Marty
McBride did it in 1985, a trip backwards into the future. Recently for Father’s
Day, my daughter took me on that same trip back into the future. I saw things
as they had become, not as they used to be, when I was growing up. It was a
world changing around me even as my own world kept getting smaller and smaller.
‘The
way they used to be’ was the world I came from. It was where I grew up and a
world where I’ve been held hostage by my vapid memories for all these years. It
was a future which I’ve only glimpsed at in quick head turns at social media
press clippings.
University
Avenue, where used car lots once proliferated the landscape, has been sliced
and diced by light rail, high and low income apartments, and craft breweries.
Now there are gourmet restaurants serving food I can’t even pronounce and a
brand new temple to soccer which wasn’t even around when I was passing through
there. When I was growing up, sandlot baseball was about as close to sports as I
ever got. I never played a single game even though the lot wasn’t that far
away.
This
new temple to the skilled game of kick ball has replaced the bus barns which
replaced the streetcar barns decades earlier. There are more slots for bike
parking than stalls for cars and the light rail is only steps away. My, how
things have changed.
Soccer
entered our lives with our two kids playing VAA (Valley Athletic Association)
soccer each summer. That was soon replaced by high school sports and our world
moved on. Now the grandkids (at least the Minnesota ones) get to experience the
game on a whole new professional level. Lucky them.
A
century-old brewery omnipresent during my eight year bus ride downtown to grade
school is now an indoor shopping mall planted next door to artist’s lofts and
gallery space. A fixture on the West Seventh Street corridor has morphed into
retail and residential space.
Where
barrels of mash once rolled off the assembly line, now tiny shops catering to
curious millennial tastes dominate the landscape. It was a challenge not to
question some of the shops and restaurants there for their unique blend of
‘what is that’ and ‘you’ve got to be kidding me.’ But that’s just the old man
in me talking now. I kept my mouth shut and enjoyed the trip into my kids' and grandkids' future. We’re not in Old Saint Paul anymore.
In
my time, the Irvine Park neighborhood which abutted West Seventh Street
corridor was a sad remnant of a once glorious past. The ornate mansions and
upscale housing had been reduced to rooming houses, decrepit run down shacks
and poor people’s palaces. Wilder Playground was our refuge when Mom was at
work and the Gem Theater provided wonderful distractions from the reality at
home. West Seventh Street was a commercial thoroughfare of auto shops, thrift
stores, and small neighborhood grocery stores just barely hold on to solvency.
But time changes all things.
An
auto garage located not far from my itinerant home in Poorville is now a hip
brewery. There’s a food truck planted next door where I first ventured out to
explore the neighborhood on my bicycle. That is the future few saw coming from
my old part of town.
It’s
all become a new part of town that I won’t see much of in the future. I have
moved on both physically and mentally. There are simply too many mountains to
climb and rivers to cross with the time I have left. But it’s nice to know the
old neighborhood has come around again.
No comments:
Post a Comment