Timothy Johnson

Community Easily Beats Anonymity

And then, like September herself waved a magic wand, the Island is transformed.

In September, the Island shrinks. For two whole months, it’s possible to get lost on Martha’s Vineyard, as it teems with tourists and day-trippers. Traffic grinds to a halt, your favorite coffee shop has a line out the door, and it’s not even worth trying to get to the grocery store. Surely there’s a box of mac and cheese in the closet somewhere.

And then, like September herself waved a magic wand, the Island is transformed. It’s possible to get a reservation at your favorite restaurant at 7 p.m. The private beaches no longer require resident passes. You can pop out to the store to get milk, find a parking spot, and be home in a half hour. There’s room to breathe.

Yet despite what is gained, something is lost, too. Anonymity.

While this might not mean much to someone born and raised on the Island or in any other small town, for those of us from cities or larger places, there is something powerful about not being known.

I grew up in the Boston area, and my high school had nearly 2,000 students. I remember seeing my science teacher one afternoon in the parking lot of the eye doctor and wondering, “What the hell is she doing here?” I grew up with parents who were teachers, so it’s not like I thought she actually lived at school, but seeing her with her daughter in tow on a weekend crossed some boundary, like she’d stepped into my bedroom uninvited.

Forget six degrees of separation. Martha’s Vineyard in the winter is three degrees of separation. If you’re a teacher, more like two degrees. Your doctor? Also a parent in your school. That guy working out on the elliptical machine next to you? Your mechanic. The woman in the grocery store filling her cart? She checked out your library books yesterday. Oh, and you used to teach her kids.

While this drove me crazy when I first moved here, I’ve come to appreciate it over the years. Living on the Island is kind of like college, when you’d go to the dining hall and see the faces of people that you knew. Some of them you actually knew and others you just recognized. The girl from your Shakespeare class over there by the frozen yogurt machine. The guy getting second helpings of meatloaf; he was in your nutrition class. And the two girls in the corner; they lived on your floor freshman year.

So though I’ll miss being able to hide in the corner of a coffee shop with my book and laptop and not bump into anyone I know, I’m glad to live in a place where the connections between people are abundant and varied; where I’m greeted by name a dozen times a day, on the street, the library or the gym. I’m grateful to live in a place where this thing we call community is a vibrating living being rather than an abstract noun.

And really, the line out the door for that coffee place was ridiculous, and I never would have found a table alone anyway.

Emily Cavanagh teaches language arts at the Martha’s Vineyard Public Charter School.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/23/2016 - 18:30

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Ruth Alberghini Kingston, MA

Wonderful article Emily so true about Oak Bluffs, so enjoyed our two weeks there every year with our children. We are awaiting your book to come out soon . Miss seeing the Cavanagh this year on the island.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 09/24/2016 - 17:15

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Jonah Maidoff

Good read Emily. Community can feel both supportive and limiting. Islanders have made a choice to live most of the year as "hill people" the unconquerable elusive tribes of people Isolated by choice from the regulation and patterns of the larger culture and "civilization" of cities. We anticipate snow storms, almost giddily, the possibility of being cut off... chainsaws sharpened, waiting for the storms of late summer and soup with friends by fire and candle light. Happy Fall.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 09/24/2016 - 17:25

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Aunt Sue Webber Oak Bluffs, I wish

Beautiful writing, dear Emily. And I appreciate that sense of community all the more when I became ill, and family, friends , and neighbors became my support system .

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 09/24/2016 - 18:26

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Jane Oak Bluffs

I started reading this then thought; I must know who wrote this. Scroll up, oh right, Rueben's wife. Olivia's mum. We've never met, but, well, Year 'round O.B. Hi Emily! Nice piece.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 09/27/2016 - 02:43

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Rob Burnside Kingston, PA

Jane Jacobs, somewhere up in heaven's Community Planning section, is no doubt delighted with your commentary. Down here in Northeastern Pennsylvania's anthracite coal region, I am too!

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