05/20/2026
A Detour Down Rainy Road
Owen Wright
I took a little time today to slow down and go visit an old friend. Life has a way of keeping a man moving — obligations, work, responsibilities, and the constant pull of the larger world — and before long, years pass faster than they ought to. But today I turned down an old county road and found myself standing in a quiet cemetery beneath the longleaf pines, beside the resting place of people I have known since I was a boy.
Standing there in the warm South Georgia air, looking across the sandy ground and weathered headstones, I found myself thinking less about death and more about home.
I thought about Ben and the kind of fellow he was. Friendly. Funny. The sort of man who could make people feel welcome wherever he went. Life may have taken him too early, but it never took away the goodness in him. And standing there beside him, beside his mother and father, surrounded by pioneers, veterans, and generations of country people laid quietly beneath the earth, I realized again why I came back home after seeing so much of the wider world.
The truth is, some of us were never meant to belong entirely to cities. We may work there, learn there, and pass through there, but deep down we remain country people. We are tied inseparably to the land itself. To dirt roads winding through pine timber. To old cemeteries sitting quietly beneath open sky. To the sound of quail lifting from broomsage at the edge of a field. To the slow crossing of a gopher tortoise over warm sandy earth. To the understanding that even a rattlesnake beneath the palmettos belongs to the same ancient landscape that shaped us.
I think too many people today have been taught to believe that progress means severing themselves from places like these. They leave behind the old roads, the family cemeteries, the churches, the farms, and the memory of the people who raised them, believing that roots are somehow burdens instead of blessings. But standing out there today, I realized that rootedness may be one of the greatest gifts a person can possess.
There is dignity in belonging to a place.
There is peace in knowing where your people rest.
There is wisdom in understanding that the earth beneath your feet once carried your grandfathers, and, if the Lord allows, may someday carry you as well.
These old cemeteries are not merely burial grounds. They are reminders. They remind us that life is temporary, but stewardship is lasting. That generations before us struggled, built homes, raised children, worshipped, laughed, mourned, and left enough of themselves behind that the land still remembers them long after their voices have gone quiet.
And perhaps that is what I would want a younger generation to understand.
Do not become so consumed by the noise of the modern world that you forget the old roads that brought you into it.
Go back home sometimes.
Walk through the cemeteries.
Read the names on the stones.
Listen to the wind in the longleaf pines.
Remember that you belong to something older than yourself.
Because one day, if you are fortunate, another generation may stand quietly beneath those same trees remembering you — not merely for what you accomplished in the wider world, but for whether you loved your people, cared for your land, and left your corner of the earth worthy of being called home.