| We
                      lived here six months while our house in Fargo was being
                      readied.  I got out of school early, so
                    did not have older sisters to guide me home, and got lost.
                     I walked and walked, getting more and more lost and
                   broke down in tears, wetting my panties in anxiety.  No
                   one noticed,
                    but soon I became aware of the iron pylon with a cannonball
                    on top that protected cars from the open gutter, and it looked
                    like an iron little girl to me.  As I stared at it,
                    it became a symbol of my own iron self within me, and I knew
                    I had
                    the courage to find home.  I asked the nearest passerby
                    to take me to the police.  When I got home, Mother was
                    so full
                    of praise for my having taken charge of myself, being so
                    self-sufficient.  Here was born the stubborn autonomy
                    that has been my lifelong prized possession.
 |