Dirt Roads |
Dirt roads are almost a thing of the past
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The following was shared with me by email
from my cousin, Bill Goodpasture and his wife Janice, who now live in
Florida. I liked it and you may like it as well. It’s entitled "Dirt
Roads".
What's mainly wrong with society today is that too many Dirt
Roads have been paved. There's not a problem anywhere today, crime,
drugs, education, divorce, delinquency that wouldn't be remedied, if we
just had more Dirt Roads, because Dirt Roads give character.
People did not worship their cars more than their kids, and motorists
were more courteous. They didn't tailgate by riding another person’s
bumper, or the guy in front would choke you with dust or else a stray
rock might crack your windshield. Dirt Roads taught patience. Dirt Roads were environmentally friendly. You didn't hop in your car
for a quart of milk you walked to the barn for your milk. For your mail,
you walked to the mail box. What if it rained and the Dirt Road got washed out? That was the best
part, then you stayed home and had some family time, roasted
marshmallows and popped popcorn and pony rode on Daddy's shoulders and
learned how to make prettier quilts than anybody. At the end of Dirt
Roads, you soon learned that bad words tasted like soap. Most paved roads lead to trouble, Dirt Roads more likely lead to a fishing creek or a swimming hole. At the end of a Dirt Road, the only time we even locked our car was in August, because if we didn't some neighbor would fill it with too much squash. At the end of a Dirt Road, there was always extra springtime income, from when city dudes would get stuck, you'd have to hitch up a team and pull them out. Usually you got a dollar...always you got a new friend...at the end of a Dirt Road!
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