The Story of the Music Truck
For My Beautiful Daughter Meghanne
For My Beautiful Daughter Meghanne
Retaining some level of
naivety in life isn’t necessarily a bad thing
Although
I escaped the teenage mother moniker by less than 24 hours, becoming a mom
midway through my sophomore year of college certainly had its challenges. For
starters, I had no intention of going to work until Meghanne was in
Kindergarten. Instead, I planned to finish my pricey private John Carroll
University college education and then attend either law or graduate school. As
such, living off my husband’s paltry
starting-out salary meant making a lot sacrifices. We lived with my
mother and had cost-free family support when it came to childcare. We drove
used, paid for cars, Meg wore hand-me-downs or gifts, and overall we cut
corners at every turn to live within our means. And, while we certainly were
not living the carefree party lifestyle of most of our 20 year-old friends, we
didn’t really care. Meghanne was our whole life and we knew the sacrifices we
were making would lead her to a better life and future.*
Meghanne’s
dad, Gordon, and I, grew up in Cleveland proper with our backyards abutting the
MetroParks—Me from OLA and Gordon from St. Pat’s parishes. If you are Catholic
and from West Park you know what that means. If you are not, let’s just say we
shared very similar upbringings and consequently, experiences. One of those
commonalities was the sweet sound of the Ice Cream Truck trolling the
neighborhoods on hot summer nights and the delicious refreshing, amazing,
treats of bomb pops, nutty buddy or other tasty morsels.
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I bought this ornament for Meggie for our Christmas Tree. It lights up and plays music |
So
the first time I heard the Ice Cream truck come down our street when Meg was
old enough to question its existence, (18 months) I panicked. Unlike our mean,
tough, I walked 10 miles to school, uphill both ways parents….I knew that I
could never say no to her. But, I also knew if I allowed her to get something
from the truck, she would want it every day! Like most latch-key, gen-x kids, I
wanted her to have everything that I could never have growing up. Even
something as trivial as the Ice Cream Truck. And, I knew on our thin budget we
couldn’t afford that. So when she heard the music and she asked, “Mommy what is
that?” I did what any NOT-teenage mother would do. I told a little white lie. I
simply said: “Honey, that’s the Music Truck. It drives around all summer
throughout the city to play music for all the children in the neighborhood to
make them happy.” Meggie, of course, bought it hook, line and sinker and
believed every word I said!
This
went on for the next few summers.
Fortunately, on most days we were in the backyard, on the deck sunning
and swimming, surrounded by a 6 ft. wooden privacy fence. So she was shielded
from the kids surrounding and chasing the “music truck.” Instead, Meggie would
stop, listen and dance. I loved watching her happiness and innocence as she
swayed back and forth to the music.
In
the summer of 1993, when Meggie was 4 years-old, my Uncle Ray would come live
with us briefly. He was going through a divorce and needed not only a place to
stay but also a place to bring his 6 and 8 year-old sons—Russell and Billy, respectively.
I was in graduate school at the time and welcomed the addition to our household
because Ray possessed the means and a plan to take us to the golden city of
Rocky River—which call me a snob, but in my OLA mind, making it across the
bridge to Rocky River—meant MAKING IT! (Hey don’t judge, I was young).
So,
one day during that summer of Ray, after morning summer classes, my BFF, Tina,
from college came home with me. We donned our bathing suits, slathered on sun
tan lotion and took up residency next to Meggie’s baby pool, with Faulkner, to
have a lively literary discussion. In the background, the music truck was
playing and I barely noticed Meggie going into the house as Tina, debated some
literary theme in The Sound and the Fury. However, we were quickly interrupted by a wild-eye child careening
through the deck’s screen door---“Mommy, MOMMY, MOMMY! You are NOT going to
believe this!!” Meghanne declared at the top of her lungs with excitement I’d
never witnessed before!
And
there she was. My baby. Her face COVERED with green. Wide-eyed. Smiling ear to
ear. An, ERNEST in her face, a twinkle
in her eye. She was bursting! She was on the verge of telling me the world’s
GREATEST secret—Bigger than when the caveman discovered FIRE…..And she then
spoke.
“MomMY,
you ARE NOT going to believe. BUT GUESS what is in the music truck!!! ICE
CREAM!!!! it doesn’t just play music. it has ice cream!!!!!!” She said
covered in the Nickelodeon green slime of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle pop
she was devouring.
My
reaction? With a cold stoned faced I
asked Meggie: “Who got you that.” “Uncle Ray Mommy—Isn’t it great, Mommy? Look
what is in the Music Truck!!!”
And,
I walked inside and looked at Ray and said—“In a few weeks we move to Rocky
River (where they don’t have Music Trucks). Until that time, you will buy MY
DAUGHTER ice cream from the ice cream truck EVERYDAY!!!!”
Meggie & Russ Waiting for the Music Truck |
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FAST FORWARD
I
love this story and have told it time and time again—much to Meggie’s chagrin.
I love it because I know all it’s listeners and now readers, think about their
experience with the “music truck” and smile. I also love it because it shows my
sheer brilliance in thinking up this story (one which other have copied) but at
the same time demonstrates the sheer trust, love and loyalty a child shows to
their parent and the lengths that parent will go to make sure that their babies
have the BEST.
Fast
forward 18 years…I use to joke with Meggie that the minute she graduated from
High School I was putting a for sale sign on the house and moving. I wanted to move to the beaches of Florida
but soon realized how much I would miss my kids (in addition to Meggie, my
husband Marc has three boys + grandkids), we settled for a house on the shores of
Lake Erie. Ironically between the time
Meg left for school and the first time she came home from college we had in
fact moved to Avon Lake on the shores of Lake Erie. That first summer when Meg
came come, we were out sun tanning in the yard and we heard the “music truck”
come down our street. And, I ran inside, got some cash, came outside and said
“let’s go.” We flagged down the truck. I got a bomb pop (my favorite) and Meg
got a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle pop. And arm and arm, sitting on the breakwall…we
watched the sunset.
*Meghanne’s father and I divorced when she was 8 years old. However, we
remained the best of friends and raised Meghanne as “a couple” despite that I
had became involved with someone else who I eventually married. In fact, at
Meghanne’s high school graduation, when I introduced Meggie’s step-father to a
fellow classmates parents who have known Meg since Kindergarten, they remarked,
“Oh, I had no idea you and Meg’s dad were no longer together?” And, yes, 24
years later, we are still friends.