Mark Alan Lovewell

There's No Place Like Home

My sister and I questioned whether or not to go home to the Vineyard to shelter.

For a long time, which was actually only a few days given the warped timeline of this pandemic, my sister and I questioned whether or not to go home to the Vineyard to shelter. There were obvious positives but it was hard to ignore the desperate pleas of locals asking seasonal residents not to come to the Island. We saw the pictures online of notes declaring “You shouldn’t be here!” shoved onto the windshields of out-of-state cars.

Did these messages apply even to those of us who grew up here? Were we part of the problem?

Still unsure if our decision was the right one, we came home. On a gray March day, we drove onto the ferry. We didn’t receive a ticket at the booth and were asked to stay inside our car during the trip. It was unnerving to be so cautious while going through such a familiar ritual. When we finally docked I felt relieved.

It has been strange adjusting to life back on the Island. I’m doing my best not to regress to my teenage methods of communication as my mother, sister and I learn to co-habitate as adults. This is not the Vineyard as I know it. It is bizarre that I can’t walk into Mocha Mott’s or meet up with my friends for a drink at the Lookout. We have all had to change our comfortable routines.

I’ve been waiting for the chance to spend another summer at home since 2015, but this isn’t how I pictured it. There will be no staging of informal high school reunions at the Island bars. There will be no hugging former teachers and friends’ parents when I run into them in the grocery store aisles. Will I even recognize them underneath their masks?

There will be no day spent collecting dust on my sandals as I walk through the fairgrounds. I think it’s okay to be sad about all of this. The lost magic of a Vineyard summer deserves to be mourned.

One Saturday, my sister and I spent hours sifting through the old memories of our lives on the Vineyard we’d stashed in my mom’s attic. I saved scraps of birthday messages and report cards from elementary school, embarrassing photo snaps from middle school, and the newspapers from the weeks of our high school graduations.

I was overwhelmed by my love for this place and the life I was able to live here. The Island community has seen me through all of it. These are the people who crammed my sister and I into their backseats, driving us home from school so my mom could work late. These are the people who cheered for me at games and sat in my section every weekend I worked at Linda Jean’s. They are the same people who organized fish fry fundraisers when my dad got sick and pressed scholarship checks into my hands as I headed off to college. These are my people.

And these are the people I want to ride out this pandemic with. When I called my Dad the other day asking for his grocery list, he told me his neighbor had already dropped off a bag of necessities. Vineyarders filled their online shopping carts when Bunch of Grapes asked for support, called up seniors to check in, and spent afternoons diligently sewing masks to distribute to other Islanders.

These are the people who will get us through this.

There’s no question summer will be different this year. I can’t bear to think about the livelihoods that will be shattered by the muted tourist season, and there is an immense amount of anxiety about what comes next. I am trying to be grateful for the small things.

This morning, my sister and I dragged out our faded lawn chairs to the backyard. We let the late morning pass us by, content to be surrounded by the fresh air. We listened to our neighbors calling for their dogs and the buzz of cars driving on State Road. I felt my cheeks redden from that first inevitable sunburn of the season.

In this time of unprecedented confusion, one thing is clear to me — I’m so glad to be home.

Like so many other kids my age who have returned to the Island and their families during this crisis, I feel so fortunate to be part of this community. We might tell ourselves we’ve outgrown the Vineyard or swear we’d never live here again, but we’re pulled back by the incredible force of this place. During school breaks, in between jobs, or when I just need a weekend to gather my thoughts, the Vineyard was there for me.

This summer will be different. I hope it gives me the perspective to better appreciate this exceptional community I took for granted when I was younger. How lucky am I to be here at home, right now, with my people.

Mary Ollen lives in Boston and works for state Rep. Dylan Fernandes. She grew up in Vineyard Haven and graduated from MVRHS in 2014.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 04/28/2020 - 22:29

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Chad OB

When the Twilight Zone mob decides to ban non-residents, one problem is how to define them. 10+ months off-Island? Documents to show it? No MVHS diploma? Don't know the the right people? Fortunately the cops are smarter than the mob and they won't set up roadblocks.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 04/29/2020 - 10:01

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Susan Sloane Sherman Needham

Beautiful

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 04/29/2020 - 10:20

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Jeannette Breth West Tisbury

Beautiful article. What an amazing young woman you are . I am glad you decided to come home and ride it out with us. Be safe. Stay healthy. Love and prayers to you and your family.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 04/29/2020 - 13:20

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Julia Rappaport Cambridge (grew up in Chilmark year-round)

Really lovely piece, Mary! Thank you for writing it.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 04/29/2020 - 14:26

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Ewell Hopkins Oak Bluffs

I just shared this with Kristine and Danielle, thank you so much for the lovely piece writing.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 04/29/2020 - 19:34

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Ann Ferzoco’ Plymouth

Mary Ollen , what a beautiful piece. Yours is truly a special community, and they, in turn, are blessed to call you amazing women part of their family. As am I.
Xoxoxx

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 04/29/2020 - 21:22

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Leslie Hill Vermont

You made the right choice love. There is no place like home. And there is no home like your place. Beautiful writing girl.
Xoxoxo
Leslie

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 04/30/2020 - 16:24

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Julie Hitchings West Tisbury

What a beautiful essay, Mary! You always were a lovely writer. I hope I run into you soon, somewhere, to tell you in person. Stay safe.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 04/30/2020 - 17:05

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Cindy Grant VH

Beautifully written Mary! My day was made as I got to see you and Annie as we were all out in the fresh air practicing social distancing! I smiled all day!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/01/2020 - 06:32

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ruth perry Sturgis’ MI

I loved what you wrote, Mary, made me feel like an islander. I do love the Vineyard and wish I could come there to be reenergized every year. I’m 79 and usually make a solo trek whenever I can. I Always feel like a genuine part of the island each time. I pray everyone takes all precautions, this virus is so serious, and deadly. May each person be blessed with safety and good health. Thanks again, Mary, for writing from your heart!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/01/2020 - 07:47

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Jim Nyc

Thanks for sharing true wisdom - the Vineyard is home to many — an incredibly diverse community — who justly have the right to return to this home for healing, safety, and gathering- no one had the right to deny or condemn this. Thank you for beautifully expressing this.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/01/2020 - 08:54

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Gaye Webber South Hamilton

Beautifully written. I will miss visiting this summer, the first time in over 30 years, but am planning on coming back in 2021. I am trying to help out now by ordering goods online from local businesses, and donating to local causes. Stay healthy and safe.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/01/2020 - 09:17

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Barbara Wilton, CT

I am SO confused, why was the writer not shamed for her selfishness in coming to the Island? I purchased my home on Island during hurricane Bob, have delivered a child there, paid my taxes, planted a native yard years before that was a thing. I was attacked by some "friends" on Island when I said I was planning to come this summer.

Susanna J. Sturgis West Tisbury

If you're really confused, maybe it's because the Vineyard hasn't really rubbed off on you. Do you <i>really</i> think a young woman who grew up here, whose family is here, and who doesn't own any homes, never mind two, should be shamed for wanting to come home during the pandemic? Or maybe it's just that you just need some new "friends."

Rita Edgartown

Barbara, I think I understand your comment. I was also wondering if there would be comments about the 2 young ladies endangering the health of others, and potentially burdening the hospital.

Perhaps Mary’s beautifully-written piece will help the complainers see/feel the perspective of someone who primarily lives off-island & feels a strong pull to spend this time in their MV home. Mary certainly described that pull with emotions readers can connect to.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/01/2020 - 09:18

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Reggie Johnson Philadelphia, PA

Although I am a "summer person" since 1966 whose parents purchased their cottage in VH the same year, I can relate totally to your wonderful story Mary. I spent all of my teenage and early adult years working during the summer on the Vineyard at various businesses. It is still my summer sanctuary but it saddens me how difficult and different it will be this summer and the fact that I may not be able to visit and bring my 90 year-old mother to her summer home of 54 years. Everyone please stay safe and well.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/01/2020 - 09:31

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Thomas Dresser Oak Bluffs

Thanks for a great piece, Mary, poignant and precious.
I remember you and Annie riding the school bus from West Tisbury School. Always polite, friendly but shy.
Of course you belong on the Vineyard; there's no place like home.
Glad you're here to help us share this unique experience.
And keep on writing.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/01/2020 - 11:37

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Madi West Tisbury

So wonderful Mary! So glad you can ride this out with your island family!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/01/2020 - 11:47

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Elaine Pace West Tisbury

Lovely! And I remember you when you were much younger than in Julie Hitching’s class. I can see you now as a sweet little girl in Elaine Barnett’s class.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/01/2020 - 11:55

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Maggie Riseborough BROOKLYN

So lovely Mary. I can say a lot of those thoughts occurred to me when the pandemic started. I'm afraid I waited to long with coming to the vineyard. So I'm stuck out here in Brooklyn, NY.

Glad some of us can be riding this out on our little island home. Stay safe everyone

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