By Bethany Bruno
It started with a palm frond.
One of those thick, green giants that fan out over Florida yards like they own the place. My Uncle Bob ripped one clean off the tree, held it high over his head, and marched barefoot around the pool. Jimmy Buffett’s “Volcano” blared from the lanai speakers, steel drums skipping over sun-soaked chaos. Kids doing cannonballs, adults sloshing bourbon in plastic cups, and bathing suits doubling as dinner clothes.
He said nothing. Just grinned and kept moving.
We followed. Every one of us. Cousins dripping pool water, aunts in cover-ups, and the dogs trotting at our heels, nails clicking on the pavement as if they were tap dancing. The conga line snaked through the screen door, into the kitchen, and around the card table stacked with paper plates and Publix potato salad. No one asked why.
Uncle Bob was the kind of Floridian who embodied Buffett’s lyrics. He wore linen shirts, cracked open cold beers before noon, and believed that salt water could cure almost anything.
He died in 2006. But when “Volcano” comes on at a family gathering, someone always finds a frond—real or makeshift—and we fall into line. In these sun-drenched, rum-drenched moments, the music is scripture. Our bodies remember even when our hearts ache. We march through the backyard, past citronella candles and half-eaten ribs, the music stitching us back together.
Bethany Bruno is a Floridian author and amateur historian. Born in Hollywood and raised in Port St. Lucie, she holds a BA in English from Flagler College and an MA from the University of North Florida. Her writing has appeared in more than seventy literary journals and magazines, including The Sun, The Huffington Post, The MacGuffin, McSweeney’s, and 3Elements Review. Learn more at www.bethanybrunowriter.com.
Image by Arın Turkay courtesy of Pexels
Absolutely gorgeously felt to my bones. I’m so glad you wrote this memory into existence.
Beautiful! Some of the best days we’ve ever had. I know my dad is smiling down, proud that you captured those priceless moments in time.
Beautifully evocative!
Damn
Tears on my phone
Miss it all
Miss you
Much love
Thank you! What a vivid tribute to a loved one. The language is as musical as “Volcano”.
That’s the Scott family tradition. 🥹 Any get together or wedding reception isn’t complete until we play Volcano 🌋 . It’s how we keep the memories of those we’ve lost alive. Bob would have loved your tribute.