Sunday, December 31, 2006

Resolve


2006 was a trying year but we got through it. Taught us quite a bit too, like appreciate life. Enjoy it. Hell - while we're at it, why not even live it!

New Year's Eve Resolutions:

From now on January is a shedding month. Weight that is. Pounds of fat. I plan on losing ten of them by February 1st! Right now I'm around 224. My ultimate goal is under 200. The time has come.

Medicine Park will release two CDs this year. First, the Moogy deal, and then a various artist project that might incorporate a Christmas story writ by me (currently unwritten btw).

I must finish The Lost Child by June 30th. Then write some short stories and prepare for NaNoWriMo 2007 in November. I missed it this year. The working title in mind: The Whistle (a story about a college basketball referee - lots of possibilities there).

Financial Goal Planning of Oklahoma must pollinate by year's end or I'll pull the plug on any future such endeavors. My goal is at least ten clients by that time.

Other goals: prepare for sale of farm land. Hope to average $2500 to $3000 per acre. Hope to have all sold by 2010. And learn more about the winemaking!

So - I got no time for wallowing. Carry on my good men...

Monday, December 25, 2006

Saturday, December 23, 2006

What Happened To Poor Old Charlie?

[Last year I read John Cheever's "Christmas Is A Sad Season For The Poor." Someone had provided a link to the short story on the TC Boyle messageboard. Recently I purchased The Ecco Book Of Christmas Stories which includes Cheever's story. After reading it again I had the idea that the story wasn't over yet - at least not for me. So with apologies to the original author, I offer up my conclusion.]


What Happened To Poor Old Charlie?

Talk about an amorphous depression.
The day after Christmas Charlie awoke before six am, his customary time of awakening, with a slight headache and a fuzzy memory contracting into cold clarity with each beat of his heart. He didn’t chuckle at the notion that he no longer needed to get up, get dressed, and take that Elevated train uptown. No, he could sleep in all day if he wanted to, and usually he wanted to, but not today.
Now how sad is that?
Yesterday he got fired by the superintendent of the apartment building where he had worked as an elevator operator for six months. Damn. And on Christmas Day too, an unfortunate series of licentious events bound together with the benevolence generated by the irrepressible gaiety of the season. Little doubt about that. So no more going up and down, up and down. Now it was just down, down, down. Dear Lord – he had most assuredly gotten the shaft!
As he lay awake in the bed that comprised the primary centerpiece to his furnished room, rubbing his head and wondering about next month’s rent, somebody rapped hard on the door.
He didn’t have a wife, any children, no real friends to speak of – he was merely a working man living all alone in his furnished room – and that was just the way he liked it, mind you, so he was quite surprised and annoyed by the loud arrival of some fool at his doorstep at this hour. But his surprise and annoyance by themselves would not make them go away.
The mad clamor of fists on the door once again and then a woman’s voice: “Charlie Leary – I know you’re in there! You open this door immediately or I’ll open it myself!”
He knew right away that this was no idle threat, she had a key, for this was the landlady.
“Charlie Leary! You hear me? I said now!”
“Hold on,” he bellowed, and he pulled the chain above his head and the light from a single bulb clicked on. It was still dark outside his window and he wondered if the guy who ran the all-night lunchwagon would miss him today. He fingered the sleep from his eyes, muttered something under his breath, and moved slowly towards the door amid a flurry of angry knocking, balled flesh pounding upon worn wood, some mad knuckles tossed in for added urgency.
“Now just what the tarnation is going on here?” he asked as he removed the dead bolt and slowly opened the door, expecting to see the landlady standing there in her old pink nightgown and curlers in her graying hair and perhaps the smell of liquor upon her incendiary breath. But no, she was fully dressed, apparently stone sober and standing there with two other women, strangers as far as Charlie knew, and they were all three fully dressed, all three set in the sternest of poses, and one had her hands on her bony hips and sad eyes that simmered with the promise of rage.
At first he felt alarm, now why should this bony little woman be so angry with him, but then he felt a sharp jolt of embarrassment as he followed their gaze downward realizing that he was only in torn underwear with his lone prized possession, the erstwhile family jewels, hanging out like the irrepressible bough and thicket of some overgrown mistletoe.
But not even that was apparently enough to deter the wrath of the bony little woman with those sad eyes. She tore into him and surprisingly, at least to poor old Charlie, neither of the other two women saw fit to hold her back.
Now Charlie found himself in the predicament of his life, being slapped around by a tiny woman and getting his grown-out kinky hair pulled (“I knew that I shoulda got that haircut!”) and he found her fingernails to be uncut and jagged.
“Damn woman, what’s wrong with you?” he cried and he came awfully close to just grabbing her by the scrawny neck and tossing her into the wall because even a big fellow like Charlie could only take so much, enough is enough, but at the last moment she disengaged, probably sensing his breaking point, and backed her heaving self out into the hall with her hair wild in the face but never hiding those eyes.
“My boy almost choked himself to death on that toy truck,” she gasped, and she settled there now, catching her breath, never taking her eyes off the well- hung over man. The landlady, who had just been standing there overseeing the entire scene, spoke again.
“So what do you got to say for your self Charlie Leary?”
Charlie was perplexed, dazed, and feeling the place on his neck where the woman had clawed him but good. He looked at his hand but saw no blood.
“I don’t have the foggiest notion what you are talking about. Either of you. I never even seen this lady before, and God knows, I never seen her son. And who is this other lady anyway?” and he nodded accusatorily toward the third woman, she silent yet set just as hard, and she glared right back at him with her nose all twisted around her face and her brow flattened and he instinctively leaned one step back inside the perceived safety of his furnished room.
“Never you mind who this other woman is Charlie Leary. Never you mind,” said the landlady and then the bony little woman reminded him that “my boy almost choked himself to death on that toy truck.”
Charlie felt a rising inside of him now, damn the headache, and he leaned back at them. “What toy truck? What boy?” he demanded to know and the landlady folded her arms and smiled. “Now you know what toy truck we’re talking about. We’re talking about the toy truck you brought over yesterday afternoon. In one of them pretty silver packages you dropped off,” and when she said pretty silver packages she said it with the air of a snobby uptown dilettante. True, those packages were wrapped expertly in shiny silver paper and boasted big red bows. He had felt proud just having them tucked under his arms if only for a short while.
Could this be true? Could the source of this consternation be his own benevolent and well-meaning self, only wanting to spread the best of cheer, to be a contributor to the Christmas cause? Ah hell, he knew he should have just pawned those presents and bought one of them big picture books filled with photos of Bermuda.
“So what you’re telling me is you didn’t even let your kids open the presents I brought you?” he said, and he was angry and he was hurt but the landlady paid none of that any mind.
“That’s right – my kids done had enough Christmas. We all decided to share our good fortune with the Deckkers. They been having a real tough time lately.”
And now they all looked at the bony little woman standing there up against the wall and he noticed that she didn’t seem all that angry anymore. Her eyes had recoiled and now worry seemed to drip from their sockets. He felt his own anger deflating.
“Her son’s resting at home now Charlie but last night all hell broke loose down at that hospital,” said the landlady, and he noted that she was toned-down a bit as well but still defiant and careful to speak in a serious tone. “And on Christmas Night. Well – there’s bills to be paid now Charlie, a doctor to be paid and all them medicines too. A fiasco if you ask me,” and Charlie wasn’t asking nobody, least of all her. But why was this all his fault? He hadn’t given the gifts directly to the Deckkers. It had been the landlady who had accomplished that deed. He looked at her and began to mention something about that fact but suddenly caught himself and looked down in reconsideration. The thicket was starting to reassert itself and he quickly tucked it back in and then looked back up with a nervous laugh. Something in the landlady’s eyes suggested that he best bury all that, because she was indeed the landlady, and he knew that rent might not be paid on such a timely basis in the upcoming months.
“Why, I got all them things from the folks over at Sutton Place. I didn’t even know what was in them. I was just passing ‘em along. You know, the gesture, the spirit of Christmas.” Now Charlie was smiling at them, feeling good about himself, explaining the situation. For once he was getting out of something and telling the truth.
“Charlie, there are bills to be paid.” The landlady paused right here, the silence creating a big blank space that had to be filled in by thought, and that thought was the fact that she surely wasn’t paying a dime and if he wanted to continue calling this furnished room home sweet home he’d better start digging deep inside his pockets.
“You know I aint got that kinda money,” he said, “and it’s not my fault anyway. You can blame them folks at Sutton Place – the Walsers and the DePauls and that crazy old Mrs. Gadshill.”
The landlady stepped toward him. “Then get your pants on boy. Let’s go talk to them folks over at Sutton Place.”
It was the day after Christmas, the light of the sun now filtering its way between tall buildings, and Charlie contemplating the double dilemma of unemployment and this sudden existence of an unforeseen liability. “Just a minute,” he sighed, realizing that he really had no choice.
“My boy almost choked himself to death on that toy truck.” Yes yes, I know that, we all know that, and why is your child eating metal objects anyway? But Charlie knew that answer almost at once, and a twinge of shame slapped the sneer off his face - because the little boy’s stomach was telling him to put anything small into his mouth and chew.
Fifteen minutes later they were on that Elevated train, the sound of the tracks rattling below them, and there was no need for small talk as the bony little woman stared off in a trance while the other two just sat there, arms folded, glaring at poor old Charlie.

‘Twas the day after Christmas and all cheer was gone. News travels fast, bad news the fastest, and that very morning the news of Charlie’s dismissal spread like fresh mint jelly across the baked flanks of a diminutive Cornish hen. Of course it was Mrs. Hewing from 14 who stoked that first log, ringing the elevator and entering with her two dogs and the sight of someone other than Charlie, even if it was only Fred the week-end fill-in guy, gave her a start.
“Fred – what in the world are doing here at this hour? I mean, did I lose a day or something? It is Friday, right?”
“Oh yes mam, it’s Friday all right, sure enough, nothing wrong with your mind or nothing. I just got a call late last night from the super and he asked if I was ready to move to full time and I says ‘yes sir, I sure is ready,’ and I told him ‘this sure was a nice Christmas surprise’ and he said, ‘yes, right, well be there at 7 a.m. sharp and looking good.’ So here I am mam, right on time looking grand and all, if you don’t mind me saying so myself.” Fred smiled big right then and one of Mrs. Hewing’s funny-looking dogs yelped and then the other joined in and she hurried them off the elevator and out the door to the curb.
A few minutes later she came back in and, right before the elevator door opened to her floor, Mrs. Hewing decided to go ahead and pop the question regarding Charlie’s whereabouts? Fred opened his big yellow eyes and exclaimed, “well, old Charlie got his self fired yesterday.”
“Oh my!” cried the lady as she worked the dogs out of the elevator, and before she could think to say anything more Fred and his big smile disappeared behind the closing door.
He went down thinking about whether he should just throw out Charlie’s remaining things in the locker room or keep them around for a few days. There wasn’t much, an ash tray filled with spent butts and a silver lighter that didn’t work and a just-opened pack of cigarettes (now there ya go!) and a couple of smelly shirts and underwear. Those last two would have to go right quick but he reckoned the first three could stay. You never know when a lighter might start working again. He grinned at his changing good fortune as the darkness outside the windows softened to blue hinting at the coming sunshine that would soon illuminate this new world. In fact, he chuckled at this prospect. Sure enough he thought. Yes sir, sure enough.
“What in the dickens are you laughing at?” asked Mr. Walser as he and his wife dragged themselves inside the building, the stench of pickled tongue and liquored lips seeping from his mouth, and despite the stink Fred just smiled. “Oh nothing really, just happy today I suppose,” and Fred opened the elevator and they both stumbled inside, Mrs. Walser banging her purse against the wall and laughing while the locks of her golden hair cloaked her drunken gaze. Mr. Walser steadied himself against the rail and inquired, “so, where’s our dear friend, old Charlie Whashisname?” and this he asked with one charming raised eyebrow undermined by a slurred delivery, and Fred just said, “well, I’m not supposed to say much but Charlie got his self fired yesterday.”
“This is an outrage!” responded Walser with great aplomb almost knocking himself onto his own ass while his wife reached for him and pulled him to her just as the door slid back open. Then a funny gurgling noise came from somewhere deeper inside the outraged man and right there he wretched for a moment while his wife struggled to keep him afoot. “Preston – Preston, are you alright? Preston?” Fred poised for anything that might happen, squeezing back into the corner as far away from the scene as possible, and he hoped that whatever did happen would do so clearly outside his elevator and onto the pea green carpet of the 8th floor. Once the couple had finally worked themselves outside the elevator Fred quickly punched the button shutting the door but not before he heard one last sound, that of a man hitting his knees with a thud and surrendering to the evils of the overly-celebrated night while a woman shrieked at his side and now Fred was no longer smiling, he was wondering if he should have done more, thinking maybe he should go back, offer help, but then the DePaul’s rang on 9.
Fred was smiling again because that was his natural state. Happy or perhaps too uninformed to understand that he had no reason be, that smile was a fixture on his broad face whether he was struggling atop the stool or sleeping fitfully through a slew of nightmares. When folks needed a big black Santa Claus the image of Fred was usually what came to their minds. Presently the elevator door slid open.
“So it’s true,” gasped Mrs. DePaul. She stood there a moment, her stout arms folded below her impressive bosom, and she made a clucking sound and entered. “Well, you know, I suppose it’s not your fault Fred yet still – I feel for that poor man.”
“Yes mam, I know you do, but there is plenty of skyscrapers out there looking for a good elevator man. I’ll bet ya old Charlie lands on his feets just fine – yes sir.”
Mrs. DePaul clucked again and Fred got hungry for a good fried chicken dinner. With mashed potatoes and peas all covered with gravy. “My husband says that soon enough we won’t even have elevator operators, the apartment owners are cutting costs, you know, and once we start pressing those buttons ourselves we’ll never even remember the day when we didn’t.”
The door popped open. “Oh no Mrs. DePaul! Now no disrespect to your husband or anything, but you’ll always need folks like us doing these things for ya. Like pumping gas. A woman such as yourself could get hurt doin’ things like this. Now don’t you worry about punching no buttons.”
Mrs. DePaul waddled out of the elevator and said over her shoulder, “I should certainly hope you are right.” Then she was out the door and for a brief moment of time Fred ditched the smile and felt a pang of trouble rising within him but just then the front door blew open and in marched three women and one sad familiar face.

“Oh my Lord – look what the cat done drug in!” exclaimed Fred in surprise, not knowing if he should feel friendly toward the man whose job he just took, not knowing if he should feel anger or embarrassment instead, not trusting his instinct to just head on out the door and act real busy, so in the end he just stuck with the surprise and smiled.
“No damn cat dragged anything in here boy,” said the older woman with the angry wild eyes, “so wipe that silly grin off your face or I’ll wipe it off for you.”
Charlie stood back behind the trio with hands in pockets and shoulders hunched, nodding ever so slightly, and raised his eyebrows with a knowing cock-eyed grin.
“So – what can we do for you today mam?” said a somewhat rattled Fred, and he couldn’t hold the woman’s gaze for another moment and desperately looked to Charlie for some kind of guidance but Charlie wasn’t in an accommodating mood.
“What you can do for me is find the fool that would give a toddler a toy truck that has small parts to it – parts that come off if you bite hard enough. Parts that would choke a child nearly to its death and run up a huge hospital bill – that’s what you could do for me.”
Then another one spoke, the small woman with the limbs of a colt and shiny pointed teeth. “My boy almost choked himself on that toy truck.”
Fred could hardly grasp the meaning of the situation unfolding before him and certainly could not grasp his place in it whatever it’s meaning might turn out to be. “Yes mam, I see, but what can I do for you?” This he said as he pointed first at himself and then at her and although his smile was an innocent child-like thing it could become so antagonizing given the right conditions.
At this point the bony little woman lunged right into him and Fred did his best to fend her off while Charlie just chuckled in a satisfied manner until Charlie guessed that that was just about enough. Then he moved quickly behind her and gently yet forcibly pulled her flailing arms back. Fred scrambled away from the group and yelled over his shoulder, “Damn it man, if you want your job back that bad, you can have it!” Then he escaped through the lobby door almost knocking a surprised Mrs. DePaul onto her ample tush in the process.
He was not smiling when he did.

Given the random comings and goings of the Sutton Place residents in no time at all a curious gash of humanity had congealed. By now most had learned of poor Charlie’s dismissal yet there he stood, just outside the elevator, apparently unfazed by yesterday’s pathetic events (“well good for old Charlie!”) and naturally Mrs. Hewing and the DePauls and the Fullers and all the rest were filled with questions regarding the reappearance of this good man.
But the mood soon changed once the nature of the visitation had been revealed by the old angry woman with the burning eyes and no one was allowed to leave until the identity of the perpetrator had been once and for all unquestionably determined.
“You might as well go ahead and get ‘em all down here,” she said. “Every damn one of ‘em. Aint nobody going nowhere until we get this whole thing sorted out.”
Mr. DePaul stepped righteously toward the woman and announced that “this is all so very quaint but I do have a client meeting to attend in a half hour and if you would be so very kind as to step out of my way…”
“I don’t care if you’re shining the pope’s boots you aint going nowhere,” and she placed both of her hands on her hips and fixed a defiant glare. Mr. DePaul stepped back in thoughtful repose calculating the residual effects of just lowering his shoulder and knocking the bitch on her ass. Might not be the prudent thing to do, at least not yet, so he reached into his coat pocket and pulled out his pipe.
Although most of the folks wavered upon the fringes and simply listened there was an energetic core of six or seven individuals that exchanged assertments and accusations and then one desperate voice rose above all the others.
“It was Weston that did it!”
Mr. Weston cleared his throat. “I certainly didn’t give anyone a toy car,” he pleaded. “I haven’t even been in a toy store in years. Truth is I hate toys. And I don’t like the kids that play with them either!”
But just then the lobby front door blew open yet again and in shuddered the superintendent, blowing on his hands and shaking the new fallen snow from his coat, and he was pleasantly surprised to see the throng gathered right in front of the elevator door. For it was only the day after Christmas and his heart was still gay and here was an assemblage of his people, the folks he took care of, old clients, friends even, and as he removed his hat and approached the talkative group he felt the warmth firing through his entire body and couldn’t help but offer a smile. And although his presence was for the most part being ignored and many voices were speaking at the same time he did catch that last exchange.
“No – it wasn’t Mr. Weston who contributed that toy car. ‘Twas I!” offered the super in a loud clear voice, and now all talking ceased and seventeen sweaty faces looked over at him. DePaul removed the pipe from his lips and blew out hard. Thirty minutes later, once the bony little woman had finally been plied from his right leg and the owner of the building had been contacted, summoned, and had performed the deed, the superintendent glumly left Sutton Place for the very last time.

Mrs. Gadshill paced back and forth in front of her windows and the door that led to the outdoor patio that towered atop Sutton Place. She was troubled by this new development, the employment termination of that Charlie character, and all because she had had two green pills instead of the customary one. But, after all, it had been Christmas, why shouldn’t she be allowed to treat herself to just a smidgen more, who could possibly care if she helped herself to all the icing atop the cake, the cherry atop the sundae? Certainly not her family, they were all scattered about, attending to their own affairs and pursuing their own Christmas dreams. And as for Charlie, he had appeared so strange yesterday afternoon, too damn happy for a simple working man, and his careless handling of her elevator ride had been more than enough reason to see to his demise. Anyone of right mind would surely concur.
Suddenly and without much contemplation she found herself outside on the patio, leaning over the five foot wall and peering down into the city street where snowflakes twisted downward. Horns honking and voices yelling and Christmas most assuredly was over yet its frigid air remained. No longer a chummy chill, just cold. Bleak. She pondered the loss of her own grace, the way the icy wind might feel running through her thinning hair as she tumbled all the way down, and her forced concern for Charlie. She stepped back and then moved a chair to the ledge. Only one green pill today and now here she stood. Imagine that. But she won’t take that extra step today because her unhappiness is bought and paid for and lived out in such a state of envied grandeur.
It’s all hers.

For sure, Christmas is a sad season for the poor. But for the recently unemployed and newly introduced to the twin perils of lost purpose and an uncertain future Christmas is the absolute shits. The super took one last look at the building and saw a figure standing at the top and leaning over the edge. “Gadshill,” he thought. “If she has any sense at all she’ll jump.” Then he turned the corner and headed toward that all-night lunchwagon he had often seen but never once patronized.

Thursday, October 19, 2006

Charon Gardens



On Tuesday, October 17th, I took the day off and drove down to the Wichita Mountains and hiked to the top of Elk Mountain. At the summit awaits a collection of huge boulders that I believe is called the Charon Gardens. It was one of those incredible October days where the sun shone brilliantly through a deep blue autumn sky and the hike was very enjoyable. It took me about 45 minutes to reach the top and it was a fairly tough vertical climb across a mostly rock-lined path. At one time the Wichita Mountains, which lie in southwest Oklahoma near Lawton (and Medicine Park I should add) were as majestic as the Rockies but over time have eroded and left primarily an impressive array or boulder-encrusted hills that no amount of wind and water could ever hope to dent. As tough as it was going up, I believe it was more difficult coming down, certainly on my ankle joints, as every step required careful selection of the right rock to step upon. In fact, one time I almost sprung an ankle (my right gouty one), but was lucky to catch it before it really went.

One aside: as I was driving along the road in the wildlife refuge I came over a hill and saw a large beastly figure awaiting me toward the bottom about fifty yards away squarely in the middle of the road. I'll be damned if my first thought wasn't "Big Foot" and it took a few more seconds for the reality of this figure to be revealed to me. Turns out it was a wayward buffalo that was positioned in such a manner that I had been viewing it head-on and thus saw only the two feet and a beastly mane. I slowed down and it cotinued on its slow meandering way across the road taking its own sweet time.

Question: why did the buffalo cross the road?

Answer: uh, becasue it wanted to?

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Race For The Cure


Nicholas is responding very well to treatment. He had a cat scan a few weeks back and the tumor in his chest has decreased in size almost 50% and is now of low density. Also the spots in his neck have resolved (they're gone!). So as far as I'm concerned he's well on his way back to perfect health!

On Saturday, October 14th, I decided to participate in the annual Race For The Cure 5K in Bricktown. What a mob of people! Over 10,000! Imagine my surprise to find this picture at the Oklahoman web site featuring a runner moving so fast the lens had no possible chance to capture the image without the blur.

What a beautiful day for a run. I really enjoyed it and am glad to be back running after a more than six months hiatus. To be honest, it was emotional at the start of the race when they released the doves to honor those lost to cancer. I was glad I had my sunglasses on.

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

The Promise of Autumn

It's been one long hot shitty summer. And now the heat bubble has finally burst and our long run of 100-degree days is all but over. In fact, highs may not even pass the mid 90s from here on out. September mornings can really be the greatest time of all to get outside and enjoy a hike and smell the world as the cooling nights bring everything back to life again. The radiant glow of the harvest-time foilage, sunflowers primping at their zenith, the blue sky shedding its summertime white-out and returning to a deeper blue. Take a deep breath and suck it all in.

The three months of June - July -August have been the most trying three months of my life. But the promise of autumn brings a change to our treatment routine. Nick goes in for his sixth treatment today - then next Wednesday an x-ray to assess his improvement. We all know he is gettting better - we can feel it.

I had an interesting exchange with author TC Boyle over the week-end regarding the ending of his latest novel. The amazing thing here is the accessibility of one of the world's most highly regarded contemporary writers:


utobya
Aug 27 2006, 07:31 AM
Lurker Group: members Posts: 14 Joined: 25-June 03 Member No.: 189

prestidigitation

Okay, many of you, perhaps even most of you, know the meaning of this word. But I didn't until, oh, about five minutes ago. Vocabulary has never been my strong suit.So, my inquiry is, does the inclusion of a word such as this one lessen or enhance the "impact" of such a climatic scene as rendered at the top of page 280? In my case I say it lessens it. Of course, it is not TCB's fault that I find myself ignorant and uninformed at such an important moment. I should add that I enjoy writers (both of fiction and songs) that help me broaden my vocabulary. But I still find it interesting as a writer myself that TCB chose to go with this word at that precise moment. I wonder if he even gave thought to the reader's potential plight? Please note that this is not a criticism but more of an observation. In fact, once I've adopted an artist as one of my favorites then I'm always very inclined to accept his or her artistic instinct as inevitable if not correct.
-->


TCB
Aug 27 2006, 10:33 AM
:: author :: Group: admin Posts: 51,164 Joined: 21-March 03 Member No.: 5

Dear utobya: What for one person seems a rather commonly used word may be off the radar for another. I made a joke last week in the company of a friend who has a Ph.D. in philosophy, a joke which revolved around the use of the word defenestration--to my amazement, he had never heard of it. (And so, of course, missed the joke, which then needed a wee bit of explanation.) TCB.



utobya
Aug 27 2006, 06:10 PM
Post #3
Lurker Group: members Posts: 14 Joined: 25-June 03 Member No.: 189

Thanks for your quick reply. Defenestration --- at least I've heard of it although I'd be hard-pressed to use it in a functionally believable sentence. The interesting part is that your educated friend had the balls to admit to his lack of knowledge. Most of us would of course grin and nod our heads and bullshit our way through it. Believe me, what with my fading hearing and sometimes murky wit, I've got that one down pat. I really loved the comical culmination of the Pecker's last hours north of the Mason-Dixon line. And his final answer to the question posed by Dana (a clever reversal of their roles). Nothing. He wasn't man enough to say what he really wanted: his life back.
-->


TCB
Aug 28 2006, 09:09 AM
Post #4
:: author :: Group: admin Posts: 51,164 Joined: 21-March 03 Member No.: 5

Dear utobya: Yes, and I love your take on the ending. If only all the reviewers had read so carefully or given it so much thought. TCB.

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

A Sticky Saturday Diversion



Since I've been entertaining the idea of getting involved in the art of cultivating grape vines and turning them into agreeable wine I thought it might be a good idea to take advantage of an open offer from Stableridge Winery. For $75 bucks one can experience a typical work day when a harvest comes in and hopefully learn what is actually involved in the process. Suffice to say it is indeed a sticky and loud business. And the question comes to mind at some hot and sweaty point in the middle of the afternoon as to who is taking advantage of what. Because I actually grabbed a plastic rake, ascended a ladder and helped claw over 4 tons of pinot grigio grapes, just snipped from vines that very morning by twenty hearty pickers, out of five large crates perched atop a just-acquired forklift. And I don't know what these folks would have done without that forklift and this rake-clawer. Oh, I'm sure that they would have succeeded in getting that harvest of grapes knocked down into the de-stemming machine eventually but I sure made it a quicker and less messy endeavor for somebody.

So am I a chump for paying $75 for the opportunity to help these folks? Well, maybe, but I did get a few free samples of their wine (and it is quite good) but anybody that had strolled into their Tasting Room would have received the same. And I did get a fresh turkey and cheese sandwich made with white bread (the first white bread sandwich this mouth has entertained in years) and good ol Miracle Whip. A handful of chips. Water.

In the middle of the afternoon, after I had proven my worth I guess, the owner did go inside and fetch a copy of a seminar document titled "Winegrowing In Oklahoma" dated October 2005 which he gave to me. Ah - now we're getting somewhere, because it would have cost money and time to attend this seminar at one of the nearby colleges. Maybe even more than $75. And I have to admit that it was eye-opening to watch the trucks back in with their glistening load. We raked those bunches of grapes down into the mouth of that raging machine that somehow magically separated stem from grape, depositing one into a refuge pile, the grapes being sucked into a clear hose that brought their sweet nectar from outside to inside and fed into a Pressing Machine, the actual device that now precludes us from removing our footwear and stomping away.

Interesting to note that no pressing at all is needed during the "first run" where 70% of the wine comes from. And this "first run" is the best wine as well. Then it's all fed into different large silver metal vats for continuous watching and adjusting (when the levels of sugar and acidity meet, that's when you've met success, or something like that). I need to learn a hell of a lot more about that part of the process. We're talking chemistry here, not my best subject, but then again, in school we were dealing with bunsen burners and boring chemicals, not wine.

So maybe it was worth the $75 if only to burst any romantic and harebrained ideas regarding the opening of a vineyard and winery. And you what, it was fun, and they were nice people. And there's nothing wrong with helping people and getting your hands sticky from time to time (although I'm still curious as to the source of one incredibly sore left calf --- must have been reaching for that last stubborn grape in the corner of the crate).

A couple of final facts: the old European variety known as viniferia grows well here in Oklahoma contradicting what I had read in a book. That is good news. Also, the owner said what the Oklahoma Wine & Grape Industry really needs is nurseries. Hmmm... something to think about.

So, after all that dirty hot work I was really ready for an ice cold... beer.

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Baked Plain Finally Done


I decided to include a few other stories (or whatever you want to call them) that might not have been appropriate for different reasons. One, "Shit Happens," which was actually a post from last summer right here on this blog, is downright nasty but what the hell... I guess. And "Your Windows To My Soul," the antithesis, was not really completed to my satisfaction... but what the hell... I guess.

http://www.lulu.com/content/194052

Reading TC Boyle's "Talk Talk." I like it but it isn't knocking my socks off. But it's summer, who's wearing socks anyway?

Nick had his third treatment last week. Now we know what to expect from the chemo therapy. On the road to recovery.

Saturday, July 15, 2006

Life's Greatest Lesson

If you know somebody that is down and out, lonely, maybe a little scared, give them a kind word, a pat on the back, a true smile. If someone is sick drop them a line, give them a call, fire off an e-mail of encouragement. Because it's not really what you say, what you scribble down on a piece of paper, or labor over on the computer keypad.

It's only that you did. You thought of them. You let them know, even in some small way, that they are in fact not alone. You may forget about it but they won't.

And if you say oh, I don't know what to say, I'll probably just upset them, then the truth is it's only you that may be upset. You are the one scared to call. Yes, it's true, you hate that they are going through this, but you have your own life to live and maybe in the back of your mind you know that only too soon you're day will come.

Yes. It will. But you are doing them no favor by your silence. You are only doing yourself that favor. That's the damn truth.

I know. I've been there. I damn well did it. And now I know.

Now I've learned Life's Greatest Lesson. But have I really learned it? When this is all said and done will I return to my old ways, selfish and justifying my actions, or lack thereof, by happily plodding along, ignoring all the hurt and pain that others have dropped oh so cruelly and suddenly into their laps?

I hope not. Because if you fail Life's Greatest Lesson you are a bonafide bastard. We were put on this earth to create beauty, yes, it's true, but that's an egocentric engagement. But when we're not conjuring up wonderful things we'd better be helping someone else.

There's alot of suffering in this world. A lot of hate. Fear. Looking the other way doesn't make it go away. It takes a man, two arms, two legs, and a lot of heart.

Tuesday, July 04, 2006

Independence Day


Another 4th of July and it's hard to be happy. I feel weighted down with worry. Like I told Lou Ann, it's okay to feel it, but you must let it flow through you. You cannot allow it to stay inside of you, accumulate, fester. Easier said than done. In an effort to make this happen I try to stick to routine, excercise, redirect at least some of my attention to other interests.

This morning I plan on running the 8K Frigid Five Miler course over at Mitch Park. The same one I ran back on that cold February morning when all appeared well in my world. There was actually a race this morning but I just couldn't get myself ready for it. The start time was 7:30 am and quite frankly I might have embarrassed myself with my lack of energy. I need to start training a little more if I want to participate.

I finished Ron McLarty's "Memory Of Running" back in April. This wasn't some great literary achievement but I enjoyed it quite a bit. It had the most important of literary traits: heart! Another cross-country bike story and I totally dug that.

Just finished Philip Roth's "EveryMan". Now this gentleman can write and I got through it despite the fact that it was without question the most depressing novel I have ever read. In fact, given this dark June it was maybe a miracle I even stuck with it. I had the notion to toss it. But last weekend I just got in the right mood and finished it off. Felt like I needed to read it. And be done with it.

TC Boyle's new book "Talk Talk" will be released this week. Now that's something I plan on sinking my teeth into.

Well... I guess "Baked Plain" is finally finished. I took some photos for the cover the other day, none of which I will use so I need to get out there and find a more suitable locale (one with caked red dirt brimming up to the horizon). The above picture is one of the rejects. So - is the sun rising or is it setting?

Thank God the June of 2006 is over (and yes, the above sun is setting, but the one shining over Nick is rising and smiling). Feel it... but let it pass through.

Friday, June 16, 2006

Pet Sounds Scan

Nick went in for a PET Scan yesterday. Had to lay still for an hour while the machine painstakingly scanned his entire body from head to toe. That takes a while when you're six foot three. He told me that he sang the entire Pet Sounds album while he lay absolutely still there. Even the instrumentals. I thought that was funny.

Today... another surgery to place the port and perform a bone marrow biopsy. Treatment will begin soon but we're contemplating a 2nd opinion. So much to do. So much to consider. At this point I'm leaning towards sticking with Dr. Hampton as long as the condition is a low-grade level 2 or maybe 3 with a very good prognosis. Anything beyond that and we'll probably be heading to Omaha for that 2nd opinion.

5:09 in the morning. Damn I'm tired.

The sun is gonna shine again. Even brighter and warmer than before.

Monday, June 12, 2006

My Chicxulub

In TC Boyle's latest collection of short stories there is one story called "Chicxulub." It vividly and painfully shows how tragedy is potentially always out there somewhere, lurking on the edge of our solar system, loitering down the street, if not today, then maybe tomorrow. Or maybe not.

Chicxulub is a present-day crater located in Mexico created one ordinary day many many moons ago. It's a doomsday rock hurtling itself into our earth, a species destroyer, and it could come again. No warning and little anyone can do about it.

Boyle weaves this idea along with the story of a mother and father facing the potential loss of their daughter in a pedestrian-car accident. It came out of nowhere on an ordinary Friday night and it would change their lives forever. The phone rings like it has a thousand times before but this time there is a voice on the other end delivering some information that is totally unacceptable. No warning and nothing that can be done now to change this fact.

My Chicxulib arrived on a normal Saturday night in early June. Our son came to us late that night worried about a lump below his right collarbone. Surely this was nothing. For us it had always been nothing. Just a quick surge of worry just as quickly assuaged by a comforting word from the doctor.

But no this time.

So the darkest week of my life concluded tonight. A week filled with x-rays, cat scans, biopsies, blood tests and so many tears. And althought there is so much more to come, more tests, more surgery, many months of treatment, I have finally allowed myself to feel a sense of relief. Hope has always been there and the prognosis appears excellent. Still, the dread and fear hover somewhere out there like a big dumb rock wobbling between earth and mars. But I know in my heart all will be right. No - we did not get the big one this time. This meteorite burned up in the atmosphere and maybe a handful of pebbles dotted the surface. And they hit hard and they dug deep. But we will survive, grow stronger, and in the end be better people.

They say it's a test of faith. And if you have none to begin with then it's a test of lack of faith (okay, so I'm somewhere inbetween. But I've always believed in a benevolent and creative force that only wants us to learn and be happy. I've always believed in love. Everything else is noise). Until you've faced something like this, and believe me, when it's your child you are indeed facing it, you really don't know what true faith is. I'm learning.

Wednesday, April 19, 2006

All The Children Won't Sing

I woke up this morning and started jotting down some ideas for this next story. And it's a good idea and in a strange way I'm compelled to write it but I won't. Because all the while something was gnawing away at me and I realized that I don't want to forever ruin this song for me and especially for anyone else. So, at least for now, I need to let it go.

But here's what I wrote so far. Harmless fragments, really, but maybe you can decipher where I was heading with this piece and, therefore, understand why maybe its not such a good idea to continue:


All The Children Sing


We were all children once. Think of that.
Even that ugly little bastard that runs around here with those crazed eyes that never look at me. Surely there was a time when even he smiled and played happily with the other children. You know, innately pleased as hell to just be alive.


You know what? That ugly little bastard probably shot out of his mother’s womb ready to kill Americans. Does the hatred really run that deep? Is it in their genes by now?


A bell in your head will ring…

...and ring… and ring… and ring. When did it first start? Oh, in February of ’99, around Valentines Day as I recall. The ringing in my ears. Tinnitus the doctors called it. And at first it was terrifying, it was changing my life, ending it perhaps, or at least my way of life that I had grown accustomed to for almost forty years. Mainly, a silent one, at least when I so chose. But not now. Never again said one of the doctors, that son-of-a-bitch. I wept as I drove away from his office that afternoon. But what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger, you somehow learn to adjust, and sooner than you might think you’ve pushed it to the back of your mind and once again you’re back to where you were. That's life baby... that's living!

And what causes that constant buzz. A sound very much like that electric hum right after you turn off a television. White noise. They say it’s caused by hearing loss and your brain has to compensate for that tiny void of sound. Lost decibels or whatever. But how dumb must our human brains truly be to compensate with that constant ugly buzz. Why not the sound of birds singing or the low tasteful moaning of a woman experiencing orgasm?

Stress makes it worse. And now my ears are humming and if I think about it and listen then I get overwhelmed by the rushing of this electric river.

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

All The Children Sing


April 18th... yet another birthday.

Been sick for a week but just started the anitbiotics yesterday. Feel better already.

So I don my daquiri ice button-down shirt for the occasion once more. I wear it every April 18th. Very cheery, very spring-ish, and is a reference to days of yore when I always wanted the sweet sorbet for my birthday. Somewhere Mama Jane should be smiling.

And April is also Hermit Of Mink Hollow month. This Todd R album came out in April of 1978 just as I was preparing to graduate from high school. Listening to it often brings me back to the feeling in my heart of so long ago, especially this time of year. It's a coming-of-age opus book-ended with two incredible existentialist musical delights. First - All The Children Sing - a three minute whirlwind of an album opener and the closer - Fade Away - a beautiful spiritual ending.

I just listened to All The Children Sing three times in a row. If a man had only written that one song then that would be enough. It says it all and does so in a magnificent holy manner.

With the completion of This Moth, That Flame I had intended on resuming work on The Lost Child... but now I have a new bee in my bonnet.

I have this idea for a new story, a story that borrows a title from a song by Todd R. And it incorporates an idea I've had bouncing around in my head for a few months now. And it's dark and scary and most people wouldn't want to read it. And yet it must be addressed. But no matter what it's springtime, a time for rebirth and promise, and the sun shines for all.

You and I will stay
and watch it all ---- fade away.

Monday, April 10, 2006

Damn This Blasted Wind!

Absurd ---- that's the only word that can describe these winter winds we've encountered this year. The weather's changing folks and it don't look pretty.

At least the wind gave me an idea for a just completed short story: The Next Cinderella. Pretty much writ, molded and spanked into life.

Also finished a piece for Baked Plain titled This Moth, That Flame. Now I only need to complete Your Windows To My Soul and the thing will be done in time for summer -- praise the lord!

Now Playing On Silver Moon Radio: Marriage Made In Heaven by Jules Shear, Todd R's first encounter with Elliott Easton way back in 1982 when he produced Shear's Watchdog album. That record includes the original version of All Through The Night, the song that Cyndi Lauper had a hit with, and also one of my all-time favorite tunes Standing Still.

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

"Hey - We Didn't Get Kirby's Autograph!"

Let's face it - how could you not love the name? Kirby. Puckett. Kirby Puckett. So it started there, with the catchy americana name, and then you saw the omnipresent smile attached to that bowling ball of a body. Then you loved him. And boy could he hit.

Kirby Puckett died yesterday at only 45, the result of a stroke he suffered the day before. I read a report where another former Twins great, Tony Oliva, had recently become concerned about Kirby's growing weight probelm. I suppose that says it all.

Kirby died far too young and his playing days ended far too soon. Perhaps the latter is part of the reason for the former as his playing career was cut short by injury and physical problems. I don't think Kirby ever really got over the abrupt ending of this career. Twelve years in the major leagues is a hell of a deal but Kirby might have played at least another five. He was an All-Star in 1995 and by the end of the next season it was all over.

Trouble followed. Kirby was hired by ABC to do color commentary for the Little League World Series and I recall that he struggled to get into the flow of the broadcast. It was not smooth and everybody knew it and I wasn't surprised when Kirby wasn't asked back the following year. In retrospect maybe it was unfair to toss him into that role that quickly without adequate training. I remember feeling sorry for him.

And then the real trouble followed: reports of spousal abuse and alledgedly groping a woman in a bar. It was shocking and disturbing news. The image of Kirby the pac-man with the big smile and sparkling eyes, the kids's cartoon character jetting around with bat and glove, got hammered. And in the back of my mind I wondered if this was all connected to the frustration and lonliness he felt from losing his way in life. Not that this is an excuse for anything but I still couldn't help but wonder. Again, I felt sorry for him. Here was the man who had brought me so much joy over the years, a contemporary really, and now he was floundering, a center fielder without a center field. He was caught in a rain delay that would never end.

I've been a Minnesota Twins fan my entire life and I have passed that along to my sons. Despite the fact that they are both older now the truth is Kirby meant a lot to them and his passing hurts. All families have little catch-phrases that resound with them forever and mean absolutely nothing to a stranger but I can't help but mention one now. Some time around 1993 we were walking back to the car after watching the Twins play the Texas Rangers. This was back when the Rangers were still playing at the old crappy stadium in Arlington. Benjamin turns to my dad and me and says, "hey, we didn't get Kirby's autograph" (which I had told him we would try to do) with as much earnestness as any six year old could muster, as if we should all just turn around and somehow go back and get Kirby's autograph. We all cracked up and we still do to this day whenever that phrase is uttered.

I hope Kirby found some peace over these last years of his life. The obituary stated that he had a fiance and I'll take that as a good sign. Well, this is the end and I suppose I should write something like hey Kirby, "rest in peace" which is better I guess than "not resting in peace" or "resting in turmoil." But somehow I just can't escape the image of a loud rustling within a corn field and the sudden appearance of the unmistakable image of one Kirby Puckett, pounding his glove with his fist as he trots onto his very own field of dreams, head tilted slightly back and with that eternal smile spreading across his face.

Sunday, February 12, 2006

The Frigid Five Miler

Well - I did it again. I suppose it's become akin to some twisted addiction, this need to partake in these running races every month or so. And the more extreme the conditions the more challenging and, in the end, the more damn fun it all is.

But this was the first time that I had waited until the absolute last minute to decide. All week long I had doubted that I'd run it, had not submitted an online registration form, and had kept an eye on the dire weather forecast understanding that my left leg (the one with the blood circulation problem) was just now recovering from a week-long ache caused by unknown forces.

But the locale was just down the street at Mitch Park so I figured it wouldn't hurt to mosey on over there and check out the course, the turn-out, and the conditions. And of course I went prepared to run.

Since the wind was once again galing and the wind chill was eleven measley degrees being prepared meant this: thermal underwear (both top and bottom) / white t-shirt / long-sleeve thick shirt / gloves / beanie cap / sun glasses. Oh yes, I was ready to partake.

With ten minutes until race time I decided to just frickin' do it. I quickly filled out the form and wrote the Edmond Running Club a check for $22 bucks, pinned my number on my chest as my anticipation mounted, grabbed my cool new shirt, and headed to the starting line.

The wind from the northwest shot arrows of icicles through us as we all grinned and loosened up. I was pumped. I am not crazy --- just a little stupid. And not very fast.

Muffled Pop (I could barely hear the starting gun through my cap) and off we go! After about ten minutes of running I forgot the cold. Thank God for the gloves though. I saw one guy running with his hands down his pants.

I am indelibly familiar with Mitch Park having walked and run through its paved trails maybe a hundred times over the last decade. So the paths were known but the route they chose quite unique. In my bed that night after the race I went over and over the route in my head, trying to relive the run, trying to recall how I felt at each juncture, and I'm not sure if that is a healthy endeavor or not. My legs ached as I laid there attempting to relive every pounding stride.

Anyway, at about the three mile mark somehow a damn pebble found its way into my right shoe. Now how in the hell can that happen? After having my shoe laces untie during the previous race (and adding proably 20 seconds to my time) I told myself to forget it, let it stay in there, but with each step I felt its tiny piercing stab so I thought, okay, don't stop, but with each step try to manuever the little fella to the front of the shoe where I knew adequate open space could be found. And it worked as the pebble dislodged and moved further up the shoe and at some point I forgot about it and could feel icy cold all over again.

Did I mention the cramps? I felt them almost immediately because I had not eaten since I didn't think I was really going to be running. Funny how cramps move around. They show up in the upper right portion of your stomach, then work themselves out there but then suddenly reappear in your lower left. Then your lower right. Damn the pebble! And then they reappear smack dab in the middle. Suddenly an angry gust of wind and you realize your nose is running.

I passed this one guy at the 3 1/2 mile mark or so and that must have rankled him as he immediately passed me right back. He was a younger, thinner guy and I guess the sight of me blowing by him in my overstuffed outfit and with all my huffing and puffing must have lit a fire under his scrawny ass.

At the 4 mile mark I was holding my own, not passing anyone, yet not being passed either, when behind me I heard a strange rhythm appoaching me. I turned and saw this woman gaining on me --- and speedwalking. That's right. I was passed by a speedwalker. I know that's supposed to hurt but on this day I had other things hurting besides my pride. I let it go and watched her slink past and move away.

My legs were heavy at this point. I could not really move them any faster but at least I could keep them moving. The crazy thoughts that enter your head. You want to finish strong, but then again, simply finishing appears like a fine goal. No it's not. You must improve your time. Don't let someone pass you near the finish line.

Finally the route turned toward the northwest as I knew it had to. To the Finish Line. Straight into the worst gusts of the entire run. Simply incredible. And as I drew nearer I heard yet another sound of pitter-patter behind me. A tall woman in her thirties, an older dude with a gray beard in his fifties. They were actually gunning for me. I had become their goal -- their challenge. To beat me to the finish. Now the gal was slim and looked like a runner so as a gentleman I had no real problem with allowing her to pass. But the guy. It rankled me. So as the sob caught me I attempted to accelerate but it just wasn't there. I gassed it for about fifteen yards and so did he and then I retreated as the bastard sprinted on. My legs were dead.

I crossed the finish line at just over 53 minutes. That's not fast. But considering my last-minute decision, no food, cramps and that blasted pebble I guess it's okay.

And yep -- I had fun! Let's play two!

Footnote: the Creek Classic arrives in three weeks. In the interim I will work on some speed training and finish my workouts in a strong way. I will NOT be passed like that again!

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

Mid-January Musings


JUST READ: "Riding With The Blue Moth," a triumphant account of Bill Hancock's cross country bike ride as he battled the incessant blue moth of grief. Hancock lost his son Will in the tragic Oklahoma State basketball team plane crash in January of 2001. In a quest for relief from the constant despair and in need perhaps of a challenge to redirect his life he rode on bicycle from southern California to Georgia during the summer of that very year. An inspiring testament to the love of family and the lessons that can always be learned even in the darkest of times, Hancock's horrible loss is turned into a positive experience for the rest of us. Maybe that is one of the true divine acts of life - to rise above personal setback and offer good to those wishing to receive it. I must say that the events of that gloomy Saturday resonate personally inside me as I had undeniable premonitions and weird signs from earlier in the day. Although I feel compelled to admit it I do not feel comfortable in elaborating further in this format. Suffice it to say that in some small way I do feel a connection to Hancock and greatly admire his grace and humanity.

READING NOW: Finishing up the "Best Short Stories Of 2005" collection. At this point "Death Defier" by Tom Bissell is my favorite but I still have 5 or 6 stories to read yet.

READING NEXT: Anne Rice's "Christ Out Of Egypt."

JUST SAW: "Munich" and "Brokeback Mountain." "Munich" is an incredible cinematic statement regarding the state of world affairs. The bottom line, of course, is that Revenge is an empty proposition because the cursed delineation of who-did-what-to-who-first winds way back to the Big Bang. So if anyone is to blame it's the damned creator who obviously has gotta go! In the meantime, it takes a Real Man willing to sacrafice to stop the insanity right here and now and you gotta question the availability of such a human being. "Brokeback Mountain" strikes me more as a story of Regret than blatant homosexual wanderlust. Something that we can all relate to regardless of the context provided by the film. Regret full of unhappiness, restlessness, speculating on what might have been. Regret full of despair as your life glides by and you never actually got on it for the ride. Remember this: Revenge is empty but Regret is full.

JUST FINISHED WRITING: The Ruminator. Actually, a first draft, I'm not sure that I'm satisfied with it and that's because I'm not sure exactly what I want to say with it. I'll come back to it soon.

WILL START EDITING & EXPANDING: The Lost Child. Whew! There is alot of work to be done here. Some scrapping, a little weeding, some molding, and without question a bunch of new growth. Haven't touched it since the end of NaNoWriMo. The time has come.

JUST RECENTLY STARTED: a new story about a young woman coming home from the west coast for the holidays. Lots of familial turmoil and issues. Plus the family farm goes up in flames (see Oklahoma Burning). No title yet.

Friday, January 13, 2006

Monk's Mood

I woke up yesterday morning from a long winter's nap and found myself smack dab in the middle of Monk's Mood. I knew it by the beat in my head and the tapping of my foot. The funky mood of monk. So there I was, light of mind and empty of soul, and it found me waiting and willing to be filled with it. And it felt strange, like Halloween in April, and in the beginning I felt calm, serene, a little forlorn perhaps, and then there was something more bubbling up from my tummy. I'm free brother - that was it - a sense of freedom, cut loose, set free from worldly pain and the hurt, I was released, a golden balloon tossed into the wind and rising upward toward outer space, toward the edge of the galaxy. And beyond that, the final leap, the eternal pool of bliss.

And the beat in my head led me to the clearing in my brain and I saw it, I caught a fleeting glimpse of it, the King of Lights, drifting in that pool of bliss, I knew it all, for damn sure. Like an invisible wire, a radiowave, connecting my brain to my heart, the electric soul, I hummed with the coming knowledge, I sniffed the divine reflection, I tasted the sweet truth.

I was filled with it. All.

And with the snap of the mystic's fingers I fell out of it, fell back into my self, the slap of the baby's butt and the first new breath, immediately longing for another surprise descension of the ever-evasive Monk's Mood.

Monday, January 02, 2006

Bowl Predictions

COTTON: a fast track is just what T-Tech wants. Bama has a great defense but it's hard to prepare for the Red Raider offense. Texas Tech 31 - Alabama 20.

OUTBACK: Just a hunch here - Floirda 33 - Iowa 16.

GATOR: Less than a hunch here - Virginia Tech 27 - Louisville 26.

CAPITAL ONE: Auburn is still burning over last year's snub (and I don't blame them). Auburn 34 - Wisconsin 10.

FIESTA: Notre Dame is for real and where has Ted Ginn Junior gone??? Irish 30 - Ohio State 17.

SUGAR: home field advantage for a strong Georgia squad. Georgia 24 - West Virginia 14.

ORANGE: Florida State showed some life in their last game and I'm thinking it might just carry through. Still, Jo Pa finds a way in a thrilling overtime affair. Let's hope both head coaches took their heart medicine. Penn State 43 - Florida State 40 (Two Overtimes).

ROSE: Damned if I do, damned if I don't. Sooner fans are in a quandry over this one. It's like choosing between the messy affair of walking the plank into shark-infested waters or the quick and clean chop of the guillotine. Another SC victory and championship puts them into plain reach of the Sooner's beloved 47-game winning streak and establishes them as one of the greatest college football dynasties of all time. But a national championship for our arch rival and recruiting nemesis Texas? Well you know what, the Longhorns have earned it. They've been damn good for two or three years now and I believe it is indeed their time. Plus they will benefit from Oklahoma's poor showing a year ago. SC simply can't be that good again on this night. Texas 30 - USC 24.

There you have it. As for me, like my main man Socrates, I would just go with the poison and sit back, relax and enjoy it.

Oklahoma Burning

Well, I completed the 8K run yesterday. And yes, I made it the whole way only stopping momentarily to knock down some H20 at the half-way Turn-Around-Point, but no, I didn't have much fun. The first half of the race took us along the northern edge of the Oklahoma River and straight into a gale that nearly reached 60 frickin' mile-per-hour gusts at times. I spent the entire first half of the race leaning into it and holding onto my cap while I clenched my teeth in an effort to keep the grit out which proved useless as I had dirt in my mouth and, despite the sunglasses, stinging my eyes and I can only speculate what other unknown crevices.

My time was abysmal. But I wasn't last. And I did finish. And boy do my legs ever ache.

The real story of New Years Day 2006 was the wildfires buring throughout Oklahoma. When my run had started at 2:30 pm the skies were still blue. By the end of the race they had turned brown with dust and smoke and visibility was nil. In fact, we were not allowed to enter the tent for post-race black-eyed peas and cornbread and I assume this had something to do with the potential of a tent blow-over.

Driving home along the Broadway Extension there is a point where one ascends and usually has a great view of the northwest OKC skyline. But not today. I call Lou Ann to inform her of my finish and yep, I'm still alive, and she tells me of the fire burning along Memorial & Penn. By the time I reach Edmond I can see the black smoke pouring from a place only a mile to the west of me and the smell of smoke easily permeates my car. I'm thinking that we're all caught up in a modern-day lesson, a regrettable opportunity to understand what it feels like to be stuck in some raging Dust Bowl, and the winds blow while Oklahoma burns.

Sunday, January 01, 2006

Just Another Day or A New Beginning?

Time keeps marching on, which is fine, as long as I keep marching along with it.

Speaking of marching, I'm heading down to Bricktown this afternoon for the annual New Year's Day "Run For Your Life" 8K. I ran the 8K Turkey Trot on Thanksgiving and surprisingly made it the whole way without stopping. It was a cold morning as a brisk wind whipped across Lake Hefner but half way through the trot it felt perfect. No, my time wasn't great, but that wasn't the goal. For that first race the goal was simply to finish and have fun and it felt grreat to accomplish both. Then on the 3rd of December I did the 5K Downtown In December run which actually seemed harder on me, probably due to the more pervasive chill and the uphill finish. Today's course begins at the Sonic headquarters in Bricktown and from all indications then moves to the Oklahoma River trails. Here is the catch - yes, it continues to be unseasonably warm, we're talking mid 70s, yet wind gusts expect to reach up to 50 mph! I can only hope for some wind breaks out there but in all honesty I don't expect much if the course runs along the river. Could get interesting out there. Again, the goal, to finish and... have fun?

This past week I received five copies of Baked Plain, the book of short stories I tentatively completed a ways back. It's actually just a test run as I wanted to see if I could get a book properly self-published through the Lulu web site and also was curious to see how my words looked in a formally published format. Well, not so bad, its kinda fun to have your very own literary creation in hand, but I've already found a few things that I'd change with the next run. And I would also like to add two more stories to the collection (Your Windows To My Soul & This Moth, That Flame). So later this year I will attempt to complete those two stories, edit the initial stories, and then add a more relevant cover (included is a photo of the test run edition).