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Boodle-ee-oop!

Claudia and I take daily walks together with rare exceptions. One such variance from this daily norm occurred just recently. Brian was building a new storage shed in his back yard and we both wanted to see the early stages of construction. Claudia however, had a few errands to run, so we split our routine; I would walk to Brian’s house and she would run her errands and walk over to meet me later that morning. At about the time I had expected her to arrive, my phone jangles; guess who?

“I’m on my way over, walking down Winton Avenue now, ” she says somewhat breathlessly, “and I’m having some problems – I need some help…”

I leapt from my observation chair in a mild adrenalin rush, thinking something bad was happening, prepared to rush to her aid.

“There’s something wrong with my iPhone music!” Her tone of voice sounded as if her ankles might have been under attack by an untethered shih tzu. “It won’t play a song without skipping to the next one.”

“Uhh,” as I retreated back to my observation post, “I’ll check it out when you get here and see what the problem might be.”

“No, I want to fix it now so I can listen to my music without interruption!” she demanded.

“What seems to be the problem?” I asked in conditioned submission.

“Well, it was playing a Barbara Streisand song, then boodle-ee-oop and it jumped to Alan Jackson.”

Doesn’t sound like a problem to me, I think to myself. “Okay, kill the iTunes app, start it fresh and see if that solves the problem.” This was clearly a delay tactic that would keep her busy until she arrived. The carpenter was about to raise a wall section and I did not want to miss anything while trying to trouble shoot iTunes problems over the iPhone.

“It didn’t work! The first song I tried went boodle-ee-oop and jumped to the next song. I’m almost there anyway, so you can look at it when I get there,” she frustratingly reported.

A few minutes later the iPhone is in my face. “Here! See if you can fix it!”

So, I fired up iTunes on her iPhone and suffered through an uninterrupted Barbara Striesand song, then Liza Minnelli followed by some more Barbara; nary a  boodle-ee-oop. I shrugged my shoulders and sheepishly returned the device to my wife.

“I supposed it worked for you…”

“Yes.”

And here it comes, the rhetorical question of the day. “How come it worked for you, but not for me?”

Trying to keep my sometimes sarcastic self reined in, I respond with a series of IT type trouble-shooting questions to at least try to come up with an answer:

“Did you maybe drop it this morning?” “No!”

“Did you perhaps drop something on it?” “NO!”

“How were you carrying your phone when you first noticed the problem?”

Her frustration was beginning to flow like a slowly rising tide. “I carried it in my pocket, and when it boodle-ee-ooped, I took it out and held it by the edges like this!” And she kind of shook it at me.

Ahh, finally making some headway. “Were you carrying it in your hip pocket by any chance?”

“Yes, and that’s when it first boodle-ee-ooped.”

And then my epiphany. I had a vision of my sweet little girlfriend, briskly strutting down Winton Avenue, listening to the peppy beats of Barbara, picking up the pace, shaking those hips just enough to – BOODLE-EE-OOP! Next it’s Alan Jackson – BOODLE-EE-OOP! Next comes Brad Paisley and she yanks her iPhone out of her hip pocket and gives it a little inquisitive what’s-wrong-with-you shake. BOODLE-EE-OOP, back to Barbara.

“Let me see your phone, I think I know the cause of your problem.”

Let’s see now. Settings. Music. Shake to Shuffle. Green. On. EUREKA! I change it to off. Problem solved.

“Fixed your iPhone!” I declared, in the same manner as Clark Griswold had proclaimed that he had fixed the newel post.

Claudia is naive, to say the least, when dealing with any electronic device (other than her sewing machine), and she was so grateful I think I might have been able to have my way with her right then and there in Brian’s storage shed; if it had been finished and no one else was around.

“Oh, thank you so much! How did you fix it?” she cooed.

“It was easy,” I smugly replied. “I just went to your iPhone settings and set the shake-your-ass-to-shuffle to off.”

“Huh?”

“Now you can shake that little bum as much as you like and boodle-ee-oop no more!”

By then the carpenter was raising the second wall section.

Vera’s Pledge

When Claudia answered the phone call from her mother this afternoon, my ninety year old mother-in-law asked to speak to me – somewhat of a rarity. I was expecting her to ask me to come and set her clock, or perhaps adjust the volume on her phone, or maybe her television needed some attention. Instead, she asked me to listen as she recited The Pledge of Allegiance.

Vera was a little nervous because she had been asked to open the Veterans Day program at the assisted living facility where she lives. She is a veteran who served our country in the Navy WAVES (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service) during World War II, and she had received the honor of reciting The Pledge of Allegiance. She was a little rusty, she said, and wanted to practice to make sure she had it right. I switched the phone to “speaker”. Claudia and I listened together and savored the moment.

“I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America,” she began. Her voice was soft, child-like, reverent. It crackled sometimes as she struggled to remember the words, and there was a slight tinge of patriotic emotion laced throughout. I could very easily have been listening to one of my grandchildren proudly reciting “The Pledge” for the first time.

“And to the republic for which it stands,” she continued after a short pause to clear her throat. I recalled how she had more than once told us about reading the roster of names of men who had died at Iwo Jima as this list was being reported at the office where she was working. She could never tell the story without weeping.

“One nation under God, indivisible, with Liberty and Justice for all,” she concluded. And as I praised her for her success, I once again felt as if I my attention could have just as easily been directed to one of our grandchildren; her great grandchildren.

“You know,” she coyly asserted, “the program starts next Monday at 10:00 A.M., and I’m not sure but I think it is open to guests.”

“We’ll be there,” I replied, “and I’ll be sure to sit up front in case you forget your lines.”

She didn’t think she would need any help, but she would be glad to see us there.

On this coming Veterans Day, please take a moment to remember our veterans. Feel free to tell them that you are grateful for their service if you get the chance; and it’s okay to give them a hug too, but be careful hugging the WWII vets. Some of them are starting to get a little frail nowadays – still feisty none the less.

Vera-MothersDay-2011

November 7, 2013

Smile and Wave

I smiled and waved to an old friend today – probably for the last time. Leo has been our across-the-street neighbor and friend for about twenty years. He has been sick for several months now, and most likely will die within the next few days. I was hesitant about going to visit him at the hospital. I was afraid to see him in the emaciated state that I had envisioned. I was even more afraid of what to say, how to talk, to a man who knows he is dying. There was nothing I could say to make him feel better. My best friend insisted that we go in spite of my reluctance.

We had to wait in the hallway for a while before finally entering his room, long enough for the scaredy-cat lurking within me to nearly convince me to abandon this effort and retreat to the elevator. When we finally did enter the room, there lay a man who looked nothing like the man I had known, beyond my worst expectations.

Claudia is so sweet, and bold. I had failed to consider how she must be feeling. As her sorrowful courage glistened in her eyes, and her tremulous voice sought to stir some conversation, I found myself trying to hide behind her like a troublesome child hiding behind his mother who has been summoned before the school principal to discuss some misdemeanor: And as I hid there, I began to think about this man during better times.

Leo is a good fellow. He has lived alone and has pretty much kept to himself, but his house has always been open to friends, neighbors, and the race fans who parked in his yard during the month of May. He has never locked his door. He has made thousands of candles and given most of them away. The fragrances that he added to the melting wax often drifted across the street and wisped through our open windows. Every December we have received the gift of a Christmas tree candle; sometimes he has made extras for our kids. He kept an eye on our house whenever we went out of town, and held our mail and newspapers until we returned.

Several years ago; I looked out my window and saw Leo lying prone on his driveway. Thinking there might be something wrong, I hustled across the street and discovered that he was using a screwdriver to clean some weeds out of the cracks in his driveway. It seemed a bit odd to me, but I squelched my sarcastic wonder with some ho-hum conversation. A few days later Leo was once again lying on the hard concrete of his driveway. This time he was using a narrow paint brush to apply a coat of protective sealant on the freshly filled cracks, and the entire driveway as well. I couldn’t let this pass without comment.

“Leo,” I said somewhat sardonically, “I think you need a bigger brush!”

“I know,” he replied, “but Coach Hinkle taught me that sometimes it’s better to take your time and think things through to avoid making mistakes and doing a poor job.”

That’s right. Leo played basketball at Butler University under the coaching tutelage of one of the greatest basketball coaching legends of all time, Tony Hinkle. Leo played in the old Butler Fieldhouse; known since 1966 as the Hinkle Fieldhouse, featured in one of the best movies of all times – Hoosiers (makes me want to watch that movie one more time). Furthermore, Leo has used his natural basketball skills and playing experience to coach boys in amateur leagues, some from low income families, some who earned college scholarships, some who went on to play professionally. I wiped the silly smirk off my face and went back across the street where I belonged.

“You know what Leo means?” he asked me one time.

“It means Love Each Other!” he replied to my shrug…

And then I realized the room was silent. I was still hiding behind my wife. It was time for me to overcome my cowardice and say something. “You’re a good man Leo, and you’ve done a lot of good things for a lot of people!” I managed to croak out.

“Yeah,” says Leo, “and I helped you cut your finger off too!”

It was Leo’s driveway I was clearing the snow from the day I stuck my hand in the snow blower. I think he was joking. It certainly had not been his fault. He hadn’t known what happened until several days after that memorable event. Maybe he was just getting even for my questioning his use of a two inch paintbrush to paint his driveway.

Silence again, a signal that it was time to leave. I didn’t want to say “good-bye”, couldn’t say “see you later” or “see you around”. During that awkward silence I thought of all the times we had done what most friends and neighbors often do when offering a hasty silent salutation when coming or going.

I smiled and waved.

August 21, 2013

A Legacy of Bolts, Nuts, and Screws

While installing a new ceiling fan yesterday, I found the need for a specifically sized screw and thread type. No problem, I thought. I’ll just go to the basement and dig through the jar labeled “Machine Screws”. I lumbered down two flights of stairs, found the jar and opened the lid.

Several months ago Claudia and I assumed ownership of the Ryden house where she and her brothers grew up on Fisher Avenue. Since then, we have been working like a pair of robins building their nest for their first spring brood. It started with sorting through things left behind; disposing of some and keeping others as deemed appropriate. Then there came the washing and cleaning, the preparation for painting of each room, stripping off old wallpaper, pulling up carpet. Then painting, painting, and more painting. Several times during our refurbishment activities, like the nest-building robin that searches for that perfect piece of straw or grass, I have made the trip to the basement in search of a needed bolt, nut or screw.

Ed Ryden was a meticulous organizer. It was one of his many endearing traits that is often reflected upon by most people who knew him – especially his family. For example:  Ed maintained ledgers of all his expenses  dating back to the 1950’s. Boxes in the attic were labeled with their contents, an index for each box was listed on the back of the attic doors (there are four attic storage spaces in this house). Sections of quarter-round wood trim that had been saved when Ed and Vera had the hardwood floors carpeted decades ago were neatly stored in the basement; each piece was labeled with its original location on each wall. On each wall outlet cover were tiny labels with its corresponding circuit breaker switch number.

 And then there were the nuts, bolts and screws. In the basement are many jars containing screws. Machine screws, wood screws. Flat head, round head, pan head screws. Eye screws, drywall screws. Slotted, Phillips, torx screws. There are also jars containing nuts, bolts, nails, springs, hinges, wall mollies. And of course, miscellaneous. Each jar has been appropriately labeled.

I have made several trips to the shelf where the “screw jars” are stored. Some of those trips were following Ed down the steps when he was still here, and although he has been gone for a while I felt as if I was following him now.  Finding the right jar, dumping the contents on the work bench, sorting through the screws while searching for the right one; and having found the needed screw, gathering  its kin from the bench surface and returning them to the jar.

It didn’t take long to find the needed screw. While tightening the lid back on the jar, I decided that I could at least try to continue this legacy of bolts, nuts and screws. Need one, take it out. Find one, put it in – the proper jar.

As I lumbered back up those two flights of stairs, it occurred to me:  I don’t believe that anyone could ever fill another’s shoes, but I do think that another’s footsteps can be followed. During these past few months  I have felt as if I have been following Ed’s footsteps around this house from time to time; whether it be mowing the lawn, setting out the trash for weekly pickup, bagging yard waste, or sifting through the “screw jars”.  And my shoes have felt pretty comfortable when that happens.

Remembering Ed Ryden: 7/29/1922 – 5/25/2006                                                 5/25/2013

Bad Dove – August 1, 2010

We decided to take Alyvia to the park today. On the way, just as we were passing St. Christopher Catholic Church, a mourning dove sitting on a phone line crapped on Grammy’s head. This resulted in an abrupt turn-around and a long walk back home. The cooing miscreant was sitting on the line just above the edge of the church property, so we could not determine whether or not it was a Holy Sh*t (and Grammy almost said those very words).

Regardless of the sanctity of the air-borne, but peaceful delivery, we would still have to have gone back home.

She’s in the shower now as I share this with the world.
God does have a sense of humor.

Waiting for the Bucket to Fall

“Come on pop-paw,” Rachel said, taking my hand. “I want to go see Grandma Gwen.”
I closed the Elmo book we had been reading and pitched it on the bookshelf. Rachel tugged me out of the little play area, down the hallway, through the funeral parlor past small groups of murmuring, closely huddled kin; to the side of the casket where her grandmother lay.
Rachel’s face took on a soft angelic glow. A slight Mona Lisa like smile creased her lips as her eyes began to peruse her still grandmother. Her hair. Her face. Her jewelry. The position  of her hands … I watched and wondered what this little girl might be thinking.
I was nearly five years old when my great grandpa died. My memory of him is as vague as my granddaughters’ whisperings can sometimes be. I do remember being lifted to see him in the casket; not understanding why he lay so still. I recall the cemetery afterwards, the large heap of flowers on his grave. I kept looking for his head, thinking that it must be somewhere amid the flowers.
“Where is he?” I asked.
“Under the flowers,” a voice replied.
Someone had said that he was going to heaven, a place that was higher than the clouds. I wondered how he would get there. Maybe a bucket tied to a rope would fall from the sky. Then he would come from under the flowers, climb into the bucket and be lifted away. I began to search the sky, looking for the bucket. When it was time to go, I was still waiting for the bucket to fall.
“I want to hug Grandma Gwen.” Rachel’s voice pulled me back to my place next to her.
I felt awkward. “Maybe tomorrow, when it is time to tell her good-bye you can  give her a hug.”
She grasped my hand. I was expecting her to plead, “May I give her a hug?”
Instead, “Come on pop-paw, I want to go back to the toy room.”
While in my mind I am still waiting for the bucket to fall, I think this little girl has the best attitude of us all.

You must fart

Just got back from having a colonoscopy done. It really was not that bad, and the nice thing is they actually enourage you to fart – big time!
“Are you feeling okay?” the nurse inquired as the fog slowly lifted from my awareness.
“I think so,” I groggily replied.
“Okay, Mr. Lash,” the nurse sing-songingly advised, “we need one more little thing before you can leave. Actually it’s kind of big. We need for you to pass a really big fart to get rid of all the air that is still bloating your colon.”
I was beginning to like this nurse. “I will get to work on that right away.”
“Any luck yet?” the nursed asked a few minutes later as she peeped around the curtain.
“Not yet!” I wasn’t quite ready to let go because by now I assumed I was drawing an audience and stage fright was starting to set in. Claudia was keeping vigil by my bed, and I seldom fart in my wife’s presence; only in my sleep at night.
“Well, you must fart. We can’t let you leave until you give us a big fart.”
Shortly afterwards it came. It was huge, and I provided some additional abdominal impetous that shook the curtain surrounding my bed.
“I heard that!” the voice proclaimed from outside the curtain. “Sounds like you got rid of quite a lot of air. Now, we need at least one more like that, and then we can let you get out of here. The bond between the nurse and I was growing.
Soon, another thunderous rectal belch. I swear I could feel air being drawn from my eye sockets.
“I think we can let you go now, and I will personally take you to your car as soon as you are dressed and ready to go!” came the voice outstide the curtain for the final time. She looked kind of proud as she swept the curtain asside and positioned the wheel chair for the ride. I think she was actually humming a happy tune to herself on the way out.
As she helped me out of the chair and into my car, there were these last words of instructions:
“You may not drive a car, or operate any kind of machinery, sign any important document for the reaminder of the day, or indulge in any activity that may be physically strenuous.”
“Can I fart some more?”
“Fart as much as you like, Honey!” she said as she  spun the chair around and headed back to repeat the same procedure with the next lucky guy.
I’m still kind of groggy. I have forgotten what the nurse looked like, but I think I love her!
I have been asked to leave places for having farted, but this was the first time that I was being held hostage until I blew one – a really big one.

The tweens

About and hour after I have changed my mother’s catheter bag, I am placing my granddaughter on our Dora the Explorer toilet seat insert for the big potty. While Rachel and I wait for the Tinkle Fairy to visit, it suddenly occurs to me that at this point in my life I am dealing with both ends of the spectrum in my service to members of my family – between the very old and the very young. I am a tween.

A tween…? I don’t know where that word came from. It just popped in. It sounds kind of nice. It’s also exciting to think that perhaps I have come up with a neologism that would succinctly describe a boomer who is between the greatest generation and the yet to be tagged generation of my grandchildren. But my joy is short lived because, when having come back to my senses, I realize that I have heard the word tween before.

A tween is most commonly used nowadays to refer to children who are in the preadolescence stage of their lives; somewhere between the ages of 8 and 12. I passed that stage a little over 47 years ago.
A tween could be a hobbit between the ages of 20 and 32. I passed that stage about 27 years ago; but my ears didn’t start getting shaggy until around age 50.
A tween could be used to describe merely ordinary geniuses  – according to science fiction author Mark Clifton, Star Bright – hardy, har, har, har!…
A tweener falls somewhere between Generation X and Boomers. I’m a boomer; so I can’t be a tweener.

Hmmm… As soon as the Tinkle Fairy has come and gone, I think I’ll strap on my iPod, grab my cell, and text message a few friends and get their opinions on this.

lol

My kind of ride

This past weekend Claudia and I accompanied Rachel and her Mom & Dad on a trip to Holiday World; a not so quaint amusement park located in southern Indiana. One of the first things we discovered was that the three and one-half year old primary reason for going had grown about four inches in the past year. Last year, Rachel was about three inches shy of passing the “you must be this tall to ride” benchmark for stepping over the threshhold into the world of some adult rides – with an adult. This year the top of her pretty little head was a whole inch above the mark.

After a warm up ride on the merry-go-round, Rachel was ready for the big time stuff. So, she, her mom, and Grammy headed for the Spider ride. This thing looked like a giant Starfish with little spinning buckets mounted atop the end of each tentacle – and spin it did. Rachel gasped for breath, Mom squealed, and Grammy turned cadaverous. When the ride was over, Rachel said “Let’s do it again!” as Grammy made a bee-line for the Ladie’s room while trying to hold down her Hostess Crumb Cakes from breakfast. Fortunately, Grammy did manage to keep everything down; but she was also done as far as the rides were concerned – and she used to be quite the amusement park rider too.

Rachel rode just about everything allowable on the adult rides that day, and she always came off saying the same thing: “Let’s do it again!” She had a great time. She even enjoyed riding the shuttle bus that carried us to and from our place of lodging.

The next morning, as we were just kind of relaxing at the old camp site, Rachel asked me to take a walk – with her on my shoulders – another one of her favorite rides.
“I want to ride the bus!” she says from somewhere above my head.
“Okay, we can ride that to the park.”
“I want to ride the merry-go-round!”
“I’m sure you will get to ride the merry-go-round.”
“I want to ride the roller coaster!”
“Your mother was right. I think we have created some sort of little monster.”

“Tell me Rachel, what is your favorite ride?”

“I want to ride in Pop-paw’s car!”

“Now… that’s my kind of ride Boo-boo,” I replied while trying to catch my breath.