We would always stay in a boardinghouse. Everyone shared a refrigerator and a cupboard. There was usually an argument going on about a missing can of soup or a grapefruit. Everyone knew what everyone was eating, and when they had a fight with their husband or wife, we could hear their discussions right through the walls. We shared bathrooms and showers, and privacy was left behind in our winter residences.

  The owner of the boardinghouse was the boss, and we listened. If she locked the front and back doors after midnight and we arrived late, we had to knock. If any of us missed curfew, we had to stand for a very long time until the door opened, accompanied by a long lecture. But none of us minded the restrictions, for once the day began, we were barefoot and free, running the beaches as far as we dared. It was difficult to explain to anyone who had not experienced shore living: why we had to be there, why we had to abandon shoes and schedules and dive into sandy beds and eat sandwiches that never tasted better, even with sand scattered throughout them.

  We would do without much in the winter to be able to afford a few sweet days of ecstasy in the summer as we sat on porches rocking, trading stories, while love was everywhere, just waiting for discovery. As a teenager, I felt it as soon as my feet touched the beach. Romance was in each grain of sand: no matter how young or old; if new or in the memory; holding hands or each other. Love thrived by the sea.

  Years later, I, too, would rent a room in a summer boardinghouse as my mother did. I had two young children, a commuting husband, and a big house waiting for me at home. But once summer beckoned, nothing could stop me. I fled to the New Jersey shore. For only there I captured what I had lost during the winter. Only there could my soul burst free.

  I now live year-round in a house four blocks from the ocean in New Jersey. I know that every morning if I walk up to the boardwalk, the ocean will not disappoint me and disappear. I can count on its existence, its loyalty, and its commitment. And just as I knew in the boardinghouse years ago, I know the shore will always be an essential part of my life. The love affair continues.

  I confess. I shall not love like this again.

  Harriet May Savitz

  The Sounds of the Sea

  Today the ocean roars, bursts upon the old stone jetties uncovered by the relentless waves, and pounds the sand with an exhilarating force. Seagulls swoop down with raucous cries, squabbling over the breakfast delivered up by the tide.

  Tomorrow the sea may be calm, splashing softly upon the shoreline and receding with a gentle whisper over the sand and pebbles. The gulls may let out an occasional squawk as they slowly circle, looking like a gray and white mobile in a languorous breeze.

  I am blessed to live near the beach and to get my daily exercise. I enjoy walking on the boardwalk. The sounds of the sea are rhythmic and soothing, so I’ve developed the habit of listening as well as looking while I walk.

  I puff along, arms swinging, boards trembling beneath my feet, or occasionally stepping down and strolling close to the water’s edge, where lapping waves pack the sand firm enough for a steady pace. Walking alongside the ocean is a delight offering an ever-changing vista and the comforting sounds of the sea.

  This has helped me to realize that so often I don’t think of listening in the same way as I think of using my other senses, and maybe this is true of most of us. At the beach we see the water, sparkling with sunny sprinkles or glittering with a silvery path of moonlight. We can smell the salt water and fishy scent of the ocean and feel on our skin the breeze ruffling the current washing in toward the shore. And if we can close out the everyday noises so often surrounding us, we can hear in the watery to and fro of the tides the music of the sea.

  The sounds are all part of the enjoyment of walking, so there are no earphones for me. I listen to tapes, CDs, and the radio at home and inmy car. While strolling I prefer the sounds of nature and the sounds of the world around me.

  Today the sea roared; tomorrow it may whisper. I’ll be walking, and I’ll be listening.

  Carolyn Mott Ford

  The Penny Jar

  May you live all the days of your life.

  Irish blessing, also attributed to Jonathan Swift

  For us, it was a treasure chest. The large glass jar sat in the corner of our bedroom, waiting for the next time we would scoop out handfuls of pennies to purchase our picnic for the beach.

  “I think I have enough,” David said as he put the last few coins in the wrapper.

  “I’m ready if you are,” I called back as I grabbed the beach towels and headed for the car.

  A bucket of fried chicken with all the trimmings was our weekly feast at the nearby Siesta Key beach. We looked forward to watching the amazing sunset that filled the sky with vivid splashes of color as if an artist had dipped his brush in his palette and streaked it across the horizon.

  This was a place of comfort and encouragement for us, as well as a place of beauty. It had been several months since David had lost his job with no prospects in sight. Life began to seem futile as our finances slowly drained away. Yet our weekly vigil at the beach always seemed to restore a sense of hope as we marveled at God’s creation before us. This week was no different than those before— no response to the hundreds of resumes mailed out and the constant rejection of “you’re overqualified” from the local newspaper ads. Yet knowing that God controlled the ebb and flow of the tides gave us confidence that everything in our lives was under his control as well.

  Throwing the last chicken bone in the air for the swooping seagulls, we strolled toward the ocean’s edge. Walking hand in hand, the tranquility of the lapping water swirling around our toes began the process of healing our spirits. A gentle breeze caressed our faces as the sun began its dip into the sea.

  “Where else could you possibly want to be?” David whispered, wrapping his arms around me as we stopped to watch the sun’s descent. “If we didn’t even have a penny to our name, we have all the riches one could hope for right here—you and me, the sunset and the sea.”

  Karen R. Kilby

  It’s a Fine Day at the Beach

  Living five miles from the Jersey Shore affords us the pleasure of sitting on the boardwalk a few days a week. My husband and I find ourselves a bench with a wonderful view of the clear sky and rolling waves kissing the shore. I am softly humming to one of the 921 songs on my iPod while my husband is staring into oblivion, imagining he hit the Lotto. If he ever won he told me he wouldn’t let me know because I would give too much away to family and friends. He would still pretend to go to work so that I wouldn’t catch on that we were rich. He forgets that I know the numbers he’s been playing for the past thirty-odd years. But this is his time to relax. So I let him have his little fantasy.

  Then it begins. Here they come. What are they thinking? They jog. They speed walk. They bike ride. They disrupt our peace. I decide we need to take matters into our own hands. Someone has to do something. I appoint us the JSWWYTP, which stands for Jersey Shore What Were You Thinking Police. We give out imaginary fines to those who haven’t a clue as to how ridiculous they look.

  We start with the jogger who looks like he will pass away any minute from exhaustion. Not only are his shorts stuck to him with sweat, they have slits up the sides showing more than we need to know. He’s guaranteed a fine each day until he just vaporizes into outer space. Not far behind the jogger is the speed walker. She stands so straight, with her shoulders pinned back, that we can’t tell if she is coming or going. She gets a double fine because we don’t have time to guess her direction. Now we hear the next victim. He’s carrying his portable CD player with headphones plugged in, singing at the top of his lungs to some rap song. He—and most eardrums will agree—gets a fine for noise pollution and bad taste in music.

  We try to be patient and fair. But some people just don’t get it. We watch as the lone couple on the beach is surrounded by all the other beachgoers. These drones search the sand, and the only place they feel comfortable is next to or in front of this couple. No oth
er place on these miles of beach suits them. They all get the “I’m afraid to be alone” fine. Then, parading in front of us is a rather obese middle-aged man wearing a bathing suit, what we can see of it anyway, that didn’t fit him back in the 1980s when he bought it. He gets the book thrown at him.

  Just when we think we’ve had enough for the day, we see the little kids carrying their pails or dragging a wagon full of toys onto the beach. Their bodies are so small, you wonder how it all fits in them: heart, bones, muscles, and brains. Their only mission today is to have fun. They don’t care who’s singing off-key or walking backwards. It’s sunny out and it’s time to play.

  So my husband and I put away our imaginary ticket book and focus on those who have it right, at least for the next twenty years. Then, I’m sorry to say, some of them will pass our way and have to be fined for becoming an adult who, like the others before them, just don’t get it.

  Maryann Pasqualone

  “I took my work to the beach for the day!”

  Reprinted by permission of Stephanie Piro. © 2005 Stephanie Piro.

  Capturing the Sunlight

  Healing does not mean going back to the way things were before, but rather allowing us to move closer to God.

  Ram Dass

  Sunlight streamed through the sliding glass doors that overlook the ocean in the distance and the swimming pool immediately below. From the small kitchen island, where I mechanically soaped down a pan from breakfast, I looked beyond the living room of the fourth-floor condo we had rented for Labor Day and gazed at the seamless brilliance of blue sky and ocean. Sunlight! That’s what I needed to banish the dark clouds clinging to my heart.

  Crossing the width of the living area, I slid open the door to the balcony. Laughter from the pool below fanned refreshingly into the tired, aching places of my soul.

  I was physically exhausted and emotionally drained. Earlier in the summer, what was to have been a happy family reunion and holiday with our budding teenage girls and my parents in California had turned into a time of unexpected mourning. The glitter of our anticipated Hollywood vacation had been clouded by the sudden death of my father a week before our planned departure. Instead of celebration, I spent two months with my mother sifting through my father’s things and bringing her home to Florida to help her heal and mourn her loss.

  Now it was my turn. After pouring myself into my mother’s grief and loneliness, I needed my own time to heal. And so we had come to the beach, where I was free to let my mind wander through familiar and forgotten places and reach into the longings of the past to try to draw out nectar for the future.

  Suddenly the door burst open, and two wet girls with silver braces shining from their teeth stood before me, their bodies wrapped in beach towels.

  “Mommy, can we go down to the beach?”

  “We’re all going down in a little while,” I said, struggling to let go of my melancholy meanderings.

  “But we wanna go now!” Julie pleaded.

  “Why can’t you wait a little? Aren’t you enjoying the pool?”

  The girls grinned sheepishly at each other.

  “We’d really like to go now. Can’t we, Mommy?” Laura dutifully echoed her older sister.

  My attention snapped to the present. “Why? Are there some cute boys down there or something?”

  Their grins broadened.

  “Well, let me get my bathing suit on.”

  They squirmed in agitation, bouncing from their knees up. “That’ll take too lo-ong!”

  “Okay,” I conceded. “You can go down to the beach, but don’t go past the condo and don’t go in the water till Daddy and I get there.”

  In a flash, the wet drips on the carpet were abandoned. The door slammed, and I heard wet, pattering feet running down the hall.

  That afternoon as my husband and I sat under our umbrella on the beach, we watched two girls tiptoeing into their early teens as they strutted through white sand in new bathing suits. Giggling and posing in self-conscious innocence, they periodically dropped down on the blanket beneath our umbrella to report on the triumphs of the day.

  “What a pair,” Marv said as we watched them saunter down toward the ocean once again.

  The tape in my mind did a quick rewind, and I saw myself at thirteen strolling along a Southern California beach in a yellow two-piece. At a distance my father raised his camera, eyes twinkling and face beaming. The camera clicked.

  “Those are two beautiful girls,” my husband observed, laying his camera on the beach towel.

  Two boys approached our daughters in the water. Demure smiles brightened. The blond boy took the lead, talking, gesturing. They were laughing. Proudly, Laura glanced our way and smiled. I smiled back and waved, but she pretended not to see.

  I chuckled. Heavy layers of fatigue and sorrow began to peel away under the warmth of a bright summer sun and sweet sense of today. “Our little girls are growing up,” I said.

  Marv nodded and pulled me close as the tableau unfolded at the water’s edge.

  Together we watched yesterday evaporate into today while today danced in the sunlight and flowering of a new generation. Our daughters’ dreams were for tomorrow. Ours curled around us in the present and unfolded one by one, waiting to be captured and held close in this singular moment of time.

  “This has been a great day,” Marv said. “Let’s come back here again sometime.”

  But I wasn’t sure we ever could.

  Linda W. Rooks

  Ebb and Flow

  “Why is this happening to me?” I shouted to the wind. Standing ankle-deep at the Pacific Ocean’s edge, I wanted to scream—but no one would hear me. I was alone.

  I’d just divorced after a seventeen-year marriage. On top of that, I moved from a midwestern state all the way to Southern California. Back there, I lived on the shores of Lake Michigan. The water was always on my right. Here, the water was on my left. Everything seemed backward, including my life.

  I thought I’d still be married. Happily ever after, right? Instead, I was building a brand-new life in a brand-new state. It felt wrong, and yet so right.

  I looked up at the clouds overhead. They were white, filled with promise.

  I heard the seagulls squawking as they swooped around the cliffs behind me.

  I gazed out to sea. It stretched out endlessly, seemingly beyond eternity. The water shimmered when the sun peeked out from behind the clouds.

  But it was the waves, the constant and ever-flowing waves that calmed me, soothed me, and sent a message deep into my soul.

  Life was all about ebb and flow. Some things come to you; some things are taken away. But then more things come to you . . . and more and more and more. It never stops. Life goes on.

  A couple of years later I found myself sitting astride a low cement wall gazing out at that same Pacific Ocean. Only this time I wasn’t alone.

  “Here you go,” a handsome man said. “One order of fish and chips with an ocean view.”

  “Thanks,” I replied and placed the warm paper basket on my lap. The fish was delicious, but it was whom I was with that was even more thrilling.

  “I have something to ask you,” he said. Then he put the remainder of our lunches aside. Kneeling in the sand, he took my hands. “Would you marry me? I know I have a lot of baggage, and I know . . .”

  “Shhhh,” I whispered. “Yes, I’ll marry you.”

  As we rose to our feet to embrace, I was facing the ocean. The waves were cresting and reaching for shore. The sun was bright and high in the sky. The air was warm as a gentle breeze caressed my bare shoulders.

  Ebb and flow, life goes on, sometimes even sweeter than before.

  B. J. Taylor

  5

  SPECIAL

  MEMORIES

  Memory is a child walking along the seashore. You can never tell what small pebble it will pick up and store away among its treasured things.

  Pierce Harris

  Yesterday’s Future

  Fun i
n the sun in Ortley Beach, New Jersey, had been a summer tradition for my family and many of my friends’ families for years. Everyone would rent a bungalow within walking distance of the beach for two weeks or so. Sometimes the vacations would overlap and we kids lucked out. I remember stretching one vacation for almost the whole summer by staying at someone else’s house. Oh, not just me, but the whole group of us.

  The group would meander to the beach around 10:30 AM and stay until 4:00 PM—eventually everyone would make an appearance. Every day our group gathered to enjoy one another’s company like long-lost friends who had not seen each other in years.

  In those days no one questioned kids around the age of twelve going to the beach by themselves, for as I recall, we knew our limitations and never thought of challenging them. We were more interested in just getting together, sporting a suntan, meeting boys, and dreaming about dating the lifeguards.

  We would bring sandwiches, snacks, and Thermoses filled with iced drinks—literally ready to camp out for the day. Some days we would splurge and buy a hot dog, cold soda, and the best lemon-ice cup at the refreshment stand.

  Our days were routine: sunbathing on colorful beach towels and blankets while listening to and singing along with songs from the Hit Parade on the portable radio, playing volleyball, building sand castles, and collecting seashells for craft projects.

  On those occasional sweltering days, we would speed across the hot sand down to the water’s edge and splish and splash in the cool ocean waves. This, however, was a secret ploy to get a closer look at the “men” on duty, bound to protect us poor “helpless” women, ages twelve and thirteen. Besides, it was refreshing and we were at the beach!