I was recently thinking of January sneaking its way into my unprepared year and chewed that thought over with a friend. Billy cut down his first Christmas tree when he was six years old. He walked across the street into the Indiana forest with his little carpenter saw hanging straight down beside himself like his Dad taught him to carry it safely.
He didn’t feel the catch in his parent’s heartbeat as they watched him walk into the pine dome of a December afternoon. Dad said it could be no bigger than he. Hunting, and estimating, then using the saw as a marker against the top of his head and each tree, he found the one that maybe, just barely, rose above his head a tiny little bit so his parents may not notice if they measured. Mittens off, knees on ground, and a shimmy under, he bowed down and set his blade. The straight, long reach of his little man arms worked the handle until the teeth chewed through to the other side.
“I launched it to my shoulder,” He said to me during a business dinner, “And walked it out of the forest and right up to my bedroom.” Then he set it, and trimmed it and went to work making the rest of his life as deliberate as cutting a tree as tall as himself.
I began writing an anecdotal article for the Jordan Credit Union Good Cents publication in 1999. This is an archive of what was on my mind. Enjoy the random reading.
Red Wings
When I was about to start 4th grade, Mom bought me a pair of Red Wing cordovan lace-up shoes—they were beautiful. And sturdy. And red. Not a little kid color of red—these were a magnificent, dark, grown-up red. No clown-red, or sunburn red, or color-the soles-with-red-ink kind of red. They were divine. They were CORDOVAN red.
We took the bus downtown and walked from the corner to a storefront with only shoes in the window. There were red wings on the packages, and on the big white sign suspended on the front of the store. Every shoe in the store was a Red Wing. Magnificent Red Wings. And every one cost about a hundred thousand dollars.
They measured, and I walked, and I twirled, and I said, “Really, Mom, they fit perfect!” And we bought shoe polish. My own tin of Cordovan and a special cloth. I loved them—my only pair of shoes—my Cordovan shoes.
The day before school started, my shoes and I walked the few blocks to Sugarhouse Park. We ran along the creek bank throwing leaves into the twirl of the current and watched them twist downstream to where the creek meets the pond. My shoes and I ran to keep up. We slipped… and went under… and finally caught a fistful of bank grass. By the time I got us out, one of the three of us was gone. I was frantic. We limped downstream, sloshing through the eddies, trying to find the other. I was positive Mom didn’t have another hundred thousand dollars.
We searched until dark. I remember giving up.
The rest of the story as requested by a reader…
Not only did Mom not have another hundred thousand dollars, she made $2.11 an hour. We had half of a car because it ran half of the time and we ate pancakes for every meal as the end of the month rolled on to us. But she was gracious and empathic as I sobbed snot through telling her the story. I cried myself to sleep. And I know now that she must have too.
I ended up with fancy slip on shoes that had three chains with a relaxed drape across the top where shoelaces would have been. As I looked through my choices, I thought I’d choose something completely different than the Red Wings. The loss was just too painful to be reminded of them every time I took a step forward. Maybe it was the Red Wings that was the tipping point for Mom, I don’t remember, but the timing would have been the same week. She sought help and her community generously gave. We shopped at the church store for underwear, pants and shoes, and we ate meat again.
The first week of school I wore the shoes with chains. I had pretty feet and the one-inch high plastic black heels clicked on the linoleum tiles in the Girls bathroom. But the pretty shoes failed me in the 100 meter run. At Gymnasium period, the entire 4th Grade lined up on the playground to test for the President’s Fitness award. At the whistle, I leapt, and one shoe stayed in place. Retrieve, then toes curled, I shuffled across the playground toward the stopwatch and my teacher. Last place smelled bad, but it blinded me through tears as my teacher said, “You need to wear different shoes.”
Eventually, I outgrew the need of walking shoes and Mom outgrew our circumstances. She is now the President of the Board of Directors for JCU and I ended up in a wheelchair.
Red Wings, chained shoes, debt, and indebtedness taught me to walk in others’ shoes before judging the limp.
We took the bus downtown and walked from the corner to a storefront with only shoes in the window. There were red wings on the packages, and on the big white sign suspended on the front of the store. Every shoe in the store was a Red Wing. Magnificent Red Wings. And every one cost about a hundred thousand dollars.
They measured, and I walked, and I twirled, and I said, “Really, Mom, they fit perfect!” And we bought shoe polish. My own tin of Cordovan and a special cloth. I loved them—my only pair of shoes—my Cordovan shoes.
The day before school started, my shoes and I walked the few blocks to Sugarhouse Park. We ran along the creek bank throwing leaves into the twirl of the current and watched them twist downstream to where the creek meets the pond. My shoes and I ran to keep up. We slipped… and went under… and finally caught a fistful of bank grass. By the time I got us out, one of the three of us was gone. I was frantic. We limped downstream, sloshing through the eddies, trying to find the other. I was positive Mom didn’t have another hundred thousand dollars.
We searched until dark. I remember giving up.
The rest of the story as requested by a reader…
Not only did Mom not have another hundred thousand dollars, she made $2.11 an hour. We had half of a car because it ran half of the time and we ate pancakes for every meal as the end of the month rolled on to us. But she was gracious and empathic as I sobbed snot through telling her the story. I cried myself to sleep. And I know now that she must have too.
I ended up with fancy slip on shoes that had three chains with a relaxed drape across the top where shoelaces would have been. As I looked through my choices, I thought I’d choose something completely different than the Red Wings. The loss was just too painful to be reminded of them every time I took a step forward. Maybe it was the Red Wings that was the tipping point for Mom, I don’t remember, but the timing would have been the same week. She sought help and her community generously gave. We shopped at the church store for underwear, pants and shoes, and we ate meat again.
The first week of school I wore the shoes with chains. I had pretty feet and the one-inch high plastic black heels clicked on the linoleum tiles in the Girls bathroom. But the pretty shoes failed me in the 100 meter run. At Gymnasium period, the entire 4th Grade lined up on the playground to test for the President’s Fitness award. At the whistle, I leapt, and one shoe stayed in place. Retrieve, then toes curled, I shuffled across the playground toward the stopwatch and my teacher. Last place smelled bad, but it blinded me through tears as my teacher said, “You need to wear different shoes.”
Eventually, I outgrew the need of walking shoes and Mom outgrew our circumstances. She is now the President of the Board of Directors for JCU and I ended up in a wheelchair.
Red Wings, chained shoes, debt, and indebtedness taught me to walk in others’ shoes before judging the limp.
Mama Said
“To bed, to bed, your Mama said…”
My Mom said that every night for as long as I remember. Kevin, David and I could count on bedtime dragging out for at least 30 minutes longer between another drink of water, or, “I’m hungry,” or, “I’m scared,” or “Tell us about when you…” And during the drag-out, she’d sing-song her Mama phrase between drinks, and extra prayers, and another story about when she was little, you know… when the dinosaurs lived.
“To bed, to bed, your Mama said…” through thousands of bedtimes. Brothers and I would laugh at the ending every time. And my daughter did, and her granddaughter does too. It’s a tradition that has lived beyond its intention.
And the grandkids will pass it on to another generation or two. “To bed, to bed, your Mama said…before she makes your hiney red!”
“Mama, what’s a hiney?”
My Mom said that every night for as long as I remember. Kevin, David and I could count on bedtime dragging out for at least 30 minutes longer between another drink of water, or, “I’m hungry,” or, “I’m scared,” or “Tell us about when you…” And during the drag-out, she’d sing-song her Mama phrase between drinks, and extra prayers, and another story about when she was little, you know… when the dinosaurs lived.
“To bed, to bed, your Mama said…” through thousands of bedtimes. Brothers and I would laugh at the ending every time. And my daughter did, and her granddaughter does too. It’s a tradition that has lived beyond its intention.
And the grandkids will pass it on to another generation or two. “To bed, to bed, your Mama said…before she makes your hiney red!”
“Mama, what’s a hiney?”
The Ways We Remember
It’s 99% Delmar and 1% Tadaki – the palm-sized nest that Eileen found on her back porch delivered by the Dog God. The bird bed flew in on a Pacific wind this last Vernal Equinox. She held it in her palm examining the soft white hair woven through a few twigs. Soft and light, it is too big to be a Swallow nest; perhaps a Hummingbird; no telling since the lawn held no broken eggs. The white hair braided through and through with a few black ones for contrast. Ron will build her a pretty box to put it in beside the tagged collars. The dogs are gone – gifts to people who need them – Tadaki is mine.
Good Purchase
Amy is moving so she needed to clear out her garage to lighten the moving load. She ran across some used-only-once sleds that she didn’t want to take to flat Kansas. They are the Back-to-the-Future version of a metal saucer that was the latest innovation when I was a kid and hiked mine up the Sugar House hill. I’d drag it behind me as I clanked up the hill. A line of frozen gloves with kids attached stood in queue hanging on the steel handrail – a line all the way to the top. Amy got a bite on ksl.com, so she met the potential buyer at a nearby park. We’ll take them! The buyer said. Their family collects sleds; they have over a hundred; and they didn’t have these! They’ll reunion on the hill next winter.
Investment Palace
We’ve been redesigning our financial house with investments that will come through when we most need them. CDs are doing well and we’ve been fortunate to be able to roll them over at maturity when many people are forced to cash out. The ill economy has definitely affected our day-to-day spending. We have tried different things here and there – couponing, scaling back Christmas gifts, and we’ve been fortunate to be able to help our kids with a few things. Every few weeks we reevaluate our investment results to make sure the money walls are standing tall -- refinance, extra principal payments, and close in the payoff date. We have a piggy bank for spare change dug out of pants pockets and the car cubby hole. Someone challenged me to keep all the $5 bills that pass through my wallet and we have an antique bean pot stuffed full of Lincolns.
We’ve built up our capital – our financial capitol – so our foundation is sturdy. Five years ago we made a smart investment in a pink and purple Princess Bounce House we found in the classifieds. This weekend our daughter borrowed it so her soon-to-be grandkid could have the perfect birthday party in a pink Princess palace. Claire’s smile shows that the payout is working.
Leavings
A leaf followed us down the street today. Outside was windless and nearly quiet; just the jangle of tags clinking against Tadaki’s sturdy black collar and the whiz of electricity lingering on the tracks. Then tick, tick, tick… and stop... as we look back at nothing but a sound. Tick, tick… again, and it sneaks up like elves tiptoeing from tree to tree. Pears are blooming, and dried oak leaves from the winter chill are blowing away. Today one tumbled after us--as though we were its last chance at life again. We stopped to wait for it, but a sudden breath…whewww… sent it tripping skyward. I wished we could fly.
March Winds
Kevin, Kelly and Dave flew kites in the cool March winds. We assembled kites from kits wrapped together with sticks, plastic and a ball of string. Kevin always used an extra ball making his kite sashay so high that you could barely see the colors of his dragon tail -- torn from old dish towels – a rudder gliding the kite’s diamond belly above Sycamore trees.
Migration
Trash floats at 20 miles per day. Two years after the Japanese earthquake, people are finding pieces of oriental culture on beaches from Alaska to Oregon. Commercial fishermen watch plastic bottles float by when they are far out to sea. Chopsticks tangled in nets making a table of fresh sushi. Scratches of foreign language on plastic lanterns. Sheets of corrugated roofing bent in unnatural angles like cupped hands—palms up with pools of salt. Shiny parts of cars. Shards of glass washed smooth into ocean marbles. They float deeper in the sea; about seven miles per day. I may plan a vacation to Oregon in a few months to see them wash ashore.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)