Saturday, January 20, 2018

The Wind Blew By and It was Named Jerry

There was no mistaking the flashing lights, we were about to have a police encounter. As the officer walked up to the car, we hid the beer bottles under our seats.  The six month old VM Microbus sat in the outside lane on the ascending slope of a four lane three-mile-long suspension bridge.  Without waiting to be asked my brother handed the officer his license, registration and proof of insurance. 

Leaning in the window of the microsbus the officer gave us a stern look.  Glancing at the documents the uniformed man asked if my brother knew why he pulled us over.  Jerry flashed that “all shucks” look that he had all but patented and said “Honestly officer I think you might be stopping us because you think we intentionally skipped paying the toll.  But the truth is we didn’t intend to get on the bridge.  We got turned around at that pull off back there and instead of going back into Delaware we ended up headed toward New Jersey.” Every word he had just spoken was total horseshit but the sound of those phrases just oozed with smooth sincerity.  

Officer Bosman carefully scanned my brother up and down.  I merited only a glance. “Jerry Todd,” he said, “Do I know you?”.  Something clicked in my brother’s memory.  “Bosman, are you the Bosman that took my sister to that big dance. What has it been 15 years since I saw you?” 

At that moment, my brother had taken complete control over the situation.  The cop smiled and asked how my sister was doing.  “Married” laughed my brother.  Officer Bosman relaxed.  “I am sorry boys he said but I gotta write for avoiding the tollbooth.  You can appeal this of course at the Justice of the Peace Court in New Castle. You know I don’t think I will be showing up for that hearing.”  My brother’s smile had avoided yet another disaster.  No OUIL, no contributing to the delinquency of a minor and a cop had just told him that if he appealed the ticket by showing up in court, he'd probably win it.

My brother died two months ago.  That force of nature that was his smile is nothing but part of 13 ounces of ash in a ceramic jar on a mantle in a beachside house in Mexico.  His life force touched me; I think I got a bit of that shuck and jive just by watching him. How many times did I watch him just smile and say I understand and then follow up with a question about where the person was from based on their accent? Invariably, he would follow that up by listing a place he had lived near where the speaker was from in Texas, or California or North Carolina.  Watching him taught me to listen for the little things that give you access to the person in front of you that just wants to be known.

A few years ago, my youngest son and I arrived at a bar in a beachside resort. It was roughly late dinner time on a late week night.  The manager could come up with a table for six but eight would require an hour wait.  The lad and I decided we would go into the bar and eat and let everyone else take the table.  My son was about 16 at the time. 

In the course of our time at the bar I ordered a beer and the boy had a pop.  We placed our dinner orders and waited. A guy sat down beside us and called for a single malt.  He had a southern accent and within two questions I knew he was from Louisville, Kentucky.  The man and I talked about the nightmare for the locals the Derby week causes.  “Me,” I said, “I always stayed out of town at a little campground. Nope I was no part of your problems with race day tourists.  On race day, its straight to the track and when the race was done, I left.”  He smiled and said you’re the kind of people we like, you just leave your money and most likely you don’t piss on my lawn.  The boy giggled.  I told the man I didn’t sit in the infield winning me bonus points with the now not so strange stranger.  He gave me tips on some great bar-b-que joints in Louisville and headed off.  

Next, I met two women up from North Carolina as they saddled up to the bar.  We talked about the beaches around Wilmington.  I mentioned that I had spent a few weeks down at a beach house on Henderson Beach with my brother.  Jerry was once a lifeguard and a student at UNCW.  The women laughed and told me about their upcoming loop of the nearby vineyards.  I told them my favorite spots to stop and sample the best wines.  I also told them about a great little dive they needed to have lunch at.  Our food came and the ladies and I finished up our conversation.  They had moved on by the time our food came.

My son looked at me in a way that is hard to describe.  We talked about what had just happened.  He seemed surprised to see how easily I moved into conversations.  He admitted he struggled in that area.  This made me smile both inside and out.  My thoughts drifted back to my brother.  Finding a way to make a positive connection no matter what the circumstance, with a smile and a line, my brother gave me that gift.  As my son looked at me and kept talking about how smoothly I moved between conversations I could see my brother’s brown hair and mustache looking all the world like Sam Elliott smiling and moving past the velvet rope into whatever club he wanted.

Yeah, those bits and bobs of remains sitting on that mantle don’t do justice to the force of life that was my brother.  He had an aura.  He had a will to live and live life fully.  From sucking down 100-year-old cognac to driving fast and tight he was in for the whole E ticket ride.  I am glad I got the chance to watch a master.



A Dream had One Winter Morning

Most nights I dont remember my dreams.  Awaking I may have a feeling that a dream was fun, frightening or odd but the content of the ethereal fantasy is usually lost to me and lost very quickly.  Some mornings as I rouse myself from my flannel sheets I may think that a dream was so striking that I will remember every detail.  Within five minutes the particulars and specifics have mostly if not completely flow.

Last night was different.  The dream was striking and quite vivid.  My mind was filled with so much detail that I pulled out my iPhone as soon as I sat up on the edge of the bed. Quickly I dictated as much as I could remember.

In the first vignette of the reverie I was trying to buy concert tickets. In the world of the dream you could only buy the tickets at the theater. As a result, I was standing at first in a small venue in a town where I had lived 40 years ago. Dreams add layers to every single element, and so it turned out the music hall was inside of a performing arts high school.

Glancing around it seemed he old brick building was falling down. With dark red brick, dark stained wood and long wide staircases the place had a Harry Potter like feel to it. Wandering around I kept looking for the box office.

As I walked the halls I ran into my old legal secretary. She was dressed in white but I could not make sense of what she was saying. Teens were suddenly everywhere singing songs from recent musicals and running lines from Shakespeare. It was a cacophony. My secretary smiled and faded away.

With all this going on the real world intruded. My heart felt regrets over not sending my son to the school. But I was there to get tickets damn it and so I searched everywhere for somebody to sell me tickets. Eventually a uniformed person wrote my name on a clipboard and told me I had tickets. But there was no receipt and I was stressed.

Out of nowhere someone I kind of knew from years ago gave me coins.  Talking quickly, they told me the coins were of some value and that I could either hold or use them. I was confused completely. I decided to get some air.

Leaving the school, I passed a beautiful bucolic scene where a new elegant restaurant had been built.  The trendy bistro was not yet opened for the day. But I so wished to eat there. Continuing on I walked past a street that had been important in my life but it was different. While the signs were just as gaudy as they had ever been, with neon and blinking arrows, the joy of the place I had felt before was gone. And then I awoke.

In the end as I sat there on the edge of the bed I was in an utter melancholy funk thinking wistful thoughts filled with regrets.

Me, I dont think dreams mean much.  I have a quarterly dream of hands reaching out of a grate or from under a door grabbing for my ankles. I am not worried about someone abducting me, although I have been having this dream every three months for thirty years.  I am pretty sure I was not abducted as a child.  It was just a dream. Still, a dream can set our mood for a day.  So be it. 




Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Wet Slippery Leaves


For the past several days it has been raining.  This constant two and a half days of precipitation wasn’t anything special.  Dreary and varying between a drizzle to a steady rain, the sky stayed grey moving at times toward dark grey and the air got colder.  As I walked in this morning the sidewalks were wet and leaves were strewn across the pavement. No matter which route one might opt to walk, sidewalk or street it was a slippery mess.  The seasons change and that is okay.

 

Less than a week remains until Halloween.  We have no candy in the house.  Our decorations are up, fake tombstones, skulls in the dirt partially covered and a picture of Pennywise peering out of the garage next to an illuminated red balloon.  We can get in the spirit or spirits of the scary day but the candy has to wait.  It is so easy to fall into a bag of mini Hershey bars and a week’s worth of careful eating would be shot all to hell. I saw a picture of Halloween from several years bags and to me my jowly face was one scary mask.

 

When fall comes and in actuality it has now come, the pace of life changes.  The tenor of exchanges is sped up because you don’t linger over street side conversations in cold air. When fall comes people hunker down.  These things are neither good nor bad, they just are.

 

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

Let Me Up I Have Had Enough


Not many posts on my part of late.  You can lay the blame on depression or perhaps malaise. I am not seeing our current situation as a glass half full scenario.  Nope, no way in hell do I think what is coming is going to be good.

 

But what can I do?  Not much really.  I can vote in elections.  I can go to my state party’s events and the like, but other than that I am stuck with the same government everybody else has. Me, I don’t like it. 

 

Some of my friends don’t like the leader but believe that overall good will come of this.  The distilled argument is that we have allowed government to do too much for us for too long and it has stripped up of our self-reliance. The corollary to this is that the government is making decisions in areas where it ought not be treading.

 

I understand the argument.  I agree that there needs to be a paring down of various government intrusions into life and a winnowing of social benefits.  But…and this is a big issue, we cannot abandon the poorest and neediest among us.

 

Me, I don’t have the energy for what comes next in the battle royal that the next set of elections will bring. I am working on my escape plan.

 

If my body holds out, in less than two years I will retire.  When that happens is I am going to sell my home here in Michigan and head out for other parts.  Currently the thinking is that we will look for some seaside port on the Atlantic or Mediterranean.  It is time to learn to live in another world before I shuffle off this mortal coil.  Can’t think of much else I want besides seafood, salt air and the very occasional beer. 

 

What I don’t need is this, “Same untruths from an utterly untruthful president. #AlertTheDaycareStaff”.    Thank you Senator Corker for summing it up.

Saturday, June 3, 2017

700 or just a little Beyond-We all need our Heaven

Somewhere there exists a photo I have been looking for.  Maybe the shot is in my Facebook stream.  The image in my mind’s eye right now might be a print lost somewhere in the boxes and boxes of prints created before photography all went digital. 

What you see as you look at the picture is a view from the second floor of a house in Sea Isle City, NJ.  It was taken in full sun.  The snap does not look toward the ocean but in the opposite direction toward the bay. Looking out over the brackish water to the west you see the posts and other artifacts humankind has abandoned in the marsh.  You also can see the mainland. The lower third of the image is of the railing of the elevated porch from which it was taken.  The railing is a beautiful rainbow of greens, pinks, yellows and a couple of other shades I don’t remember at the moment.  These are beach colors, aqua green and flamingo pink but dusty and lightly faded. The view from that particular spot is my heaven.

Sounds odd doesn’t it, a sliver of a second story porch with just enough room for a few chairs, a birdfeeder and a tabletop fountain facing north as nirvana.  Who would think of their beautiful reward as sideways vista of a salt marsh?  How could that be anyone’s heaven?  Well it isn’t anyone’s heaven, it is my heaven. 

This space was created by the love of two very special people, people who have been my friends (and one of them a relative for a short while) for more than 2/3rds of the life I have lived so far.  Partly these people, with their sense of balance in life, in time and in nature, make that particular view my heaven.  Partly the marsh to the left and the ocean to the right make this my heaven. 

The unending life force of the sea meets the cauldron of life on land, the salt marsh.  Partly, this is heaven because of the spirit of joyful life that is found at a seaside resort like this during the hot days of August. Heaven, my heaven.  I don’t know if sitting in a chair listening to the gulls call and feeling a sea breeze is your heaven but I am okay with any differences we may have on this point.

Often in these current days, which I find very dark and troubling, I go to that deck in my mind and just watch the circling seagulls.  I shut my eyes and shut down this world of spiritual pain. I listen internally to the sound track of a life time.  Words of my parents flow by just as readily as do the tunes of Jackson Browne and Joni Mitchell.  I find myself rereading mentally the pages of books that have impacted me.  I dive deep into the constructs I have brought into my heart and mind over the years.

I think I can tell you why the current situation hurts so much.  The control of our lives is held in the hands of men mostly whose values are totally opposite of what I have believed, worked for and voted for all my life. The only choice I have when I leave the reverie is to live and act and speak according to the values I have always clung to not worry about what the rest of my fellow citizens do.

Yeah if I am on that deck I am mentally younger and fitter.  If I am on that deck I am surrounded by love.  If I am on that deck I might even be high.  Haven’t done that in 25 years but when it becomes legal, and it will become legal fuck you Jeff Sessions and your frightened old white man ways, I might partake again.  When I am on that deck I am at peace, quiet, gentle peace.

There is a poet I urge everyone to read.  His name is W.S. Merwin.  His poetry comes at you head on and then sideways.  When I am mentally taking refuge on that seaside second floor deck I have a copy of Moon Before Morning next to me on the table.  I have a large assed Wawa coffee with lots of cream.  A cigarette is burning in the ashtray (remember this is a mental moment) and I am reading aloud to whoever will listen the following poem entitled Ancient World.

Orange sunset
In the deep shell of summer
A long silence reaching across the dry pasture
In the distance a dog barks
At the sound of a door closing
And at once I am older


Thursday, June 1, 2017

OCR (Ocean City Reefer) *


This is one of my all-time favorites.  What it entails was of the time. I wrote it about five years ago... 

 

Okay, here is the deal. I haven’t written anything in a couple of weeks. I am going under the knife on Monday for gallbladder surgery. If I don’t post now I won’t be posting for another long period. Thus, I will post a rough draft of a story I started a couple of years ago. Enjoy.

The island community of Ocean City New Jersey has a sign that proclaims itself “America’s Family Resort” The sign is clearly visible as you roll across the 34th Street bridge, across what was once salt marsh and brackish water. The crisp white and blue sign harkens back to the time when the legacy of the Methodists ministers remained strong. These were the men who in 1879 laid out the city as a retreat for the rejuvenation of the Christian soul and body. When I was a boy spending my summers catching rays and body surfing, Ocean City was closed for business on Sundays. The rides, the shops, everything but restaurants and newspaper stands were locked up tight on the Sabbath. Then as now, no liquor was sold on the island.

In the summers of the early 1970s the concept of family in America was feeling stress. The behaviors manifested by the younger members of our nation’s nuclear families were clearly not those that would have been endorsed by those 19th century Methodists. The disintegration of the traditional multi-generation clan style of family, the social rebellion of the 1960s and the pervasive influence of television had created a group of 14 to 20 year olds that were out of control. This was a generation traveling the fringe. I was one of the Boomers and we were pushing the boundaries and entering into the borderlands that lay beyond the social mores of the time. Summer and suntan lotion just made it worse.

My family’s home was about 60 miles away from Ocean City. It was a farm town that in the summer was hot and dusty. There was nothing for a kid to do there except to work at the packing houses. Summer there was unloading and sorting produce and getting into trouble with the cash earned at those tough backbreaking jobs. In 1970 beer was cheap and pot was available. My father decided that after the summer of 1970 we should flee our hometown and go to the beach.

 

Two specific things led to this. First was the gun incident. Second was the fact that my Mom found my pipe (commonly referred to in the then current lexicon as my bowl) in the bottom of my dresser. She didn’t know what pot smelled like or she would have been sure I was going to hell. But she did know there was not a right reason on God’s green earth that a 14-year-old should have a pipe with a wire screen in it stashed in the bottom of his dresser under his t-shirts. Imagination in hiding places was obviously not my strong suit. The gun story was a bit more complicated I will set that out in a different post.

As a result of the incursion of violence and drugs into our family life my father decided we should spend entire summers at the beach. I didn’t know how I would handle that, I knew nobody at the beach. My relatives spent all their summer down there, but I had not hung out with them for any time since they moved away from our home town when I was six. Up to then we had been thick as thieves.   A great deal can change in a decade.

My mother was a teacher. In the late 1950s she was in her forties. In what must have been a great surprise to her, she got pregnant for a fourth time in 1955. In April 1956, I came along. Her sisters were in tune with this and five cousins on my mother’s side were all born within roughly six months of each other. Add a few months and that number rises to six. Mom took a couple of years off to make sure my initial rearing went okay. She then went back to teaching and I was dropped off at my aunt’s house with my cousin, Billy. Well no sooner did I get there then Jimmy was born, and then Dottie Mae. We played together. We ran about. We did all the things kids did and we were almost an inseparable living organism. Then they moved away. My Uncle bought his own funeral home about 45 miles away. But in the crowded east coast megalopolis they might as well have moved to the moon, they were gone. Twelve years later we would reawaken that friendship.

[Okay so this is an old draft of a story that I never finished. I should be honest and fill in the three paragraphs that would explain how when I got to the beach I fell in with my cousins and we were tied on so many levels it was hard to believe we had seen each other every day of our lives. I would also have to explain how we all worked at the same card store/gift shop/newspaper stand together and it was sort of like the Taxi sitcom, all nuts, all the time. Also, I would have to work in how I developed a somewhat as they say now complicated relationship with a woman named Nan. Just go with it. My cousins and I were tight and their names were Bill and Jim. My complicated kind of love interest was Nan and she was far too hot for the likes of me. The final thing I would have to add is that we spent every single freakin’ day on the beach working on our tans. The rest of the story picks up when my cousins, Nan and I went to the beach. Oh, my cousins lived half a block away from me and none of us lived more than 1 1/2 blocks from the water.]

So there we were ready to head to the beach. I was happy that Nan had deigned it acceptable to spend some time with me on the strand of sand. Billy had Aunt Sugar’s big orange blanket. Well, we used it as a blanket. What it had been in its earlier incarnation was the bedspread for a full-sized bed. It was an orange of the kind that it could have been used as an emergency signal. The edges had a fringe that was a series of white strings that were about two and a half inches long. It was unmistakably Aunt Sugar’s because there would be nobody else who would have something like this. Jimmy was going to join us at the water.

Having been up until 3 a.m. the night before we did not get an early start, noon maybe 1p.m. we headed out. Towels, check, jug of water, check, beach umbrella, check, beach tags, check. Off we went.

 

The day was perfect and the beach was crowded. Once you worked your way through the suntanned bodies down to where the water was retreating you had a space. This late in the day it was the only place to find space to lay out your towel. As you lay on your stomach your torso was separated from the beach itself by the coarse orange material the bedspread now beach blanket.  I was set on reading Thomas Hardy’s Jude the Obscure. Other people around me on the strand were reading the tome of the season, perhaps it was Looking for Mr. Goodbar that year, or Jaws. Each of those books had a year where they were everywhere. Propped up on your elbows holding the book in one hand you would develop a little bit of perspiration. This body generated moisture would arise after about half an hour and would glisten and be uncomfortable. It was like nature’s own timer telling you to go swim, body surf, frolic and then return to reapply the sensually scented Bain de Solei tanning lotion and to lie on the other side of your body.

Any idyll on a beach towel with a young beauty is something when you are 16. It is forever. It is filled with the promise of nothing and everything. On a beach towel on a warm day you can nap. You can talk about the world, politics, sex, dope, whatever. You can take a slug of ice water from a thermos. You can watch the sun-tanned girls go walking by. You can see a two-year-old run to the water and run back again. Or you can try and figure out what to do about your doofus-assed cousin who seems intent on getting everyone sent to prison.

As Billy, Nan and I lay there experiencing warm eternity on a summer afternoon, Jimmy finally found his way to the beach. Jimmy had no filter.  It wasn’t clear what had happened or when it had happened. When we used to spend time together in the little ranch house as kids Jimmy was smart, and he was apt to follow the normative behaviors expected of us all. But in the years since I had spent time with him he had dramatically changed. It was subtle and hard to discern at first but as time went on it became very clear. Jimmy had challenges seeing the lines of normal behavior and color within them. It some ways he was like Neal Cassidy, the hipster beat. 

Jimmy no sooner had sat down on the towel than it became apparent he was in full non-conformance mode. As my cousin sat on the towel cross legged he proceeded to pull from out of his swim trunks an ounce of marijuana, you basic bulging glad sandwich bag of green leafy vegetation. None of the three of us noticed at first as we were engaged in number of divided attention activities, conversation, people watching and being generally lost in sunny day bliss. Jimmy however was on a mission. Joint by joint he winnowed down the pot he had in the bag. One joint, two joints, five joints, ten joints; slowly but surely the little outcropping of Mt. Cannabis was arising from orange island of my aunt’s blanket. 

Glancing down the beach I noticed that the beach wardens were doing their rounds. Ocean City like most of the other lily white towns had instituted beach tag fees in the year before this incident. The fees were ostensibly designed to provide funds for beach clean-up and maintenance. The real purpose was a bit more sinister. In essence the real purpose of beach fees was to keep the riff raff out. And let’s be specific hear, riff raff meant people of color, whatever color it might be other than white. The tags were effective to this end. The tags also provided a basis to have deputized folks walking down the beach keeping an eye out for the evil John Barleycorn. As I noted this was “America’s Family Resort,” and allowing the use of alcohol on the beach just wouldn’t be right. If the demon rum was a problem, how would you think the quasi police tag patrol would take to a bunch of stoner teenagers openly flaunting the drug laws of our country? Remember Spiro Agnew was still the Vice President. Remember also that it had only been a year or so earlier that Casey Jones and White Rabbit had been banned from the airwaves by the FCC.

Noticing the impending arrival of terry cloth short wearing justice, I in hurried consultation with Nan and Billy made the executive decision to wad up my aunt’s beach towel with the joints inside and go. In my mind the safer course seemed to be, given the number of eyes around that might mention my cousin’s behavior to the beach patrol, getting the dope off the beach. Nan and I decided/ended up being the blanket bearers. The plan hastily formulated was that we would take the blanket back to my parent’s beach apartment and hide the pot back behind the apartment building, possibly in the outdoor shower. 

For those of you that have never had a beach apartment in the 1970s in New Jersey, they invariably had an outdoor shower of some kind. These can range from a cold-water affair with a watering can type of nozzle or they can be quite elaborate. The one behind my parent’s apartment was in between. It was basically a small shed with a bench and some storage, with the hottest water you could ever want and a shower head that gave off needle fine spray. I used to luxuriate after a day on the beach taking a 20-minute-long shower until my skin was lobster like red. The simple pleasures they are what count most in life, aren’t they?

Walking quickly Nan and I covered the distance between the beach and the house, it was a relief to turn into the side path that led to the back of the house. Not having been busted by the police, the beach patrol or any other authority we simply needed to get to the shower shed, stash the joints for Jimmy to pick up later and we would be in the clear. Walking quickly Nan and I would simply need to avoid any prolonged contact with my mother as we passed the screen door to the kitchen/dining room. These apartments were stacked four in a building and were long and thin. The living room was in front, followed by a bedroom, then the bath, then the kitchen then a second bedroom. The living room had a pull-out couch and the place could accommodate up to six or seven people if they were appropriately stacked. The outdoor shower was appended behind the second bedroom

As we passed the kitchen, our luck tanked. Trying not to stop I heard my aunt, my beloved aunt’s voice, call out. The aunt talking to me was Billy and Jimmy mom and I had her dayglow orange beach blanket wadded up in my hands. “Jay bird, where are you going and what are you doing with my towel?” Trying to be nonchalant I said hi and tried to pass by without engaging in conversation. My aunt called again and I could hear her chair shifting as if she might get up and open the door blocking our passage. “Jaybird, give me my towel.” “Aunt Sugar” I managed to choke out, “Billy and Jimmy are going for a long walk on the beach and they asked me to bring this up to the house. It is full of sand, let me shake it out in the back by the shower.” Silence and it seemed luckily no discernable movement by my aunt followed. This was a false reading of the reality of the situation and the moment’s respite did not last long. 

I don’t remember what she said next but it became clear she was going to come after the towel if it wasn’t in her possession in the next fifteen seconds. There was no time to take it into the shower shed. Lacking a better plan, I just shook the towel vigorously toward the house. Nan was slacked jawed. The joints went flying. Tapping against the back of the house the reefer sticks bounced gently toward the ground. About 18 joints lay within a foot or two of the back wall of the shed and the apartment. My plan was that I would now walk the towel into my aunt and pick up the joints later.

This heart attack on a plate would just not end. As I took my first step toward the side door I noticed the landlord descending the steps that came down from the second-floor apartment. These steps ran just above the shower. Mr. Dee, the landlord seemed to be in a talkative mood. As I remember the situation now it seemed he wanted to be introduced to the bikini clad Nan. No mystery there. Nan’s young tanned, firm and vibrant body was about as easy on the eyes as any nubile beauty could be. Dee, letch or not, would have had a hard time ignoring such pulchritude. In a stroke of good fortune for us the old man driven by the small brain never took his eyes off Nan’s chest. Luckily this meant that he did not notice the 18 joints (or two years of jail and probation if you looked at it another way) lying about the back of his building. Having feasted his eyes, and a period of time having passed that was moving into the awkward realm of socially unacceptable staring, Mr. Dee turned and headed out back to where his car was parked.

I sprinted to the side door to give my aunt, the Sherlock Holmes of teen bad behavior her towel. I say that because she had busted me by finding my gallon of wine hidden among the garbage cans behind her beach house one time. I say that because she routinely checked the nooks and crannies of her garage and found my Mary Gin, on loan to my cousins, stashed in the rafters. A Mary Gin removed seeds and stems from pot to allow crackle free smoking. Handing her the clumped up but shaken out towel seemed to defuse the situation. Nan in the meantime gathered up the joints. She hid them out of sight in her now lumpy bathing suit bra top. With nary another word, we headed out. I don’t remember where we went but anywhere but there was the destination.

Another near disaster narrowly avoided. Once again it was not my fault, and once again I was simply trying to avoid things from spiraling out of control at the hands of someone else. Yup, there in the heart of “America’s Family Resort” I had dodged another bullet.