The Bigger My World Gets

By | April 23, 2015

The Bigger My World Gets

In the midst of a busy and tiring day like this one, it’s hard to imagine tranquility. It’s hard to separate myself from all that swirls around me and imagine a simpler day, a simpler time, a simpler place. Someday these kinds of busy days will be far behind me and I’ll have only the vaguest memories of them. And when that someday comes, I’ll yearn for the time when my days were full and busy and the swirling retinue of having so many things to do would be a welcome and much appreciated reprise. There’s a constant yearning within me – for what I used to be, for what I might have been, for what I still might be. My world has grown so big and complex and it hard sometimes not to yearn for the small and uncomplicated world I knew as a child.

When I was a child my world was small and uncomplicated; my dreams were unfettered by the restrictions of what is possible, untainted by reality: the dreams of a child are pure. When I was a child I had dreams of becoming a professional baseball player, a TV weatherman, a rock star, a movie star, a writer, a fireman who race to fires in a white fire truck, a lone sailor sailing a vast but placid sea, discovering uncharted islands, an astronaut landing on a distant planet, and so many other things.

The bigger my world gets, the smaller my dreams become.

When I was a child I longed to be grown-up so I could do all manner of grown-up things. And now that I’ve grown-up, I long to be a child again so I can do childish things. When I was a child I my world was small. My parents were the sun and the moon of my tiny solar system – and the galaxy was the town in which I grew up. Going somewhere, anywhere, was an adventure – even if it was just going to Keller drugs with my grandfather to look at the comic books. They were mixed in with my Grandfather’s favorite “True Detective”, as well as “Time”, “Newsweek”, “People” and others – magazines in which I, as a child, had not the slightest interest. To venture out of the my house, out of my little solar system and venture into town was was an exploration of the galaxy. Looking at comic books while my grandfather browsed though magazines – in old drug store that no longer exists. The older I get, the farther back in time I look.

I can remember the first time my grandfather took me a Cleveland Indians baseball game; it was back in the time when the Indians played in the old Municipal Stadium. It seemed to me than that the trip to Cleveland – about 60 miles – was a journey of unimaginable distance and time. I left my little solar system and my galaxy behind and ventured into strange and unknown parts of a vast universe. It was only Cleveland, but to me it may as well have been Alpha Centauri. When we finally arrived at the stadium, everything was so exciting, so big and so new. The vastness of the baseball stadium amazed me. When I looked down from our seats high in the stands and saw a real major-league baseball diamond for the first time, I marveled at how green the grass was. I remember thinking that even the sky was bluer and the grass greener than it ever was back in my little world. Everything was bigger and more exciting in this universe – everything was new and different.

Now the grass looks the same color wherever I go; the sky is the same old blue in Boston as it is in Chicago. The clouds are as gray and gloomy in Dallas as they are in Columbus – rain is rain and snow is snow. I miss seeing the world through the eyes of a child.

When I was a child and the grass on that baseball field was greener than any grass I had ever seen; all I wanted to do was hurry and grow up and be a baseball player and play on that beautiful grass, under that surrealistically blue sky – and drink in the roar of the crowd when I blasted yet another game-winning homer into the left-field bleachers. It was easy when I lived in such a small world to dream big dreams. When I was a child in a small world, there was an entire universe of possibilities – and the boundaries of reality didn’t exist.

The bigger my world gets, the smaller my dreams become.

The older I get the fewer opportunities await me. The older I get the less universe there is left to explore. The more complex my life is, the simpler and smaller my dreams become. I think how ironic that if I live long enough my world will start shrinking again. If I live long enough my world my well be a room in a nursing home, or in a small apartment, and venturing will be is too difficult and painful. I’ll be back living in a small word again – and when some kind person takes me out to get a few groceries, it may well be, once again, like exploring a different world. But I doubt it. I’ll have a life’s worth of memories and my dreams will be limited by the knowledge and experiences of a lifetime. The innocence of a child will have all been drained from me, and though my world may indeed become as small as that of a child, it will be a very different world. And it occurs to me that no matter how long I live and how small my world gets, I will never again dream the unbounded dreams of a child.

Today, I find myself wishing for the days when the waterwheel on Cold Creek turned slowly ’round and ’round; and the splashing of the water it churned provided the perfect background for me — teenage boy who aspired to be a writer. The grass along the pregnant banks was green and the spring breeze was young and fresh. And if the breeze was just right, I might feel a refreshing bit of spray from the waterwheel waking me from my teenage dreams. Sitting alone next to that waterwheel was an escape from a too-rapidly expanding world. Just for a few moments I could live another life, in another time. Looking back I can see myself as a teenage boy trying hard to hold on to a childhood that was too quickly fading away. But I yearned to be a grown-up so I could do grown-up things – without even knowing, really, what those grown-up things were.

I have too much to do – and the time to reflect is over; the world that I’ve created is calling. My dreams are so much smaller than the dreams I had as as a child – the world is much bigger now. Though I had a hand in creating the world in which I live, I sometimes feel like a stranger in it. I sometimes feel that somehow I’ve wandered too far from the person I might have been. I wish I could find a little of the child inside.

I have so much to do, yet I can’t help wishing I could return just once more to that slowly spinning waterwheel and that sleepy little stream. But that world is long gone; they dismantled that waterwheel a long time ago. They ripped it apart and burnt it, and ravaged those beautiful green banks along the stream and and turned it into a parking lot for a country store. The country store is now out of business, and sits empty next to a parking lot that no one uses. I can’t go back because there’s nothing there.

The bigger my world gets, the smaller my dreams become. And I have a feeling that it’s not just that way for me – I have a feeling it is that way for everyone.

5 thoughts on “The Bigger My World Gets

  1. June

    Thanks for yet another ‘going back’ story. Your Grandfather will be very proud of you and the good memories he created for you to remember.
    Getting into our “Golden Years” some days seem more ‘tarnished’ than golden and to be able to go back to your “Grandfather’s days” memories he left you, will never be tarnished and that’s why the memories we created back in our childhood days, teenage days, gives us the push to go into our next day.Have you ever wondered if we didn’t have those happy “grandfather days’ to go back to how could we ‘slip’ into the next day because we lost those dreams along the way?
    Always keep those memories alive..They will see you thru not only to your next day but as long as your memories stay on top. God bless…..

    Reply
    1. Ramona

      Thanks for another great essay. I believe you’re absolutely right when you say, that you have a feeling it is that way for everyone. I know it is for me.
      God Bless.

      Reply
  2. Wendy

    I too have special memories of my childhood days. In the small town we lived in, I wrote of my Grandfather recently. I also remember lying dreaming away in some extra long green grass at the to of our property. I had absolutely no worries or fears to cloud my mind. Mys sister and I also climbed an apple tree in the garden to spend time picking apples and eating them at once. Our garden was enormous and my father a farmer at heart. We had every vegetable growing that you could imagine and fruit trees in abundance. Chickens pecked away in the fowl run and obediently produced eggs for us to eat and for my mother to bake with. Those memories are so precious although I didn’t appreciate what I had then.

    Reply
  3. Ramona

    Thanks for another great essay. I believe you’re absolutely right when you say, that you have a feeling it is that way for everyone. I know it is for me.
    God Bless.

    Reply
  4. Carolyn

    “There’s a constant yearning within me……… for what I might have been” I think we all do that at one point or another and wonder why we never fulfilled some of those dreams. I was sitting in the livingroom the other day with my daughter and mused, aloud, that I was confused as to what I’d just accomplished in my life aside from those childhood dreams that never blossomed. Was I a ‘failure’ in not applying myself enough to make some of those come true? She gasped and told me that I’d done so much for her, her sister, and so many others and that, although I’d not done other things in my dreams, I had been destined to do so much in a different way. The next day a young woman approached me in the gas station market. “Aren’t you Carol?” she asked. I said I was and she said, “I thought so. You were the property manager that helped me into my very first home away from home. You can never imagine how much that meant to me and how it was a step up into my adult life. You were so encouraging about my future education that I went back to school. Thank you!” And here you are “for what I might have been” and see what you’ve become; a caring soul who helps so many with their computer frustrations. It might not seem like much to you but, to us, it’s a life-saver from having a nervous breakdown. Thankfully for us your path took you to a fork in the road that led you to us. God bless you both!

    Reply

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