Journal of Our Journeys, Chapter 12
Tennessee
In 1972, someone decided to invite my oldest sister, her husband, and their two oldest children to join us on our family vacation. They all packed into a two-door Road Runner, towing a pop-up camping trailer behind.
The plan was to travel together to
Tennessee, see Nashville and Chattanooga, then split up. Judy and company would drive on to Florida to visit a friend while the rest of us would swing through
Virginia to see relatives there again.
The Country Western Music Hall of Fame must not
have done much for me, because I don’t remember any of it. All I can see is the
photograph of my niece and nephew outside the building in matching outfits, the girl in pink, of course, and the boy in
blue. It was reminiscent of how Mom had dressed Pat and me not too many years
before.
The Wax Museum of Country Stars scared me;
the figures looked so life-like. Either Pat or Dad kept saying, “Look! That figure just moved!”
Chattanooga
was much more interesting. Ruby Falls and descending hundreds of feet below
the ground to get to it was awesome. The falls were a torrent of water, causing
the heart to pound and the stone floor to shake.
Rock City, acres of rock gardens through
wooded paths and narrow passages of solid rock, had been the dream of Frieda
and Garnet Carter. They also invented Tom Thumb golf, which would one day
be known as Miniature Golf. Rock City also had Lover’s Leap, a rock outcropping
several hundred feet above the valley floor.
To get to it, a person had the
choice of crossing a solid rock bridge or a Swing-Along bridge held up by
cable. Naturally, Pat charged across the swinging
bridge, Dad swinging it all the way. I plodded across the rock bridge, scared
enough by the chasm below that I certainly didn’t want to feel as if I would be
tipped right off of it.Following the beauty of the outdoors, the
trail went indoors to Mother Goose Village, a cave-like place with cubby holes
filled with figurines lit by Black Light. I was already old enough to think the characters were somewhat lame, but the black light was mesmerizing. We laughed at
each other’s glow-in-the-dark teeth and any white on our clothes.
Shortly after Chattanooga, my oldest sister's family
headed southeast while we drove due east to Virginia.
The first night without them, we camped in
Cherokee, North Carolina. I don’t need the camper log to vividly recall that
little town on an Indian Reservation. Sometime during the night, I woke up with
a severe stomach ache. Soon, I was in the toilet with diarrhea – not a good
thing in those close quarters. Next, I was throwing up. Mom says she wasn’t
overly concerned until I started passing blood; then, it was time to pack up
camp and find a hospital.
I don’t remember how we got there; all I
remember is lying on a gurney in the Emergency Room. I slept on and off, while
Mom sat at my side the entire night, and once when I was asleep, I dreamed
about Cheerios. What in the world was up with that? And more importantly, why
do I still remember that all these years later?
The Déjà vu thing is that over Spring
Break in 2008, my mom, my daughter Val, and I drove to Virginia to visit those
same relatives. By suppertime of the second day on the road, as we drove into
Danville, Virginia, we decided to have dinner at the Kentucky Fried Chicken and
then find a motel for the night.
The only problem with that was the
sandwich that Val ordered. Hours after going to bed at the Super 8 on the other
end of town, Val started vomiting. By three am, my mom and I decided that
enough was enough, and we dragged my poor teenage daughter into the car to
begin searching for the nearest ER.
The night clerk at the motel tried to be
helpful, but in the dark of the night, her directions made no sense. We just
started driving, hoping to run across a big blue H sign.
The Danville Regional Medical Center is a
nice, modern facility, and I recommend it if you are ever in the area with a
crisis in your car.
It didn’t take the doctor (was his name
really Dr. Dan, or was I sleepwalking at the time?) long to diagnose food
poisoning, and we had no qualms about accusing the Colonel. With IV fluids and
Compazine running, Val was able to fall asleep in her hospital bed. Grandma and
Mom, on the other hand, dozed fitfully in our hard plastic chairs, our heads
bobbing and jerking, until they released Val at seven am.
Thankfully, there was no third ER visit on
other trips to Virginia.