Essay About Moving Away

640 Words3 Pages
Walking into the restaurant was like walking into a time machine. Everything in the venerable Skyline Chili was just as it had been nineteen years earlier. I was still just a thought in my parents’ minds and they only needed a table for three. Something timeless about the establishment’s sparkling blue plastic booths and the familiar picture of the Cincinnati Reds team on the wall simply captivated us. The eatery became a memoir of the 1990s that my family grew to love as we frequented the corner both every Saturday promptly at 11:30 AM to beat the lunchtime rush. Whenever family traveled in from out of town, we rushed to Skyline to show them what we considered to be our special piece of Cincinnati. It was more than a restaurant - it was a monument, a scrapbook with endless memories inside its pages. As I grew older, however, everything began to change. Saturday mornings were taken up by my own self interests and the novelty of spending time with my parents had worn off; I was absorbed in middle school and intoxicated by peer pressure that said only losers hung out with their parents on the weekends. I…show more content…
Just to prove him wrong, I decided to accept his offer. As my family and I pulled up to the restaurant and the iconic sign came into view a wave of nostalgia washed over me. Suddenly I couldn’t wait to sit at our well-loved table and feel my legs stick to the clingy plastic seats like they always did in the dead of summer. Walking through the doors, though, revealed something different entirely. Gone were the shimmering blue booths and the ancient Cincinnati memorabilia; replacing them were seats of lush cream and flat screen TVs on every wall. It was modern, classy, and stylish - everything it wasn’t supposed to be. We were at the same place at the same time and yet everything was
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