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Freedom on the 4th
Written by Randy Phillips

Today's blog submitted by guest writer Robin Thomas:

I’m thankful that I live in a country where we each have the freedom to celebrate our patriotism with family and friends on the 4th of July. We’re free to eat Aunt Kay’s homemade banana nut ice cream then go sit on a lawn chair in front of the courthouse square and watch our kids wave a red, white and blue symbol of American pride at passing homemade parade floats and synchronized Shriner’s go-karts. Yes, I love America and I love folks who love America, too. It’s a day to honor our veterans and those who paid the price for precious freedom. It’s a day of celebration traditionally capped off by detonating fireworks!

That awesome burning sulfur smell from a freshly popped Blackcat takes me back to the summers of my youth when I “helped” my uncles operate their little firework stand. Firework City, USA was on the edge of their farm on an old dirt road just a mile south of the traffic loop in Lubbock, Tx.  Firework City, USA was a 6 ft by 20 ft metal shack which housed the entrepreneurial dreams of my then 15 year old twin uncles. I loved going to visit them at my Grandmother and Granddaddy Thomas’ farm. We’d take off our shoes when we got to the back porch steps of my grandparent’s ‘57 Chevy blue farmhouse and not put them back on until we left in a few weeks. My grandparents made magic happen for us grandkids on their farm and they did it by giving us 110% more freedom than we deserved. As long as I didn’t drive into Granddaddy’s blackeyed pea patch, I was allowed to drive his old farm truck all over the farm. For a nine year old, that is FREEEEEDOM!  We worked and were rewarded with non-monetary rewards.  My kids have never been swimming in an irrigation ditch after chopping weeds out of dryland cotton all day, but if they had, they’d know there was no better experience, time or place in the world. This is stuff you can’t experience on  Wii or X-Box.

One particular summer night right after a strategic dirt clod fight, “someone” double dared my younger cousin, Kurtis, to stomp out the fire of a still burning 18 shot medium barrage firework. I wonder why that firework stand seldom turned a profit? Anyway, Kurtis took the dare. He had no choice as it was a double dog dare. Kurtis soon learned the sulfur flame insulating value of the sole of his PF Flyer’s sneakers, which, as I mentioned earlier, were not presently on his bare feet, but instead were lying in a neat pile of muddy shoes by the screen door of my grandparent’s ‘57 Chevy blue farmhouse. After a lot of howling and tattling to Grandmother about what I double dog dared him to do (he was such a crybaby) I learned I have the freedom to tell the truth that “blue flames are not really ice cold”  and also not play mean-spirited pranks on my cousin. I then experienced forgiveness by way of peach tree switch. And guess what? I still loved Grandmother nonetheless for it. And all of us grandkids still chased fireflies that night after eating watermelon cooled by an irrigation ditch full of cold West Texas well water. Freedom. Granddaddy still whittled scary watermelon rind monster teeth for each of us out of some of the few watermelons that his nine year old grandson hadn’t crushed with his old farm truck. Freedom. And we still shot roman candles at each other after snipe hunting armed with nothing but an old burlap tow sack and a lot of courage.  Freedom. Happy Independence Day, PromiseLand West. I hope each of you remember your first taste of freedom this 4th of July!

 

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