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Friday, April 8, 2011

Love is like...... (Metaphor in a poem for Dottie)


Love is like…. (Poem for Dottie my love)
Poem given with flowers

Love is like a favorite old sweater,
shabby it sounds, boy do I know!
But, I believe your great patience,
will stay for the truth,
So, wait and I’ll tell you my odd simile.

The sweater I wear, and feel so secure.
Live in forever, and never remove.
Asleep in its arms, the best place I am sure.
Always well worn, but never is fading.

If it’s misplaced and off in the wash,
I’m just not the same, as odd as it seams,
Sometimes ignored, and cast to the side.
Donned once again, my heart’s all ablaze.

Tears and some holes have even grown dear.
Reminding me still of love suffered long.
If threadbare and worn, the faults all my own.
Loose threads make it ragged,
But it's only well worn.

If ever an urge for the latest new sweater,
I remember that this one is just broken in.
Like second skin slowly grown over time.
It will never be shed till death do us part.

It once was red-hot, fiery sparkles all new,
But now showing wear, it’s cherished much more.

Since I have no old sweater, just a love beyond all.
Please remember this metaphor,
Always worn but never fading.

And since I must have the last word as you know,

Our love makes me feel sane, safe and so sound.
-Michael T


Monday, April 4, 2011

The Baby Smiled (Madison's Poem)



The Baby smiled at my old face.

With chubby cheeks and giddy talk,
her innocent charm engulfed the room.

I hid my face in a pretending game,
her tiny voice with bashful giggles came.
Laughter priceless, soothing soul.

Laughing, running play, in timeless baby games,
eyes are sparkling bright, delight is oh so quick.
Innocent and hidden still from life’s anxieties.

Bring me more the Baby signed.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Frankenstein’s Little Lambs

Frankenstein’s Little Lambs

The creature, which he had hoped would be beautiful, is instead hideous to his eyes, with a withered, translucent, yellowish skin that barely conceals the muscular system and blood vessels. After giving the monster life, Frankenstein is repulsed by his work: "I had desired it with an ardor that far exceeded moderation; but now that I had finished, the beauty of the dream vanished, and breathless horror and disgust filled my heart.” Frankenstein flees hoping to forget what he has created and attempts to live a normal life. Victor's abandonment of the monster leaves the monster confused, angry and afraid.
-Dr Frankenstein’s words from the novel by Mary Shelley-

The book is a fiction, but all good fiction tends to reveal men’s hearts and bare the soul.

The current trend of “Big Christianity” as in “Big Oil” or “Big Tobacco” seems to be creating an deviant strain of Christian, not much different than Frankenstein’s monster. Emaciated, tasteless, weak and very strange, scaring the bejesus out of most ordinary people, if there are such a thing.

And us who are a part of this huge empire and engine that I choose to call “Big Christianity” are despised, feared and thrown out without a wink by almost everybody that feels like they have been pressured, influenced or used by this big corporate engine.

You don’t have to look far to find the victims of Big Christianity, wounded Christians that love Christ with all their heart, never daring to darken or perhaps actually lighten the doorstep of the church again. The late Dr Martin Luther King once preached a sermon called the “Knock at Midnight” with a main thought that many people were knocking on the door of the church and either getting no answer or becoming utterly confused when they were turned away or left hungry after so many attempts at extracting real life from this huge edifice.

Martin Luther King’s words in his sermon “A Knock at Midnight” still bear a striking resemblance to our current church history.

We must not be tempted to confuse spiritual power and large numbers. Jumboism,(my word was “Big Christianity”) as someone has called it, is an utterly fallacious standard for measuring positive power. An increase in quantity does not automatically bring an increase in quality. A larger membership does not necessarily represent a correspondingly increased commitment to Christ. …But although a numerical growth in church membership does not necessarily reflect a concomitant increase in ethical commitment, millions of people do feel that the church provides an answer to the deep confusion that encompasses their lives. It is still the one familiar landmark where the weary traveler by midnight comes. It is the one house which stands where it has always stood, the house to which the man travelling at midnight either comes or refuses to come. Some decide not to come. But the many who come and knock are desperately seeking a little bread to tide them over…..

At midnight this type of church has neither the vitality nor the relevant gospel to feed hungry souls. ….Many men continue to knock on the door of the church at midnight, even after the church has so bitterly disappointed them, because they know the bread of life is there.


How many of us, like Dr Frankenstein, are horrified to find that our dreams of a beautiful bride, our noble visions of transformed lives and our answer to the great commission have merely produced the Frankenstein Sheep of Big Christianity? Much like a forged painting, or a copy of a copy, it just doesn’t seem to have the true soul of the original dream. In it’s place some deviant strain of rabid consumers of religion, sermons and songs, grow fat on eloquent speakers and the next singing sensation.
Instead of Christ’s disciples, we become more akin to Frankenstein’s monster.

The current trend of Big Christianity, bigger shows, bigger churches, bigger bibles, bigger TV names and preachers all smacks of a monstrous aberration of early church history that is recorded in the Book of Acts and Gospels of Christ. Proving once again that men are sinners, depraved and wicked, and left to ourselves we will turn into some kind of hideous monster. C.S. Lewis said that we are all moving toward one of two destinies: immortal splendor or immortal horror.

I do not mean everyone is living in obvious flagrant sin and perversion, but perhaps a titanic Golden Calf is being created out of the huge engine of Big Christianity.

If you have taken the time and energy to have a profound and deep relationship with God in Christ, and you then take a good long look at the huge structure being built around North American Christianity, you must come to a similar conclusion as I do, that something is very wrong with Big Christianity. I believe it is far from the holiness that Lord called us to. Oh, it looks good, and has produced some stellar people but holiness is more than skin and actions.

Just take a look around most churches and you will see the white-washed gleaming smiles of people afraid to say they had a bad day. Thinking that to do so would be a shame on the God who is perfectly able to defend His own reputation and is in fact so secure in His own Holiness that He needs no defense. People choosing rather to hide their pain and sorrow under a gauze of nice fat study bibles, study programs and assorted other programs smacks of the unholy as assuredly as the next pagan on the street. Their own bible says They will act religious, but they will reject the power that could make them godly. 2 Tim 3:5 (NLT)

Not at all rejecting God, and fully believing the tenets and doctrines that they are taught and hold dear. Hungry for more religion and church, they wander from feeding trough to feeding trough and in true American Style they become obese and unhealthy choosing to fill their lives with whatever they can get at the next buffet. Twisted and broken, many are hearing the glorious promises of God day after day, but never realize a smidgen of what’s said. Beginning to sour and feeling trapped inside, fearing to flee, they stay put and go round and round hoping for a change that never comes. For some there is one last desperate cry for some sermon to fix them, before they run out the door, never to be seen again, morphing at last into little lost lambs.

Frankenstein’s sheep wander into the barn on Sunday, latte in hand, bible under their arm and wander out after hearing a sermon by yet another sheep who has slaved, prayed and sought God; hoping that at least one of these monstrous sheep would grasp the idea of true holiness, true depth of relationship with the Living God. Alas, too many just stare at the preacher and gobble up tidbits, treating it all like junk food and snacks.

No wonder Jesus used sheep as a metaphor for us people. We fill ourselves with the best choice morsels filling our lives with DVDs, concerts and the latest miracle worker, and going out into the world nice polished little lambs really changed but a little. But does the lamb ever become a ram or does it reproduce? Does it seek the injunctions of Christ to be holy for He is holy? Is He the center and the reason for our being? Or is that just a doctrine we’ve learned? Are our wills being bent to breaking to see His will and purpose in our life?

I believe true holiness is a gut wrenching search for the God in Christ. A never-ending quest for a deep-seated holiness in Christ. The scripture says that He dwells in the High and the Holy place “with him” who has a contrite and humble spirit, in order to, revive the spirit and the heart Isaiah 57:15.

How does that square with coffee cups, bumper stickers and the masses of money that are spent on meager reminders that God just barely exists? Those truly must be the sacraments of Big Christianity. Is the High and the Lofty One really pleased with our sacrifices to cash registers and the internet for the latest Christian trinket that proves we are His?

As a Pastor of a gloriously small church and a person who talks to people on the street most everyday, I am confronted with this fact; that many people have come to the church of “Big Christianity” and left either bitterly disappointed or more wounded than when they came, vowing to never knock on that door again. Many, if not most of the people I meet are more than willing to engage in a conversation about Christ and God. many, if not most, feel that Jesus has answers for their problems. But, they have been so tainted by their experience in this or that church, that they can’t even be dragged kicking and screaming into a good local church.

Their experiences are as varied as the unique creations they are. They have not been pretty enough, dressed right, nor had the social correctness and proper behavior to be deemed a welcome addition to the window dressing of the congregation. It is never really said, but the message is loud and clear. The sign outside says all are welcome, but the loudest message is on the faces of the congregants. “You’ll ruin the view”. I have been in churches where it was hard to find a less than beautiful person, and at the very least the members of the worship team were all gorgeous.
I’ve heard it said that there are seemingly more numbers of “beautiful” people in Southern California; and the reason is that in the early days of Hollywood “good-looking” people came to Hollywood seeking their fortune, most failed, but they stayed and met other “good-looking” people and produced “good-looking” kids. Perhaps this is what happens in some churches, a type of natural selection.
What does that say to the weary and beat up traveler looking for some bread and water for their soul?

I think these wounded sheep are perhaps the beautiful ones, and the ones in the “inner circle”, “the beautiful ones”, “the untouchables” are Frankenstein’s Sheep. Intending to build something beautiful with mere cast off parts, much of the church has morphed into something very hideous and distant from what the True Shepherd intended. I fear that looking so polished and gorgeous has given us a sense of rightness, and all the while we are wondering where the new life that we preach about is really at.

Our kids are all home-schooled and kept away from the evil and corrupting influences of the world. We campaign for the right politicians and dream of a Christian State not much different than what radical Islam does, except we know we are right.

All of this looks good, sounds good and sometimes even feels good, but we have turned into Frankenstein’s Sheep instead of Christ’s. Surely Christ’s sheep are battered and bruised, and a quick reading of the New Testament will show that Christ preferred the company of hookers, pimps and thieves, to the polished act of the bible thumpers of the day.

If we could just take a real look at ourselves, as Paul the Apostle said, “if we would judge ourselves we would not be judged 1 Corinthians 11:31”. Let’s put away our nifty bumper stickers, slick DVD’s and gleaming white teeth. Let’s show a little frailty, knowing that we are but frail creatures subject to a fall at any moment. Perhaps then, we could hear the knock of the wounded and disenfranchised, and together we could eat the Bread of Life and drink the Living Water. Perhaps this would be enough to renovate our souls and the sickening ugliness of “Big Christianity” would come tumbling down like a house of cards, and in it’s place would be a truly beautiful bride and not just the bride of Frankenstein.

The creature, which he had hoped would be beautiful, is instead hideous to his eyes, with a withered, translucent, yellowish skin that barely conceals the muscular system and blood vessels. After giving the monster life, Frankenstein is repulsed by his work: "I had desired it with an ardor that far exceeded moderation; but now that I had finished, the beauty of the dream vanished, and breathless horror and disgust filled my heart.” Frankenstein flees hoping to forget what he has created and attempts to live a normal life. Victor's abandonment of the monster leaves the monster confused, angry and afraid. -Dr Frankenstein’s words from the novel by Mary Shelley-

Friday, March 11, 2011

TAXMAN

TAXMAN

Clyde Smelnick at forty-one years of age still lived with his mother. He despised her since the day he knew she had conspired to keep him with her forever. His mom knew Clyde’s secret, she knew who he really is and what he really does, but no one else knew, and the secret was still well kept.

He didn’t love her, as most sons love even the meanest of mothers, and if there was a shred of love in that wretched woman’s soul for him or anyone, he couldn’t see it. Theirs was a family of convenience. Clyde had the job and his mom had the power, so she sat home, in the same flowered print dress, eating Oreos and watching soaps, day in and day out. Her only excursion on a daily basis was to walk her despicable little Chihuahua that hated Clyde, and Clyde hated it back.

Clyde, with his perpetually runny nose, always wore an always rumpled and out of date plaid shirt. His black horn rim glasses, ever smudged with fingerprints, persistently slid down his face. You would have to look long and hard to find a more harmless and bland looking person than Clyde.

But, looks can be deceiving.

Clyde bent his ear towards the perpetual snickers he heard across the lunch room, storing them away in his perfect memory, saving them for later. Without exception Clyde sat alone, eating his liverwurst or pimento loaf sandwiches with one hard-boiled egg and a carrot stick, add one Oreo on Fridays, just to celebrate. Fridays were the saddest day of the week for Clyde because his greatest and only joy was his job as an auditor with the IRS.

How fitting that Clyde worked at the IRS.

The Internal Revenue Service was established in 1862 with the purpose of funding death and destruction during the Civil War. Originally the tax being a flat 3% on incomes over $800 exempted most wage-earners at the time, leaving the tax burden for only the wealthy. Over time this was turned on its head as the agency began to focus their revenue gathering efforts on the average, struggling working stiff. The IRS developed all kinds of mean and nasty little tricks they called Law, and used these laws very effectively to suck money out of people with even the meagerest of incomes, leaving the richest of society every benefit those same taxes paid for.

IF you were acquainted at all with Clyde the auditor, he registered a zero on the Richter scale, he seemed to have no benefit or liability on the world around him, But, no one had any clue what was really lurking in the heart of this little nerd.

In reality, Clyde was an anti-hero, leaving a wake of destruction and misery behind him wherever he plied his special skill. He went about his business with the exactness of an executioners blade, noose or lethal injection. He feigned sympathy towards his victims while gorging on the life blood of their innocent little lives.

Even his victims had no idea that Clyde was the villain. “How could that harmless looking man do anything? “ were the thoughts of people sitting across from him while he examined their income tax forms.

“We want to make sure you haven’t paid too much.” He would dryly say.
It nearly always turned out the other way. Good, innocent and conscientious people bearing the brunt of the guilt and the luxurious burden of the upper class elite. Telling each person he “examined” that they were selected randomly by the computer that looked for certain red flags on their returns.

“I’m sure it will turn out to be nothing,” He would always say, to keep his victims still while he devoured their life’s savings.

No one, not even his superiors knew the truth. Clyde never took breaks, except for lunch, and always stayed late without pay. Because of this, he was the darling of his superiors, his rate of collection was the highest in all of California.

Clyde had no time for diversions. He spent all his time pouring over clearly conscientious taxpayers records. Clyde only read the newspaper to find victims. When he read a story about a working stiff hero that had saved an old woman from a burning house, he looked both the brave man and the old lady up in his system. He would scrape and scratch until he could find some archaic tax law or reverse loop-hole and use it as an excuse to flag them for an audit.

Clyde was a master at finding a way to make them pay. To himself alone, he called it Clyde’s Tax, taxing them for their goodness. Clyde despised good happy people, for his only happiness was in stealing theirs.

Lying in bed at night staring at the cracked ceiling, he took sickly relish in the pain of these poor folks, knowing they were at home spending countless hours scraping and scratching their records together, trying to avoid “Clyde’s Tax”. Fantasizing about their mounting anxiety and how they would worry themselves sick over the impending audit, Clyde grinned a satisfied grin and peacefully drifted off to sleep.

He took a morbid pride inflicting stress on his victims even days and weeks before they sat across the desk from him on audit day. Little blue haired old ladies, blue collar workers with six kids, even better if one was a special needs child.

“Special needs” he huffed, “I’ll show you who has special needs, Uncle Sam is needy, he’s starting to grow thin from all those tax cuts. I don’t care if you want to deduct that $800 dollar a month medicine your special needs child has. I have a special way of getting that deduction back out of you.”

He loved sapping the enjoyment right out of other people’s lives, knowing that the pain he inflicted would last for months and maybe years.

“Enjoy life, ha! I stopped dreaming about that when I was 15 and mom took my allowance and bought meth with it. Misery is my enjoyment. The most enjoyable day of my life was when that IRS recruiter showed up at his High School. I could be paid real well for inflicting emotional, financial and even physical pain on good innocent people.” Clyde thought reminiscing about that day twenty-four years ago.

Clyde was the first in his class, and if they had honors, Clyde would have been valedictorian. He stayed late, paid for all the extra books to help him pass the tests and he graduated at the very top of his class. He would make all those nice happy people pay for their nice happy lives. “Happy ain’t all it’s cracked up to be anyway,” was his mantra. He became the IRS’s little darling and poster boy for a successful auditor.

The minister and his wife sat in Clyde’s office nervously holding their box of papers. They had sweated and worried for days making sure every scrap of receipt was included and could be back-checked three different ways. All their bank statements with the receipts lined up in order and all their proof of expenses was neatly stacked in a nice wicker basket. They knew that they had done what was right. They never cheated their taxes. They were conscientious to a fault, but that still did not alleviate all the fear.

They sat holding each other’s hand. Little beads of sweat popping out on their foreheads. They glanced at each other with a look of reassurance while Clyde poured through their records.

Sitting across the desk from them rifling through their records, Clyde nodded occasionally and said “Hmmm” a lot. This was all part of his act. Over the years Clyde carefully crafted his art of inducing stress. He knew the exact motions and body language that would induce the highest amount of anxiety into his victims. Like a cat playing with a mouse that he would eventually devour, Clyde played his sadistic game like a master.

He knew exactly what he was looking for. He had planned this ‘hit’ for weeks.

Smuggling their records out of the building late one night, he went over them at home with a fine tooth comb. He knew if he looked hard enough he could always find something wrong with any tax return. He could make the smallest error seem like a felony by applying any one of a number of obscure tax laws to it. The tax code was so immense, no one knew everything that was in it, except, “Tax Man”, Clyde’s secret anti-hero name for himself that no one knew but him.

A modified version of the Batman theme song would run through his head whenever Clyde scored a hit for the IRS, “Taxman nananana! Taxman!” He really was somebody now.

If “they” only knew.

Clyde sat at his desk, salivating over this potential kill. He would rake them over the coals. In the end they would feel like dirt. It wasn’t just the money, it was the righteousness, joy and peace he wanted to steal, kill and destroy. Men feared failure and women wanted security. He attacked and devoured these like a lion on the hunt.

“This could not be happening” Clyde exclaimed silently to himself. As he put all the figures together through his computer, they were getting money back, a lot of money. Clyde took it personal. It may be the governments money but Clyde treated it like his. Clyde wanted pain and suffering from the Minister and his wife. He poured through the numbers again. “No! This cannot be.” He thought. Now the little beads of sweat popped out on his forehead. “Stay calm, don’t give yourself away Taxman.” He went through it the third time and it was almost time for the office to close.

He finally relinquished victory to the minister and his wife. He tried to feign happiness as he told them the ‘good news’. He cringed when they smiled and thanked him profusely for his thoroughness and ‘kindness’. “Can we send a note to your boss, saying how pleasant and thorough you were?” the minister said. Taxman cringed, his cape in tatters. “Yes that would be real nice.” He said.

Unbeknownst to Taxman, someone in the office was listening in. Ashley Meyers the cheerful auditor in the next cubicle had been monitoring his activities since she began working there five years ago. She had even hacked into his secret files. Someone did know his secret.

Ashley, a pretty twenty-something was very conscientious, but her return rate, the money she collected from taxpayers, was lower than anyone’s in the office. Scrupulous in her work and life, she genuinely cared about people, little animals and the environment. This meant that Ashley cared about her clients, as she called them. She worked for them, to see that they got a fair shake, only using the fine-toothed comb on the obvious cheaters. She despised cheaters.

Ashley always greeted Clyde with a smile when she saw him in the hallway or the lunchroom. This made Clyde nervous. She was too good, too happy, and too pretty. She unnerved Clyde, his palms would sweat and his speech stammer when she spoke to him, always in her sweet little voice with just a hint of country south.

The question’s always asked or at least we’ve all wondered, do IRS agents ever get audited?
Yes they do, as Clyde found out when he checked his mail on Saturday. This infuriated Clyde.
“What do they think they’re doing? don’t they know I’m their best agent.”

Clyde’s records were definitely in order. There was none of that scraping, scratching and sweating for him. “Piece of cake” he thought. He called the number and set up an appointment, for two weeks from Monday. He had to take the day off of work to go to a different office than he worked in. While he was waiting for that day to come, Ashley was transferred out of his branch, he was almost as happy as when he assessed huge penalties and back taxes on some innocent little old lady.

“The happy little good girl was gone.” He rejoiced as much as Clyde could.

On the day of his audit, Clyde dialed the same number on the intercom that thousands of other taxpayers had dialed, just to see someone like him, a little sweet hint of country south voice answered and asked him nicely to please wait. He took a seat and waited for a very inconvenient fifteen minutes.

When the buzzer sounded and the door opened, out walked Ashley Meyers and she greeted him warmly, feigning surprise. Now it was Clyde’s turn to sit in the hot seat. Ashley was very thorough examining Clyde’s perfect records. But unknown to Clyde or anyone else, Ashley had caught onto his sadistic little game when she first started working for the IRS. She hated cheaters.

When she caught onto his game, she went into the big computer and adjusted his tax withholding so a little less than what was right got deducted from his paycheck. Only twenty-five bucks a week and Clyde never noticed, never checked and never suspected. But twenty-five bucks a week over five years adds up to six thousand five hundred smackaroos. This was the only slightly dishonest thing she had ever done, but the end justifies the means, right?

With relish in her voice and a sly grin that Clyde didn’t see, she printed the report and turned it for him to see. “What! This couldn’t be.” But, Clyde had never checked his own deductions. Not only did he owe, it looked like he had defrauded the IRS that he so loved working for. There were lots of records of his unauthorized access to the computers and Clyde was charged as a criminal.
Clyde was tried and convicted for his crimes and was sentenced to five years without parole. He served out his term as a dishwasher and janitor at the prison on Bird Island. Clyde, released on the last day of the five years, took a job as a dishwasher in a seedy restaurant on skid row. Mom still held his secret and so did the pretty and cheerful auditor at the IRS.

“Taxman nananana! Taxman!” He really was somebody now.

Friday, February 25, 2011

Icy Shadows

Icy in the shadows,
You see in the light.

Icy fading rainbows,
You see only might.

Icy shoulders all so cold,
You see ever kindly.

Icy growing mold, I’m told,
You see love so blindly.

Am I missing something?
Tell me if you please.

Come remove this icy thing,
Help me fell this killing freeze.

-----*------

Icy sun on mountainside,
But can ne’er forget the other side.

What goes lurking there?
Hidden in those shadows?

Icy imagining creatures dear,
You see cleavers in the dark.

Cause things with horns are never fair,
Icy monster, faerie’s shark.

Plotting plans against the light.
Let’s escape sun’s fencing glare!

Am I missing something?
Tell me if you please.

Come remove this icy thing,
Help me fell this killing freeze.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

I Had The World By The Tail, a War Story

It was 1979 and I had the world by the tail. I was working at Russell Coil company making widgets, not really, but they might as well been. I had the fearful respect of most every person in the plant, and I liked it that way. It gave me some shred of credibility in the smoking ruin of my life.

I did say I had the world by the tail, didn’t I? That’s what I kept telling myself anyway. I awoke Saturday morning to the clanging in my head that told me once again that I had smoked, snorted and drank way too much the night before. My best friend’s couch, much to the chagrin and disapproval of his wife, was my home, a too short couch with a spot in the corner to hang my leathers and pile my few precious belongings. I had the world by the tail.

With the clanging in my head growing by the second, I found an unopened 16 ounce Budweiser in the door of the fridge and choked it down, the carbonation stinging the walls of my throat. As the golden liquid hit my gut, my clanging head began to quiet and my queasy gut started to settle down. I did say I had the world by the tail, didn’t I?

As the banging in my head subsided and my stomach stopped it’s middle of the ocean roll, I chomped down half a box of Captain Crunch while reading the paper. Throwing on my crusty, trusty old leathers, I was ready to chase the tail of this cruel world. I headed out the door with a nod of my head to my buddy’s wife, and she scowled back disapprovingly. In one of those little garages that come with low-level apartments, sat the love of my life, a 1956 Harley Davidson Panhead. It dripped oil, it’s paint was scratched and dull, but it always ran. And to the amazement of my chrome loving friends, whose rides, though clean and polished, were often carried around in oil dripping, fading, gray primer paint wearing, dependable old pickup trucks.
I had the world by the tail.

My ride wasn’t pretty but it ran consistently and after all, that’s what matters isn’t it? Unleashing it from its lock and chain, which merely kept honest people honest and was only slightly smaller than what secured a small warship to it’s dock, I threw my leg over it’s lovely low slung saddle. Sitting there in that seat, I felt as secure as a baby bird in it’s nest.
I had the world by the tail.

I loved starting “my” bike, and for those of you who haven’t a clue, there was no key, just a switch to turn on the electrics. One headlight, one taillight and ignition electrics is all that she had in the way of an electrical system. So, with a flick of the switch and a pump of the kick starter to get it up to the compression stroke, I jumped on it for all I was worth. And, for one split second, I am airborne and the bike is balanced on its two wheels as I come down hard on the starter, and the love of my life roars to life. Just like God breathing life into Adam, I am god, and I have breathed or rather, kicked life into my metal beast. There is no better sound in the universe than the sound of a Harley “firing up” in the morning, especially if it’s your own.
I had the world by the tail.

I don’t remember where I was headed that morning, it now being over thirty years ago, but it could have been a cruise by the beach or to go somewhere and drink beer, most likely the latter. Looking back now, it seems that’s all I or any of my “friends” really ever did , “ride somewhere and drink beer” or some other now unmentionable and nefarious activity. We were forever riding our bikes somewhere to drink beer, a ride through the canyon to Cook’s Corner to “drink beer”, a poker run to stop at as many bars as you could, drink beer, draw a card and come up with the winning hand at the end. I had the world by the tail.

All of these riding places to drink beer, and ever more nefarious activities was not without it’s casualties and costs, I have the scars to prove it. This story is about one of those scars, but I will never show it to you. I believe the only person in the world to ever see it was a too pretty blonde nurse in Anaheim Memorial Hospital’s emergency room.

What I do remember clearly is “tooling” down Euclid Ave about 45 miles per hour, when, all of a sudden, Miss Big Floppy Straw Hat, Cadillac Driving Old Lady decided for some unseen reason to stomp on her brakes, locking the wheels, grayish blue smoke pouring from where her rear tires met the road. Now, I wasn’t born yesterday, and it didn’t take a rocket scientist to assess this situation in a hurry. And before I go on, one detail of the love of my life that I must share with you is that my stripped down version of the stock 1956 Harley, still weighed more than 500 pounds, and for the sake of being stylish it had a 21” spool wheel on the front, which means “NO front brake”, and believe it or not, this was intentional. Purposely removing 70 percent or more of the potential stopping power. I had the world by the tail, but one little shoe brake on the huge rear wheel.

When Miss Big Floppy Straw Hat, Cadillac Driving Old Lady stomped on the brakes, so did I. And when they say that in crisis situations everything moves in slow motion, it’s true, it’s true, it’s true. As I stomped on that one brake that I did have, my own rear wheel spewed grayish blue smoke from where my rear tire met the road. Problem being, I only had one rear wheel and I can fall down. In that timeless instant it seemed that I had all the time in the world to assess the situation. Time to calculate the distance and stopping probability before I was pasted, like a bug to a windshield, on the back of Miss Big Floppy Straw Hat, Cadillac Driving Old Lady’s huge Cadillac. The answer to my query, not enough time in eternity, not enough distance in the world, and I am dead meat. So, the logical conclusion was to ditch the bike and hope for a soft landing. I had visions dancing in my head of me smashing into the back end of that big Caddy. No way was that going to happen, so like an expert I abandoned the love of my life, in favor of my own life and pushed her off to the right as I dove to the left. I had the world by the tail, but one shoe brake on my rear wheel.

Still in slow-motion, my right cheek, not the one on my face, hit the asphalt, and I went skidding and bouncing down the road, taking a few head over cheek tumbles along the way. But, for the most part it seemed I was surfing on my right butt cheek. The elapsed time of the whole “incident” seemed like minutes instead of seconds, and during the ride down Euclid Avenue on my cheek, I had visions of flashing lights and ambulances dancing in my little head, which bounced off the pavement a couple of times during the ride. I had the world by the tail.

When everything came to rest, traffic had stopped, and proving that minutes had really passed, a crowd had gathered on the side of the street to watch the bad guy get smeared all over the asphalt. When I finally came up for air and the world stopped spinning, Miss Big Floppy Straw Hat, Cadillac Driving Old Lady was nowhere to be found, and why would she? She was oblivious to the fact that she had nearly obliterated me and the love of my life, but rested comfortably knowing she had saved some poor squirrel from becoming road kill. I had the world by the tail.

Odd as it may sound, like I had just tripped over the curb and taken a mild header, I walked over and picked up my turtle shell, horn-rimmed shades (sunglasses), placing them on my battered face like I had merely misplaced them for a moment. Walking over to where the love of my life was laying silently on her side, I picked her up, and jumped on the starter. Instantly, that beautiful, fire breathing roar assured me she was still alive. At the time, I didn’t feel any pain, and I learned later that is why God created shock and dopamine. I twisted the wick(throttle) on my bike and zoomed back the way I had come. I had the world by the tail.

On the way home, as I was pulling up to a stoplight, I looked over at some guy on a rice burner (Japanese motorcycle). I nodded a simple greeting to him and wondered why he had such a strange look on his face. Learning later, when I met a mirror face to face, that I had a good size stream of my own blood running down my face along with a few minor abrasions and shredded jeans. Isn’t it always fun to imagine what people are thinking? I still get some kind of thrill thinking about what he, or the crowd that had gathered must have thought as they watched the spectacle of my ordeal. “What a bad ass!” is what I hope went through their mind, and I also hope they are telling this story to their grandchildren.I had the world by the tail.

As I returned to the apartment where my borrowed couch was, stepping through the door I realized something was more wrong than I initially felt. Looking at the looks on my friend and his wife’s face, I became a little worried. “What the F… happened to you?” they squawked. As I was relating my story, the pain began to creep in. What was most pronounced was a searing pain in the furthest and deepest parts of my skinny butt. Get the picture? It’s as gruesome as you can imagine. Starting a hot bath, I lowered myself in the water and soaked until the water began to chill. When I crawled out of the water, I noticed two things right off. The massive amount of black asphalt littered across the bottom of that white porcelain tub and the searing pain in my right knee. I managed to get my jeans on and standing in the doorway I looked at my friends and said “I think I need to go to the hospital”. I had the world by the tail.

At the hospital I went through the usual 2-3 hours of triage and x-rays before actually seeing a doctor. They wrapped my knee in an immobilizer, referred me to a clinic for Monday, and wearing only one of those thin hospital gowns, laid me on a gurney in an examination area with the little curtain on chains drawn around me, and told me to wait. When a very pretty blonde nurse came in flashing a sparkling white and toothy smile, I thought this just might be my lucky day. I had the world by the tail.

She gave me some basic instructions concerning the care and feeding of my wounded knee and then asked me this terrifying question that I will never forget.

“Do you have any other injuries?”

I gulped as my throat dried, and feeling like an embarrASSed eight year old, I said with a shaky voice, “I have some road rash on my “back side”” censoring my normally crude language that I usually took such great delight in. She nonchalantly said “roll over let’s see”.
I had the world by the TAIL.

The next words are forever indelibly etched in my brain, “I don’t see anything”. “Well……………..” I stammered, “you have to look a little deeper”. Spreading my cheeks with her cold but soft hands, she obviously saw the damage to my rear orifice when she gasped “Oh my!” and in a shocking reaction to the sight, her hands went to her mouth as my cheeks slammed shut. Throwing the curtain aside she ran out in the hallway and I could hear her loudly announcing “You wouldn’t believe where this guy has road rash!”.

I had the world by the TAIL.

She came back in innocent as a lamb, poured some Novocain in the crack of my tail and began to scrub with a potato scrubber, digging down deep and removing every speck of asphalt. Novocain or no, I would rather have endured the wreck three times over than to go through that part of the ordeal. Thirty years later, my butt still winces. Worse yet, why couldn’t she have been big, fat and ugly? Or better yet, it could have been Miss Big Floppy Straw Hat, Cadillac Driving Old Lady getting her just desserts for causing all this pain and shame in the first place. Well, at least the love of my life was still in one piece.

I had the world by the TAIL.
This story is 98.5% true, it really happened.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

The Sound of Silence

After an emotionally charged visit with my Mom and Dad in warm and sunny Southern California, I headed back towards the cold foggy grayness of Northern California where I make my home in Sacramento. Weaving my big gray Dodge “cowboy truck” through the LA freeway system, I charged up and over the Grapevine, a climbing and twisting road that snakes through the Angeles National Forest and divides the North and South parts of the state. I really don’t know why they call it a forest; it has no real trees just millions of little bushes and rocks. As I began my rapid descent into the southern end of the Central Valley, the all too familiar foggy grayness of Northern California’s “Tule fog” was stretched out before me like some cosmic size gray comforter.

Descending the steep grade, my ears and head began to fill up with cotton, from the rapid change in altitude, and the all too familiar sound of waves softly crashing on the cotton beach, began to roar in my head. When I got to the bottom of the hill I pulled into Bill and Joe Bob’s Travel Center, the sign near the off ramp promising that Bill and Joe Bob really do have it all, “IF WE DON’T HAVE IT, YOU DON’T NEED IT!”, the sign read in huge block letters.

Pulling up to a front parking spot I could hear the music piped out to the fueling islands, and despite the roar in my head being near deafening, the tinny sounding “Happy Birthday Sweet Sixteen” seemed to permeate the air, birthing an image in my head of car hops and greased hair, being eerily reminiscent of the old TV show “Happy Days”.

Stepping down out of my “cowboy truck”, something was very out of place that I couldn’t quite put my finger on, like stepping through a worm hole, only I didn’t go anywhere. People were busy gassing up at most of the twenty-four pumps and at the one nearest me, a young pretty lady in jeans, sweater and high heels, was having some difficulty getting the modern gas pump to work right. She was clumsily putting the gas nozzle into her car’s gas tank, banging it against the metal filler tube and trying to get the tangled hose to cooperate.

Now the thing that I couldn’t quite put my finger on before had suddenly become blaringly quite obvious. All that movement, banging around and clumsiness, and there was not even the slightest little sound. It was completely silent except for the music coming from the gas islands speakers, which was now playing “The Lion Sleeps Tonight”. Instinctively, I stuck my fingers in my ears and wiggled them around hoping vainly to un-pop my pressure clogged head, still not a sound. I began to gawk at the young lady pumping the gas, not because she was so pretty, but somehow thinking that if I stared harder I could hear what she was doing. She scowled back at me, and interpreting my befuddled stare as a leer, she flipped me the bird. I jerked my head so hard and so fast the other way that I might have pulled a muscle in my neck.

My attention swung towards the other side of the gas island with other young ladies, old balding men, bikers and cowboys all fiddling with the pumps trying to get their cars, trucks and motorcycles filled with gas, oil checked and windshields cleaned for the next leg of their trip. The islands were alive with people but still not a sound except for the piped in music. In addition to this weirdness, it seemed as if the normal speed and motion of every movement had been turned down one click, not quite slow-motion but enough to be very strange indeed. Perhaps it was merely the absence of the normal sounds that caused this slowing effect. Anyways, it was still very creepy.

I scanned once again across the islands straining and hoping to hear just one sound amidst the bee-hive like activity, and everything was still eerily silent. The piped in music had now switched songs to Spencer Davis Group’s “Gimme Some Lovin’”. My mind was telling me I could hear because I was seeing, but there still was no sound except the oldies playing through the speakers on the gas islands.

I tried to shake off the oddity of this scene, and explain it away by blaming it on my plugged up ears. As I opened the door to walk into “The Store That Has Everything”, a trucker looking guy who was just exiting passed me and he was wearing a ball cap embroidered on the front with the words “Make It Loud!.” He was eagerly tearing into a plastic package with a new cell phone holder that looked like Gumby, but the sound of the tearing plastic was conspicuously absent. I held open the door as I let an elderly couple go in ahead of me, and as if the outside scene wasn’t strange enough, what I found as I walked through the door completely baffled me.

Inside the store, all of the sounds that I expected to be there came rushing into my confused and deprived senses. Everything was absolutely as you would expect it to be. The room was filled with a huge variety of wide-ranging sounds. Cash registers were ticking, soda machines were slushily dispensing and workers at the counters were shouting orders back to the kitchen. Believe it or not, the “We Have Everything” store had a Burger King, Pizza Hut, Taco Bell, Subway and even a Popeye’s Chicken. I guess they did have everything. I could hear every little sound as crisp and clear as you would expect.

I very noisily purchased a 64 ounce diet Coke and a Five Dollar Foot Long Subway sandwich, extra jalapenos, and I relished every clink of the ice and crunch of the paper.
Quickly forgetting the creepy soundless incident outside, I browsed through the five-dollar trinkets just to see how carelessly five dollars could be squandered and for what. Making my way out through the doors, Sub in hand and noisily sucking Diet Coke through a bendable straw, I stepped through the door to the outside and was snapped back into that same creepily muted environment.

Abruptly, the silence was broken by the rough and awkward cranking of a large diesel engine springing to life. The cab of the large tractor was unevenly vibrating from the running engine and sooty black smoke was pouring from the twin stacks at the back of the cab as the driver warmed the engine. The gears ground together trying to mesh, and then finding their place with a solid crunch, the truck moved forward with a lurch. The large truck and 53’ trailer, emblazoned with its colorful and catchy ad for “Noise Cancelling Headphones” passed in front of me headed for the highway. The rig obscured the gas island scene in front of me like the curtain at a theater.

The instant the truck passed, the curtain opened on the same hectic scene as before, and suddenly, as if a huge volume of air violently rushed into an empty space, there was a well-defined and sharp POP! The sound of gas nozzles clanking back into their holders, and engines revving came in to fill the empty space. Kids were crying for sugar and trinkets, parents were yelling back and people were talking and singing along with the song by Simon and Garfunkel

“The Sound of Silence”

People talking without speaking
People hearing without listening
People writing songs that voices never shared
No one dared
Disturb the sound of silence

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Garbage


An eerie, dusty smell filled the air, and a rotting shredded curtain waved behind the cracked window that was half-heartedly covered with masking tape.
I‘ve seen way too many homes like this while working for the local gas utility.
I was there to turn the gas off for non-payment. Oddly, this customer had a great history of paying on time, but recently payments had been sporadic and for the past three months no payment had been made. The meter was around back, but I could not get through, because the rotting gate, which was hanging by one and a half hinges also had a broken latch. I had been getting a lot of assignments like these since the downturn of the economy. Unable to get through the gate, I went around to the front door.
The front walk was littered with faded dirty scraps of old paper and dead grass. Kicking a crusty old can off the sidewalk, I carefully wound my way around the coils of a very aged, worn and seldom used garden hose lying across the walk.
I knocked on the peeling skin of the front door, half hoping that no one would answer and someone else would be sent to do this job later. Despite my pleas to the powers that be, a desperate yet manly voice answered “hold on, be there in a minute”. Several minutes later a man, with two days growth of beard, pulled open the sticking door, with a squeak, and with a disinterested shrug, looked at me through listless eyes. No greeting was offered just a vacant look waiting for whatever bad news or sales pitch I might have for him. “Are you Jim Clark?” I said with the warmest, caring voice I could muster and yet maintain some form of authority.
Peering past Jim and into the house I saw carelessly stacked piles of old and yellowing newspapers. Jim answered with a drawled and defensive “OK…?”
“I need to get to your gas meter in the backyard” I said, hoping to get away without explaining that I was turning it off for non-payment, hoping to just hand him the notice and run. The words I dreaded to hear floated grimly out towards me and hung in the air. “What for?”
“Well” I nervously stumbled to get the words out, “the bill hasn’t been paid in three months”. Jim just stood motionless and looked at me like a kid that had been disappointed so many times that one more didn’t really matter. Shrugging his shoulders he pointed towards the back door and shuffled towards a well-used and very old recliner with stuffing sticking out of the tears and a half broken footrest leaning sideways.
The stacks of papers I saw were just the tip of the iceberg. Stacked on counters, floors and tables was a huge assortment of papers, cups, old magazines and discarded old parts to various gadgets and old electric appliances. The smell was fairly tolerable, for the garbage that was more susceptible to decay was stuffed in a number of actual garbage cans on the side of the house. There were no rotting bodies that I could tell of anyway.
Walking towards the back door I asked the question, that everyone asks when they have no idea what else to say, “How are you doing?” It seemed as the words escaped my lips that the answer was obvious, even to the mangy cat curled up on the trash strewn kitchen counter. But ask it I did, and I even waited for his reply.
“Well” began Jim, “it’s been a rough year” and he began to tell me his story “Just when I thought things were starting to look up and my life was starting to show some signs of improvement. My wife grabbed the kids and left, I thought all was going pretty well, but about two years ago my wife Eunice just picked up and left. That tipped me over the edge. Every girlfriend I ever had ran out on me the same way. Now it was my wife and kids that I lived my life for.” I guess Jim just needed someone to listen, so I pulled up a milk crate and sat down next to him as he settled into his too well-used recliner.

It seems every girlfriend, and some that turned wives, eventually had rejected and pushed him aside. I must tell you, after listening to Jim, that this was not all their fault nor was it all his. It seems that Jim lived with a constant fear of never measuring up. This colored every word that he heard, every action and deed, that as nice as he was, no one not even him could stand up to it very long.
So, he just gave up and sat down. It didn’t happen all at once, but slowly, bit by bit he gave away pieces of his life to apathy and resignation.

Jim lost hope, and for one reason or another he chose to keep the garbage.

The garbage collectors came by every week to pick up the garbage ,and all he needed to do was take it out to the curb, simple enough.
But he didn't…
Day after day he just sat in his house and the garbage began to grow. First it was just papers on the counter that somehow seemed important. Then it became the stacks of old newspapers, you just never know what you might need them for. Soon, every broken and cast off old appliance and gizmo found it’s way into the house. It didn’t stop there. Before long, the yard started to fill with broken down lawnmowers and old cars that would never run. The house and yard began to seriously deteriorate, and his neighbors began to complain, and when Jim did venture outside he could see their looks and only guess what their whispers could be. This only made Jim more withdrawn and he collected more garbage. Even for all this, Jim couldn't understand why the neighbors had stopped being friendly.
As Jim continued his story I could feel the pain in his voice, and I believed he really wanted things to be different, but some unseen force seemed to hold him to that garbage. As bad as it all seemed to everyone around him, it became his normal,.

Somehow, the mayor of the city Jim lived in found out about his plight and even took an interest. One day he just showed up at Jim's house, and he even stayed for dinner. He spent time listening to Jim’s story just as he was. The Mayor seemed not to even notice the garbage, nor was he taken aback by Jim’s lack of care for anything.
The mayor obviously cared about Jim, garbage or no.
When they were done eating the Mayor asked, "Would you let me get rid of all this garbage for you?" warily Jim said "yes if you really want too,"
The mayor, still in all his fine clothes, rolled up his sleeves, and worked all that night and into the next day, until all that garbage was stacked in cans out by the curb.
The Mayor thanked Jim for allowing him to help him, and gave Jim his card and said if there was anything else he could do for him, all he had to do was call. Jim warmly shook his hand and choked back tears and even thought about hugging him but decided against it. Taking the mayor’s card, he went back to his old recliner and sat staring at the card the Mayor gave and pondering why anyone would do all this for him, especially someone so big and important.
Jim Clark sat back down in his house,
He enjoyed the clean feeling in his home, for a while.
As the days went by Jim got bored and lonely again,
He actually missed the garbage,
Jim went out to the curb sifted through his old garbage,
He found some that “just wasn’t that bad”,
Then Jim brought that whole can back in the house,
and over time opened it up and soon it ended up scattered around the house,
Thinking just a little garbage wouldn't hurt, he added some more.
After all, even his neighbors had some……
Time went by, and soon enough, Jim had even more garbage than before,
The neighbors began to complain again,
Jim became sad and lonely again…
Matthew 12:43-45
43 "When an unclean spirit goes out of a man, he goes through dry places, seeking rest, and finds none.44 "Then he says, 'I will return to my house from which I came.' And when he comes, he finds it empty, swept, and put in order.
45 "Then he goes and takes with him seven other spirits more wicked than himself, and they enter and dwell there; and the last state of that man is worse than the first.


QUESTIONS

1. Who is the Mayor?
2. Who is the man?
3. What is the garbage?

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Crack


I sensed this great creative surge today,
an unseen power springing from within.
Deep inside it came poking, prodding,
Beckoning to be reckoned with,
brought to life and into being.

But, alas! I’ve rugs to sell and many things,
To do, places to go and people to see.
So here I sit in traffic deep,
Brawling with my deepest muse,
to keep it quiet and quite content.

Staring through this aging crack,
That grows slowly across my windshield.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

The Car


This is a slightly embellished short story about when my daughter Brandy drove the family car around the block, when she was eight years old. The true part is that she did drive the car, and she was only eight. I hope you enjoy it.

The Car

On a warm and sunny spring day, in the mid 1980's in an average middle class suburban neighborhood, dogs were barking, kids were playing and I was washing the car. How much more typically average could you get? But as you know, no neighborhood is as normal as it appears at first glance. After all, what is normal? Normal is bland, normal is boring and food needs spice to be worth the eating.

On this particularly warm and sunny spring day, normal was broken, shattered and left lying in pieces by an incredibly curious event that added some amusing spice to my life that day.

I had these neighbors; Well, I surely couldn't say they were the best neighbors anyone ever had. In fact, quite the opposite is true. They had the angry pit bull and the dead lawn in the summer that was three feet tall in the winter from never seeing a mower. The front part of the backyard fence was wired like San Quentin to keep the killer dog penned in. I watched often as the father in the house chased salespeople and postmen away with a baseball bat. There were all kinds of strange, nefarious goings and comings in the middle of the night, loud trucks, louder Harleys and assorted chopper style motorcycles. Men and women greasy, dirty, long-haired and heavily tattooed, in an era when only convicts and bikers had tattoos, were coming and going at all times of the day and night. The police occasionally showed up, and please don't tell them, but it was me that called the police a couple of times when things seemed to be a little out of hand and my wife told me to. Nobody went to jail, that I know of, but I'm sure a murder or two were prevented.
Living amongst the bedlam in that house were four very cute and pretty young girls that I remember quite clear. They had often played with my own children and that's how I got to know some of them. They seemed fairly normal for being raised in the midst of all that chaos. And it was amidst that turmoil that I did witness some of the most curious events. As I said, spice added to the food makes it more flavorful, and often that spice was salsa and Tabasco.
The father was a boisterous, loud-mouthed, tattooed and scruffy guy, the one with the baseball bat. One day, as I was washing my car in the street I heard him bragging to a friend that his eight year old daughter, Brandy could drive the car without any practice, training or help. I heard his friend tell him he was full of it (you know what “it” is, right?).
All the while, there stood Brandy, a little round-faced cherub of a little girl. Brandy was 8 years old and in the third grade, pudgy cherub cheeks, persistent food stains on her chin and Shirley temple curls. No wonder this guy doubted Mike's claims that she was probably the smartest person in the world, and I heard Mike say with a swagger, “and definitely smarter than you”.
So, there Brandy innocently stood with a dirty shirt and a bit of spaghetti sauce from lunch at the corner of her mouth. I just had to stick around to see this. Not wanting to butt in or be seen prying into this perhaps dangerous (to me) situation, I washed my car until I think I scrubbed a layer of paint off it.
I did have an idea of Brandy's capabilities, for I had watched her out in the garage fetching tools for her dad Mike. I often heard Mike angrily growling and barking at what everybody did, but when they were working together in the garage, I heard none of this, so I assume she always brought the right tool. Mike had an old scruffy looking “chopper” that he was always working on. It ran like a dream for a thirty year old motorcycle. Brandy could even remove the primary cover with it’s 20 bolts and gasket, reassembling it herself too. I have seen her remove and replace the spark plugs, nothing less than brilliant for an eight year old. Mike told me once that she had been doing this since she was four or five years old. I often saw him buried under the hood of an old, beat up, hammered is more like it, truck he had bought for two-hundred dollars. With wrenches sticking out of his back pocket and Brandy standing in the driver’s side of the truck, Mike asked her to bump the starter, saying, “now” and “now” and “stop”. I saw this many times and I never saw Mike ask anyone else help him to do this.

Back to the driving the car story, 1979 Chevette here we come. If you are too young to remember these beastly little compact cars with a three-squirrel power plant, then you really haven’t missed much. The Chevette superseded the Vega as Chevrolet's entry-level subcompact. They now have smaller cars for the environmental heroes, they call it a “Smart Car”, but this thing was like a K-Mart car versus Costco. All that aside, the Chevette was the best-selling small car in America for 1979 and 1980. I think it was the price $99.95, just kidding, sort of.

Mike pulls this little car out of the driveway and lines it up in the street, and you would imagine most eight-year-olds getting the chance to drive a car would be jumping up and down with unrestrained excitement, but if Brandy was excited, you couldn't tell. “Do you want to drive the car Brandy?” ”Sure” came the sheepish reply.
Brandy never got overly excited about anything, bubbly and effusively happy, yes; never stop talking, yes. Mike told me once that his dad calls her a gerbil on speed, but she was not always like this. Until the age of four Brandy would not even say her own name, but then a near tragic fall onto her head from a second story balcony had knocked something loose and she started talking and never stopped to this day. Even though she never, and I mean never stopped talking, she was her own woman. She was not like some crazy, hyper kid, nor was she overly mature and snobbish. She was more like your pal wrapped up in an eight year old suit.
Brandy was a true middle child stuck between the youngest, Christal, and the oldest twins, all girls. They say the middle child feels out of place and strives for attention, and this Brandy did to the “nines”. She was not necessarily a bad child but she had a dad that was prone to anger, and you could say, she was an expert at pushing those buttons. Brandy craved attention and she was often getting her fill of the wrong kind by expertly pushing the attention buttons. I think perhaps it was only her perception that she did not get much attention so she would settle for negative attention, which she got. Brandy and Dad having very similar personalities, they often butt heads.

Anyway, back to the biker, the little cherub and the '79 Chevette. Here they stood in the middle of this nice quiet neighborhood. Mike “patiently” explained, (patience being a miracle in Mike's case) what everything did. Brandy was sitting in the driver’s seat, intently focused on the instructions, and Mike was down on the ground, and I could hear him saying,” “First you turn this key and then you pull this lever until it is on the D”, “this pedal makes it go when you press it with your foot””, this pedal makes it stop”. Then Mike got in the driver’s seat with Brandy in front of him, just for safety's sake.

I silently uttered a prayer under my breath as I stood there with a river of water running down the driveway; remember, I was supposedly washing my car. Now, I remember “helping” my grandpa drive the car when I was ten, but he held his hands on the wheel and worked the pedals. This is NOT what was happening here. Brandy expertly turned the ignition key and pressed the gas pedal just right and the engine came to life and she released the key at just the right time, no grinding. She brought the shifter down into drive I assume, for the car began to roll forward with Brandy's little cherub face sticking over the steering wheel as her hands gripped the wheel at a perfect 10 and 2 o'clock. The smile on her face was worth a million and a half bucks.
As Brandy drove that car perfectly straight down the street, I almost wanted to close my eyes when she was getting near the corner. I say “she” because I knew Mike did not have his hands on the wheel or his feet on the pedals. As the car approached the corner, it expertly slowed and with a perfect arc turned the right hand corner. I couldn't see the rest of the trip, but I knew that it went much the same, for moments later I saw the Chevette coming towards me from the other end of the street, meaning that Brandy had indeed driven that car by herself all the way around the block.

When they pulled up in front of my house, they both got out with smiles and memories that I am sure would last a lifetime. Just when I thought that cherub face couldn't smile any bigger, she emerged like she was just crowned Miss America, spaghetti stains and all. Mike picked her up and held her in the air giving her his pride and respect and bragging rights. The other man Mike was bragging to earlier started to hoot and holler and I saw him pass a twenty-dollar bill to Mike.
I finally finished washing my car and later that month my water bill was double.