Connie Philips, Hannah Ross, Emily Reyes--formerly Phillips, and Emily's husband Cristian Reyes at the Clark County Fair. (Washington Post photo by Matt McClain) |
Kahoka, Missouri (Sperling's Best Places map) |
Emily's relationships with friends and family back home had become increasingly bumpy, as her personal convictions changed. But she had loved going to the Clark County Fair since she was a girl, and had promised to help her parents run their concession booth for three days. So she went, and McCrummen's story highlights the awkward, delicate navigation of her visit. Her husband Cristian pitched in, trying hard not to draw attention to himself as an immigrant. The Guatemala native had been raised in rural Missouri since he was eight, and showed up to meet Emily at the fair wearing a shirt with a huge American flag. He was, he told her, "full PR mode."
But controversial topics kept coming up in conversation, and everyone involved had to choose whether to engage in arguments that would not likely change anyone's mind. "Maybe the best path forward was avoidance, Emily thought. Avoid Trump, avoid all related controversial subjects. Talk about biscuits and fries and the demolition derby and appreciate what Kahoka was, not what it wasn’t," McCrummen writes. That approach worked, for the most part. And after the controversial topics were stripped away, what was left were the everyday conversations between people who love each other, even if they don't understand each other so well any more.
from The Rural Blog http://ift.tt/2vTrqAC Forget Hollywood: What happens in real life when a liberal young woman visits her rural hometown? - Entrepreneur Generations
0 Response to "Forget Hollywood: What happens in real life when a liberal young woman visits her rural hometown? - Entrepreneur Generations"
Post a Comment