The Cornfield Place
When I was in kindergarten, my mother would read to me every evening before bed. I loved listening to the stories, but more than anything, I wanted to be able to read them myself. Sometimes I didn’t like the ones she picked. Other times, I’d fall in love with a story and want to hear it every single night, but she’d get tired of it and say, “No more, not again.”
I wanted the power to choose the stories. To reread the ones I loved for days, even weeks. I asked my mother to teach me to read. She was a teacher, after all. But she said, “You’ll learn in school. There’s no need to do it before.”
One early spring afternoon, when I was about four years old, I took a blank sheet of paper and laid it over a page from the newspaper. Slowly, I copied every letter I could see. Line by line, I filled that blank page. It took a very long time. Maybe an hour, maybe many - time moves differently when you're four - but I remember it felt endless.
When I finished, I brought the paper to my mom and said proudly, “Look, I can write! Will you teach me to read now?”
She got angry.
To this day, I don’t know why. Maybe she was tired, maybe startled. She looked at the page and said, “This isn’t writing! It’s just scribbles. Rubbish. Don’t waste your time pretending. You’ll learn properly when school starts.”
Her words stung. I started to cry.
“I just want to read, Mom. You didn’t want to help me, so I tried by myself. This is all I could do. Why are you mad?”
She softened then, her voice quieter.
“You’re not going to give up, are you?”
Tears still in my eyes, I shook my head. “I can’t wait. I need to read now.”
And so - she taught me.
By summer, when we went to visit my grandparents, I could already read short stories. It still took me a long time to get through a single one, but the joy of making it to the end on my own was unlike anything I’d felt before.
When I found a story I loved, I’d slip away to the cornfield near my grandparents’ house with the book in hand. There, tucked between tall green stalks, I would read the same tale over and over until I heard my grandmother’s voice calling me to dinner.
To this day, when I find a book I love, I still look for that cornfield place, the quiet corner of the world where the pages come alive and nothing else matters.