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BACKSEAT BLUES

WAS I BORN BEFORE?

By Vicki Lawana Trusselli Published 3 months ago 3 min read
TRUSSELLI ART SEE CREDITS

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.

ARTGURU

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?

ARTGURU

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.

ARTGURU

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?

1953 Chevy

created, written, edited by

Vicki Lawana Trusselli

Trusselli Art

California

artBalladFamilyFor FunFree VerseFriendshipinspirationalMental HealthOdeperformance poetryProsesocial commentarySong LyricsStream of Consciousness

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.

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Comments (3)

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  • Aarish3 months ago

    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.

  • Julie Lacksonen3 months ago

    You are quite talented with the lyrics and the music! Love this. 💜

  • Skyler Saunders3 months ago

    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.

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