Farewell to Pictou County, N.S.

By COURTNEY BUDER

Pictou County, Nova Scotia, Canada

Lint blue thunder flavors the memory. The waves are enormous, curling up high and mighty like Caribou antlers. In hindsight: Why are we at the beach during a thunderstorm? But back then, in all of my five year old wisdom: The water is so warm and excited to see me.  

The power went out for three days during one hurricane or another. My niece was only a baby, my mom and sister murmuring about warming the milk. Everybody crowded together onto a bed, every blanket in the house employed. I thought it was wonderful. I remember standing in the middle of the street, the wind tearing straight through me. I watched my red hat get sucked up and away into the grey, watched trees flail, calm as a clam, as a strange and lonely little girl transfixed, like watching a snow globe from the inside. The Ship Hector crept up onto Caladh Avenue and my mother finally burned the candle. Life went on.

On the night a deer ran into the side of our car, the glass exploded like confetti. I don’t remember crying, I remember it all like that magnificent snow globe, the details lost on me beyond the glittering shards swirling around like snowflakes. I remember being confused later on, when my sister kept insisting that I was crying in the passenger seat until the ambulance came. One of us remembers it wrong.

I remember reading about psychologists manipulating people into believing that fabricated memories were ripe from their subconscious. The recovered memory movement. I devoured the written word, anything I could get my hands on. Reread books my older siblings forgot to return to school again and again and again, learned about Mardi Gras, owls, sedimentary rocks. Learned about public libraries, then went and read every ghost story ever recorded in Pictou County. It’s all I really remember, the things I read. If I even really remember. In the years since, I’ve read a lot about that place as I knew it and as I didn’t. About the skatepark they’re still trying to get built; Shubenacadie Residential School; the pulp mill, not the familiar stench but the contamination, who and how it killed; about small-town racism, small-town small-mindedness; Viola Desmond; the No. 2 Construction Battalion; and then hurricanes worse than anything I ever saw, a place that isn’t what it was before. I don’t remember what it was before, in my own eyes just a blur of happiness and hardship, yellow on green, salted grey, lint blue thunder, the seabound coast. I know that when I thought I knew, I didn’t really know. Not all of it. Maybe this schism, this discordance, it’s all it ever was, all anything is.

I remember where to go to feel as dissonant as the memories. Into the thick of woods up past what used to be Pictou Elementary. Go at night. Walk up the center of the road, if you want. There won’t be cars. Look up. I bet those stars remember things, too.

I wish I hadn’t read about the recovered memory movement. I wish I could ask somebody in good faith to sift my every memory through a sieve, the falling granules sparkling, backlit with Jitney sunshine, to let me know which parts were real, which parts are missing and how to get them back, let me know why we were at the beach during a thunderstorm.

 

 

Courtney Buder (she/they) is a writer and visual artist living in Fredericton, New Brunswick, on unceded Wolastoqey land. Their work is published or forthcoming in Geist Magazine, Pinhole Poetry, Room Magazine, the Queen’s Quarterly, and elsewhere. Find them on Instagram @courtneybuder.

From the beginning, The Common has brought you transportive writing and exciting new voices. We are committed to supporting writers and maintaining free, unrestricted access to our website, but we can’t do it without you. Become an integral part of our global community of readers and writers by donating today. No amount is too small. Thank you!

Farewell to Pictou County, N.S.

Related Posts

whale sculpture on white background

September 2025 Poetry Feature: Earth Water Fire Poems, a Conversation

LISA ASAGI
"We and the whales, / and everyone else, / sleep and wake in bodies / that have a bit of everything / that has ever lived. Forests, oceans, / horse shoe crabs, horses, / orange trees in countless of glasses of juice, / lichen that once grew / on the cliffsides of our ancestors, / deepseated rhizomes, and stars. // Even stars are made

Two children kneel on a large rock surface, large grey boulders and a forest of trees visible in the distance.

The Garden of the Gods

ELI RODRIGUEZ FIELDER
The gods must have been giant children squeezing drip sandcastles from their palms, back when this land was at the edge of a sea. This used to be a mouth, I say. It feels impossible that this peculiar landscape should suddenly emerge among farms and Dairy Queens.

Book cover of Orbital by Samantha Harvey

What We’re Reading: September 2025

MONIKA CASSEL
The speaker’s father, deployed to Vietnam in 1970 (the year of the dog in the lunar calendar) becomes a central figure between these grieving, unsilenceable women, but he is reticent, seen most vividly when the speaker, a child, watches as he sleeps to make sure he doesn’t choke on his tongue from seizures resulting from his service.