The smell of the low tide on the way home tonight brought back more childhood memories. You know how you can be somewhere and just get a whiff of something and it can take you back to a specific time in your life?
My dad was a commercial fisherman and stone crabber and we were out on the water a lot growing up. It’s hard to remember exactly how old I was, but I think I was around 10 or 11 and I must have been going through a gawky, clumsy stage. One year my dad gave me the nickname “kerplunk”. It wasn’t one of those nicknames that last you for the rest of your life (thank goodness!) It was a nickname for a season. And let me tell you, that particular season, I earned it.
It seemed that we couldn’t be in the boat or actually anywhere near a body of water without me falling in. “Kerplunk”, he would say. I was thinking today that maybe the fact that dad started calling me that made me fall in even more, since our words hold such power.
I remember one time he was fishing and there was a large cooler in the boat and at the time the lid was halfway off. I was precariously perched on the edge of it and before I knew it, I was overboard and trying to get back in the boat. “Kerplunk”. Another time, my dad was stopped near a mangrove tree and had told us all to sit down as he was about to take off. In all my youthful stupidity, I thought it would be a cool idea to hang on to the mangrove branch as my dad moved forward.
The next thing I know, I’m hanging from the branch as the boat speeds away. I thought it was pretty funny until the branch broke. I screamed and they looked back about the time I found myself going under. Thankfully, I did know how to swim. I can still remember how the oyster shells felt when they cut through the tender flesh in the salty water. My dad gave me a piece of his mind that day for that one, but he had to feel sorry for me at the same time. I was a pathetic, bawling, dripping mess by the time they picked me up.
Then, it seemed that as quickly as my “kerplunk” incidents began, they just stopped happening. I guess you could probably say I learned my lesson, started paying more attention instead of trying to merely get attention. Even though it’s kind of an embarrassing one, it’s a good memory, because I remember all the good times we had out in the boat. I’ll have to remind my dad about that the next time I see him.