I would like this writing into a blog post. But I would also like to place some symbolic in the writing. Nice and tidy please. Here is my first time, I pulled one my custom made writing and or journal prompts...Write about remembering an ancestor or being remembered yourself.
Here is my first time pulling one of my custom-made writing and journal prompts:
“Write about remembering an ancestor, or being remembered yourself.”
It’s strange how we recall those who made a dent in history—whether for good or bad. Yes, we all hear about those who made a lot of money, but we don’t hear about those who simply got up and went to work. The so-called blue-collar workers.
I grew up in a blue-collar family. My dad worked on the railroad and was a member of the Teamsters Union. No one reads about Harold Witherell in books. I believe he is mentioned in passing, in one book: Spokane International Railroad. Nor will anyone read how his father, Clarence—my grandfather—abandoned his family. It’s also not mentioned that my other grandfather, Edgar, was a bootlegger back in Minatare, Nebraska.
Sure, I have some known surnames in my past: Munch, Stevens/Stephens, and Shirley.
For the Munch name, a great-grandmother’s maiden name was Munch, and then of course there is the artist EDVARD MUNCH, and even CARDINAL MUNCH
For the Stevens/Stephens line, I have a 3rd-great-grandmother whose maiden name was Stevens/Stephens, just like the writer VIRGINA WOOLF family line.
And last would be the Shirley line. I’m sure some of you have heard of BELLE STARR. My mother’s given name was Myra. She was named after her father’s mother’s middle name: Cynthia Myra. Yes, my grandmother on my mom’s side had the maiden name Shirley.
Part of my reading habit includes journals and diaries. Queen Victoria wrote in her journals from the age of 13 until shortly before she died. One of her daughters later edited them. Her grandfather, King George III, also kept a journal but ordered it destroyed upon his death. The poet Sylvia Plath kept a journal as well. For some reason, her ex-husband Ted Hughes burned her last journal.
I have a fear of my journals being edited or destroyed—pages ripped out because someone might find them controversial. Like my Uncle Ned, who wore colorful clothing.
When walking through a cemetery and coming upon the graves and their markers, I do wonder many things, such as:
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What color was their bedroom?
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What was their favorite food?
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What books did they read?
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How much did it cost to go to a movie when they were alive?
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Were they born in the same town where they are now buried?
Sure, I only listed five, but I could come up with a ton more.
I had Chat Gpt looking into some of the symbol and the mean behind them.
Symbolic Footnotes
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The Train Wheel — represents the laboring ancestor; movement without applause, progress without spotlight.
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The Torn Page — symbolizes deleted histories, burned diaries, and all voices removed because they were inconvenient.
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The Empty Chair at Supper — for the ancestor who walked away, or the one taken too soon; absence shapes memory as much as presence.
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The Candle Passed Hand to Hand — lineage not of blood alone, but of names, stories, quirks, and stubborn truths.
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The Weathered Headstone — marks a body, not a life; the soul lives instead in recipes scribbled, laughter remembered, and handwriting saved in a drawer.
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The Colored Coat — for Uncle Ned and every ancestor who lived against the grain; individuality stitched into family legend.
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The Rusted Key — stands for journals locked, thoughts hidden, stories waiting to be opened with the right generation.
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The Faded Ticket Stub — history’s cost of wonder: the price of the first movie, the first train ride, the first newspaper headline ever read.
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The Grain of Wood on a Workbench — homage to the blue-collar hand; the quiet architect of the ordinary day.
Re "write about remembering an ancestor, or being remembered yourself.”
ReplyDeleteToday I received a long report from a cousin about her grandfather and his siblings, including my grandfather. It went back far further than I knew anything about, but that was fine ... I will print it off and read it slowly and carefully.
Thanks, cous :)
...I grew up in a blue collar home.
ReplyDeleteI have tried unsuccessfully to get my hands on my grandmother's decades of diaries. I can only imagine the treasures hidden in those pages.
ReplyDeleteNo one wrote or writes diaries in my family...my husband was doing the family tree and found lots of letters and old pictures he inherited from his parents who probably got them from their parents...
ReplyDeleteThis is interesting. You have some famous people in your lineage.
ReplyDeleteKeep writing your diary,if only for youself
ReplyDeleteI don't like the idea of journals being destroyed, but I suppose some people don't want certain things about them known even after they're gone.
ReplyDeleteInteresting footnotes
ReplyDeleteI wonder things like that about my great grandparents. I have pictures of them but know nothing about them.
ReplyDeleteI'm lucky that I have writings and old photos of my family on my mom's side. Quite a history for sure. Very nice post.
ReplyDeleteYep, I grew up in a very blue collar home as well.
ReplyDeleteBlue collar home in my background too.
ReplyDeleteI know very little about my ancestors, my mum said once that my dad's family were alcoholics and were what might these days be called "gutter trash" which is worse than "white trash" but my dad wasn't an alcoholic, so maybe mum lied to me. For Mum's family, I know her dad bred rabbits and entered them in shows and won several prizes, but that's all I know.
ReplyDeleteLooking into your ancestors can be quite fascinating
ReplyDeleteAncestry DNA test have made it much easier to find family
I’ve even found a cousin in Pennsylvania one day we hope to meet in person
I tell people I will look for new relatives until I find one I like lol
As a person who's done lots of genealogy research for both sides of my family and my husband's family, I really enjoyed your post. One of the things I enjoyed the most when doing the research was finding newspaper articles about the people because it told a lot about who they were and what they were like. Back in the day, particuarly in small towns the newspaper even told when people came to visit.
ReplyDeleteSandy's Space
I like the images you researched, the rusted key is intriguing. Yesterday I read part of my dad's memoir, it is about 100 pages and he wrote it at age 80. Your family history is interesting, railroad workers, etc.
ReplyDelete