Life Beside the Bayou

Greetings from Bossier City, Louisiana, where the temperatures still rise into the nineties during the day and rain has fallen exactly one-half time since I arrived.  It’s my first excursion west of the mighty Mississippi.  I’m on central time now!  I’ll be here for another few weeks… and to think I have to leave is difficult.  To think I haven’t always lived here seems absurd.

I made my way inside the huge iron gate and found the castle charming, gracious, down-to-earth.  Living here is as easy as sitting on a porch swing, talking coyly with a southern accent, watching out for kids throwing footballs, saying “hey” to your neighbor, and talking for an hour about how much you looooove so-and-so’s something-or-other.  This is the ultimate small southern town.  Sit a while.

A bayou drifts through my backyard, creating a barrier of peace to protect the castle from traffic’s rumble.  Cypress and willow trees rise out of the still water… white birds poke their toes delicately as they look for edible things there. Beyond the this grove, a few active farms are nothing but flat dirt right now, lowering the horizon so at sunset the sky has more colors than your colored pencil box.

What a beautiful place to be.  What a beautiful place to stay, to think, to live and grow, and to explore. I already love it here, and it’s a corner of the world I never would have discovered without traveling like this.  Hello, Bossier City and Shreveport, and Barksdale Air Force Base with all your green uniforms!  I look forward to gettin’ to know ya.

~The Dauntless Princess~

Mountain Retreat

After I returned home from Canada, I yearned for solitude and retreat… Quiet forest, lit candles, breathtaking views. Googling “cabin in the mountains” gave me a snug hidey-hole in Rabun County, Georgia. After a few moments’ thought, I couldn’t see any reason not to go for it. 

I bought a huge amount of books from thrift stores: Freakonomics, Christy. I checked out even more books from the library: Isabel Dalhousie novels by Alexander McCall Smith, young adult novels, and dreamy romances. This was the focus of the week: reading, reading, and more reading. 

But there were also candles. Giant pillar candles discount from Marshalls in soothing neutral colors. Others were relics from Gainesville, candles I dragged out of storage. 

   
 I was a bit apprehensive about the cabin itself, since I’d never been there before. I’d only seen pictures of it on the Internet. What if it didn’t exist? 

But as I drove up Screamer Mountain through the hurricane weather, more and more excited each time my ears popped, I came around the scariest bend in the road yet to find the cabin beautifully nestled right there. It looked so tiny and rustic I couldn’t help but smile.

Once inside, I set up my few belongings in a flash and took a long bath. Then I didn’t go anywhere for forty-eight hours. I sat on the back porch with my bathrobe and coffee. The rain fell tremendously, unbelievably. And it was so peaceful. It was perfect and just what I had looked forward to.

   

   
  
 

 
Even as my next trip to Louisiana loomed in the near future, the mountain served as a temporary sanctuary. Someday, maybe, I’ll make the long drive up the mountain again.

-The Dauntless Princess-

Small-Town Swing Dancing

My parents’ hometown of Toccoa, Georgia is small… Very, very small. My parents and grandparents live there. And even
not counting them, there are some interesting characters in town. My dad attracts all of them and makes friends with them. One such friend is named Greg Austin. One day long ago when I was twelve, my dad and I made a surprise visit to his house. 
I was feeling shy that day, probably because pre-puberty wasn’t treating me well. With my long stringy hair, teeth not yet straight, and hand-me-down baggy t-shirt, I was every inch the socially awkward homeschooler. But when I walked into the Austins’ house that day… things changed. 

Mr. Austin is very tall with a mustache and a mop of grey hair. He welcomed us in by shouting “everyone put clothes on!” which drew laughter from the far parts of the house. I went in the living room and found a teenage boy sitting on the sofa with his button-down Hawaiian shirt open, strumming a guitar and singing. When he saw me, he remarked, “Oh! A young lady,” and dropped his guitar to button the shirt over his chest. I giggled. Being recognized as a lady, however young and androgynous I looked at twelve, made me feel like a princess.

Fast forward to the present day. I’m twenty-six and visiting my parents’ hometown on vacation… And my father was hosting a dance! Within the first five minutes I saw Mr. Austin’s grey mop bouncing toward me and greeted him. Of course, he’s a sanguine sort that meets many people and forgets most of them immediately, so I had to explain again who I was. By the time he had it figured it out, a cheerful young man in an Air Force uniform was leaning over his shoulder. “My son,” Mr. Austin explained, “Josiah.” Josiah winked at me and suddenly I remembered the boy buttoning up his shirt so long ago. I smiled back at him. “Will you be needing a dance partner?” Josiah asked boldly. “I’ll make sure there’s someone available.”

“Yes, I’d love that!” I said at once, forgetting I didn’t know how to dance. 

“Done!” Josiah said, grinning.

My dad doesn’t know how to dance. “Watch out for that Austin boy,” he said, ignoring the fact that Josiah is now thirty-two. “He’s full of beans. He was jitterbugging with what’s-his-name’s daughter a few minutes ago.” 

I mingled a while longer and then Josiah was back, sweating profusely and offering me his arm. “So I forgot to tell you. I don’t know how to dance,” I said, laughing.

“It’s okay!” He responded, wiping his forehead. “I was an entertainer and taught ballroom dance for years before I joined the Air Force.” And sure enough, he took my waist with confidence (I flashed back to Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire: “Take my waist, Harry”) and led out. 

Dancing, especially with a partner, is not one of those things you can overthink in life. If I tried to think, to figure it out, I froze up and we started to trip. If I let myself do what he already knew how to do so well, I started to pick up the steps a little. And then it was easy to enjoy the dance, the moment, the hurricane weather outside and this wonderful life.

Most guys don’t take the initiative to learn to dance. Even fewer feel confident asking a lady they don’t know onto the floor. I think Josiah and his kind should be at every dance, getting out on the floor and taking ladies with them, even and especially ladies who never learned and don’t usually. 

Princes, take note: learn to dance and take some chances. You won’t be sorry.

  
-The Dauntless Princess-

Au Revoir, Ottawa: Rodger’s Afterword 

After I showed him my last journal entry, Rodger scorned the reading and said it was all quite ridiculous and unrealistic. He insisted I add this afterword to tell his side of the story.

First, he said, Ottawa was not very friendly toward snails. When most people saw him for the first time, they said, “What is that?” As if they’d never seen an ambassador from the kingdom of gastropods. For all Canadians are famously polite, he thought they could have shown him more courtesy. Princess Stacie and he developed a special animosity when she didn’t appreciate one of his puns.

Second, he wished me to point out that while everyone in Ottawa is very polite to one another, when they get in a car they drive like morons. He was forced to take the bus most of the time to avoid accidents merging on the freeway since no one would let him over. I pointed out he was slow at merging at the best of times, but “slow” is a touchy subject with him and set him off worse than ever.

Third, he was depressed that most shops only accepted Visa and MasterCard. He asked how on earth he was supposed to win rewards points toward the pro-fungal creme he’s been eyeing on the website? Same with Bing rewards, which pay roughly $5 a month. “Not offered in your country”… Pandora didn’t work either. And then he gave a long rant about Google Canada which, unfortunately, did involve a lot of profanity. 

And as icing on the cake, Princess Madison asked him whether or not snails are really ticklish and then fell asleep during his explanation, so he took to his shell when he saw her coming after that.

When he went back to admiring the view of our jet, I considered that he had some good points… But it still wasn’t enough to spoil the nostalgia for me. 

I had coffee. 

My flight was boarding on time. 

I’d see my family tonight and the Dark Knight awaited me this holiday. 

Forget his complaints. I was happy enough to afford my Canadian experience some nostalgia. 

-The Dauntless Princess-

(And Rodger)