BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU WISH FOR…
As 2010 comes to a close, I can’t help but look back to the end of 2009.
I remember saying a silent prayer that 2010 would be different. We were starting a new year and I did not want a repeat of the personal tragedies of 2009. My mom had two strokes and died; my sister started peritoneal dialysis; several cousins passed away, including one my age; and my sister’s partner’s two brothers lost all their belongings when an early morning Christmas Day fire spread through their apartment building.
Satisfied that 2010 would be different, I didn’t give that prayer a second thought. That is, until now.
January 10th: I woke from a sound sleep with a sharp stabbing pain in my side. It was so painful, I seriously considered going to the emergency room, but decided to tough it out.
After several tests at the hospital, it was determined I had a sluggish gall bladder.
Feb 3rd: Harry, my gall bladder, was permanently removed.
Feb 5th: my sister went into the hospital and eventually had surgery. Feb 5th was also the start of “The BIG Snow”,
Sept 2nd: I went into the hospital for a week. Wound up with an irregular heartbeat.
Not to bore you with horror stories about defective body parts, there really is a point to this story.
In 1979, I was the only meter maid on the shift. I had the entire ‘business section’ of my town to patrol. It extended east to west from First Street to Fifth Street, and three blocks north to south. That included all the intersecting side streets and two parking lost. I walked my ‘beat’ two or three times a day.
One particular summer day, it was overcast. Rain was expected, but I figured I’d be back at the station before it started. I turned the corner at First Street onto Railroad Street. The gray clouds turned darker. The storm was moving in faster than I’d hoped. I offered a silent prayer. God, I wish I get under some shelter before it rains.
I hurried as all I had left to cover was Railroad Street and one parking lot on the other side of the tracks along the river. Just as I got under the bridge spanning the river, the heavens opened up. It poured; I was soaked. One of the business owners on Railroad Street invited me in until the rain passed. It did, several minutes later.
After I finished checking all the meters, I reflected as I walked back to the station the need to be specific when praying. God waited until I got under the bridge before letting it rain.
So my friends, just like December of 2009, as we stand at the end of 2010 bridging into a new decade, I pray and wish for a better year in 2011. For all of us, I wish good health, financial blessings, and peace of mind.
And remember: be careful what you wish for or pray for. It may come true.
Saturday, December 25, 2010
Saturday, October 23, 2010
Hook, Slice or Sinker?
A sportswriter was once asked if he were to compare writing to a sport, which sport would he choose. Without even thinking, he replied, “Golf. Most definitely golf.”
The interviewer asked, “Why golf?”
“Isn’t it obvious?” the sportswriter asked rhetorically. “Golfers golf for the love of the game. Writers write for the love of their craft. Do you understand?”
The interviewer started to nod, but shook his head instead. “No.”
The sportswriter laughed. “Golfing offers personal satisfaction and fulfillment, adventure, discipline, structure, freedom and leisure.”
“But what does all that have to do with writing?”
“You don’t golf, do you?”
“No.”
“What about miniature golf?”
“Well yeah, I’ve done that.”
“There you go.”
“Huh?”
“Come on. It’s almost my tee-time. I’ll walk you through the analogy while I’m waiting for my teammates.”
Together the two men walked out of the Country Club bar and around back towards the golf course. His waiting caddy looked at his watch. “You’re early.”
“We just came back here for some fresh air.”
The caddy nodded and walked off.
The sportswriter gestured, “This is the first step.”
“What’s the first step?”
“Second base.” “Huh?”
“You know, Abbott & Costello Who’s on First, What’s on Second? I’m sorry. OK, I’ll get serious. The first step in golfing is deciding to play. The first step in writing is making a decision to write. Do you agree?”
The interviewer nodded.
“It's a nice summer day and you decide to play miniature golf. You drive to the most popular course and park your car next to all the others. You walk past the vending machines and video games to the back of the arcade where you pay five bucks to get a putter, a colored golf ball and a scorecard. You walk out the back, down past the driving range up to the first hole. The flag says 'par 3', but you don't let that intimidate you. Now you study the hole, picturing in your mind where you want to put the ball and mentally selecting the spot along the side to bank it against. You take a 'walk on the wild side' by not putting the ball in the worn depression, but in a new spot at the edge of the putting green. Your hands start to sweat ever so slightly as you straddle over the ball, legs slightly bent, hands gently wrapped around the faux leather grip of the club. You take a deep breath as you glance to your left, mentally envisioning a dotted line down the worn Astroturf to the crack in the wood beneath the pots of purple petunias. You look down at your golf ball, exhale slowly, and glance down the runway again one last time. You shift your weight slightly, slowly draw back the putter, then you strike the ball. It rolls down the green pathway, striking several inches from the crack causing it to bounce off the course all together. Some may say you hooked the ball while others may say you sliced it. Whatever it’s called, you hit it wrong.”
“I’ve done that.”
“Exactly. Everyone has done that. Now you have to run after the ball and start all over again. This time, the ball hits the crack, ricochets correctly, rolls under the lighthouse, right into the hole. A sinker! A hole in one! Well, a hole in two, but who’s counting? What matters is you made the hole under par and you move on.”
“That’s all well and good, but what does that have to do with writing?”
“As I said earlier, the first step in writing is making a decision to write. Once that decision is made, you choose where you’re going to write.”
“What do you mean where?”
“Do you have an office? Maybe you’re more creative at sunrise and you bring your laptop into the sun room where the morning rays inspire you. Maybe you prefer the old-fashioned way: using paper and pencil. Maybe you jot notes while riding the train or subway or talk into a micro-cassette recorder while you’re walking the dog. The key is to write where and how it works for you. That’s your putter, your ball and your scorecard. Are you with me so far?”
“Yes.”
“Staring at a blank page or monitor can be overwhelming. You know—like a ‘par 3’? But you go on. Maybe you’re the kind of writer who has the whole idea in his head. You know exactly how the story will go; exactly what will happen. You just need to coax it out. You start writing, but a bit of new dialog pops into your mind. You like it and suddenly, not only do the new words come to life, your story now veers off on a tangent that never existed before. You hooked or sliced the ball!”
“I’ve done that too.”
“Sure. You’re not alone. Do you like the new plotline? If you don’t, just hit that delete button and start all over again. If you do, keep going. Before you know it, your story is done. A hole in one!”
“That makes sense. I never looked at writing that way. But what about adventure, freedom and leisure?”
“Personal satisfaction and fulfillment in golf is completing the game to the best of your ability. In writing it’s completing the piece from start to finish. Golf can be very leisurely—not to be rushed. It’s more than the game. It’s enjoying the weather, the walk, the companionship. Writing can be time consuming, but unless you’re under a deadline, you work at a speed comfortable to you. When you hit a golf ball, the slightest turn of the club can change its flight and direction. That’s why body position and posture is so important. Writing is the same way. You may know where a story is going, but often it will surprise you and take on a life of its own. You not only need discipline to keep a story on track, but the discipline to keep working even if you think you have nothing to say.”
The interviewer nodded again. “I’ve had writer’s block in the past. It’s not fun.”
“No, it isn’t, but you persevere. My favorite things about golf are that it’s both an adventure and an escape. You’re at the mercy of the weather and the condition of the course. Writing allows you to work on a variety of subjects. You can expand you knowledge base and challenge yourself by writing is styles different from the norm. Writing is a learning experience, and like golf, you can always improve your game. And, it’s an escape--an escape from the daily routine and a chance to get out in the fresh air. Writing is an escape because you can submerge yourself in your story. You can be whatever or whoever you want to be: a spy, the president, a writer, a chef, a soldier, a robot, a boxer, even a golfer.”
“Can I quote you on that?”
“You can have every word. There are plenty more where those came from.”
The interviewer asked, “Why golf?”
“Isn’t it obvious?” the sportswriter asked rhetorically. “Golfers golf for the love of the game. Writers write for the love of their craft. Do you understand?”
The interviewer started to nod, but shook his head instead. “No.”
The sportswriter laughed. “Golfing offers personal satisfaction and fulfillment, adventure, discipline, structure, freedom and leisure.”
“But what does all that have to do with writing?”
“You don’t golf, do you?”
“No.”
“What about miniature golf?”
“Well yeah, I’ve done that.”
“There you go.”
“Huh?”
“Come on. It’s almost my tee-time. I’ll walk you through the analogy while I’m waiting for my teammates.”
Together the two men walked out of the Country Club bar and around back towards the golf course. His waiting caddy looked at his watch. “You’re early.”
“We just came back here for some fresh air.”
The caddy nodded and walked off.
The sportswriter gestured, “This is the first step.”
“What’s the first step?”
“Second base.” “Huh?”
“You know, Abbott & Costello Who’s on First, What’s on Second? I’m sorry. OK, I’ll get serious. The first step in golfing is deciding to play. The first step in writing is making a decision to write. Do you agree?”
The interviewer nodded.
“It's a nice summer day and you decide to play miniature golf. You drive to the most popular course and park your car next to all the others. You walk past the vending machines and video games to the back of the arcade where you pay five bucks to get a putter, a colored golf ball and a scorecard. You walk out the back, down past the driving range up to the first hole. The flag says 'par 3', but you don't let that intimidate you. Now you study the hole, picturing in your mind where you want to put the ball and mentally selecting the spot along the side to bank it against. You take a 'walk on the wild side' by not putting the ball in the worn depression, but in a new spot at the edge of the putting green. Your hands start to sweat ever so slightly as you straddle over the ball, legs slightly bent, hands gently wrapped around the faux leather grip of the club. You take a deep breath as you glance to your left, mentally envisioning a dotted line down the worn Astroturf to the crack in the wood beneath the pots of purple petunias. You look down at your golf ball, exhale slowly, and glance down the runway again one last time. You shift your weight slightly, slowly draw back the putter, then you strike the ball. It rolls down the green pathway, striking several inches from the crack causing it to bounce off the course all together. Some may say you hooked the ball while others may say you sliced it. Whatever it’s called, you hit it wrong.”
“I’ve done that.”
“Exactly. Everyone has done that. Now you have to run after the ball and start all over again. This time, the ball hits the crack, ricochets correctly, rolls under the lighthouse, right into the hole. A sinker! A hole in one! Well, a hole in two, but who’s counting? What matters is you made the hole under par and you move on.”
“That’s all well and good, but what does that have to do with writing?”
“As I said earlier, the first step in writing is making a decision to write. Once that decision is made, you choose where you’re going to write.”
“What do you mean where?”
“Do you have an office? Maybe you’re more creative at sunrise and you bring your laptop into the sun room where the morning rays inspire you. Maybe you prefer the old-fashioned way: using paper and pencil. Maybe you jot notes while riding the train or subway or talk into a micro-cassette recorder while you’re walking the dog. The key is to write where and how it works for you. That’s your putter, your ball and your scorecard. Are you with me so far?”
“Yes.”
“Staring at a blank page or monitor can be overwhelming. You know—like a ‘par 3’? But you go on. Maybe you’re the kind of writer who has the whole idea in his head. You know exactly how the story will go; exactly what will happen. You just need to coax it out. You start writing, but a bit of new dialog pops into your mind. You like it and suddenly, not only do the new words come to life, your story now veers off on a tangent that never existed before. You hooked or sliced the ball!”
“I’ve done that too.”
“Sure. You’re not alone. Do you like the new plotline? If you don’t, just hit that delete button and start all over again. If you do, keep going. Before you know it, your story is done. A hole in one!”
“That makes sense. I never looked at writing that way. But what about adventure, freedom and leisure?”
“Personal satisfaction and fulfillment in golf is completing the game to the best of your ability. In writing it’s completing the piece from start to finish. Golf can be very leisurely—not to be rushed. It’s more than the game. It’s enjoying the weather, the walk, the companionship. Writing can be time consuming, but unless you’re under a deadline, you work at a speed comfortable to you. When you hit a golf ball, the slightest turn of the club can change its flight and direction. That’s why body position and posture is so important. Writing is the same way. You may know where a story is going, but often it will surprise you and take on a life of its own. You not only need discipline to keep a story on track, but the discipline to keep working even if you think you have nothing to say.”
The interviewer nodded again. “I’ve had writer’s block in the past. It’s not fun.”
“No, it isn’t, but you persevere. My favorite things about golf are that it’s both an adventure and an escape. You’re at the mercy of the weather and the condition of the course. Writing allows you to work on a variety of subjects. You can expand you knowledge base and challenge yourself by writing is styles different from the norm. Writing is a learning experience, and like golf, you can always improve your game. And, it’s an escape--an escape from the daily routine and a chance to get out in the fresh air. Writing is an escape because you can submerge yourself in your story. You can be whatever or whoever you want to be: a spy, the president, a writer, a chef, a soldier, a robot, a boxer, even a golfer.”
“Can I quote you on that?”
“You can have every word. There are plenty more where those came from.”
Friday, October 9, 2009
BURIED TREASURES
…or how a tired mind works during a long bus ride at 5:30 in the morning…
I always have the news on in the morning before I leave for work. I like to know the weather for the day, road conditions, and any little news tidbits to share with co-workers, especially since, at 5:00 AM, I can’t depend on my morning paper arriving before I leave. One morning this week, just before I turned off the TV, I heard the announcer mention that the largest dinosaur footprint ever found was discovered in France. I think he said it was over 4 feet across!
I was sitting outside waiting for my bus and I thought about that discovery. Now it’s not like the dinosaurs disappeared last week so I have to wonder, why didn’t anyone find this giant footprint before? Of course, that got me thinking things buried in the ground. And no—I don’t mean dead people in cemeteries.
Growing up, I lived across the street from a creek on the outskirts of town. At that time, in the 19 s, all us kids played in the woods, in the creek or in the dirt. Over the years, I was rewarded with multiple finds of flint chips (from the Monongahela Indians, from approximately 1200 years ago) and ‘commies’, early fired/non-fired clay marbles (from as early as 1880’s). After 20 years living there, we moved to the other side of town.
Flash forward to present.
There were two houses on our new property and the backyard was divided with a fence. Every year I planted a vegetable garden on our side. Just a couple dozen tomatoes, a couple dozen sweet peppers, celery, Swiss chard, basil, and everything in that song… parsley, sage, rosemary and thyme. All enough for our use.
The grandson of the former downstairs tenant played in the yard a lot. I don’t know why and maybe I’ve always been afraid to ask why, but he used to smash match box cars and chop those little three inch green plastic soldiers into pieces.
Shortly thereafter that tenant moved and a young guy with a German shepherd moved in. The dog didn’t spend a lot of time in the yard, but when he did, let’s just say he knew how to dig. That side of the yard looked like a mine field—full of holes. We eventually had to get a truck load of top soil.
Eventually my girlfriend and her parents moved in. We removed the fence dividing the property and I expanded my garden. That’s when the finds started.
For years I dug up car wheels and plastic body parts. My first big find was a TOOTH! It wasn’t human and it was too small to be a dinosaur. Since I had taken an archaeology class in college, I knew how to draw fossil specimens. So, with trusty Sharpie and ruler in hand, I proceeded to draw my tooth to scale. Cover letter ready, I sent it off to the Paleontology Department at the Carnegie Museum in Pittsburgh.
Several weeks later, I received a response. After reading through the complements for my detailed drawing, I was told I found a pig’s tooth. Did I live near a slaughterhouse? No, but it’s a sure bet that’s where the top soil came from.
Since then, I found another tooth (didn’t send an inquiry to the museum), marbles, and one year, I found an Indian-head penny. Every year, I’m still rewarded with something that had worked its way to the surface. But after all these years of digging in the garden, I have yet to make a major find!
…or how a tired mind works during a long bus ride at 5:30 in the morning…
I always have the news on in the morning before I leave for work. I like to know the weather for the day, road conditions, and any little news tidbits to share with co-workers, especially since, at 5:00 AM, I can’t depend on my morning paper arriving before I leave. One morning this week, just before I turned off the TV, I heard the announcer mention that the largest dinosaur footprint ever found was discovered in France. I think he said it was over 4 feet across!
I was sitting outside waiting for my bus and I thought about that discovery. Now it’s not like the dinosaurs disappeared last week so I have to wonder, why didn’t anyone find this giant footprint before? Of course, that got me thinking things buried in the ground. And no—I don’t mean dead people in cemeteries.
Growing up, I lived across the street from a creek on the outskirts of town. At that time, in the 19
Flash forward to present.
There were two houses on our new property and the backyard was divided with a fence. Every year I planted a vegetable garden on our side. Just a couple dozen tomatoes, a couple dozen sweet peppers, celery, Swiss chard, basil, and everything in that song… parsley, sage, rosemary and thyme. All enough for our use.
The grandson of the former downstairs tenant played in the yard a lot. I don’t know why and maybe I’ve always been afraid to ask why, but he used to smash match box cars and chop those little three inch green plastic soldiers into pieces.
Shortly thereafter that tenant moved and a young guy with a German shepherd moved in. The dog didn’t spend a lot of time in the yard, but when he did, let’s just say he knew how to dig. That side of the yard looked like a mine field—full of holes. We eventually had to get a truck load of top soil.
Eventually my girlfriend and her parents moved in. We removed the fence dividing the property and I expanded my garden. That’s when the finds started.
For years I dug up car wheels and plastic body parts. My first big find was a TOOTH! It wasn’t human and it was too small to be a dinosaur. Since I had taken an archaeology class in college, I knew how to draw fossil specimens. So, with trusty Sharpie and ruler in hand, I proceeded to draw my tooth to scale. Cover letter ready, I sent it off to the Paleontology Department at the Carnegie Museum in Pittsburgh.
Several weeks later, I received a response. After reading through the complements
Since then, I found another tooth (didn’t send an inquiry to the museum), marbles, and one year, I found an Indian-head penny. Every year, I’m still rewarded with something that had worked its way to the surface. But after all these years of digging in the garden, I have yet to make a major find!
Thursday, September 24, 2009
The Magic of the Moment
It was the kind of morning mist only a true fog connoisseur could love.
I noticed it as soon as I slammed the kitchen door shut and turned around. It hung from the trees and swirled in the pre-dawn moonlight. I stopped at the fence, closed my eyes, and let it close in around me, enjoying its playful touch.
I sighed deeply and opened my eyes, jumping back into the reality of the moment.
I would have preferred sitting on the patio, watching the smoky tendrils bob and weave in the gentle breezes, but alas, I could not. No, I had to go out and wait for the first bus of the day. The office beckoned.
I'm glad I left the house a few minutes earlier than normal. Traffic was almost nonexistent at that hour and, with the fog, there seemed to be even less. The extra minutes outside in the peace and quiet enabled me to enjoy the dancing mist.
I crossed the street and sat on the brick wall. The fired clay blocks were slightly damp to the touch, but I didn't mind as I set my bag and purse next to me. Sitting there, I could feel the cloud-like fingers gently caress my shoulders.
I sighed deeply and slowly exhaled as the fog settled around me.
I looked up at the clouds. In the light of the full moon, the mist was highly visible as it moved on the generally invisible air currents. It looked like a wool blanket had enshrouded everything and was gently being pulled away.
Brrrr.
A sudden wind gust kicked up as a lone car drove by, stirring the minuscule water droplets like a wooden spoon stirring a pot of pea soup. I looked up the road and could see a line of blurred, slow-moving, oncoming headlights. Checking my watch, I knew the bus was in that line. I sighed and stood, tossing my purse over my shoulder and the bag over my arm. Sure enough the bus was at the next corner.
As he pulled up to the curb and opened the door, I allowed myself one last outside glance. The driver shut the door and pulled out.
I looked out the window, but it wasn't the same.
I reached up and turned on the tiny overhead light, aiming it so I could read the morning paper. I shook my head in disbelief. There was enough global gloom on the front page to make me feel I was still sitting in the fog.
So many problems; yet so little relief in sight. I folded the paper and slid it back into my bag, preferring the blessed ignorance of the fog over facing the reality of the day.
I noticed it as soon as I slammed the kitchen door shut and turned around. It hung from the trees and swirled in the pre-dawn moonlight. I stopped at the fence, closed my eyes, and let it close in around me, enjoying its playful touch.
I sighed deeply and opened my eyes, jumping back into the reality of the moment.
I would have preferred sitting on the patio, watching the smoky tendrils bob and weave in the gentle breezes, but alas, I could not. No, I had to go out and wait for the first bus of the day. The office beckoned.
I'm glad I left the house a few minutes earlier than normal. Traffic was almost nonexistent at that hour and, with the fog, there seemed to be even less. The extra minutes outside in the peace and quiet enabled me to enjoy the dancing mist.
I crossed the street and sat on the brick wall. The fired clay blocks were slightly damp to the touch, but I didn't mind as I set my bag and purse next to me. Sitting there, I could feel the cloud-like fingers gently caress my shoulders.
I sighed deeply and slowly exhaled as the fog settled around me.
I looked up at the clouds. In the light of the full moon, the mist was highly visible as it moved on the generally invisible air currents. It looked like a wool blanket had enshrouded everything and was gently being pulled away.
Brrrr.
A sudden wind gust kicked up as a lone car drove by, stirring the minuscule water droplets like a wooden spoon stirring a pot of pea soup. I looked up the road and could see a line of blurred, slow-moving, oncoming headlights. Checking my watch, I knew the bus was in that line. I sighed and stood, tossing my purse over my shoulder and the bag over my arm. Sure enough the bus was at the next corner.
As he pulled up to the curb and opened the door, I allowed myself one last outside glance. The driver shut the door and pulled out.
I looked out the window, but it wasn't the same.
I reached up and turned on the tiny overhead light, aiming it so I could read the morning paper. I shook my head in disbelief. There was enough global gloom on the front page to make me feel I was still sitting in the fog.
So many problems; yet so little relief in sight. I folded the paper and slid it back into my bag, preferring the blessed ignorance of the fog over facing the reality of the day.
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