In our stampede through time we tend to leave a lot of
debris in our wake. Americans, have always been
innovators and new machines are ever presenting us
with new and more efficient ways to produce a thing,
and our comforts have also been heeded as well.
Having lived in eight decades, I see so much that we
no longer value that we once depended on so much. Old
wash boards, flat irons, wood stoves, cast iron pots,
and other forms of past housekeeping necessities grace
the tables of antique shops and flea markets. Rusted
farm implements slumber away the years beneath old
oaks, and the barns that once housed fine harness
leather, hay, corn, and grain for choice livestock,
stand leaning to windward on abandoned farms where old
windmills with bent and missing blades still humbly
try in vain to face into the wind. I wax a little
poetic when I see such sights along the Interstates as
I cruise by at seventy-five miles per hour. At that
speed it's hard for my mind to reckon back to 1944 and
hear again the jingle of trace chains as our team of
grays labored up the rolling hills pulling our months
supply of needs.
True, we were behind times being a bit financially
challenged back then. The more advanced farmers had
more land and tractors to plow it with. But even the
old International Farm all and popping johnnys, (John
Deere) tractors of that day and age, are now
collectors items. I vividly remember cotton pickers,
cotton gins, wheat thrashers, hay bailers, and a host
of other jobs of those by gone days.
In the realm of creature comforts, as they are so
aptly named these days, considerable progress has been
made. I can recall a hand pump and a sink inside the
house as being sufficient for my mother to call it a
'modern house.'
Any forced air heating we had came from through our
open windows on a summer night. If you walked into my
Mother's living room, you would always see her
quilting frame suspended overhead. Mom always kept
plenty of warm covers for us in winter.
But being an appreciator of off handed things, I would
like to mention a thing that was at special times
revered by us all and lingered in the scenes of rural
communities for a long, long, time. That being the
necessary outhouse. They came in many varieties. But
my old Tennessee mule skinner step pop, insisted on
the single holer each time he built one, saying there
was no need for a two holer, the task at hand being a
very private and personal one required no need for
companionship. Moreover, he questioned always any
subject two people so disposed would discuss. Only Yankees, School teachers and Republicans, would ever consider a two holer. I
do recall six holers, being placed at each corner of
the acreage of rural schools. But can't remember
anytime ever intimately performing in tandem. So
maybe the old man had a point?
Teen age boys loved to turn these small vital
structures over at Halloween. Or else simply move
them back a few feet so those approaching in darkness
would arrive unexpectedly. I was once party to
turning one over on its door only to discover the
resident owner being inside. Our big decision being
whether to right the thing and be attacked by its
occupant, or run. We righted it then ran, hoping
darkness would not reveal our identity.
Modern toilet tissue as used today, was a luxury. In
fact, the ladies carried it to and fro if there was
any to be had at all. But men and boys suffered
through with the Sears Roebuck or Montgomery Ward
catalogs. This is why men of my age still read while
performing. It was an acquired habit, you see.
Kicking back in my chair with my remote control in my
hand, I am made to wonder, what will the people of
2101 have to remember of the debris that they will
leave behind in their rush for the betterment of
mankind? Will it be so grand and glorious as the
debris I have known? Or will the wake simply be
strewn with plastic?
Betcha they won't have anything so cherished as an
outdoor toilet.