Category Archives: World at Large

Must Take Note

We have an honest-to-goodness Welshman coming to our clinic right now, born and raised in Wales. He traveled the world for his job, but ultimately he and his wife settled down here and have been here for the past 30 years. (Hasn’t done much to diminish his accent or mannerisms!) He’s fascinating to talk to, as a result of his travels and diverse interests. He’s retired now, so he explains to me how in the summer he bakes specialty items for a Farmer’s Market, and in the winter he does woodwork.

What was one of the most fascinating things is his explanation of why he settled down here. “We lioke it here, we reely do,” he says. “All thot traveling, and here we are. The thing that I like the most, the thing that is soh notable, is how many people are volunteers!” He says this with such delight and wonder, in his clipped words. “Not the same things, and not necessarily a lot of time, but there are soh many people who give of their time. And they’re soh personable! My wife will say, ‘I’m sorry I’m late, but I just could n’t get away from the Supermah-ket!’” And he laughs.

He has traveled the world and back with a high paying job, and yet what he marvels at most is the wonder of small-town friendliness and helpfulness. I think it’s a pretty dang good compliment when that’s someone’s reason for settling down in your area.

I Hate TV

I had to watch an episode of House for my school work.

I hate TV.

I hate how everything is broken up into tiny clips, chopped up by ads.

I hate how they build each clip to a roaring emotional rage, so you will stick to the channel even through the ads.

I hate how the roaring emotional swells make you glad for the commercial breaks to let your adrenaline come down.

I hate how every sound, every camera focus, every facial expression is design to jerk at primal emotional reactions. Pain. Rage. Lust. Fear. Danger. Grief.

I hate how well it can work.

I hate the subtle or not so subtle ways they say that living by raw, unrestrained emotion is okay, normal, good.

I hate that it can be so hard to tear one’s self away from a very vivid game of emotional puppetry, and yet there is never anything worth taking away from it.

I hate that it always pounds on the most primitive reactions of the body, and never goes deep enough to stir the soul.

I want a bird

This is sorta akin to saying “I want a pony,” because I have a friend who works in a pet store, and I found out the genus of bird I’m interested in runs at like $200-$300. Owie.

But still. While I am talking about my pony, let me describe it to you. I’m looking at Conures, which are a type of parrot. They’re very people friendly, very smart, and full of playful antics. According to their singles’ ads. I mean, their descriptions online. Like this. How could you not want one?

Oh, yeah. That price tag.

I’m still tempted to save my pennies.

Aw, it’s a birdy.

Family Business

So my little family-owned physical therapy company decided to have their company holiday meal in January. People were just too busy and too stressed in December. They sent out their invitations to three of their offices (plus the one I work at) to come join them at a local steak house.

And when I say family owned, I mean the husband and wife jointly own the company and both sat in the middle of the U-shaped seating arrangement; he had his arm about the back of her chair nearly the whole time, and the conversation frequently veered into the territory of what was so great about the Green Bay Packers. He was thoroughly picked on by his employees when he had to borrow his wife’s glasses to read the bill, and pictures were taken and threatened to be put on Facebook.

Everyone touts the all-American, small town family businesses, but so few actually get the pleasure of being part of one.

beaten around the bush

Today

I got out of the car

was wrapped in a jump rope

and dragged into the darkness

I was

dragged around the table

many times

as fast as possible

I don’t know why

but it made other people happy

I was picked

up and dropped

once or twice

the strangest thing

is

none of it was strange

House and Home

“Once upon a time there was a beautiful young duck named Ping. Ping lived with his mother and his father and two sisters and three brothers and eleven aunts and seven uncles and forty-two cousins.

Their home was a boat with two wise eyes on the Yangtze River.

Each morning as the sun rose from the east, Ping and his mother and his father and two sisters and three brothers and eleven aunts and seven uncles and forty-two cousins all marched one by one, down a little bridge to the shore of the Yangtze River.”

“The Story About Ping,” By Marjorie Flack and Kurt Wiese

Our house didn’t have wise eyes. I checked—lots of times. No, our house had sad, tired eyes and a droopy mustache. Our house was like an old, tired-out momma cat with a great big huge litter of brand new kittens. It was very fond of us, to be sure, and certainly did its best to take care of us. But it was tired, so very, very tired.

When we first started looking at this new house—this house that isn’t really new at all (it was built in the 1800′s) but has only had 3 owners before us–it was sleeping gently and comfortably. But as the doors began to open and close more and more often, and feet tramped up and down its stairs and rattled through its halls and voiced called from room to room–it began to wake up. Slowly. One eye cracking open at a time. Like a old Ent, it made creaks and groans and took stock of its new residents. It was happy to be occupied. It had been waiting. It was comfortable to be lived in again.

The first night we stayed over here, I listened to the strange new-house sounds, knowing that soon they would either be worked out of the joints or simply become so familiar as to be unheard or perhaps comforting. But I felt a little bad for the old house. Not that I missed it, but just that it seemed it must be so lonely, without people crammed into it, filling it to bursting. I slept a little uneasily, even though the creaking hall seemed welcoming.

Two weeks passed, filled with hustle and bustle and long days. I needed to go back to the old house, and get what remained of my belongings.

Driving back, my stomach started to knot. What would I feel? Would I be homesick? Nostalgic? Would I cry? The roads were all familiar, so familiar, but it seemed almost a dream. When would I start feeling something, and what would I feel? I pulled into the driveway and got out of the car, looking across the road to the field and hill beyond—still the same and yet strange. I looked over the property, the same as when we’d left it, craning my head to see the chickens that ought to be in the fence. Everything was the same. Nothing had changed.

I walked up the stairs to the porch of irony, the porch that had been rebuilt a scant year before we’d left. I opened the same door I’d always opened, and stepped into the kitchen I’d been stepping into for more than 20 years, and then I just stood there, in a little shock.

The house had died. It smelled like a house where nothing every stirs or moves, and hasn’t for years upon years. I had to stop and count the days. How long had it really been? Hadn’t we just left? How could this have happened? The rubble of our lives–literally, the things we shouldn’t have even had and therefore hadn’t taking with us–was strewn haphazardly all over the floors. Almost everything of worth had already been stripped. It was eery, in an almost post-apocalyptical way. What had happen here? What had driven people to leave in such haste, and where were they now?

The abandonment of the furniture and useful things served only to highlight the destitute state of what remained. Dust and cobwebs that ought to have been cleaned long ago. Broken and rusting cabinets. Floors worn well beyond quaintness. Peeling wall-paper and peeling paint. Mildew, where the un-insulated walls had fostered condensation. It seemed sad, almost horrifying.

Going upstairs did not help. The atmosphere of abandonment was palpable, almost choking. The rooms seemed smaller, of course, emptied of most of their belongings, but detritus was still strewn everywhere. I did what I had to do, what I’d come to do, sorting through the rest of my things and cramming them indiscriminately into black garbage bags. But it felt so. . .un-sacred. Disrespectful. Slimy and underhanded. It felt like I was robbing a grave, even though everything was rightfully mine. But the house was so tomb-like. The house had died.

It had held on for us; it knew we needed it. But as soon as we were safely settled somewhere else, it died. The poor, tired, fragile thing let go, and slipped into that rest from which one cannot return.

I know everyone must struggle with seeing their home become nothing more than a house. But I stood in that deathly silent kitchen, and tired as hard as I could to imagine someone else coming to live in it, to breath life back into it. I tried and I tried and I tried. I couldn’t find anything, any reason, anything strong enough to make it spark back. I knew how its sickness and disease had spread through to the very core of its every bone, knew how it had been hobbled and coaxed along over the years. . .knew how it had trembled with slamming doors and pounding feet.

When you looked out the window, now, it would feel surreal; but everything was okay. Everything was alive. Everything was the same, everything was as it should be. But when you stood inside, you knew there was no going back, because there was nothing to go back to. What little scraps of life that had been there before had slipped away. There was no solace there anymore, nothing to miss that could ever be revisited. The tired eyes have closed.

Pleased as Punch

I like small towns.

I like tractor supply stores, shovels that come with warranties, and the jolly new wheelbarrow.

I also really like my Honda C-RV.

I really, really like it. I like that I can tell the extremely pleasant check-out guy that I do not need any assistance, and I can just wheel my barrow full of 5 gallon buckets and canning jars and shovels out to my car. I like that the grandpa in the parking lot with his new mower-belt admires my wheelbarrow. And I like that I can open my trunk, put down my back seats, and unceremoniously stuff everything in back without ever:

(a) going up on tip-toes
(b) “trying to figure things out”
(c) pretending I know what I’m doing in a parking lot full of farm people while I struggle to get the seats down
(d) cramming, finagling, re-arranging, shuffling, adjusting, pushing, lining up, trying a different angle or otherwise “making things fit”

I like that I did it all without any hesitation, even though I’d never done it before. I like that there are so many real-true farm people in the area that the cashier asks you if your tax-exempt the way other retailers ask you for your zip code or phone number. I like that I can be a go-fer for various projects of fairly large magnitude without driving a honking big pick-up that had better be able to run over other vehicles without a problem, because, who knows, I might be doing that when I park it. I like that after unloading said supplies, it takes only seconds to get the seats back up, and I can haul a car load of peoples, childrens, and other humanoids without the slightest hint I was using the vehicle for a hauling cart.

I like that I can stop on my way home from work and get not only all the needed supplies for digging out a basement, I can also get the jars for my 11 yo brother to experiment with making elderberry syrup to pour over ice cream. And I like that when I ask the helpful clerk where the canning jars are, I like that he apologizes that there aren’t many left this late in the season, even though there is still plenty for what I came for, and even though, of course there isn’t—everyone’s bought them up by now, and any ninny should expect that. Then again, maybe I look like a ninny, in my work clothes.

I like that I don’t get in trouble for buying the last two shovels on the rack, but I feel sorry for anyone else who’s in a hurry for a shovel.

I like that not only is my small town is full of ornate old houses from back when people were used to having servant-types to paint all that dang wood-work, it is also populated with “classical” cars. I think it’s almost cute that they have a “City Fire Department.” I admire the fire department, but I am still struggling to see the city. They must have hid it somewhere pretty well.

Pandora’s Box

Say you were driving along, on a brilliantly beautiful late summer afternoon. You drive in to Pennsylvania, where it’s little more than a quaint after-thought to maybe actually put up street signs to identify their roads. There are hills, covered with trees and fields, and the sun just pours over their golden greenness. The roads get narrower, and rougher, until the gravel road gives way to a wash-board dusty excuse for a travel-path. You pull over on the grassy side of the road. You get out of the car, stretching a little after the ride, and walk across the field, little butterflies flitting in front of you.

After you cross the field, you find yourself standing in front of a box.

What is in the box?

How can you tell what’s in the box? A box, after all, includes in it’s purposes hiding it’s content. Someone could tell you what was in the box, but how would you know they were right? It could be full of anything. It could even be empty.

But I will tell you one thing.

When you stand behind your cousin and watch her shaking body, you can be certain she is singing over her dead mother’s body.

Without ever opening the box.

Hometown

Caleb took a shot of this house while I was driving, and it reminded me of “The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street.”

Yesterday I dragged myself out of bed in the wee early hours of the morning, and drove off toward Town. It was light as though the sun were up, but it was such a hazy, cloudy, dense morning that you could hardly call it bright. The thickness of the weather would soon result in rain, but as of yet there wasn’t even a breeze. Everything just hung closely to the ground and staid put.

I rounded one of our large, sprawling hills, and the view opened up into the valley that contains Town. Most fittingly, there before me was a scene that made me think quite strongly of the Twilight Zone. I don’t have a picture for you, because I was on my way to take my boards examination, and quite honestly the last thing on my mind under those circumstances (weighty exam, early hours, etc) was the thought of taking along my camera in case there was something noteworthy (in the testing center. Where they make you strip off every shred of electronics, including your analog watch, and lock it away, lest somehow technology give you the answers to the universe).

Embedded in that thick haze were several of these mysterious orbs, all blue-green-grey. They weren’t moving there; they were just dispersed over the city, hanging there oppressively, waiting, watching.

After doing a few double takes, I finally realized what I was seeing. The local festival had launched it’s hot-air balloons–yes, even at such an absurdly early hour. The humid haze was muting all of their bright colors to the point they all looked something the color of little army men or split pea soup. When they lit their fires, the bright flash of light seemed no less ominous. They weren’t moving because there was no wind. So 8 or so of these balloons, strung out over the valley and looming over the city, were deprived of every ounce of festivity and instead equipped with a very foreboding the-mothership-is-here sort of feeling.

They were so low, and so still, whatever doom they were bringing seemed to be quite near. They were so much so the color of the weather, it seemed as though they were the ones responsible, settling this obscuring cover over all of the closest thing this area can call civilization. It was horribly eerie, and you couldn’t get away from it. Every time you rounded another corner, they were still there, but now even closer.

Fortunately, the rest of society was oblivious to their danger, and so we escaped without harm. Riots, hysterical screaming, looting and military crack-down were all avoided.

Probably the Town didn’t notice their impending danger because they weren’t looking at the sky, and they probably weren’t looking at the sky because it was absurdly early on a Saturday morning.

Which just goes to show you that one can avoid a lot of horrible fates if one just has the sense and good fortune to stay in bed, particularly on Saturday mornings.

Oh, Shiloh

Shiloh is a PTA at my current clinical. She is pregnant; very, very, VERY pregnant. Everyone is sure they will have to perform an emergency delivery for her. (She isn’t due till late next week.)

I have seen plenty of expectant mothers before, but Shiloh is somethin’ else. For one thing, she is all baby. If you watched her from behind, you’d never know she had a baby growing in her; if you see her from the front, she looks like she has a 50 lb watermelon attached to her front, and that it’s a wonder it doesn’t tear off from all that unsupported weight. Her baby is projected to weigh at least 10 lbs, but she seemingly has not gained weight anywhere else on her body. (Not from lack of eating bacon, I assure you! Today she was wondering if anyone would recognize her if she went through the lunch line a second time.)

Even more strikingly, she doesn’t seem tired. Oh, she says she is, but she still willingly walks up four flights of stairs, baby-belly and all. Every once in a while, she comments wonderingly that “all I want to do is sit here.” It wouldn’t be so funny if she didn’t sound like it was such a peculiar idea, all the while wrapping her arms around her belly that looks like it’s ready to explode. It’s not her first baby, so it’s not like you’d expect her to be surprised at being at least a little fatigued.

Shiloh is the kind of person you didn’t think really existed. She always looks serene, and speaks in a smooth, calm, low voice. (She assures us she can be less than serene at home.) By the end of the day when everyone is getting a little frayed around the edges (never mind women who are 9 months pregnant), when things start going wrong–she laughs. A few times I have seen her rubbing her head, but it always turns out she had a headache.

I know she’s human, but still. If I should ever carry a baby, I hope I can do it with a smidgen of the grace she’s doing it with.

Shiloh, Shiloh, Shiloh. Are the rumors I hear true? Do you go roller-bladeing out on the sidewalk with your kids?