Saturday, December 28, 2024

Safe Haven (Part One)

 He was running. His past was in hot pursuit, but he had just broken away. It was ironic because he made it. He had broken free three years earlier and was living on a strange planet where nothing was measured in the same way.

I will never understand why he came back. He was supposed to be passing through on his way into the past that he never had but always wanted. It was a powerful lure. It was one that he would turn everything over in his life.

What he did not see coming was the adult tendency to focus on survival that works in the path of least resistance. That worked for a while until it did not. He realized he was being poured into the mold he never wanted to be shaped by. 

One morning, with rage in his heart, he ran for the border. The guns behind him, firing in disbelief. "How dare he choose something else?" But he did it, with all of the beautiful disasters that he was always famous for, and succeeded anyway.

His last foothold on that life suddenly crumbled, and he was completely untethered. He could not, for his life, imagine what tomorrow would be like, just like it was on the other planet. But this was not that. His lack of connection dropped him in the sand of a beach where it seemed like anything was possible, wondering what could really be possible.

Many miles away in a dangerous sea, weathering, weakening, and unpainted, there was a ship and on it a girl who kept throwing punches to see reactions. She did not know why, but she needed it. There was something there. The ship had wrecked due to the neglect and affliction she and the other crew dealt it. The energy they received weakened the ship's structure, and there was nothing anyone could do.

She jumped from rotted board to rotted board of debris floating in the sea until she found an inflatable lifeboat with people barely alive. Carefully, she slid them off the raft into the depths. As the sun set, the little raft was driven far away by storms from the mountains to the west of the sea.

The light of day found the raft sitting on the shore of a beach. For days, she watched and received people from the ship, but somehow, they disappeared because they were useless. They always paddled away, floating on whatever they could find because they knew it was a better fate than staying.

Weeks passed when she saw him fall from the sky but was safe on a platform. He landed on the beach with support from those who sent him there. He continued with that connection for a while, and the girl watched. She asked questions at times, and he answered them. He asked her questions, and she answered them.

They looked out at the sea for days and days until his support disappeared. In the sand, he was drunk on the prospect of freedom. She watched. A wayward passenger from another ship woke on the beach one day, and she collected him. It looked like he would stay, and suddenly, she rejected him.

The boy on the beach sat there with the entire universe open. Possibilities of things he had never done or known laid out before him. Anything was possible. There was, however, a danger to not knowing things, and it turned out that he knew much less than he was aware of.

He was just staring off into the sea, realizing that he did not need to stay here. That is when the meteor fell to earth and vaporized the sea. That is when he did what he always would do. 


I can't stand the rain

 Where are you?

What do you think each morning?

Do you laugh?

Do you smile?

Three months have passed, and everything has changed. I have found that everything I had ever hoped for you was really hoped for you. I had no ulterior motives. I was there because of you, marveling at your resilience, creativity, and heart.

Have I not seen you because it is too hard? I know it would be hard for me, but I also know that my love for you is strong enough to allow us a new chapter. That confirms that it was always who you are that grew our bond, not other relationships.

You taught me a lot, and I am really thankful for that. Showing someone how much more they have to learn is a unique gift. I do not take it for granted. I just hope you know how important you are. I also hope you know all that you can do. 

It is in my nature to see all sides and possible outcomes. I just need confirmation that you are safe and doing well. I think about it a lot. The connections we make in life sometimes feel like we should have them forever in the way they begin. It is clear, and has been for years, that this is not always true. 

We all get power from something that carries us through the years of erosion we face. We hold onto it, gripping it as though we are suspended only by it a thousand feet above the ground. At the time, I did not feel that I was preparing for your life's journey; I realized that I was, and honestly, I was not done.

I now have to depend on the undefinable survival skills you possess to keep you safe. It sounds like me making myself feel better knowing you are doing well. I am just not a person who stands on the sidelines of disaster. I used to be, and was that ever a mistake.

This is me and all my flaws. On your side, I stand ready to fight the things that want to pull you down. It is who I am. I hope you understand. 


Thursday, December 26, 2024

The Zevonic Expanse

*Note: This was an experiment. I took a verse from every song on Warren Zevon's 1991 album Mr Bad Example, which is my favorite of his. I pasted them here, then asked my grammar program to edit them to sound more empathetic.


I spent a sun-soaked day meandering through the vibrant streets of Denver, my mind restless as I searched for a place to lay my head—ideally somewhere with unwashed sheets that hold the echoes of a thousand stories—while I sipped on a smooth shot of rye, letting the warmth wash over me. With a sense of adventure, I splurged on a first-class ticket aboard Malaysian Air, and upon landing in the lush landscapes of Sri Lanka, I felt none the worse for wear.

Photo by Javier Saint Jean on Unsplash

Hours slipped by, and I knew she had ventured out long before; I can only hope she’ll find her way back to me. I wait here, sipping my drink and staring intently at the door, a picture of patience as I yearn for my angel dressed in black to return. The thought of stepping outside into the rain feels heavy on my heart.


Suzie Lightning, with her fierce spirit, takes no prisoners in this game we call life. She captures the essence of fleeting beauty—one moment, she ignites the sky with electric energy and the next, she's gone, leaving only the aftermath of her brilliance. 


I'm growing weary of our back-and-forth; the spark between us is fizzling out, and it feels like the final act of our little tragedy is upon us. We could choose to go down fighting; thanks for the memories, but there's no point in lingering here. You strive to perfect me, but I feel like a house of cards—a fragile castle built on sand, where even the slightest breeze could bring it all crashing down. 


Surrounding us are rows and rows of broken hearts and shattered homes, and the sadness is palpable, an everyday reminder of the struggles we all face. 


As evening settles in, cooling the air, the sun dips below the horizon while my wife laughs and plays canasta with neighbors, a stark contrast to my restless solitude. When the weight of the world feels unbearable and I crave escape, I pack up the Winnebago and drive it straight into the glistening lake, seeking solace in the depths.


Some prayers seem to drift endlessly into the void, unheard, while some wars rage on without resolution, and certain dreams cling stubbornly to life. Next time, I’d prefer to break rather than bend under pressure. The journey from dawn to dusk feels long and winding, and reaching the end of another day often brings only hollow triumph.


As the evening approaches, a fever of anticipation rises within me. When the chaos finally subsides, all that remains is the haunting echo of distant drums. They say love requires a little patience, a line to stand in, and yet, I find myself waiting for you, beloved, for what feels like an eternity.


I pace restlessly across the floor, eyes fixed on the door, all the while continuing my search for a kindred spirit, finding ways to fill my time in Denver when faced with the inevitability of departure.



Wednesday, December 25, 2024

Biting off more than I can chew

 I had this amazing idea earlier this year. I suddenly realized that in 1985, I was in the vicinity of my father from January 1st through December 31st. Why not write about the whole year, just like I had done for 1984?

I was excited and rushed in, looking forward to the discoveries I would make on that journey.  I had forgotten that one-third of the way through 1985, an atomic bomb went off on the road that I was traveling. On April 3rd this year, that story came to an unexpected halt. I was innocently writing and then realized there was a river of depth I was unprepared to cross. Ever since then, I have existed on the banks of that story, pacing around like I had something to do before crossing, but the reality is, I have no idea how to cross the water.

Photo by Quasi Misha on Unsplash

I have to turn around and consider how to do it. I conveniently remove my responsibilities by saying it is not my story to tell. Deep down, I know there is plenty I could tell without taking liberties that do not belong to me.

I know it is because the story is fragmented, which I do not understand. Thirty-nine years ago, I skydived into adulthood in a land I did not understand. My scars have stories I have not thought about enough to tell. I know that I should, but I do not know how.

I have not given up. I am just sitting here by the fire, resting and considering how to cross this river. I do not give up. My tenacity might be complicated and indigenous, but it pushes back with equal force. You will see me on the other side of this. I will do it in my own time.



Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Sleepwalker

 The storm is upon us in a mere minute. 

There was no time to run.

No time to hide.

We tried to cover where there was no shelter.

Photo by Kasper Rasmussen on Unsplash

One moment standing, 

the next moment swept away.

In the aftermath, we sifted through debris.

We looked for clues to tell us this was coming.

Why?

We cannot stop it now.

We have lost.

It is over.

Given the rare chance to live in those moments before but change nothing

I noticed something.

It was the faint sound of the cry of war over the mountain.

If I had just listened,

I could have warned them.

They say where there is smoke, there is fire 

Here, this was so true.

I looked for more and more clues.

The more I looked, the more I found.

Where did we cross the line from victim to accomplice?

The more I know,

the more I need to know

and 

the more I do not wish to know.

Park that in the driveway to stare at.

It makes me wonder 

Are we really awake?

Or are we really walking in our sleep?



Sunday, December 22, 2024

Progressive Compliance

 I was ten, and all I wanted was what everyone else had.

I was twenty, and I fought everything everyone else had.

I was thirty and tried to convince everyone I had what they had.

I was forty and thought I would lose everything I had.

I was fifty and realized I had more than I had ever known.

If I have learned anything, I have known so little for most of my life.

I comply, eventually. Is that ever worth anything?

One thing I am sure of:

The fight has always been within.

Photo by KS KYUNG on Unsplash

I have been my most significant opposing force.

What would it be like if I could turn back the pages of my life and erase those fruitless struggles with my greatest adversary?

The question is, however...

Are those battles the ones that taught me the most and gave me the greatest returns?

It is hard to comprehend.

I have always said it is "no way but the hard way."


Saturday, December 21, 2024

What is all the fuss about?

 



Well, I finally did it. I finally ordered the McRib sandwich at McDonalds this week. That is ironic because as a lifelong patron of Mc D's and my love for meat, especially pork, I would likely have had this experience already. After all, the Mc Rib was first introduced to the McDonald's dining world in 1982. I was 17 years old, for goodness sake! It was a time when the health impact of what I ate was never a factor I considered. Prime time to take the plunge if you ask me.

The Google AI Overview states that the Mc Rib sandwich is made of a boneless pork patty shaped like a rack of ribs, barbecue sauce, onions, and pickles on a toasted bun. The patty is made from ground pork shoulder, water, salt, dextrose, and rosemary extract.

I could tell the pork was pork shoulder merely by the fat-to-meat ratio. It might also be precooked under pressure, adding to its tenderness. I liked the onions on it because I like raw onions on sandwiches, whether hot or cold. 

As I ate this and let the initial differences between this and the other McDonald's sandwiches dissipate, I started to pick up on a hollowness to the flavor that I could not quite identify. It is that imbalance you feel when the acid content is just a little too high and then lacks umami.

GAI states that the Mc Ribb is a favorite among McDonald's loyalists. It also states, "The McRib has been removed from the menu permanently multiple times but has returned for limited-time appearances. McDonald's uses a scarcity tactic to keep customers interested. 

I get it; if this sandwich were available all the time, it would indeed be the cause of its own demise because it is missing something important. When I realized this, eating the last bit of it in my truck the other day during lunchtime, I realized I had to make my own. 

I was not alone when I decided to look up this comet-like occurrence-ish sandwich. The internet is peppered with others making their version of this facsimile legend. So yeah, I am going to join the ranks of those who say, "McDonald's, it has been fun, but come on, that was a one-way trip for me." I can do better, and so can many others.  

This January, a worthy project will be to make this classic girl myself and perhaps make it a family favorite like I did with my version of Chili's Southwest Eggrolls or Applees Mini Chicken Asian Taco Sliders. What then about our old girl, the McRib? By January, I am sure that she caught Katy just like she always does. After all, she is from Kansas City.



The Culture of Respect

 As a novice food creator, I have met people who do what I do to one degree. There is a comforting humility that I can identify with. I think of them as so much more than I am. I am startled when I realize that they think of me in some ways the same, in the context of each owning our particular strengths. It is then that gaining friendships like these is very important. We need each other, and the world needs our collaboration.

We all carry a piece of the story. Commercial merry-go-rounds have nothing on us. It is learning about them through the food they create and the goals they wish to obtain. I agree that we all need those willing to go one hundred thousand dollars or more in debt to throw the dice loaded in opposition to their success to start a delicious food business. Without their bravery, people like us could never have become self-aware of our creativity.

We are a community, past, present, and future. We support one another. It is a language and something that must be earned. At first, if we have a chip on our shoulder, we are dead to those who spent many sleepless years mustering a good attitude even when they were handled rudely, the many burns and cuts endured, the smoke and sweat, and mismatched acknowledgment. There are times when nothing makes sense.

But there is something inside that makes them go on. Here I am, someone who landed on the highway through a most fortunate mishap in which I jumped the guard rail and lived to tell about it. I hope that I am humble enough to be accepted. I do my best to shut up and listen. 

If I had my way, I would live the next 3 years with families in other countries and just live as they do, under their rules. One year in Vietnam, one year in South Korea, and finally, a year in Japan before traveling back across the Pacific to allow all of the respect I learned to shine in my creativity and words. But that is just a dream. How can I get as close to that experience as possible without actually that happening? That is what I am still trying to figure out.

All I know is that I must move forward. That is all. I will figure out the rest and hopefully make some friends and even some family along the way.



Monday, December 16, 2024

In the Depths of December

 The days get shorter, and the task list grows like I never knew it could. I perceived that this hour would be more coherent. Instead, it is a guilt-laden, sedentary existence. Change comes about when throwing punches, moving like an enraged climber of mountains. Somewhere, there is a timebomb in the climber's mind as he races to the top of the hill, defying the very laws of age to do it.

Today, I live to defy my age. A few years ago, I lived to defy my past. Before that, I lived to stay alive. Before this, I lived hoping for chaos. Before that, I lived for stability. Who is right? 


One thing has stayed the same. I wish to be the tornado that tears through the fabric of the obstacles and subdues everything. I laugh at that because if things were simple, and not fight to taste, see and feel, then I would not like my life at all. 

When December began, the ground was already covered with snow. It has a debilitating effect on everything within it. A warm November allowed me to live with a larger portion of denial than I was entitled to. That is on me. 

I just looked down at the date on my computer: December 16. It is the longest night of the year and also the day my father was born. I miss him. It has been almost 29 years since he left, which means I have almost lived in the world without him as long as I had him in the world with me. That is very surreal.

Some days, I struggle to recall something I have not thought of, but I have mainly extracted all the memories I could find. Two weeks ago, I got to sit with my cousins and listen to stories of when they and my parents were young. Those are like sweet treasures. Especially lovely was listening to stories of my grandfather, who passed when my Dad was only 13. I had not heard these stories before. 

So here I am, toughing out December, begrudgingly, reluctantly, and quietly. It all goes by so fast, anyway. I can never figure out what to make of my December dreams. They are always so exhausting. I could write a book in December. It would be a book of irony in so many ways. Today, I am just trying to survive. The cards I hold are able to keep me in the game, and yet, deep down, I also know that I am bluffing.


Wednesday, December 11, 2024

There is a war....Part 6

 Today, I evaded the antagonist. I was hiding beneath the floor planking, the dirt of their boots falling through the cracks of the deck onto me. I did not even breathe so much because I could easily be detected. 

It is pure exhaustion when I contemplate tomorrow, tomorrow, and tomorrow. There is no finish line in my sight, only the battle and the fight of the day, the hour and the moment.


If I stop rowing, the current takes me to the heart of what I wish to avoid. I am summoned as a child to indulgence. My own personal Gestapo seizes me, dragging me out of the building as I cling to furniture, walls, and door frames in futility.

Every time I think I might be a mile ahead of them, I learn they are 100 ahead of me, and I am in hostile territory. Will I ever find peace?

Where is there one night's sleep? Where is there even an hour of rest? If I close my eyes, I worry about where I will be when they open. 

I know in my heart there is only one way through this. I have known all along. The opposition, the fight, the war, and the victory all live within me.




Thursday, November 28, 2024

The West Pacific Sunrise

 I was hanging in my weakness, 

the waves of fruitless thought.

I took the steps I had so carefully crafted, 

smashing them with shame that only I could perceive.


I saw fantastic strangers who wanted everything I wanted.

They were clinging to rafts of their creativity.

I saw them as mentors, and they saw me as theirs.

Like me, they fought for dreams, moving one thread at a time.


Photo by Aidan Kahng on Unsplash

I do not understand how I have blocked out the sound of reassurance.

I have walked the shore of self-doubt for no reason.

I saw them flying kites in the breeze, and I was astonished at their skill

They complimented my craft, and my past slapped me for listening.


When the sun lit the water then slowly touched the sky

I heard a noise that it was making, and it was fine.

I held my thoughts of self-depreciation at bay so that the work of my hands 

could prevail with the sound the sunrise makes.


I am listening now, my inner voice subdued and held down, and I am never allowed to speak.

I have heard enough of that and will now listen to your words.

The sun is rising and it is time to acknowledge that.



Saturday, November 23, 2024

Tangled heart

 I saw them.

 Intertwined like as a single person. 

Saying words that the rest of us cannot know.

 Minds, thinking the same thoughts,  hearts, beating in harmony.

In darkness, they sustained each other, stealing most of the life within them.

Their homeland is a parasitic existence.

A woven strength kept them in love, chaos, and emulsion.

Below the surface, the strength that sustained them could not be defined and was likely more messy than it appeared.


Photo by Angel Luciano on Unsplash

What they built felt timeless and we rejoiced to a fault.

The walls were indestructible.

The ground was firm and without doubt.

Alone was something they could never know.

No matter how dark the room was, they always saw each other in the light.

It was something we came to know as the mountain that sits outside my north window.

I never dreamed it could cease to exist.

I know nothing because I never thought I could be injured in a great train wreck when I was not even there.

It is our connection. It is real and one many cannot achieve.

That is something you never throw away.

That is something you hold.

I never knew those walls could crumble like they were just paper and ash.

I worry that the ground was soft all along, but I cannot be sure of anything these days.

dreamed - farm

dreamed - arms

dreams - wrong

never - dreamed - hurt

never - dreamed - lose

dreams - I'm - strong

now - creek - rising

my - bridges - burned

dreamed - crowds

smoke - clouds

dreams - don't last

have - suspicions

position - stars

all - revealed

know - then

stars - surrender

snow - falling

fences - torn

need - someone

hear - someone

song - somewhere

dreamed - walking

two - talking

life's mystery

words - flow - friends

winding - streams

wanted - see - you

seem - surprising

find - yourself - alone

dark - rising

new - moon - born

always - dreamed - love

never- dreamed - lose

I always thought I would have you in my life. My heart rewrote our history and I was standing near you as you opened your eyes for the first time. I fell in love with you in that alternate universe and love knew no barriers. That is why I stand here today feeling so much loss.

I just want you to know that we are good. Finding you does not have to be for nothing. Perhaps this is always where we were going, I don't know. I have to stop thinking that one story has anything to do with the other. But when you love someone like they are your own daughter, you cannot help but feel all of the pain that rolls in.

I wish I knew what was ahead. November is an awful month and as a precursor to the days ahead, words have spilled out over the fire leaving us to salvage fragments with our tears.

I know I always knew you, and I hope you know you too. You are someone I believe in, someone I can trust. I wish you knew how amazing you really are.


Saturday, November 16, 2024

Unconnected

 Say some words... Smash them.

Extend invitations... Carry out the ambush.

Ask a question... Burn me.

Photo by Trym Nilsen on Unsplash

Make a choice... Assign blame.

Receive a gift... Lament and complain.

Take a hug... Slap my face.

Continuity does not exist... Wonder and wonder why.

One thing leads to another... Don't connect the dots.

Hear the words... Don't listen.

Be informed... Deny.

Sew... Tear.

Build... Break.

Form... Crush.

Hold... Push.

Ask... Don't answer.


One day in 1977

 The headlights cut through the dark of night as I drove through the November night. The culmination of all my efforts for the last quarter century was supported by who sat next to me, what was in my heart, and what was in my thoughts. To the west, the bridge. When I was just 11, I crossed the previous old iron bridge that stood here, for the first time.  It was built in 1910.

Back in the 70s, it was nothing to cross bridges that were this old. That was just the way things were. Ten years later, I drove across that bridge the day before it was closed forever. The day before, on April 5th, 1987, the Schoharie Creek Bridge on the New York State Thruway (I-90) over the Schoharie Creek near Fort Hunter and the Mohawk River in New York State collapsed due to bridge scour at the foundations after a record rainfall. The collapse killed ten people.

We were enduring record rainfall at that time. My job at the time was pouring concrete for Bob Eilers in Newington Connecticut. That day, April 6th,  he foolishly poured walls in hard rain and things got dangerous. I got mad and left. I kept driving until I got to that Connecticut River crossing that connects Westminister Vermont and Walpole New Hampshire. I did not know it at the time, but I was standing on the threshold of one of the major pivotal moments of my life. You can be sure I was thinking about the Schoharie Creek Bridge as I crossed the old 77-year-old narrow iron girder structure with the Connecticut angrily thrashing a couple of feet under this old girl. I stopped on the west side, then gear jammed the three on the tree shifter on my 72 Dodge pickup. Adrenaline pumping. Hey, if a whole interstate bridge can fall, anything is possible!

Where was I going? It was a progression really. I was going to my family's camp in East Alstead New Hampshire. My cousins Dave and Janet, my second set of parents really, had built this cabin, with some guest appearances by others, including my father, who currently in 1987 had been living in Port Aransas Texas for the last 7 years. I had nothing with me today. I went to work this morning, threw a tantrum, and drove all the way up here. This was what you can do when gas is 86 cents a gallon. The bottom fell out on oil prices the year before, and you could literally roll pennies and fill a gas tank.

When I got up to the cabin, it was still lightly raining. I always loved coming here. This was my place. I was so drawn to it. It was like there was a source of energy under the soil that pulled me like Superman to the fortress, well, except no superpowers, red boots, capes, tights, or flying. A great deal of my life would be launched from here. When I was 11 years old, coming up here was the most incredible thing that could have ever happened to me. Back in 1977, my absolute obsession with this place could later be a foreshadowing of the incredible change and milestones, good and disastrous that would culminate in the years and decades to come, all happening on this very mountain.

I loved this place back in the 70s, having first gone up there in the summer of 77 with Dave, my Father, and my cousin Steve. There were only 2 walls up at the time and no floor. Steve and I took the scraps and built a small cabin fort in the front yard for something to do that weekend. The following fall, I went up again with Dave and Steve. It was going well until one of the beagles did not come back Saturday night. Overnight, it rained very hard, I recall Dave getting up many times thinking that maybe she was outside the door, ready to come in. 

Morning came and the rain did not ease up at all. Dave suited up in raingear and left with a rifle in case he found her injured and needed to ease her suffering. During that time, Steve and I sharpened sticks. Being alone, the first thing that came to mind in our young brains was that we might need to defend against unwanted visitors. We felt it was our responsibility to craft weapons.  Hours passed during Dave's soaking-wet hike over the mountain.

I will always remember what happened next because it was a glimpse into what it was really like to be an adult with kids who have no clue. Dave returned, soaked to the bone and unsuccessful in finding Daisy. We quickly learned that the logical and most helpful thing we could have done here was to start packing, brush our teeth, and clean up the cabin. There was so much to do. Dave always took a load of wood back home with him and that had to be loaded. I recall that the bumper of the truck got caught on a stump and got pulled out straight. The memory of Dave swinging that sledgehammer to right the bumper and cursing will forever be there. I would live this moment myself many times in the future, even with this same truck that later became my truck in the late 1980s. 


I am happy to report that on Monday, a person on the mountain called Dave's home number to let him and Janet know that their Daisy was safe with them. They went up the next day and retrieved her. After that Sunday morning, I tried a little harder to ask myself, what can I do to help the adult who is trying to carry this load right now.

Because I brought nothing with me that day in 1987, no food, no bedding, nothing, I lit a fire and lingered for about an hour, then I drove back to Connecticut. One Saturday night that passed winter two friends and I were having a couple of beers at a bar in Southington. It was lightly raining. We got bored, so at some point, one of us suggested a road trip to New Hampshire. We switched to coffee and by the time we got just north of Springfield Massachusetts, it began to snow very heavily. Eventually, we could only move at about 30 miles an hour, so it took the better part of the rest of the night to get up there. There was a dim daylight in the heavy snow by the time we got to Cobb Hill Road. I had snow tires on the back of my 2 two-wheel-drive truck and a full bed of planks from my concrete jobs that kept the old girl moving even in weather like this. 


I would think of this trip as stupid kid stuff. I was 21. We buried the truck in a snow bank on the side of the steep dirt road and hiked in the last mile as the road going out to the cabin was not maintained and sat under 3 feet of packed snow all winter long. We got inside, lit a fire, and sat there warming up, but this time too, no food or provisions. We looked at each other and decided to go back home. The one very memorable thing about this strange trip other than the long drive in the snowstorm overnight was the truck was stuck good when we got back. It was stuck in a bank on the left and facing up a steep hill. We turned the steering wheel all the way to the right, and the three of us got by the left fender and kept pushing the truck sideways. When the steering wheel moved, we would crank it to the right again, and we did this over and over until the truck was facing downhill. We hopped in and just drove out and back to Connecticut.

It seemed like in 1987, not a 14-day span went by without me driving up to the cabin. Sometimes with my friend Scott, sometimes with my then-girlfriend Stephanie. Sometimes we would drive up there and find Scott and his wife up there. I never understood the pull this place had on me, but it kept pulling me.

In the summer of 1987, I was working for Clock Company, a heat treatment plant in Manchester Connecticut. I had talked my way into a job operating their most elite vacuum furnaces. I always thought I would be marrying Stephanie, perhaps mostly because she just always talked about what the wedding was going to be like. Then without warning, she ended it because she "needed some time."

Suddenly, my tether broke. I had been living in a campground in my 1976 Chevy Van that had carried me up from Texas the previous autumn. I was running around like a madman, always running towards Stephanie on my opposite 3rd shift schedule. I was always late, always disappointing her or her family, always having to be somewhere. Suddenly, I had time and space. 

Clock Company was owned by the same company that owned Mal Tool Aircraft in North Charlestown New Hampshire. We were having our annual company picnic weekend there. I decided to go since I had nothing better to do. The cabin was only 2 towns away. 

I never got up to North Charlestown that weekend, but there was an awakening. I arrived at the cabin Saturday afternoon with a cooler of food, a 12-pack, and a notebook. I sat at the table after dinner Saturday night listening to Solid Gold Saturday Night on a station out of Rutland. Old songs from the two decades passed unheard for many years. I wrote. That was something I had not done in a long time. As I sat there I came to the conclusion that I was done with Stephanie. I did not want to live in Connecticut. I never intended to stay there when I left Texas, I was supposed to be moving to Maine. But here, tonight, a new seed was planted. Why not New Hampshire? Other than my job, which was a really good one, I was no longer attached to Connecticut. I left the cabin Sunday afternoon feeling like a new person. For the first time since leaving South Texas, there was some direction in my life.

The next time I went up, everything changed. My impulsiveness led to a complete shift in life. I was suddenly married and had a family. That land in East Alstead also meant a lot to them. Just like the months before, we frequently visited the cabin in any season. I was young, wreckless, tireless, and indestructible. Road trips were made on a whim all of the time. 

The following summer, everything around me collapsed as far as a place to live and work. I took my stepdaughter Amy to Florida to spend the summer with her father and when I came back was told that I did not have a job anymore. I could have just found something else since there were jobs everywhere, but the toxic people who lived all around us in the campground were making even living there unpleasant. I decided that there was no better time than now to start over in New Hampshire since I had to start all over again in Connecticut anyway. The fact was, Connecticut for me was repulsive. It had completely changed from what it was when I was a kid and enough was enough.

The summer of 1988 was hot, so living in a one-room hunting cabin without electricity or running water was interesting. I don't think I will ever know how we ate or put gas in the truck. The gas gauge on the old truck had not worked in years. It was better this way. Don't ask, don't tell got us by. Putting a couple of dollars in change for gas at a time seemed to carry us back and forth between Connecticut and New Hampshire over the long hot summer and yet, I will never know how. 

We left Connecticut in June with only $50 and a tank of gas, and by the 2nd week of August, I had a 2nd shift job in Claremont, New Hampshire for $5.50 per hour, an apartment on the 2nd floor of Spring St in Claremont for $115.00 a week. That wonderful place in East Alstead and my family who owned it had really helped us start life in New Hampshire. Things did get pretty dark at times, but they really started looking up.

Over the next few years, this spot on that mountain continued to be a foundational part of our lives. We were now only 40 minutes away and still enjoyed going there. Now it was also a way for us to visit with our cousins Dave and Janet when they came up.

During the mid-nineties, I continued to go there but my second wife never had the desire to go. For that reason I would go up on my own, or with friends, or my brother Bobby when I brought him up to NH. As the years went by, the freshness of this beautiful place changed. I know that it was always really a reflection of the miles that I had put on. For me, it was always beautiful.

In the late 90s, I was so busy in my life that I did not have time to visit, and a great deal of time passed. Dave had a serious incident happen in his life and I always felt that maybe he and Janet just might be holding onto it not only for them but maybe also for me. Maybe that was just in my head. I wanted to make sure they put their needs ahead of mine and told them that they should do whatever they wanted to do with the land. I can still hear Janet's voice on that call, during which she told me she would let Dave know how I felt.

The irony was that in the year 2002, they did sell the land in East Alstead that we enjoyed for 25 years. 2002 marked a year that I most likely would have used more than ever before in my life for the next 20-plus years at least. I did not know that at the time. When I think about it, I do wish I had made an offer to them the year before. I was in the position to do so at the time and it would have allowed me to let Dave and Janet continue to enjoy it just as they had for over 2 decades. I imagine we would have built a little camp somewhere else on those 50 acres so that they could use their cabin whenever they wished. Hindsight is 20/20 and is just the way that things are.

What I find so fascinating is the sprout of a seedling in 1977. A Friday afternoon Dave and my Dad picked me up from where I lived in Torrington Connecticut and brought my cousin Steve and me up to that land in East Alstead. It seems like a stand-alone, unconnected event on a summer weekend almost 50 years ago now. However, because of that one weekend, so many people were born and would never have existed without that trip. Wars could not have been fought, and marriages, rescues, and inspirations would never have happened. Amy and Jesse's children, nor their children would ever exist, neither would Liam and Noah. Those are only the direct effects.

I always talk about how many entire courses in my life hung on the thread of one single second in time, in which I could have gone one way or the other with the way I chose being so unlikely. But this journey to NH as an 11-year-old kid was the very DNA of many of those threads that built entire lives and in turn, touched thousands of lives. Even I have a hard time comprehending the far-reaching implications of this. 

There is something else though. I am sad sometimes when I think about that land in East Alstead. It was so important to the wild ride that my life has been and so many changes within it. Like a fuel section of a Saturn 5 rocket, nothing could have happened the way it did without it, but later it feels discarded, and fallen to earth as refuse.  I know this is not the case. There are memories in the hearts of Amy and Jesse, my stepchildren in those days who if not for what I did then, would never have these memories. That is something to be so thankful for. I would not trade it for anything.

As I sit here, I think about the influence that place in East Alstead had on me. I started playing my life out as if I had never visited there that day in 1977. I realized as I tried to project how the course would have been different, I could write an entire series of novels about that course. That is the refuse, isn't it? That is the path not taken which makes it worth nothing. There are many people alive who will never know that their entire existence and family hang on that one day. I lived every moment of where that path took me, and I still cannot believe it.

Thursday, November 7, 2024

November

Channel surfing. 

Reading pages 1 through 9 in every book on the shelf.

 It is the CD player stuck in "intro". 

It's Ray Davies Destroyer. 



It takes your complete sentences.

 It infiltrates your dreams and leaves you stranded thirty years ago with a recent memory lapse.  

It is looking for emotional clues.

It is thought time to put it all back on the rails.

It is a shift in the center of gravity.

It is indifference.

It is getting stuck on snags that should be smooth.

It is an echo in reflection of this time no matter what the year may be.

It is wanting to be a writer, then a chef, then an artist, and an engineer.

It is the sound of cicadas 24 hours a day at a horrible decibel.

It is having those you love all around you.

It is being more inside than you are on the outside.

It is wondering if you look clear or fuzzy in the lens of others.

It is summer and winter on the same day.

It is progress with a new measure.

It is people who let go for reasons that will never be known.

It is being understanding even when you do not understand.

It is dreaming of your Cinnamon Girl but knowing that is not real.

It is knowing the path home but the channel keeps changing.

It is standing on soil that keeps disappearing causing the need to jump.

It is sedation, it is turbulence. 

You know what this is, don't you?

It's November.



Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Unbreakable

 Spring fell upon us with more independence than ever before. It was all new and the people we lived with were all different.  I am still trying to figure out how that happened. For the first time, I was called to the kitchen table where all of the world's problems found solutions and we consulted over the morning coffee. Somehow, my sitting on the door armrest had translated into acknowledgment and validation. I fought for that!

My quadraphonic programming carved my perception of what my course should look like. Although that is spun into the fabric of who I became, thank God it failed to deliver fully! I have seen what that looks like, and I will tell you, brother, it is not pretty.

It was amazing to see the many facets of their relationship. I saw them as best friends at the height of marriage, and also as best friends when they were alone. It was such a true friendship and one that showed how right it felt between them. It was all of the other things happening outside that wrecked everything worthwhile. It would not have been so bad, except deep cracks in the foundations allowed the storm that was sweeping across time and space to get in. Who could possibly endure?


The antagonists appeared to be forces from the outside while inside each one owned their own specific torment. In those days, we never dealt with things like that. I recall the arguments; they, like the relationship, were charged and powerful. It was an age in which we just did not know what we did not know...what we needed to know. If we did, they could have had a chance.

It was here that she finally did it. Someone had to do something. The times did not allow for things to just continue as they had in the generation before and the one before that. She broke all the dishes in the pantry, leaving nothing of what had seemed like a sweet rescue. 

Now she was free of it, but free of what? She shared what had happened with the boy on the phone. Sitting at a telephone stand in the hall an hour away, he supported her for what she had done, and her bravery, not revealing how much it hurt him. He knew they both owned this, he did this too. He knew enough that he could have prevented it. Even though he knew what, he did not know how. 

It was the year when couples could act with a great alliance, but upon closer inspection, only dissolve the things they had. It was accepted as a normal byproduct of the pain. He knew he had played a part in all of the mess and now it was just ashes as he smoked one cigarette after another, consoling her and commending her for moving on. Nothing felt right, but there was no other way.

No one knew how to fix it. The old standard cast the mold and the world was changing. It is in the hearts of my parents that the frontier was taken, leaving them in the wake of families floating on the surface of the ocean after the ship they were on went down. They paid a higher price than anyone else did, and for time unforeseen more would fall as soon as they stood.

As evening descended, they each stood looking out their windows, him east and her west. After all of the villages that burned, it was a return to innocence. There was still something so incredible like that which can only be felt in the first love. It was evident, no matter what happened on that day in 1976, here was something that the air of the times, laws both legal nor physical, time itself nor any outside influence could ever break their connection.

I was fortunate. While yes, I heard more sad things than I would have liked to, their love and friendship is what I remember the most. I was old enough to remember hours and hours. Sitting in the backseat of that 63 Plymouth, 68 Pontiac, their ease at being able to talk to each other was such a beautiful thing. If I could have a wish come true for the span of my life it would be that they could have seen it the way that I could. I know it took me so many years to understand it, but having done so I do know, some people never get to have the closeness that my parents had. 

They got married in a time in which they were on the threshold of social storms, those that had never before been seen. They were swept away in it. I do however find peace in the fact that they knew in their hearts, that the love they had was real and it was without end.

 


Monday, November 4, 2024

The North West Girl

 There was a sound in the night. It was a cry as if she was here, but I could not find her. Throughout the years, she never cried. Even now when she does, it is silent. 

Because I know her heart, I can feel it, the confusion, the devastation, the temporary reprieve. There is a dimensional barrier that I have to cross if I am to console her. My callous recovery from my own trials sometimes make this as easy as passing through a solid wall of concrete.

So many times, for so many people, I have wanted to be the reason they found to look at things more positively. I wanted them to see the good in who they are, just like I did. 

It is in the broken glass on the floor that I stop and ponder. I know that there was a difficult trial in this very spot. I am not interested in those whose boring and predictable lives have allowed them to live the dream. It is those who sit in the corner, knees pressed to chest, head down. I see you. 

At one time in my life, I will admit that there was something in this consideration for me that was selfish, that somehow this allowed me to not look at my own imperfection and made me feel somewhat more worth something when helping others. Let me assure all, I have taken the express elevator to the bottom, and I learned a thing or two while I was there.

Today I am listening. There is a heart that I care for so much hurting and confused. Somehow, I have to let her know that I am here. For listening in the sad days and rejoicing in the happy days. I have seen all that she is; magnificent in ways that she cannot yet comprehend.  But I believe in her. I always will.

Saturday, November 2, 2024

You've got to get mad

 I need to create classic recipes. It is the avalanche in me that cannot be stopped. I love seafood. I make excellent mussels. Sweet vermouth, PEI mussels, cream, portabello mushrooms, shallots, garlic, cilantro, bacon. Maybe a Thai chili or two if I want to cook on the wild side.  My oh my!


But now, I NEEEEEEEED to make a lobster thermidor, a favorite back in1960s-70s entertaining. The food from those old black-tie dinner party meals is rising into view once again. I know there can be wild spins on what we can do with a meal that Julia Child championed us out of our collective trepidation. 60 years later we are tampering with the maverick. But take your rest here for a moment to cook at the station of that wonderful woman who brought the housewives out of the dark ages, showing us all that family dinner had no limits. Even more so, Julia showed us that ambition and creativity were not owned by men alone. She like my grandmother, did so in a world that said otherwise. But wow! I digress!


I make amazing grilled oysters. They are simple, but there are so many ways to make them. Time is the biggest obstacle. Like the great Warren Zevon said, Life will kill ya'. I have ideas to make one wonderful thing after another. By the time I got home from work or the grocery store, my energy and ambition had long since left me. It is a mystery where it goes.

There it is, the antagonist in this blog shows its ugly head at the beginning of paragraph four. Time and energy, are those elusive things that none of us seem to have. We don't have time and so we compromise. Even worse, we figuratively have these little people standing on our shoulders, whispering in our ears: "You can't do it." Time assaults us, commercial dictators assault us, and we feel drained. The hyper-sensory trip we undertake daily is a long, LONG way from the days back in 1977 when I was white-washing cement walls on a summer afternoon.

The fact is, we have to fight against what seems to be an invisible weight that was never there before. I would attribute it to getting older but I know for sure that is not the cause. It is something else. Young and old alike, we all seem to be suffering. This means we have to channel the great Outlaw Josey Wales: "Now remember, things  look bad and it looks like you're not gonna make it, then  you gotta get mean. I mean  plumb, mad-dog mean. 'Cause if you lose your head and you give  up then you neither live nor win. That's just the way it is."

This may not work for the average person, I don't know. What I can tell you is, I have lived by this law that it is only because of it that I am still alive today. Daily too. Exhaustion sets in and I get mad, I push and I succeed. It gets me through RA, through apathy, tiredness, anxiety and all those things that pin us down today.

I ran into a colleague who said she struggles with being an introvert. The pandemic has dealt us all a serious blow in this area. Personal interaction has an odd weight and unpleasantness these days, until you actually do it. Then we wonder what we were so worried about.


It may seem like I am jumping around a little, but it is all related. I have been doing Fight4Taste Friday since March of this year. It is where I make a simple or not so simple meal for approximately 22 people at work on Fridays. It is so simple to slip into neutral, and when I fight against that, I find my joy.

So yes... Lobster Thermidor, smoked oysters, bento boxes that take me to new places, more, more, more. It's all good. Just remember, before I get started, everything inside of me says NO. But that is when I need to get mad.





 

Tuesday, October 29, 2024

Waiting for You


 I met a girl, and she opened my eyes.

I wanted things I never wanted before.

She shared stories that I never knew existed

Tales I never could have imagined.

When I awoke she was nowhere

Out on the front porch, I noticed a glow on the horizon

I knew what I had to do

I rode off into the frontier.

As the years went by I grew in knowledge and wisdom

I could tell by the feel of the wind when it was time to go

One great adventure after another, she always led me

It was a cool evening and  I saw her walk by

my creativity surged with no limits

but then I turned to look and again, she was gone.

As the years go by I find that I need to push forward on her memory and what she showed me

Every time I see her, I watch and miss her knowing she will disappear

Our encounter becomes more of a deep well giving water endlessly only if I strive to remember.

Today I have to search inside and look for ways to bring her into my day.

Some are crafty deceptions, some are close encounters with her

Together, these make me possible, pushing forward. Ever pushing forward.

Saturday, October 19, 2024

Digging in the Dirt

 Occasionally, I write about something I would never have attempted. I perceive this as growth and courage, but it can be far more difficult when in the trenches that I find myself digging. 

While nothing exists until the day I tap that "Publish" button, there is a pressure that I cannot define before that moment of release. The absolute need to get that piece of life out and to let it fly free is a powerful entity. 

A piece such as that cannot be written in a day, a week, or a month. It is all relative to how intense and dense the account is. Complexities exist not only on the day I share the accounts but also on the day I write about them.

There are no shortcuts to reaching the goal. The process is full of reflection, regret, sadness, and nostalgia. There is no detachment when telling a good story. Initially, it must be experienced and recorded; only after that can a third person's perspective be shared, as it's only then that I can see it in that light.

I can be impatient. I am learning the process I find myself on a ride where there is no way to get off until it is complete. Choices are no longer an option once that ride begins. It is time to commit, hold on, and tell the story that needs to be told. That becomes my only mission at that time. Otherwise, I am incomplete.




Monday, October 14, 2024

Things we don't know

 I thought I felt it. I could swear it was there, that ever-slight vibration in the earth and something in the air. It is what you see when you do not look, but your mind can fill in the void. There is something happening somewhere.

There are subtleties in the words and body language of an old friend. You can miss them if you only think about your own house. Something is smoldering and for some reason, we need something to implode to give our attention to it.

Photo by Harli Marten on Unsplash

Why do I walk with my eyes closed when it comes to you? Somewhere if I just open them, I might see you crying. How did I miss so many signals? I have boasted that in the golden era of time, I was raised in the field of empathy. 

How do I know you are hurting if I was wrong about so much? I try to feel like I never have before and still, I fall so short. There is a world of hurt out there and we all carry what we have. Escalation and intensity finally pull the disaster into the light. If only we could see it before now, we could nurture the wounds.

No, we will wait until we are all moving at high velocity and then the inevitable happens, a wheel begins to shudder and it tears away from us as we tumble down into disaster and new normal. It will become the pivotal moment of our lives to which we divide the now from the then. 

In a moment of personal breakthrough, I think about you my friend. I look at you intently: "are you OK?" You nod and crack a quick smile and irreverent remark. I do not break my eye contact. "No, ARE you OK?" This time silence. I will not say it again as this would only be degrading, but the truth between our eyes makes you look away. "No. No I am not", you say. 

It is in the slowing down that we find our way. Once upon a time we did that. There was one day that we used to allow us to talk, to build, to play and just hang out. It would seem, that in all of our youthful lack of wisdom, we knew what to do, we just didn't know it.


Wednesday, October 9, 2024

The Stranger

I met a stranger on the day that he died, and my life was never the same.

I was just a boy of fifteen when the stranger rode into town. I was sitting in the saloon, sipping on short glasses of ice, complete with a couple of molecules of ginger ale. This justification was a lie for a man who could never look at himself in a mirror. I was a passenger. I had in tow with me the girl I would know forever, but the days of our acquaintance were numbered.

December came, and I was almost giddy with self-imposed tradition: I would turn my attention to the nighttime stratosphere and extract light that could not be seen from the dark sky. The times were changing, yes, they were, but I gleefully felt that I could hold on to the world I grew up in.

I was hanging with my southern boogie friends and my guitar-wielding women. They fed me everything I needed when that stranger came to town. As he approached the entrance he was thriving but I did not hear him at all, and then suddenly oblivion, he was shot down the moment he arrived.

I woke from a misty December dream and saw him lying in the street, the town echoed with the wailing of his widow, hands bloodied, disbelieving in shock. I came to him, knowing that there was nothing that I, nor anyone could do.

Everyone around me knew him so well and a shockwave blasted through the crowd of people that were gathering like a fire fueled by gasoline. A trapdoor opened under my knees as I knelt next to his lifeless body and I fell away from all of the people I knew, joining the friends of this stranger.

Suddenly as if in a dream, the stranger got up and told me to take a journey with him. The first part of that journey lasted four years. As we traveled, somehow he let me feel his life but in a way that only I could feel it, so it was not the same as it happened to him, but in a strange way, it was exactly what I needed to understand so many things about myself. The southern boogie friends and guitar-wielding women were still dear to me, but they paled in comparison to the stranger who had become part of who I was.

As the years went by the idea that we as a world once lived, jumped and breathed in a season of such unparalleled creativity seemed so impossible, yet we know it was there. So many years later, I am still learning from this friendship that I could never have imagined. The relationship built friendships in my life that I think may never have happened, had I not met the stranger.

I met a stranger on the day that he died. My life was never the same after that, and I am so thankful that I got to know him at all.


Tuesday, October 8, 2024

When the Walls Fell Down

It happened in a moment. It was summer, but I must have dreamed it. My entire life was laid out before me, and then I was ambushed and found out that what I knew, I did not know. 

I was good, but then I found out that I was not. Even worse, I had not been good for a long time, and now I knew.

Photo by M Alazia on Unsplash

It is always like that absolute shift in reality that the entire world had on 9/11. For seventeen minutes that morning, we all thought a terrible accident had happened. Then at 9:03 am, Flight 175 hit the south tower and then we knew that everything we knew was wrong.

As we watch video footage, we feel an incredible desire to rewrite the events of that September morning or whenever we watch the Challenger lift off on January 28, 1986. The loss cannot be counted, and the ripple that follows lifts the ties, tracks, and spikes right out of the ground and takes them elsewhere.

Sometimes, I looked down the corridor and I knew that if I walked down the hallway, the building would collapse upon me. Sometimes I did that, and sometimes I did not.

In the times in which I felt there was no warning, I looked back and could see that there were always signs and warnings along the way. Lying to oneself can come so easily.

It was a bitter cold Saturday afternoon in January of 1978. We sat in the warmth of Torrington's Warner Theatre. Charlene and I had just settled into the movie, Saturday Night Fever. Suddenly, something I had never seen happen before, they turned down the movie and paged her. Ninety seconds later, everything was different. It will always be engraved in me. Eternally, she is standing in the aisle, crying and I hear her voice still. Twenty minutes later, we were sitting in a cigarette-smoke-filled kitchen, stuck. 

When the walls fell down, sometimes we did things. Sometimes we did not do things. The gambler knows when to hold and when to fold. He is not always right and the more he is successful you can be sure it came with so much loss. 

When the walls fell down I learned, I cried, and I was angry. When the walls fell down I had to build something from ruins always feeling the pain of not having built what I could have before the collapse.

When the walls fell down I wanted to fall down too. A world-saving mission had just failed, and now the planet was knocked out of its orbit and was hurtling into outer space to die a cold and dark death. I wanted to find a mountaintop somewhere to just watch it all fade away.

But there was something inside of me that said no. There was something that made me get up and continue. I hated it, and it made me furious, but it drove me to my feet and I clenched my fists and I screamed. I stood up with the ruins at my feet, knowing now what really happened, knowing I was about to build from whatever was left. Would it be better, I don't know. I just know that it would be fortified with the walls that fell down and somehow, this would add strength.






Do you sleep in Stockholm?

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