Backseat Blues
I had a dream the other night. This morning, I was thinking about the world today in 2025. My thoughts took me back to 1955. My poppa owned a 1953 Chevy. We drove everywhere in that car. I remembered an event in 1955. I was five years old and as I watched the trees, mountains, deserts fade away as my poppa drove that Chevy like he was king of the road. Mom and Dad were cool. Now I am seventy-six. I closed my eyes today, drifted back to midnight as I lay in the back of that old yellow 1953 Chevy listening to Hank Williams on the radio sing, '‘I am so Lonesome I Could Cry.” I can still hear my poppa sing that tune softly. Mom would look over at Poppa, smile, then turn back and smile at me. I would hum the tune, then cry. I looked up at the stars, and I asked God, the Universe, “Was I Born Before?” For a day I dreamed about my archives, and I am now smiling at the end of the evening before midnight as I can still hear my Poppa sing to Hank Williams as we drove that old 1953 yellow Chevy down life’s highway.

I was five,
Already humming in keys I hadn’t learned yet.
My fingers found the piano like it was waiting for me
Not to teach, but to remember.
I sang before I understood the words,
But the feeling?
That was mine.
That was older than me.
Poppa would nod,
Eyes closed, tapping the table like it was a drum.
Mom would smile,
Her voice soft, her gaze steady.
She knew I was not just playing.
I was channeling.
The living room became a stage,
The kitchen a concert hall.
I sang to the plants,
To the pets,
To the silence between meals.
Every note was a dispatch,
Every chord a question:
Was I born before?
I lay in the backseat of my daddy’s ’53 Chevy.
Mountains rising like old hymns.
Hank Williams on the radio,
“I’m so lonesome I could cry.”
And I did, quietly,
Not because I had lost anything.
But because I remembered
Something I had not lived yet.
I asked myself,
Why am I so lonesome?
Was I born before?
Did I ride these roads in another skin,
Another name, another ache?

The song did not explain it.
It just confirmed it.
I knew the blues before I knew my own story.
Was I born before this life began?
Did I cry to songs I hadn’t yet lived?
Was I dreaming in the backseat
Of a stage I’d already played?
I was five, but I knew the blues
Like a name I’d carried through time
Was I born before?
Or did the music make me remember?
I dreamed in the backseat
Of cactus shadows, palm trees swaying,
Roses blooming in desert hush.
I lay down, feet propped, eyes wide
Watching the night sky
As stars passed by like old stories.
Country tunes filled the car,
Blues wrapped me in a mythic trance.
Yesterday, present, future life
All braided in the hum of Hank Williams.
I thought about the dance
On the reservation,
Where I learned to rise
On my tiptoes,
To move like memory.

Now we have left the reservation.
Time drives us over mountains and desert.
The cactus looms in my head,
A sentinel of something I knew
Before I had words.
Was I born before this life began?
Did I cry to songs I hadn’t yet lived?
Was I dreaming in the backseat
Of a stage I’d already played?
I was five, but I knew the blues
Like a name I’d carried through time
Was I born before?
Or did the music make me remember?
I dreamed of stars,
Moons, suns,
And then I cried silently
As my dad sang with Hank:
“I’m so lonesome I could cry.”
I hummed with Poppa,
My mom beside him,
Listening to the beat
Of dreams from younger days
Along life’s highway.
I lay in the backseat,
Crying softly,
Asking myself,
Was I born before?
I was five,
But I knew the blues
In my heart and soul—
From another lifetime,
On stage,
In a laid-back way.
Was I born before this life began?
Did I cry to songs I hadn’t yet lived?
Was I dreaming in the backseat
Of a stage I’d already played?
I was five, but I knew the blues
Like a name I’d carried through time
Was I born before?
Or did the music make me remember?

created, written, edited by
Vicki Lawana Trusselli
Trusselli Art
California
About the Creator
Vicki Lawana Trusselli
Welcome to My Portal
I am a storyteller. This is where memory meets mysticism, music, multi-media, video, paranormal, rebellion, art, and life.
I nursing, business, & journalism in college. I worked in the film & music industry in LA, CA.




Comments (3)
Your writing makes the blues feel eternal, like a memory older than a lifetime itself. The way you braid music, family, and existential wonder is mesmerizing.
You are quite talented with the lyrics and the music! Love this. 💜
This stirring, moving encapsulation of feelings and thoughts reflects a mind at serious work. The imagery of the ‘53 Chevy and the sounds of Hank Williams display and echo through the mind. Brava. —S.S. P.S. Become a PAID subscriber of Lawana’s.