Tuesday, January 31, 2012

French Lessons

Elgin's fabulous Fountain Square, circa 1890.
It had been a month since Percival had been home and he was anxious to return. Sure, Elgin's bright lights and big city nights had been thrilling (oh that Fountain Square Plaza!) but thoughts of McLeansboro--and his beloved, Bernice--kept calling him back. As he stepped down with a flourish from the battered Greyhound bus, he took a deep breath of the dust-choked air and promptly entered into a fit of coughing and sneezing.

"Home!" he gagged. "Home!"

"Wassat?" said the driver. "Home? I told you boy this is far's I go. I ain't no lim-o-zeen driver!"

"No, monsieur," croaked Percival as he wiped the grime from his lips with a perfumed handkerchief. "I just meant that..."

"Yo crazy is what you is. Yo a little light in the shoes, too," he quipped as he snapped the bus door closed like a pocketbook, slammed the gear shift home and took off down the hill with a shrill grinding of gears.

"Wait!" yelled Percival, choking again in the growing cloud of dust and gravel. "My suitcase!"

But either the driver didn't hear him (that was Percival's rationalization) or he just really didn't care (that was Percival's realization).

"No matter," he said in his best Pollyanna voice as he brushed off his jacket and straightened his tie. "Maman will sort it out. C'est la vie!"

He pulled out his pocket watch to check the time and paused to gaze at Bernice's photo which he had pasted inside the watch cover like a lover's locket.

"I'm coming, ma chère! I'm coming!" he murmured as he started down the dirt track to his mother's estate, Kildare.

Estate, however, may be an overgenerous description of what had once been an expansive and successful family farm. Percival's grandfather--Big Percy, they called him--had staked his claim and cleared the land 75 years before. Short on suitable timber and cash, Big Percy built his house out of sod against the highest hill on his parcel of 200 acres. It was warm in the winter, cool in the summer and he found it pleasant to sit on the sod roof and catch the gentle breezes at the close of a hard day's work. The home was low maintenance, too. Daily grazing by his milk cow and small herd of goats kept the sod roof neat and trim. It was everything Big Percy had hoped for, and he fondly named it Kildare after the local country doctor (the doctor was nonplussed).

It took a few years for Big Percy to get his farm up and running but once he did he was determined to marry. One day, he put on his best Sunday suit and took the train to Elgin where he attended a lavish reception for the local dairy barons and their families at the famous Old People's Home. The reception was followed by a concert across the street in Central Park where the Elgin National Watch Company Band presented "Souza-palooza: An Evening With John Phillip."

At first, Big Percy was a little overwhelmed by the experience. He was unaccustomed to the luxurious life that Elginites so clearly enjoyed. He was dazzled by the two-seater outhouses (His and Hers with last year's Sears-Roebuck catalog!), easy access to comfort food (six hobos, one fire, no waiting!), and high style (overalls with stripes!). There were so many available, healthy women to choose from and he was a little awed by their poise and stunning beauty--some still had their own teeth!

He considered turning tail and heading home in the face of such superiority until he glimpsed a woman in the band. Her name was Roseanne Zinzin and she was the daughter of a highly respected French watchmaker (Monsieur Jean Vachement Zinzin) who had put Elgin watches on the map. Roseanne was also employed at the watch factory and she played a mean tuba in the company's world-renowned band.

Big Percy was completely smitten with her. He loved the way her dull, auburn hair swallowed the failing evening light. He adored the way her face purpled to rival the setting sun when she sustained a note. He swooned over the deft manner in which she emptied her spit valve on her shoe. Even the way she chewed gum (like a cud) between numbers captured his heart. He had to have her.

Roseanne, for her part, was bored out of her mind with her life. She resented her father for taking her away from her beloved Saint-Ouen just outside Paris to live amongst the bourgeois Americans, and she dreamed daily of escape.

She was smart enough to know that she was too lazy to do it on her own and that it would take all her feminine wiles to ensnare a man she could control. She had made an exhaustive and critical review of her assets along with a careful study of American men. Her best strategy, she knew, would be to play to her strengths. In other words, she would play stupid.

Big Percy, meanwhile, was flying blind. Being unfamiliar with the intricacies of Elgin high society, he boldly asked the next man he saw for assistance. As it turned out, the man happened to be one of the "right" people and Big Percy soon gained an introduction to Monsieur Zinzin who, due to his poor English and Big Percy's nonexistent French, found himself impressed with the young, rich chevalier from the fabled American South.

A brief, whirlwind romance followed, and both Big Percy and Roseanne were privately thrilled with their respective good luck. Big Percy was amazed that Roseanne so obviously loved him despite his humble origins and lack of assets while Roseanne was ecstatic that an hour or two of giggling and fawning had bagged her an American millionaire whose rustic ways were undoubtedly compensated for by his vast land holdings and palatial plantation home.

They both pushed aside their unease over the language barrier (Roseanne was too lazy to learn English, Big Percy too stupid to learn French) and rushed to the altar with different futures. She envisaged mint juleps, hoop skirts and festive cotillions while he pictured strong coffee, overalls and fall harvests.

The journey to Kildare was different for each of them as well. Big Percy, eager for home, felt that it took forever while Roseanne, eager to escape Elgin, felt that it didn't take long enough. She found the distance suspect. While she was ignorant of American geography, she thought the stately columned homes of Dixie were much further south, and when Big Percy borrowed an asthmatic mule and a dirty vegetable cart to deliver them from the station she was smart enough to know that something was amiss.

"Où sommes-nous?" she asked.

"What's that? Ooh?" said Big Percy, totally confused. "Oooh? Oh! You think it's pretty, yes? Wee? Oooh?"

Roseanne stared at him blankly, equally confused.

The wagon ride home would have been uneventful had it not been for the mule. Overburdened by Roseanne's prolific trousseau, the mule expired three quarters of the way home with a loud "Weeee HAW!" Big Percy was forced to pull the smelly cart himself while Roseanne walked beside him in growing terror.

When they stopped at what Roseanne believed to be a mud hut for livestock and Big Percy moved to carry her over the threshold she promptly burst into tears. "Merde!" she screamed and punched him in the face.

It is said that there are five stages of grief but, for Roseanne, there could only be one (anger) and she made it her life's work to visit that anger on Big Percy every chance she got for the remainder of his life.

Big Percy, for his part, tried to make the best of things (and to shut her up) by giving her the things she wanted. He bought a team of horses and a smart little surrey, and he planted wildflowers on the sod home's roof. Eventually, he built her the finest house in all of Hamilton County. In return, she bore him one child, a daughter. Finally, he gave her the one thing she wished for most of all: he died.

Over the years, Roseanne groomed (spoiled) and molded her daughter Alice into a younger version of herself. Like Roseanne, Alice, too, longed for escape but, like Roseanne, she was too lazy to go any further than the sod house roof where she would spend hours looking out over the surrounding fields and picking wildflowers.

After Big Percy died, Roseanne hired two or three local men to work the fields but, being lazy themselves and only hired help, Kildare began to decline long before it had reached its zenith. With a rapidly deteriorating inheritance, Roseanne worried over what Alice's future prospects might be.

She was smart enough to know that Alice was too lazy to secure a future for herself and astute enough to know that it was left to her to find Alice a husband. Being lazy herself, she confined her search to the hired help.

One sunny afternoon, Roseanne walked down to the barn where her three hired hands--Ray, Bert and Jack--were idly watching a pair of coon dogs sunning themselves in the yard. One of the dogs, Rufus by name, was diligently licking himself while the men watched with rapt attention.

"I wish ah cud do that," sighed Bert.

"You do that an' that dog'll baht you," said Jack.

Roseanne quickly turned her attention to Ray, the least of the three evils.

"Pardon monsieur, puis-je parler avec vous?" asked Roseanne.

Ray simply stared.

"Oh, never mind," muttered Roseanne (she'd finally learned English), "just come with me."

From that point forward Roseanne saw to it that Ray and Alice spent a great deal of time together--alone. When Alice finally announced she was pregnant one morning over breakfast, Roseanne immediately and nonchalantly produced a loaded shotgun and a minister who pronounced the couple man and wife in time for lunch.

Alice and Ray were happy enough to have two children: Charlie and Percy (as he grew older he preferred Percival). Ray, now master of Kildare if only in name, doted on Charlie who was everything a man could want in a son--tall, strong and handsome. Percy, on the other hand, was Roseanne's favorite and she taught him French, schooled him in etiquette and enthralled him with tales of all things "fantastique."

After Ray and Roseanne's tragic deaths (they were gored to death by a herd of male goats the pair mistakenly tried to milk one foggy morning), Alice was left alone to raise her sons. Charlie was increasingly dismissive of Percival and his "fancy" ways and Alice felt increasingly protective of him until he reached the age of 30 and she supposed that Percival might benefit from a trip to the outside world.

"Toughen him up!" insisted Charlie, and so she sent him on a Petit Tour to the fabled city of Elgin. Percival, reluctant at first, acquiesced by kissing his best girl Bernice good-bye, packing his suitcase and hiking into McLeansboro to catch the next train north.

Percival spent four glorious weeks following in his grandfather's footsteps and touring the great sites of Elgin: Woodruff and Edwards, Juby's Pharmacy, Al's Café--the fabulous Douglas Hotel! Now Percival had come home again and he was hard pressed to decide whom he missed more: his mother, Alice, or his sweetheart, Bernice. It was Charlie, however, who met him at the door.

"Hullo, Percy," he said with just a touch of derision.

"It's Percival," huffed Percy. "Hello, Charles. How are you?"

"I'm fine," said Charlie. "How was your trip?"

"It was wonderful--magnifique! But first I simply must see Bernice. I've missed her so! Tell me, where is she?"

"She's dead."

"What? How? How?! What's happened?" cried Percy. "Quel horreur! Oh, my heart! My love is gone! Cruel world!"

"Um, hey, Perce, you do know Bernice is a milk cow, right?" asked Charlie with genuine concern.

"Of course I know!" snapped Percy. "That doesn't make her any less special! How did it happen?"

"She wandered off one day and stepped in front of a thresher down at the Hayter place. Tore her to shreds. We had barbecue for a week."

Percy could manage nothing less than a strangled shriek in reply.

"You doin' ok there, Percy?" asked Charlie.

"How can you be so cruel? How can you just blurt out something as horrific as that?"

"Well, Percy, I don't have your education and what you call refinements. I'm a pretty simple, straightforward man and I calls it as I sees it."

"You should have softened the blow and taken my feelings into consideration." insisted Percy. "You should have let me down easy!"

"How, Percy?"

"Well, you remember how Bernice used to go up on the roof of the sod house to eat the early daisies?"

"Yup, I remember."

"And do you remember how, sometimes, she refused to come down and I would spend hours making daisy chains and placing them around her neck?"

"Yup, I remember."

"You could have told me that Bernice is on the roof--Bernice est sur le toit."

"Bernice est sur le toit," repeated Charlie.

"You're not pronouncing that right. Your accent is horrible. Try again Charles. Bernice est sur le toit."

"Bernice est sur le toit," repeated Charlie testily.

"No, no," Percy said, clapping his hands like a schoolmaster. "Bernice est sur le toit. Sur. Le. Toit."

"Bernice est sur le toit," said Charlie, this time louder and a little angry.

"No, don't be stupid," sniffed Percy. "Saying it loud and wrong only makes you look big and stupid. Try it one more time."

"Bernice est sur le toit," repeated Charlie.

"All right, that's passable. I'm sure it's the best you can do," he added acidly.

"Thank you," said Charlie, unfazed. "So, I should have told you Bernice is on the roof and then told you she stepped in front of a thresher, right?"

"Mon dieu, no!" said Percy. "Then you should have told me that Bernice caught cold up on the roof. Bernice a un rhume. Try that."

"Bernice a un rhume," repeated Charlie.

Percy cast his eyes heavenward with a dramatic flourish and shook his head in exasperation. Charlie simply stared at him.

"All right. So I should have said she's on the roof, she's got a cold and then told you she stepped in front of a thresher, right?"

"No, of course not!" Percy snapped. "Then you should have told me that she passed peacefully in her sleep. Bernice est décédé dans son sommeil. Can you say that?"

"Bernice est décédé dans son sommeil," said Charlie with a vastly improved accent.

"Oh," said Percy, noticeably impressed. "That was actually rather good. Well done Charles! Bravo!"

"Thank you," said Charlie with a little bow.

"Now," said Percy. "Where's mother?"

Charlie sighed deeply and said, "Maman est sur le toit."


Editor's note: this story is based on a joke told by Ronnie Corbin on his BBC show "The Two Ronnies" circa 1978.

Saturday, January 28, 2012

House of Worship

Grandma Kate and Kathleen at Oak Street.
Home has been on my mind of late. Sometimes home is a physical place that's still maintained and kept safe for your return by those you love. Sometimes home is a moment in the past that offers no return but is unchanging and steadfast in recollection. For many in my extended family, Oak Street will always be home and yet it will never be home again. The house still stands, but my connection--our connection--to it has been shifted to another plane, another place, another time.

As a child, I spent many nights at Oak Street, usually in the summer. My grandpa, Ira, usually went to bed first. He slept in mother's old bedroom on the first floor. My grandma, Kate, went to bed next or at least started her nighttime routine next. Though she always seemed to go to bed early she was always the last to lie down. I always stayed up with great Aunt Della to watch the news, not caring what I heard or saw, only reveling in the thought of how late I was being allowed to stay up. She sat in her appointed chair and sewed or embroidered, or she would fix a tray for herself with a snack of apples, salt, peanut butter and cheese. Her routine was the most interesting to watch and was one of the reasons I made a point of staying up at night.

Kate was secretive about her nocturnal doings and, being a modest woman, used a lighted closet for a dressing room. Ira dressed in the small room tucked above the kitchen and behind the bathroom, the room we called the attic. You could tell it was his because it was just like him: modest, quiet and straightforward with a soft memory of Aqua Velva in the air.

Della was more robust and open about her bedtime preparations. You could hear her groan when she removed her corset and girdle. I secretly marveled at what appeared to be yards and yards of lacing and elastic and wondered how big she might really look without them. She donned men's flannel pajamas--large and shapeless--and wound whole rolls of toilet paper around her head and topped it all with a pink hairnet all to preserve the curl of her hair. We called her "The Sultan" and teased her often about her "turban."

Not one of the three old people was without some measure of bridgework which, at night, were removed and left in various locations about the house, most often in the kitchen to my horror. Kate would sometimes leave hard candy or loose change in a convenient coffee mug on the kitchen hutch and I, hoping to pilfer something worthwhile, would more often than not be rewarded with someone's teeth instead. Della had the most complete set of dentures and would be a striking sight when she emerged from the bathroom at night. The bathroom door would squeak open and the Sultan would step out onto the creaking floorboards in full regalia. Her pink turban rose high above her head with wisps of snow white hair peeping out. Her flannel peejays flowed about her and her pink robe hung to her knees like a grocery sack. Her terrycloth, rubber-soled slippers each sported a full-blown embroidered rose at each peep toe. Since her teeth spent the night in another room with two effervescent tablets, her jowls hung loose and low--not unlike a turkey.

Kate, by contrast, didn't worry about such things. She slept with no thought for her hair in a long, plain nightgown that often failed to hide the varicose veins in her legs. I always slept in her room in a bed reserved for her sister Myrtle. I had tried sleeping downstairs in Ira's room but his snoring had given me ample reason for staying upstairs, as I'm sure it did Kate.

She would bring a glass of water into the room and set it on the nightstand between the two beds. I would squeeze my eyes shut and pretend to be asleep, watching her the entire time. When she was younger, she would kneel by the side of the bed to pray but when her knees would no longer obey her in this she would lie in bed stiff and straight as a board as she pressed her Bible to her chest and filled the room with prayer. I listened and learned as she remembered each of us by name, every child, grandchild, niece and nephew, every friend and neighbor old and new. She offered up our problems, our hopes and even fears. Sometimes she read a Psalm or a lengthy passage, holding the Book up to the shaft of blue streetlight that spilled across her bed. Once done with her devotion, she lay on her side and slept, rarely rising until the next morning. Last to bed, first to rise, she was the quiet, steady life of the house and of the family. Filled with a deep abiding faith and unswerving love of God, she was the foundation of a home she made into a living house of worship.

Friday, January 27, 2012

On the Corner of Oak and Ryerson


The irrepressible and irreplaceable Della Gruthoff.
In my last blog entry, I revisited the front porch of 153 Oak Street (just down the street from Juby's Pharmacy) and called to mind one of a thousand warm summer nights I spent with Ira, Kate, Della and, on occasion, Myrtle.

I'm back again so why not find yourself a seat (there's room here on the glider) and join me for another of Della's stories (told my way). This particular tale asks the age old question, "Where's My Big Toe?"

* * * * *

Once upon a time there was a little boy who lived with his mother and his dog, Buster, in a little house at the edge of town. He was an average, everyday boy much like you or me. He had an everyday face, everyday clothes and everyday friends. And just like you or me, he liked to watch TV, play with his dog, have adventures and go exploring. Why, sometimes he would spend whole days climbing trees and building forts or digging in the yard and searching for interesting things. He had whole shoeboxes full of rocks, pebbles and bits of string for his ever growing collections.

One day, the little boy (let's call him Pete) was digging in the back yard at the very edge of the fence that separated Pete's yard from the sad little cemetery next door. He'd been playing in the rich black dirt for about an hour when he found what looked like a big white marble but flat on top and flat on the bottom. He had just started to rub the dirt off and take a closer look at it when his mother called him to come in for dinner.

"Pete! Supper time!" she called. "Bring the dog in with you!"

"OK, Mom," he yelled as he shoved his newest find in his pocket and pulled Buster inside by his collar.

Pete and his mother were rather poor so dinner was a very simple affair--just a bowl of boiled cabbage and a bologna sandwich. Some day soon, Pete hoped, they would have enough money saved up to share a hamburger; maybe they would even have a few scraps left over for Buster!

After dinner, Pete and his mother curled up with Buster on the sofa and watched their favorite TV shows until it was time for bed. Outside, the wind picked up and the sky clouded over. In the distance, lightning played along the horizon.

Despite the rising breeze, the night was still warm so Pete's mother left the windows open after she put Buster outside for the night. As his mother tucked him in, the swaying curtains caught Pete's imagination and attention and he was soon lulled to sleep.

A few hours later--just after midnight in fact--Pete was woken by a loud thump. The wind had risen further and the flapping window curtains had knocked over a lamp. Pete took a moment to let his racing heart slow and was just about to get up to shut the window when he heard a low moan.

"Ohhhhhhhhhhhh," said a low, guttural voice. "Ohhhhhhhh nooooooooooo. Gone, gone, gone. Gone, gone, gone!"

Pete quickly climbed back into bed and drew the covers over his head. "Who is it?" he called.

"Ohhhhhhhh," said the voice. "Ohhhhhhhhh nooooooo. Wheeeeeeeeeeeere's mah big toe? Wheeeeeeeeere's mah big toe?"

"I said who is it?" Pete called. "Who's out there?"

(Although he was an average, everyday boy much like you or me with everyday fears you have to admit he was also pretty brave!)

"Ohhhhhhhh," said the voice, nearer now. "Wheeeeeeeeeeeere's mah big toe?"

"Now you answer me, ya hear?" called Pete, his voice starting to quiver. "Who's out there?"

"Ohhhhhhhh," said the voice, louder and even nearer now. "Wheeeeeeeeeeeere's mah big toe?"

"I got me a baseball bat, ya hear?" yelled Pete. "I ain't afraid to use it! Don't come no nearer!"

"Ohhhhhhhh," said the voice, even louder and much nearer now. "Wheeeeeeeeeeeere's mah big toe?"

"I said I got me a baseball bat!" shrieked Pete when suddenly a body jumped up on top him, pinned him to the bed and began sniffing him.

"Git offa me! Git offa me!" screamed Pete as he threw back the covers and jumped out of bed to find Buster gnawing away on his new, big white marble.

"Relax kid," said Buster. "I was just lookin' for my bone. Check with me first next time before you go diggin', huh?"

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

153 Tales of Oak Street

Kathleen with Grandpa Ira
in front of 153 Oak St.
Like me, many members of my extended family consider the old house on the corner of Oak and Ryerson to be one of the most important buildings in our collective history. Of course, it was never really about the house itself but the people inside it: Ira, Kate, Della and, quite often, Myrtle--my grandfather, grandmother and two great aunts.

Say the word "summer" to me, and I will recall warm, dark nights spent on the sweeping wrap-around porch listening to the cicadas singing in the trees and waiting for the stories to begin. While many of these stories are well known, they were told in a manner that made them unique in their own right. I hope my re-tellings do them justice. This particular story is about "The Crooked Mouth Family."

* * * * *

Once upon a time in a little town not very far away there lived a crooked family. That's not to say that they were corrupt or criminals. No, they just happened to be oddly shaped. This one had a crooked back and that one had a crooked arm. They even had a crooked dog whose crooked tail looked like a crooked stick. They were all crooked in many different crooked ways, but they were also all crooked in the same way for they all had crooked mouths. They lived a simple life in a simple house with a wood stove for heat, a hand pump for water and a single white candle for their evening's light.

There was a daughter in the family (we'll call her Persephone, which is not the easiest name to say when you have a crooked mouth) and she was fixing to marry a young man who'd caught her fancy. One winter evening, she invited him to dinner and introduced him to the family. By the end of the meal, the young man had made quite an impression on the girl's family, and they readily gave the couple their blessing to get married.

Just before it came time for the young man to leave, a winter storm swept through the neighborhood and blocked the roads so the family insisted he stay with them until the storm had passed. One by one they each snuggled into their separate beds until the mother realized they hadn't put out the candle.

"Pa," called Ma out of the right corner of her crooked mouth, "can you put out the candle?"

"I can," said Pa out of the left corner of his crooked mouth. But when he got up and went to blow out the candle, he could only make a small puffing sound like this: "Pff. Pff. Pff. Pff."

"No, Ma," said Pa. "I can't put the candle out."

"Per-feff-o-nee," called Ma (for remember, it's not the easiest name to say when you have a crooked mouth), "can you put out the candle?"

"I can," said Persephone out of the top corner of her crooked mouth. But when she went to blow out the candle, she only made a long whispery sound like this: "Shhhhhh. Shhhhhh. Shhhhhh. Shhhhhh."

"No, Ma," said Persephone. "I can't put the candle out. Can you?"

"I can," said Ma out of the right corner of her crooked mouth. But when she went to blow out the candle, she only made a shrill hissing sound like this: "Zee! Zee! Zee! Zee!"

"No," she said. "I can't put the candle out."

"Let's try to do it together," suggested Persephone, and the three of them bent to blow out the candle in unison.

"Pff. Pff. Shhh. Shhh. Zee! Zee!" Over and over they tried but still they couldn't blow out the candle. After an hour of trying, they looked up to see the young man standing in the doorway.

He shook his head, licked his thumb and forefinger and pinched out the flame saying, "If I'm going to be a part this family you're going to have to get electricity."

Next time: "Where's My Big Toe?"

Saturday, January 21, 2012

The Afterwife

One night, just before the 2012 Republican National Convention, Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney died suddenly. Being religious men, they both ascended into heaven where they were greeted by a harried Saint who was working hard to earn his wings.

"Welcome to heaven, may I have your names, please?" he said.

"Uh, Newt Gingrich."

"Mitt Romney--hey, is Moronai around?"

"One thing at a time Mr. Romney. You'll have plenty of time for bar hopping later."

"Bar hopping? What the...?"

"Okay, Gingrich--that's with two i's is it not--Gingrich line one and Mr. Romney if you will proceed to line nine."

"Catch ya later Newt," said Mitt. "Let's grab a drink some time."

"Sure," said Newt, crossing his fingers behind his back and lying through his teeth. "I'd love to."

"You know," whispered the Saint to Newt, "That really doesn't work at all. I'm going to have to write you up."

Flustered, Newt hurried over to his assigned line and picked up a brochure that described the process whereby he would be assigned a caseworker, an afterlife partner, eternal home and means of transportation (after all, heaven was a very big place). Newt's caseworker was an up-and-coming seraphim named Cletus.

"Let me get your file here," said Cletus.

"Take your time," said Newt, shielding his eyes against the blinding light surrounding Cletus. "I've got all the time in the world." He chuckled and leaned forward to whisper conspiratorially "that's a little afterlife joke."

"Cute," said Cletus, rolling his eyes and preening wings three, four and six. "Like I haven't heard that a few times over the past 6,000 years. You're a regular Methusaleh."

"Methusaleh?" asked Newt.

"Yeah, you know, world's oldest man," explained Cletus, now crawling under the desk and digging through stacks of manila folders. "Also happens to be the world's oldest comic with the world's oldest act. Hasn't written anything new since the flood. You can catch him down at the Improv in the entertainment district every Friday night."

"Oh," said Newt, entirely confused. "Right."

"Holy, holy, holy Toledo here it is!" Cletus shouted, waving a smoking file above his head. "Now we're cooking with gas. OK soooooooo. Oh. Oh my," giggled Cletus. "Haven't you been a naughty boy? Holy, holy, holy crap!"

"What? What did I do?"

"Well, it's not so much what you did do as what you didn't do. You didn't deal fairly with wife number one and you didn't tell wife number two the truth. Plus there's that whole lobbying thing. Very messy."

"Oh. Well. Sorry," he murmured and shrugged his shoulders.

"According to this, you just baaaaarely got in. But, not to worry, not to worry. You're still here, aren't you? I must say though, this will affect the ways things are from here on out."

"Why?" asked Newt. "What do you mean?"

"Well, everyone in heaven gets a partner, home and celestial car. But the quality of those things is determined by your pay grade and your pay grade is determined by how you lived."

"OK. I can appreciate that. So, what do I get?"

"Let's just take it slow, shall we? Gotta watch that culture shock. Why don't we take a drive to your new home so you can get settled in?"

"Sure," Newt agreed. "I'm really looking forward to a nice hot shower."

"Yeaaaaaaah, about that," Cletus hesitated and looked as if he were about to say something but then changed his mind. "Why don't we talk about that later, ok?"

Cletus escorted Newt to the underground parking garage where a beautiful, shiny new Bentley awaited them.

"This is mine?" asked Newt eagerly.

"Ah, no," answered Cletus. "This is actually mine. Yours is in the shop. Here's the claim check. It's a 1978 Dodge Omni. Should be ready some time next millennium. Sweet ride, eh?"

"Humph," said Newt as he shoved the claim check in a pocket and climbed into the luxurious car.

The Bentley floated from cloud to cloud like a dream as Cletus drove through heaven's shining streets and pointed out a few of the sights.

"Throne o' God on your right, angelic choir stalls on the left. There's the new Masonic temple going up just over there. They've been working on that for-ev-er." said Cletus.

"Ahhh," said Newt, feigning interest.

Cletus kept driving and driving. They passed through the business, entertainment and temple districts and reached the first residential districts. Street after street of breathtaking mansions with gardens, eternity pools and armed guards rolled past.

"Is one of these mine?" asked Newt eagerly with his nose and hands pressed against the window.

"Stop that!" snapped Cletus. "I just had this car detailed. Your place is a little further on."

He tapped a brilliant finger on the deluxe GPS monitor and muttered to himself. "Is this thing even on? I wanna stop somewhere for some angel food pie."

"Recalculating," said the GPS.

"Humph," said Newt.

Hours passed and Newt had just nodded off to a deep, restful sleep when he felt a burning sensation on his left arm and bolted upright.

"Ahhh!" he screamed. "What did you do? Put a cigarette out on me?"

"Holy, holy, holy drama queen," said Cletus. "I merely touched you. I'm burning here with zeal after all. If you can't stand the heat, get out of my car."

Newt glared at him.

"No, seriously, get out of my car," said Cletus. "We're here. This is your place."

"Oh!" said Newt. "This is...um...this is...well there's no other way to say it other than..."

"This is horrible," Cletus finished for him. "Yes, I know. But, this is what your pay grade gets you."

Newt looked with horror at the dilapidated shack before him. "It's an outhouse! This is where I'm supposed to live for all eternity?? You call this heaven??"

"Tsk, tsk, picky, picky," Cletus nagged. "I think it's rather quaint. Oodles of ambiance you know. Very rustic. I admit we're in the far, far outskirts of heaven but it's still heaven. Sure the area's a little rundown, but urban renewal's on the way! Give it another three or four thousand years."

"Oh man, it doesn't even have plumbing" Newt muttered.

"Yeah," chuckled Cletus. "How ironic is that?"

"Maybe I should have gone to hell instead," signed Newt.

Cletus reached out and slapped him soundly on both cheeks.

"Get a hold of yourself!" he scolded. "You think this is bad? Hell is in the Bahamas. If you're really evil they force you to stay at the Atlantis Resort. It's like Groundhog Day with water slides."

"Nooo," Newt moaned. "That's just horrible. Forget I said anything."

"Forgive and forget! That's our company motto! Take a look around while I make a phone call and check on your afterwife."

"My afterwife?"

"Wife, partner. Same thing really. You've been assigned Fidel Castro but he's not here yet. He's still alive--hanging out with Hugo Chavez at Sloppy Joe's bar and trading CIA assassination plot tales. I'd get Batista to stand in for him but you can bet he's in hell for sure."

"Fidel Castro! But...what...who...he..." Newt spluttered as his face turned several deepening shades of purple.

"Holy, holy, holy mackerel!" Cletus threw up his hands in mock horror. "Chill-ax Newt. No need to worry! I'm sure Fidel will be more than happy to let you wear the pants in this relationship."

"Humph," said Newt as he cast a longing eye at the depths below.

"Bahamas, Newt." reminded Cletus. "Atlaaaaaaaaantis."

"Brrrrrr," Newt shuddered.

The years passed and Newt worked very hard at acclimating to his new environment. Fidel Castro finally died at the ripe old age of 136 and--true to Cletus' word--he happily donned a dress and assumed the role of Newt's afterwife. (It turned out to be a pretty straightforward thing although Fidel did insist on keeping the beard; "I love you," he whined, "but papito it's my trademark!")

One day, the archangels made the rounds and announced that all of heaven was invited to attend a concert celebrating St. Peter's early retirement (after losing the keys to heaven for the umpteenth time, the powers that be had pressured him to step down). Newt and Fidel were very excited to revisit central heaven so they made a point of getting there early and doing a little people watching.

The crowds in central heaven were enormous (after all, everyone who had been anyone was there) and Newt soon found himself fascinated by all the familiar faces. Suddenly, he spotted Mitt Romney walking hand in hand with Kim Kardashian.

"Well, I'll be...Ouch!" he yelped as he felt a searing touch.

"Holy, holy, holy cow Newt," said a newly arrived Cletus. "When are you gonna learn to relax? It's just me."

"Cletus, hi, say, listen, isn't that Mitt Romney over there with Kim Kardashian?"

"Yes it is," answered Cletus. "She's his afterwife."

"What?! His afterwife?? How did Mitt Romney end up with Kim Kardashian and I end up with Fidel Castro? There is absolutely no way that he was any better than me back on Earth--especially with that whole Bain business."

"No, see, you don't understand." explained Cletus. "It has nothing to do with him. It's all about Kim. She just baaaaaaarely got in."

Friday, January 20, 2012

Voices Carry

The photo is somewhat faded and blurred, but not to a point where you cannot make out the features of his face. He holds a child in his arms and, while the rest of the family stares forward and smiles at the photographer, he is captured looking deep into the child's eyes as if he meant to ask a very personal question.

Family reunion, 1919.
Despite his prominent placement within the family portrait, his existence was never discussed nor were his foibles, maladies and flaws listed and dissected like those of other family members at our holiday dinner tables. He was omitted, for he was insane.

Insane is such an ugly, dark, outdated word. It conjures up images of babbling maniacs wandering drafty halls dressed in stained hospital gowns. Today we use technical terms that keep those images at arm's length--terms like schizophrenia, bi-polar and fugue state. Medication makes these conditions palatable to some degree and allows those who suffer from them to blend into society's woodwork where they are free to practice and enjoy anonymity.

What must it have been like for him, I wonder. What was it like for the rest of the family? The picture of him with the child is disturbing in that one cannot imagine giving him the small responsibility of holding her. What were they thinking? Was he mad then? Or was it much later in life that the voices drew him aside from the family to become his closet confidantes?

The questions are intriguing but the answers are not forthcoming. The disease stalks others within the family and therefore remains an impolite topic of conversation. I can imagine, though, that I know the question he asked the child: "Do you feel as I do?"

Monday, January 16, 2012

Centenary

Tokyo's mayor gave 3,000 cherry trees
to Washington, D.C. in 1912 as a gesture
of friendship between Japan and the U.S.

As children, we tend to view our parents as other-worldly people vastly different from ourselves. They wield such power in our lives that we set them atop towering pedestals that we ourselves patiently polish and raise to sometimes dizzying heights. Some pedestals come crashing down abruptly. Others grow so lofty that we are forever distanced from their tenants and we are left never really knowing who that parent truly was, what they hoped for and dreamed of and whether or not they approved of us.

Over the past several years, I've been experiencing a growing affinity for my elders. As I approach and overtake the moments within their lives when I first met them, I'm blessed with insights that infuse my recollections with color and enrich my experiences.

I've found that context is one of the greatest contributors to insight. In other words, I can learn more about my parents and grandparents when I consider the events within their lives in the context of their times. For example, my great grandfather Sergio Joaquin emigrated from the Azores to Boston, Massachusetts in 1852. On the surface, that's a pretty pedestrian fact. But when you consider that the Azores experienced earthquakes in 1841, 1848 and 1852 and the fact that he was only 14 when he left, it suddenly becomes a drama that is pregnant with possibilities. It's like picking up a box of crayons and coloring inside the lines of a black and white drawing to create a portrait that's relatable and whose texture and depth establish a connection and--yes--inspire insight.

Building context in this way contemporizes the past. I can build my understanding of Sergio by comparing his immigration experience--choosing to leave his home in the wake of a natural disaster--with my experiences during Hurricane Wilma. That comparison creates an emotional connection with him, and I find myself admiring him for having the courage and foresight to journey alone to a foreign country and make a new start at such a young age.

I'm using context in this manner a lot lately because this is an important year for me and my immediate family. I'm 50 this year--the same age my father was when I was born--and next month marks my father's 100th birthday. Surprisingly enough, when I look at the events of 1912, I see a very familiar world.

One of the most significant events of 1912, of course, was the tragic demise of the Titanic, echoed by the recent sinking of the Costa Concordia off the coast of Italy. Other echoes abound. Italian forces bombarding Beirut, rapid change in Asia with the rise of the Republic of China, social activism in Africa with the founding of the African National Congress (ANC)--the political and social hotspots of 100 years ago are all too familiar today.

There were new and exciting applications of new technologies as well, such as the first parachute jump from a moving plane (Albert Berry); the first English Channel crossing by a female pilot (Harriet Quimby); and the first non-stop flight from Paris to London (by Henri Seimet in three hours).

The year had its heroes (Roald Amundsen announced he had reached the South Pole), its stars (Sarah Bernhardt starred in Les Amours de la reine Élisabeth), its tycoons (Carl Laemmle incorporated Universal Pictures) and its tragic figures (Robert Scott and his team perished in their disastrous bid for Amundsen's prize). It even had U.S. military action on two fronts with the U.S. Marines dispatched to Cuba and Nicaragua.

In short, I've found that 1912 was a lot like 2012 in very many ways and that my father's world was very similar to the world in which I live today. And that makes me believe that maybe he and I weren't so different after all.

Editor's note: My cousin Ruthie has pointed out that, while I was writing the above entry, she was marking her father's 106th birthday. RAF (as she and her sisters called him) was a legendary figure in his own right having graduated from Harvard University at the age of 20. Following the sudden death of our grandfather, RAF ensured that his brothers, sister and mother survived the Great Depression by putting his own ambitions and aspirations aside, moving back home with his new wife, Ellen, and dedicating himself to his family.