Fingers Gone Wild

“Good news, Britt!  Satan won’t be joining us on our vacation.”

The introductory quoted sentence is far too real to even want to elaborate on, but I feel I must. There are certain mistakes we just can’t take back, my friends.  We can recover, but ultimately, we can’t erase them.  If you wish to read on, take caution, for this is not for the ‘weak’ly reader and it certainly is NOOOO Disneyland.  It’s a cyberspace circus of fears and tears, and there are three main attractions on this global flight to Perdition known as Texting, Tweeting, and the almighty E-mail. These are also the most terrifying.  Amongst dozens of other dazzling features these cell phones possess, they can be utilized for building friendships, enhancing job status, networking, developing serious relationships, and allowing you access to any information you may require formerly found in encyclopedia, atlas or almanac in a split second, right in the sweaty and shaky palm of your hand.  Adversely, they can also destroy friendships, get you fired, divorced, (sometimes in that order) or just plain lost.

-Politicians/Athletes/Celebrities:  We read about, hear about, see and smell every delusional blunder they make just by using their fingers, especially the forefinger of doom leading directly to the most unholiest of buttons……….SEND.  Gives me chills just thinking about it.  Yes, it gives me, not a politician, athlete, or celebrity, just your average cup of Joe the chills because I am quite capable of delivering units of letters to the wrong people making me equally stupid.  I’m also willing to admit it.

TwitterTombstone1Referring to your friend’s wife as Satan is o.k., as long as it doesn’t land in her husband’s text messaging unit instead of the intended receiver, my wife.  My wife and I were planning a week’s vacation and thought it would be nice to invite some of our friends up to visit the cabin, since there was adequate space.  One couple, our friend and his wife, respectfully declined.  Shortly after, I sent him the accidental text informing him of his wife’s newest name.  This after our friend had done several favors for us in a city three hundred miles away.  Fortunately, the wife being compared to the Princess of Darkness never witnessed the text, and as contrite as I could be, when seeking forgiveness from my friend, I was quickly granted it……almost too quickly.

After breaking up with a girlfriend, (a breakup which took over two months for the check to clear) I developed a relationship with another girl, who would eventually become my wife, Britt.  Britt lived in another city so there were many times when I would simply text during weeks apart writing quick blurbs such as, “I miss you”, and yes, “I love you”.  Isn’t that sweet?  No, it isn’t simple, and it sure as hell isn’t sweet when it floats through cyber city and lands at LA Ex Girlfriend’s Cellport.  When I figured out what I’d done, I quickly called Britt, and said in the most primitive of ways, “I think I did something stupid.”  She understood; the ex didn’t.  The ex wrote back saying, “I miss you too”.  Crud.  I simply decided to move to the city of Britt, and change my phone number.  Ex OUT.

Just yesterday, I made my wife a sandwich for work.  It was a sandwich she loved so much that she decided to text my brother, Glenn, our Real-state agent, and thank him for being so good to her.  Since he hasn’t sold the house we are asking him to sell for us, he was a tad bit confused, but thanked her anyway for the kind words.  A little bewildered, Glenn also wondered why she was so excited to randomly describe a sandwich with such passion.

Profanity is always a nice touch when accidentally texting your priest, rabi, grandma, grandpa, God, or even a new brother in-law. While I was fixing to BBQ one evening, my wife was running late, so she again sent my brother, Glenn, living three hundred miles away from us, a quick text stating, (and this is my first F blog bomb so forgive me) “F@#k, I’m still working…..have I ruined dinner!?” Stop texting my family, Brittney, unless it is business related.

“All’s well that ends well.”  That was an e-mail delivered by one of my friends and fellow employees long ago when I was a middle school teacher.  During a routine “lock down” drill, (we practiced these drills regularly in case there may be a dangerous situation brewing…….no laughing matter) my friend sent this Shakespearian message not just to the secretaries notifying them that all students were accounted for, but to the entire district, with the heading, “LOCKDOWN”.  Let’s just say it sent (send’s ugly cousin) many teachers and administrators at the high school, the other middle school, and elementary schools directly to Panic Land.   Fortunately, for Fiddle Finger Jack, our principal only sentenced him to a month in our Solitary E-Mail Confinement Chamber.  This is when an employee, when wishing to send an electronic mail during a break, must instead find an envelope, handwrite a letter, place a stamp upon said envelope, and deliver it by foot to the proper recipient even if the recipient is only twelve feet away.  Fellow employees refer to it as the “E-Hole”.  A month in the E-Hole is like a year without communication.  All cellphones are also required to be confiscated upon entrance to the place of work.

There are also very profound ones using vernacular which could either offend the incorrect recipient or just confuse them.  My friend, D Dub, thought he was e-mailing his best friend, whose first name begins with Na, yet his forefinger of the damned was too fast on the draw sending his “rude ass tittays” phrase spiraling out of control and crash-landing on one of our own congressional staff members in Washington D.C. whose first name begins with Na as well.  D Dub still works in Texas.  (does anyone know what a “rude ass tittay is?)

Twitter-verse, the only ride I’m too scared to get in line for, is one I don’t think I’ll ever touch.  This blog is as close to embarrassing myself as I want to get.

I left out one of the cyber kiddie rides known as the Voice Recognition Roller Coaster of Confusion.  When you receive one of these texts, you forgive and dismiss their mistakes knowing the person sending it may have just suffered a concussion or consumed a case of wine in their garage just prior to message delivery.

Conclusion: Watch where you put your finger.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I am Not Your Uncle (I just play one at your birthday parties)

Sometimes we must question life’s unwritten rules concerning kindness, generosity, leniency, genealogy and forgiveness.  That’s a Crapload of rules. On an otherwise sunny day ago, I wasn’t up to the task.  I buckled under the pressure of a nephew I didn’t even know existed, but it made me think, which is unusual.

I am not a father, but unfortunately, I am an uncle. (Secretly, I love being an uncle because I adore each and every one of my fifty three nephews and nieces, even though I probably don’t know a third of them)  Caring for them as family and friends, I hope the feelings are mutual.  However, I don’t enjoy surprises, and sometimes, having such a large family, it feels like there is a surprise in the mailbox every day, and the surprise has a dollar sign written all over it, but the dollar signs aren’t always written in blood.  It is not always an invitation to to a blood related nephew or niece’s birthday party but perhaps just a friend’s child’s birthday fiesta.

An uncle is often required to perform certain duties.  Although sounding cruel, this certainly should not be misunderstood as a negative observation, but rather, promoting the importance of understanding the wonderful but sometimes puzzling difference between family and friends.  Let me give you an example.

The Setting:

An old friend you haven’t seen for quite some time greets you in a line at a local grocery store with his 10 year old son in tow.  (This is an exaggerated version of something that has happened to me and many others)

Friend with son:  Hey, Ben, how ya doin?  Look Sigmund, it’s your Uncle Ben!  Say hello.

Sigmund:  (a forced and uninspired) Hey (ensues)

(Keep in mind the last time I saw this child was at the hospital where I delivered a ten dollar gift which was probably used as a dog toy upon return from the hospital, so I didn’t blame him for wondering why he didn’t know he had an “Uncle” Ben.)

Me: (After awkwardly greeting my brand new nephew, I turn to his father, Todd, really wishing to have spent more time in the grocery store latrine.  We shake hands) Boy, it’s been a while, Todd.  I thought you moved out of the state.  How are you? Are you here on a visit?

Todd:  Oh no, me and Siggy here got sick of the old lady so we made an agreement.   I could have Siggy, and she could take the house.  (sheepishly chuckling) Pretty good deal, huh?  So, now we’re back living on the corner of 4th and McPhuket.

Me:  Wow, sorry about the split…….hey, you’re a stone’s throw away from where I live on 5th and DePuke.  (temporary lack of judgment)

Todd:  Great!  Do you have plans for the weekend?

(Shit. Having absolutely no plans but to watch some baseball, my rolodex of excuses was out of reach.)

Me: Not really, no.  You?

Todd:  Terrific! You can come to Siggy’s Birthday Party!  Wouldn’t that be just excellent, Sig Boy?

Sigmund:  I guess.

Friend: (Whispering in my ear) He just loves soccer, nudge nudge.

Cha Ching!  Oh, why couldn’t he have loved baseball?  At least then I’d have fun shopping at Big 5.  I’m not a great lover of soccer, and after all, isn’t this about me and not this Siggy clown?

Trading phone numbers and exchanging phony smiles, as well as a firm handshake (I think I hurt his hand…… 🙂 we parted ways without so much as my new nephew acknowledging the toilet paper dragging from the bottom of my sneakers.  (Little Son of a Nevermind)

Fulfilling my duties of purchasing a thirty dollar ball that people are only allowed to kick, and suffering through a dreadfully boring party, I felt my little uncle pity party should end because it wasn’t that bad.  Thus, I decided to get bloody positive recollecting the fond parties I attended of my own kin over the last thirty seven years. (My first nephew was born when I was three years old.  He did not receive a gift from Uncle Ben.  I am the youngest of thirteen children.)

Now as an uncle, one is requested to perform certain duties.  It’s a long list but we’ll start with the simple four requiring no financial responsibility whatsoever, which sometimes makes them the most difficult.  You must remember names, and you must remember birth dates.  Then, when those nephews and nieces develop into adults and deliver spawn of their own, you must remember more names and more birth dates.  Those are the toughest four duties, but if you master forgetting them all, it can save you a hell of a lot of dough.  It’s a rocky road of parties when the parents know your number and that you still live in the same town.  It’s even a rockier or dirtier road when the parents don’t call to remind you, but the nephew or niece is making the calls.  This is the point in the uncle/nephew/niece relationship when the uncle must find a new address in a foreign city or country thus escaping the straight jacket of uncle responsibilities.  The uncle’s only cost?  Marriage.  In order to move out of certain cities in the U.S., an uncle must have probable cause other than ignoring his nieces and nephews.  He must obtain a VISA which can only be granted if the uncle is choosing to live a life of wedded blasphemy, or bliss, overseas or just across the political boundaries of the State where the uncle currently resides.  If the uncle survives the marriage for at least two years, he is granted full uncle sovereignty.  He is allowed independent authority over a geographical area deeming it as Uncle Territory.  Nieces and nephews are not allowed to cross into this territory unless they know his wife’s name and birthdate.  However, upon visitation rights to nephew and niece territory, he is strongly recommended to attend birthday parties in said territory if it happens to arrive on the dates he is visiting.  At the very least, if he is unable to attend, he must display a form of sincere shame.

Returning home, my wife and I decided we had time to calculate the amount of money I saved over the years by being a lousy uncle, but we did it just for kicks and out of curiosity. (Kind of like those times when you try to figure out the amount of money wasted on ATM charges; you get through about two years, throw up, and try to drink those memories away.)

ROUGH ESTIMATES OF WHAT I OWE OVER JUST TWENTY YEARS ASSUMING EACH GIFT IS THIRTY DOLLARS A PIECE: (This is rough because there probably are siblings floating around I don’t even know about because when I call my dear mother, she usually mentions a name and I respond with a “who?” and she says, “you know, your nephew, Pat’s new baby boy, Rocco!  He’s your new Grand Nephew, you knucklehead!   My last question, echoed with grand emphasis, “WHO THE HELL IS PAT!?”  Unlike mine, my mother has a memory like a steel nap, I mean steel trap, of course.)

-Twelve Brothers and sisters:  30 children (nephews and nieces) total

-30 nephews and nieces:  23 children of their own (great nephews and nieces)

-A Grand Total of: 53 nephews and nieces

-53 times thirty dollars for each birthday:  $1,590 dollars annually

-$1,590 dollars times 20 for the years I’ve stiffed them:  $31,800 owed including Great Grand Nephews and Nieces without interest.

(Turns out I’m a pretty Great Uncle after all)

We can go further and provide estimates of graduation gifts, weddings, baby showers and bail, but we won’t.  That I refer to as The Grand Slam of Obligations.  You are lucky if you get one of those from me.

Fortunately, none of my nephews and nieces will read this, but if they do, please feel free to land on our doorstep with your head held high and hand outstretched, and be prepared to accept yet another UBOU.  Uncle Ben Owes U.

My point is not that I am an inhumane beast of a man.  It’s just that I have enough nephews and nieces to ignore of my own.  I don’t need any honorary or fake ones to ignore as well.  My friends know exactly how I feel about this issue, so instead of honoring my thoughts, they do precisely what I would do to them.  They have their sons or daughters call me on Christmas Eve, and bellow, “MERRY CHRISTMAS, UNCLE BEN!”  I respond just as the title of this piece states, “I AM NOT YOUR UNCLE!”  Bless their souls, they laugh, and we all get a kick out of it.

Uncle Ben - Samuel L

Willy, Jimmy, The Doobies, and a Disappointed Thief

My wife and I had a wonderful weekend.  With the clear blue skies, we collectively made a decision to attend a baseball game in the rare sunshine of Seattle, Washington.  Consuming the proverbial hotdog and nine dollar beverage, we didn’t care about the outcome, because if you go to a game expecting your team to win, you will be disappointed as well as igniting a marital dispute.  Therefore, you enter the beautiful stadium with the correct attitude.  You don’t care about anything but having an enjoyable evening, watching a game you love, and hoping your car doesn’t get broken into.  Everything worked out swell with the exception of our car being broken into.  Sadly, it was in the middle of the night in our driveway.

Returning from SafeCo Field, my wife and I arrived safely to our home filled with two large, very protective watch dogs (most of the time) and one angry cat.  They bark and meow when the wind blows.  This was absolutely the very first night of my career living with them when I wanted them to bark and they didn’t.

Waking up at five thirty in the morning on a beautiful sunny Sunday, I noticed some strange looking items in our driveway while I was grabbing the Seattle Times.  Only wearing boxer shorts, risking that I was the only man in the neighborhood waking up this early on a Sunday, I thought grabbing the paper from our porch was a safe bet, but if I were to venture down to the driveway to examine some sort of evidence in said driveway, I should probably put on some shoes.  Otherwise, I am confident enough to go shirtless.  I have the abs of a SEAL.

Upon inspection, I found it odd to find three items strewn about in our lot: a Sport’s Illustrated, a jacket, a roll of toilet paper, and a few tennis balls.  These are all items I keep in my backpack when we take our dogs to the park.  (The toilet paper is for me……I don’t like those dirty bathrooms at the park.)  So, now, inspector Gannon has two questions for himself.  Self, was I sleepwalking, or is there something rotten in West Seattle?  Indeed, there was something rotten in West Seattle.  Something rotten had two legs, two arms, and is very lucky our family was sleeping.

Our car was ransacked.  My backpack was gone, and there were papers, Cd’s, gum, and dog leashes tossed about in an even more disorganized fashion than how I had left them.  It was an old and dumb school violation of my family’s property.

Purely out of respect to the criminal, we filed a report, knowing the police would not show up to ask questions.  I understand that.  However, if they were to show up and ask if we could describe any evidence which could identify them, I would respectfully say, “Officer, the only thing we know is that he or she isn’t very smart as they didn’t take the most valuable items in the car . . . namely the Willy Nelson, Jimmy Buffet, and Doobie Brothers CDs.”

Our family wasn’t harmed, so I really didn’t care, but I do miss my backpack filled with toilet paper, some tennis balls and a jacket they didn’t even want.  What a snobby thief.  I swear, the raccoons raiding our garbage cans on a nightly basis are far more intelligent.  They also are polite enough to show up to our door and ask to do it.  My response would be, “Fine, I don’t care. There’s nothing in there I care about but those three CD’s.

 

Of Mice and Mary

The moss grew thick in the habitat for inhumanity known as a porsche one day, or perhaps several years.  Much like a fallen tree, it became an apartment for some, but for that particular porsche, it became a condominium for a group of pretentious mice (save for a few) as well as a warm and friendly environment for some mice to hang their tails and eat properly.  No garbage at this condo, just a lobby serving complimentary casseroles.  Status does not exceed the minds, hearts, and stomachs of mice.  Evidently, they chose cars over logs and couches on any given Sunday.

Under unfortunate circumstances, Mary and her husband, Denny, proprietors of the house, were once burdened and forsaken by selling a car.  This car had been in the family for years and had taken on a far more important purpose for living or being driven; it lived for a family of rodents, and the car notoriously became known as the Mouse Condo.

Have you ever heard of a Mouse Condo?  Neither had I.  Evidently, it comes in the form of a 1974 914 Porsche with a 2.o something I can’t even describe.  I’ve only known two of them.  One sat in a backyard, yearning to be stolen, and the other sat in a garage for ten years as a halfway house for those lovely pests we refer to as mice.  This is where Mary and her husband, Denny, enter this epic story of Mice and Porsches.

Some cars consume your soul.  For Denny, its initial owner, this was no exception.  Denny  maintained, so to speak, one of these female mice chasing vehicles for many years.  When the option of selling came for practical reasons, out of the greatness of his heart, he refused to let go of it, even considering the rust, flat tires, exploded engine, people or parasites willing to take it off his clutch cold feet and hands.  He considered it a habitat for mice.  Denny’s heart weighed more than the porsche those days.

Let’s back up a bit and consider why Denny was so kind to allow his model of nostalgia to be rented by cheese eating squatters.  After selling their cabin, Mary and Denny imported the mice from a very special place called Diamond Lake by way of a couch. Denny’s wife, Mary, vehemently opposed the mice infested couch to migrate from their cabin and enter their house, but according to Denny, the couch was worth some money.  Mary’s only solid debate, since Denny did purchase the couch and cabin prior to their wedlock, was that the mice didn’t have Visas required to legally transport them from the country to the city.  Denny’s reply was, “Neither do Cubans! Have you seen any major league baseball players being deported?”  Mary’s ammunition was depleted because she loves and respects the game of baseball, Cubans and yes, mice.

So, now the couch enters the garage just in front of the Porsche 1974 914 car whom nobody gives a yankee dime about with the exception of Denny and mice.

The couch, much like the porsche, never entered their house, but did move on up to the City in a garage.  And, just like all mice will do, they took full advantage of that vintage Porsche in the garage.  Much live a fictional novel, both the porsche and the couch became living and snoring creatures.  They haunted Mary when she was asleep, and they haunted her when she was awake.  Kind soul that she was, Mary had to come up with a plan and cure for her sleep deprivation.   That’s when, on the seventh day, Mary, created the casserole, and everyone rested on that day too, except the mice.  Affectionately, throughout the land, both humans and rodents, deemed Mary, The Queen of Casseroles.  Negotiating with the mice, it was finalized by Mary and Denny only allowing three of them to enter the house on Sundays.

Most of the mice in the porsche needed leaders.  As everyone knows, mice are very diplomatic so they voted on who the President, Vice President, and Chief Economic Advisor to the President would become as the first trio to manage this District of Worthless Vehicles as well as provide them all with ample sustenance.  Since mice only have first names, the uneducated mice voted only on their names (much like horses) and their lake of origin.  They voted in Dusty, Dorris, and Dottie from Diamond Lake.

Mary’s casseroles were so good, she developed a way to make everyone in the house happy….including the mice.   When her husband, Denny,  found that Mary was welcoming  three kind mice into a home worth far more than his porsche, she was definitely close to resting, and resting her case of casseroles as well as a derelict vehicle.

The kind and keen mice developed a sense of what was wonderful in this house, and they embraced it.  Progressing from a couch to a condo was quite a step up for them.

The different personalities of these three mice are most intriguing, considering they  were siblings.  The male was the oldest and the strongest, and the two following him, female mice,  were the cutest and most clever.

Mary first welcomed “mice one” to her family introducing him to her husband, Denny.  It was a shrewd move on Mary’s part.  Denny was not just interested in cars, but also very interested in sports.  Denny and Dusty hit it off immediately.  Baseball, basketball, football….it didn’t matter, they were joined at the sofa.  This provided time for Mary to make her casserole.

Mouse number two: Dorris:  If you research mice, some of them are capable of giving birth after two months of being born. Dorris was no exception. They are also willing and quite capable of providing for them after their  birth.  Dorris was shrewd, much like the owners of the house, knowing when casserole Sunday came around on the calendar.  For the other mice who were not allowed to enter Mary and Denny’s house, thanks to Dorris, it was much like going to church, but skipping the boring sermon, and going straight to the wafers at communion, followed by eating leftovers in a clean cafeteria with the other pious souls.  Dorris, however, was not one to ration, and mice will eat until the food supply runs out.  This created issues between Dorris, Denny and Mary, because the only thing Denny cherished more than sports were Mary’s Sunday casseroles.  Poor Denny would end up with porridge after a hard day of watching football with President Dusty.  The third mouse came up with a solution.

Mouse number three: (Economic Advisor, Dottie)  Dottie recognized that President, Dusty, and Vice President, Dorris were ignoring the important details of maintaining a nation of mice if they were to survive in the Porsche Condominium.  It was a simple and rational solution.  Dottie knew how to fiscally make everyone happy; well almost everyone happy.

Using mathematics, Dottie devised a plan where they could divide the casserole, and all may not be happy about the proportions, but certainly would see the light of the next day.  “One quarter of the casserole should go to the three of us.  One quarter of it should go to the freeloaders in the garage who don’t say please and thank you.  The other half should remain with these humans.  That way, we all survive, and can look forward to many more Sunday brunches.”

President Dusty and Vice President Dorris couldn’t disagree with logic.  It was settled in a private meeting in Mary and Denny’s attic while Dorris was giving birth to another baby.  Like all meetings should, it lasted less than five minutes.

So, life went on, and for several months, everyone was fed properly.  However, the peasant porsche freeloaders were beginning to rebel against the regime of Dusty, Dorris and Dottie.  “Why can they watch T.V., drink tap water, use sophisticated bathroom facilities, while we are crapping in a porsche, now being referred to as the Porsche Porta Potty?”

They were calling for the impeachment, or imcheesement, of the President.

This is when a President loses all sense of judgment and just wants to please the rodents. Even without Dorris and Dottie’s approval, Dusty invited all the mice in for a Superbowl of Casserole Sunday party.  Denny wasn’t present that day.  He gained knowledge of the party via Dusty, who had become a very nice companion for Denny, and Denny wanted no part of this cheesy party, because he knew exactly how it would conclude:  A Mary Fondue Meltdown.

With a semi-genuine smile, Mary welcomed the mice for just this one day of fun.  She had the usual appetizers all mice would enjoy such as crackers and cheese as well as the breadcrumbs she had spilled upon the floor from her main course.  She also provided the tap water for all of them.  That was her last mistake.  While initially quite affable mice, after drinking the free tap water, some of them went from jovial to surly.  The jovial ones weren’t just drinking the water, they were diving into pools of it, whether it was a bowl on the kitchen floor or a sink or a bathtub.  The surly mice began to fight over some of the breadcrumbs creating a natural kitchen room brawl.  Tails were flailing, teeth were chattering, and one particular water tapped out mouse had the indecency and audacity, to look at the hand which was feeding him and said, “Are you going to fight too?  No?  So you’re a Mary, not a mouse?”

Laughing, President Dusty knew where Mary was heading.  Mary walked into the pantry, closed the door, grabbed her broom, and came out of it as the infamous super housewife, Meltdown Mary.  Flying out of the pantry on her broom, the mice witnessed the Hell which was coming with her. Upon landing, Mary started swinging the broom in the air like a baseball bat.  They scattered and shuffled to find any place for shelter.  Most of them scuttled beneath the door to the garage where they could retreat to the porsche.  The mice remaining, not quite understanding the wrath she was bringing with her were provided a harsher tone.  With a booming voice, Mary bellowed, “ALL YOU OTHER RATS, GET THE HELL OUT OF HERE, AND THAT INCLUDES YOU THREE, DUSTY, DORRIS AND DOTTIE!”

Now you have to understand that calling a mouse a rat is very offensive to mice since mice are much smaller.  They have smaller teeth, smaller noses, and of course, smaller tails.  They hate being called rats since rats have been making fun of them for centuries.  That was it.  There were no casualties, but they left and never returned.

That same night, Mary was having terrible thoughts.  She knew some of the mice would come back to apologize for their deplorable behavior, but she wasn’t ready for an apology.  Therefore, she devised a plan.  The next casserole she was to make would be doused with strychnine.  Perfect.  No more mice.  Luckily, for the mice, Mary slept on that idea.

The next morning, Mary herded twelve little toes with tails between their legs scurrying into her room.  Actually, it was more like a saunter.  Dusty, Dorris and Dottie came to ask for forgiveness on behalf of all their idiot rodent friends.  Mary did indeed forgive them, and nary a mice was poisoned.  However, she asked that they never return again.  Sadly, the three kind mice understood and left the room without a crumb.

Thoughtfully, after interacting with mice she had grown fond of, Mary felt remorse.  She knew her emotions had taken over, but also needed to set mice rules.  Late that night, when Meltdown Mary transformed back into the loving, caring, and generous Mary, she was missing Dusty, Dorris, and Dottie.  While all the mice were sleeping, Mary snuck into the garage to carefully awaken her three kind mice.  Not to awake the others, she simply took them in her hands, transferred them to a warm blanket and tucked them in using Kraft American cheese singles.  Mary knew that since the other mice had absolutely no desire to ever enter her house again, the three contrite mice would awaken to breakfast in bed because it was lying right on top of them.  Then, after breakfast, her three mice could silently go back to their porsche where they belonged.

Months later, the porsche was sold to some fool who also agreed to take the mice with him, providing Mary show up with a casserole every Sunday.  She agreed to the deal.  Then, she celebrated, and secretly told Dusty, Dorris and Dottie, they were welcome to return anytime and could even bring their children.  Denny agreed.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Play Fair

The Kentucky Derby is right around the corner and on its home stretch, but I lived another  stretch several times in Spokane, Washington.  The stretch started with confession, followed by lying, and ended at a horse track known as (quite ironically) Playfair.

Probably seven years old at the time, I maintained morals and specific values.  However, (forgive me father) I did sin at that pivotal age.  I was willing to tell a lie, but two of my brothers and my father were not satisfied with my less than adequate fib.  Nor was the Catholic Priest.

You see, at this age, I swear, my only sins were lying in the confessional.  The priest asks you to reveal your sins.

Confess your sins, my son.

Is playing wiffle ball in the backyard a sin?

No, but did you intentionally hit anyone in the face with the bat?

Not intentionally.

Who did you “not intentionally” hit with a bat?

A neighbor.

Was he a good Catholic boy like you?

No.  He was a friendly neighborhood Mormon.

Oh, that’s definitely not a sin!

Father, can you just give me another week.  I’ll try my best to do some sinning?

Yes, my son.  Do you have any plans for the weekend?

My dad’s taking us to the race track right after I get out of here.

Ok.  That’s a great start.  I see great and powerful sinning in your future.  You will have much to talk about in our next meeting.

Perfect.  (off to begin my life of sinning) I promise you… next week this conversation won’t be so BORING!

Good.  Go in peace to love and sin for the Lord.

I did indeed go in peace, but, from my standpoint, committed a sin just hours after my dismissal.

Providing our mother a much needed break from some of her children, dad would take us to the race track for the last two races for two reasons:  free admission and he loved gambling on the horses.  (this was to be my first time to attend)  Yet, there was only one reason my two older siblings, ages eleven and thirteen did not want me tagging along.  I was only seven and to be allowed into one of the dirtiest racetracks in the nation, you must be ten.  What terrific standards they set at the track when a boy must be at least the age of ten before witnessing jockeys, trainers, owners and many of the gamblers cheating.  Seven?  “No, wait until you are ten boy before you witness such heathen like behavior.”  Since only seven at the time, I knew this presented a problem collectively for all of us going to the track.  If I can’t get in, no one gets in.  Not my dad, not my brothers and certainly not me.  Bless my wonderful father, because, much to the dismay of my brothers, he wasn’t going to leave me at home, and he was going to teach me a lesson and provide material for my next confessional visit.

Dad said to me, “Ben, I want to take you with us to the track, but by the looks on your brothers’ faces, they don’t want you to be a part of this, because if you don’t learn how to tell a lie, we can’t get in, and I can’t leave you in the car waiting, even though your brothers wouldn’t mind me doing so, understand?”

“I guess, but what do you mean by lying?  Is this like one of those phony fairy tales you weave before bedtime, or is this going to be a mortal sin?”

Patiently, and almost excitedly, dad said, “no, don’t worry about that mortal sin stuff, this is just a white lie, and it will keep you from getting beaten up by your older brothers who are begging me to leave you at home.”

My first chance at sinning, oh boy!  “What do I have to do?”

“Well, you’re seven, right?” (I don’t think he knew any of his children’s ages, but he guessed right)

“Right, dad.”

“All you have to do, when we are walking by the booth, and some swarthy man is asking for your age, just tell him you are ten.  Then, legally, he can allow your entrance.  And, believe me, he doesn’t care.  He just wants our money once we get in.”

Painfully, I had to think about this for just a few short moments, but this was my first negotiated lie.  “Dad, I’ll tell him I’m nine!” According to me, it was my first lie.

My two older brothers looked at dad and me with disgust, hands in the air and eyes rolling, but my loving father quickly extinguished the flames by saying, “hey guys, how about going to Chico’s Pizza for some pinball and at least two pies?”

“Alright!”

Food was much more enticing to our family than gambling.  My brothers never laid a finger on me, and I could admit at my next visit to the priest that I was at least willing to tell a lie.

Today, I don’t have to lie about my age, but when asked for age identification, all I have to do is take off my baseball cap.  I don’t like telling people I’m forty.

Have fun watching the Derby.

 

 

 

 

Rest In Peace (the baseball nursery rhymeless)

One of my five year old nieces was staying the night with us, and before bedtime, I was requested to tell her a story.  I didn’t know it would give her nightmares.

Here was my thoughtful introduction.  (her name is Lucy)

Me:  Lucy, do you know anything about baseball?

Lucy:  A little.

Me:  Do you know anything about a magical place in the Emerald City (known as Seattle) called Safeco Field?

Lucy:  (apprehensively) No.

Me:  It’s where baseball players go to die.  There is nothing safe about this place!  And, many others suffer from their lack of ability and additional lack of knowledge of what should be a mentally simple game.

Lucy:  What do you mean by others?  Team mates?

Me:  Not just team mates, but those in the stands witnessing them dig their own graves, primarily in left field and center field.

Lucy: Keep telling the story.

Me: Ok, but it doesn’t have a happy ending like World War Two. Are you cool with that?

Lucy: Yes.

Me: Good, because tomorrow night, we’re going to talk about Korea.

Lucy: Ok.

Me:  I’m getting tired, but here’s the brief story.  When very talented baseball players lose their desire to play, yet don’t lose the desire to make money, figuratively speaking, they come to a home where they are safe, just not at home plate.  Are you following me?

Lucy:  Not at home?  Who feeds them?

Me:  Good question.  The owners.

Lucy:  Do the owners live with them?

Me: Nobody lives with them!  The owners can afford to pay people to take care of them, but the owners and players must sign contracts, much like making a deal with the devil.  Do you anything about him?

Lucy: No.

Me: Yeah, let’s leave that one alone for tonight, and get back to the fun part of the story.

Lucy:  But, uncle Ben, you haven’t told me about the worst part of this story.  The owners don’t live with them, but shouldn’t they, out of principle?

Me:  Another good question.  No, sadly the owners live thousands of miles away but provide vast amounts of money so these ballplayers can eat, drink, chew on bubble gum and other things like women, but let’s not get into that.

Lucy:  Tell me more.

Me: Before I put you to sleep with negative energy, let’s speak of a man named Santa Clause.  Are you familiar with this guy?

Lucy:  Yes!  He is jolly and brings me gifts my parents can’t afford!  He also has a beard and……..

Me:  That’s enough.  Do you know anyone else who has a beard?

Lucy:  Yes, but no one who shows up with presents.

Me:  Ok, let’s just get this Santa Clause crap out of the way, because he doesn’t exist, get it?

Lucy: Ok.

Me:  Do you love your dad and your mom?

Lucy:  Yes!

Me: They are much like managers of a baseball team.

Lucy: What does that mean?

Me: Good Lord, they are the ones helping you make proper decisions, when in fact, they should be kicking you in the ass.

Lucy:  You’re scaring me…….this is not a fun story, and where are you going with this?

Me:  The manager of the Emerald City Seattle Mariners is fat and wears a beard, but doesn’t bring any gifts!  He is the exact opposite of Santa!

Lucy:  I think I want to go to sleep.

Me:  Ok.   Goodnight and God Bless you.

 

Illustration courtesy of Lucy Gannon

Drawing courtesy of Lucy Gannon

 

 

The Yard That Aaron Left

Our backyard  stadium was built by love and mystery.  The love was not a mystery, but the mystery was built by my brother who existed only on paper; not in pictures.  As a ghostly like character, our brother, Aaron, happily haunted his six brothers and six sisters from time to time.

The mystery of my brother, Aaron, goes on and on, much like the furthest ball I’ve ever witnessed hit in our backyard, winding up in our front yard. Perhaps, like the house in New York that Ruth built, this was the house that Aaron left, and he did it with great style.  There were no apologies necessary, no diseases to deem him as the luckiest man on the face of the earth like Lou Gehrig; this character just ran his own way.

At that time, he was the most mysterious man on my earth, and remains to this very day.  There will be no picture of a man named, Aaron.  He only existed in the eyes of those admiring him……..and for only a brief moment, those eyes belonged to a boy tossing a ball to him before he left us.

Looking at this picture, I remember a child throwing a ball to Aaron knowing where the ball would reside.  It was with bitter sweetness, because the time you spent with this ghostly and sometimes mythical character was cherished.  There is a reason you don’t see the batter in this picture, just like you can’t find one picture of a leprechaun or a unicorn.  They don’t wish to be captured.  And, they never will.

I’ll never know him as much as I always wished, but I always admired him for being, much like a novel, that chapter you can’t wait to finish reading.  Throwing to him in this brace depicted in the picture, I was tossing a baseball to my brother, knowing that when he hit it, he and the baseball would never return.

The brother I still don’t properly know, but indeed love, was the only man to hit a ball out of Gannon Stadium. To hit it out of our stadium,  it must cross over the Red Monster, (our center field fence) travel further over the house on a red ball flight, and land in our front yard located across from the house many of us occupied from time to time.  Depending on the wind, proper attitude, altitude, matched with skill, cunning, and shear talent, this was quite a feat.  But, with our brother, Aaron, his exit was far more impressive than his God given skills.  It’s difficult to decipher which one I respected more.

Not even rounding the bases, or grass and tree roots, he found the ball in the front yard,  left with the ball and we were all wondering when the ball would come back.  It never did.

Remembering the ball and the man, when that ball left our park, we knew the ball and the man would never return, but that was the magic of my brother, Aaron.

Aaron was one of the two brothers out of seven to hit right handed.  I think he just did it to agitate my father. That was typical Aaron, but ever so intriguing.  Because of the great Mickey Mantle, my father taught five of his seven sons to hit left handed, even though we were born righties.  Our mom was the only lefty in the group, but she wasn’t destined for the big leagues.  Our brother Aaron, with magnificent talent, was on a mission not to make it to the big leagues.  He just wanted to have a good time and happily mess with life.

When Aaron played baseball, he was an enigma.  As a very talented player, he just showed up in time to play, or piss my dad off.  At the age of five, it was the first time I heard my father teach me the term, “lollygagger”.  He was a bored centerfielder only willing to run to a fly ball at the precise instant it was about to touch the ground.  I never witnessed him missing one of those balls, but I did witness my father going into cardiac arrest. It was then, when in high school, Aaron would laugh, ending the inning, knowing he was coming  to the plate and smash a home run.  It was also when dad would shake his head in disbelief, wondering why he deserved such torture.  Aaron would then leave the park after hitting a home run, and nobody knew where the hell he went after hitting it out of the stadium.  He never touched home plate.  Aaron just hit the ball and without properly running the bases, much to his younger brothers’ dismay, simply ran off to Montana, Utah, Idaho, or Missouri with the ball.  He was that fast.

Running into my brother, or as I’d like to characterize him as a “true character”, from time to time over so many years, it is always a gift. In my dreams, he has the same smile, and a glimmer in his eye, making you want to know what he is thinking, but, you will never know.  That is why I think of him often.

Still, to this wonderful sunny day, there are times I don’t want him to exist.  I wish for him to remain that fictional superman I remembered flying out of our yard one day.  Rather than feeling I was cheated by his lack of presence in our lives, I choose to focus on all the tremendous memories.

 

 

An April Fool (opening days)

Strike Tree!  You’re outside!

Once maintaining the status of being an April Fool, you can see this picture is no joke.

Turning a gun into a bat seems like it should be fictional.  It’s not……..not where I grew up.  Where I grew up, everything I touched turned into a bat.  Brooms, branches, rakes, fence posts, t.v. antennas….. I’m telling you, I was a magician when it came to turning anything into a baseball bat.  Once, I even turned a rabbit into a bat after pulling it out of my frizzy blond locks.  However, one can argue that turning a gun into a bat was my greatest trick when baseball’s opening day was lurking in our backyard midst.

In the picture, it is unclear whether whatever I was swinging was a toy gun, or a worn down bebe gun, but I do know that I’ve never shot anything in my life, nor had the desire to do so. According to my mother, I was using this gun as a baseball bat while attempting to chop down our cherry tree. She never told a lie.  Since I was only about four, axes were not allowed to be in my hands, nor were they allowed to be in anyone’s hands in our neighborhood, unless you were actually chopping wood.

My mother and I had a wonderful relationship.  After all the siblings were off to school, she did her best to keep me busy.  Keeping me inside the house was not an option.  Playing card games such as “memory” could only last until about noon.  That was usually about an hour before baseball’s opening day began for me.

Cable was not available in those precious days, so my mom made certain her youngest son would live it in our backyard.  If you look closely at Gannon Stadium, you can recognize an old school ball yard.  We had it all.  First base was the root of a tree.  Second base was a thorn bush, which is why mom always kept a first aid kit handy.  Third base was the cherry tree which is depicted in this picture.  Evidently, home plate was anywhere I wished it to be, because if you look at the landscape of our home, there was a centerfield home run fence known as “The Red Monster”.  (It was our west coast version of “the Green Monster” located at Boston’s Fenway Park) Judging from the direction I was swinging the gun, a centerfield homer was not an option, so the scouts in our yard taking this picture had serious doubts about there being anything in between my ears and beneath that ghostly white hair.

I have absolutely no idea why I was trying to chop the cherry tree down with a gun, but I was outside in the spring with a mother who just tried to keep me occupied before the rest of the gang came home for dinner.

My mother, Margaret, loved the game of baseball;  she just had never played it……..until I convinced her that no matter where she threw the ball, I’d swing at it.  I recall running across the yard, fifteen feet out of the gunner’s box attempting to hit her dangerous attempts to toss it across home plate.  Sometimes, I would end up in one of our neighbor’s yards.  That didn’t bother me or my mother because one of the neighbors would always smile while providing me with the carrots she had planted months prior to the ball mom planted in their dirt, knowing my mom needed a bit of a break.  Food, even vegetables at that time, was the only deterrent to baseball, but only on a minor league level.  This neighbor was lucky not to have planted onions.  They are far too similar to a baseball.  The carrots, I could eat.  The onions were far too tempting not to hit, unless of course, they were sautéed.

Last night, I watched a baseball game with my brother, Mike, because mom wasn’t around.  She was too busy sleeping, dreaming about a day where she could balance baseball with “Dancing With the Stars”.

Last Monday, our official opening day, I called my mom and reminded her of those very special days when she displayed such kindness and affection.  The bond remains, and she has definitely earned the right to change the channel from a game to dancing.  Neither of us are April Fools, but we are foolishly in love with this time of year.

 

 

 

The Resurrection of Paprika and Jesus. Happy Easter!

For thirty some odd years, I went with my family for the Easter Vigil at a Catholic church and, for thirty some odd years, I looked forward to it for all the wrong reasons. During the first ten years, I looked forward to one thing when leaving the two hour ceremony; ironically, my mom’s deviled eggs.

Three guests were responsible for bringing three critical ingredients.  Only one was wise enough to know not to arrive on a donkey with gold, frankincense or myrrh.  This wasn’t Christmas.  Jesus always struggled with the devil and bunnies.  However, He was kind to the infinite degree.

Knowing they were coming (some not invited but wishing to attend), we prepared ourselves for the best, the worst, and some in the middle.  Having faith in the greatness and significance of this day, we understood the best guest always showed up precisely when the worst was attempting to crash our pious Sunday gathering.

The Easter Bunny was kind of like the middle rodent or limbo. Delivering his eggs, we accepted him as though his was required for the deviled eggs.  I swear, sometimes I was more afraid of that bunny than I was of the devil.  To me, the bunny seemed to be much like a friendly ghost or even a friendlier sasquatch. Yet, I didn’t wish to see any of them!  Out of fear of witnessing this strange ritual referred to as hunting on this sacred day , I never wished to peer out my bedroom window and happen upon the eyes of  the 13 foot tall bunny hiding these eggs.  Rather, I relied on prayer, daylight, blinds, and my God given speed.  Courage was not on my Easter Resume.

I never saw the Easter Bunny…….thank Jesus.

Our family always had a great time locating the hidden eggs, because we knew that meant the giant rabbit was busy scaring other children in a different neighborhood, and those eggs, thanks to mom, were boiling before we even placed them in our comfortable basket.

Each Easter, we did, however, hear a sinister knock on our door when we were in the process of making the perfect deviled eggs.  Of course, it was the devil, and mom, fearlessly, answered the door knowing he was bringing his red hot paprika which mother forgot at the store.  (satan was actually bringing cayenne pepper)  Just from pure genius, our mother knew the difference between paprika and cayenne pepper, much like recognizing the difference between good and evil.

And, that’s exactly, without calling first, satan makes an unwelcome pop in visit.  The devil, annually, on this day seemed to be suffering from a tobasco sauce hangover.  His  spear shaped tail wasn’t waging and he even forgot his trident.  We actually felt sorrow for him because, even though he wished to tempt us and poison us,  he always departed peacefully, knowing who was going to knock on our door next.  He, Jesus, knocked on our door, and without saying much more than, “Have a wonderful day, and here’s the Paprika”; Mom, while inviting him in, Jesus merely, and, respectfully declined the peaceful offer.  I just think he was already full of those heavenly eggs, and just needed another nap………until next Easter.

Ingredients:  eggs, mustard, sugar, mayonnaise, sweet pickle juice provided by my sister, Mary, and paprika provided by a very humble man.

 

 

 

 

 

A Birthday Card for Mom (she just turned 322)

(most of this is inside joke material, but for any of my friends who read this drivel and have crossed paths with my mother and/or her sons and daughters, you may get a kick out of  it.  Initially, I was not going to post it, but some of my family members have requested it to be posted. If any of my family members who have not read it are offended, that was indeed my intent)

To my mother, from one of her sons:

Dear Mother,

You know you’re not getting a gift, right?  Let’s just clear that up real quick before you get your hopes up on some cruise ship long liner ticket with your first angry mate, sister Mary, coming along only as baggage.  I didn’t even get a call from you on my last birthday, January THE 14TH!!!  I haven’t slept since.  Ok, now for the happy go fortunate stuff.  (I don’t believe in luck)

I had a dream the other night where I was sitting on a park bench waiting for a train.  A man next to me was holding a child not looking much older than one, so I assumed he couldn’t speak using words other than “mama”, “da da”, or perhaps “shit”.  These are the words infants use and abuse so quickly.  The man could recognize I was bored and I was chuckling at the infant, equally as bored, being fumbled about by the father’s hands trying to keep the child occupied.  Yet, it wasn’t the man who spoke first, it was the child.  The child looked at me and asked me if I had any older brothers, and I said, with a smile, yes.  The child then asked, “how many?”  Six.  This always raises an eyebrow with people, which is fun if they don’t know any of them.  He then asked if I had any older sisters, and before I could reply, the father replied, “yes, he has six older sisters as well”.  I looked at him and we both smiled and the dream ended.  I had never met this man and he had never met our family, but I looked at him as though he was an angel.  Now, you’re thinking I’m going to call you an angel since it’s your birthday, right?  Not so fast, mother.  You’re one tier ahead.

Not being much of a church going religious bloke anymore, I still maintain faith in God, mostly because of you and dad.  I believe you summon these angels to protect goofballs like me from imminent danger we sometimes bring upon ourselves.  You look at someone like me, or any other of our family members and say, “Ok, this person is going to need an angel”.  That’s where the negotiations start with you and a guy referred to as God.

God: Ok, Margaret, how many angels do you need?

Mom:  (sheepishly) Well, it depends on which son or daughter you’re talking about.

God:  Mike.  Isn’t he the one who has a great deal of arrogance……eh hmm…pardon me, confidence in one’s self?

Mom:  I guess you could say that.

God:  I like that guy.  He’ll be the angel of fun when he makes it here!

Mom:  So, probably two.?

God:  Done……..who’s next?  I know there is a long list and I have some Mormons knocking on my door who even have more requests than you so give it to me straight and quick.

Mom: Mary

God:  Hmm…….has she calmed down on the racial slur bit, and how about those meltdowns?

Mom:  Yes……..I think.

God:  As long as Anne is still in the picture, only three should do………NEXT!

Mom: Steve?

God:  None.  That guy can take care of himself.  And, don’t worry, there is a stool ready for him anytime right next to me.  I love to laugh.  NEXT!

Mom:  Glenn?

God:  This is a tough one.  I think I’ve sinned more than him.  Let’s just make him an angel and call it good, ok?

Mom:  Ok, Theresa?

God:  She’s good.  But she’s good enough to have four floating around from time to time just to keep her from developing a southern accent.  The next time I hear the phrase, “I hope ya’ll can forgive me” I’m sending them on the express way to Hell. NEXT!

Mom:  (while laughing) Anne?

God:  You’re wasting my time, Mrs. Gannon. You already know she’s an angel.  Oh, and by the way, the next time you catch her, tell her Missy is hanging out in my back cloud with a couple of llamas.  NEXT!

Mom:  Aaron?

God:  I’ve already been working on this one but none of my angels can find him.  I have like, thirteen working on the case.

Mom: I understand.  Dorothy?

God:  I can give you five…….

Mom: If you take one away from Aaron’s case, can you give me six?

God:  Done.  NEXT!

Mom:  Patricia?

God:  I have to check her file.  Hmm…..seems to be a good woman, but as a flight attendant, she does need at least one.

Mom:  But she was a cheerleader in high school…….do you know what roads she must avoid because of her good looks?

God:  You’re right, I’ll give you eight.

Mom:  Will you make sure they are civil war buffs?  Please?

God:  For you, yeah yeah yeah.

Mom: Maggie?

God:  Does she have a husband that goes by the name of Jerry, (and chuckling) aka Aldieny, aka McNuggets?

Mom:  (unaware of where this question is leading) yesssss???

God:  Ha!  I’ve heard about this guy.  We signed him up years ago.  He’s been an angel for years.  And by the way, Maggie has sent more business this way than Donald Trump has toupees.  I love that gal.  Next.

Mom:  Thank you.  Greg?

God:  This is another tough one because our angels don’t care for being hidden in a two hundred dollar bottle of balsamic vinegar.  Let’s see……isn’t he a reverend in the Catholic Church?

Mom:  (excited) YES.

God:  Well then he’ll need ten for every commandment.

Mom:  Done.  Again thank you.  Tom?

God:  You know this is a tough one as well.  When remembering him, I even have to say ten Hail Marys. I once had a dream where he screwed me over on a business deal while playing monopoly.  I’m reluctant to give him any angels just out of spite, but out of complete and utter fury, mixed in with some forgiveness which is supposed to go along with this territory, I’ll waver and give him six angels for Park Place and Boardwalk Avenue……and no, Tom will not get his railroads back in return.  NEXT.

Mom:  Ben?

God:  Don’t you think the twelve you’ve already assigned to him has been enough?

Mom:  Yes, but, with complete reverence, you forgot that he has thirteen angels.

God: I AM NEVER WRONG!!!!  (heavenly volcanoes erupt with serious lava)  HOW DARE YOU QUESTION ME???

Mom:  (unfazed)  You don’t remember the request for that Brittney girl?  Well it’s working out and I just wanted to thank you.  Cool that volcano crap down now, please, it’s my birthday.  I have enough candles to blow out on my own.

God:  Oh yes.  You are welcome.  I thought you said that girl’s name was Gortney.

Mom:  Good bye and God ble………..wait………who blesses you?

God: GET THE HELL OUT OF HERE!

Mom, you are an inspiration to so many people inside and outside of our family.  You gave me hope, faith, love and laughter every time I needed it and you still do to this very special day.  Thank you.  Happy Birthday, you old bag of gifts.

Love,

Ben