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Tuesday, April 28, 2020
Always There
As I changed my infant son’s diaper, I’d sing this song to him. It had many lyrics, most of which didn’t make any sense at all. But I’d sing it through and then, when we were both clean and fresh, I’d hold him in my arms and I’d say, “I love you; I’ll take care of you; I’ll always be there when you need me.” This was our ritual, carried out a few times every day until he was old enough to recognize the song. He’s thirty two years old now and he can still sing it all the way through.
Wednesday, April 15, 2020
The Two Car Garage
My father was an old world craftsman, not in the sense that he created exquisite furniture for people who had been born into “the purple of commerce or who had risen through the ranks of the aristocracy.”(see Wilde, Oscar) No, he was a craftsman in the sense that he tried to make whatever he needed out of whatever he had on hand.
Wednesday, April 1, 2020
How I Met My Wife
Sometime in 1991 (the years from 1990 through 1992 are a bit hazy in my memory) I was divorced and found myself with a great big bulls eye on my chest, the target of unseemly largesse among a few of the unattached women in my church. They offered everything I might need: casseroles delivered; someone I could talk with; home cooked meals; tickets to the symphony (actually, one ticket and companionship); housecleaning; furniture shopping and arranging; most things a wife would provide. (In a couple of cases, I think, everything a wife would provide.) Now, I’m not generally all that desirable and I found the situation pretty creepy and so managed, on principle and without exception, to avoid being the recipient of any of it.
Then there was Susan.