I have spent the last year
sifting and sorting every part of my life: preparing to immerse myself in all
the throes of the digital world, the social media, the technology of real
estate and the world, the sense of economies, large and small, the wonder of
grasping the identification of generations, the erosion of our city by the gold
miners who have always been here taking different shapes and names but always
skimming and scheming and digging and leaving large gaping holes in which they
sometimes make their getaway and leave us wondering what happened?
And as I fall through the mist of tears and joy, as I read old love letters and
cherish all the photos I have taken on all the streets and in the villages and
of the trees and favorite places and people, I hold my hands to my heart in
thankfulness. I will not land. And as I go from place to place on different
levels, there are some places I want you to see both then and now, either or
both, from the world where I have placed them. The Archives.Is this real estate? Nothing could be more of head and heart
than this home called Charlotte, my beginning.
I will start at the one such beginning for me. Matthews Market. In the heart of
Matthews by Renfroe Hardware. The market is where I begin my week that starts
every Saturday morning rain or snow or sleet
and the only thing that keeps me away is severe illness or being out of
the country and even then I am at a market somewhere if only in my heart and
soul. The market is the end and the beginning. The final fruit is brought for
us to nourish our bodies and in this doing, my spirit, our spirits, are
nourished. I firmly believe I am alive today, healthy today from all the
ravages of chemo-therapy, radiation and surgery and resulting side effects of each
by the food raised, planted, grown and tended by these gentle folk.
Two days ago, camera in hand I went to the marketplace. Still amidst the bustle
of Matthews. Still and yet, I can hear voices, the songs of market. Still,
though I can see, the people I know scurrying from vendor to vendor, chat with
the volunteers, see the farm children grow into adults, see the swales of new
and old visitors and when it is finished, the stands and tables and simple
signs and the billowing tents remain and the dirt and gravel grind beneath my
boots and a tall tree stands over all reaching her boughs high and her roots
deep. This is me.
I am the tree and this is what I bring you.
I am the tree and this is what I bring you.
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