December 22, 2011

WHAT CHRISTMAS MEANS TO ME -or- Why I Love My Brother-in-Law

Nobody does Christmas like my loud and boisterous Cooper-Haney family. Our celebrations are chock full of traditions and extravagant food. (We’re full of crap, too, which makes the revelry all that much more fun.)

This is the third year for our newest tradition – a hearty game of Dirty Santa for the Big Kids. With a $10 gift limit and an obnoxiously creative group of dysfunctional adults, the gifts always range from the ridiculous to the sublime...from Dusty’s thrift store hairless baby dolls to Dale’s handcrafted truck testicles:


As fate would have it, my dear sainted Mom was the schmuck who ended up with the gonads. She lifted them out of the brightly decorated Christmas sack and held them aloft with a questioning look on her face. There was a moment of collective silence before I loudly asked, “Okay…who gave Mom a set of nuts?” Nobody fessed up. Nobody had to because my older brother Dale was doubled over with guilty laughter.

He somehow convinced our sweet, trusting Mom that they were homemade ‘nunchucks’ --- a Chinese weapon of destruction. She was clearly intrigued by the idea and began to swing the ‘weapon’ round and round, for practice. We finally had to tell her the truth, out of fear that she would be toting them all over town for protection.

Dale has a special knack for creating Dirty Santa gifts. He was also responsible for this masterpiece…


I have never known anything but a Christmas that was bursting at the seams with family and fun, yet I have never done a single thing to deserve such a bounty of love. Could never do enough to be so deserving.

Sure, our family makes a concerted effort to stay close and will do whatever is required to maintain the ties that bind. But really, doesn’t it mostly come down to just plain ol’ dumb luck of the draw?

I know that Jesus doesn’t love me one bit more than the neighbor down the road with a foreclosure sign in his yard or the abused single mom seeking refuge in a homeless shelter. I will never understand the imbalance of undeserved blessings. I can only stay humble in my gratitude and diligent about paying it forward.

When I was younger I naively believed that everyone’s Christmas was just as fun and blessed as mine. It took a melancholy young lad named Dickie to make me realize just how charmed my Christmases truly are.

I was 14 years old when I shared my first Christmas with Dickie. I couldn’t possibly tell you what gifts we exchanged those forty (seriously?!) years ago. I’ve forgotten the gifts, but I clearly remember the uncharacteristic sadness that overcame him during the holidays. Although he never spoke of it, I knew his Dad had died suddenly of a heart attack when Dickie was only 10 years old. It became a familiar pattern during our dating years, Dickie becoming quiet and withdrawn during Christmas, only to breathe an obvious sigh of relief on December 26th and the return to normalcy.

It was many years later that he shared with me the story of his family’s first Christmas without his Dad.


His Mom was still very much in a state of depression, and Dickie and his brother Jackie were both acutely aware of their bleak financial situation. Even so, his Mom made an effort to acknowledge the holiday with a little aluminum Christmas tree bearing two wrapped packages underneath. As the still-grieving family gathered together Christmas Eve to unwrap their gifts, the 10-year old boy was beyond disappointed to find he had received nothing more than a tacky pair of argyle socks. Although his wish list of possibilities was very short, it had never included the possibility of ugly socks. What he had really wished for was a pair of super spy x-ray glasses.

The forlorn young boy feigned sleepiness to escape and hurried upstairs to his room, wanting nothing more than to put the unbearably sad evening behind him. He turned out his light and crawled into bed, knowing full well it was hopeless to wait up for a Santa that would never come.

As he lay silently staring at the ceiling, he was startled by the sound of heavy footsteps clomping up the stairs, accompanied by a booming “HO HO HO!” He sat straight up in bed as his 15-year old brother burst into his room and turned on the lights.

"HO HO HO! Here’s your Christmas presents little boy!” said Jackie to his younger brother as he threw an old white duffel bag onto the bed.

Dickie scrambled to open up the bag. As he shook out the contents his eyes grew brighter and brighter and his buck-toothed smile grew wider. An army canteen on a belt. A white sailor’s hat.

“But, Jack! This is your best stuff… stuff I’m not supposed to touch.” Dickie said to his beaming brother.

“Nah. I don’t need ‘em anymore. Merry Christmas, brother. I love you.”

Dickie told me that he fell asleep that Christmas Eve with a heart open to the possibility of hope that everything would be okay.

And that was precisely when I fell in love with Jackie Dean Haney. (Actually, he had me at "HO HO HO"...)


The Dickman is now firmly entrenched in our Christmas traditions and plays an integral role. There is no greater anticipation than wondering what gastronomical sensation he will contribute to our yearly dessert contest. Although it’s almost impossible to top his previous wins of Snicker Balls (took forever to chew) and Peanut Butter Pie (took forever to swallow), he always manages to wreck my kitchen while serving up another unforgettable Christmas memory. Unforgettable.


Still, through all the years of craziness and chaos that we call our annual Cooper-Haney Christmas Extravaganza, I occasionally catch Dickie exchanging a brief, knowing glance with his brother Jackie. A silently poignant remembrance of Christmas Past, with a shared appreciation for the Beautiful Mess of Christmas Present.

Which for me, is the crux of Christmas...this brief season of heightened emotions. Those dual threads of sorrow and hope, which weave in and out through our lives, are never more tangible than during the holidays. Sadness for what is lost and an unquenchable hope for what is to come, tightly twisted together much like the brightly striped candy canes of Christmas.

So why is it that instead of slowing down long enough to acknowledge the unnamed yearnings evoked by Christmas, we allow ourselves to be distracted by irrelevant silliness like self-righteous religious posturing and the semantics of political correctness? Why do we allow ourselves to be pulled into the frenzied mass of mace-carrying shoppers furiously swiping maxed out credit cards in overcrowded malls filled with cynically outsourced Santas?

When really, what we should do is simply just...stop. Stop trying so hard to bring on the ‘merry’, and pause long enough to give a respectful nod to the melancholy. I strongly believe we can’t appreciate one without the other. Isn’t hope the only cure for sorrow...isn't giving the very best way to deal with loss?

My understanding of the true meaning of Christmas came with the realization that Santa doesn’t always appear as a fat jolly man in a funny red suit. He might even appear as pimple-faced teen aged boy carrying a duffel bag. And Christmas gifts don’t have to be shiny or new to be the Best Gift Ever.

Haven’t we learned through the years that long after the presents are forgotten, what we hold on to are the memories shared with our loved ones, and the hopeful possibilities of the New Year to come?


“And the Grinch, with his Grinch-feet
ice cold in the snow,
stood puzzling and puzzling, how could it be so?
It came without ribbons. It came without tags.
It came without packages, boxes or bags.
And he puzzled and puzzled ’till his puzzler was sore.
Then the Grinch thought of something he hadn’t before.
What if Christmas, he thought,
doesn’t come from a store.
What if Christmas, perhaps, means a little bit more.”
~ Dr. Seuss ~

December 11, 2011

TRES AMIGOS IN RIO ROJO

(To the tune of "Walking in a Winter Wonderland")



Taco Villa Green Burrito,
Gassier than the Tahoe.
A beautiful sight,
We're happy tonight.
Walking in a winter wonderland.


* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *


Missed the sign, we were talking.
Who knew officer was stalking?
A small price to pay for such a fun day,
Walking in a winter wonderland.


* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
In the cabin we can don our lounge wear.
Lock the door and keep the world away.


I’ll say: Who’s ya sista?
They'll say: You are.
Come sit with us and all will be okay.


* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *


Later on, we'll perspire.
Hotflashing by the fire.
(Built that fire with our hands. Ha...who needs a man?)
Walking in a winter wonderland.


* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *


Drove all the way to Questa for our grills.
We three chicks be bad as we can be.
First World problems wouldn't be a big deal,
If we all had an OWNER'S CLOSET key.


* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Hidey holes and fried chicken.
Pimento cheese, finger-licking.
We ate and we played, the Dream Catcher way...


Making memories in a winter wonderland.

December 02, 2011

Merry Christmas to My Outlaw Mom

My Mama is an outlaw. Her crime? Defacing books.

Let me count the ways.

When I was growing up, Mom used to keep a small Bible laying on the edge of the tub for reading at the end of her long, hard day. The only problem was that after taking care of three precocious kids and a demanding husband, she very often fell into exhausted sleep while reading, only to awaken at the sudden splash as her Bible fell into the water. There was always something so comforting and endearing about seeing that misshapen and distorted Bible sitting on the edge of our tub.

The truth about my Mama is this: she leaps feet first into every book she opens. The characters become her friends, if not her family. I don’t know how many times I have called her and she has said, “I gotta get off this phone and finish this book. Except I don’t want it to end because the man in this book is so much like your Daddy.” – or – “The mother in this book is just like you Robin, she doesn’t take any crap off anybody!”

You see, reading is not a passive exercise for my Mom. It is a passionate, emotion-filled journey that requires nothing less than her total focus and interaction, which includes cracking book spines and dog-earing pages. But that's not even the worst of her offenses. (I hope the book police aren’t reading this blog or heaven forbid, any of those silent monks who hand-scribe books in cold, damp monastery basements.) Because - forgive her Baby Jesus - my Mom writes in the margins of her favorite books.

Inherit a book from My Mom the Book Vandal and you will find a graffiti trail of her innermost thoughts scrawled with guiltless abandonment on random pages.

In her defense, she was led into this life of crime by her own Mother, my Flodie.

Flodie was a voracious reader who developed the habit of inscribing a distinctive, properly cursive ‘F’ inside the cover of every book she read. She would also give her handwritten opinion of a book with either: 'Very Good', 'Good', or 'So-So'. Furthermore, Flodie demanded that her daughters also initial each book, so everyone would be in the loop. My Mom would initial a simple 'dc' with beautiful flourishes, while my sweet Aunt Betty Bob would initial 'BBM'. I never see that initial without hearing my Mom's laughter as she taunted her sister with “Big Bowel Movement”. (My Mom and I are just classy that way.)

Growing up surrounded by all these book vandals had quite the opposite effect on me. In compensation for my feloneous matriarichal mentors, I chose to break the cycle by willfully obeying all the rules of Book Etiquette 101: I used bookmarks. I never opened a book to the point of spine-cracking. I never used a book as a coaster for my sweaty glass of sweet tea. I always put my book down before I got sleepy in the tub. And most importantly…I never ever wrote in the margins.

And then one day, my Flodie was gone.

We sifted through her belongings, hoping desperately to find something important...something meaningful and comforting. But it was shocking how little of herself she had left behind for us to hold on to. I kept a hairbrush with strands of her beautiful silver hair. I kept a tube of her favorite ‘lips’. And I kept her Bible...her tattered, well-worn Bible. It wasn’t just a Bible she read, it was clearly the Bible she used. I’ve found loads of comfort and wisdom in the pages of that Bible. And an unexpected treasure of a neatly folded tissue tucked between pages in the Book of Luke...



But for Mom and myself, the gifts that kept on giving were the boxes of books we found with Flodie’s initials and particular stamps of approval. Upon Flodie’s arrival in heaven, I spent days pouring over those books...holding each one in my hands...hoping her beautiful hands had touched the very same places as mine...knowing her mind and heart had absorbed the very same words. I was so grateful for the healing, for the sense of connection.

♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥

I sat down to visit with my Mom the other day and as always, I asked about the latest book she was reading.

“Oh, Robin. I found it. It made me cry.”

“Found what?” I asked in complete bafflement.

“I found the passage you outlined in this book. You know...where you wrote 'My Mama' in the margin”.

“Oh, wow, Mom. I did that ages ago. Will you read it to me, please?”

She did not pick up the book. She picked up her journal.

She said “I copied this in my own little book so I wouldn’t have to hunt for it. I’ve read it a million times. Here it is..."

“I feel my Mom touch my arm. And then I am in her arms, where I have always fit, listening to that incredible heart of hers beat beneath my cheek. Suddenly I can feel her strength, as if resilience was something one can gift to another. “
She looked back up at me with tears in her eyes, my own filled to overflowing.

“Isn't that just perfect, Mom? It says exactly what you are to me. And Mom? Other than Bibles or textbooks, that’s the first time I’ve ever written in the margin.”

Three generations of book outlaws. My Mama was so proud.

♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥

NOTE TO MY MAMA:

Merry Christmas to my BFF. I hope you enjoy my little collection of stories. I hope you scrawl your beautiful graffiti in the margin of every single page. And I hope when you are finished, you will turn to the front cover and write 'Very Good', or at least 'Good'. Anything but 'So-So'. Because we all know, life's too short to read ‘So-So’ books.

Love you much,

Robin In Da Hood



November 19, 2011

Holidazzzzzzzzzzze...

I woke up in a panic this morning with the realization that THIS IS THE WEEKEND BEFORE FREAKING THANKSGIVING!

How did this happen? When did we start celebrating the holidays more often than we used to? I am still munching on leftover candy corn from Halloween, for Pete's sake. (And I won't stop until it's gone, either. That's the least I can do for those starving kids in Asia.)

Yeah, yeah, I know..."Thanksgiving is supposed to be a special day set aside to give thanks for all our many blessings". Blah, blah, blah. Let's be honest...Thanksgiving is SO much more complicated than just giving thanks.

To be clear, it's not all the cooking and meal preparation that bothers me. I can cook a big ass frozen turkey and dinner for 12 with my eyes closed. What truly bothers me is that in reality, Thanksgiving is a day set aside for sinning.

The sin is gluttony. Every single year I push my engorged belly away from the table after a satisfying Turkey Day feast, only to belatedly realize, yet again, that if gluttony is a sin...and a sin is a sin...I just wasted a sin on gluttony when I coulda been sinning with Robert Redford.

Instead of beautiful memories to warm me in my old age, I have five more pounds to squeeze into Spanx for the upcoming Christmas parties.

And it's not just the sinning that makes me dread Thanksgiving. It's also the sudden realization that Freaking Merry Christmas is just right around the corner. Yea, verily, has already begun.

I know it's wrong for me to look upon Thanksgiving as little more than a warm-up for Christmas, but I do. To me, it is the pre-game meal designed to get me through the marathon of Christmas shopping. And if I was smart...I would load my Thanksgiving plate with proper portions of ham and turkey to provide me with the essential nutrients of muscle-building protein to fight the good fight against the frantic mobs of Christmas shoppers. If I was disciplined...I would eat only the complex carbs to give me endurance and enhance my cognition. And most importantly...I wouldn't gorge.

Well. I think we have established by now that I am neither smart nor disciplined. And I am obviously a gorger. Not only do I eat all the wrong stuff...I eat everything on the menu. Even worse, every single year I make the mistake of combining the turkey and ham with the dressing and mashed potatoes, thereby releasing buckets of coma-inducing Tryptophan into my feeble, undisciplined brain.

I have a theory about Tryptophan. I believe Tryptophan is the reason holiday shoppers trample each other to death on Black Friday. I believe Tryptophan is the reason I spend too much money on too many people buying them too many things they really don't need. Tryptophan is the very reason that, as a child, the day after Thanksgiving I would sit upon Santa's lap and waste my One Christmas Wish on something as worthless as a Magic Eight Ball.

Tryptophan makes me stupid, and basically sabotages Christmas. Every single year.

But not this year. 2011 is gonna be different. This year, I have A Plan. This year I will be sure to get all my Christmas shopping done BEFORE Thanksgiving. It's a beautiful plan. I have made my list, I have checked it twice, and I'm proud to say it is comprised of only the most practical and useful gifts imaginable with some...uh, suggestions from my grandbabies.

These are a few of my favorite things on the list:

(1) A Panasonic Nose Hair Trimmer with Rubberized Non-Slip Grip...

...for the Dickman. Because his 3-year old grandson looked up at him the other day and said, "G-Dad, why do you have spiders in both your noses?"

*******************************************************

(2) My G-girl is responsible for this next gift. Not long ago, I was walking with Mandie Lee, when she turned to look me up and down and said, "Gee, MiMi...you are big!" I smiled at her and said, "Yes, I am. I'm a tall girl - much taller than your Mama". "Yeah, you're REALLY tall." she said. "Cause Daddy told me not tell people they're fat."


A Mexican Tapeworm. Guaranteed to help you lose 2 pounds a week, whilst eating all your favorite foods. Then, when you finally reach your Mandie-Lee approved target goal, you simply take an antibiotic to kill the worm and poop it out. What could be easier?

*********************************************************
(3)

Frownies. One box for me and one for the Dickman. You guessed it. Our G-babes told us that our wrinkled foreheads remind them of...wait for it...YODA.


*******************************************************
(4) This next gift I'm really proud of, and I truly believe it will be the Dickman's favorite. It's not that I'm lazy...

(Okay, so I am a Lazy Gluttonous Woman With Lust For Robert Redford In My Heart.)

But this gift should give me all the redemption points I will ever need...

Take that, you Tryptophan.

...AND A HAPPY THANKSGIVING TO ALL MY FAVORITE TURKEYS ♥

November 07, 2011

What If God Was One of Us...?

Watching the Texas Rangers give away, uh...lose the World Series was painful. Not as much for me directly as indirectly, having to watch the Dickman suffer through the loss.

Even though he claims to be a grown man, this is a guy who believes in the Rangers like a 4-year old believes in Santa Claus. Who takes responsibility for each win or loss based on the precise combination of clothing he wears (or does not wear) during each critical, earth-shattering game.

As the Cardinals hammered home the final nail in the Rangers' coffin, I expected nothing less than wailing and gnashing of teeth from my grown man. (Who, by the way, was decked out like an escapee from the Texas Rangers Asylum for Insane Athletic Supporters.)

Searching for something, anything that would ease the crushing weight of defeat on the fragile soul of the Dickman, I found the following post on Facebook (written by another equally rabid Rangers fan and friend):

“We need to remember, it’s the end of the World Series...not the end of the world.”

The Dickman was neither placated nor convinced.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Saturday evening, Dickie and I were sitting in our respective chairs, our heads simultaneously nodding between our computers and the TV, when I suddenly experienced a gentle rocking motion lasting about ten seconds. As I was trying to come up with a plausible explanation for the extraneous movement (sugar rush from that praline? more menopausal hormone trickery? voices in my head throwing a party?) Dickie loudly blurted, “Look at that! The chandelier just started swinging!”.

Phew! I can’t even tell you how relieved I was to know that all the wackiness was not from within. We quickly resumed our ping-ponging between computers and TV to discover aftershocks from a 5.6 earthquake in Okla-freaking-homa had indeed caused the earth to move under our feet, ala Carole King.

Rangers losing the World Series to St. Louis? Oklahoma and Texas having earthquakes? Kim Kardashian getting a divorce? What in the wide, wide world of sports is happening, folks?

If these are not clear signs of the apocalypse, I don’t know what is.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Yesterday I was chatting with my 3-year old Grandson before church began. I had my legs crossed and he was riding my foot like a horsey, random questions spilling out of his mouth faster than I could answer them…especially while giddy-upping. Suddenly his eyes popped wide and he said, “MiMi...do you know my Savior?”

As parts of me melted, whilst other parts of me were charmed, I replied, “I do know your savior, Mattman. He’s my Savior, too.”

“Really?!” He asked excitedly. “I didn’t know you knowed him. Why do you call him ‘MY’ Savior?”

“Because He’s my Savior, too. And G-Dad’s and everybody else's. We all share Him. You do know that 'Savior' is just another name for Jesus or the Lord...right?"

Mattman giggled a little and said, “Oh, MiMi, you’re so silly. Jesus is Jesus and da Lord is da Lord.” My friend is just Savior. His name is just Savior. He’s wearing a brown shirt, just like me. Hahahaha! No he’s not, I’m just kidding. It’s not brown...but it does has two buttons like mine.”

[Ahhh...an open door to a teachable moment. Of course I stepped right on in.]

“Well, your Savior could be wearing a shirt just like yours Mattman. He could be anywhere in this room. He could be that little boy over there, or the old man we saw walking with a backpack on the way to church. And do you know what's really cool? I even see Jesus in you. When we love each other, when we help each othet...we are being Jesus.”

“Oh.” He said with a politely dismissive little smile. “Can I go to class now?”

As I was walking him to his class, he suddenly jerked his hand free from mine and took off running towards a little boy waiting for him in the classroom.

“Hey Savior! Do you know my MiMi? She says she knows you!” my G-boy shouted as he ran to his little friend, who was indeed sporting a shirt with two buttons...just like Matthew’s.

He was also wearing a name tag with his name spelled out in big, bold letters: Xavier.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

I’m not sure if my Savior and Xavier are one in the same.

I'm not even sure if God is still a Rangers fan.

What I am sure of is this: it’s not easy being Jesus in this crazy world of ours. A world that seems to be getting more off-balance and crazier by the minute.

And I’m more than a little humbled it took my favorite 3-year old to remind me that I should be much more concerned about walking right past Jesus without seeing Him today, than wondering whether or not He’s coming tomorrow.

November 01, 2011

OCTOBER-FREAKING-FEST

Here I sit --- wearing the same shirt I slept in last night, so completely behind on laundry that I'm down to my oldest/biggest/holiest panties --- thanking God that the marathon called October only comes around once a year.

Life is busy. I am old. Let's review:

*OCTOBER 15 - GEEZERS GET WILD AT THE AMERICAN LEGION HALL

There is no better time to be had than can be had at a Geezer Gig. These music-filled gatherings are all about connecting with your tribe...some of who were with you in the trenches of high school...all of who love oldie's music and have made a commitment to suffer through joint pain the following morning. (Never mind the fact that the Dickman would rather play drums with these guys than to spend five minutes with Toni Tennille. Without the Captain.)

We were all looking forward to the Fall dance which was being hosted for the first time with the American Legion Veterans. I had convincingly assured the cynical Commander of the local American Legion Hall what a happy, fun-loving, non-violent group of Geezers we are. Apparently, he didn't quite take me at my word. It wasn't so much anything he said, but more of a feeling I got when I noticed the outline of the bulletproof vest under his dress shirt. (Have you ever noticed how hard it is to make eye contact with a guy that's packing heat?) Sheesh.

I've come to the conclusion that each Geezer get-together adds at least three years to Dora B. Haney's life. Even though macular degeneration keeps her from recognizing faces from long ago, her 86-year old feets still know how to boogie.


Otherwise, the only violations that occurred were committed by a guilty few of us who probably watch waaaaay too much Dancing With The Stars and fancy ourselves to be dancing fools. Fools even worthy of a stage name. Okay, okay, 'Urethra and the Monistats' isn't exactly a real stage name, but hey...it fits.

It's only AFTER the dances - when I'm looking at pictures posted on Facebook - that I realize I am not 26 and I really don't look like Beyonce when I'm shaking my tailfeather. In actuality, I look more like my tailfeather got caught in a cement mixer. (Hindsight is not 20/20 when it is your hind that is being sighted.)

***********OCTOBER 14-22 --- BIRTHDAY MARATHON***********

With so many October birthdays in our family occurring within a span of nine days, I've gotta wonder: Whassa going on in Mid-January that puts everybody in the mood for making babies? Speaking for myself and my own donation to Birthday Week, it was a frolicking ski trip to Red River that resulted in the birth of my son Lucas nine months later, 31 years ago.



Now that we're up to five birthdays, we've found it easier to combine them all into one night of revelry and debauchery. Which in our family means lots of ADHD adults who have given birth to lots of ADHD children, eating lots of cake. A sure-fire recipe for chaos.

In a stroke of genius, I hired a Game Truck for the male portion of the ADHD-afflicted family members. For one glorious hour, they sat spellbound with their remote controls, either blowing each other to smithereens (while their babies sat next to them, innocently enthralled by the Mario Bros)...


...or pretended they were Rock Stars, in the worst way. Really. The worst way.


************OCTOBER 22 --- GEEZER ROAD TRIP!!************

No sooner had Jackie sucked all the helium out of the birthday balloons, than we found ourselves loading up the drums and guitars and hitting the road for Mansfield, where the Geezers had been invited to play for a reunion of Borger graduates from the '60's.

Please allow me to share some random thoughts from our Very First Geezer Road Trip:

1) Men's prostates tend to enlarge as they get older, therefore requiring more frequent bathroom stops. I'd like to think this is nature's way of leveling the playing field for us girls and our dysfunctional uteri and tiny bladders. Guys are never happy about this uh,...development, and will expend a great deal of energy trying to convince us that the size of their prostate has nothing to do with the degree of their machismo. Unless, of course, they happen to meet up with John Wayne, sitting proudly astride his horse at a Sonic Drive-In in Memphis, Texas. There's no fooling John Wayne.


2) Texas is large and restrooms are nasty. The sign outside of this station in Bellevue should have been a warning. It might just as easily have read "Don’t even think about using this bathroom unless you have really strong thighs for squatting or ninja-like hovering skills."

3) Mexican food makes me stupid. Even though dinner was amazing, the company sublime, I was so bloated with tortilla chips and overdosed on salsa that in the excitement of getting my picture taken with Awesome Waiter David and some band groupies....


...I left my not-so-smart phone on the table. Apparently the pimple-faced bus boy mistook my sturdy little flip-phone for an eating utensil and scooped it right on into the tub of water for a good soaking. The management was nice enough to give me a bag filled with hope and rice for reviving my stupid phone. The phone never revived, but hey...anybody hungry for rice?

4) Borger Bulldogs Rock. Maybe it's the effect of all the carbon black we inhaled, or all those hours we spent dancing in lines at Teen Town...but nobody knows how to party better than a bunch of Borgans. The cherry on top? The Borger High football team whooped up on the Pampa Harvesters whilst the band played on...



5) Everyone is a winner in the World Series. While Dickie and crew cheered the Rangers on to a win in Game Four...


I spent the evening with one of my favorite Borger Bulldogs solving First World Problems. We finally concluded that we must find us a plot of land and call it The Peace Farm. We already have the cute t-shirt. Now if we can only figure out how to erect a barrier that will keep out anything that destroys our peace. Kinda like a bug zapper, but without causing death or permanent scarring. A force field that will identify say...people that make us want to pull our eyelashes out one-by-one.


*********OCTOBER 31 --- TRICK OR TREAT***********

Do I really need to state the obvious: by the time Halloween rolled around I was done for, depleted, fingers worn to a nub and sitting in a bowl of Ranch dip.


But I was quickly revived by a visit from the Butterfly Princess, Yoda and a short, blue-eyed whiskered male of unknown species.


It was a fun-filled night --- except for the parts where Dickie kept getting mad at the toddling trick or treaters for choosing the Kit-Kat bars over the candy corn. He has vowed that next year we will only hand out pieces of that nasty taffy stuff. You know what I'm talking about - the cockroach candy of Halloween that would undoubtedly survive the apocalypse.

But today...ahhhhh...today is a new day. A new beginning. The date itself is even hopeful: 11-1-11. October is nine whole months away. Plenty of time to catch my breath, wash my undies and figure out what to do with all those uneaten carrots.

Hey! Maybe I can give them to the Dickman while he's watching old episodes of Captain and Tenille...

October 09, 2011

Dickman, Duke of Hurl

WARNING: This blog is not for the queasy or the puke-a-phobic. I’ll admit, I even got a little nauseated while writing it. But if you can get past the gross chunky parts, you will find a funny story worthy of sharing. Because sharing is caring. And I really care.

Hardly anything warms the cockles of the Dickman’s heart like a big, thick, steaming bowl of homemade chili.

So, you can just imagine how excited he was to be chosen to judge the annual Chili Cook-Off at his office. A plethora of chili – just waiting to be sampled. He and the other judges spent forty-five minutes tasting twenty different pots of homemade chili. Finally, it was up to Dickie to cast the deciding vote between two equally tasty bowls. In a valiant effort to remain fair and unbiased, he kept going back and forth between the two bowls of chili...tasting them over and over AND over...before deciding upon a winner.

After turning in his judge’s hat, Dickie suddenly realized he had spent so much time selecting the perfect chili that he was now running late for his dental appointment. He rushed out to his car and into the traffic like a chili-bloated ninja on a mission.

When he arrived, he was disappointed to find that Renay (his favorite dental assistant), happened to be out of the office. Renay’s replacement came in, introduced herself, and began preparing a mold to take impressions of Dickie’s mouth.

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[At this point in the story I should pause to insert some pertinent vomiting history regarding the Dickman. As far back as anyone remembers, he has always had a wussy stomach and a hair-trigger gag reflex. So much so that in high school, Dickie’s football nickname was ‘Water Boy’. His pre-game hurling became such an integral part of the team ritual that some players feared bad luck if Dickie didn’t produce. All the players knew it was time to begin countdown for kickoff whenever they heard the comforting sounds of Dickie’s “BLLLLLLEEEEEECCCCCCCKK!” coming from the opposing team’s sideline (his favorite place to hurl). On one of the rare occasions that Dickie refrained from puking prior to kick-off, he ended up puking ON the kickoff. Literally. During the playback of that week’s game, the coaches could barely watch as Dickie held the ball for Mike Wilson to kick. They saw the exact moment Dickie’s shoulders hunched over the ball, just seconds before Big Mike’s toe connected with the pigskin and sent it hurtling through the air...streams of Dickie’s bodily fluid flying off in all directions.]

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In all fairness to the Dickman, he did try to warn the unsuspecting dental assistant. “I have a really bad gag reflex and Renay always puts salt on the end of my tongue to keep me from puking.”

“Eh, we don’t need no stinking salt”, said the unwitting assistant. “This will only take a second”.

According to the Dickman, pre-vomit warning signs are rendered useless when your mouth is crammed full of dental appliances filled with goop. And no added salt.

"Brrrrllllpppp-ffftttt!!!" His body gave one huge shudder before chunks of prize-winning chili were projectiled all over the examining room. All. Over. It was a virtual Vesuvius of Vomiticus of Epic Proportions. Covering every sanitized surface in sight, even extending a good four feet out onto the wall.

The dental assistant squealed, then recoiled in disgust, then quickly executed a perfect pirouette and ran out of the room...leaving Dickie alone with his handiwork.

About the time Dickie had managed to get the – now goopier – dental mold out of his mouth, the dental assistant reappeared, covered from head to toe in a green HazMat suit, complete with helmet and face shield. She carefully planted herself out of the line of fire and supervised as Dickie alternately mopped and gagged, cleaning chili off the chair, off the counter, off the dental instruments, off the lights, off the wall and even a few splatters that found their way out into the hall.

Hearing all the commotion, the dentist stuck his head around the corner. Incredulous eyes popped out of his head as he took in the tornado of vomit. Struggling to maintain a semblance of professionalism, he quietly told the OSHA–compliant dental assistant to give Dickie a few minutes before trying to take another impression. Then helpfully suggested that this time she might try putting a little salt on the end of his tongue.

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So...neighbor. I don’t know how long it has been since you’ve had a big, thick steaming bowl of chili, but I have a feeling it’s gonna be awhile around here.

September 30, 2011

IF IT'S NOT ONE THING...IT'S YOUR MOTHER(S)

Mom knew she had arrived earlier than the appointed time when she pulled up in front of Dora’s house, but she was anxious to be on her way to Amarillo…anxious to get the dreaded spinal decompression surgery over with. Dora stuck her head out the front door and hollered that she was almost ready, then disappeared back into her house. To pass the time and calm her nerves, Mom pulled her paperback book out of her purse, rolled the car windows down, and quickly became absorbed in her latest story.

Several minutes had passed when Mom heard a faint sound coming outside the passenger window. Glancing over, Mom saw a hand waving at her through the window and heard Dora’s voice calling for help. She hurriedly opened her door and walked around the car, surprised to find Dora lying uncomfortably between the curb and the car.

“What are you doing on the ground…did you fall?” asked Captain Obvious, aka, Mom.

“Yes, I've fallen and I can’t get up! You’re gonna have to help me!” exclaimed my Mother-in-law, Dora.

Mom shuffled around to the back of the car and pulled her walker out of the trunk.

“Here…use this.” she instructed as she plopped the walker down in front of Dora.

“Dang it, Donna! I said: I. Can’t. Get. Up! I think I hurt my leg.” replied Dickie’s clumsy Mama.

As luck would have it, a white knight in a beat up truck saw the two little ladies beside the road and stopped to help. He managed to get Dora tucked into the car, returned the useless walker to the trunk, and sent them merrily on their way.

Uh, except the merrily part only lasted until Panhandle. At least for Dora. That’s when her leg began throbbing with pain. Which Mom – whether out of stress or a warped sense of humor - found to be hysterically funny.

I happened to be working in the same hospital where Mom was scheduled for surgery. I thought it was sweet that Dora wanted to come with Mom, to offer her support. They had planned to drive straight to my house, and I was waiting for a call to tell me they had arrived safely. That was not the call I received…

“Robin…hahaha…we’re almost to Amarillo…hahaha, but I swear, all that’s holding the two of us together is duct tape and bailing wire, hahaha. Dora thinks she hurt her leg, hahaha. She fell trying to get into my car…haha…and I didn’t even hear her …haha…cause I was reading my Nora Roberts book and you know how good her love scenes are, hahaha.”

“Wait a minute, Mom. If Dora is hurt, why are you laughing so hard?”

“Hahaha! Isn’t it awful…haha? I shouldn’t be laughing, cause Dora is really hurting, hahahaha. You don’t think she broke her leg, do you? BWHAHAHAHA?”

“Mom. Seriously. Stop laughing and drive straight to the hospital. Call me when you get lost.”

She called three more times trying to figure out how to get to the hospital. Mom’s sense of direction is about as warped as her sense of humor.

I had a wheelchair and a couple of my physical therapy buddies ready to help them out of the car when they arrived. Mom still had the giggles, but Dora’s ashen face wasn’t quite so jolly. According to the x-rays, she didn’t have much reason to be. Yep, it’s all fun and games 'til somebody breaks a hip.

And that, my friends, is how my Mom and my Mom-in-law came to be on the same floor of the same hospital after undergoing orthopedic surgeries a mere two hours apart on the same day. That was seven years ago. Since that fateful day, they have not been allowed to travel together without a responsible adult in the car.

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Tuesday happened to be my day for being the responsible adult.

Call me crazy, but I don’t agree that doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results is insanity. In my dysfunctional world…it’s optimism. Which is why, in an effort to kill two birds (or Moms) with one stone, I had optimistically made their cardiology appointments on the same day at the same time, with the same doctor. Bless my heart.

Act One of the Donna and Dora Traveling Road Show began in the clinic waiting room.

As the wait grew longer, the Moms’ patience grew thinner. They began to express their frustration loudly and vocally, their boiling disgust spilling onto the entire medical profession (excluding optometrists and pharmacists, of course).

Mom pointedly explained to everyone present how she had almost become a nurse, but thank goodness had come to her senses. She had, in fact, bought the white shoes, stockings, dress and hat ensemble that all good nurses of the 50’s wore and had actually worked two entire weeks in the hospital. She explained how her budding career as a nurse came to a screeching halt when she was asked to bathe an elderly male patient. After she had modestly dabbed his chest off with a wet washcloth, he removed the towel across his hips and asked if she minded washing his...uh, junk. That was when Florence Nightingale threw the washcloth at her patient and walked out of the room. And continued walking right on out of the hospital.

But HAD she become a nurse, Mom explained to us all, she would never leave her patients waiting a whole hour in the waiting room. How. Rude.

Dora agreed, mumbling how she made it all the way to her wedding night without ever having to see a man’s junk, much less, wash it.

Finally (thank you Baby Jesus) we were called back to the examining room. Carrying three purses while leading two Moms through the maze of halls was not unlike herding cats. Slow, shuffling, noisy cats. With 45-pound purses.

Dora went through the battery of tests first. As Mom watched the nurse place electrodes on Dora’s chest for an EKG, she told us how much she had always envied Dora’s greatly endowed boobage. But not so much any more...

Dora bragged to the the nurse that her EKG would be better than my Mom’s, because she had never been a nasty smoker and everyone knows that smoking affects your heart. And makes your breath stink. And probably kept your boobs from growing. According to Dora.

After the tests, the exhausted nurse gave both Moms a copy of their individual lab results.

Dora looked at hers in confusion and said, “I never did know what a cholesterol was.”

“Oh you have one.”
Mom told her, helpfully. “Everyone has a cholesterol.”

Finally, the doctor came in and attempted to give each of them a good report. I felt like an interpreter at a UN Summit Meeting, between the heavily accented Arabian doctor and the stereophonic babbling Moms. He seemed to feel safer addressing Dora. Especially after Mom told him she didn’t want any more tests done. Ever. “Might I ask why?” He politely asked.

“Because, hey…you gotta die with something, right?”

“That’s right Mrs. Cooper.” He replied with his eye twitching.

Two hours and thirty minutes it took us. One hundred and fifty minutes to essentially learn that smoking will make you flat and that all God’s children have a cholesterol.

But being around these two Moms of mine...with their indomitable spirits and wacky humor...best 2 ½ hours of my week.

Even as they frazzle my brain, they fill my heart, and make my belly ache with laughter. I count it nothing but honor to stand with them as they stand together, united in their fight against the fast fade, connected forevermore through their grandchildren, great-grandchildren and generations of Cooper-Haneys to come.

I didn’t need no stinkin doctor to tell me their hearts were good. Both my Moms have the Very Best Hearts. And my own is grateful for every day they are still with me. Duct tape, bailing wire, and all...they bless my heart, indeed ♥

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September 24, 2011

He washed MY feet

Mothers of boys…we see our sons in their most vulnerable moments. We’re the ones they come to when they are sick, when they get hurt, when they’ve had a broken heart or a bad dream.

And because we’re the ones who see them with their guards down, it makes it harder for us not to over-protect and over-manage. Hard to keep ourselves from going before them to make the crooked paths straight.

We alone know the heart of our son, the heart that grew right under our own, in a way nobody else ever will.

This is why it is almost impossible for us to look at our son and see a man. Even if he has hair on his face and an apple on his Adam, we still look through those grown-up eyes and see the breakable heart of our own little boy.

Instead of the 27-year old man, we see the 4-year old little guy that we dropped off for his first day of preschool. The one that walked off sadly with his teacher, tugged on her hand to stop, then turned around to look back at me. As he looked me up and down with all the solemnity of a judge, Jacob's parting shot was: “I just wanted to remember what you looked like...”

Letting go is hard.

It’s been even harder with Jacob. Partly because he’s my baby, partly because he’s always been the sensitive one, and mostly because he’s traveled down a long and crooked road that only he could finally make straight.

I’ve learned so much from Jacob. As a little guy, he was my peacemaker…the one that always wanted everybody together in the same house in the same room singing Kumbaya and passing out cookies. He has always seen the best in everyone and everything around him. Every meal that I cooked was the best one he had ever eaten, every song his brother taught him on the guitar was the best one he had ever heard, every ballgame he and his Dad played was the most fun ever.

 
Jacob has always seen life in extremes…from the brightest hues of the rainbow to the darkest grays imaginable. For him, those days that weren’t The Very Best, were almost always The Worst.

To experience life so deeply is both a blessing and a curse. To be born with a heart so empathic that it never stops feeling must be both wonderful and terrifying. I never really understood depression until I had to watch my young son struggle in its grips. I never realized how far one would go to escape those dark feelings, until he almost escaped too far.

We’ve been through a lot, my Jacob and I. Much like any parent-child relationship, not all of it has been pretty. But we’ve never given up on each other. No one could love him more.

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Last Saturday, I was kneeling on the floor beside the Dickman’s chair, looking over his shoulder as he read about me making fun of him in my last blog. As we were laughing together, I felt something cold and wet touch my feet. I swung my head around to see Jacob on the floor beside me, washing my feet off with a paper towel.

Let me repeat myself: Jacob was washing MY feet.


To fully appreciate this act of kindness, you would have to know what ugly feet I have. My feet are Fugly. Truly. My own Mom once told me that my feet looked like they had worn out three bodies. My husband tells everyone that he married me IN SPITE of my ugly feet. I have bunions. I have callouses. I have cracked heels. I even have a spot on the bottom of my right foot that occasionally grows a tiny hair, but we’ll save that for another story.

“What in the world are you doing? Are my feet really THAT dirty?” I said to J.P. in surprise.

“Nah, they’re not too bad. I just wanted to wash your feet.” He replied.

Distracted by my husband’s hysterical laughter as he watched another video of his sedated self…I paid my son little heed. Until a few moments later, when I felt him gently rubbing lotion onto my now clean feet.

“Seriously, dude…lotion?” I said.

“Yeah. Your feet are really dry. This will make them feel better.” So said my handsome manservant.

Again, without much thought, I turned back to my laughing husband.

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Later that day I pulled up to Jacob’s new apartment. He and his Dad had begun moving him in and thankfully, I had timed it just right so there was nothing heavy left for me to carry up the stairs. As the guys were busy doing manly stuff like putting bed rails together and hooking up cable, I puttered around in his tiny kitchen, trying to not to wonder what might be growing in a half-empty bag of flour that had survived six weeks of storage in a horse trailer.

No sooner had we moved him in, than he was ready for us to be on our way. As I walked back down the steps of his apartment he called out to me and I turned around.

“Mom…? Thanks. I really mean it. Thanks for everything. I know I’ve put you through a lot. That’s why I washed your feet this morning.”

“Well, baby…that was really so sweet of you. But I’m sure you washed my feet because they were hideous and your OCD just couldn’t stand it.”
 
“No, Mom. I mean…yeah, it started out that way. I got a paper towel to wipe a smudge off your foot. But then I thought about how Jesus washed his disciples’ feet and I wanted to do the same for you. I couldn’t find any oil, so I just used lotion. I wanted to show you that I’m sorry. And that I love you.”


I looked at this beautiful man that was once my little boy.  I really looked at him. And suddenly all I saw was the man, standing strong and vulnerable before me. His tender heart shining out of blue eyes full of hope...hope that I would understand the importance of the gift he had given.

Finally, I saw.

I walked back up the steps and hugged him. I wrapped my arms around this son of mine who had been through so much, who had fought so hard to stand right where he was standing. I told him I was sorry. That I didn’t realize at the time just how precious a gift he had given me. But now? I got it.

As Jacob’s mother, there is nothing that I’ve ever done to make me worthy of him washing my feet. Even so, I got it.

There I stood - just like Peter – confused and unworthy.

And there he was - being Jesus - giving the purest of gifts in the most humble of ways.


As I was driving away, I glanced back one more time and took a long, appreciative look at the man standing on the stairs. In that moment, with a heart filled to bursting...I just wanted to remember what he looked like.

September 17, 2011

Going Down Tobacco Road With A One-Way Ticket To Paradise

After so many years together, it's safe to say that my husband and I have few surprises left for each other. That's why it was such a shock to see an entirely new side of the Dickman - one I had not known existed - when he underwent an Upper and Lower GI last year.

Other than giving birth to a kidney stone and, oh yeah, a recent unfortunate case of the 'Kneesles' which developed from a dog bite to the knee ---> (hahaha), Dickie has always been disgustingly healthy.

As you might expect, his experience with hospitals and medical procedures has been very limited. In fact, prior to last year's scope, he had never been under any type of anesthesia or sedation.

Suffice it to say, he really didn't need to take the pre-procedural Go-Lightly, cause he was pretty much scared sh*tless.

And take it from me, fear is not an emotion that the Dickman wears well. Thankfully, he is a man of few fears. In fact, except for roller coasters and PMS'ing women, the only thing the Dickman is afraid of is...needles.

So, what do you get when you combine a deep-seated needle phobia with an overt need to be in control? One Crappy Patient. Which in itself is surprising, as Dickie has always excelled at most every other thing in life. Except chewing gum and threading needles. And maybe a few other little things. (You can email me for a complete list.)

The main problem is - just like every other male of the species - the Dickman wants to be in the driver's seat. Both literally and figuratively. Whether driving an actual car or guiding an actual surgical tube through his own orifice(s). He does not like giving over control.

In spite of it all, he survived the dual-ended scope. In fact, Dickie was awarded an A+ on his butt scope, which to my understanding is the same as saying he is, I mean...has...a perfect butthole. As for the Upper GI, the doc recommended that Dickie undergo a follow-up scope this year. In my opinion, this was prescribed simply because Loopy Dickman is so darn entertaining.

Seriously, there is nothing funnier than the Dickman under the influence of the conscious sedation drug,Versed. In all the many fun-filled, rip-roaring years of my marriage, I have never laughed harder at anything or anyone than Dickie post-scope.

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A few weeks back I was in the process of filling out my WOTY (Wifey Of The Year) entry form when Dickie called to let me know he had scheduled his upper GI scope.

Don't judge me, but I can't tell you how excited I got in anticipation of seeing Dickie under the influence once again. I was especially excited because this time I would be prepared. This time I was taking a camera to record Dick on Drugs for all posterity and his grandbabies to see.

[Is that wrong? Go ahead and nod your head yes, I really don't care. Because in all my excitement of getting to laugh at my sedated husband, I forgot to send in my WOTY entry form.]

I'm not sure why Dickie has such a crazy reaction on Versed. I've had the same drug and do exactly what I'm supposed to: sleep like a baby in between short wake-ups to ask "Is it over? Am I okay?".

But no, not the Dickman. Not only does he refuse to relax and go to sleep, he won't shut up. And his personality changes into a character that can only be described as a combination of his Uncle Harold shooting the bull with a bunch of guys outside the Borger Bulldog bus barn and former president Bill Clinton holding court at a summit meeting.

I submit Exhibit A...the Dickman in the early throes of mindless utopia as he begins to channel President Clinton, his voice in sincere meeting mode:



Throughout the entire debacle, Dickie remained very fixated on his Diet Dr. Pepper. Here he is trying to figure out the existential meaning of a Dr. Pepper gone flat while going down Tobacco Road with a One-Way Ticket to Paradise:



And my very favorite...more Diet DP deliberation mixed in with a little French lesson amid declarations of true love:



Yeah, sure I'm gonna let you drive home. You can't even operate the bendy straw in your drink can.

When the nurse had enough of the Loopy Dickman, she came in and asked who he was going home with. In all his virile glory, Dickie assumed the nurse was hitting on him. (Another weird side effect of the Dickman on Versed...he suddenly becomes irresistible to nurses, but only in his mind. Bless his heart.)

Thankfully, he still liked me best, and not just because I was the one taking him home.

Finally, here he is...happy to be going home with me, a special child of the universe:



I might add that before we left, the doc came in to talk to us and gave me some Good News and some Bad News. The Good News was that Dickie had checked out fine. The Bad News was that he wouldn't have to have another scope for three years.

"What??" I said, "I have to wait three more years to enjoy my husband on Versed again?!" "'Fraid so, Mrs. Haney" the doctor said...then skedaddled away.

Oh well - look at the bright side. With a three-year hiatus, I might actually have a shot at winning Wifey of the Year.

September 11, 2011

REMEMBERING 9/11

Flashbulb Memory (noun) a memory laid down in great detail during a highly personally significant event. These memories are perceived to have a "photographic" quality. For example, a great many people can remember exactly where they were when they heard of the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001 or the assassination of John F. Kennedy or John Lennon. (Webster)

With both sons away at college and my husband in Philadelphia on a business trip, that Tuesday morning in September was unusually quiet and peaceful in my little corner of the world.

I made it all the way to the hospital before I was alerted to the catastrophic events unfolding in NYC. Walking into a patient’s room to begin therapy, the unbelievable images on the television slowly seeped into my brain. I calmly excused myself and went to the therapy office, where fear and confusion had erupted among my young co-workers. I distinctly remember one therapist on the phone, sobbing to her mother, telling her over and over how much she loved her.

Another young student was sitting quietly in shocked silence as hot tears streamed from her disbelieving eyes. I wrapped my arms around her in motherly comfort, having nothing else to give her. There were no words, only the unspoken understanding that everything had suddenly changed.

I looked up to see my boss searching the room, watched as his eyes settled on mine. He came over to me and with great concern asked if I had spoken to Dickie. I did not know what he had just learned. That a third plane had exploded on impact right outside of Philadelphia.

In spite, or perhaps because of the horror that had filled the morning, I hadn’t given a thought to the fact that my husband might be so close to the tragedy. I told my boss that Dickie was supposed to have flown out of Philadelphia earlier that morning. He said, “You need to call him, Robin. Another plane just went down.”

As I heard his words, I stopped for a moment to check my heart. My heart has carried Dickie around inside for so many years, I knew there would be a physical change in rhythm if he were not okay. Even so, he had never felt so far away.

It took awhile to get through to him. All circuits were busy. When I finally heard his sweet, ‘Hey, baby…are you okay?”, I felt the world shift shakily back onto its axis. Beyond being frustrated and helpless – and oh so sad – he was okay. All flights had been cancelled, all rental cars had been rented. On the day of the worst tragedy in history, he wanted nothing more than to be home with his family but was powerless to do anything but return to his hotel and wait.

In the hours and days that followed, my time was either spent in front of the TV or on the phone. There were endless conversations with my sons, with my mother, and with Dickie, who was slowly going crazy trapped in his hotel room. All of us shared our frustration and our fear, hopelessly trying to make sense of a senseless act, trying to find words of reassurance. With each image of Ground Zero, of the Pentagon, of the field in Pennsylvania, we all felt the impact of those airplanes like a punch to the chest. We shared in the unspeakable grief for the thousands that had been impacted directly.

I remember calling my 93 year old grandmother who suffered from dementia and had a hard time figuring out the world on a good day. I called my Flodie at her supervised group home, just wanting to hear her precious voice. Her caregiver answered and said my grandmother was agitated, but fine. As soon as she heard my voice Flodie excitedly said, “Robin, I think something bad might have happened.” I said, "Why do you think so?” She replied, “It was on TV...somebody made a mess.”

“I think you’re right, Flodie,” I said. “Somebody made a big mess...”

Two days later, Dickie was able to connect with a friend from Amarillo who was also stuck in Philadelphia. They had somehow secured one of the last rentals to be found and drove straight through to Texas in 22 hours.

With Dickie safe at home, I was finally able to release my feelings - on paper. This is the letter I sent to my sons:

===========================================

September 15, 2001

Lucas & J.P.,

What a week! You guys don’t know how many times I’ve wanted to pick up the telephone during this past week just to hear your voices, and how thankful I am to God that I was able to do so. Part of me wanted to have you close to me at home; but most of me felt peace knowing that you were at ACU, praying in Chapel, praying in groups, praying all alone for our people and our country.

What has happened this week affects all of us deeply. Beyond that, the results of Tuesday’s Terrorism will have a profound effect on My Grandbabies-To-Be. I thank God that my sons have had the privilege of making it into manhood without directly knowing the threat of war. No matter what the near future may bring as a result of this terrorism, I believe that both of you are mature enough and strong enough in your faith to deal with it. But I’m selfish enough to admit that it really infuriates me that My Grandchildren will not be able to grow up with the same sense of security. And I can’t help but wonder what kind of world they will inherit…

I’d like to think that there will be ‘trade-offs’. My little blue & green-eyed (brown-eyed?) Grandbabies will be born into a nation left with obscene scars that were unimaginable to us less than one week ago. But they will never grow up taking their freedom for granted, as our generations have done. My Grandbabies will never think that it’s ‘corny’ to sing the national anthem or question the tears that form in the eyes of their parents and grandparents when we hear their sweet voices singing of the Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave. The words to the Pledge of Allegiance – One Nation, under God - will never be empty words, but words of promise and hope to My Grandbabies. Most of all, I believe that My Grandbabies will grow up depending on God with their every breath, not just in times of chaos and trouble. I believe that their faith will be stronger, their hearts will be softer, their pride indestructible. I’m sad that some asshole from Afghanistan has shaken the physical foundation that I believed would remain intact for My Grandbabies. But I thank God that they will grow up in a world whose eyes have been opened, and whose spiritual foundation became renovated, reconstructed and reinforced on 9-11-01.

I challenge you both to be an active part in helping to bring our nation back to God. I want My Grandbabies to know and believe in foundations that can’t be broken apart by cowards and unbelievers. I challenge you to stay strong and keep the faith. You are My Baby Boys and I love you both more than you could ever know.

Mom
Psalm 46


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Ten years later…I now have three of those blue-eyed grandbabies. Three beautiful souls full of innocence and hope, who are not yet old enough to understand the monstrous evil unleashed upon our nation a decade ago.

The fact that Islamic terrorists wanted revenge is not what is important for them to understand about 9/11. What I hope they will understand is the amazing bravery of the First Responders; how everyday people turned into heroes; how we should never take our liberties – or our life – for granted. I hope they come to realize that in spite of the best efforts of a cowardly band of terrorists, we still remain the Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave.

Most of all, I hope they will grow up to be the kind of people that speak these words as a prayer...that will whisper or sing or shout these words with a hand proudly placed over a heart filled with faith:

GOD BLESS AMERICA.

August 31, 2011

The Griswolds Do DFW - 3G

When my sons were small, family vacations primarily consisted of trips to meet up with other dysfunctional relatives for reunions. Being there was fun. Getting there...not so much.

On those long trips I spent the majority of the car ride twisted like a pretzel in the front seat, either answering the whine of "When will we be there?" ad nauseam or playing referee between my two sons while they committed such atrocities as breathing on one other. After endless hours of listening to cassette tapes of 70's music, we would fill the void by playing such lively games as 'I spy something...' and 'Slug Bug'.

It's safe to say our trips pretty much mirrored those of the Griswold family --- me screaming at my sons to "get along and act like you're having fun!" as they managed to dodge my blindly swatting hand with ninja-like skills of evasion. Oblivious to the drama, the Dickman never missed a beat while drumming Inna Gadda Da Vida on the steering wheel.

I'm sure it was his fond memories of those trips that gave Lucas a moment's hesitation when we offered to wisk two of his perfect children off for a quick trip to DFW. The fact that we were only staying one night weighed heavily in our favor. (Because really...how much could we warp his babies in just two days?) He agreed to let us take his little darlins on two stipulations: 1) that we take his brother Jacob along for a chaperone, and 2) that we drive his family van, equipped with 5-point harness safety seats and a custom DVD player.

Good call, Lucas.
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DAY ONE

Can I just say that nothing makes a five hour car trip with young children easier than hypnotising them by playing Blue's Clues on a loop? Today's vehicular DVD players are the equivalent of our generation's practice of dosing the kids with Benadryl and singing 14 rousing choruses of "99 Bottles of Beer".

(Road Trip Nirvana)

Even the lull of the DVD couldn't completely calm the buzz of excitement in the car headed down Highway 287 for Six Flags. Call me crazy, but no matter how many candles wind up on my birthday cake...Six Flags will always be one of my favorite places.

And here I was, taking two of my favorite short people to one of my favorite places. Perhaps such overt excitement was to blame for my shortsidedness in forgetting a few unfortunate morsels of information: not only were we hitting Six Flags on one of the hottest days in Texas history, but both my body and I had aged at least 15 years since our last trip to Six Flags.

It was shocking to find the only people older than Dickie and I who worked at Six Flags were the park maintenance people. When did that happen?

As for the heat...we found that sweating every last drop of moisture from your body pretty much takes care of having to tinkle in a public park restroom.


Other than making sure we never missed a drop of mist, our other strategery for staying cool was to sit quietly on the the exhausted backs of the painted ponies running in circles under the shaded carousel...

...or to loiter in the air-conditioned gift shops until Mandie or Mattman started licking the candy.

Speaking of licking...it was worth the price of admission to discover that age does not diminish the delightful taste of a Pink Thing! But disheartening to remember that a three-digit temperature combined with amusement park food combined with roller coasters is a surefire recipe for disaster. After all, these rides were specifically designed to extract vomit from kids filled with Pink Things and curly fries.

Or more precisely, adults filled with Pappasito's mexican food.


(Not the vomit-inducing ride.)

(Nope, only smiles, no vomit.)

[By the way, there was not a single group shot taken, because two of us always had our hands full of kid and the other one couldn't find a reliable person that did not look like a camera thief. Very large people squished into tiny spandex garments do not evoke fuzzy feelings of trust.]

We finally sweated through all our dignity and made a beeline for the most invasive water ride we could find. It was powerfully refreshing to get drenched with gallons of stagnant water.

And nothing short of empowering to realize that nobody even notices if you got scared on the ride and peed your pants...


Just 5 hours, 4 sausages-on-a-stick, 3 Pink Things, and 2 glow-in-the dark headbands later, we were forced to leave when our chaperone blew chow on a Tilt-N-Hurl ride in Gotham City.

As we drove back to the hotel, we reviewed our fun-filled day amid the smells of vomit, fried foods and urine. We unanimously agreed: A Good Time Was Had By All.
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DAY TWO

We awoke the next day somewhat recovered and ready for Part Deux of our Great DFW Adventure. Our little gang of five divided into teams of gender as the boys dropped Mandie and I off in front of the obnoxiously pink American Girl Boutique...


(Finding my tiny G-girl in this photo is like Finding Waldo.)

I'm not ashamed to admit it. I got almost as excited as my 5-year old Grand-girl when we stepped out of the real world and into the land of doll utopia. We walked through showroom after showroom looking at displays selling everything a doll could ever need or want. From the skin of her plastic torso to the wardrobe of her real-life girl/mommy - here it was. Estrogen on crack.


Maybe it's because I've lived most of my life in a man's world, but when I got past all the PINK --- I couldn't help but be a little in awe of this oh-so-girly store full of everything a doll lover could imagine --- and then some. For example, here is American Girl's answer to what one should do with a doll while answering the call of nature:


Meanwhile, the boys combined their collective testosterone and marched themselves right on over to...the Galleria shopping mall. Okay, in all fairness, they did manage to hang out with some ferociously wild animals...




Packing so much fun into a two day trip was nothing short of exhausting, for 3 year olds and 50+ year olds, alike. I anticipated hearing nothing on the long ride home but the sound of gentle snoring (hopefully not from the driver). Instead, what I heard was "Can we watch Blue's Clues again?".

As we drove through Quanah, I found myself humming "99 bottles of beer" and scavanging in my purse for a Benadryl.


Blue's Clues, aside, I loved every sweaty moment of our Most Excellent Adventure. Traveling with grandchildren is much more fun than traveling with your own children. Nobody has to act their age and everybody gets to have a great time.
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When we finally pulled into Lucas' driveway, turned off the DVD player and unhooked the harnesses...we all bailed out of that smelly car with hearts and souls stuffed to overflowing with memories.

And that's important.

Cause you never know when you might need one of those memories - or at least a green balloon - to carry you along this roller coaster ride of LIFE.


We don’t stop playing because we grow old;
we grow old because we stop playing.
~ George Bernard Shaw ~