Sunday, December 11, 2016

Military Service


Puerto Rico –  1955 to 1957

This past Veteran’s Day I was reminded that Dad served in the U.S. Air Force right after high school.

His service was not out of some patriotic desire, but from economic need.  His teeth were rotting out and his family didn’t have any money for dental care.  So he joined up to get new teeth.  For as long I can remember, he had an upper full denture plate and a lower partial plate as well.

I’m not sure he that ever thought the service was worth the trade.  He enlisted on 4 August 1954 for a four-year hitch, but got out about three and a half months early with an honorable discharge.  I remember him telling me that the early discharge was because both he and the Air Force had had enough of each other.

He told me once that he served 30 days in the brig because he had mouthed off at an officer.  I think it was actually 26 days, because his discharge papers show “26 Days time lost under Sec 6a, Appendix 2b, MCM 1951.”  MCM is the Manual For Courts-Martial, and Sec 6a, Appendix 2b mandates that, any days lost due to confinement (and other reasons) are still owed to the service as part of your enlistment.  I guess they let him slide on that since he did get an early discharge.

I don’t recall exactly what he did while in the service.  I think he was trained as a radar technician.  He served over two years at the now closed Ramey Air Force Base in Puerto Rico.  He told me that he used to man rescue boats that were kept ready in case a plane went down in the water.  However, they apparently spent a good deal of their time taking officers out on fishing trips.

His free time was spent in the bars, riding motorcycles and spearfishing.  He had a long scar that ran down the length of his forearm from a motorcycle wreck in Puerto Rico.  His time in the bars was when he picked up his drinking habit (“there wasn’t much else to do there”).  The local prostitutes (“whores”) were not unknown to him.  His first time was with one of those ladies.  He caught gonorrhea (“the clap”) once and the base doctors gave him the standard treatment of penicillin.  He woke up the next day all swollen from an allergic reaction to the penicillin (“the treatment was worse than the clap; that penicillin liked to kill me”). He said the prostitutes could be dangerous in other ways.  According to him, they had been known to slap men with a razor blade held between their fingers.

I don’t know the exact dates that he was there. He always referred to that time as being “stuck down in Puerto Rico for two years.”  He told me that a hurricane hit the island and base while he was there, and it was “pretty damn scary.”  He was amazed at the calm when the eye of the hurricane passed over.  Thanks to the Internet I found information about Hurricane Betsy which hit the island August 11 – 13, 1956.  Sustained winds reached 73 mph in San Juan and at Ramey, wind gusts of up to 115 mph were recorded.

He lifted from the Air Force a .45 automatic handgun that he had until it was stolen in ’82 or ’83 from his bedroom in a rent house in Alief along with a box of change.  The handgun had been stolen once before from him in ’77 from our rent house in Sharpstown.  Dad figured it was his nephew Tommy who took it and sure enough found him in the parking lot of a local bar trying to sell the gun for cash.

He had his dog tags for a long time, but I could not find them with his stuff when he died.

Other mementos of his time in the service include the scar on his arm, a penicillin allergy medical alert bracelet, a decal from the Ramey AFB Spearfishing Club, and a lifelong bout of alcoholism.

Original Scan of Spearfishing Club Decal

Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Uncle Junior

Houston – Summer, 1977

After living in an apartment off Stella Link and the West Loop for just four months, it was time to move again.  This time Dad rented a house in Sharpstown.  A house gave him the ability to work on his car or truck and to store his house painting equipment and supplies.  But this move left me at the age of 13 with no friends, again, all summer. 

In 1977 there was no Internet and no cable TV.  Part of the summer I “worked” as Dad’s painting helper and part of the summer I spent at home.  I was a big reader of science fiction books back then as well as comic books and spent time doing that.  I think I watched “The Price Is Right” every day.

I also passed time by teaching myself to do wheelies in a wheelchair.

We ended up with the wheelchair when Uncle Junior got hit by a car trying to cross the West Loop on foot one drunken night. 

To recap, I was living with Mom in Memphis and came to live with Dad when she died in February 1977. Then in late March 1977, Dad’s father died at the age of 78.  So it was back to Memphis for the funeral.  Walter Clyde Green, Jr. was Dad’s oldest brother by almost 12 years.  As these things go in the South, Junior’s wife called him Gene, whereas Dad’s middle name was Eugene, but as a kid, all the way through high school, Dad was known as Sonny.  I only ever heard him called Sonny once by family; everybody seemed to call him Douglas and I was, of course, Dougie.

I knew my uncle as Junior.  When we lived in Memphis from 1968 to 1970, I can remember visiting Junior and his wife and my cousins in Arkansas at a cabin out in the mountains, the Ozarks maybe.  I remember driving up part of a mountain road to get to the cabin that seemed like it was vertical.  I thought surely the old station wagon was going to roll back down the hill and we would crash and die. 

When I moved to Memphis the second time, in 1976, Junior was divorced and living with his mother (Pauline) and father (Clyde).  By then, Junior was an alcoholic in a very bad way. He wouldn’t always come home and frequently had that old drunk smell.  He was the kind of drunk who would drink rubbing alcohol or Sterno cooking fuel if he couldn’t get anything else.  I remember Pauline yelling at him when he would stumble home drunk.  Pauline yelled a lot at him and Clyde Sr. both.  I remember one time that Pauline had gotten a hold of some sort of drug that she added to Junior’s food that would make him sick if he drank any alcohol. It didn’t work.  He would get sick, puke everything up and go right back to drinking.  Junior smoked hand-rolled unfiltered cigarettes. 

Where Dad was a functioning alcoholic, Junior was on-a-path-to-his-doom alcoholic.  Dad told me once  that when it came to drinking, Junior couldn’t pace himself at all and couldn’t stop once he started.

Dad told me that Junior was a medic in WWII. He said that when Junior came back he was a changed man and not for the better.  There was a darkness and sadness to him after the war.  Today, I’m sure, he would have been diagnosed PTSD. 

That March of 1977, after Clyde Sr. died, Dad agreed to take Junior to Texas with us so that Junior could get a new start.  Junior had helped dad get started in the paper-hanging and house painting business in 1969 and so I guess Dad was trying to give a helpful payback.  Junior started working with Dad as a painter.  We were living in that apartment off of Stella Link and the West Loop.  I think it was only a week and Junior’s first payday when he went out and got drunk.  He was on foot and tried to cross the 610 Interstate Loop in the middle of the night. 

He got hit by a car and remarkably did not die.  As I recall, he had a broken leg and ribs and more.  He ended up in the VA hospital for some period of time.  As soon as he got out of the hospital, Dad put him on a plane back to Memphis.  The VA gave him a wheelchair to get around and it ended up in our spare bedroom.

Junior died of cancer, throat cancer I think, in 1983 at the age of 57. 

So that boring summer in 1977 I started riding the wheelchair around the house.  The flooring was hardwood and I started doing wheelies.  I got pretty good at it.  I could ride through the entire house, around furniture, and turn through doorways -- all while on two wheels.  I even took it outside a few times going up and down the sidewalk in front of the house.  

The wheelchair highlights a difference between Dad and I.  If I ended up with wheelchair like that from the VA today, I would make sure that it got back to them – some poor soul would need it.  Dad wouldn’t waste a second of his time to get the chair back to the VA.  The wheelchair stayed with us for a few more years.  Around 1981, I ended up loaning it to a coworker at Kmart who had a relative or neighbor who needed a wheelchair for a short period of time; the wheelchair never made it back to me.

The fun video linked to below, “Learn to Wheelie” reminded me of the wheelchair.  This video is a hoot and I was laughing and cheering on the rider as he got better and better at his wheelies. 


https://youtu.be/lTYJMke4kd8

Sunday, August 28, 2016

Senator John Tower

Houston – 1984

On David Letterman’s old NBC talk show, Late Night, he used to have a segment called “Brush With Greatness.”  He would invite audience members to tell tales of their encounters with celebrities.  There are clips of these segments on You Tube. 

Living with Dad, I had my own “Brush With Greatness” with Texas Senator John Tower.

When we moved into the mobile home in 1983, Dad was hiding out from the IRS. He decided to put the utilities in an assumed name.  It wasn’t a case of identity theft; it was just a fake name that he grabbed from nowhere.  The name he picked was Jack Blanton. 

I learned that Jack Blanton was a real person when I answered the home phone a couple of times and the caller was looking for Jack Blanton.  I was in college at the time; I typically had classes in the morning and worked at Kmart in the evening.

 The first phone call came in the middle of a week day. “Hello?” I answered.

A woman’s voice replied, “Senator John Tower would like to speak with Mr. Jack Blanton.  Is he available?” 

I assumed that the call would be some sort of recording where the Senator would ask for a campaign donation.  When you get a phone call for a name that you know is made up, you can be pretty sure that it is some sort of telephone solicitor. 

 “He’s not here right now.” I answered.

“Do you know when he will be back?”

“No, I really don’t.”

“Okay, thank you.”  She seemed confused by this answer.  I didn’t offer to take a message and she didn’t ask me to take one.  That confirmed to me that the phone call was some sort of effort to raise money for the Senator’s re-election campaign.  Senator Tower actually wasn’t running for re-election, but I didn’t know that at the time.

A few weeks later another call came in for Jack Blanton in the middle of a week day.

“Hello?” I answered.

A woman’s voice replied, “Senator John Tower would like to speak with Mr. Jack Blanton.  Is he available?” 

Again?  I decided to play along.  “I’m Jack Blanton,” I declared.

“Please hold,” she replied.

I waited for a moment and a male voice came on the line. “Uh, Jack?”

Oh shit! It’s a real person! I wasn’t aware of what Senator Tower’s voice sounded like, but the voice on the line had an East Texas twang to it.  “Yes sir?” I replied.

“Jack, we’re looking for someone to head up a fund raising committee to for the campaign against Lloyd Doggett.”  Crap!  This is the real deal! I’m on the phone with U.S. Senator John Tower and I’m pretending to be someone who doesn’t exist.  I later learned that Lloyd Doggett was running for John Tower’s Senate seat as the Democratic Party nominee. 

“Well, Senator, I’m pretty busy these days.  I don’t think I have the time to do anything like that.”  Get me out of this phone call!

“Jack, it’s very important that we get this committee going in Houston and we’ll need someone like you to help us out.”

“I’m sorry sir, but I’m a college student and I’m working a full-time job.  I just don’t think I’ll be able to do this.”

The conversation paused just slightly, “I think I have the wrong Jack Blanton.”

“Yes sir, I think you do to,” I replied.  With that, I was no longer on the phone with Senator John Tower.

I thought to myself, Who the hell is Jack Blanton and where did Dad come up with that name?

Dad swore that he picked the name at random.  I can only guess that Dad saw the name somewhere and it bubbled up from his memory when he picked a name to use for his phone, gas and electricity bills. 

We didn’t have the internet back then, so there was no way, other than going to the public library, to research and try find out who Jack Blanton was. I didn’t do that, but a couple of more clues came my way. 

The first clue was something I spotted in a business journal in the lobby of the Sugar Creek National Bank in Sugar Land. I was scanning the magazine while waiting and came across a full page ad for Texas Commerce Bank.  The ad had headshot line drawings of each of the bank’s directors on the Board of Directors. Oil Executive Jack Blanton was there.  The second clue about  Jack Blanton came to me at another time and place, I don’t remember where, but I learned that Jack Blanton was on the University of Texas Board of Regents.



Sunday, August 14, 2016

Little Gems

Memphis – Spring and Summer, 1976

In May of 1976, when I had just four weeks left in the seventh grade, Mom decided to secretly take me and Cousin away from Dad.  He was drinking pretty heavily then, but she had recently gotten out of a half-way house after having her latest nervous breakdown.  So, of course, she was in much better shape to take care of us kids.

For the life of me, I will never understand why she didn’t wait for us to finish the school year.  That put us in the third school and our second state for the school year of 1975-76.  We were still living in Central Florida when she took us. 

The plan to take us divided my loyalties between parents.  At the time I wanted to stay with Dad because he was more emotionally balanced and functionally stable; it felt safer with him. Mom had lost it many times and would probably lose it again.  But if I was to refuse to go with her or blow the whistle on her plan, then I could become the cause of the next breakdown.  That’s a lot for a 12-year-old kid to process and make a decision on. 

As sad as it made me to leave Dad, I kept the secret and off we went to Memphis.  We packed everything we could into our 1972 Chevrolet Kingswood Estate Station Wagon. It was the three of us and our loyal German Shepherd Dog named Shama. 

The drive from Florida to Memphis had its moments.  We had little money, so a motel was out of the question.  I remember stopping a few times so that she could nap while us kids waited nervously.  There was a scary episode while driving at night; we got lost trying to change from one interstate highway to another.  I remember Mom getting angry as we drove around in circles trying to find the right ramp.  I remember feeling very scared.

I remember Mom losing it over an eye-liner pencil.  It had fallen out of her purse into the floor board of the wagon.  We were in a parking lot searching for this pencil in the front seat clutter of the car, “that pencil cost me ninety-seven cents! Do you know how long it took for me to save up for that!?”  We just stood there meekly saying, “we’re sorry” and hoping she that didn’t take it out on us.  I don’t remember if she found the pencil or not. 

Another memory of that drive was having only one eight-track tape to listen to the whole way.  It was John Denver’s Back Home Again. You would think that I would hate that album, but I still love it to this day and I can still sing most of the songs on it.

Skipping ahead a bit in the timeline, later that summer when we finally set up house in a three-room apartment we had very little to our names.  We needed almost all household items, including dinnerware.  We were receiving welfare checks and food stamps by then, and so had little money.  But what Mom did have was a stack of S&H Green Stamp Saver Books.  With these books you could go to an S&H Green Stamp store and redeem the stamps for all sorts of merchandise. Memphis in 1976 had an S&H Green Stamp store.  Mom had enough trading stamps to redeem them for a set of Mikasa Avitra dinnerware, a set of flatware, and a few other things.

Mom died about nine months after taking us to Memphis.  Those kitchen items ended up with Dad and me when I went to live with him in Houston.  Cleaning out Dad’s mobile home did not reveal any treasure, but it did reveal the Mikasa dinnerware and a few other small house hold gems.

Today I went through the two boxes of kitchen things that I saved from his mobile home, intending to clean up the items and donate them to Goodwill. Along with the Mikasa Avitra dinnerware are two turquoise Pyrex Butterprint casserole bowls, one Federal Glass batter bowl and one set of Lefton china canisters.  (I used the Internet to discover all these names). The casseroles and batter bowl I rember from my childhood.  I have no idea where the china canisters came from. 

These little gems don’t have a great value assigned to them, but through the Internet I can get them to collectors who will love them for the nostalgic pieces that they are. 





Update 1. :  The wife and I both like the cheerfulness of the Mikasa dinnerware and are going to use it for a while

Update 2.:  Dang it! Through my clumsiness and courtesy of the granite countertops, I put a big chip in the lid of the smallest Lefton china canister.


Keeping Me Alive

Greenville – December, 1963

When I was in my late 20s, I almost went to Europe on a business trip.  The company had all the reservations and I had my plane ticket in hand.  However, the day before the flight they said, “never mind . . .” Yeah, I was disappointed.

In preparation for that trip, I needed a U.S. Passport.  One of the requirements is a certified copy of your birth certificate.  I always had the pretty one from the hospital, but never had a certified copy.  South Carolina was pretty efficient and for the right fee had a copy to me overnight. 

I read the certificate in detail and found one detail that was a small surprise.

Question:
     “16. PREVIOUS DELIVERIES TO MOTHER
          c. How many fetal deaths (fetuses born dead at ANY time after conception)?”

Answer:
     “2.”




This was a only small surprise because I knew that Mom had two stillbirths after I was born, but I didn’t know of any stillbirths or miscarriages before I was born. 

I asked Dad about it.  He answered, “I finally had to make her get her tubes tied.  I got tired of burying babies. Before you came along, I came home from work and found her and your brother and sister gone.  She told me later that she was headed to visit her family in Baltimore.  She was pregnant and had a miscarriage along the way. She stopped and put D and D in a motel with enough food for a couple of days and went to the hospital.” 

Mom left my brother and sister alone in a motel and went to the hospital for a miscarriage.  D and D were  two years apart in age and were under the age of six.  Mom didn’t tell Dad she was even leaving for this road trip and didn’t call him for help.  She told him about the miscarriage after she got home. 

I have vague memories about the two stillbirths that occurred after I was born. I remember Mom going off to the hospital for several days a couple of times. During the day I stayed at a nearby daycare, probably in someone’s home.  I remember her being gone for days(?) and I remember all the neat toys to play with at that daycare.  I also remember visiting the graves of my brother and sister, Devin and Denine Green. 

 


My mother kept having miscarriages and stillbirths because of Rh sensitization.  This causes a condition called hemolytic anemia where the mother’s Rh negative blood creates antibodies that destroy the fetus’ positive red blood cells faster than they can be replaced. 

My blood type is O+ and hemolytic anemia almost killed me. 

I was born on Friday the 13th, December 1963. I was 5 lbs. 13 oz. at birth, anemic and yellow with jaundice.  To save my life I needed blood transfusions.  Dad told me that I had an IV in my head and an IV in my foot, one taking blood out and the other putting fresh blood in. 

I remember him telling me that the doctor told him “don’t  get attached to this baby – he won’t make it past six months.”  I guess he got a little attached because he didn’t give up.  He said that he would feed me coke and crackers, that was the only thing I could keep down.  This was the 60s and so I don’t know whether they even tried to breast-feed me.

Knowing that blood transfusions are what saved my life when I was born, I am a regular blood donor.  I started when I was 17 years old and still donate three or four times a year.  

Oddly enough, Dad never understood donating blood. He sneered at the thought and said, “if they want my blood, they’ll have to pay me.”


Friday, August 12, 2016

The Note

Houston – June, 2016

Two days after Dad’s death, while cleaning out his mobile home, I found the note.  It wasn’t placed in a prominent place and it might have been overlooked but for me reading any scrap of paper with Dad’s hand writing. 

The note was on a small notepad. The artwork on the page had a cartoon family of owls at the top, staring directly at you and the logo for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital at the bottom.  The notepad was in with the clutter on the table next to his living room recliner. 

I spoke to him twice in the week before he died.  On the Friday before, I brought him some bar-b-que (pork not beef; he was raised in Memphis, not Texas) and invited him over for Father’s Day. Then on Father’s Day when he was late, I called to see what was up. He said he was not feeling well and apologized for not calling me to cancel. 

I imagine it was several days between the time he wrote the note and committed the act.  I imagine he was trying the idea out first – that he wrote the note to make the idea real. He may have even written it on Father’s Day.



“Goodbuy  Cruel World:  I’ve Been hurting 3 T 5 years That’s enuff” 

The note told me what I needed to know – that he didn’t blame me.

I wonder how many other loved ones of suicide victims do the same thing, read the note to see if they are blamed by the victim.  That seems like a selfish thought and is a bit of a turn on what it frequently said about suicide – that suicide is a selfish act of the victim.

Calling suicide a selfish act is a form of blame too, I guess. When we say that, we are blaming the suicide victim for causing our grief.

Since I don’t have any grief for the end of his life, I don’t have any blame for Dad either.

In that final moment outside his trailer, in the gravel of his parking space, what was he thinking? Was he sad? Was he angry? Was he depressed? Was he relieved?

I wish I could have provided a happier ending for him. Deciding that you’ve had a long enough life after 80 years of living is a decision that should be respected.  Like the movie Soylent Green, going “Home” should be a happy decision.  You should be able to die in a peaceful, clean place, listening to your favorite music, watching images of beauty and happiness, surrounded by loved ones. The end shouldn’t be standing all alone on a gravel driveway with Houston humidity bearing down on you. 


I’ll give him this – at least he didn’t die in a hospital with tubes and wires keeping him alive.  He was ready and he died on his own terms.  Mr. DIY to the end.  


Friday, July 29, 2016

Handsome Young Man

Dad graduated from Memphis Technical High School in 1954. His year book has pictures for 198 students in the Senior class. 

I remember him telling me that he took Print Shop classes.  I also remember him telling me that the kids would sometimes use the equipment to print pornographic stories to sell to their classmates and friends.

Before that he went to Fairview Junior High.  I went to Fairview Junior High myself some 26 years later for just the last month of seventh grade, in May of 1976.

I found a couple of great pictures of Dad on dates.  You can see this handsome young man with a couple of pretty young ladies.  One of the pictures has a handwritten note from the young lady, “To Sonny, for a very wonderful night and to a very sweet guy.”

Another set of gems are the telephone directories from Fairview Junior High.  The directory from his ninth grade (October 1950) has the name of a particular girl circled and with a handwritten note, “Aint she wonderful??????????”

He tells me that he never smiled with his teeth because they were rotting pretty bad. In fact the main reason he joined the Air Force was so that he could get some dental work.  They pulled what remained of his upper teeth and gave him an upper denture plate.  He also had partials on the bottom.


It is fun and strange to imagine Dad as a teenager, going on dates, and being called, “sweet” by a pretty young lady.  He probably was a pretty ordinary kid for his time and place, just trying to have a good time with his whole life ahead of him. 




Sunday, July 24, 2016

Fort HPD

On Friday I went to downtown Houston to the Houston Police Department headquarters at 1200 Travis Street. I was there to get the police report on Dad’s death.  The only official information that I have so far is the medical examiner’s death certificate.

I initially thought that Dad had killed himself with a particular automatic handgun, but from the death certificate I learned that he had used a shotgun.  That pistol is missing.  Whenever I visited him at his mobile home, I would see that pistol in a holster on the countertop near the front door. I saw it on that counter about a week before he died.

For $5.00 an hour I parked in a nearby garage about a block and a half away.  It was shortly after Noon when I arrived. Google maps on my phone efficiently guided me to HPD headquarters and back to the garage.  The temperature was high, in the low 90s.

The lobby of 1200 Travis is surrounded by glass, letting in lots of natural light. From the outside looking in, I could see the typical security screening equipment that we’ve come to see in government buildings.  Friendly officers watch as you empty your pockets into dirty plastic bowls so that your possessions can be scanned with X-Rays.  Then you walk through the metal detector and hope that it doesn’t “beep,” drawing unwanted attention.

As I refilled my pockets, the officer pointed out the glass doors 20 feet away and told me to have my identification out.  To get through those glass doors, I had to wait for someone to remotely unlock them. Through those doors was a large open space office area about 50 feet by 30 feet in size.  The office area had a makeshift but permanent feel to it.

One of the long sides of the office space faced the doors that I had just come through.  Behind the desks, there were a couple of officers sitting with PC monitors, keyboards and mice and some other office equipment that I did not recognize. I handed my drivers license to the officer who greeted me.

“How may I help you?” he asked.

“I’m headed to records on the 21st floor,” I replied.

“Well, that’s changed.  They’re gonna take care of you right over there.” He pointed to the office area directly behind him.  “Hang on a minute while I get you signed in.”

He then started to make small talk. “You have the right kind of hat for today.”

I was wearing a very large brimmed hiking hat that gives my fair skin lots of coverage from the sun. “Yeah,” I replied as I took off the hat showing my white and ever enlarging forehead. “My fair Irish skin needs all the protection it can get.”

“Have you tried that Banana Boat . . .” he started.

“Somedays I don’t have it handy.  And when I sweat, the chemicals make my eyes burn. The hat does what I need for short walks.”

He changed the topic. “You look like a doctor. Are you a doctor?” Now it felt like I was being probed for information.  I’m about 80% sure that he was making small talk.  I do it myself all the time.  I’m an introvert by and large, but in one-on-one situations I like to chat with people.  But police offices are probably trained to ask questions when dealing with the public, to gather information to confirm whatever story they are being told.  The officer might be making conversation deliberately to get information, or out of habit, or just because he was bored sitting at that desk all day.

“I work in I.T.” I told him.

“Now there’s a good job to have,” he said.  “Some of those I.T. guys make a sweet six-figure salary.”

“My job is not much different than your’s,” I told him.  “I sit at a desk all day staring at a computer screen.”  I almost mentioned that he and I had matching waste lines to go with our desk jobs, but kept that comment to myself. “Except that you get to talk to people and I rarely talk to people during my work day.”

“So you’ve got them afraid to bother you,” he smiled.

“No, I have one of those administrative jobs that don’t require a lot of contact with people.”

While we were chatting he was going about his job.  He put my drivers license into a card scanner that quickly grabbed the image. He handed the license back and manipulated the PC until a label printer on the desk printed a temporary ID badge.  He peeled the label from the backing and handed it to me.  With his other hand he indicated to put the label on my shirt high on my chest.

Again, he pointed to the other side of the office space. “Go over there and fill out the blue form and they will take care of you.”

The blue form was for requesting a public police incident report.  It was mostly geared towards getting reports from traffic accidents.  Where it asked about what kind of crime, I wrote “suicide.” There was a blank on the form to enter the incident number.  I had already gotten the incident number by phone the previous week.

When I handed the form to the clerk, she asked me if I wanted the public report or if I wanted the full report.  I told her I wanted the full report but would start with the public report.  She keyboarded and moused very briefly until the large laser printer/copier behind her spit out two pages. She directed me to the other clerk sitting with here who would take my payment of 20 cents.  That was a pleasant surprise.  I expected to pay ten or fifteen dollars, but instead I paid only by the page.

The public report was useless to me.  It didn’t have any information that I didn’t already know. However, the last section of the report was called the Property Section.  All the text in this section was redacted.  The Property Section had seven subsections that apparently described seven different pieces of personal property that I assume where confiscated or taken as evidence.

To get the full report, the records clerk told me to go around to the other side of the office space, right where I started and to tell them that I needed Open Records. Now it felt like I was dealing with a city service. I had gotten to Point B and they couldn’t help me and so I had to go back to Point A.  Whereas if the officer at Point A had asked me if I wanted the public report or the full report, I would have told him “full report” and then I would have gotten to go to Open Records to begin with.

I have pretty good patience most of the time, but mercifully there were only a couple of other people there asking for reports.

Back at the front desk, I told the officer that I needed Open Records.  Instead of directing me to the 21st floor as I expected, he pointed me to a row of chairs against a wall and said that he would call them and someone would come down.

I sat and waited for just a few minutes before a nice middle-aged man came from the elevator bank and sat down next to me. I showed him the redacted public report and told him that I wanted the full report.

He paused and stared at the report for a moment and from his body language I half expected him to say that he couldn’t help me.  But he let is breath out and handed me a clipboard with another form.  He told me what blanks to fill out. This form wanted a little more detailed information about Dad.  There was even a check box to indicate that I already had the public form. There are apparently some rules about victim privacy, but I guess as his son I was able to submit the request for the full report.

The records clerk told me that I would get the full report in seven to ten days. He said that there would be an invoice along with the report as well as a payment envelope and that I could use to mail the payment back to them or that I could come downtown and pay it to them directly.

My business was done, but there was something else to do on my way out.  The corner of the lobby has a small Houston Police Department Museum. The number of exhibits is small and somewhat haphazard. The highlight of the museum is the Wall of Honor memorial for fallen Houston police officers.

I finished my tour of the museum and exited back out through the security screening area.  The officer there made a point of retrieving from me the stick-on visitor badge.













Friday, July 22, 2016

Faceplant

I reflect back on my childhood and on balance it was mostly an unhappy one. Two factors standout: 1.) alcoholic and emotionally distant parents and 2.) starting school at too young an age.

When I was two or three living in Greenville, I would see Brother and Sister go off to school.  I really wanted to go with them so Mom took it upon herself to teach me to read.  Apparently I’m a quick learner (at some things) and by the time I was four I was reading 3rd grade level books.

Our society likes to start kindergartners at age five and since I am a December baby the public school wouldn’t let me start at age four.  Mom and Dad decided that I should be in school and so they enrolled me in private school.  I went to a Catholic all-girls school where only the kindergarten was co-ed.  Just about the only thing I remember about going to that school was being an altar boy for one of the services.  I had to put out a candle and I remember being very nervous about it. I wore the robes and completed my task without incident.

That early start in school left me physically and emotionally behind my class mates for the rest of my life.  I was smarter than most of them, but smaller than most of them. Combined with my buck teeth, curly hair and overall naiveté, I was setup for a lifetime of bullying and abuse.

One of my successes in childhood was roller skating.  Mom and Dad used to drop us off at the skating rink every Friday and Saturday night.  I know now this was their way to get rid of the kids every weekend so that they could hang out at the bar.  But I learned how to skate pretty good.

Sister was a fast and bold skater.  She could roll around that rink backwards seemingly endlessly with incredible speed and power. Brother learned how to dance skate and would perform wonderful routines with a beautiful young woman.  I remember these incredible spins he could do, pulling his arms in to his body to increase the speed of the spin.

One of the skating sessions was a Racing session.  Boys and girls raced separately.  All the racers would gather into the center of the rink, then the rink referees would pick the racers for each race. They tried to group the racers for each race at similar age and skill levels.  The winners of each race got a wooden nickel good for a free coke.

I was a fast skater and I won my share of races, but there was this one kid that was a bit of a punk and I just could not beat him in a race.  I so much wanted to beat him. One night he and another kid were ahead of me in the race, dueling it out for first place.  Frequently in races, skaters would collide with each other and fall.  In this race the two lead racers’ skates touched and the both went down leaving me, the third place racer the easy win.  When my nemesis fell, he landed stretched out across the lane between me and the finish line.  I was going to win, and in my joy I decided to jump over my nemesis.

I didn’t jump high enough.  The face plant I made on that wooden floor was spectacular.  There were no broken teeth and there was no blood, but there was a lot of pain.  I came up bawling my eyes out.  The referee took sympathy and gave me a wooden nickel.

Dad was a roller skater as a young man in Memphis in the 50s. I’ve got a couple of great photos of him on skates and I have his profile from his 1954 high school yearbook. He apparently loved skating so much that his ambition was “to own a string of skating rinks.”





Thinking Like a Prick

Dad and I didn’t see eye-to-eye on much including, of course, politics.

Not that I ever knew the man to actually walk into a voting booth. His first go-to answer for not voting was that they were all crooks. His second go-to answer was that he didn’t want to register to vote because he didn’t want jury duty.  Heaven forbid that he should make a sacrifice of his precious time.

When Texas changed the law and started to use the Texas Driver License registrations to add to the jury duty list, he gave in and registered to vote. "Now I can cancel out your vote." He smiled and almost giggled.  What the hell?  That grated on me a bit.  Just another insult from the old man, but it also degraded the reason to vote. Vote, yes vote, but do it because you believe in something.  Not because you want to insult your son’s judgement.

As I almost always did around him I held my tongue, but I did have a retort in mind: “Okay, Dad that’s just fine -- cancel out my vote.  Here, let me write out a $2,000 check for my guy. Let’s see you cancel that out.”  I can think like a prick with the best of them -- it's quite easy, but I find it easier going in life by not acting like one.  Dad never quite learned that lesson.

I put up with his negativity and jibes at me for decades.  As I’ve been thinking about them a lot over the past few weeks I finally asked myself the other day. "Why the hell did you put up with that crap?"

Sunday, July 17, 2016

Damn Good Painter


When Dad left the Friden company in early 1969, the family moved from Greenville back to Memphis.  He decided to follow his father into the house painting trade.  He probably worked with his dad and oldest brother some in the house painting trade when he was younger. Being someone who always has to do things his way, Dad never liked having a boss.  He says that he left Friden because he could see the writing on the wall for the electromechanical calculation machine, but I am also just as sure that he didn’t fit in well with the corporate world.

I can unequivocally testify that he was a damn good house painter and he was proud of it.  He always wore white dress shirts and white painter’s pants.  He had mom take his work clothes to the dry cleaner so that his shirts would have a good pressing with sharp creases and just the right amount of starch.  In his later years, when the kind of work that he did expanded to all sorts of repair/remodeling/construction, no one else on the job was allowed to do the painting.

He paid me to work as a painter helper for him part of one summer when I was thirteen. I'm going to use the word, "work" loosely and because after all I was only thirteen.  He was painting the exterior of new Perry Homes houses out in Katy off of Mason Road.  My job as a helper was setup and clean equipment, do the cut in work and scrape the excess paint off of the paint shields as he was spray painting the house.

We lived in Sharpstown near Bayland Park at the time.  We got up and left the house well before dawn.  The idea was to start work at first light.  Summers in Houston are brutal for those who work outside and you want to get work started early and be done by three or four o'clock in the afternoon.

Breakfast would consist of milk and Hostess Fruit Pies.  Dad got white milk and cherry, while I choose chocolate milk and lemon.  We would buy a couple of bags of ice for the small ice chest and just drink the water straight from the chest as it melted. Lunch would be from a food truck that Dad called the Roach Coach.

He paid me $2.00 an hour, which was probably too much.

I learned some skills that summer. I know how to clean a paint brush with just an inch of paint thinner in a bucket.  I learned how to cut in and caulk.  I climbed ladders a lot and learned to fear and respect them.  I got to walk on roofs to paint vents and around chimneys. When it rained, I learned how to walk in slippery Texas gumbo.

I also learned that I never wanted to work outside for a living, especially in Houston summers.

Painting ended up being hard to do as a full-time permanent occupation for a couple of reasons.  Unlike some trades such as plumbing, HVAC, and electrical, painting doesn’t require a license or formal training or certification to be a contractor.  Over time, the house painting trade was taken over by those willing to work for less money.  But also the fact that Dad was operating in the underground and untaxed economy meant that he couldn’t bid on any of the bigger, legitimate work that required a tax ID.

While he did all that other kind of work to survive, he considered himself first and foremost a painter.

I’ve been working on some ideas for his grave marker.  He was an atheist and not very sentimental, so all of those religious and sentimental things won’t do.  The marker will have to say something about him.  My idea right now is to add a paintbrush and bucket to the marker.  I also want to show on the marker to whom he is connected in the cemetery. Dad will be the fourth generation buried there after his father, grandfather and great-grandfather. Below is the first draft of the marker.




Thursday, July 14, 2016

The Beating

I enjoy listening to podcasts, especially on road trips.  Some of my favorite podcasts are the ones where you get to hear personal stories of all sorts of people.  Marc Maron interviews celebrities in his "WTF" podcast; a recent one was with singer/songwriter James Taylor.  It was a good interview and covered Mr. Taylor’s bout with depression and his decades-long struggle with substance abuse. One of the things that stuck with me was his description of how his family “came off the rails.”  My own family did something like that too.

Both of my parents were alcoholics. Mom got hooked on Valium a couple of times.  She suffered from depression and had body image issues. But the point when the family came off the rails seems to be centered around Brother and his troubles.

Dad’s parenting style grew out of the way that he wanted to be treated as a kid. He fought with his mother about curfew and such and never felt like he needed a lot of parental monitoring. He really wanted to just be left alone.  He says that he left us alone because that was how he wanted to be treated, but another side to that may be that didn’t know how to be a role model.

I had a pretty good head on my shoulders and a good internal moral compass and Dad's approach, while leaving me lonely and sad for a relationship with him, worked out okay for me.  My brother, however, could have used a lot more parental involvement.

Brother was seven and a half years older than me.  I don’t know all the details but by fifteen or sixteen he started doing all the wrong things.  Cutting school and doing drugs were bad enough, but he also was stealing from houses in the neighborhood.  It got so bad that he was put in Juvenile Detention.

One of the early incidents that he got in trouble for had to do with a case of 8-track tapes. When the case showed up, he said that he belonged to a friend of his.  He even wrote the friend’s name, address, and phone number in the red felt lining of the case lid.

I only remember one of the tapes in the collection, an album from the Partridge Family.  I used to love listening to that tape.  I would play it in Brother’s 8-track player/radio combo.  I would pull the antenna down to the level of my face and pretend it was a microphone as I sang along with the songs.  I would fantasize about replacing one of the young boys in the group, becoming a member of the band.

But before that could happen, Brother’s crime was found out and all hell broke loose.  To top it off, I was a factor in his being caught.  The case of 8-tracks was stolen from the garage of another teenage boy about Brother’s age.  This kid was pretty sure that Brother had stolen the tapes because Brother had been at his house right before they went missing.  One day as I was walking down the sand road in our neighborhood, the theft victim struck up a conversation with me, eventually asking me about any 8-tracks that Brother had.  I gave him good enough inventory list to confirm that the case and tapes were his missing property.  I guess he told his Dad who then asked my Dad about the 8-tracks and then the gig was up.

I don’t think there were any official criminal proceedings this time, but there was hell to pay.  That evening while Sister, Cousin, and I waited outside, the punishment came. I can remember hearing Mom crying, but above that I could hear Dad yelling at the top of his voice, “Why did you do it?  Why did you do it?” Brother was screaming his replies of, “I don’t know, I don’t know!”  The screaming was punctuated by the loud slaps of the end of a leather belt striking Brother’s bare back.

We kids outside thought Brother was going to die. Sister was crying and Cousin and I were just staring at each other and at the house.

The next day I saw the evidence of the beating on Brother’s back – the bruises and marks that I swear were the clear imprints of the end of a leather belt, even showing the stitching and prong holes from the belt.

That beating was pretty bad and to my knowledge was the worst that happened. But there were other incidents. There was at least one fight between my parents that left Mom with a broken nose. Dad almost punched out Sister when she pushed him too far.  And I was there for one knock-down drag-out fight between Mom and Sister.

Dad rarely spoke of that time period when the family went off the rails. I like to think that he was as embarrassed at how he behaved as he was saddened about the pain that he himself had suffered during those times.  I asked him once about that beating and he blamed Mom, said that she pushed him into it with her screaming and crying.  That may be what happened, but it doesn’t absolve him from responsibility.  It was his hand that delivered the blows to a fifteen-year-old boy needing guidance.

Early on, I learned that I could not trust my parents to always do the right thing, I could not trust them to truly take care of us kids. Of all the things they did to themselves, to each other, and to us kids – that lack of trust was probably the most damaging. But in learning not to trust them, I had a better chance of surviving the relationship with my mind and spirit (mostly) intact.

That beating, is something I'll never forget, but it doesn't have deep emotional connections with me.  If it did, I might have hated Dad or estranged myself from him. The beating wasn’t a direct crime between Dad and me and his trespasses against me never rose to that level. Family members usually get a little more leeway in their trespasses against us before we give up on them.


Friday, July 8, 2016

Dreams

Dad’s side-yard allowed him to create his garden, store tools and supplies, and have space to work on projects. One of those projects is a camper trailer that he dreamed of taking out on the road.  He bought it used a couple of years ago, in much need of repairs. He had gutted the inside to rebuild it, but in the end he lacked the strength to finish what he started.  Now I’ve inherited this gutted old camper trailer and the realization that I need to pursue my dreams a little harder before I get too old and tired to finish them.

One of my dreams has been to hike to the bottom of the Grand Canyon (and back up). This dream started the very first time I saw the Grand Canyon.  It was on a road trip with Dad in the summer of ’78 when I was 14.

I don’t remember everything we saw on that trip, probably because as a 14-year-old nerd stuck in a car for hours on end I was pretty bored.  I managed to spend most of those hours reading some science fiction novel.  This was in the days before I developed motion sickness and could read in a moving car.

With my head buried in a book, Dad had nothing to do but look at the landscape before him and marvel at whatever feature or sign caught his eye.  He would occasionally point out something interesting, to which I would usually respond as only a 14-year-old can, “So?” Those of you who have had teenagers, or can remember being fourteen, take a moment and pull from your memory the sound of disdain that a 14-year-old can put into their voice.  Imagine the curl of the lip and slight bob of the head when that 14-year-old can only answer with one word when you point out the majestic beauty of a sandstone formation in the American West.

“So?”

Now imagine being told this over and over again for nearly a week.  Can you imagine leaving the teenager on the side of the road?  Or putting them on a bus headed back home while you finished the trip?  Or do you wait for the opportunity for revenge?

Fortunately for me, Dad chose the last option. On one of the rare occasions that pulled my nose out of my book, I saw something on the landscape that caught my eye and pointed it out to Dad.

“Sooo!?” was the response he spat back at me.  Point taken, Dad, point taken.

On the trip itself I remember seeing the Alamo – that’s it?; Carlsbad Caverns – I couldn’t have cared less, and the ketchup in the commissary deep in the cave was the cheapest, nastiest flavor of ketchup I have ever tasted; Indian cliff dwellings – boring; Pike’s Peak – so what?

But something at Grand Canyon finally caught my eye.  It wasn’t the Canyon itself, but the sliver of a trail that went down into the canyon. We had stopped at a scenic overlook and there was a trail led out to a large feature jutting into the canyon.

To give Dad credit, he sat in the car and waited while I explored this trail for about 30 minutes.  Or, in hindsight, he was happy to have a break from me.

I hiked out to the feature and found myself a hundred yards from the parking area and any other people.  Cool!  But the trail didn’t end there.  It started to wind its way down into the canyon.  I so much wanted to go further and follow that trail and explore the canyon. I promised myself then and there to do that someday.  I’ve been back to Grand Canyon a couple of times since then, but still haven’t explored those trails.  I’ve hiked quite a few other trails, but that first one in Grand Canyon has always been fondly with me.

Monday, July 4, 2016

Salvatore

When we first moved into the mobile home in 1983, the demographics of the mobile home park was mostly working-class white.  Over time the demographics changed to almost all working-class Hispanic.

For at least the last ten years or so Dad and the guy across the street have been the last white guys in the park.  Dad had a prime lot with a big shaded side-yard and the guy across the street has an end lot so that he has a neighbor only on one side.

As far as I can tell, Dad got along okay with the Hispanic neighbors. He didn’t hang out with them, but would return their greetings.  In the past week of my daily clean-up efforts several of them have come by to offer condolences and say nice things about him.  Some of them thought Dad had been murdered and were incredulous that someone would want to hurt this quiet old man.
 
One neighbor has been especially nice and helpful.  Salvatore appears to be in his 60s and has an infectious smile.  In just a short time I have learned that Salvatore lost a pet dog not long ago and that he has a hard time working his new smart phone.
 
As part of my clean-up I started a pile of recyclable metals that I could take to a recycler to responsibly dispose of and maybe get a little cash.  Salvatore asked about the metal and I offered it to him freely.  I don’t really want to take the time to make trips to the metal recycler, and I’m sure he needs the money more than I do.

Every day that I have been out at the mobile home I have created small to large piles of metal that Salvatore has taken away for me.  His smile has always been warm and I’m glad to see it in the middle of my sweaty work.  Salvatore has even taken some stuff from my trash pile to the dumpster. He says that he can take it all to the dumpster for me a little at a time, but that he can’t fill up the dumpster with it all. 

I had already realized that I didn’t want to put all my trash into the dumpster as well, because then the residents of the park would not be able to throw away their kitchen trash.  I’ve been bagging all the small to medium trash which I can easily put it into my own curbside trash pickup.  Today I stacked most of the big trash and scrap carefully into the bed of my pickup so that I can take it to a nearby landfill tomorrow morning at 7:00 am.

Salvatore offered today to weed-eat the side-yard.  I told him that he didn’t have to do that, but I later reconsidered.  I saw a way to get him a little more cash. On my way out this morning I offered to pay him to weed-eat the yard.  He smiled and push away my hand.  He was thankful for all the scrap metal and glad to help out.  What a nice man!

This is in stark contrast to an incident that happened to me when I lived in the park 30 years ago that has stuck with me all these years. 

On a dark and rainy night, when I was driving into the park, I managed to miss the drive just enough that I put my left front wheel into the drainage ditch.  My old ’76 Monte Carlo was good and stuck.  I started to walk to the mobile home to call my friend Steve and ask him to drive all the way out from Alief to pull me out.  

But a neighbor, a young white guy, in a similar large American car offered to help.  I got a tow strap from the tool shed and we quickly got my car out of the ditch. 

I thanked the neighbor, but before I could disengage he asked for compensation. “Hey aren’t you going to buy me a six-pack of beer for helping you out?”  

I was pretty disgusted; never in my life would I expect or ask compensation for helping someone in need.  I gave him five or ten dollars for his help, made note of the make, model and color of his car, and silently swore to never offer him help if I saw him broken down somewhere. 

Along with my friend Steve, his son Thomas, and my dad’s friend Lester, Salvatore is on my list of angels this week. If I can figure out something appropriate I hope to gift Salvatore for his friendliness and kindness. Well what do you know. After writing that last sentence I Googled the name Salvatore to make sure that I was spelling it correctly. I learned that "In Spanish the meaning of the name Salvatore is: Savior."


Sunday, July 3, 2016

The IRS

Dad’s first bad encounter with the IRS was back in 50s.  After he got out of the Air Force, he went back to Memphis.  I don’t know the exact details, but for a year or two he paid the mortgage for their house.  He decided that since he paid the mortgage that he could deduct the mortgage interest from his own Federal income taxes.  The IRS disagreed and subsequently audited him for the next couple of years.  Then I guess he was square with them for the next couple of decades but he always resented those audits. 

Then comes the year 1978.  He was working as a house painter for new houses built by Perry Homes in Katy off of Mason Road.  He didn’t set aside money for taxes and the work that winter was light.  When the time came to file his taxes he didn’t have enough to pay the bill -- he didn’t file that year or 1979 or  1980. By 1981 he made an effort to get things straight, but with penalties and interest the IRS wanted something like $80,000 for those three years.  He was never going to have that kind of money and didn’t have the patience and negotiating skills to get a better deal.  He entered the underground economy and stayed there the rest of his life.

I don’t recommend this lifestyle to anyone.  In 1983 the IRS tracked him down and seized a checking account to the tune of a few hundred dollars.  I was still living with him. I was a college student at University of Houston and working for the Alief Kmart and dutifully filing my taxes every year.  We were living in a rent house in Alief when the IRS came to our door we packed up and moved out that week. We moved into the mobile home where he lived until he died. 

He filed for Social Security at the age of 65 and amazing enough they enrolled him. He got something like $550 a month. He sure was happy to get that money.  There were cost-of-living increases over the years, so he was getting $767 a month when he died.  He was able to supplement his income with handyman type jobs over the years, but the past couple of years had been pretty hard because of his age and failing health.

Sometime in the mid to late 80s he came up with a plan to buy a bar in Alief called The Gin Mill. It was his favorite hang out at the time and the owner had died or was in failing health.  As an unofficial member of the underground economy, there was no way he could buy a bar, but he had a plan.  He wanted to buy the bar in my name and have an accountant do the taxes along with my Kmart income.  All government paperwork including the Texas Liquor License would be in my name as well. 

I was freaking not happy about this plan for so many reasons. My dealings with the IRS were clean and I wanted to keep them that way.  The liabilities involved with owning a bar were pretty scary.  And the idea of a drunk running a bar was bad on so many levels.  I decided that if push came to shove, I would have to tell him “no.”  I wasn’t looking forward to telling him that I wouldn't help him with this crazy plan.  There are things you will do to help a family member, but this was too much for me. In the end he couldn’t come up with enough money to buy the bar and I was so glad to be off the hook.


Saturday, July 2, 2016

Pineapple and Mayonnaise Sandwich

We went out to eat tonight with some friends at Salt Grass Steak House.  I had a T-bone steak and baked potato in his honor.   I think that a T-Bone, salad and baked potato were components of his favorite luxury meal.

Dad was one of those guys who liked to grill meat. He liked to grill steak, chicken, pork chops and sometimes pork ribs.  I learned how to preseason the meat the way that he liked it. For steak he liked Worcestershire Sauce and garlic salt. For chicken, ribs, and pork chops he liked to grill it with a wet bar-b-que sauce made from Kraft bar-b-que sauce with a splash of Tabasco sauce.  I learned how to de-skin pieces of chicken.

I came to live with him in Houston in early 1977, around the time of Mom’s death.  On the weekends, he loved to go out to eat at Steak and Ale restaurant.  The salad bar was big treat and I learned the hard way that those green pickles were actually jalapeno peppers. One time at Steak and Ale, during rodeo week, I found a wad of cash under my chair that turned out to be two twenties. With that money I bought my first camera, a 126 Instamatic camera, from Ritz Camera on Stella Link just east of the West Loop.

He would sometimes bake cornbread (no sugar!) and cook up some black-eyed peas and butter beans.  He liked to break up the corn bread into chunks and stuff them into a glass and then fill the glass with milk. He would then eat the soggy corn bread with a spoon or fork. 

In a recent conversation about grits, he says that had never eaten or even seen them until he joined the Air Force. 

He hated smoked Texas brisket, but loved pulled pork and pork ribs.
 
When I was a kid in Florida in about the seventh grade, he taught me about the wonderful pineapple and mayonnaise sandwich.  In later years when I mentioned them in conversation, he said he didn’t remember anything about them. 

I still like black-eyed peas, butter beans, and corn bread.  But I’m not a fan of steak or pork chops.  


The last couple of years I know that his overall nutrition was getting worse.  I bought him some strawberry flavored Ensure hoping to help, but he complained that it was too sweet.  I’m really confused by that because when I cleaned out his kitchen this week, there were a lot of Blue Bell ice cream cartons and the meat drawer in the fridge was full of Little Debbie snacks.  

On Suicide

Like most of you, suicide has touched my life many times. 

When I was 13, my mom died young from a blood disorder called TTP.  It caused a lack of oxygen to her brain which left her brain dead.  She died or was allowed to die (I don’t know which) a couple of weeks after that.

But she had tried to kill herself by overdosing on pills at least a couple of times when I was younger than that.  Her despair was tied to Dad leaving her.  I remember one those times clearly from when I was about 10.  It was in our house in Longwood, Florida.  I think it was a Saturday night.  She wouldn’t let me watch the color TV in the family room.  I had to watch the crappy black and white one in the formal living room. 

While I quietly watched the Saturday night monster movie, she wrote a note and took a bottle of pills, probably Valium.  She fell asleep in the recliner, which was something she never did.  When we got up the next morning, she was still asleep in the recliner.  We couldn’t wake her up and eventually called an ambulance.  I remember visiting her in a psych ward behind locked doors with reinforced glass windows once or twice while she recovered.
 
More recently we’ve had a couple of friends take their own lives.  An old friend of my wife’s overdosed on pills and wine after a fight with her husband.  A couple of years before that a friend from work shot herself in the abdomen and bled to death. 

Three years ago my brother drank himself to death.  While not quite the same deliberate act as most suicides, he had a hand in his own death even if it was guided by the demon of substance abuse.


Suicide is usually such a private and lonely affair. In 2013, there was a sportswriter, Martin Manley, who blogged his own suicide in detail, explaining everything he did and why.  The blog is gone, but you can read about it here and many other places.  At the time, I read the whole blog and my take away was that he gave up too soon.  He was still healthy and wasn’t poor.  But by god he wanted to be sure he died before his health or money gave out. 

Addendum: I found a mirror site of Manley's suicide blog.  It is morbid but fascinating reading. 

Dad's Garden

Dad and I were not close, and so he and my wife were even less so. Over our 24 years of marriage, we had Dad over for most Thanksgivings and Christmases and a few other holidays here and there.  
So her image of him is probably too colored by my own comments and discussions about him. 

When we visited his mobile home that first night after his death, she commented about his garden. She found it curious that such a gruff and negative man kept a lovely little water garden. 

So somehow there was this nurturing side to him that took care of these plants and carved out a little pocket paradise for himself.  Nurturing plants is much easier than nurturing relationships with people, and I’ll be the first to admit that I’m not the best at either one myself. 


Attached are a few pictures from his garden that I took just a few days after his death.  

















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