The Shaping of a Life
Chapter One
1.
My father taught me to love words, and my mother taught me to pray. In his case, it was patient and intentional. In hers, quite the opposite.
The house in which I grew up and in which my first subjective instruction was played out was a determinant in those lessons. Or if not a determinant, then at least a kind of text upon which my memory and understanding have recorded them and to which I have attached their intricacies. This is not to say that the old house was in any way a thing of beauty or even that it could lay claim to any pretensions. It most assuredly was not that kind of house.
Built in the 1920s just before the Great Depression wrought havoc on everybody including the house's original owner/builder, the poor thing was still not entirely finished when my father bought it fifteen years later from the man's widow. The roughed-in, but unfinished, portions of the upstairs that looked out through broad dormer windows onto a line of silver maple trees and then to the street beyond became mine within a few days of our moving in.
"Phyllis's playroom" was the way my mother came to refer to tha ... read full excerpt from: The Shaping of a Life ebook