A rough day

To say that yesterday was rough is putting it mildly.  I woke up and dressed to do my chores, stepped outside to the roar of wind high in the trees.  Then over the top of that den I hear sirens.  Lots of them.  This is unusual out here in the country.

Suddenly, while the feeding geese, I see three sheriff’s cars pull into the drive of my neighbor’s yard on the corner.  Worried.  A bit later a Huntsville Emergency  Medical Services  (HEMSI) vehicle pulls up into the drive…  not too long after the Sheriff’s Truck shows up and out climbs the County Coroner.

I watched horrified realizing the implications of what I was witnessing.  Much later the HEMSI personnel come out of the house, they stand quietly at the front of their vehicle, turn out the lights, climb in and quietly leave.

Then the friends and family are pouring into the drive, and the overflow parks at edge of the road.  There is hugging all around as they head into the house.  My heart breaks to think of what is transpiring inside.

They were a lovely couple.

Then I think about Bob and I, and the sadness begins anew when I really consider what it must be like to lose the love of your life.

Bob and I have known each other off and on (Be patient I promise to explain) since grade school.

We first met when we were about nine.  My parents had bought their first home and we moved in.  I made fast friends with Kathy and Susan next door.  One day they told me about “A really neat tree house!” They then explained that “We’d have to be wary of the boy who lived there because he was really mean!”

So off we went to see the tree house.  We crossed an empty field, passed through the corner of an orange grove, and then climbed through a fence board like The Little Rascals.  From there we proceeded to go up to a giant weeping pepper tree that housed this awesome wonder.  All seemed quiet enough so I, being the intrepid explorer that I am, began the ascent.  Suddenly  out popped a chubby little face with a deeply dimpled chin who growled “No girls allowed!”  We all screamed and ran back the way we’d come.

We next met in high school.  One day my friend Andrea and I were sitting on a bench and talking in the ‘central quad.’   I looked up and mentioned to her about the really cute boy in the distance.  There he stood talking to his buddies.  He was wearing a Greek Fisherman’s cap, Navy Pea coat, and the biggest dimple in his chin.  I asked Andrea who he was and she said, “Oh, that’s Bob Swink!  I’ll have to introduce you sometime.”

I told her I thought he was cute and loved the dimple in his chin, at which point I stuck my finger in the center of my chin and said, “It looks like God stuck his finger in his mold before he was done.”  All the while I was twisting my finger back and forth in my chin.

A bit later I got this strange feeling and looked up.  It was him and he was making that same silly motion in his dimple and smiling at me with all those beautiful, perfect teeth!  He said, “I knew you were talking about me.” Then he began to laugh.  Andrea went on to her next class and we sat and talked.

We dated for a while and in that time I became very good friends with his mother.  Eventually, we broke up and I graduated and left for the Navy.  Over the next ten years we would run into each other in the strangest places! We would date as friends and then he or I would find someone we were serious about and we drifted apart again.

One day Gloria, an old friend  from High school called and told me she was getting married!  She said that she had found all of the old gang but could not locate Bob.  I told her I would give it a try, and out of the blue I remembered his parent’s phone number.  I dialed it… He answered.

And so it was we dated again, he moved in, and all was wonderful.  Then one night he said he had to talk to me, “It’s really important” he said.  He sat me down, placed a chair in front of me and then he sat and took my hands in his. It was at this precise moment that I began to brace myself for a crushing blow… (bad history with untrustworthy men will do that to you)

Then he said:

“I don’t want you to get away again.  Will you marry me?”

I do not recall how long it took for me to reply, but I said:

“I have to think about it.”

I have to think about it?  What kind of crazy answer was that?

Over the next week I thought long and hard about marriage and the kind of man Bob was.  The truth of it was, and is, that he was dependable, could hold a job, never hurt me (nor would he) and really was all that I could ask for.  Not to mention I already got along famously with his mother.  We’d known each other almost forever and I couldn’t think of one good reason not to say yes.

So I did.  That will have been 30 years ago this June.

I had planned to tell you this story next June, but somehow it needed to come out today.

Epilogue

Now some of you know that I was planning to drive to Nebraska to visit my long-lost cousin Karen.  Understand dear reader, that no matter how badly I wanted to get there, it just wasn’t going to happen.  I called her and told her I would like to fly in to Omaha, Nebraska, but that I just couldn’t bear the drive… It would be another whole day there, and then two days to get back from Omaha to Home.

And so it was that the next morning I packed all my things into my truck, walked about taking a few last impressions with my camera, and then I just had to get going.  Jayme had given me Ibuprofen for my back and I went out and got the engine started.  I sat for a moment while the engine warmed, thinking about my stay and the long journey ahead of me.  I was glad to have come, but eager to be home again.

Backing out of the drive I heard the gravel crunch under my truck’s wheels took one last look at Jayme’s home… and there she was in the window waving good-by!

I turned into the road and drove off the sound of NUVIna’s admonishing voice…

“Recalculating route!”

It was going to be a LONG way home…

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I would like to share with you some of the photos that would not fit into the previous posts.

A side note: Jayme, Glenco and I watched a special on Chihuly the famous ‘glass blower.’  Weeeelll… it turns out that he does not actually BLOW the glass himself but designs and then directs master glass blowers to turn out what he wants to make.

So now you’ll ask:  “So what’s your point?”

My point is that Aaron wanted to try out a camera like mine so I let him.  I told him what I wanted to see and then gave him cart blanche to snap away.  He took hundreds of photos and then I went through and edited them down to what I was looking for.  So, in a way I am to Aaron’s photos as Chihuly is to mouth blown glass sculpture… yes?

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Here are some of my favorites Aaron took for me at the lake

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Sand in the making.

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Liquid Steel

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At the end of the day.

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Again, a special thank you to Aaron for catching this loveliness for me to Chihuly-ize.

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And these photos are mine from the trip home.

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They all told me I had missed the fall beauty.

Their eyes were shut.

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I once read an old folk tale wherein a poor fisherman is offered three wishes by a magic fish

I politely told him,  “No thank you.”  And went my own way.

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(Bob told me he could not see the fish… It is the stones, look again!)

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A little chapel ca. 1850 on the Tippecanoe Battle grounds…

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Arriving too late for the sermon, I nonetheless found the message inspiring…

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The Battle ground Memorial of Tippecanoe was the only stop I allowed myself on the way home.  As I pulled up into the parking lot I had to fight the urge not to cry.  Some would blame it on being hormonal, others might think me far to sensitive… I have no explanation for my reaction, not really… but feeling the way I did made this memorial icon seem dreadfully huge and out of place.

I do not wish to offend anyone.   I am only trying to put words to how I felt at that moment.

I could not go in.

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Back on the road and making yet another pit stop, I was suddenly impressed with how much Highway 65 resembles a gun barrel.

We all drove it at 70 + miles an hour, hurtling ourselves towards our destination, whilst multi-ton trucks did the same…

all jockeyed for position.

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It was a death trap that I survived to get home in time for

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Fall!

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And in the morning I let out the geese.  All were pouting save Polly…

and she honored me with a dance!

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There, with the grace of God, went I: part III of III

Wherein I explore a very big lake and discover I am ready to go home…

Having spent Saturday at the Bantam show, and on the road, I was glad for a lazy morning on Sunday.  But in no time at all we were back on the road with Jayme’s sister escorting us, and we had her nephew in tow.

Poor guy thought he was going to be home doing the normal boy in charge, teenager home alone shenanigans, and suddenly there was a carload of old ladies down in the parking lot demanding his presence!  (As seen through the 14 yr. old’s perspective.)

He has that effect on you.  You just want him around because he is so spontaneous and fun!

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Deja Vu?  No, you’ve seen this before… Jayme borrowed my cake picture, and I borrowed one of hers.. Turnabout is fair play they say!

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And then we were off to the Dunes, with a side trip to a very ancient barn complete with …

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Barn cats

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A carload of other old ladies showed up with a trunk load of cat food to feed them all.  I wondered at the time if this wasn’t the place where everyone came to dump unwanted kitties… lots of kitties…

I have this love of old barns.  I discovered them when I was eighteen and traveling from Southern California to my first duty station in Pensacola Florida.  As I entered the southern states they started popping up in the fields here and there and I wanted to draw every one of them.  Sadly, they are slowly being torn down and the wood repurposed for other projects like tables and shelving…

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I liked how the light came in through the window and lit up the angles on these beams.

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Old Barns Have Character

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It makes me sad to think of them no longer existing in their proper form as… barns.

Interesting observation here, the barns in Kentucky were for the most part painted a very dark charcoal black, and the barns in Indiana are mostly painted white.  Why is that? (A rhetorical question, but if you know the answer do tell!)

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Milking Room Deep Down Below

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Underneath it all there was a milking room.  I would have dearly loved to get inside to take pictures, but could not figure out how to get in there.  So we will all have to be content with pictures through a broken window… for which I gingerly got down on all fours in broken glass and balanced my camera on the ledge to get.  Be satisfied with the results, as they were the best to be had under these conditions.

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On the way to the dunes I saw this one and made poor Jayme’s sister pull over so I could get a picture of it…  I’m hating the blue tarp covered something on the side, but the sky and the whole effect are really beautiful.  It was just such a day!

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The Dunes, as they are called, is a beach on Lake Michigan.  Honey if you are from anywhere else in the country and you see the Great Lakes on a map, well you think “Yeah, wow, big lakes alright.”  But then you  get there and it’s like looking at the ocean… with the sun setting all wrong…

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Massive…

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It is a surrealistic sensation, causing introspection and a feeling of aloneness, yet comforting in a strange way…

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And then suddenly, all too soon,  our day was drawing to a close.  The sun was setting …

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And we were on the way back to The Coop Keeper’s  home.

My visit was almost over and I felt sad to think it.  Jayme had cared enough to open her home to me, a stranger.   She took me to see chickens in Ohio, and a Great Lake.  We went antique and thrift shopping (which my husband just will not do).  We talked, laughed, shared and did all the things that best friends do, and it was like we had known each other for years.

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I’d had a wonderful stay, and in the morning it would be time to go home.

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End Part III

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The Epilogue posts  tomorrow…