The humidity has lifted, and
the August air is shifting towards the crispness of fall. Soon my father’s
lemon tree will be inside for the next nine months, my backyard pool will be
closed, and it will be time to return to school before I’ve finished packing my
clothes and belongings for my Amherst apartment. With the seasonal transition
comes the end of BBQs and hot dogs, fresh vegetables from my father’s garden and
the bittersweet feelings of leaving the warm nights and beach days behind.
It also marks the end of my
summer as a marketing assistant at The Big E, where I have learned the ins and
outs of journalistic writing and formed great relationships with the marketing
team. Since early June I’ve been coming into the office from 9-5, holding a job
much different than those of my friends at school. Instead of serving customers
at a local restaurant or country club, or working as a lifeguard at a local
pool, I am doing something I enjoy and gaining the experience I will need after
graduation. I love it here, and as the Fair draws closer, I become aware of the
limited time I have left.
Each day I write stories on
cream puffs, Craz-E Burgers and the animals that star in the major
competitions, and I revisit my childhood and the excitement I felt around seeing
the livestock and elephants up close. Each year I begged my parents to take me
to the Fair, and for the most part, they did. Then in high school I marched in
the parade with the Minnechaug Band, leaving school early and indulging in
tasty treats and riding the Giant Yellow Slide. It was one of my favorite days
in the school year.
Fast forward to today, Aug.
13, 2013. It is exactly one month until the Fair, and my experience with The
Big E has evolved into so much more than eating fried dough and shopping for
flannel shirts in the Vermont Building. Becoming a part of the
behind-the-scenes Marketing team, I now understand the endless hours of
preparation ESE goes through to make the Fair possible.
Soon I will leave my position
behind to start my classes, welcoming the crisp air and the changing leaves as
they become a pumpkin shade of orange and a cardinal red before falling to the
ground. Warm cider and crisp McIntosh apples will fill my kitchen, and flannel
shirts will replace the short sleeves and sundresses I’ve been wearing since
May.
New England is breathtaking in the fall, but I know that I will miss my summer writing job and the people I am lucky enough to work with. In a way though, it isn’t truly over until Sept. 29, the last day of the Fair. For those 17 days I can still revisit the grounds and drop by the office as if I never left, and going back to school was simply a detour.
Congratulations on the new chapter of your life...I am sure you are a great asset to the Big E staff. I will be looking forward to my visit this year.
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