Gone Vishin?

My mother has always maintained solid vision.  While her hearing may be taking a stroll between Selective Street and Helen Keller Avenue, her vision remains keen.  When I visit her, and we watch her beloved Seattle Mariners, she always knows when her favorite baseball player, Franklin Gutierrez or “Cutierez” is at the plate.  It’s not when the announcers call his name, but rather, when she sees his striking good looks from her recliner, well over ten feet away from the television set. (She seems to be able to spot a good looking man from 6 blocks away.) So, when Gutierrez struts to home plate, she makes the announcement.  “Guty’s up!”

Recently, my mother had to watch the Mariners from a hospital bed because of a recent scare.   She was admitted for a couple of days, undergoing many uncomfortable tests but has since been discharged with an expensive bill of health.

Although hospitals are seldom a place where laughter is in abundance, our mother made us all laugh during her first day of being admitted.  A nurse began asking mother several questions or to perform certain tasks, mostly checking on her senses and level of consciensness.  What day is it?  What month, year, squeeze my hand, push on this, pull on that, toss that tissue in the nearest basket, who was the Heavyweight Champion of the World in 1973…..etc, etc, etc.  My sisters, Anne, Patricia, Maggie, as well as my wife and I watched with pain in our eyes because we knew how uncomfortable this beautiful, 87 year old mother of 13 was during the interrogation.   That’s when mom converted our eyes filled with uncertainty to ones filled with the laughter we inherited from her.  One of the last questions from the nurse was, “How is your vision?”  With an incredulous look on her face, mom gasped, “What!”.  “HOW IS YOUR VISION?”  Almost sounding agitated by the endless questioning, my mother answered, “Oh, I don’t care about fishin!”

We all busted up heartily, providing us a moment of relief, and when we told her why we were laughing, she busted up as well.  Sadly, the nurse didn’t think it was so funny, especially when I requested the next question for our mother should be about her hunting skills.

We knew she’d be home soon at Anne’s, comfortably watching “Guty” from her recliner with the sound turned up as loud as possible for no reason whatsoever.

Prayer

Religion and decisions, much like politics, are tricky subjects.  I voice my opinions with God, Jesus, the Catholic Rosary, my wife, some dear friends, and my mother. The latter seems to be the most impressive.

I have decided to rely on my mother’s faith, genuine goodness, a dose of prayer, drizzled with a wonderful wife, to live my life as properly as I could wish.

A very fortunate man.

By the wayside, don’t rely on Trump to run our nation.  He is a perfect example of what our mothers warned us about.

 

Out of the Woods

My wife was out of town for a few days so I thought I’d surprise her with something special upon her return.  I not only purchased a new toilet seat for our master bathroom, I installed it as well.  This was meant to astonish her and anyone who knows me (the installation part).

As a novice with respectful regard to toilet seat purchasing, I quickly found out there are two kinds of toilet seats.  The home furnishing store I visited offered plastic seats and wood seats.  Knowing ours was not plastic, I chose the wood.  It turned out to be the wisest marital and latrine choice I could possibly make.

We have three bathrooms in our house…..not that you care.  I do.  My wife’s first choice of bathrooms after retuning from her journey was the wrong one.  With excited anticipation, when she entered the one closest to our entrance, I yelled, “Why are you using that bathroom!?”  She looked at me as though I may be crazy.  It’s a look I commonly receive.  I could only wonder when she would be ready to use the new toilet seat upstairs.  I may be a bit goofy, but it isn’t often when I say something such as, “Hey, you should use our bathroom upstairs.  Wouldn’t that be fun?”  It wasn’t until the wee hours of the night when she finally used it.  Coming back to bed, I was wide awake, excited to hear about her new thrown and tell her of the proud King who installed it.  Nothing.  I decided to let it rest.  It was was indeed for the best.

The next day, my wife informed me that our five year anniversary is right around the corner, and she then asked me what significance five years may have for those lasting this long in bliss.  Knowing five years is a record for both of us, that was my only response.  She then needled me further about silver, gold, platinum, and other more recognizable anniversaries representing marriages lasting more than five years.  As a certified neanderthal, I stared at her with furrowed eyebrows and a snarled mouth halfway open.  This is our way of saying, “Are you serious?” Or, “How the Hell should I know?”  She caught the drift before any words could blow hard from my lungs.  Then, as usual, she educated me about something I don’t give a crap about.  Evidently, since the middle ages, people have celebrated each anniversary with a traditional gift associated with that year.  Less significant anniversaries are associated with gifts of paper, aluminum, glass, lint, plastic, and even foam rubber.  As a man of culture and science, I pondered her lesson and could only think, speak and wish for one thing the five year anniversary might offer: Beef Jerky?  Sadly, no.

Being a very fortunate man, in our wedding vows, we agreed to NOT purchase one another gifts on anniversaries, only take trips to places such as Tijuana, Spokane Washington or Bora Bora.  Since we have neither the time nor patience to travel with one another outside our zip code right now, I guess I decided to break one of our sacred marital vows.  The traditional five year anniversary gift actually is wood.  Look it up.  That wood toilet seat sure came in handy this year.

Now, I only have to remember the date.

 

 

 

A Whole New Concussion

After finishing an earlier story about a treehouse, I was soon provided with added material regarding the story.  This was material understandably forgotten.  Details were not omitted, just forgotten.  Whenever I write a story about our family, inevitably, if they read it, one of the family members involved with the piece will inform me about a portion of the story I may have forgotten.  It leaves me wishing I would have contacted them prior to publishing it.  The treehouse blog, “Nails….” was no exception.

According to one of the story’s antagonists, my brother, Greg, informed me that not far from the tree we were domesticating, (about fifty feet away) sat a chicken coop.  Save for some rusty nails and some chairs used for our neighborhood gang meetings, it was empty. By the time I was born, I guess mom and dad began preferring store-bought chicken.  We still referred to it as the chicken coop, although it should have been renamed, “the fire hazard”.  To my knowledge, it never burned down, but it did contribute to some of my head trauma growing up with elder siblings.

Having a rather large backyard, we always had hoses spread around the grounds.  Some of them worked properly without gashes while others were merely rubber derelicts waiting for a trip to the dump in the truck we didn’t possess.  Evidently, either during one of our breaks from building the treehouse, or after the construction of it was postponed, my brothers thought they’d put one of the dead hoses to use.  Tying one end of a hose to a branch of our treehouse, and the other end to a tree standing next to the chicken coop, it would, potentially, make an excellent zip line with the rider landing safely on the roof of the coop.  It seemed like a fun and challenging project for my brothers, but the question remained: how could they do it and make it safe at the same time?  They put their minds and heads to work with one towhead (me) in the hole.

Once the hoses were securely fastened to each tree, we then needed some form of vehicle to transfer supplies or humans from one side to the other.   Unable to find anything useful outside, we ventured inside to find something we probably shouldn’t remove from the house.   Soon, we discovered a seat we could attach and hang from the hose with a crude form of rope.  One of my brothers found it in the piano room.  Our piano, one that had been tuned about the last time our coop had chickens, possessed a cushioned chair used for anyone wishing to sit and bang on the keys.  It wasn’t actually a seat, but a hope chest acting as one.  The top came off easily and looked like the perfect answer to our dilemma.  Dragging it outside and using some heavy twine, paired with styrofoam to decrease the sliding friction, the padded seat dangled uneasily from the hose.  There was only one thing remaining. We needed a volunteer, so to speak, to test the makeshift zip line.  My first suggestion was to borrow one of our sisters’ dolls and give it ride.  As usual, my brothers ignored me and needed something more accurately resembling a human. I don’t remember volunteering, but I do vaguely remember brother Tom guaranteeing me I wouldn’t regret giving it a shot, because there just might be some benefits if I had the courage to go first.  According to Tom, mother would be so proud of me, she would buy extra Ding Dongs and Kool Aid at the store for all of us.  (All lies.)  Reluctantly agreeing to be the test pilot, I sat on the piano seat and with only a baseball hat wrapped around my skull, I was prepared for sliding.

The slight downward slope would provide the momentum for me to successfully slide from one end to the other, and the chicken coop roof landing would only leave me easily hopping off the moment before possibly crashing into the receiving tree.  The degree of difficulty, even for me, seemed quite low.   The highest point during the trek was probably no more than ten feet, so it really didn’t look like anything too dangerous.  After a quick pep talk from Greg, “You’re not going to die” shadowed by a semi-confident smirk on Tom’s face, I guess I was prepared for slide off.

From the moment I left the branch,  I knew I’d either reach the coop head first or bail out off the seat of terror.  I had time for neither.  Just after deployment, my speed accelerated, in my primitive mind, from zero to sixty in less than a second leaving me simply terrified. The styrofoam began sizzling and the jostling rope, which was really just some crude form of twine, snapped and the seat and I floated to the hardened dirt with my skull hitting just before the cushion which broke upon impact.  (Greg’s added memory had now brought mine back.)

People say you see stars and hear birds when you get knocked upside the head with tremendous force.  I only heard laughter, and eventually saw Tom and Greg’s faces when they reached me on earth.  They did ask if I was o.k., and I believe my only proper response was an uneasy, “uh huh.”  They seemed to be happy I wasn’t dead, so I felt pretty good about that.  However, just when I came to my feet, the trees, grass, coop and brothers began to blur, not with tears, but with dizziness.  “You sure you’re o.k.?”  “Uh huh.”  Staggering inside our house, I thought I could hear one of them yell, “When you come back out, bring some sodas.  You’re a hero!”  Of course, this was followed by laughter and me entering our house, collapsing on the nearest couch and then vomiting for the next few hours which is exactly what happens when one gets concussed.  Sometimes, it hurts to be a child hero.

 

God Bless Me

New York has never really been nice to me.  I’ve figured it out.  Unless you are from New York, it’s never really nice to anyone.  I get it.  I’ve been to this city several times, and just when I try to forgive it, IT reminds me where I am.

Yesterday, after arriving at John F. Kennedy Airport, for some reason,  walking from the jetway to the port, I had a sneezing fit.  Ten solid sneezes and not one “God Bless You.” I knew I was back in the Rotten Apple.   Thirty seconds of not being blessed frankly upsets me.   Perhaps, I’m just a little too soft and easily bruised.  Or, it could be my deep, dark, psychological hatred for the Yankees.

Maintaining very few solid qualities, I take pride in those retained from terrific parents and a very fortunate upbringing.  One of which is blessing people when they sneeze.  The typical response is a surprised “thank you” and both the sneezer and the God Blesser seem to feel better.  Much like tithing at the church I no longer attend, it just seems, for lack of better words, right.  Rather than channeling my inner anger, and dismissing those sneezing in New York, I am going to make a change.  I am going to walk through Central Park seeking those who sneeze, and God Damn it, I am going to bless them.  I hope it’s contagious.

Peace out.  Stay right.

Toe Head

Let’s face it.  Unless you’re concerned with fetishes, or pedicures, toes are commonly ugly.  Forty years ago, I was given the name, “Toe Head” by my six older brothers and six older sisters. The name infuriated me so much I would be willing to swing like a wild man when anyone would use it in my presence.  For me, it was a synonym for ugly.   It was only four days ago that someone pointed out the term “Tow-head” was merely referring to someone with blond hair and pale skin.  (I guess my Washington State University English degree didn’t pay off quite so handsomely.) This person saved me.  For years, I’ve been wandering this planet thinking my head was just an unshaven, misguided toe.  If I’d have known this years before, I may have dated more.

Fortunately, my wife knows bettor……better.

Nails (GTC and the GLB)

Growing up wasn’t hard to do.  Making it interesting wasn’t either.  Being the youngest of seven brothers, athletics was the premier means of adolescent occupation, but believe it or not, even sports became only a medium of boredom during the four season course.  Baseball was obsolete during winter and playing it in the rain isn’t any fun.  Football was always around just like the mail service.  You played it in the rain, snow and sleet, but sometimes, concussions, or the desire for more than sports forced you to choose a different avenue of interest.  We chose to build a treehouse.

You can only climb a tree so many times without wanting to do something else with it.  Therefore, fabricating a shelter out of it seems like a bright idea.  Much like building a common house, a tree house consists of a combination of many items, but the easiest is the tree.  Since it usually resides on  your parents’ property, taxes aren’t required, and anything you do to the tree is only perhaps reprimanded by the owner’s inspection.  As long as the branches remain intact, and the roots continue to dig towards middle earth,  we were allowed to have our way with the tree.  The tools (however many hammers your father owns or has borrowed) are provided at minimal cost.  Necessary wood was equally cheap because most of the bums or bindlestiffs seeking shelter in the field behind our property would leave behind their makeshift shelters when hearing the train sing from two miles north of our neighborhood.   The nails, however, depending on who you were working with, were at a premium.  Without exception, I was the sole reason our treehouse project was never completed.

GTC:  Gannon Treehouse Construction

My brother, Greg, the boss and chief executive builder, could and can build almost anything.  He’s an artist. Give him four toothpicks, and just by snapping them in half, he will creat eight of them.  Sincerely, he was quite a sculptor, whether it was redefining the art of making sandcastles at the beach, or taking a rivet set and providing the support for a skyscraper.  So, we had that going for us.  His only problem was hiring help.  Sometimes, his heart is larger than his fraternal brain.  He’d hire two of his younger brothers, Tom and me, for minimal pay (promising not to beat you that next day if you obeyed his orders was his only form of currency, and that was fine with me).   Tom, only two years Greg’s junior, unlike me, wasn’t much of a nuisance.  He really didn’t want to be a part of Gannon Treehouse Construction, but the laughs during the process of building might be worth it for him to stick around the construction site. (Solid material used to mock us later in life.)  The only thing Greg required from Tom was to keep his chemistry set he received on Christmas nowhere near the tree.  Greg liked to build things. Tom liked to burn things.  Me?  Six years younger than Greg and wanting to be a part of anything my brothers did, I was desperate to join.  Reluctantly, Greg would agree, and would kindly respond to my unmerciful begging.  “Ok. Ok.  Just don’t screw anything up.”  Only Greg used a synonym for the word “screw” I was told not to repeat at the age of five.  Tom informed me I might not want to use that word while in our real house.  The entire team might pay for it.

We also had the gang of neighborhood misfits wanting to participate in one form or another, or merely spectate.  Tom was placed in charge of these yahoos.  By placed in charge, this was a unique way for Greg to demand Tom “keep them busy so they don’t talk to me or make ridiculous suggestions.”

We had our friendly neighbor “hood”, Chavez Chavez, who was pretty brainy, but could also easily get on Greg’s nerves by explaining why some of his procedures were more of the Tarzan nature than cutting treehouse edge.  Greg referred to Chavez Chavez as “Nacho Man”.

There was Doty Bug, our resident nerd who didn’t wish to help, but merely asked Greg to leave room at the lowest branch for an office.  This suggestion was recognized with a phony smile, and then quickly forgotten.

RamJoe would show up in fatigues and action figures spending his recreational time drawing war plans in the dirt with a stick next to the tree.  He was of no use at all, and Greg had no qualms with “accidentally” booting any of his action figures out of his way.  “Get your $%@#ing dolls out of the way, you nutless jarhead!”

Some street toughs would randomly drop by on their stolen bicycles and make comments or ask questions about the progress.  “Pretty cool.  When do you think it will be finished?”  Code for “Can’t wait for the finished product.  We haven’t vandalized a tree for quite some time.”

The street toughs would come and go, but the former idiots would remain for Tom to keep busy.  A shrewd businessman since birth, Tom could make just about anyone do just about anything for his own benefit.  He’d set up competitions just for his own amusement, and keenly win as though he was playing with house money.  Taking RamJoe and Chavez Chavez aside, he’d somehow get them to argue about who could climb to the highest branch of the tree, knowing it would place them both in danger.  “RamJoe thinks he can climb higher than you, Chavez Chavez. What do you think?”  “No freakin way.  This gringo couldn’t climb his way through one of my mom’s tacos.”  RamJoe, whose father was an ex-marine and part time bigot, would take the bait and say something like, “you could only beat me if there was a burrito at the top, Nacho Man.” The nine year olds would go back and forth until they were ready to fight before climb.   Then, Tom would stop it before fists began to fly and make it interesting for himself.  “Whoever loses has to go and buy two sodas from 7-11 or find a couple back at your house if you don’t have any money.  One soda is for the winner, and the other is for me.  You see, if either one of you gets injured, since it’s on our property, we could be responsible.  So, unless buy me a soda, I won’t let you climb.”  They didn’t bat an eye.  They did scratch, claw and climb, and no matter who was the victor, Tom always ended up with a pop.  These were the little things Tom did to maintain his status as a foreman.  In the background, you could also see it entertained our boss as well.  Just to keep Doty Bug out of the way, Tom would always have him referee.  Spitting contests, burping contests, whatever it would take, Tom would sucker them into competing for a stick of licorice, some bubble gum or a Slurpee.  Someone was always pissed, and Tom’s belly was always full.

The GLB: The Goofy Little Bastard

Amidst all of these shenanigans, or “Tomgannigans” if you will, I was left for Greg to deal with, leaving a proper dilemma.  The difference between those other fools and me was that even though I was useless, I wanted to be useful.  This presented a problem for Greg, because he knew this was nearly impossible.  So, when I approached him, before I could say anything, he asked me a question using one of his pet names for me.  “What do you want, you goofy little bastard?”  He used this term affectionately for me until about the age of thirteen.  Then, I think I just became a big goofy bastard.

I just looked at Greg sitting on his makeshift scaffolding consisting of some rebar, two by fours and and an old backboard.  When he knew I was looking for something to do, he took off his hat, placed it on a nail he had hammered into the tree and looked around.  Then, he pointed at a hammer sitting in the dirt below him and said, “Go hammer something, but do it over there.”  As specific as those instructions sounded, I thought there was room for modification, but I didn’t say anything.  I did, however, notice something.  I looked at where his hat was hanging, and then I looked at the rest of the crew.  They were all wearing hats.  Therefore, each of them would need a nail to hang their hat.  I knew I wasn’t capable of much, but I could hammer a nail into wood.  Not wanting to get in Greg’s way, I thought I’d wait for him to go inside for a snack before I’d follow through with my initiative. Killing time, I decided to watch Tom “Dictator of the Dimwits” perform some of his mental magic tricks at their expense.  I also headed inside for a snack and while inside, dropped by my room as well as others’ rooms and it seemed like all I could see was a blizzard of hats.  Then, I looked in some closets.  Hats hats hats.  Storage room.  Hats.  This tree was going to need more than just a few nails to accommodate all these hats.

In those days, hats were very important to me.  They still are.  (Recently, one of our neighbors made fun of me for having, according to her estimation, more than fifty thousand baseball hats hanging in our laundry room.)  Back then I felt each hat, if one of them paid a visit to our treehouse, should have its own personal nail.  I remembered seeing nails littered all over the area surrounding the tree, so I didn’t think it would be an issue.  It certainly wasn’t an issue for me.

As I passed through the kitchen, Greg brushed me aside and headed for the refrigerator.  I knew he’d be here for awhile.  It was my chance to work without interruption, distraction, or intimidation.  Hammer in one hand, one hat on my head and another in my free hand, I headed for the tree whose foundation was at an an angle on our property and didn’t allow a clean view from any window in our house.  Filling the hat in my hand with as many nails as possible, I began climbing and nailing.  When I’d run out of nails, I’d climb down, reload my hat, and head back up for more banging.  I even created a special spot of hat hangers for the street toughs who would inevitably drop by to vandalize the house of lumber.  With only three nails remaining, I looked up to admire my work.  As a child, I knew there wouldn’t be a disappointed soul in the neighborhood if they wished to hang their hat anywhere on our tree.  Looking back, it probably looked like a medieval weapon used by a giant in a spooky fairy tale.

Speaking of giants, my brothers eventually finished their sandwiches and headed back outside.  I stayed there waiting for not just their approval, but their praise.  When Greg stopped in his tracks at the base of the tree, he looked confused.  He then looked at me with my hammer.  His odd look at me made me drop the hammer.  As usual, if I smelled anger, I’d look to Tom who may lend a hand in my favor.  Tom’s look was more of horrified amusement.  He wanted to laugh, but was a little afraid that may land him in hot tree sap as well.  I looked back to Greg.  Carrying the same expression, he managed a quick and dry, “huh.”  When anger was teetered at its most explosive edge for Greg, he commonly did this.  “Huh.”  Leaning over, Greg picked up a hammer and used its opposite side to pry one of the nails out of our tree.  The nail came out looking like elbow macaroni.  “Huh.”  Tossing that nail aside, he attempted to pry another out.  It snapped like those toothpicks I was referring to earlier in the story.  “Huh.”  He almost fell down trying to pry the third one out, because the flat side of the nail folded like a cheap umbrella.  “Huh.”  Tom couldn’t hold it any longer.  His gut was busted.  Dropping the hammer, I could only wait or run.  For some reason, perhaps frozen with fear, I waited.  Greg simply walked away slowly, and we didn’t see him until we had to go to bed.  When Greg wishes to destroy something or someone, luckily for me, he just walks away.  I slept in mom’s room that night.  We played football the next day.

 

Hocus Jocus (Sayonara @#$%Kickers!)

Middle school students are a delight!  This bodes especially true in mid June…the last remaining days of school before summertime bliss.  Just as true, those little whipper snappers really know how to keep their teachers in line.  I know.  I was one of those teachers for close to fifteen years.  Now, I only live vicariously through my friends still living, breathing and teaching.

The last few days for the middle school community consist of two things: children and childrensitting.  Notice I don’t refer to the middle schoolers as babies, because although their behavior can be recognized as baby like on these days, their ages define them as children.  After taking a final exam one week before the school calendar moves them forward to high school status, a once promising, maturing adolescent digresses for the remaining days of middle school, leaving the parents chuckling at the teachers’ expense.  The students chuckle as well, knowing they have four aces in the hole, and will happily show them to you upon request.  Academically, they have checked out and the teachers smell it.  The teachers are now the ones in survival mode.  How do we keep them busy without anyone getting hurt?  That’s really the only thing a teacher thinks about on these days, other than the closest bar they will all convene seconds after the last school day ends.

Ideally, teachers would place all the students in a sound proof padded room with straight jackets, only armed with their loud mouths.  This way, other than peoples’ feelings, no one gets harmed.  Unfortunately, this is not an option.  Therefore, teachers put their paycheck to use by planning more and preparing more for V Days and P Days.  These are Vacation Days for students and their parents, and Penance Days for the teachers who receive the next two and a half months off.

You reserve these last days for indoor and outdoor activities requiring no brain stimulus whatsoever, only meaningless corralling by means of simple manipulation:  Bribery.  A wise teacher spends part of his or her paycheck buying a few sodas and candy bars, because a large percentage of the students will finish just about any task you provide to bask in chocolate or carbonated glory. Just because a student isn’t required to read, write, add or subtract, they still must remain busy in order to keep the teacher from taking an unpaid leave of absence so close to the very last bell.  Organize those books for a Mountain Dew.  Take down all those phony motivational posters I put up at the beginning of the year for a Snickers bar.  Place all these papers I didn’t grade in that paper shredder and keep your mouth shut for a Milky Way and a Pepsi.  Right there, you’ve wiped out about forty percent of your problems.

Knocking out another forty percent is basic locker clean out, an organized play day featuring softball, volleyball, mud wrestling and racketeering (played by future convicts who have stolen some of the sodas you purchased the night before).  You also have the “Lack of Talent Show” and finally, yearbook signing.  As a teacher, you try to stretch this crap as far as you can by doing a little as you can, yet it still leaves about twenty percent of the remaining students who don’t wish to participate in any of these events.  These are the “I’m bored” students.  They may be the worst kind of breed at this age.  So, as a teacher, you may have  to come up with something special to prevent each and every last school day lawsuit.  Hocus Jocus!

To this day, I’ve never met a person, young or old, tall or short, delightful or miserable, who won’t drop anything when they see the newspaper puzzle “Hocus Focus”.  This puzzle includes two pictures which look alike, yet ten differences are hidden between the two of them and you are challenged to find those differences.  If a person is getting mugged on a city street and the mugger and “muggee” look up and see a billboard displaying two of these pictures challenging them to find the differences, they both immediately stop struggling and won’t resume until they find them.  They may even help one another.  These puzzles are that intriguing.  It is, by far, the most entertaining portion of People magazine.  (When my wife and I travel, we always compete with each other trying to find the extra tooth in Tom Cruise’s electrifying smile.) Middle school students are no exception to this rule.  For some reason, if you place these on the overhead projector, or these days, a “Smart Board”, students’ mouths lock shut like pit bull on a pecan pie until they find each dissimilarity.  It’s magic for about five minutes.  So, once they celebrate finding all the differences, you place an additional one up to kill another five minutes.  Each five minutes of silence replaces that beer the teacher wishes to have in his or her hand as the clock keeps ticking.  After the the third hocus focus, the students will eventually lose focus, and one or two will eventually, and obnoxiously bellow, “These are too easy”.  Twenty minutes still remain before you can legally release the teenage hounds into a world in which you may never see them again unless it’s on the five o’clock news.   Solution?  Even easier.  Place two identical pictures in front of them and watch them silently struggle trying to find ten differences which do not exist.  It’s the most senseless time kill of all eternity, and for a middle school teacher, these twenty minutes of quiet amidst potential bedlam, it’s like a swedish massage…..whatever that is.  Only seconds before the final bell rings will one student stand up and say, “THIS IS BULL@#$%!  THESE PICTURES ARE THE EXACT SAME!”  With an enormous grin on my face, I would listen to the last bell, and say “Have a terrific summer! Sayonara @#$%kickers!”

Encyclopedia (Britt)anica (It’s O.K.)

There comes a moment, or perhaps moments in one’s life when you truly believe it’s just time to pack up and leave.  You may leave your town, your profession, your spiritual or political beliefs, or you may even leave your house.  Some people choose to run away from everything, even their mom.  My wife chose to do this at the ripe young age of four.

Knowing my wife, Britt, since the age of thirteen, I always knew she was pretty independent and even perhaps a bit stubborn at times, but I had no idea her stubbornness would lead her to such a drastic decision barely after infancy.  Not until recently did I find out she left her mother at such young age.  Yes, she was a four year old runaway, but why?  I had to know.

Evidently, although her memories are slightly fogged, fashion played a key role in her departure.  Constantly, Britt and her mother would argue over what she was to wear on any given day.  This began at the age of three months, but boiled over at age four.  There was nothing specific, just general, daily garment disagreements.  So, in Britt’s eyes, leaving her home and mother wasn’t impulsive.  After over a three year battle with her mother, Gail, it was time to leave.

She’d been planning it for years……the leaving part anyway.   She knew she’d need a suitcase, but that’s where her plan ended.  She had memorized her exit speech, opening and closing the door, and staring down the road of fashion independence bliss, but beyond that, how else she would survive hadn’t crossed her mind.  Nevertheless, the day had come for her say her goodbye.

Britt waltzed into her room to collect some of her belongings, and even though she struggled picking out the perfect outfits for her journey, surely she wouldn’t ask her mother for advice.  The very thought of this would embarrass the entire proud community of runaways.  Running away would lose all its meaning.  She was preschooler, and a woman, of principal.  Finally, she made up her mind regarding the collectibles and garments, placed them all in the suitcase and headed for the door.

Exit Speech:  (Facing her mother) “I’m running away.”

Her words were crisp, concise, and uttered without signs of remorse.  Her mother simply replied, “O.k.”

As Britt carried her suitcase to the door, she turned and waved goodbye.  Quickly, her mother stopped her.  “Wait a minute, Britt.  Since you are leaving, you’ll need these.”  Instead of packing more 1970’s casual wear into Britt’s suitcase, she began filling it with a set of encyclopedias.   “These will help you along your journey.  Good luck!”  To me, this was thee most clever, if not brilliant anti-runaway chess move in the history of runaway lore.

Now, one could argue that Gail’s strategy was to place so many of these books in the suitcase that her daughter would be anchored to change her mind.  The sheer weight alone should have prevented Britt from leaving, not to mention the extensive amount of reading required.  Or, one might argue Gail was merely amusing herself.  (But, Gail knew Britt better than anyone on this earth.)  Never one to accept failure gracefully, Gail knew Britt would give it her best shot.  Indeed she did.   Although far too heavy to carry for a four year old, Britt’s iron will, along with tremendous passion and desire would somehow help her manage to drag that suitcase throughout the cosmetic world.  Grunting in her tye dyed dress, she made it through the door.  One last glance at her mother, and she was off to the nearest Bon Marche.

Making it a full three houses down the road, almost an entire block, Britt needed a break.  Fortunately, the third house was her Grandma Ruthie’s.   If nothing else, Grandma Ruthie might offer Britt a stale cookie providing a little sugar energy when she continued blazing her path to designer clothing paradise.  Before Britt could knock on the door with one of her calloused hands, Ruthie had already opened it.  Oddly, Grandma Ruthie almost looked as if she was expecting Britt.

“Well, hello, Britt!  C’mon in, Dear.  Where are you going with all that stuff?  Here.  Have a cookie.”

“Thanks, Grandma Ruthie. I’m running away.”

“Did you tell your mother?”

“Yes.”

“What did she say?”

“She said ‘good luck’.”

“Do you want to call her and tell her you are ok?”

“No.”

“That’s quite a suitcase.  What’s in it?”

“A bunch of heavy books mom put in it.  They may as well be bricks.”

With a phony gasp, “Oh my, this must be a set of encyclopedias.  Your mother must care a great deal for you if she sent these with you.   She might even love you.  You will need these.”

“I guess, but the clothes she makes me wear make me look like a clown.”

“I understand, Dear.  Have another cookie.”

“Thank you.”

After devouring another cookie tasting like yesterday’s newspaper, Britt began to miss her mother.  Forgetting about the fashion line she was designing, she began thinking about the nurturing line her mother was providing, and it made as much sense as it could for a woman who was four years old.

“Are you sure you don’t want to call your mother?  It’s been almost fifteen minutes.”

“Ok.”

Britt called her mother and thanked her for the encyclopedias and informed her she hadn’t had the time to read any of them yet.  She also asked if she could come back home. Her mother, Gail, said, “Ok.”

One year later, Britt honed her negotiating skills when it came to apparel selection.  She and her mother made a deal.  As long as Gail could choose what Britt would wear to school, Britt could choose whatever she wished before and after school.  So, all was o.k..until she became a teenager.  That’s when she began reading the encyclopedia and wearing makeup.

 

 

Credit This

My wife is traveling to New York, and she is stressed with regards to the packing.   I told her to pack a credit card, keep her clothes on, and make sure she has enough coins to ride the subway.  It’s that simple.

My brother, Greg, rarely travels, but when he does, he packs three items:  the clothes he has on his back, his wallet, and a credit card.  STRESS FREE.

It is an exceptionally divine means of travel.

Mark Twain was quoted as saying “Golf is a terrific way to ruin a nice walk”.  Even though I love Samuel Clemens, I am prepared to canonize my  brother as a more profound quotation device (not to be confused a flotation device) in the twenty something century.

“When traveling, bring your current clothes, an ID, and a credit card.”  (Greg Gannon)