Words Delight Our Senses by da-AL

Photo of woman looking at books on shelves
Courtesy Pixabay.com

Reading and writing are more than marks to on a page — they’re sensual!
My ears taught me what writing was. As my father would drive, my mother beside him, me squished in the back seat between two older brothers, they all would holler, “Yield!” and “Stop!” and “Hollywood and Vine!”
My father was in charge of money, handyman stuff, and ‘babysat.’ My mother cleaned, cooked, and tended the kids. Outside of the home, she also worked as a secretary.
Homemaking, mothering, and working didn’t interest me — but her secretarial accouterments enthralled me. That’s because they had to do with reading and writing!

Photo of old typewriter
Photo: Pixabay.com

Her spiral-bound green steno pads and click pens defined scholarly elegance.  Her dication machine, a table-top reel-to-reel tape recorder, was a whispery spooler and a boisterous reader. Pencils and ballpoint pens smelled of wood and plastic.
And paper! Bonded sheets for business letters were fabric-thick and textured to accommodate the erasure of typewriter mistakes. Tissue-thin onionskin paper was for international letters, to economize on postage.
Her typewriter, all ten ‘portable’ pounds of it, made music! There was the clacking of alphabet keys, the errp-errp-errp of sheets rolling in and out of the cylindrical platen, and the slap-ding of carriage returns. When I was allowed to hammer at the smooth plastic buttons, my fingers would twitch percussion in my dreams.
The process of my mother leaning into her typing with her brows knit, produced more wonders — a cigar box full of erasers: rectangular Pink Pearls that were worn oblong, round gritty pumic-hard wheels that featured jabby tangles of red bristles, blue and pink sweet-scented putties that were kneaded into gray wads. Hopeless typos called for alcohol scented white paint.

Photo of library and students
Photo by Tamás Mészáros from Pexels

Before I learned to read, my father would take me with him to the library. The front doors were a tall as a bank’s. Sun streamed into rooms as hushed as churches that were filled with readers, their heads bowed over their books.

What’s your first memory of reading and writing?


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36 thoughts on “Words Delight Our Senses by da-AL”

  1. I remember both my mother and father writing stories on an old typewriter. My mother started a memoir but found it too painful to continue. My father wrote stories about a fictional mouse who came on his calls with him (he was a police officer). He kept the other cops in stitches.

    Both were great storytellers. They also read to us. They gave me a great childhood. Sounds like your parents did the same, da-AL.

    Liked by 2 people

  2. Lovely post again, dear Daal 🙂
    I remember me crying the evening before my first school-day, because I couldn’t go! I couldn’t read and write properly yet! haha But as soon as I could, I start reading and reading. My first writing was in a diary I’ve got from my dad 🙂

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      1. Yes, indeed. Although I must admit, I am reading a book right now with a very small font and discovering I might need glassed to read was kind of a shock. For a moment it took my reading-pleasure away. Oh no, I too get old! haha

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        1. unfortunately I have same prob, Patty — I was blessed with extremely good sight for so long… on the other hand, people who have cataracts removed can have lenses inserted, so something to look forward to LOL

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