My Spot on Earth
By Iris Bryant
How do you connect with the earth? That is a question I’ve never considered.
Until I heard the word “dirt.”
Would this be an opportunity to reclaim that spot on the ground?
That spot that I envisioned the first time I visited the home of my biological grandmother. The spot that I wanted to ask about, but I was afraid of asking too much—of digging too deep—of having too many questions about the day of my birth.
Is this an opportunity to reclaim the spot—which I have worn like a cloak of shame?
The spot that I wondered about since I was 12 years old.
Suddenly it dawned on me: I connected to the earth on the morning of my birth.
The morning she decided the spot next to the woodpile would be the best place to put a newborn baby girl.
The spot next to the woodpile is the place my Uncle AJ* saw me. He ran inside to tell Grandma Almira* that the baby was outside, and he couldn’t convince her to look because her baby was resting in his crib.
In the room.
In the house.
Inside.
But there was a baby outside.
Exposed to the elements.
In the dirt.
Next to the woodpile.
The woodpile, the place she felt I would be found, was not a place of safety or security.
But Uncle AJ persisted and finally Grandma Almira looked outside and found me.
I survived.
Discarded and abandoned, but I survived.
* Please note names have been changed out of respect for their privacy.