I often wonder how we got there, and how it was that we all came to be created
by that place, changed forever by our years there.
It was as if
I were meant to be there. Even in my
earliest years I loved tagging along
with Dad to the “Farm,” as a girl full of curiosity would, wanting to
understand what goes on from 8-5 in the parent world.Cathy Belliveau, Program Director Down Home Ranch |
Camp Days |
It is so hard
for anyone to understand who had never been there.
To understand,
you had to breathe it in…let the
place seep into you to experience the sense of awe it still holds for me. It brings me to tears even after all these
years: That Farm on the hill, holy depository for the broken and the lost, the
loved and the rejected, the home. It was the playground of my teen years…my rite
of passage to adulthood. It is a big
part of who I am, and a big part of me was left behind, inside those gates.
I was thirteen when I first came to the Farm. It took a while to take everything in and allow it to enchant me, as it had so many others who dedicated their lives to the care of the people on the Farm. I went there every chance I had. I spent my summers there teaching and being taught. It was the best growing up place anyone could ask for.
I was thirteen when I first came to the Farm. It took a while to take everything in and allow it to enchant me, as it had so many others who dedicated their lives to the care of the people on the Farm. I went there every chance I had. I spent my summers there teaching and being taught. It was the best growing up place anyone could ask for.
After all
these years it is still the Farm I think of when I recall the proudest moments
in my work. I still see the faces and hear
the voices….calling me back over all those years to the past.
Their faces come back to me—bringing smiles
and tears. I see the hands of the
children and those of the elderly, all needing, yet all giving.
The Farm started
as a true farm community in 1933 for those society felt needed a separate home
away from the rest of us. At first it
was just for men with mental disabilities, but it expanded in my years there to
open the doors to women and some children.
The older men would tell me stories of growing vegetables and working in the fields below the main campus. That was before my time.
How proud they were of their work and how they missed the productive years, before the rules changed and the powers that were took the farm work out of the farm and left in its place the institution.
Cathy volunteering at Special Olympics |
The older men would tell me stories of growing vegetables and working in the fields below the main campus. That was before my time.
How proud they were of their work and how they missed the productive years, before the rules changed and the powers that were took the farm work out of the farm and left in its place the institution.
These old
gentlemen should have been someone’s grandpa….so they became mine, and I will
never forget them. And in my mind’s eye
I see my red headed six year old, with
his brown vacant eyes and one hand stretched out as if searching for something.
He whirled around in his dance for
one….laughing at the wind….oblivious to my presence. How I longed to reach him and unlock the child
and set him free…but in a way he was already free…free from the world that
could be so cruel to someone so different.
I remember
Christmas on the Farm, with parades and bands and hundreds of smiling faces
wrapped up in holiday joy. In the summertime
there were watermelon days, paddle boat races and swimming in the pool.
We loved Halloween so much we dedicated a an entire month to prepare for it. Staff worked tirelessly to create costumes, a haunted house, and a carnival with candy apples and games of chance. There was not a single holiday we didn’t celebrate and go all out for.
Santa paid a visit |
We loved Halloween so much we dedicated a an entire month to prepare for it. Staff worked tirelessly to create costumes, a haunted house, and a carnival with candy apples and games of chance. There was not a single holiday we didn’t celebrate and go all out for.
In some ways
it was all such a perfect safe haven.
But not
always. Like any loving but sometimes
dysfunctional family there were hard days and times it was difficult to smile,
but they were few enough in my day. The
hugs and the loving words made up for the black moments when someone forgot our
purpose. We were family to each other
and to the people who lived there.The lessons we learned about unconditional love and acceptance were gifts we all received. Those gifts are cherished to this day, and will be remembered as long as I have any memory at all.
It is
difficult—no, really it’s impossible—to
convey the depth of love many of us had for the people and for the place.
The Farm was closed forever in 1995, shut down by people who didn’t understand what it had been able to become over the years: a sanctuary.
The pond at Travis State School |
The Farm was closed forever in 1995, shut down by people who didn’t understand what it had been able to become over the years: a sanctuary.
Shut down by
people with fancy theories but precious little real experience in living and
loving people with a label.
Shut down, but
never forgotten. But not by me, and not
by the hundreds of other people who lived and worked there.
The Farm will
always be the haunting, mystical place on the hill that changed us all.
C. Belliveau
C. Belliveau
Thanks Judy! My Dad is playing his accordion in the TSS version of camp. The other picture is my Dad playing Santa teasing my Mom. My entire family worked for Travis at one point or another. I guess you can say the love of this work is in the blood.
ReplyDeleteCathy, I grew up there too. Started right out of college and I would have stayed there forever. So many changes over time made the place better and better. I'll never forget being called Missis smiff smiff (smith smith- I was a smith and married a smith) and the arrowhead collections so proudly brought out to show everyone, the one man who could identify whose car was driving by by the sound of it's engine. So many more incredible people and workers. And my wonderful mentor, Mark Lett. blessings, Robin Smith Cline Ellison
ReplyDeleteI remember one of the guys who could tell me what day of the week my birthday would fall in no matter what year I gave him. Amazing. Down Home Ranch is my second TSS...and this time it's not going anywhere.
ReplyDelete