Posts

That Ohio Feeling

I heard about the passing of family friend last week. I met Lon years ago on a detour while my Father drove me back to college. I've always enjoyed watching my father interact with his friends, and Lon was a nice enough man in his own right. These jaunts to meet him were really rather peaceful. I was sad to hear the news. He seemed sincere, and my father was close to him. It reminded me of this old post, which I drafted, but never published. Here it is with a few revisions... This past weekend, I made it back to Ohio for, Rosalie's, my younger sister, graduation from high school. My older sister, Jessica, was also at home, having been discharged from the Army just about a month back. I flew into Cleveland Friday night, and Saturday morning Jessica, my father, and I went to Loudonville, OH where Jessica was participating in a 100 mile mountain bike race through Mohican State Park. At seven o'clock Dad and I saw Jessica off at the starting line, six hundred bike...

The jam

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Sometime late in the evening (around 9 pm, I would think), Susan and I were whisked outside to the portico. As the doors were opened, our friends started a version of "Heart of Glass" dedicated to Susan. It has always been one of her favorite songs to request. We listened once through, then started singing! After that song, I grabbed a spare guitar that Troy had brought and joined in the jam. I remember calling out and singing "Move It On Over" by Hank Williams and "Way Downtown" by Doc Watson. I couldn't remember all the words to the Hank tune, by my friend, Brad, pulled them up on his phone, and I drunkenly sang them out. Susan went inside and told the DJ that he should pack up and join us on the porch. Gaelan did not have the drum set. He was banging on the cement. Girls on the fiddle. Sean squeezed a button box, and Troy held down the bass. We played and drank. I hardly remember any of the songs. Not too long ago, a friend ment...

Dinner Music

In Hot Springs, NC remembering the wedding. I want to write down everything. Let's pick a place and start... The dinner playlist chosen by DJ Bart: Nat King Cole, "The Man and the Music," side 2 Duke Elington, "Duke Elington's Greatest Hits," side 1 Artie Shaw, "This Is Artie Shaw," side 2 Roy Eldridge, "Roy Eldridge," side 1 John Coltrane, "John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman," side 1 (cut short, maybe only 1 song) All vinyl. All from our collection. Thanks, DJ Bart.

The Dawn of Spring

While on the drive up north to Athens (to meet with our wedding vendors), Susan and I watched the bare trees fly past us on the highway. We could see a faint red glow brushed over-top the grey and brown branches, not unlike dawn when the Sun's rays strike the underside of grey clouds tingeing them red, then orange,  and finally yellow as the angle of incidence loses its obliqueness. On the drive back home, I detected distinct oranges in the buds. I suppose that spring is dawning.

Ode to Buddies

By rushing water, by water rushing, The pup and I remembered something. He the fun of rivers running. Me that spring is surely coming.

The PopUp Chorus

I was at Motorco in Durham for the weekly PopUp Chorus, standing at the third in a line of four old school urinals, with no privacy dividers in between, preparing to do my life's work, when in walks a fella with an busy gray mustache and a cowboy hat (ten gallons, no less), and he chooses urinal number one. As I stood there staring at a tiled wall and telling myself to relax, he starts up a conversation. "I just saw a guy wearing the funniest t-shirt," he began. "It was a note from the planet Pluto. It said, 'Hey NASA, you're Mom thought I was big enough.'" After a moment of contemplation, I laughed out loud. Literally, I lol-ed.

A Quick Trip to Athens

I left work after dark and raced to the highway, wove through traffic, sped judiciously past Greensboro, Winston Salem, turned north: Pilot Mountain to the left rising out of the blackness - somehow appearing more black than the sky. Yes, in fact, I noticed the sky was not black but deep purple, like bruised flesh - a trick from the full moon obscured behind clouds. I climbed I-77, rose above the Piedmont, and sped back into the high country before the wild hills of West Virginia appeared - black coal hills, undulating, looking down on me. I had a distinct feeling of something old - perhaps something I felt a long time ago, but since I could not name it, it slipped away. I past the time (except for a quick gas stop near Wytheville) on Mars, tracking its colonization by humans early in this century. This history was laid out in vignettes and was read aloud - the voice emanating from a tablet computer. The Martian Chronicles. I hugged the tablet close to my body (sometimes right up ...