The Moth - The Moth Radio Hour: Location, Location, Location
Episode Date: March 7, 2023In this hour, stories of the places that leave a lasting impression. A skating rink, a golf course, a restaurant, and a cemetery. This episode is hosted by Moth director Chloe Salmon. The Mot...h Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media. Hosted by: Chloe Salmon Storytellers: Jacoby Cochran and his family build a home at Rich City Skate. Holly Thompson and her grandfather share a love of golf. After a turbulent history in online dating, Leah Haydock finds solace in pasta. Marguerite Maria Rivas searches for her daughter's grave.
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Attention Houston! You have listened to our podcast and our radio hour, but did you know
the Moth has live storytelling events at Wearhouse Live? The Moth has opened Mike's
storytelling competitions called Story Slams that are open to anyone with a five-minute
story to share on the night's theme. Upcoming themes include love hurts, stakes, clean, and
pride. GoodLamoth.org forward slash Houston to experience a live show near you. That's from FioraX.
This is the Moth Radio Hour.
I'm Chloe Sammon.
On the map of my life, there's a pushpin, marking the garden of my childhood home in
Wichita, Kansas.
It had lush butterfly bushes, explosions of tulips and marigolds, shocks of sweet smelling
mint, and green of all shades.
I used to crouch on a stepping stone that was tucked in the space between two butterfly bushes and feel held and hidden.
I'd study the mossy soil and watch ants go about their business, and if I was very still,
I could watch the butterflies float from flower to flower above me.
the butterflies float from flower to flower above me. I had to leave my special spot behind when we moved to a new neighborhood right before
I started my freshman year of high school.
I was sad but hoped that the family that bought our house would love the garden as much as
I had.
Instead, we heard through the Great Vine months later that the new owners had torn the
garden up and paved
over it with cement.
I was outraged.
How could they?
It's been years since the garden disappeared, but I've found that its pushpin has stayed
put in my map.
Places change over time, but the memories we make in them stick around, even if they live
under a layer or two of cement.
In this hour, stories of the places that make up the maps of our lives.
Our first story takes place in a special spot on the south side of Chicago, but was told
in New York at Aaron Davis Hall in Harlem.
Here's Jacobi Cochran, live at the mosque.
I'm standing on the sideline of the largest roller skating rink floor in Illinois, and it
belongs to Rich City Skate. My family's skating rink.
I'm 15 years old when my stepfather and his parents decide to realize a lifelong dream
That I had never actually heard of
To own and operate a skating rink
And so somehow they bought it our entire family renovated and renamed it and now it was our inaugural
National party make some noise if you have a bit roller skating
inaugural national party. Make some noise if you have a bit roller skating. They said, you know, you know, you know. Now, if you've never been roller skating in your life,
a national party is kind of like the Grammys of roller skating. Yeah, I'm talking about some of
the greatest roller skaters in America, all in one place, showing off their moves, their music, their style, and the place is packed.
When all of a sudden the DJ starts the roll call, which means every city or state comes
on the floor one by one to represent.
So you got people in there from Texas doing a slow walk.
Folks from Detroit in there doing the ballroom.
You got partners in there doing Kentucky throws and New York trains.
They had come from California to Florida and the music was thumping.
The synchronized lights were blaring.
The fog machines were humming.
When all of a sudden the sound of the God Father of Soul, James Brown feels the building.
Now, when you hit those horns from the intro
or the payback, you know it's time for Chicago
to get on the floor.
Suddenly, my mother skates by me and she throws me a wink.
You see, my mom's is one of the greatest
rollerskaters in Chicago, which means
she wanted the greatest rollers skaters of all time.
Everybody knows sweet tea.
And when she skates, it's like time stands still.
I'm lucky that she passed down some of her gifts and a little bit of her first love
of skating to me and my siblings.
of her gifts and a little bit of her first love was skating to me and my siblings.
So yeah, I grew up my entire childhood.
From field trips, to weekends, to Duke Jams,
all in the skating rinks on the South side of Chicago,
from markum to glimwood to the famous rink on 87th Street,
and now rich city skate.
And I loved it. I mean, when my family bought this rink, and now rich city scape.
And I loved it.
I mean, when my family bought this drink, it immediately became like a family affair.
My stepfather immediately became a general manager.
My grandparents were CEOs, my mom, the CFO.
Aunt's uncles, cousins,
feel the myriad of rows throughout the building
from the snack bar
where we had to cook the food and serve annoying birthday parties to the stuff shop where we
sold light up trinkets and candy all the way to the skate rental where we had to collect,
repair and pass out skates.
And me?
And I learned how to do everything.
You name it, I learned it, and I loved it all the way down to cleaning them nasty ass
bathrooms.
But I threw myself into the rink.
Every free moment I had, I was at the rink when I described myself, it was Kobe from
the south side of Chicago, I worked at my family's rink.
And somehow that was cool when he came on my mouth.
But I realized quick, it just wasn't my family or my love,
but the communities as well.
You see, black owned skating rinks are far and few in between.
And these places have been a safe haven for blacks.
They're all the way back to the great migration.
So from the very beginning, our community supported us.
They showered us with love as we threw bigger parties, as we threw political rallies.
We were on the radio and skated at Bud Billikin Parades.
Every day I had never seen so much joy in one place.
It felt like a family reunion.
We were flying high a few years later when I went off to college, but you know, no worry,
I only moved like two hours away.
So every weekend or holiday I could visit, but college was an opportunity for me to define
myself.
For me to stop just being Kobe who worked at the roller skating rink, so I joined a speech
team, joined Alpha Phi Alpha.
I got a job on campus.
But of course, every waking moment I could,
I would go back to the skating rink.
And I would just like to fall into things.
Like I never left skating with my homies till 4 a.m.
in the morning and let me be clear.
I'm a badass, more fuck on them skates.
But that distance I had put between myself and the ring gave me a new vantage point.
I started noticing things on my visits.
Like I started realizing that my mom and my stepdad were fighting more, but they were putting
on smiles for the people.
I started noticing that the growing pressure of running a family
business was starting to heighten the tensions and the egos as people positioned
themselves for more control. I started to realize that my younger siblings who
were now in high school had put a lot of space between themselves in a ring which
was a complete 180 from how things were when I was in high school. But through all of this, I just figured, hell, this is part of the business.
This is what comes with turning a hobby into a hustle.
This is the small business tax you pay.
Things didn't really crystallize for me until about midway through my junior year when I
get a call from my mom who is deeply angry but completely calm.
Yeah, sweet tea wasn't really one for small talk.
She said, Kobe, I call to tell you that I'm finished.
The me and your father are splitting and I'm leaving the ring.
I was shocked, but I just wanted to hold on to that fantasy, that family affair.
So I begged her, you know, what can I do?
What can the family do?
How can we turn back the hands of time, as she said, we can.
Kobe, this was never my dream.
And now I don't even feel the love.
And I knew she wasn't just talking about for the rink or her
marriage, but her first love for skating, which had become
my first love for skating which had become my first love.
And after that phone call, the visits,
you know, started becoming a little less frequent.
You know, family members started to feel like
they had to choose sides.
And so when I would go back to play,
start to feel like a ghost of itself.
When I graduated, I went from living two hours to
12 hours away because like I said I just wanted to hold on to that fantasy so I ran. But you know I told
myself that even I was throwing myself into something new that I would go back and visit that I
would help out at some point but you know a month became six months which became two years
A month became six months, which became two years.
And then the summer of 2016 rolls around, and I look myself in a mirror and I say,
I can't put a life of me,
miss another rich city skate national party.
It's a 10 year anniversary.
And so I grabbed my skates and I headed there, and I knew that things at the rink had changed.
But when I walked through the doors, many of those synchronized lights and humming fog
machines were out of order.
A lot of those thumping speakers had blown and I'm standing on the sidelines of the largest roller skating rink floor in Illinois
And it now has humps and dips in a clear spot that's been roped off because that's where the ceiling leaks
And yet somehow this place is packed from side to side people had rolled in there from
California to New York to Florida.
And at that moment, the DJ starts the roll call.
And my heart swells as you got people out there
from Texas doing the slow walk.
Folks from Detroit doing the ballroom.
You got partners doing Kentucky throws in New York trains.
And when the sound of James Brown feels the room I sprint on the floor.
But I'm a little rusty. It's been some time, but with each passing song as those humming,
the horns go on and on. The magic returns to my body. The moves start flowing through me like I
never left. And I think to myself this is what it was all about.
The people and the people are here as the sweat pours from my face and the music fades.
My father skates by me and he throws me a wink.
He grabs the microphone and he thinks everybody for being there.
For making this one of the best national parties that the Rink has ever seen, he thinks them
for their love and their support.
And then he tells us that this is going to be the last rich city skate national party because rich city skate is closing its doors.
And I'm hearing this for the first time and it feels like a punch to the gut.
I'm looking around as people are sobbing and hugging.
You can hear as people are begging, what can we do?
What can the community do?
How can we turn back the hands of time?
And he says, we can't.
He says, this was always my dream.
But now it's time to wake up.
I never seen so much sadness in one place.
It felt like a funeral.
And I don't really know what to do, so I just sort of do what comes natural, and I start cleaning up.
would of do what comes natural and I start cleaning up. From the nasty ass bathrooms to the snack bar to vacuuming the stuff shop to collecting
skates when I come across this wall that is filled with pictures.
Ten years of my family's history strung out in Polaroids.
And there are birthday parties and graduations and rallies and parades.
And I see this picture in the middle of my family
during our inaugural national party
and our freshly pressed polos with smiles
as wide as naivety will allow.
You see, for years, I started to resent this place,
wondering if it had took so much from us and if it was worth it.
But as I stared at these pictures,
I realized that for so many people, this place was home.
So before I left, I went to my stepfather
and I asked him for one last favor.
And he walks into the DJ booth,
in the intro to the payback starts playing in the background.
And I hop on the floor, sweat into mingle with tears running down my face.
And I take one last skate around the largest roller skating rink floor in Illinois and realize building
or not.
I'm going to always be a rich city skater.
Thank you. That was Jacobi Cochran, a writer, educator, and storyteller.
He's the host of CityCast Chicago, a daily news podcast covering happenings about town.
Working on the podcast takes up a big chunk of his days, but he fills his off hours by
going to live shows and taking photos of his life
in the city.
Jacobi says he still skates from time to time, mostly at another beloved Chicago spot,
the rink on 87th Street.
To see some photos of rich city skate in its heyday, head over to themoth.org.
Coming up next, a young woman finds her place on the golf course, and a pasta dish becomes
a talisman against bad days.
When the moth radio hour continues. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media and Woods Hole Massachusetts
and presented by PRX.
You're listening to The Moth Radio Hour from PRX.
I'm Chloe Sannon.
In this episode, we're hearing stories of places.
Our next one comes to us from Holly Thompson,
who told it at a story slam in Portland, Oregon,
where we partner with the Public Radio Organization, OPB.
Here's Holly.
So the one thing in life to come easy for me was a golf swing.
I was 10 years old when I got my first set of golf clubs. And a year later, at 11,
I had made the big leagues. I was in my grandpa's and his four-somes group every Saturday morning
at 7 a.m. And for those of you that don't know golf, that is like prime time. That is
when all the serious golfers and good golfers are out there.
So for me to be this little 11-year-old girl joining these guys at 7am, it was a big deal
and I felt like, top shit. And my grandpa and I had this awesome routine of every morning
getting up and going to Julie's diner and having chocolate chip pancakes
and me riding shotgun in the golf cart with the smell of his cigar smoke in the air.
And after every round we'd go into the clubhouse and he with his booming loud voice
would command an entire room and brag about how his granddaughter
had outscored all the other guys that day.
I started to join local tournaments and win
and that catapulted me to playing at the national level
and winning.
Newspaper sources were referring to me
as this blonde, bomber golfing on,
and girls that I would compete against would actually want me to sign their scorecard
after we played because they thought I would be this LPGA star.
Those Saturday mornings with my grandpa dwindled away, I stopped playing with him
because I became all focused.
I had to live up to the hype.
I had to become what everyone else thought I would become.
And so I ended up going on a full-ride scholarship to the University of Wisconsin-Madison. And I played for a couple months,
but the fun was gone.
And that swing that used to be so easy,
it wasn't easy anymore.
And I ended up quitting after only a couple months.
And I didn't touch a club or even look at one for years.
And it wasn't until my grandpa was diagnosed with cancer.
I thought again about that.
It came really suddenly, and he was only given six months to live if he was lucky,
and I hadn't played for years.
And he was so depressed, he wouldn't leave his house, he wouldn't talk to anyone.
And I ended up one morning just doing the only thing I could think of.
And I ended up dusting off those old clubs.
And I drove over to his house.
off those old clubs and I drove over to his house and I woke him up and I said grandpa we have a golf course to go to and he turned towards me and he hadn't
spoken anyone in weeks and he said but you don't play anymore and I said I
played a day at grandpa and will you be my day?
And he got out of his bed for the first time in weeks.
And he was moving slow that day, but cancer was progressing really quickly.
But I drove him to Julie's diner and we had those chocolate chip pancakes.
We had shared so many times before.
And we got to the golf course at 7 a.m. sharp,
because all old guys loved to be punctual.
And his friends were waiting there and I took my golf club out of my bag
and it felt so foreign in my hands and so big and heavy.
And I went up and I took my first swing.
It was on a par three, 150 yard hole that we had golfed so many times before.
And I took a swing and I completely missed.
And I remember turning towards my grandpa and his buddies, and you could have heard
a pin drop.
They had never seen me do that.
And I just was like, guys, I was a practicing.
I was just practicing.
And I just refocused, and I tried to get myself back to just like, I'm with grandpa.
There's nothing else.
It's just be 11 years old
again with this club in your hand and just swing, just have fun. So I swung again and I
hit the ball and as soon as I hit it, I knew. When you hit, when you're a golfer and you
hit that ball just right, you know.
And he sat there and I watched the trajectory of that ball and I watched it land at the
front of the green and it kept rolling and rolling, just following the undulation of the
green.
And it rolled 45 feet, I'm measured. And I saw it go towards this red pin and it disappeared, it dropped.
And this is that moment every golfer dreams of.
And as far as much as my grandpa and I had golfed, we had never had a hole in one or witnessed
one.
And I went in like crazy mode. I was like doing
dances. I would not wish anyone else to see ever again. And I just remember like
once I combed down I look over my grandpa and for the first time in my life I saw And I started crying, obviously.
And just in that moment, it made me realize there was no amount of fame, no tournament I
could have won on any level that would have made me feel more like a champion, looking
at my grandpa at that moment.
He died three weeks after that round.
And I'm just look back at that round every day.
And I'm so grateful.
I had that experience with him.
And then he reminded me that all that matters
is those moments with loved ones,
the rest of the stuff is fluff.
And to this day I golf again, I just do it for fun.
And the swing's easy again.
And I swear sometimes when I'm in a golf cart, I walk a lot, but when I'm in a golf cart, I can smell the centipist cigar and I can help that smile. That was Holly Thompson.
She now lives in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and is a biological dentist who specializes
in placing non-medals or conia implants.
That hole in one on the green with her grandpa was Holly's first and only, so far.
She still gulves regularly, at home, and all over the world.
To see a photo of Holly and her element on the golf course,
head over to themoth.org.
Up next is Leah Haydock.
She told this story to Grand Slam in Boston,
where we partner with PRX and WBUR.
Here's Leah.
The year I turned 40, I wondered if my husband might surprise me with the party or a trip
away, and I did not expect a divorce because I didn't ski.
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somehow found live-to-rage on Urban Dictionary and I wrote back and I said
well I like a glass of wine or two with dinner but I probably wouldn't say I'm a
rager and I had I took advantage of all the technology because there's so many Mae'n gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gwaithio'r gweithio. Mae'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r
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gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r gweithio'r ffysbweithio a'r So I walked into the restaurant and I deliberately didn't sit in Ethan's section. I was like, I'm not dealing with that ice cream thing.
And I've got my pastor and I'm eating it.
And he comes over anyway and tops up my wine, which I really didn't need anymore of.
And he also gives me this giant plate of broccoli,
and I'm like, because I've had a few glasses of wine, I'm like, do you think
I don't eat enough vegetables? And he's, and he like looks at me and I say, I say, do you
feel sorry for me because I'm always alone? And he looks at me like really, really looks
at me and says, how could I feel sorry for you when you've got all that going on? And I turned beet red, wanted to put my head in my ball
of pasta, but like the grown adult I am,
I send a group text to my happily married girlfriends
because they're a great source of a dating advice.
And they told me to leave my number.
And I was like, I don't leave my number for people
in restaurants. And Alex pointed out that I had gone on so many dates, I am a'r gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi'n gydwch chi mae'r prydyn ni'n ei ffyrddol. Mae'n ei ffyrddol. Mae'n ei ffyrddol yn eimwch yn ymwch yn ymwch yn ymwch yn ymwch yn ymwch yn ymwch yn ymw We love, thank you. still grateful for his kindness and all of the pasta.
After the break, a woman's grief takes her to an island that holds her heart.
When the moth radio hour continues. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media and Woods Hole Massachusetts
and presented by PRX.
This is the Moth Radio Hour from PRX.
I'm Chloe Sammon.
Our final story comes to us from Margarit, Maria Reves.
She told it at a main stage at the Wilbur Theater in Boston,
where we partnered with Public Radio Station WGBH,
a gentle note that this story contains themes of intense loss.
Here's Margarit live at the Moth.
Here's Marguerite live at the mosque. Thank you.
No, thank you.
In the 1980s, the early 1980s, I was a typical statin island working girl going back and forth
to my job on Wall Street every day on the statin island ferry.
And then I got pregnant.
I love that baby from the moment I knew she was there.
I went out and bought a walk, man,
so we could listen to music on the commute
with two sets of headphones,
one for me, one for my belly.
Carly Simon's anticipation played constantly.
And then as my belly grew and the headphones stretched,
they finally snapped.
And I fixed them with some tape from the office.
The doctor called just about my seventh month this was
and asked me to come in for a sonogram
and then he said he wanted to see me afterwards.
When I went in to see him, he looked at me and he said, I have some news.
He said the baby has a fatal birth defect and that her condition is not compatible with
life.
I said, my baby's going to die.
It was inconceivable.
I was seven months pregnant.
She was growing.
She was moving.
She loved music.
I loved music.
I loved her.
And she was going to die.
And he said, yes, that she would die shortly after she
was born.
Two months later, I had my daughter, Maria.
I gave her my middle name because I knew that when she left,
she'd take a big part of me with her,
like maybe the whole middle part of me with her.
And she was so beautiful.
She was bathed and baptized and brought to me
with a little pink cap on her head,
so I couldn't see her birth defect so much.
And the nurse who helped deliver her brought her to me and said,
kiss her goodbye girl.
And I kissed that cheek.
It was like cool water.
And her mouth was like a rose.
And I recognized the curve of her nose.
And when I spoke, she looked at me.
I went home to grieve.
And then I wanted to see the baby's grave.
Before I had left the hospital during visiting hours,
after visiting hours, my family had left.
A woman came in the room with a clipboard,
and she said she was from the city.
And she wanted to know what I wanted to do for the burial.
She said, the city usually takes care of things
in cases like this.
And I remembered that my brother's baby, who'd been born prematurely just before Maria,
had died.
He had a city cemetery burial, and I had this vision.
Because you see, I was 23 hours post-labor, pumped up on painkillers and full of sorrow.
So I had this little vision of Maria and Christopher together,
side by side in some pretty place,
with a picket fence in grass.
So I saw in the papers.
And then when I got home and asked to see the grave,
that's when I found out I could never see the grave.
I had signed the papers for my child
to go to New York City's potter's field on Heart Island.
Heart Island is a little island off the Bronx.
And I could never visit.
You see, Heart Island was administered
by the Department of Corrections
where prisoners dug long trenches
and buried bodies and mass graves.
And for that reason, no one could visit.
It was against the law, ever.
It was like Maria had died all over again.
I had nowhere to mourn.
I had no patch of land to say,
this is where my child is.
She was born, she lived and she died,
and here she is, I had nowhere to go.
It was especially hard on her birthdays and on holidays.
Eventually, I was blessed with two beautiful daughters,
and when they would take their place
around the Thanksgiving table at my mom's house,
I would look at them, and I would always see three.
Maria was always there, a presence.
37 years after Maria was born and died.
My niece, Jamie, who lives here in Boston called me up and said,
and did you know, did you know there was a loss in families
to visit Hart Island now?
You can go visit Hart Island.
And I was first like floating out of my body and I was like,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
No, thank you.
You see, in those 37 intervening years,
my grief had been compounded by my guilt
at having signed away my child to a place I could never visit.
And that was exacerbated by these horrible headlines I used to see.
City of Vel'Los, Souls, Island of the Forgotten.
She was never forgotten, not for one minute.
And I used to see these images of trenches and dirt and mud and gravel.
And I remembered that last beautiful kiss. And I said, I can't go see my baby here.
But then I remembered that dream I had
about Maria and Christopher being together.
And when that doctor had told me that day,
that she was going to die.
I felt as though I had swallowed a rock, and it had dropped me right to the bottom of
the harbor as cold as ice.
And I carried that rock, biggest my fist in where my heart should have been.
I carried that rock for 37 years,
and I knew I had to do something to move that rock.
And Jamie said, it's okay, I'll come down and get you,
I'll take care of you.
And I believed her, and I knew this had to go.
This rock had to go.
So I went to the city's website and I filled out the
forms for us to visit. Soon we were on the dock. Heart Island is in the Bronx.
It's off the Bronx. In order to get there, you have to cross water. I was at the
dock with Jamie, my niece, and Miranda, my daughter. And as we stood there on the dock, I could see other parents who were going to see their
children.
Some of them had just found out their children were buried there.
The officer in charge came out, the corrections officer in charge came out and said, we'll
be going to Hard Island soon.
Let me tell you how we'll get there.
Once we're underway, I'll give you the procedure.
He said, we're gonna get there by an old Staten Island ferry
that's been repurposed only for Hard Island.
It's the oldest one.
And I realized in that moment
that my daughter's first journeys in her last
was aboard a statin island ferry
so at a place here in the Bronx.
Soon this little ferry came, it looked like a little barge,
we got on it, and we started to cross.
And the fog was so dense, you couldn't even see Horde Island, you had no idea where
you were going.
It was like you were crossing the river Sticks, that's all I kept thinking.
And as we got toward the island, the officer in charge said, okay, here's the procedure.
Do you see that white bus?
We're gonna get in that bus
and it will take you to your loved one's gravesite
where a corrections officer will be stationed
to supervise your visit.
You can't take pictures and you can't leave
until the bus comes around to get you again.
So we shuffled onto the bus comes around to get you again. So we shuffled onto the bus, got underway,
a woman got out with red flowers, and put them down
in front of a statue, an old, whether it's statue
that must have been there for decades of an angel child.
And the bus wound round again, and a family got out,
and they had this beautiful bouquet.
And I had seen them on the dock and the
father was so composed.
And you know, when you got there, the officer in charge would show you where the grave
was because none of them are marked.
He has to have the grid to let you know.
And when he brought him out, that father fell to his knees.
And I thought, oh my gosh, what's going to happen to me?
We went round and round and round, dropping people off.
And finally, the bus came to a stop.
I got out.
And the officer in charge said, I'm going to show you where your daughter's grave is,
and where your nephew's grave is.
And when I looked around me, there were no trenches, there was no mud.
The beautiful Long Island sound was right there. In gravel did not cover their graves, grass did.
And when he showed me where my daughter was and where my nephew was, they were adjacent
to each other.
The dream, 37 years before that adult brain dream I had was true. Those cousins were on the most
beautiful part of the island. We knelt at Maria's grave, Miranda and Jamie, and I cried.
And then Jamie said, do you remember when we went to an Eagles concert as a family?
Do you remember that time?
She took something out of her coat.
She said, Maria would have been the right age to go.
It was a yellow ticket stub.
She said, I'm giving her my ticket, and she put the ticket down on my daughter's grave.
Then she said,
Maria would have gone to Vermont with us every summer,
and we would have spent swimming in sunset lake
and playing on the dock,
and she took out a bottle of water,
she unscrewed the cap,
she doused the grave and she said,
this is Maria's sunset lake.
And finally, she said,
Maria would have been at every Thanksgiving at Grama's house.
And we would have played with her in the backyard till it got dark.
And we would have had dinner with her.
And she took out a little bag of dirt,
all desiccated and dry.
And she sprinkled it on Maria's grave and she said,
this is Maria's grandma's house.
And I knew in that minute, I knew that Maria had not only not been forgotten,
she had been missed.
She had been missed by her companion cousin.
I wasn't the only one who saw.
I knelt down on the grave.
The supervising officer called us over first and said, he'd like, would you like a keep
sake?
And he had a whole, whole, roared camera.
And he said, I can take a picture for you, if you like.
So we stood the three of us together holding each other, the beautiful
long island sound at our back, the mountains of grass in front of us. He took the
picture and as he did I could see that the bus was returning for us. And I started to panic. I didn't want to leave her again. I knelt down on the
grave one last time with that rock still heavy in there. And I started caressing the grass.
That's the last thing I remember before I started weeping like I had not wept in 37 years.
37 years of grief and guilt came pouring out of me.
I was keening at her grave.
I heard some noise behind me and I got up and the officer in charge was there.
He was such a wonderful sweet man.
And he looked at me and he said, will you make me a promise?
Will you do me a favor?
Will you come back next spring?
See, it was December and it was actually the last visit anyone could make for that year.
So you come back in the spring.
It's beautiful here in the spring and emotioned with his hand. He said, it's full of flowers.
It's full of wildflowers. Come back. You'll feel better. But I already was feeling better.
At rock I had carried was gone.
And in its place was a widening channel for me to navigate.
A channel left for me to navigate by Maria
out of this darkness and finally into the light.
Thank you.
That was Margarit Maria Rivas.
She still lives on Staten Island and is an English professor, a writer, and a proud
grandmother to Violet Ray. She also performs improvisational poetry with musicians from time to time.
She's at work on a book about journeys, a mix-john revolum combining poetry and narrative.
One sunny day, I took the Staten Island ferryerry over to Seymar Grete and talk with her
more about Maria and that day on Heart Island.
I was curious to know if she had left anything for Maria in addition to Jamie's gifts.
The matter of fact, when I did go visit Heart Island, I went to one of my favorite places
in the woods and I gathered things because I could never bring my baby home.
And I said if I can't bring her home to Staten Island, I'm gonna bring Staten Island to her.
So I gathered leaves and rocks and sweet gum seed pods and twigs and every sort of
kind of natural object in that beautiful wooded
blade that I used to go in. And I wrapped it in brown paper and tied it with a
purple ribbon, and that's what I actually brought to Hard Island instead of a
bouquet. In addition to the show in Boston, Marguerite has told her story live on a
few of our other stages. Each time a new theater full of people have heard about Maria and her mother's love.
I asked Marguerite how it feels to know that so many new people know her daughter's name.
There are many Maria's that have never been talked about.
And when I left the show in Boston and one woman was visibly upset, I said, oh, she's
got a Maria.
Knowing that her life had meaning and that people hear that, I have no grave stone, no headstone.
But the headstone is the memory that people will take away. So I might not have one headstone,
but I might have 800 now,
and maybe another 600.
Because of the pandemic,
Marguerite hasn't been able to return to Heart Island
since that first visit in 2019,
but she plans to this winter
and has a visit scheduled two days before Maria's 40th birthday.
That's it for this episode of The Moth Radio Hour.
I hope you'll join us again next time.
This episode of The Moth Radio Hour was produced by me, Jay Allison, Catherine Burns, and
Chloe Sammon, who also hosted and directed the stories in the show.
Co-producer is Vicki Merrick at Social Producer Emily Couch.
Additional Grand Slam Coaching by Larry Rosen.
The rest of the Moths' leadership team includes Sarah Haberman, Sarah Austin, Genes, Jennifer Hickson, Meg Bowles, Kate Tellers, Jennifer Birmingham, Marina
Cluche, Suzanne Rust, Brandon Grant, Inga Gladovsky, Sarah Jane Johnson, and Aldi
Kaza. Most stories are true as remembered and affirmed by the storytellers.
Our theme music is by the Drift, other music in this hour from the Schmidt
Vertory duo, James Brown, Marisa
Anderson, Goucho, and Eric Friedlander.
We receive funding from the National Endowment for the Arts.
The Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media, in Woods Hole, Massachusetts,
and presented by PRX.
For more about our podcast, for information on pitching us your own story and everything
else, go to our website, TheMoth.org.
for information on pitching us your own story and everything else go to our website
TheMoth.org.