Friday, December 26, 2008

The Spark



She glides in the morning.
Her tiny toes never touching
the floor as she dances
through the house. School, chores,
even somber funerals, find her singing
sweet life that bursts from her
lighted lips in a mirthful cadence.


In the dying summer light of September
she has kissed the wilted grass,
waltzing gracefully through nine hymns
of her blazing, ascending birth.
Every creature, every mossy stone,
whispers their delight in the warmth
of her tender, grasping hands.


I preach, I bemoan, beware the bitter strangers
who have no soul- no sense of your frolicking
lightness. Yet she sees through the hard
flesh and scowling lips, delighting in the rapture
of touching their withered spirits. Humanity
is not damned. In her pulsing heart and shimmering
brown pools, everything has a spark.

Thursday, December 25, 2008

For the Joy of it all


It’s 11:30 p.m. on Christmas day. Topped by a leaning angel, the fake pine tree appears relieved that it has survived another holiday without finding itself in the bottom of a dumpster. Multi-colored pieces of wrapping paper litter the carpet, interspersed with a box of Life Savers, baseball cards, Mike & Ikes, and two very exhausted cats. Our dog, Macy, is snoring rather loudly at the top of the basement steps. Her belly is full of ham scraps, half an iced cookie, and something she dug out of the trash that looks like a human liver. Due to her age and bad kidneys, this may be her last Christmas with us, but tonight she is at peace.

Our children are tucked in their beds, soft smiles tracing lips coated with cookie crumbs and chocolate. Today we were the parents they secretly wish they could have every day of the year. We played, we laughed, we paid attention to what they had to say without glancing at our watches or taking half a dozen phone calls from the office. They returned our love in spades. Unsolicited hugs and softly whispered declarations of affection filled our ears and warmed our hearts. For twenty-four hours, they had mom and dad all to themselves.

As the clock ticks closer to December 26th, my wife has taken leave to the bedroom, her heart and mind resting easy that she has made this a beautiful holiday once again for all of us. Because of her, this was the only day out of a hectic year that even faintly looked like a modern-day version of a Norman Rockwell painting. The long hours of juggling work, house-cleaning, cooking and gift shopping, have all been worth it. I hope tonight she dreams of hugs and kisses, joyful peals of laughter, and the knowledge that she is the thread that binds our hearts and makes us whole.

We have survived another year. All is well in our world, if only for today.

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Why Must Kittens Grow Up?












Several months ago, I found two kittens in an abandoned home at the manufactured housing community where I work. The kittens were about three or four weeks old at the time and living in squalid conditions. The home was devoid of food. The thoughtless renters had left a filthy bowl of yellowish water on the kitchen floor. Imagine a home where the floor is covered in feces, fleas jumping merrily from one living creature to the next, and you might have a revolting visual picture of what the place looked like. If there is a living hell for cats on earth, I had descended into its most abysmal depths.

Their mother, who was nothing but skin and bones, immediately came to me as soon as I opened the door. She was so weak she could only circle my path, meowing incessantly as if to say “look what they’ve done to me.” Her kittens, one a male yellow tabby and the other a smaller, female multi-colored hobbit, spied on me shyly from behind the kitchen counter. As I brushed the multitude of annoying fleas from my khaki pants, I tried very hard to imagine how I was going to be able to drop these poor creatures off at the local Humane Society, which isn't a no-kill shelter.

The female kitten was easy to corral but her brother was more skittish. It took me fifteen minutes to gather both kittens and place them in a box in the car. As I was locking up to go back in for the mother, a neighbor walked across the street and informed me that there was at least one more kitten in the house. After searching from room to room, I finally had to give up my quest for the elusive third sibling. I felt miserable as I called our maintenance staff to check the home for the third kitten, and instructed them to take the mother cat to the Humane Society. I still feel bad about that decision, but we already have fish, a rabbit (which is about the size of a turkey) and a dog with bad kidneys. I also knew that my wife, Julie, was going to be less then happy with the prospect of two more creatures sharing our home, so unfortunately adopting the mother was not an option.

When I finally got home later that day, Julie was mad for about two minutes as we played with the kittens on the floor, but she quickly fell in love with both of them as the kids announced that they were now part of the family for all eternity. The kids named the male tabby, Merlin, and his smaller, calico sister, Sophia. We spent our evening giving both kittens a mild flea bath and patiently picking off the dead little bastards with a pair of tweezers. The next couple of weeks were pure bliss as we watched the tiny hairballs play and explore their new surroundings. We were in love.

That was three months ago. Now our cats are driving me crazy. They’re still cute in a “teen” sort of way as they frolic around the house like the Manson Family on a combination of speed and LSD. We now have to keep our bedroom doors shut at night to avoid having Merlin and Sophia crawl or sprawl on our sleeping faces (believe me there’s nothing worse than being roused from a deep slumber by a swishing tail that fifteen minutes earlier was probably flipping around in the litter box). They jump on our kitchen counters and table without regard and defecate in their litter box like twenty hung over frat boys clogging up the toilets on an idle Sunday afternoon.

Despite my threats to anonymously drop them off at the Humane Society, we are stuck with them. My kids would probably never forgive me if I got rid of them now. I guess by rescuing them when they were “cute and cuddly” - we have made a commitment. The frustrating thing is waiting for the next ten years until they become mellow, constipated octogenarians, who don’t want a damn thing to do with any of us.

Saturday, December 13, 2008

The Sky Is Falling


According to MSNBC this morning someone is losing their job every 5 seconds in this country. But that shouldn't come as a surprise from a government that is commited to being the biggest military bully on the block for the next milennium. According to The Center For Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, our wonderful, peace-loving nation, spends more on the miltary industrial complex than the next 45 highest spending countries in the world combined.


It's ridiculous that we spend $410,000,000 a day in Afghanistan and Iraq while families in America go without food, healthcare and jobs. I guess some day we will be the greatest hunter-gatherer society on earth...


Here is the link for The Center For Arms Control and Non-Proliferation and the link for Iraq Insider. They're websites that tell us what our country's real priorities are.



Friday, December 12, 2008

My Leaky Bucket List - Or Ten Things I'd Like To Do Before I Die.



1. Spend a week at the Louvre. This is absolutely number one on my list. The thought of seeing the world’s most beautiful pieces of art in the flesh is enough to make me want to cash in my life savings and fly, float or submarine across the pond.


2. Hike a portion of the Appalachian Trail with my son. Not the whole trail mind you, but a sixty mile section through the mountains of Virginia or Tennessee. I’d also like to see a bear in the woods while trekking through the wild (and not embarrass myself in front of my son by freaking out or shitting my pants).


3. Find my ninth grade high school english teacher, Mrs. Gallis, and thank her for helping me to appreciate the beauty of Shakespeare and Dickinson.


4. Walk my daughter down the aisle at her wedding without bawling like a baby or tripping over her long white gown (preferably in about twenty years).


5. Find out in all certainty whether god is an illusion or fact. It would be nice to know this before I take the great leap into nothingness or eternal regret. If he/she does exist and doesn’t have a sense of humor, I’m totally screwed.


6. Spend the golden years with my lovely wife on a sandy beach, reminiscing about how rich & rewarding our lives have been. And would it be too much to ask to not be hooked up to an oxygen machine or popping Viagra pills like they were red jelly beans?


7. Take my family to Egypt to see the Pyramids of Gaza (while not getting snuffed by some Muslim extremist who is still pissed off at Bush & Rumsfeld ten years from now).


8. Write the great American novel (or at least the first page).


9. Quit bitching about saving the environment & actually practice what I preach. A good start would be not throwing candy bar wrappers out my car window as I'm driving by some loser's house who still has a "McCain/Palin" campaign sign in their front yard, or start recycling the 100,000 Diet Dr. Pepper bottles I’ve drained over the years.


10. See the beauty of the African Savannah before it’s gone or imprisoned forever in America's zoos.

Country Fried Stupid...






The American Economy Gets Screwed, Again.

When you get a chance make sure to drop a line to your favorite Republican dipshit senator (primarily those slope-headed country bumpkins in the south). Thanks to these moronic buckwheats the Big Three automakers have moved three steps closer to calamity. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) succeeded in leading his band of pouting Neanderthals in a classic political ploy to move our economy closer to the brink of collapse. Apparently, the fact that one in ten jobs in this country are tied to the automotive industry means nothing when you can piss on the UAW for promoting Democratic candidates in the last election.

“I hate to be so blunt,” said Bob Corker (R-TN). “That’s politics.”

Well thanks a hell of a lot Corky! And kudos to the misanthropic voters in Tennessee for picking you over Harold Ford, Jr. in 2006. This is the reason Republicans are a dying breed. They don’t care about average Americans who are losing their jobs at a meteoric pace. When you’re nothing more than an inbred corporate swine with a grudge & a fetish for Fortune 500 Insurance Companies (AIG) … why would you give two craps from the seat of your golden commode that the Midwest is rapidly morphing into Kazakhstan?

2010 can’t get here soon enough. It’s time to play taps for the Republican Party and the sooner the funeral viewing of their rotting political corpses ends… the better it will be for all us.

Sunday, December 7, 2008

The Last Good Nine.



Yesterday, Alabama had their hopes dashed for a national championship by the Florida Gators. It was also the 11th anniversary of my father’s death from cancer. The memory struck me late in the fourth quarter of the game as Florida was celebrating their victory in the waning seconds. I have no clue why the memory hit me when it did. I’ve never been particularly good at remembering dates (in fact I forgot our 17th wedding anniversary last month).


My dad didn’t watch a lot of college sports. He liked pro football if the Cincinnati Bengals were having a good year. His favorite sport was professional golf and he watched countless hours of tournaments on his big screen television. He had an odd habit of watching the T.V. from the kitchen table, a setup that left him a good forty feet away from the tube in the family room. He was also strangely quiet and unemotional when watching sports. Unlike me or my younger brother, who would scream at the set like raving maniacs, you would never know by the look on dad's face if Jack Nicklaus had just sunk a long putt to win the Masters or if he was watching a Buick commercial.


Dad was a good golfer. He was good enough to play in the championship flight every year at the local country club, but never quite good enough to win the title. Golf was something that consumed him at times and defined his relationships with men. If you played the game and played it well, dad would let you into his life. His best friend, father and brother all had the same passion for the sport. I’m not sure if they would have been that close if not for the game of golf. Vacations and family get-togethers were usually scheduled around tee times and the number of rounds you could get in on a weekend cluttered with family commitments.


As I grow older, my memories of dad when I was a child are few and fleeting. He worked very long hours as a sales manager to provide a comfortable life for his family. His weekends in the spring, summer and fall were taken over by the game of golf. My mother was the person who watched me play little league baseball, tennis, or act in high school plays. It wasn’t until I got older and became more proficient at the game that I began to feel a real connection with my dad.


Once I had proven that I could break 90 on the golf course and not talk during his backswing, dad finally admitted me into his sporting sanctum. I was amazed at how much more I learned about him. Whether it was standing on the tee of a backed-up par three or eating a sandwich and drinking a beer after a five hour round, he suddenly became less one dimensional as a person and father. Over the next fifteen years on the golf course, I learned about his thoughts on love, marriage, family, religion, and so much more. I learned that he was a grudge-holder, deeply sentimental about love, an atheist/agnostic, had more regrets than I would have imagined for someone who had accomplished so much in his life, and was proud of all three of his children.


I still remember the last round of golf I played with my dad in 1996. We played on a local course, Max Welton, only minutes from his house on Lake Wawasee. It was a very warm day in late August and dad was still recuperating from a heart attack he had suffered in the midst of his last round of chemo. I don’t remember what our final tally was that day because the game that had brought us together became a sidebar on that last outing. Despite my forceful objections while getting loosened up on the first tee, he insisted on talking about his coming death.


He told me he was tired of fighting a disease that he couldn’t beat. With golf, you could practice whatever was ailing your game and have a better round the next day. But cancer, his cancer, didn’t leave you with anything to work with. It slowly sapped away your strength until you couldn‘t play anymore. He told me between swings and putts that he had lived a good life, accomplishing much more then he had ever expected. He wanted to be cremated and didn’t give a damn what we did with his ashes. Watching him gracefully swing his driver or expertly line-up a putt made it all that more painful to realize that this was probably our last time together on the golf course.


After putting out on the ninth hole, we drove the golf cart to his truck and unloaded our clubs. While dad waited and changed his shoes, I drove the cart back over to the pro shop and reached for the scorecard, still firmly clasped on the steering wheel. I looked at the card for the first time that day and saw that it was empty. We had been so absorbed in the moment that he hadn’t kept score. The only thing he had written in at the top of the card was our names, Dad and Jeff. Instead of taking the scorecard with me for sentimental reasons or chucking it in the trash, I left it where it lay... sitting in the cart overlooking the golf course, surrounded by encroaching shadows on a warm summer day.

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Bouncing the Conversation



Every year as I get older I find myself getting more impatient in conversations that I have with family and friends. Not impatience over someone discussing why the book they just read will stay with them forever or someone telling me an interesting, richly-detailed story, but the little nuances of conversation. Too much detail that doesn’t add anything to the subject matter or staying focused too long on one single aspect of a subject.


My wife, Julie, thinks I’m just getting cranky as I approach fifty. Like just about everyone else, I have caught myself rambling on about one subject over dinner or in conversations with friends and family. But I’m trying to change. Really, I am. There’s nothing worse than talking to someone and suddenly realizing that their eyes have glazed over, and they’re thirty seconds away from going into an irreversible coma.


Even though Julie thinks I have the attention span of a second-grader, sometimes it’s the ebb and flow of the conversation that keeps it interesting and entertaining. When I was in high school the fastest way for a teacher to lose me was to drill down on one mundane portion of the lecture (come to think of it… maybe that’s why I was such an abysmal math student) instead of keeping the lesson moving at a fair pace. I believe now as then, that you have to bounce a lecture or conversation to keep it interesting.


A few years ago I was having dinner at a convention with a very knowledgeable business associate of mine. For over an hour, he droned on and on about the technical issues of repairing plumbing in manufactured homes. This was all he knew or cared about in life… and after sixty-plus minutes of trying to gently guide the dialogue to another subject, I told him the truth about how I felt about his myopic terms of friendly conversation.


“Richard, you know I really like you.” I said, cutting him off in mid-sentence. “But I have to tell you the truth. If we were forced to spend the rest of our lives together on a deserted island… I would kill and eat you within twenty four hours of stepping foot on the beach!”


He paused for a moment, smiling, searching my eyes for signs of my usual bullshit... or to fathom if I was speaking the truth. I didn’t smile back. To this day he still talks too much about plumbing, but we discuss other things as well and I haven’t had to eat him - yet.

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Moving Away... But Moving Closer.


Today, I helped my brother move from Louisville, KY to Colorado Springs, CO. He's ten years younger than me and we haven't been close since he graduated from high school. Aside from holidays and an occasional visit in the summer to see my kids, we've probably spent less then three total months together in the last decade. For whatever Freudian reason, we have become strangers... bound only together by the fact that we share a birthday (exactly ten years apart) and are expected to socialize together several times each year.

I'm a salesman by trade (not something I'm proud of... but we all have to make a living), and I spend a good deal of time trying to figure out what makes my customers tick. Some people are motivated by money or material things. Others seem obsessed with relationships or the hope that by doing good they won't be left behind when Barry Gibb, in a flowing white robe, leads them to Valhalla. At first I categorized my brother as a materialist... a Generation X kind of person who lives for today and says "to hell with tomorrow." He always shopped at the 'cool stores' at the mall & would spend more money on a pair of designer sunglasses than I would spend on a new radial tire. But over time, especially in the last six months, I began to realize that he didn't neatly fit into one of my 'that kind of person' categories.

I was confounded that he never seemed to have plans for the future or follow a schedule that dictated his life. Getting information out of him about his personal life was like pulling tail feathers from an indifferent peacock. I knew more about some of my business customers than my own flesh and blood. How was that possible? He had no particular direction and it didn't seem to bother him at all. When you're married, with kids that are constantly needing to be driven from one activity to another, it's hard to get through twenty-four hours without your Blackberry or daily planner. My brother abstained from this type of regimentation, and frankly it drove me nuts.

As he got older and our gulf became wider, he seemed to revel in the fact that he didn't own a cell phone, answering machine, or computer. He actually read newspapers and magazines, used a Rand McNally Atlas when he traveled, and was much more up to date on many things without so much as a glance at the internet. He never forgot my kid's birthdays, something that I do on a regular basis with my nieces and nephews, despite my reliance on today's technology. He was an exceptional uncle of the highest order, but a mystery as a brother.

Over the years, I've expected (almost demanded) to have an epiphany which would suddenly open my eyes to what made my brother tick. But it never happened. He confounded me right up to the moment I said goodbye to him this morning. This move is a very big deal for him. He's leaving his home of nine years & everything he knows for a fresh start 1,100 miles away. In many positive ways... it's a life-altering move, something I respect & admire because many people (myself included) would find it damn near impossible to make such a huge leap in the middle of their life.

Everyone else was waiting patiently in the truck & van to take his extra stuff to our mother's house in Winchester for storage. We were alone in his apartment saying goodbye when that moment of reckoning hit me. Instead of doing our usual routine of shaking hands, we embraced for a moment (something we hadn't done in almost a decade). It was a brief, tearful acknowledgement that made me realize that I didn't have to figure out who he was or what made him tick. I only had to love him, because we're brothers.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Thanks for running a terrible campaign, Jill.


What can you say about the failed candidacy of Jill Long Thompson? Pathetic, inept and underfunded are all terms that come to mind when you look at the beating she took on November 4th. In an incredible year that saw Indiana go blue in the presidential sweepstakes for the first time in four decades, Long Thompson somehow managed to run a campaign against incumbent governor Mitch Daniels that bordered on the absurd. In other words... she lost by almost 500,000 votes. When you don't run any advertising for five weeks leading up to the election... you should have never tossed your hat in the ring in the first place.


With union support and several major PACs (Emily's List, The United Steelworkers, United Transportation Union, Service Employees International Union, Communication Workers of America, and the Local #446 of Association of Federal, State, County and Municipal Employees) backing her run, Long Thompson failed miserably to ignite enthusiasm amongst Indiana voters. Note to future Democratic candidates for governor... If you can't raise the finances or figure out a way to connect with voters (especially in terrible economic times & against an incumbent that sells state assets like an auctioneer at a fire sale)... Don't run for office!


Hopefully, Jill will recline in her rocking chair and relish the short time she spent representing Indiana's Fourth Congressional District from 1988 to 1994. She needs to accept the fact that she is never going to win another election in her lackluster, political career.
Posted by Jeff at 10:12 PM

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Lieberman Holds His Chairmanship in a Landslide.


How on earth does the current Democratic Senate Majority allow Joe Lieberman to retain his chairmanship of the Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee? I understand the glorious possibilities of a filibuster-proof senate majority, but the odds of Franken and Martin winning their respective senate seats seems unlikely, especially in the case of Martin defeating Chambliss in the upcoming runoff in Georgia. The Democratic Gentleman's Club played 'soft' politics with their compatriot and missed a golden opportunity to punish the turncoat.


Senator Lieberman did everything in his diminished power to lead John McCain to the White House. He even campaigned for several Republican Senate Candidates and introduced Sarah Palin (the Wasilla Imbecile) at numerous campaign events. This guy is everything that is wrong with politics today. He has no soul and would sell his constituency to the devil just to be relevant in a time of great political change.


This was the perfect time for a long-awaited payback, and the Senate Democrats once again proved that they don't know how to bench a third-string running back that constantly fakes left but goes right. It's a shame that the good people of Connecticut are going to have to wait four more years to toss out New England's latest incarnation of Benedict Arnold...

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Farewell to the King


Farewell, President Jughead... For the first time in eight years, I'm excited about the future of our country. President-Elect Obama is the real deal and is going to get this country back on track both domestically and internationally. His performance in the Presidential Debates was nothing short of breathtaking. He ran a smart, disciplined campaign that focused on uniting the country, while his opponent(s) tried every negative political trick in the book to divide and conquer the electorate with hatred and mistrust.

President-Elect Obama is an extraordinarily intelligent man, and we as Americans deserve to have an intellectual in the White House after eight years of faith-based, CliffsNotes' policy-making. I hope it sends a message to the right wing of the Republican Party that the days of running an aging dullard, with his hand on a bible, and a legacied degree from an ivy league university or military academy... just isn't going to cut it any more. Underachievers like President Bush should never again aspire to highest office in the land. I can't help but wonder how small the Bush 43 Presidential Library will be when it's completed. Maybe a single magazine rack at the local Crawford, Texas, 7-11? I believe that when history is through with President Bush, he's going to finish six strides behind Fillmore, Hoover, and Nixon in the Presidential Breeder's Cup.

I'm cautiously optimistic that Barak Obama and our Democratic Congress is finally going to put an end to the Iraq War, the gutting of environmental laws, the extreme right shift in federal judicial apointments, and the lax, trickle-down fairy tale of Reagan Economics. In other words, the sun is shining just a little bit brighter in America today...


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