Family Funtime

Daisytown Homecoming

Deems Park Road

There’s a story here. There always is after visiting Deborah’s hometown — if you can call it a town — but I’m not sure I’m ready to get into it just yet. I will say that things were a lot quieter without Deborah’s mom around. That’s not to say she wasn’t still a looming presence, however, as Deborah’s dad, Elmer, made sure to vocalize what he saw as his wife’s needs and wants. While Deborah cooked Christmas dinner for the first time in her mother’s kitchen, Elmer was right there as Barbara’s representative. “You’re mother never did it that way…”

Barbara never taught Deborah how to cook — she barely allowed Deborah in the kitchen, let alone allowed her to touch anything. Deborah had to hunt around for cookware, and take a few minutes to figure out how to use the electric oven. For the most part, she ignored “how her mother used to do it” and made dinner her own way. It turned out perfectly.

“I didn’t expect you to be able to cook so good,” said Elmer as he cleaned his plate. He hadn’t eaten a home cooked meal in months. “I’m not saying I thought you’d be bad or anything, just not this good.”

“I can do a lot of things, Dad.”

“You never did any cooking.”

“Mom never let me.”

“When did you start?”

“After Jamie and I got married,” she said. “When I was single, I never wanted to cook big meals for just myself. I ate out a lot, or just heated things from a can. I was living the wild single life. You know how it is, Dad.”

“Yeah,” he said and chuckled.

Daisytown Horse

Cemetery

Deborah, Cemetery

Hey, Dollface

Doll Face

As has become the custom in recent years, my family met at my sister’s house in scenic Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania for Thanksgiving dinner. Aside from rare quality time with my family, a highlight of any visit to my sisters house is poking around to see what my sister’s de-facto husband Dan has been up to lately.

“Folk Art” and “Outsider Art” are terms the art world attaches to work created by people who lack two things: money and ambition and although Dan lacks both, I’m not sure either term applies. He’s not eccentric enough to qualify as an “Outsider” and his work isn’t utilitarian enough to be considered true “Folk Art” so let’s just call Dan an artist, and leave it at that.

Barge Door

Basement Shelf

He makes things out of broken machinery, old bicycles, cloudy lenses, rusty springs and whatever else he finds while rummaging through life. When he saw me taking pictures of his various paintings and sculptures, he pulled me aside and took me to the basement. No disrespect to Dan, or what he makes out of what he finds, but his workshop is as interesting as his art. Looking around, it’s hard to tell what anything is. “Is that a tool? Is it a work in progress? Is it an unmolested turn-of-the-century widget?” Very often whatever you pick up is a carcass of something Dan made, then took apart again. “It used to be a bird, but I needed those springs for the motorcycle over there.”

Rusty Car Sculpture

He makes a lot of partially functional vehicles. That is, vehicles that often (but not always) roll and usually have something on them that if you push or pull or wind, will do something, although none are rideable in any practical sense. You’d never know it to hear — or better yet, see — Dan explain them, however. It’s easy to get caught up in his vivid descriptions and imagine these rusty jalopies puttering down the street, spitting oil and coughing smoke. If nowhere else, at least in a parade.

Porch

The backyard, too, is filled with rusty curiosities getting rustier. Jasper, my sister’s three-legged dog, followed us outside to smell a collection of sculptures I’m sure he’s smelled a thousand time before. Dan reached down and scratched Jasper behind the ear, on the side of his missing hind leg, and Jasper’s eyes rolled back in ecstasy.

“Did you take any pictures of the porch?” Dan asked.

Jasper sensed we were about to go back inside and rushed to take a quick piss. We waited for him to lift his stump and relieve himself then headed to the other side of the house.

“This is my favorite place in the world,” said Dan.

Jim Thorpe

The next day we walked into town and Dan showed me a storefront in a historic stone building that he considered renting. It was a well-lit gallery space, about 500 square feet, with an equal size room in back. In the end, Dan didn’t think he could cover the rent selling his creations to tourists and he let the opportunity pass. The space was subsequently rented and now housed a smelly soap gift shop. Dan and I stood outside on the street while Deborah lingered inside the store.

The rent was 500 bucks. After looking at storefronts in New York with Deborah when she was thinking of opening a jewelry store, 500 dollars sounded like a bargain. “You don’t think you could cover that nut?” I asked Dan.

“Not without cranking out a bunch of cheap little knick-knacks to sell. Nobody spends a couple of hundred bucks on sculptures around here.”

“I see your point.” I said. “But, I don’t know, the stores here are nice enough, but there’s nothing here you would’t find in any other tourist town. I think you could create a really unique vibe.”

“I’m one hundred percent sure I could make an interesting space, and that people would definitely poke in to have a look, but I’m not convinced they’d buy what I’m selling.”

“Maybe you could paint little local landscapes. Those sell, don’t they?”

“Yeah, I suppose.”

“I’m always bewildered by how gift shops like this one thrive. It seems that no matter what else there is to see or do in any given artsy fartsy tourist town, women will always buy smelly stuff.”

Just then, Deborah stepped out of the store carrying a paper bag. She stopped on the sidewalk, unrolled the bag, put it up to her nose and sniffed. “I bought a soap,” she said.

Wooden Bird

Deborah’s Shitty Summer

I asked Deborah what I should title this post. She said, “Deborah’s shitty summer.” So here we go:

Deborah’s Shitty Summer
or
The Lost Art of The Long Post

w hotel

With barely any work over the previous three months, even just one night at the Standard Hotel in Manhattan was quite an extravagance, but Deborah had just returned from an emotional trip to western Pennsylvania to visit her ailing mother, Barbara, and was already making plans for another one. She hadn’t slept in days and I wanted to splurge on a special distraction for her birthday.

Deborah did her best to enjoy the night, which included dinner at the Standard Grill, and a brief bout of exhibitionism in front of the floor to ceiling windows overlooking the High Line Park – despite, or perhaps because of, the letter on the designer coffee table which read, in part:

Dear Guest,

As a reminder, please be aware of the transparency of our guest room windows and that activity in your room, when the curtains are open may be visible from the outside. We appreciate your consideration of the patrons of the High Line public park and surrounding neighborhood below.

I barely had time to finish reciting the note before Deborah stripped and stood at the window, several stories above the oblivious park goers strolling along the boardwalk.

Standard Window

We had a good laugh and then shared a long, hot soak in the oversized bathtub, but Deborah’s concern over her mother’s health kept her a tightly tangled slinky of stress which prevented either of us from enjoying it much.

“I hope I can sleep,” she said.

She didn’t.

Although Deborah’s childhood wasn’t exactly a happy one and, after leaving home, she often went years without speaking to her parents, she had come to accept, if not forgive, events of the past, and had reconciled with them to the point where she was calling them every at Sunday at 5 o’clock and signing off with kisses. A strict weekly phone schedule was necessary because when their phone rang unexpectedly, her mom and dad rarely answered it. In the days before Deborah came up with the idea of calling at a specific time every week, she used to have to call her cousin, who lives next door to her parents, and ask if someone could walk over to tell Deborah’s mom and dad that she was trying to reach them.

A couple of weeks before her birthday, Deborah’s father, Elmer, said that her mother was too sick to come to the phone. Deborah was concerned. Elmer was concerned too, but her mother –– who was borderline agoraphobic and rarely left the house –– refused to go to the doctor, choosing instead to continue treating her self-diagnosed intestinal problems with a regimen of vitamins and herbal supplements bought over the phone from a radio program she listened to religiously.

As soon as Deborah got off the phone, she left a message with her cousin asking that someone check in on her mom. The report came back: “She looks like a skeleton.”

Deborah booked a flight immediately. She doesn’t have a driver’s license — as teenager, she was never allowed to drive, and the license she got while living in LA expired shortly after she moved back to New York— and she didn’t want her father to drive to the Pittsburgh airport to get her (not that he would’ve agreed to, anyway) so there was a lot of juggling before she was able to arrange a ride from a childhood friend who still lived in the area.

Living Room

When Deborah finally arrived at her parent’s house and saw her mom, she was stunned at how much weight she had lost. Her mother mustered the energy to put on a semi-convincing show that led Deborah to believe — or rather hope — that the worst was over and she was on the mend. Deborah wasn’t convinced enough not to insist her mother still get checked out by a doctor.

“No, no, no,” her mother said, she knew what was wrong and it was only a matter of time before she was back to her old self. In fact, she was already feeling much better. The cabinets and counters were littered with pills and powdered concoctions that were doing all that needed to be done. “No doctors!”

Deborah was exasperated, but her screaming was no match for her mother’s stubbornness. “You never did what I wanted you to do,” her mother said. (Deborah had never become a schoolteacher or married the preacher’s son, for instance.) “Why should I do what you want me to do?”

Deborah left after a few days, exasperated but already planning to return with me — and our car. “We’ll drag her ass if we have to.” In the meantime, she made hit-or-miss attempts to call her parents more often. During one such call, Deborah learned that her mother’s condition had deteriorated to the point where she finally needed to go to the Emergency Room.

But there was a problem.

Barbara and Elmer own two schitzu dogs they keep on a short leash — literally. They are loud, smelly and annoying dogs with a lot of nervous energy. Everyone in the family — Deborah’s brother, her cousins, her aunts and uncles — would love to see them driven far away and left at the side of the road, or better yet, driven off a cliff, but Deborah sees her own childhood reflected in the repressed lives of the dogs, and she often finds herself defending them. “The dogs would be just fine if my parents weren’t crazy.”

The problem was that neither Barbara nor Elmer wanted to leave the dogs alone, even for a few hours.

“Would you forget about the fucking dogs for a minute and get mom to the hospital,” said Deborah. “The dogs will be fine.”

“No, no, they’ll get into everything. The go into my room and chew on my socks. They’ll get germs.”

“Put them in the basement.”

“They’ll get into the sump and get eli coli.”

“Put them in a kennel.”

“No no, it’s too expensive and those places don’t do what we tell them to do.”

James, Deborah’s cousin-in-law, who lives next door and does a lot of work fixing things for Barbara and Elmer, offered to check in on the dogs while they went to the hospital, but just “checking in” wasn’t good enough. They needed someone they could trust to stay with the dogs at all times. The problem with that, of course, was that there was no such thing as “someone they trust.”

It was finally determined that Deborah’s uncle, Alex, a former D.C. cop and Marine, who lives in a neighboring town, would be recruited for the task. Although he has Parkinson’s and is the first to admit his limitations, Barbara still thinks of him as the big, strong guy she grew up with and is one of the few people she thinks can “handle the dogs.” Alex agreed to sit in the basement with the dogs, watching TV and eating Double Quarter Pounders that he’d pick up on his way to the house. By the time it was settled, however, Barbara decided she needed one more day to mentally prepare.

“Deborah,

As Barbara spent the night mentally preparing to go to the hospital, Deborah spent a sleepless night watching lightening illuminate the skies over lower Manhattan through the window of the Standard Hotel.

In a cab on our way home, we learned Barbara was scheduled for emergency surgery. Apparently it took no time at all for a doctor to diagnose a cancerous tumor.

“You must’ve been bleeding for a long time,” the doctor said to Barbara as he examined her.

“I thought I had hemorrhoids.”

“Well, you misdiagnosed yourself.”

So much for catching it early.

Spongebob

Deborah and I walked in the door of our apartment, stuffed a weeks worth of clothes into a couple of suitcases, caught a few hours sleep and sped nearly 400 miles to Monongahela Valley Hospital. By the time we arrived, Barbara was recovering in the ICU.

Deborah’s brother, a Sergeant Major in the Army, had flown in from Colorado ahead of us, and was standing outside the hospital. “Is that my brother?” Deborah said as we approached. They hadn’t seen each other in years, but she recognized the uniform.

“You might want to take a minute to prepare yourselves before you go up there,” he warned us.

The diagnosis wasn’t good. Although the doctor’s plan was to open Barbara up and remove a tumor, the cancer turned out to be so far advanced that all he could do was give her a colostomy and sew her back up again. Even with chemo or radiation he gave her six months at best.

Rice House

“Honestly, I came prepared for a funeral,” said Mark, as he and I took a break in the visitor’s lounge.

I admitted that I had packed a black suit just in case.

His eyes reflected the same conflicted emotions that Deborah’s did.

“Sometimes I remember my childhood and think, Did that really happen? Was that really my life?”

Barbara wanted privacy while the nurse burped her colostomy bag and so Deborah left her mom’s bedside to join us in the lounge.

“What are you guys talking about?”

“Our childhood,” said Mark.

“Ugh.”

Deborah doesn’t like to talk about her childhood much, and they reminisced about things I’d never heard about before.

Some of the punishments their mom came up with were truly bizarre. “What did she do that for?”

“Who knows? Some sin or another,” said Deborah.

“Whatever,” Mark shrugged, “I don’t think any of it had much effect on me in the long run.”

“It had an effect on me,” said Deborah. “That’s for fucking sure.”

Stuck in time

Mark left the following day, while Deborah and I booked a room and stayed through the week. Despite the cost, Deborah insisted we stay at a nearby motel. “I can’t sleep at my parent’s house.”

Deborah’s parents built their house in 1965 and it hadn’t changed much in all the years since, other than to fill up with knick-knacks purchased from the Home Shopping Network. Who knows the last time anything had been painted. The formerly white walls are a papery gray, and the doors are mostly bare wood with a few chips of paint. That’s not to say things aren’t clean. Barbara was a germophobe and kept the house disinfected by obsessively scrubbing everything down with bleach and boiled water, but all the cleaning hasn’t prevented things from slowly disintegrating with age. The off-white curtains used to be a bright yellow — though at least they were in one piece, unlike those of Deborah’s granddad who, as the story goes, used to cut small squares out of his curtains — the part that hung behind the couch so his wife wouldn’t notice — and use them to wad up his chewing tobacco. The only thing remotely new is the sliding glass door leading to the sprawling field behind the house and that’s because no one is allowed to use it. Barbara used to open and close the door for Elmer when he walked the dogs, but somewhere along the way she decided she wouldn’t even allow herself to touch it.

A beautiful Baldwin organ in pristine condition maintains a prominent place in the living room. “First we got Mark, then we got the organ, and then we got Deborah,” says Elmer when he recites the chronology of his life, seeming to give the organ as much significance as Mark and Deborah’s adoptions. The organ hasn’t worked in at least thirty years and its only use now is as a place to display Holiday greeting cards.

It’s not that Barbara and Elmer aren’t aware of their home’s inertia. Elmer told us that as they walked out the door on their way to the Emergency Room, Barbara took a look around and said, “I never did get new curtains.”

Dogs

We went to the hospital everyday, stopping first to get Elmer. I’m not a psychologist, so my diagnosis means nothing, but at times I’ve thought that Elmer suffers from ADD. Other times I think he’s OCD. Occasionally I think he’s bi-polar, or maybe even suffers from schizoaffective disorder. He himself claims to have Alzheimer’s. Whatever the case may be, one thing’s for certain, he’s a flibbertigibbet. Under the circumstances, it wouldn’t be surprising for Elmer to be completely out of his gourd, but since Mark had somehow managed to get him a prescription for anxiety meds, he was simply his usual distressed and frantic self. “I wanted Barbara to be around for the Rapture,” he kept telling us. “But I don’t think that’s going to happen. I mean, it could still happen. No one knows when it will happen. It could happen and moment. No one knows. Only God knows. It’s going to happen soon, I know that, but maybe not before Barbara gets called home. I always planned to be with Barbara for the Rapture and we would go up together. When the world was going to end in 2000, I never left your mother’s side. I wanted to grab onto her hand as she rode up to Heaven.”

During our stay, I took Elmer on a few errands by myself — each one and adventure all its own — giving Deborah time to sit alone with her mother who, despite regular shots of morphine, was actually quite lucid. She told Deborah that, Rapture or no Rapture, she feared she wouldn’t make it to heaven at all.

“I was a toughie,” she said.

Although she didn’t go so far as to apologize to Deborah for any of the cruel and rather creative punishments she concocted, hearing her mother admit she’d been “a toughie” was a breakthrough.

Leopard statue

We went food shopping so Elmer would be well stocked before we left. He and Barbara helped us work up a list. I have to admit I was more than a little annoyed when I discovered that half the stuff we bought was for the dogs – tuna fish, peanut butter, cheese. We bought more than they asked for and as we unpacked the bags, we showed Elmer the canned food we bought. “I can’t bother with that,” he said. “You’re mother doesn’t like me to mess with the stove.”

“Well, look, we got you some canned ravioli,” said Deborah. “You can eat it cold if you want to.”

He picked up the can and looked at the label. “Oh, we got this once,” he said. “But it gives the dogs diarrhea.”

Daisytown Barn

At the end of the week, we drove back to New York, exhausted. Deborah was on the phone every day — with her mother to say I love you, with her father to reassure him as best she could, with her brother and his wife to discuss all the possible scenarios for the future, with nurses to get updates on her mother’s condition, and with a variety of social workers who were supposed to help navigate the tangled mess of what to do next.

Her mother would have to leave the hospital soon, but no one could figure out where she would go. Their insurance plan was very limited. When they first hit the age of eligibility, instead of choosing a Medicare plan that would have covered everything, they insisted on a PPO plan that offered less coverage in exchange for allowing them to choose their own doctor — never mind that they didn’t have two pennies to rub together or that they never went to see any doctors, anyway. Barbara wanted to be home with the dogs, but doubted Elmer could take care of her. Elmer wanted Barbara home, too, but also knew it was way beyond the scope of his abilities. He was a nearly unintelligible ball of stress as it was.

Mark phoned to say that one of the social workers refused to continue working with Deborah. Apparently Deborah had offended him with her swearing.

“She’s far too emotional for me to deal with her,” the social worker said.

Mark told Deborah that he and his wife would take over the task of finding a place for their mother to go, and sure enough, for the bargain price of $1600.00 a month, they did. But the nursing home required payment up front and no one was there to write a check. After some negotiating, they made a rare exception to take Barbara in on Mark’s word that a check was in the mail.

The relief was short-lived. Barbara wasn’t happy with her new digs. There was no air conditioning, and no TV. When a TV was located and rolled into her room, it came without a remote control. Barbara was ready to call it quits. “I just want to go home.”

Brooklyn Hurricane

I picked up a couple of days work, finally, while Deborah made plans to return to Pennsylvania. Hurricane Irene was lumbering up the coast, however, and getting anywhere wasn’t going to be easy. “Just hunker down here with me in New York until the hurricane passes,” I said. “The last thing you want to do is get stuck at the airport, or worse, a bus station.”

She felt helpless, but with the hurricane looming, there was little to do but wait. Airports were closing, busses and subways were shutting down. We stocked up on water and peanut butter and spent the day before the storm moving anything of value away from our loft’s big windows. The storm came and went like a giant scrubber, as if we passed through a giant automatic car wash. The sun came out to dry us off. “I hope it’s not expecting a tip.”

Rainy Brooklyn

Back at work on Monday morning, as if nothing happened, I got a call from a woman at the nursing home. “Mrs. Rice has passed away,” they said. I wondered why they were calling me, or where they got my number. They didn’t even know who I was.

“Her husband is taking it really hard. He collapsed. We literally had to pick him up off the floor,” she said, “He’s hysterical and we can’t have him here, is there someone who can come get him?”

“Have you spoken to Deborah or Mark?” I said.

“We spoke to Mark,” she said. (I imagine Deborah’s name probably still had a big red mark next to it.) “Who are you?”

“I’m Deborah’s husband.”

“Oh, okay, well perhaps you can get a hold of Deborah. Someone really needs to take care of Elmer.”

Deborah called me a moment later, crying.

“My mom died.”

She heard it from Mark. The check for the room arrived at the nursing home the same morning Barbara died, but apparently, a refund was out of the question.

“Are you okay?” I asked Deborah. “Should I leave work?”

“No, I’m alright,” she said. I’m going to take a pill and go to bed. I’ll see you when you get home.”

Daisytown

We packed and left the next day for another marathon road trip. The highways were pulsing with impatient trucks catching up on lost time from the hurricane and overstuffed family vans getting a head start on the holiday weekend. The rest areas were bloated; the bathrooms were a sticky mess. A million Coke-a-colas sipped through fat straws from over-sized paper cups, converted into a murky piss inside the guts of day-trippers and truck drivers and splattered onto the tiles. We kept our stops to a minimum.

We passed several accidents on the interstate, fender-benders mostly, though one particularly acrobatic car tilled a wide swath of soil from the highway’s shoulder to the middle of a grassy median where it lay upside down and defeated like an embarrassed figure skater. Traffic inched past so that everyone had time to gawk and say, “Wow.”

____________________

We drove straight to Elmer’s house to pick him up for an appointment at the Funeral Home. Regardless of whatever time we arrived to pick him up for anything, he always took at least an hour to run through his routines and today of course, was particularly rough. He took the dogs out, wiped their asses with a paper towel, and then continued to fuss around, repeating things to himself, and to us, over and over.

“I’m taking my own car,” he said.

“No, dad, we came over here so that we could drive you.”

“I need to take my own car.”

“Why?”

“It’s what I have to do. You can follow me if you want to, or you can ride with me, but I’m taking my car.”

“No, dad.”

“I can’t just stop driving!” he snapped. “What do you think? How do you think I was getting around before?”

“You’re upset and I don’t want you driving like that.”

He agreed, then disagreed, and then agreed again. It was the same with every decision, big or small. Finally we got him into our car and headed to the appointment.

Sliding Glass Door

Alex’s wife, Sheila (the mother of Deborah’s cousin next door) was on her way from Virginia. Although she and Alex were still married, they hadn’t lived in the same town for decades. Before she left, she spoke to Elmer on the phone and said, “Don’t take out any loans to pay for anything. I’ll give you what you need.”

Elmer repeated it over and over as we spoke to the funeral director about the arrangements. “That’s what she told me, ‘Don’t worry, I’ll pay for it.’ That’s what she said.”

Regardless of who was paying for it, we kept the choices modest, but a funeral is expensive and once everything was arranged and Sheila heard the grand total, she was a little stunned. “I can give you two thousand dollars, that’s it,” she said. Although it was a generous offer, it was, unfortunately a few thousand dollars short of what was needed. My own mother and father wired me an emergency loan, but with the first of the month looming, Deborah and I would soon be tapped out. We felt pretty queasy about putting another several grand on our credit card.

Elmer used to talk to Barbara about life insurance, but whenever he brought it up, she’d say, “No, no, no. You might decide you need the money some day and try to kill me. I don’t want you profiting off my death.”

So there we were.

“We’ll figure something out,” I said.

Clown Doll

The funeral home could wait to get paid, but the gravediggers needed money up front before they’d touch a backhoe. Seven hundred and fifty bucks in cash or check to “open and close the grave.”

Elmer had a small stash in an envelope hidden in the house somewhere that just about covered it. Deborah asked him how much he had, and where it was, but he was very secretive. Most of it was money that Deborah and I had given him last Christmas to buy a set of new chairs to replace the tattered pair they used for watching the Home Shopping Network, or Lawrence Welk, or any number of Christian programs.

Of course, when it came time for us to make a trip to the cemetery to pay the gravediggers, we had to wait a couple of hours while Elmer tried to find the envelope.

Since Deborah refused to drive with her father, and somebody had to stay with the dogs, I drove Elmer to the cemetery while Deborah stayed at the house.

Despite the record-breaking heat, Elmer led me around the cemetery showing me various graves. Deborah’s grandmother, who was perhaps the sole reason Deborah managed to survive her childhood and become as reasonably well-adjusted as she did, and her grandfather who, despite being beaten into a coma for refusing to take a stand against blacks joining the coal miner’s union, (“They are just trying to feed their kids, same as me.”) lived to the ripe old age of 92, rested in peace a few yards away from Barbara’s plot. Barbara’s sister and husband were a few yards in the other direction. Elmer had four plots of his own — one for him and his wife, and one for Mark and Deborah. “But I don’t know,” he said, “Now that Deborah’s married, you’re the boss of her. You might not want her to be buried here. You might want to be next to her, I don’t know, that’s up to you. But I might not need mine, either, if the Rapture comes. It could happen at any time, no one knows. We’ll see, we’ll see.”

We spent another half hour looking for various other distant relatives, none of which we found. “We should pay the man, and be on our way,” I said.

We walked into the office, and Elmer proceeded to over-share the way he always does. He told the man how his wife didn’t have a bowel movement in ten days before going to the hospital. How the doctor examined her and said, “Cancer! She has cancer!” He described her suffering and ultimate death in lurid detail, and then proceeded to describe his own health issues. “I have to wear diapers,” he said. “And I can’t hold my urine, either.” He mentioned wearing a clamp, something that makes me cringe every time he does. He goes into inappropriate detail with everyone he meets, so I’ve heard about the clamp a hundred times, but I still don’t know how it works. It sounds Medieval.

“Do you have the money?” I said.

When he opened the folder he was carrying, it was gone.

“Oh no!”

A frantic Easter egg hunt ensued, retracing our steps, searching high and low for the envelope full of cash that somehow, someway, slipped from his grasp. Elmer raised his hands and prayed for God to give him his money back.

It worked.

Elmer dropped to his knees and praised God, “Thank you, thank you thank you.”

We walked back to the office. Elmer was trembling, but still managed to count out the money. “One, two, three, four, five, that’s one hundred. One, two, three, four, five. That’s two hundred. One two three…wait how much did I put down already?”

“What took you guys?” said Deborah when we returned.

“Long story. How were the dogs?”

“Fine. I took them outside for a walk. They were no trouble at all.”

“Wait, you took them out?” said Elmer.

“Yeah, dad.”

“Did they do a dirty? Did they do a dirty? I have to wipe them if they did a dirty,” he threw his hands in the air. “ I need to wipe them if they did a dirty or they’ll get sick. Was it hard or was it runny?”

He wrung his hands and fretted. He wiped the dog’s asses and then took a shovel and made Deborah show him where she had taken the dogs. It was all wrong.

“I never take them on this side of the house. Never. You took them on the other side of that ditch? Oh no, they aren’t allowed over there.”

He shoveled up the dog shit and moved it from under one tree to under another.

Travel With Jesus

The funeral was scheduled for Friday, proceeded on Thursday by a viewing.

At the viewing, Elmer didn’t leave Barbara’s open casket for more than a minute. At one point, he needed a cup of coffee and Deborah asked if I’d take him downstairs to the coffee room. It wasn’t much, just a paneled room with some historic photos on the wall and a small counter where a couple of coffee pots sat on warmers. I poured some into a Styrofoam cup and handed it to Elmer. It was scalding hot, but Elmer gulped down a series of frantic sips.

“Slow down Elmer, there’s no rush.”

“Someone might come and they won’t know where I am.”

“Someone will tell them.”

“One of my old school friends might show up. They won’t see me and they’ll leave.”

“”Who are you expecting?”

“I don’t know, I don’t know.”

“Well Deborah knows where you are. Whoever comes won’t leave without seeing you. Take a minute and drink your coffee.”

It was useless. He lived in a world of compressed time. My 30 seconds was his twenty minutes.

He took three more short, sharp sips, then rushed upstairs. I followed him, but then Deborah needed to escape, too, so went headed down to the coffee room together. An old family friend followed us.

“How ya doin’ Debbie?” said the old man with a broad, engaging smile and sparkling eyes.

“I’m okay.”

“I’d love to talk to you a minute about something. Will you let me do that?”

Deborah knew what was coming.

“No,” she said.

“I just want to talk to you about Jesus for a minute,” he said, getting bug-eyed and too close for comfort. “Will you let me do that? Please?”

“Drop it,” she said.

“Awww, man, really?”

“Really.”

“I just love Jesus, man. I want to share the word.”

“Seriously, I’m not interested. This is my mothers funeral and if you start with me, I’m going to get really angry.”

“Okay, I can respect that.”

He changed the subject, somewhat, to various mission trips he’s taken to Mexico, and then to a recent three-week vacation he took to Hungary.

“Was that a mission trip, too?” I asked.

“It’s always a mission trip,” said Deborah. “Just walking downstairs was a mission trip. When he walks back upstairs, it’ll be a mission trip.”

He laughed, but said it was true.

“I love you guys. God bless you.”

“We should go back up now.”

Praying Lamp

Back in the viewing room, a well dressed old man — the best dressed in the room, anyway — strolled up to Deborah and put his arms around her waist. “Debbie, beautiful Debbie,” he said, squeezing her tightly. “How long has it been?”

Who’s this slick old coot? I wondered. It was the preacher of course. He was there with his wife, a well-preserved seventy-something woman in a tight sweater and a torpedo bra. The two of them host a radio show, “Nine hours a week,” he told me.

A small boy, about two years old, was running around barefoot — in and out of the room, back and forth in front of the casket, weaving around the people.

“Is that your boy?” the preacher asked.

“No, I don’t know who that is.”

It turned out to be the great-grandson of Deborah’s aunt. Elmer had eight brothers and sisters, but only a few were still alive. She was one of them. Deborah sat on a chair next to her and said hello.

“How much is all of this costing?” she asked. Not because she wanted to help out, just because she was nosy.

Deborah changed the subject and struck up a conversation with the woman’s daughter, who then introduced Deborah to her son. I didn’t catch the guy’s name. In fact I didn’t catch anything he managed to say other than. “New York…Brooklyn…prison…fighting…” I tried to read the tattoos all over his neck, but I couldn’t make out any of that, either.

Rainbow

It was mostly the same cast of characters at the funeral the next day. The preacher apologized for being too old to sing anymore and played a couple of songs from a CD, instead. He spoke about believers and non-believers and it was hard not to feel like he was talking directly to Deborah. He asked if anyone wanted to give testimony.

A guy with a pencil thin mustache got up to say a few words. He was thankful for growing up with Barbara and her family. “We never knew any sinners,” he said. “We only ever knew Christians. And for that, I’m forever grateful.”

Deborah’s aunt Sheila said a few nice words, but of course it was Elmer who — despite his ever-rambling style —gave the most touching tribute.

“Barbara was the greatest…” he started.

He spoke about when they met, when Barbara would only let him kiss her once a week. They got married three days after Barbara’s eighteenth birthday and then she let him kiss her once a day. Things never progressed much beyond that. That is to say, they weren’t particularly affectionate for the rest of their marriage but, in the end, fifty three years later as Barbara lay in the hospital bed too weak now to push him away, he kissed her a million times.

A Contrast in Approaches

Midtown Snow

“Tell Jamie about what that guy said to you on the street,” Deborah said to my niece, Hayden, who has been considering a move to New York and was staying with us for a few days to get sense of what it might be like.

“A guy threatened to kill me,” said Hayden.

“What?”

“Yeah, so, I was walking down the street on my way to meet my friend for lunch and this guy stopped dead in his tracks and was staring at me up and down. I was talking on the phone, getting directions from my friend and I muttered into the phone, ‘What the fuck is this guy staring at?’ I didn’t think I said it very loud, but I guess maybe I did, who knows. Anyway, the guy said, ‘A judge would never forgive me for killing you.”

“Wait, what did he say?”

“A judge would never forgive me for killing you.”

“What does that even mean?”

“I don’t know, but it definitely freaked me out. The guy was creepy.”

“I wonder if it was a reaction to what you said or if he would’ve said it anyway. Maybe that’s what he was thinking when he stopped to stare to begin with. Either way, yeah, random and confusing encounters on the street are par for the course. When I went out for lunch today, I passed an old man on the street who called me an old whore. I could see him coming, and I sensed he was going to say something, but I didn’t know what. As he passed he said, ‘You old whore.’ I kept walking while he stood on the sidewalk continuing to spew all kinds of stuff I couldn’t make out.”

Deborah howled with laughter before saying, “He’s lucky he didn’t say that to me.”

“Ha, yeah. I would’ve liked to see that.”

“Your story is better than mine,” said Hayden.

“Funnier, maybe. Yours is pretty disturbing. Anyway, the thing is, random stuff like that happens all the time.”

Snowy Grate

Not all random encounters are quite so bad, though. Hayden also got a free hug from a Greenpeace volunteer. “We’re giving out free hugs for Greenpeace,” he said to her as she passed.

“He was kind of cute, so I let him,” said Hayden.

“Uh boy, that old story.”

Of course, he ultimately went into his pitch which ended with a request for a 15 dollar donation which was hardy free, but since Hayden declined to contribute, that’s what it turned out to be. She even got a bunch of stickers.

“He probably thought you were cute, too,” said Deborah. “I doubt he’s giving out free hugs to everyone.”

“Did this happen before or after you ran into the guy who talked about killing you?” I said.

“Before.”

“Too bad.”

“I know.”

Snow Roof

Why They Invented Fiction

Sticker Lot

“All photographs are accurate, none of them is the truth.”

–Richard Avedon

Aside from my wife, who I’ve lived with now for over half the time I’ve been writing this blog, no one has appeared in more posts than my dear old friend Brian — currently chasing the dragon of enlightenment in a far flung Burmese Buddhist Monastery. (I’ve been so busy that I can barely keep track of my own schedule, often forgetting what day of the week it is never mind the date, so I really don’t know how far along he is in his scheduled 60 day retreat. How is he doing? I wonder.)

I’ll admit that I don’t always paint the most flattering picture of him and occasionally I write something that tests his work-in-progress Zen temperament, but despite being justifiably annoyed at some of the things I’ve written over the years, he knows what makes a good story and what doesn’t and, thankfully, he cuts me a lot of slack. To be honest, the fact that he knows what makes a good story is sometimes what gets him so annoyed — although he sometimes gets mad at me for revealing things he’d rather not have revealed, occasionally he gets mad because he wants to be the one to reveal them — wishing to retain ownership of his exploits for when it comes time to write his memoirs. “Stop stealing my material!” he used to say.

Because of the leeway Brian allows me when using him as a “character” in my running narrative, I sometimes take it for granted that everyone has his same attitude. Sometimes they do. I wrote about my friend Jason’s “creepy guy van” recently, without thinking whether he would be insulted by my description of his rusted-out jerry-rigged jalopy. Thankfully he understood that it was precisely the funkiness I described that gave his van character and made it fun to write — and hopefully read — about. But sometimes they don’t. A family member of mine was once so disturbed by a story I wrote that he threatened to bash my head in with a baseball bat. He didn’t.

Deborah and the BQE

Deborah recently discovered that her cousins in both Pennsylvania and Kentucky, have been harboring resentment for a couple of years now over how they were portrayed in a few of my posts. I don’t know precisely what I said that insulted them so much, but maybe the specifics aren’t as important as the broad strokes. I imagine that simply referring to Deborah’s bucolic hometown, nestled in the rolling hills of western Pennsylvania, as “Pennsyltucky” could be enough to bristle hairs and make me seem like an elitist asshole from New Yawk City. Although, like I said, I don’t remember what I wrote, knowing me, and the history of this blog, it’s probably no surprise that they were offended. I do remember Deborah asking me to delete a post a couple of years ago, which I did, but it was too late, the damage was done and they’ve been angry about it ever since. Not just angry at me, unfortunately, but angry at Deborah, too. I don’t understand the logic, but so it is. Guilt by association, I suppose.

Duck Window

Never mind that no place has suffered more snarky descriptions than New York in general and the dirty ol’ borough of Brooklyn in particular. I’ve been scolded in the past for not being more positive about all the good things this town has to offer. “I think you’re unfair to your neighborhood,” someone once commented, and then went on to list all the positive things about my former neighborhood of Bushwick that he felt I’d been ignoring. “If you hate Brooklyn so much, why do you live here?” Well, I don’t hate it. And the things that make it annoying are the same things that give it a peculiar energy. The other night two guys pushed me and several other people out of the way as they boarded the B62 bus. They both had ultra-processed hair and wore flamboyant outfits that nearly matched. One had on a short shearling jacket over a black turtleneck and the other had on a three-quarter length shearling jacket over a black button down shirt. Despite the subfreezing temperature, their jackets were wide open revealing flashy necklaces. They both had on square-toed brown dress loafers polished to perfection. Little Richard and Big Richard, I called them. They were speaking in the loudest, most obnoxious “gay accents” imaginable and had more attitude than they knew what to do with. It spilled all over the street as they literally pushed and shoved old ladies out of the way to get a seat on what turned out to be an rather uncrowded bus. They managed to make the ride home equally aggravating and entertaining.

You’re not likely to see such characters in Deborah’s hometown, but that’s not to say you don’t see characters there. A different breed, is all. And next week when we make the long drive across the yawning middle of the Keystone State, to its western edge, we might even see some. Two of the most colorful being Deborah’s parents themselves. Oddballs in the truest sense of the term. But lovable oddballs. Confusing and confounding at times, but with good hearts who, despite a few horror stories from Deborah’s youth, mean no harm to anyone. I’m not sure if we’ll see Deborah’s cousins or not. Although they live right next door to Deborah’s parents, she’s frustrated that that they harbor such resentment toward her for something she didn’t do. She’d like me to write an apology to them, but since we’ll be right there, I may as well walk next-door and do it in person.

That was Then, This is Now

50th Anniversary
My parent’s with the cake made by Deborah’s friend Lindsey of Elegantly Iced.

I guess you could say my father was a Navy brat, but in reality he didn’t move around that much. My grandfather was Commander of a destroyer during WWII, and there’s only so much following the family could do. They lived in Key West, Florida for a stretch, but after the war they settled in a sleepy little town called Beachwood, New Jersey, and that’s where my dad lived until leaving for college.

My mom grew up in Newark — about 65 miles north — and a far cry — from Beachwood. Now while you’ve probably never heard of Beachwood, you might have heard of Newark — New Jersey’s largest city — perhaps for no other reason than that Facebook’s head honcho Mark Zuckerberg recently pledged a gift of 100 million dollars to Newark’s school system. (Sure, the timing of his donation — the mega billionaire’s first public act of philanthropy — just happens to coincide with the opening of an unflattering movie about the Facebook founder and therefore can easily be construed as damage control, but a hundred million dollars is a hundred million dollars.)

My mother often speaks wistfully about her childhood in Newark. “It’s a shame,” she says, referring to her hometown’s subsequent decline. Whether or not Newark’s ongoing struggles can be attributed to six days of rioting in 1967, my mother sees it as a watershed moment in the city’s history. Maybe she’s right, I don’t know, but I do know that the city she describes in stories of her youth no longer exists. Then again, neither does the small town where my father grew up.

Deborah Knits outside

My parents decided to have their 50th wedding anniversary at the Beachwood Community Center located next to the Beachwood Yacht Club on the banks of Toms River. My father’s brother still lives in Beachwood, with his family, and while at the party my aunt and cousin told me stories about two drug busts on their street this past summer. “There are five summer rental houses on the street,” they said. “And they don’t care who they rent to.”

My father’s other brother, Tom, an artist with a long graying beard and one lung, told us stories in between breaths from his oxygen tank. He looked down the bay at the nicely re-built boardwalk that follows the shoreline and described what it used to be like: “It didn’t used to be up on stilts like that,” he said. “It used to be right down near water level and it meandered in and out of the woods. We used to go running down that thing stark naked in the middle of the night and go skinning dipping with the jelly fish.”

It was a beautiful day. The yacht club was hosting a regatta and windblown sails could be seen through the community center’s bayside picture windows. A group of my father’s childhood friends, referred to as “The Beachwood Gang,” had a table to themselves and were reminiscing about childhood sailing antics. My mother interrupted their stories as she brought me around to re-introduce me to everyone. I recognized some people by sight while others I only recognized their names. “This is Tommy Walsh,” my mother said, introducing one of my father’s more notorious friends.

“Oh sure, hi,” I said, “I know you, you’re my godfather.”

“That’s right,” he said, “I did a good job, didn’t I?”

I’d met the guy maybe twice in my life.

“Sure,” I said, “You’ll get no complaints from me.”

“I remember when Jamie was about three years old,” my mother said, “and you said to me, ‘Are you still calling that kid Jamie?’” (As opposed to something more “masculine” like Jim or James.)

“I remember,” he said. “And are you?”

“Yes.”

Tommy rolled his eyes and then turned to me. “And you? What do you call yourself?”

“I call myself Jamie.”

From the way he shook his head at the travesty, you’d think I was a boy named Sue.

Julia