My Experience of Returning to the Old Neighborhood

We all harbor our memories--good and bad ones--of the neighborhood where we grew up. Sometimes curiosity takes us back to our old stomping grounds just to see what it's like today.

What is your reaction? Do you get choked up with emotion? Are you filled with relief you got out? Are the old memories dim or jumbled together? Do you even recognize the spot? Do you just shrug, indifferent to another place where you once lived?

We lived in a brown shingle rambler on a street in the 1950s suburbs outside of Washington, D.C. I can recall the civil defense sirens wailing away. I can also recall the sunny sidewalks. But now I stand in front of the same house, and it seems a lot smaller to me. The shade trees towering over me blot out the sun.

But that's not all. I feel no real connection. The neighborhood is well-kept, what you'd call "nice," but I don't register any pangs of nostalgia. It's like a different person than me lived in the rambler. Pity. I wanted to feel something more profound, but it's not to be.

So, I depart for my present home.

By Ed Lynskey
Twitter: @edlynskey
Author of Lake Charles
"Nice addition to anyone’s summer beach reading schedule."
Florida Times-Union
Ed Lynskey
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Published on June 21, 2011 09:24 Tags: nostalgia, the-old-neighborhood
Comments Showing 1-5 of 5 (5 new)    post a comment »
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message 1: by Joyfula (new)

Joyfula My parents still live in the new brick ranch they bought in the 1950s!

But the home town before that! The streets are so much narrower than I remember. And everybody except my cousins are Republican.


message 2: by Ed (new)

Ed Joyfula wrote: "My parents still live in the new brick ranch they bought in the 1950s!"

That's a long time. The narrower streets strikes a chord for me, too.


message 3: by sarg (new)

sarg You can never go home. (except in memory and that is through rose colored glasses)


message 4: by Ed (new)

Ed sarg wrote: "You can never go home. (except in memory and that is through rose colored glasses)"

Yes sir, I'd agree.


message 5: by Ed (new)

Ed A meth lab in the garage! Now that makes the saying "there goes the old neighborhood" real true. LOL. I remember climbing the pitch pines and getting lots of sticky sap on me. Pines just seemed to have more running sap in them than other trees. Thanks for the story.


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