Nineteen years ago this month, I arrived in Omaha from small-town Kansas for my freshman year in college. Three colleges, three degrees, and thirteen years of teaching later, I’ve lived in Nebraska longer than anywhere else and longer than I’d imagined.
For the last five years, I’ve lived in midtown Omaha. My quiet street is lined with small homes, 50 – 80 years old, and widely varying in appearance. My house it the tiny gray-blue two-story house (that looks a lot like another gray-blue two-story house in Kansas). My neighbors Bill and Floss across the street, who moved into their house as newlyweds 60 years ago, tell stories of when our street was a graveled dead end. Other neighborhood folk include Bill’s elderly sister, medical students in Omaha for four years, and a good deal of us in our affordable starter homes, earning an education in mortgages and home maintenance.
Nearby are the University of Nebraska—Omaha campus, the nationally recognized University of Nebraska Medical Center, and the Lied Transplant Center. Blocks away are Nebraska originals Runza and Valentino’s, as are Subway, Burger King, and Arby’s. On the same stretch of the busy Center Street are Omaha’s own Gorat’s, Warren Buffet’s favorite steakhouse, and Petrow’s, a local diner.
Home, for me, will always be Kansas. In a south-central Kansas wheat field is a gray-blue former farmhouse. This is the house where my family drove for every summer vacation from our Illinois home until we moved to Kansas when in 1982 when I was 10. This is the house my parents purchased from my grandmother in 1988 when I was 16. This is the home where I returned every summer during college and multiple times every year since. This is the house where annual holiday family gatherings included zwieback, borscht, pluma moos, crullers, and late night conversations with a mom and four adult daughters.
This is the house where my mom grew up in the 1940’s and 1950’s. This is the house where my grandfather was born in 1897 and died in his sleep in 1981. This is
the house my great-grandfather built after immigrating with a large group of other Russian Mennonites of Dutch heritage.
Farther back in memory is suburban Chicago, the place of my childhood, and south Texas, the place beyond my memory but listed on my birth certificate and my passport. Southeastern Illinois and eastern Indiana, the places of my Swiss Mennonite paternal grandparents, lurk somewhere in the depths of my roots.
* * * * * * *
PAPILLION-LA VISTA HIGH SCHOOL
Thirteen years ago in1996, I signed my first teaching contract with Papillion-LaVista High School. I’ve thoroughly enjoyed working with these suburban Omaha students, teaching primarily AP (Advanced Placement) Literature & Composition and Creative Writing courses.
Papillion (pop. 19000) and LaVista (pop. 14000) are two relatively small contiguous suburbs on the southern edge of the Omaha metropolis. The two communities serve as bedroom communities for the many large corporations and businesses of the larger Omaha area, as well as the Offutt Air Force Base on the southern edge of the Omaha area. The northern boundary is just 10 minutes away from the Old Market, UNMC, the Qwest Center, and the Sokol Auditorium. The southern edge of Papillion borders clear rural landscape—vast acres of cornfields, working farms with large barns and tall silos, and even a heard of buffalo.
Papillion’s website advertises itself as offering a “healthy economic climate, lowest crime rate in the state, productive work force”, while LaVista claims to be “one of the fastest growing cities in the State of Nebraska”. In 2009, Papillion was voted number three of the top 10 cities in America in which to live in a poll conducted by Money Magazine and CNN.com. Both suburbs are indeed experiencing a rapid growth of their commercial, industrial, and residential areas.
STUDENT POPULATION
The student population at Papillion-LaVista High school reflects the general population of its two suburbs. Students are largely white and middle class. Less than half of these students have lived in suburban Omaha for more than 10 years, their parents migrating to these suburbs seeking better jobs. As a community closely tied to a nearby US Air Force base, a notable share of students have lived the mobile life of military dependents. The other half have multi-generational ties to the Omaha metro area.
PLACE-CONSCIOUS WORK
My first work with the Nebraska Writing Project in the summer of 2001 included my first Deep Map and some deep-mapping poetry. Since then I’ve created many deep-maps, each exploring a different city, state, or building place that has become part of me.
Since 2005, I’ve been doing a variety of place-conscious work with my students. Ted Kooser’s 2004-06 appointment as US Poet Laureate, and especially his poem “So This is Nebraska”, were the impetus for my students and me to explore our suburban Nebraska place. Even more intriguing have been the last two years and the place inquiry study my students have enacted, thinking about how living in our suburban Nebraska place shapes us—and the possibilities for us to shape our place.
PLACE-CONSCIOUS TEACHING COURSE
My fascination with my own place experience, the place experience of my peers, as well as the impact of place-conscious teaching in my classroom make the possibilities for this course incredibly intriguing.
PLACE-CONSCIOUS POETRY
Below is some poetry I’ve started as a result of thinking about my places. . .
DEEP MAPPING—OMAHA (2004)
I'm not a native Nebraskan.
I'm not a native anything.
Lived in five states, eight cities
Texas, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Illinois, Kansas
Then landed in Omaha
What’s so great about Omaha?
No breathtaking scenery, balmy weather.
I haven’t caught Husker fever.
The muddy Missouri river front
Far cry from forests, beaches, mountains.
Just this fall, after living in my first-owned-house
I found myself telling my mom
In Kansas
I can't leave Omaha.
I like who I've become here
And I don't want to leave.
Omaha has been the healing warmth
Of true friendship
The receptive soil that fed the roots
I planted
Omaha is teaching
Teaching at Papillion LaVista High School.
The walls are home.
Where I spend my days, my evenings, my nights
I've seen all 24 hours here.
Omaha is my PLHS family.
We've bonded through births,
marriages, marital problems, divorces,
infertility, broken bones, chronic illnesses,
automobile accidents,
Deaths.
Omaha is the place of many firsts
First cars, first house, first real-job
First identities
College-student, adult, college graduate, aunt
High-school teacher, college professor
Omaha
The deepest place on the deep map of my life.
PLACE AND STORY
I. The Illinois town
Trees lined every street
With massive trunks and sturdy branches
Some days we'd climb in my backyard
Other days they'd shade our sandbox-play-restaurant
Canopy the expansive parks
Lush green grass
A deep carpet underneath my swing set
Mysterious forests for hiking on field trips
Steady, strong, hovering, protecting
My childhood
Holding magic in what their maze of leaf clumps
Walking tree-lined streets
With my mom and sisters
To the library
Rooms stacking shelves of adventures waiting
Inhaling thick parched paper and ink
Nancy Drew, Hardy Boys, the Boxcar Children
Still today on tree-lined bungalow streets
I see where Nancy and the Hardys lived.
II. The Kansas town
High-up blue summer skies
Beating the blacktop into mushy tar
Spindly trees and small leaves waving feebly from bony fingers.
Brown grass, dry and spiking
Riding my bike in 100 degree heat
To the little public library
Plastic bags of books swinging from the bars
Still stuck with Nancy and the Hardys
Found the one shelf of young adult romance
Shades began falling from my childhood eyes
The bright fluorescent adult world
And my spindling struggles against
The beating sun of clichés and jokes I didn't understand
And the spiking jabs of their drab brown world
Where I didn't want to be
III. But in the Kansas countryside
Soft, yet coarse buffalo grass
Oak trees, leaves twinkling in the searing sun
White-chalky gravel roads and green hedge-clumped rows
The old white farmhouse and the red barn
The shelter belt and the outhouse
The stuff of old summer vacations and
Long-ago bedtime stories of my mom's childhood
And enchanting tales of ancestors
In the country church graveyard
Tall white headstones of
Heroic immigrant grandparents carving new lives
The black headstone of the 1960’s woman shot by her husband
IV. And what is Nebraska?
Omaha is hills that pull my tendons and suck my breath
Hills elevate fading buildings that block sunsets and storm skies
Bluffs and rolling plains
Plus a river
Between Omaha and Lincoln
Stories of far-off sandhills and cornfields
That aren't my Nebraska
A place where I no longer read anything
But student essays
But I'm living stories that are my own
And no one else's
And I'm writing my own
Poem-stories
City lights and excitement
Adult life, opportunity, freedom
Mary – Reading your prose reflections before your poetry helped me, I think, in feeling out the deeper places in the landscape of your poems. Thanks for organizing your entry this way! I was especially taken with the two sections in “Place and Story” that described your trips to the library – it’s fascinating how the places we read about and imagine can be just as real and influential as the places we physically inhabit.
ReplyDeleteMary,
ReplyDeleteMy husband and I are currently looking for a home in midtown Omaha and I am getting more and more jealous as I view the beautiful homes that all of you are posting on your blogs!
James Nedresky, our wedding photographer does nature photography and much of it takes place in Kansas, you should check his work out!
Inherent in your writing is an interesting discussion on two places, Papillion and La-Vista, and how they come together to form one school district. I'd love to hear about how two places get crammed into one and are forced to form their own identity. I'm wondering if the traits/beliefs/traditions of one place dominate another in this place, or if they mix together to form a sort of third place.
ReplyDeleteI look forward to reading your work this semester.
Mary,
ReplyDeleteMy new son-in-law is a Papillion graduate. Does the name Wawrzynkiewicz ring a bell? I am thrilled to see you teach AP. The best things I use in my classes come from ideas that other teachers have shared. I haven't found many purchasable teaching materials that work so successfully I am so excited to have you in the class.
Dear Mary,
ReplyDeleteI didn’t know you had lived in so many places! I like how you described that you cannot really say why you like Omaha, but that you like the person you have become in that place. Thank you for your help in explaining how to get a header (I still need to try it & will let you know how it goes). Thank you for sharing your stories about place. I look forward to learning more about you and from you during this class.
Jennifer Troester
Mary,
ReplyDeleteI was surprised you lived in so many places and that you were born in Texas. I thought that Kansas had been your home all of your life. I love the photos of the farm house in winter and summer because I love how the landscape changes with the weather. What a wonderfully large house! It is one of those houses that you become so psychologically attached to; a good friend of mine left such a house here in Aurora, and she grieved for months! She was so connected to that house where she raised four girls for 18 years. I also appreciate that you discussed both Papillion and LaVista because it seems to me that you are aware of slight differences in your students from both communities. This is just a very wonderful blog.
Hi Mary,
ReplyDeleteYour generous post encouraged me to think more about Nebraska as a collection site of wanderers. I'm not from here, either. I'm a "heartland transplant" originally from northern California. Your post helped me to think more about the notion of "home," and how we anchor our perspectives of new/other places/spaces to this reference point. I liked thinking about this, mostly because I've been trying to make sense of "home" after my mother moved 50 miles away from the town we grew up in and bought a fantastic house. Looking at your post, home can be both a geography and a state of mind, a critical consciousness that encourages us to engage with the geographies around us. Thanks for this post. I look forward to working with you this semester.
Mary,
ReplyDeleteThank you for providing such a wonderfully diverse blog! I tend to feel so connected to my childhood roots that I forget about what places I have been in my life after my childhood was over. You have provided me with so many wonderful perspectives to ponder. I am working with deep maps right now with my students, and they are really enjoying the process! I really look forward to reading more of your writing, thank you for sharing!
Mary,
ReplyDeleteOmaha has been the healing warmth
Of true friendship
The receptive soil that fed the roots
I planted
Omaha is hills that pull my tendons and suck my breath
Hills elevate fading buildings that block sunsets and storm skies
The lines I selected seemed to mirror some of the ambivalence your writing reveals about your love affair with Omaha. You've grown in this place, but at the same time, you sometimes regret that another house and town took the place of your first love, which I take to be, Kansas.
I think life is often like that. We have to change to accommodate our psyche to the new place in order to come to terms with the move. After some time in a place (or relationship, for that matter)we either like the influence the new place has had on us, or we don't. If the dislike of our new self is strong enough, we take steps so that we can revert back to our old self.
It is good to see that you and Omaha made a match. I lived there for four years in the seventies and could not reconcile my needs and feelings to it, so when my husband wanted to move to a small town, I agreed. On another note, I grew up on a farm, and never, never wanted to live on one again.
I enjoyed your vivid descriptions of place in your life.
Mary -
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed the many different facets of your blog posting. The different forms tied together to increase the enjoyment of your poetry. One line that was pithy to me was
We've bonded through births,
marriages, marital problems, divorces,
infertility, broken bones, chronic illnesses,
automobile accidents,
Deaths.
The "deaths" alone on its final line read with a very final tone. I could really feel how each and every one of these individual listings held a lot of weight in your experience in this place. Interesting to note that Omaha is your deepest place on your deep map. I look forward to more of your poetry.
Mary--
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing :) You seem very connected to the school you teach at--this makes me long to have that same type of connection. I'm not sure if where I'm at will be a long-term job, but I can't wait for that job--to lay down roots in a place. I'm looking forward to hearing more from you!
Mary-I'm guessing you live within a few miles of me...from your description I was trying to guess where. We have other connections, too. Although you haven't yet caught Husker fever, your Nebraska roots are deep...maybe deeper than you realize. And yet there are ties to many other places as well, especially to Kansas. I sense you have a lot of tugs between these two places in particular. You mention a childhood full of books...Nancy Drew, the Hardy Boys, the Boxcar Children. I loved the Boxcar Children series! It's interesting to think about the characters in these books and how they influenced and inspired us. Thanks for sharing, and please write more!
ReplyDelete"I like who I've become here/And I don't want to leave." Wow! Those words are so true. I like how you describe Omaha--it's a lot how I feel about it as well. It's like I grew up here even though I was 28 when I moved here.
ReplyDeleteMary:
ReplyDeleteThanks for your blog. I appreciated the way it moved, from current location, to heritage location, to life journey, to vocation, to poetry. I loved that the last section of the last poem is "and what is Nebraska?" Your answer is to name your lived experience (mainly student essays). We should/can ask this question of all our places.
You've really made the "deep map" idea your own, in this blog and in your classroom. I hope we'll get a chance to talk more about deep maps, and the differences between them and other kinds of maps of place, as the course goes on. Of course, I'd have loved to require all of us to read William Least Heat Moon's PRAIRYEYRTH: (a deep map), which I think is about a county in your family's region of Kansas, but at over 800 pages I can only recommend it. You may be beginning similarly rich layering of your own experience with your claimed place(s) here in this region.
~Robert
Hi Mary!
ReplyDeleteIt's so cool to see this blog in connection to your work as a place-conscious educator. Who knew suburbia would be so fascintating?
I really resonated with your description of reading Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew, piled into bags hanging from your handles bars on the way back from the library. Yup, that was me, too. :-)
I haven't caught Husker Fever, either (and I was born here!)
The end of the deep map poem really made me think how cool it would be if we could add "depth" to the deep maps, sinking places lower and lower as they come to mean more to us and shape us. Very cool!
I'm looking forward to getting to know you as a classmate in this virtual classroom as well as a fellow NeWPer!
As I read you blog (and the blogs of others) I realize that my own experience with place is relatively tame. There is a kind of sensitivity that comes with living in other places that I just don't have. You seem to.
ReplyDeleteWe share this place. We know the same places. That is in common.
Mary, you write that you've lived in Nebraska longer than you've imagined. Did you ever imagine living anyplace?
I really like your prose style. A fearless catalogue here.
I look forward to this!
Mary--As we've discussed before, I think you are on the verge of "discovering" interesting and conflicting things about your place in PLV. What happens when there is "rapid growth?" Does everyone get to ride that wave of prosperity? I am looking forward to hearing all about it. The suburbs are clearly more complicated than often discussed.
ReplyDeleteMore soon,
Dan
I've heard many things about the Omaha area, and you certainly touch on many of these wonders as well as providing new insights on this city near the muddy river. Thank you for that. Your sense of place is very strong, and it's wonderful to read here.
ReplyDeleteAlso, this: "Omaha is hills that pull my tendons and suck my breath" will stay with for a long time. So very strong. Thank you!