Monday, September 8, 2025

ECHOES OF DISTANT SUMMERS

   Note:

I re-post this at the end of every summer.
Why?
Because I like it.   Jon



 Dwelling continuously in the past is for idle dreamers. Occasionally visiting the past can be nourishment for a hungry soul.

 

There are times when I can close my eyes and make the distance of years melt away......

..... and suddenly I'm on the beach again, young and exuberant, immersed in the drowsy haze of a summer afternoon where the silver glare of sky and water mingle as one, where the soft sand burns my bare feet, and the salty scent of the ocean intoxicates my senses. The soothing, eternal roar of the waves seem to echo like the song of a shell pressed against my ear.

 I cherish those summers of distant memories, because now - - in the present purgatory of a different time and place, in the subtle shadows of my rapidly dwindling existence - - I fully appreciate their value. 

Memories often tend to assume halcyon proportions and our distant pasts sometimes seem better than they really were. Careful scrutiny of my past, however, confirms the fact that it did indeed harbor the best times of my life.

There is a fierce pang of sadness wedged in the heart of my memories, because what I miss most is the innocence and the optimism - - two precious things that I will never have again.




I was fortunate enough to have divided my youthful summers between the west coast and the east coast. 

I lived in Southern California which, in my biased opinion, was the greatest place on earth. I also spent summers on the east coast, the Jersey shore, where most of my relatives were. I was particularly partial to the Pacific Ocean, because it was my territory - - but the Atlantic had its own mesmeric powers. The Pacific - always blue, placid, inviting. The Atlantic - greenish gray, remote, moody.

 West Coast

In California, in Orange County, we lived less than five miles from the beach and it was an integral part of my life. I was well-acquainted with all the beach communities up the coast:
Laguna, Newport, Huntington, Bolsa Chica, Sunset, Seal Beach. 
(Seal Beach was my secret favorite).

Huntington Beach was the closest. Sometimes I'd ride my bike there. Occasionally I'd hitch a ride. All the kids hitched on Beach Boulevard and Pacific Coast Highway.....long ago when things seemed safe.


 The Huntington Beach Pier

Long, hot summer days languishing in the sand at Huntington, absorbing the perpetual sunshine. Eating corn dogs & "strips" (fried tortilla strips with a mild hot sauce). Drinking Cactus Coolers (an orange-pineapple soft drink that I think still exists). Always swimming. Sometimes surfing. Enduring sunburns and jellyfish stings. 
Collecting shells. Sand Dollars were always the greatest treasures.



Midnight bonfiresmoonlit walks on the beach when the Grunion were running. Haunting the deserted pier at Seal Beach after midnight. Sailing with friends at Newport Beach on languid, carefree afternoons. Visiting Balboa Island and Catalina Island.

Later, when I had wheels, I'd drive to the beach or go with friends. Day or night, it was my most sacred refuge. 


Sudden flashback:
Driving with my best friend Mike in his red convertible Mustang along Pacific Coast Highway at sunset on the 4th of July. Stereo blaring, the evening alive with magic. Dazzling explosions of fireworks igniting every mile of the shore. The air warm and salty, heavy with the pungent sulfuric smell of  smoke.

  Years later I was best man at Mike's wedding. Marriage inevitably has a way of severing friendships and expunging the exuberance of youth. We lost contact long ago. The carefree days linger like taunting ghosts at the edge of our memories....


The Jersey Shore

East Coast

The east coast was always a blessed escape from unrelenting family problems and my father's insane violence.

I loved the colorful, comforting chaos of being alone in New York City: walking barefooted in Central Park, discovering museums, visiting Lincoln Center. Getting drunk in a sleazy Staten Island bar with my cousin Nancy and her husband Jim. Drinking was a new novelty to me then ( Nancy wasn't fond of drinking, but Jim and I got smashed).

Now, Nancy is a widow.......Jim is gone.......

Horseback riding with my cousin Nancy on early August evenings in the balmy New Jersey countryside. Boating along the Jersey coast and into New York Harbor (several of my relatives had boats). Watching the moon rise from the water in a sultry surrealistic haze. Long walks on the beach at Sandy Hook. Exploring the boardwalks at Asbury Park and Seaside Heights.


Asbury Park, New Jersey
 

Our once-large family has now dwindled drasticallyThe relatives are all deceased, except for my cousins. Friends have vanished. And lovers. All those whom I truly cherished only remain in faded ghost memories, where distant voices still echo with warmth and laughter......

....and those golden summers linger tenderly in the recesses of my mind:  carefree times when the invincibility of youth deceived us into believing that life is eternal - -

- - where distant memories echo like the taunting pulse of a delicate whisper in a seashell pressed to my ear.

Jon V.        2018






7 comments:

  1. Jon, this was a poignant look back at your much happier youthful days spent with friends and your cousin. While I am a NJ native, I didn’t grow up anywhere near the Jersey shore but in my adult years visited several beaches, including Sandy Hook. The Asbury Park pavilion is an amazing piece of architecture to this day. Thanks again for sharing your happier memories.

    ReplyDelete
  2. BTW what is your current room number?

    ReplyDelete
  3. I enjoyed this visit to your past, Jon. There are some wonderful memories.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Wonderful memories, all vistas are spectacular, you are fortunate to have lived in so many spectacular places.
    Jo

    ReplyDelete
  5. You forgot to mention the frozen bananas on a stick dipped in chocolate and sprinkled with peanuts we all enjoyed at the beach in OC ! Sugar ’n Spice on Balboa isle invented them :)
    I can relate to your bicoastal life as my maternal grandfather was bicoastal having homes in Newark and Hollywood. So true how we lose contact with friends and even relatives.
    I look at your pix of the beach and the music of the times come to mind. The music of the 50’s, 60’s and 70’s hit a nerve for me and bring back many good and a few bad memories of those times. Like Summertime /the Jamies, All Summer Long/the Beach Boys and many other songs.
    And to think I would take the OCTD buses to the beach by myself while So Cal had serial killers galore !
    I had one frightening experience at a pier at night when a man kept following me and then running after me, I literally ran for my life. I will never forgot his evil face and grin under the lights when I first saw him.
    Months later I recognized him on tv, he was in the news for trying to bludgeon a kid to death at the same pier ! Luckily passers-by intervened.
    On a lighter note when I was a sprout my fraternal grandfather used to say “put a seashell to your ear and you can hear the oceans and the siren call of mermaids” :)
    -Rj

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I do remember the frozen bananas dipped in chocolate.
      Your ordeal on the pier is horrifying. You're very fortunate there were passers-by. Those O.C. serial killers hung around familiar places.
      I often went to the beach at night with friends - - but I also went to Seal Beach alone after midnight. I'd sit on the deserted pier. If someone came, there would be nowhere to run. I'd either be trapped....or have to jump into the ocean!

      Delete

I love comments. Go ahead and leave one - I won't bite. But make sure you have a rabies shot just in case.