It’s difficult to remember summers where my dad and I didn’t pack backpacks, coolers, books, and ourselves into a car and drive west from our home on Long Island. For most people, a road trip is about getting to a destination, but for us it was about the road. Highways, side streets, and rundown dirt roads. We spent most nights in little motels with bright blue swimming pools and American flag murals, but for two weeks each summer we called our car “home.” I have fond memories of visiting museums and old friends, riding horses and roller coasters, and singing along to music coming out of car speakers.
This piece reflects those times, as well as the shared “road trip experience” of many Midwesterners. My collage and poem were inspired by the trips spent driving through Missouri—Ted Drewes frozen custard (featured in the bottom right of the collage) is a must have! I wanted to give others a little taste of that warm feeling of being curled up in the front seat of a car, of being on an adventure. Take a listen to the “Midwest Playlist” to hear some of the amazing music that came from the area, and maybe one day you’ll take a road trip and decide to put it on while driving in the middle of nowhere.
Along the Way
By Shiraz Johnson
Roads in
middle of nowhere,
Missouri
are made by
cars before us
paving the way
in dirt
I’m going to Graceland
and in response my dad
tries to find
NPR an antenna
searching through the
night sky for
a radio signal
that is too far
away to pick up
We’re in perpetual
darkness except for
when the car
coming at us forgets
to turn off their
brights and I have
to blink hard
with blue spots
dancing behind my
eyelids and
feel guilty
because my dad
can’t drive with
his eyes
closed
And as we’re driving
in easy silence
on the road
made by other cars
I realize that
maybe my dad
is making a
road for me,
too