the clothesline has featured in my mentioning. Choosing the right basket size for the load, ensuring minimal breakage of our weathered pins – being less than tall enough to hang items over the line & requiring an older (or younger) sibling to assist – making sure my momma did not need to go downstairs… this ritual is not a precious one to most. But it is a lovely one to me.
Now here I am, with my own clothesline north to south, my own struggles with baskets & running our of clothesline (continued below)

(layering is a necessity) & all I can think of is how my mother has loved Spring.
These words are little in the grand scheme of world and men. Yet still i feel the need to bring a light on some memories. As my mother’s birth month branches into June, the simple joys & gratitude she taught me is Worthy of Mention.
