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Ocean Summer

by Philip Yancey

| 39 Comments

I’ve been dredging my life for recollections to include in a memoir, which will come out in October with the title Where the Light Fell. Here’s a memory from one of the annual trips my family in Atlanta made to visit relatives in Philadelphia. I was ten years old at the time.

One summer, to give us relief from Philadelphia’s heat, Mother drives us to Ocean City, New Jersey—“America’s favorite family resort,” the billboards proclaim. She feels safe there because the Methodist ministers who founded the town passed a law that alcohol could never be served or sold.

While we are driving across New Jersey, Mother decides that my brother Marshall and I need haircuts. She pulls into a parking lot beside a white frame building with a barber pole out front, a red-and-white-striped cylinder spins around and around like a giant candy cane. When the door opens we see eight men sitting in chairs waiting, and only two barber chairs, both empty. “Oh, sorry, it looks like you’re busy today,” Mother says, and starts to leave.

“No, no, not at all,” the barber replies, jumping up and adjusting his white apron. “These are just friends passing the time. Come right in. Your boys are next.”

Child in barber chair (stock photo)I climb in the barber chair and notice that the barber’s hands are shaking. He runs the electric razor over my head and I feel a sharp nick. “Ow!” I yell. “That hurts!” Mother shoots me a disapproving, behave-yourself look. It happens again, and then again. Each time I yelp, and each time I get that look. I pull my hand out from under the cloth, reach up, and feel blood.

Just then the door opens and three policemen walk in with their hands on their holsters. “Don’t anybody move,” the biggest one says. “You’re all coming with me.”

It turns out that the barber shop is a front for an illegal bookie joint, where gamblers bet on horses. Everybody in the area knows it, and no one goes there for a haircut. The “barber” is the main bookmaker. Now my mother has to explain how she, in a car with a Georgia license plate, just happened to end up at that particular barber shop in New Jersey. Whatever she says must satisfy the officer, because he lets us go.

At last I get some sympathy for the ordeal of my ragged haircut, which has left me with razor burns and at least four bleeding nicks. The best part comes next. Women at the beauty shop next door have been standing outside watching the police raid, and a kind beautician offers to cut my brother’s hair. I tease Marshall for weeks about going to a beauty shop.

Child at beach on summer vacation (stock photo)After we escape from the barber and complete our drive to the coast, my first glimpse of the ocean takes my breath away. I want the scene to freeze for a second so I can take in the view, but nonstop waves break one after another in curls of white. The sea seems to stretch out forever, and off in the distance I see an ocean freighter headed for another continent. Suddenly I feel small, very aware of how little I know about the world.

Eager as a puppy, I change into a bathing suit and dash into the water, only to jump back, startled by the cold and the tug of undertow on my legs. Each wave leaves a deposit of sand and shells and foam, and then, with a sound like a flushing toilet, tries to slurp it all back into the sea. I wade out a little farther, lean back, and let the current carry me. Gradually I learn the calm spots just beyond the waves, where I can float in peace, gazing at puffy clouds in the blue sky above. I lick my lips and taste salt.

Every time I duck under the water, my head stings in four places, like tiny needles embedded in my scalp.

Childhood memory of a summer vacation to Ocean CityAt night, the famous Ocean City boardwalk beckons. A searchlight plays back and forth across the sky like a giant windshield wiper. A sign at one pizza place promises a hundred pizzas to anyone who can eat one of their giant concoctions in less than fifteen minutes. Half the food is new to me: funnel cakes, frozen custard, caramel popcorn, stromboli, and something called saltwater taffy.

Marshall and I explore the boardwalk’s amusement park. Marshall leads me to bumper cars, and we speed around and smash each other so hard that the manager orders us to leave. Next we try the Ferris wheel. We go high in the air, and when the wheel stops to let in passengers at the bottom, our seat sways in the cool night breeze. Far below lies the ocean, black as the sky, its waves shining in the moonlight like bands of snow.

Beneath the stars, off in the distance I barely make out the lights of Atlantic City. All that evening, women in skimpy sequined outfits on our boardwalk have been handing out pamphlets about the evil twin of Ocean City, a few miles up the coast. People drink liquor there, and gamble, Mother has warned us. I look at it with longing because I’ve heard about its animal shows with trained sea lions, boxing cats, and dogs that do tricks on a trampoline. Best of all, Atlantic City’s Steel Pier has a world-famous diving horse.

A man at the amusement park tells me he’s seen the show. “That dumb horse walks up a ramp—oh, I dunno, maybe some sixty feet in the air. It stands there on a platform trying not to look around until a pretty woman jumps on its back. It don’t even have a saddle. Then, with her clinging on bareback, the thing dives headfirst off the platform into a twelve-foot pool of water. I seen it with my own eyes.”

Oh, how I want to see that fearless horse! Yet, like the rest of Atlantic City, it remains tantalizingly out of reach.

This story, along with many others, had to be cut in order to keep the memoir a manageable length. As I include it here, I wonder what family vacation scenes stand out from your childhood?

 

 

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Discussion

  1. Louis G Nuechterlein Avatar
    Louis G Nuechterlein

    Dear Mr Yancey:- At age 92 I’m just finishing reading your book on Prayer. Thank you so much for all the insights it provides – and the encouragement it gives to keep on praying. The Rev Louis Nuechterlein

  2. David Bornus Avatar
    David Bornus

    Phil, I enjoyed these reminisces. One of my most salient childhood vacation memories is of a trip my family took in northern mountain forests (possibly Yellowstone) when I was about five years old. My mother had a 8mm movie camera and routinely took footage of everything. There were some bears on the highway and many cars had pulled over to photograph them. My mother got out of the car to do some up-close filming. Suddenly one of the bears began running toward her, and she turned and dashed back to the car. I’ll always remember the horror of that scene, watching the bear get closer and wondering if she would make it back to the car.

    On an unrelated subject, I’m currently reading Amy Tan’s memoir “Where the Past Begins.” Her relationship with her parents and older brother somewhat reminds me of your stories that you shared with us in Alaska.

  3. Michael Avatar

    Hi Philip, I read your book Rumors Of Another World. I really enjoyed it and found it to be very uplifting. I was wondering… in your research of the topic, did you ever come across the writings of Emanuel Swedenborg? If so, why not include some reference to his experiences. It seems he’s had a huge impact on many people that in my opinion goes largely unnoticed. If you haven’t, I recommend his book Heaven & Hell. I think (if you haven’t already), you’ll find it very interesting and enlightening.

    1. Philip Yancey Avatar
      Philip Yancey

      I’ve read about Swedenborg, but never read his writings directly. Thanks for the tip.

  4. Steve Paul Nerz Avatar
    Steve Paul Nerz

    Hello Philip,
    you and I have communicated a few times in the past, I will always remember you with warmth.
    I grew up in south Jersey and remember many trips to Ocean city, where my brother now lives. here is my best memory. we went down to the shore, and ended up in Atlantic city with my parents. we did a walk through of the Playboy club, and went by one of the playboy “bunnies” dressed in scanty clothes with a rabbit cottontail on her back side. as we passed her my mother pulled it (it was attached to elastic) and it snapped on her rear end. the woman flipped around and gave me the dirtiest look, thinking of course that I did it! I remember being not very happy with my mother!
    stay well, and appreciate your blogs. steve nerz

  5. David Lewis Avatar
    David Lewis

    Can’t wait to read your memoir, as we’ve enjoyed nearly all of your other books through the years. Your copy editing is much better than we observe in most books nowadays. We’re also watching old episodes of To Tell The Truth on YouTube – and we recently saw an episode where the secret person was a lady who rode the diving horses at Atlantic City !!

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39 thoughts on “Ocean Summer”

  1. Dear Mr Yancey:- At age 92 I’m just finishing reading your book on Prayer. Thank you so much for all the insights it provides – and the encouragement it gives to keep on praying. The Rev Louis Nuechterlein

    Reply
  2. Phil, I enjoyed these reminisces. One of my most salient childhood vacation memories is of a trip my family took in northern mountain forests (possibly Yellowstone) when I was about five years old. My mother had a 8mm movie camera and routinely took footage of everything. There were some bears on the highway and many cars had pulled over to photograph them. My mother got out of the car to do some up-close filming. Suddenly one of the bears began running toward her, and she turned and dashed back to the car. I’ll always remember the horror of that scene, watching the bear get closer and wondering if she would make it back to the car.

    On an unrelated subject, I’m currently reading Amy Tan’s memoir “Where the Past Begins.” Her relationship with her parents and older brother somewhat reminds me of your stories that you shared with us in Alaska.

    Reply
  3. Hi Philip, I read your book Rumors Of Another World. I really enjoyed it and found it to be very uplifting. I was wondering… in your research of the topic, did you ever come across the writings of Emanuel Swedenborg? If so, why not include some reference to his experiences. It seems he’s had a huge impact on many people that in my opinion goes largely unnoticed. If you haven’t, I recommend his book Heaven & Hell. I think (if you haven’t already), you’ll find it very interesting and enlightening.

    Reply
  4. Hello Philip,
    you and I have communicated a few times in the past, I will always remember you with warmth.
    I grew up in south Jersey and remember many trips to Ocean city, where my brother now lives. here is my best memory. we went down to the shore, and ended up in Atlantic city with my parents. we did a walk through of the Playboy club, and went by one of the playboy “bunnies” dressed in scanty clothes with a rabbit cottontail on her back side. as we passed her my mother pulled it (it was attached to elastic) and it snapped on her rear end. the woman flipped around and gave me the dirtiest look, thinking of course that I did it! I remember being not very happy with my mother!
    stay well, and appreciate your blogs. steve nerz

    Reply
  5. Can’t wait to read your memoir, as we’ve enjoyed nearly all of your other books through the years. Your copy editing is much better than we observe in most books nowadays. We’re also watching old episodes of To Tell The Truth on YouTube – and we recently saw an episode where the secret person was a lady who rode the diving horses at Atlantic City !!

    Reply

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