Thursday, March 19, 2009
The Sudden Death of Intuitive Thinking
Monday, February 2, 2009
The True (and uncensored) Story of My Dad, Part 2
When I finally got to Portland, I learned two things: 1) Millie had given me wonderful advice, and 2) funerals are for the living.
When my brother, Gary was handed the American flag that had been draped over Daddy's casket, I saw the tears streak down Mama's face. They had met and married during World War II - Daddy was an Army Sergeant serving stateside, on account of his glass eye.
Friday, January 9, 2009
I'm Taking A Break...so please read my story
Aunt Lilly and I were standing at her kitchen sink washing the dinner dishes when she whispered to me “My heavens, you look just like your father”.
Although we had talked non-stop ever since I stepped off the greyhound bus that afternoon, I think that was the first time she really looked at me. I felt uneasy, like I was a ghost. I looked out the window and thought about the last time we were all here together, as a family. I had fond memories of that time, but I suspect that was when Lilly found out about Daddy’s drinking.
“He wasn’t always like that,” she said, as if reading my mind. “No matter what your mother says… “
Don’t talk about my mother, I wanted to scream. She’s not the one who left us, I wanted to say. But I didn’t, because Daddy is Aunt Lilly’s brother, and she loves him, flaws and all. And I guess I do too. After all, that’s why I made the 2000 mile trip to visit Aunt Lilly.
“He was such a fancy dresser. A good cook too. And boy, could he sew”.
Oh, shut up! Daddy never dressed up for us. He didn’t cook or sew either. Mama did those things. He was the one who left us.
In the beginning there were good times. Before the drinking. After Daddy left, I heard Mama yelling into the telephone “I don’t want your stinkin’ money. If you don’t wanna be a husband and father, then leave us alone.” He left us alone.
Aunt Lilly is talking on and on about Daddy. I don’t want to listen, I want to listen. I know the alcoholism is a disease, an addiction that he can’t, or won’t quit. I know it doesn’t have anything to do with me, or with Mama. I didn’t always know that. When he started drinking, I prayed that he would move away. When he left, I prayed that he would come home.
I tried to think about the good times, like the time he took us skiing, neighbors and all. He drove us up to Mt Hood in a ’56 Chevy Impala, with no seat belts. We couldn’t afford ski bindings, so Daddy attached our boots to the skis with leather belts. My brother, Gary and I each had one ski and one ski pole. Gary skied right into a snow drift, screaming “I’m drowning, I’m drowning!” We didn’t know this wasn’t how you were supposed to ski. I thought of the summer evenings when Daddy sat on the front porch, playing his accordion, and all the neighbors gathered around, singing and dancing.
I looked at Aunt Lilly and asked “Do you know where he is?”
“He’s in Seattle, taking care of Onnie”.
Uncle Onnie. Our favorite uncle. Uncle Onnie is 10 years older than Daddy, but they look so much alike, they are easily mistaken. Uncle Onnie used to give us and the neighbor kids a quarter each time we mistook him for daddy. We made a lot of money the summer he stayed with us. Onnie’s the one who taught me how to stand on my head and how to ride my bicycle with no hands.
“Where in Seattle?” I asked.
“Onnie’s in a nursing home. Your dad lives close by and visits him every day.”
Oh, hmmmm. I looked at the field outside Lilly’s window and remembered the hay ride we took all those years ago. Afterwards, Daddy and Mama sang and danced, and Daddy made everyone laugh. Then he left, I suppose to go to a tavern, because he was gone for the rest of the night.
“Would you like his address?” Lilly asked me.
I clutched Onnie’s and Daddy’s addresses to my chest as I boarded the greyhound bus two days later. When I got home I called my sister. “Doris, how would you like to go see Daddy?”
First, I wrote a letter to Onnie. Doris and I were going to be in Seattle in a couple of weeks and would like to visit him. The nurses at the nursing home called to tell us, yes, he would love to see us.
Next, I told Mama. “Why do you want to see him?” she asked. Then when she walked away, I watched as she observed herself in the mirror, running a comb through her hair and touching up her lipstick. If Mama can forgive Daddy, I guess I can too.
Two weeks later Doris and I drove 3 hours up I-5 to the Summerplace Nursing Home in Seattle. We found Uncle Onnie flirting with one of the nurses, ‘Madge’ her name tag said. We were told he had the beginning stages of Alzheimer’s and might not remember us. But he did, because when we started to leave, he handed me a quarter and said “Give this to your dad”.
Twenty minutes later Doris and I walked past a ‘Men Only’ sign at the entrance of the Mission Hotel. Our hearts pounded as we stood in front of room 303 and knocked. A small, thin man opened the door. He was fresh shaven and wore a clean, though slightly wrinkled red flannel shirt and brown khaki pants. The three of us stood there for a moment, staring at each other, and then embraced. I felt all three heartbeats beating together, felt his bony shoulders, smelled his cheap aftershave, and wept.
He led us into his room, decorated with a bed, table, two chairs, a TV and a small desk. On the desk were photos of his 5 children and 4 grandchildren. Where did he get those, I wondered. From Aunt Lilly? He saw me looking at the Oregon, California, and Missouri phone books on the table. “I wanted to always know where you kids lived” he said, with tears in his eyes.
He wanted to show us the city, so he took us to some of his favorite places. At the library he showed us how he found his daughter’s wedding announcements and grandchildren’s birth announcements. At the Soup Kitchen, he introduced us to some of his friends. “This is my daughter, Doris, she’s a professor and her husband runs the city of Portland. And this is my daughter, Sandra; she’s a Vice President at a big bank.” The details were a little off, but we didn’t correct him. Somehow he knew what we did for a living, so we didn’t care. Let him brag.
We went to a coffee shop and he bought us each a cup of coffee and a maple bar. “I quit drinking”, he said. “I quit after Onnie went to the nursing home. Stopped smoking, too.” I stifled my urge to say – you stopped for Onnie, but not for Mama and us. There was no need to say anything; it’s all in the past.
We walked him back to the Mission Hotel and made arrangements for him to visit us in a couple of months.
“Sandra”, he called to me as I walked away.
“Yeah?”
“Tell Mama I’m sorry”.
Sunday, January 4, 2009
Don't Wait Until it's Too Late
Some of us met that night for the first time. Some knew a few others only in passing...a 'hello' as we walked past their homes, or when they walked their dogs. Some of us were more intimate....sharing dinners together in each other's homes. Ages ranged from the late 20's to the mid 60's. One couple just moved in a month ago, while we have been here for twelve years. Yet, on this evening, we were all more alike than we were different.
Our snow had pretty much melted by Thursday night, but we all awoke Friday morning with an inch of new fallen snow, that quickly turned into ice. The sixteen neighbors literally grew closer together as we walked arm-in-arm, or hand-in-hand across the icy street as we progressed from house to house.
I'm telling this story because of one person I met that night. The newest neighbor. The youngest neighbor. In a previous post of mine titled "Is my job boring, or am I boring?", I told the story of how my husband wanted to pretend to be a Motivational Speaker (like Chris Farley on SNL). He gave up that little gig when we heard that a real Motivational Speaker was moving into our neighborhood. We met him Friday night, and my husband jokingly told him about his fake job. Thank goodness, he was pretty good natured about it. After all, he is a Motivational Speaker.
But this story isn't really about him. It's about you. It's about me. It's about all of us.
Since he is so young, I wondered how this man became a Motivational Speaker. He said it all started when he was 19 years old and was in a serious car accident, with serious injuries. He eventually recovered, while the driver, his best friend, suffered damage that would alter his life forever. While my neighbor was near death, he wondered...if he died that night...would he have loved enough...mattered enough....made a difference. As he started telling his story, he was asked to give speeches, to inspire people.
Now, I might be putting words in his mouth, but what I gathered from our conversation was that he didn't want to have regrets. He wanted to matter. He wanted to make a difference. He wanted to love enough and be loved enough. He didn't want to wait until it was too late.
That made me think about my dad. He grew up in a small town in Wisconsin, but moved 'out west', as he called it, to make a better life for his family. He worked for the Water Bureau, sometimes managing the reservoirs at Mt Tabor or Washington Park. I don't know if taking care of the roses was part of his job description, but that was something he always proudly showed off to us, whenever we accompanied him to work.
My dad was proud of the life he made for himself in Portland, and proud to be part of the Rose City. He came from a large family and urged his siblings to visit us. My mother's family visited often, but few came from my dad's family. He died in 1976 and is buried at Willamette National Cemetery, on a beautiful hillside overlooking the City of Roses.
About 15 years after my dad died, two of his recently widowed sisters decided to visit Portland. One of the first things they wanted to do was see his grave. My aunt, his oldest sister, looked sadly at the grave and said "All these years Wayne begged me to visit him, and I didn't. I'm so sorry that when I'm finally here, all I see is his grave".
I still tear up whenever I think of that day. At what she missed. That he missed sharing the day with her.
Don't wait until it's too late!
Monday, December 22, 2008
A Norman Rockwell Morning
Sunday, December 21, 2008
Toy Soliers......on Salon.com
Shades of Grey on a Snowy Day
Photo taken at 9:15 am Sunday 12/21
Ok, so I'm whining.
We've had a full week of snow, unusual for Portland. Right now we have a foot of snow in our yard, with 2 foot drifts in some spots. The car tracks in the street are covered over from last night's blizzard. This morning we woke up and our power was out. Luckily, we have a couple of gas fireplaces, so we lit them to keep warm. We have a gas range and can light the pilot light to cook. But what about coffee? How do I make my latte? And how do I grind my coffee beans? And where's my Sunday paper?
I found some old coffee in the cupboard, heated water on the stove, and found my camping coffee maker in the camping stuff. Ugh. Terrible. Added a little cocoa to make a cafe mocha. Bad. Note to self: throw out all old coffee.
Since we recently 'bundled' our cable service.....Internet, cable TV, and phone....we were without a phone (that's because this moron didn't charge up her cell phone last night and the battery is low). We sat in the car in the garage for a few minutes charging my phone, and trying to catch some news on the radio. Its funny....the TV news stations show the storm coverage 24/7, whether we like it or not, but try to find out what's happening on the radio when your power is out....no such luck! No TV, no Internet, no phone, no lights, no coffee. I didn't realize how much I counted on electricity.
I went for a walk, for something to do. Neighbors are out, shoveling their walks, walking dogs, or trying to dig out cars that have been left by the side of the road for the past 5 days. Walked to our little "Village Marketplace". Starbucks was closed, but there was a stack of The Sunday Oregonian. Papers were taken and money was left as payment. I grabbed a paper and left 2 bucks.
When I got home the power was on. Yea! I can have my latte and read the paper. Isn't life grand?
Saturday, December 20, 2008
Fashion Queens.....or Easter Seesters
When I was little and would complain about not having something, my dad would say "I complained about not having any shoes, until I saw a man without any feet". Nice advice, but I wonder what he was thinking when he and my mom sent me off to church in my new Easter dress with these shoes.......tennis shoes with no laces!?!? I wonder what my play shoes looked like.....
Thursday, December 18, 2008
Toy Soldiers
Now that Christmas is around the corner, and you might be wondering what you should get the little ones....what toy will make them say WOW! and create lifetime memories....I'd like to share with you the toys I shared with my younger brother and sister. Clothespins. That's right. Plain old wooden clothespins.
I found a box of clothespins in my mom's stuff when we were cleaning out her apartment. I don't think these were the actual ones we played with when we were kids, but it sure brought back memories. It's funny how we all grew up to be anti-war.....that we mostly played army with the clothespins. Sometimes we played cops and robbers, and sometimes cowboys and Indians....but mostly it was army. We'd build a small fort in our backyard, probably out of other household items, like cans of vegetables, forks, combs, or pots and pans. Then we'd station our army men (the clothespins) around the fort and fight battles. We would spend hours playing this way.
My family didn't have a lot of money, so we didn't have many toys. My older sister had one doll with a painted on dress. A doll she cherished. We love these memories. I guess in a way, I'm sort of glad we didn't have much. It's made me appreciate the things I do have.
Every year I make a gift for my great-niece who lives in Florida. Her mother told me she loves the homemade gifts, so I'll continue until she's too old to appreciate them. I made her something really special this year....and I promise, it's not made out of clothespins.
Monday, December 15, 2008
Warrior King - part 2
Nathan Sassaman comes from a long line of military men. This was his career. It's now over. Although he admits his 'cover up' was wrong, he thought he was doing the right thing at the time. Due to the ineptness of the way this so-called war was run, he was a scapegoat. Just like the soldiers convicted in the Abu Ghraib scandal were scapegoats.
Please read the book. Like I used to say when I gave my book-reports in grade school..."you have to read the book to find out how it ends".