Remember no man is a failure who has friends.

Tag: SCP (Page 1 of 2)

Do I Really Need to Come Up With a Subject?

I am sitting here in my kitchen – laptop on the table, working from home.  Alongside the table is a window, looking out onto the side of the house, where I have two bird feeders set up.  It is a beautiful day, full of warmth and sunshine, and I’ve been lucky to watch as the birds have been visiting the feeders non-stop.  Plenty of finches, both gold and purple, cardinals, a downy woodpecker, several catbirds, a tufted titmouse.  Pesty mourning doves, sparrows, and grackles; a Downy woodpecker and either a white breasted nuthatch or black capped chickadee, I’m not sure since it flew away too quickly for me to get a good look.  A red squirrel leaped nearly 5 feet from the ground to get to the finch feeder, which prompted me to go outside and raise it higher.  I was even treated to the neighbor’s cat climbing into the dogwood tree to try and catch said squirrel

The kids are home – Will’s last day of school was yesterday, and Katie graduates tomorrow from pre-school.  I don’t understand how, on such a gorgeous day, they are not in the backyard – or at least out on the porch – but they’ve been inside more than out.

Days like this truly are a gift, and we need to thankful for them.  Days like this allow for meditation, to slow down, to examine, and reflect.  I worked all morning on a note to send to Susan, from last night’s exchange, but the process of writing, of crafting forces me to carefully consider what it is I mean to say, to try and transcend the words into feeling and emotion; it also forces me to find my own answers to my questions.  In the end, I discarded my original note.  She was right – she  has told me the truth.  She is perplexing, but sometimes I am too dense to recognize, other times I need more time to figure things out.  I’m sorry for being such a jerk lately.  I’m an analyst, I figure things out, I break them down into understandable components, and I get caught up in details.  No excuse – she is free to slap me next time, I deserve it.

Nobody’s Girl

She don’t need anybody to tell her she’s pretty,
She’s heard it every single day of her life.
He’s got to wonder what she sees in him when there’s so many others
Standing in line.
She gives herself to him, but he’s still on the outside.
She’s alone in this world
She’s nobody’s girl
She’s nobody’s girl

She shows up at his doorstep in the middle of the night
Then she disappears for weeks at a time.
Just enough to keep him wanting more
But never is he satisfied.
And he’s left to pick up the pieces
Wondering what does he do this for.
She’s off in her own little world
She’s nobody’s girl
She’s nobody’s girl

He said, Before I met her, I didn’t love nothing.
I could take it or leave it,
That was okay, but, she brings out a want in me, of things I didn’t even
Know that I need.

She does anything she wants, anytime she wants to.
With anyone, you know, she wants it all.
Still she gets all upset over the least little thing.
When you hurt her, it makes you feel so small.
And she’s a walking contradiction, but I ache for her inside.
She’s fragile like a string of pearls,
She’s nobody’s girl.
She’s nobody’s girl.
She’s nobody’s girl.

Posting

Where have all my posts gone?

Nothing is missing – all of my previously written posts are still here.  What I mean is – where are the new posts?  Not much been posted here in the past six weeks or so.  Perhaps I’m going through an inspirational dry spell, or I’ve been busy to the point that I’m too busy to write about the busy-ness?  Maybe the time of the day usually spent composing and posting has been consumed with other things, such as exchanging emails for hours at a time.

I wrote how Susan and I had batted emails back and forth for a few hours a week or so ago.  Last weekend, emails for twenty or so minutes, followed by an hour and a half phone call.  This past week, another two and a half hour email session, nearly followed by phone call.  Susan’s been stressed, caring for her sister, trying to maintain her family.  She’s been battling demons for years.  I guess I’m a friendly ear.  Sure, we have a history, but a most unusual one.  I know I’m nothing special, there are hundreds of thousands of people in the world like me: just nice people trying to do their best.  That’s all I offer.  For as jaded and cynical adulthood might have made me, I still try to see the good in people; I generally trust everyone.  Maybe I am naïve, but people need to earn my mis-trust.  For as much as I might have been hurt by Susan, I’ve always cared for her, and always desired her friendship.  That might be hard to understand, but it is what it is.  So it is with great excitement that I’ve embraced our renewed friendship.  I’d been patient for a long time; with the thawing of our sometimes icy friendship, I admit I’ve been a bit of a kid in a candy store.  Questions?  Honey, I am full of questions.  I truly, truly love that Susan is back.  It makes me smile each time I get a note from her and I look forward to receiving them, or when I think of something, and I don’t hesitate to write about it to her.  I could listen to her for hours.  And I am practicing restraint…  I feel closer to knowing Susan than I ever have.

There is nothing going on.  I’m happy way up here, and Susan way down there.  We’re married, with families.  We are friends, who have not talked this openly to each other in a very, very long time, maybe ever.  Making up for lost time?  Are we talking too much?  Maybe.  Is that dangerous?  Honestly, it could be.  We need to find the right balance.  Be careful what you ask for – you may get it.

Two More Hours

Spent two hours exchanging nearly 80 emails with Susan last night.  Yes, they really do make chat applications – like AOL IM, and Yahoo Messenger and Google Chat and Windows Live Messenger – but why use an application like that when you can do things the hard way?

Anyway, her sister’s biopsy was yesterday; her cancer has metastasized to her chest, and it may or may not be related to her cervical cancer.  Not much to do but wait and pray for the best.

Five Hours

Five hours – that is how long I was on the phone with Susan today.

She phoned at 9:17 this morning, and we ended the call around 2:15.  I had actually started out this morning on the drive to work, but decided to turn around and work from home since the roads were more slick than I liked and we’d already gotten a late departure.

I was at my laptop, connected to the B-MS VPN, when the phone rang.  I reached over to pick it up and glanced at the caller ID which read GROSS DAVIDD.  Funny thing is, although I was certainly not expecting a call from Susan, I also wasn’t surprised.  I’d been thinking about her (nothing unusual there) especially since I sent her Happy Birthday wishes.  Well, maybe she did catch me off guard, but I was happy to hear from her.  She thanked me for her birthday poem, and then we chatted, and talked, and talked… it was fortunate that my work calendar was pretty much clear for the morning, and I was not disturbed by any urgent email or OC messages.  Another funny thing is that even though we spoke for five hours, we could have and would have talked for five more.  A lot of territory was covered, from 1979 through today; plenty of laughing, and too much crying.  Lots of good, open, honest conversation.  Time kept truths were revealed.

After five hours of sometimes very emotional conversation I was left exhausted and drained.  Five hours!

We’re good… (?)  Yeah, I think so.

Happy Birthday #49

Today is the day we celebrate your birth:
The day you were born, your first day on Earth.

For forty-nine years we have celebrated you,
On the 24th of January, since 1962.

There’ve been parties with cakes, balloons and more,
And of course there’ve been cards and presents galore!

There was a drawing once, such a long time ago,
So long I’d forgotten – or misremembered it. Though

It took time to create, I don’t recall the source
From which I had copied that single horned horse.

It was created in pencil, and inked with a pen.
Every detail was checked, again and again,

Until finally it was done; the gift was complete.
Packed for delivery, it was carried down the street

To the post office for mailing, to you, from me,
To arrive some days later in Elkins, WV.

It was just one gift, created for you
When we were just kids with growing up to do.

The pen I still have, but it is now out of use
Though I hope that one day I will recover my muse.

So instead of a drawing it’s a poem you get
(though I hope that you’ve not given up on it yet.)

It’s a song to send wishes of happiness to you;
It is hoping for fun, in whatever you do,

Because this is the day that we take time each year
To remember your birthday – we’re so glad you’re here!

Now go and enjoy, my long-lost found friend,
Because sadly I write, this poem’s come to its end.

Happy Birthday, Susan.

From Zero to Sixty

For near 25 years, since 1985, Susan and I had very little contact.  I sent her a few letters here and there – I heard nothing back from her – and that was it for 18 years.  I reached out to Susan in late December 2002, and we traded a handful of emails, but she wrote that it was incredibly weird to be in touch again, denied her own existence, and took off running.  Afterward I heard nothing at all from Susan until she sent a couple random notes in early 2008, followed by more silence.  No contact – zero.  I chalked it up, and life went on.

Until 2010.

On February 14, Susan replied to the birthday wishes I send her each year.  Understand me, I was ecstatic to hear from her, but I’d been down that road before with her, and when I replied and did not hear again from her after several weeks and months I thought she was gone again… and then just by happenstance in mid-April I took a look at my inbox on YouTube and saw a reply, from her daughter’s account dated February 27, to my email.  I wonder what it was she was thinking when I took so long to reply to that note.  Since that date, Susan has sent me over sixty separate notes.  What made her decide, now nearly a year ago, that it was time?

Regardless – I’m just happy that it happened.

Global Warming

Talk about thawing polar ice caps, rising sea levels, calving ice shelves… almost unbelievably, after many years, it seems the division between Susan and I has melted under the hot, dry sun that is the Summer of 2010.  Barely seven months ago, there was absolutely no indication that this turn of events was even remotely possible, but surely as I sit here now, I tell you… Susan and I are reconciled and we are friends, again.  Big deal?  Yes, it is… a very big deal.

We’ve exchanged some emails over the past several weeks, and filled in some of the gaps from over the past 25 years, including what it was that caused our friendship to suffer and fall apart; a lot of questions have finally been answered, and we’ve gained new perspective.  We’ve cleared the air, apologized for past hurts, and we’re ready now to move on and see where this renewed friendship will lead.

News Not Good

I mentioned in my post from back in February that Susan is dealing with a personal crisis; her sister, Gail, has cervical cancer, for the past two years, but she has been in remission.

I received a note from Susan this past weekend that her sister’s cancer has spread to her right lung and her entire abdomen.

Gail is Susan’s last living family member; her mom and dad died a few years back, as did her brother. 

They are both in my prayers.

Follow Up

It was one month ago that Susan and I spoke, for the first time in a very long time.  So, what’s been going on since?  Well, we’ve been in touch, emailing back and forth over the past few weeks, and things are going OK.  Things are good.

Honestly, it is a bit surreal – it’s been just so long that I’m often pinching myself to make sure I’m not caught in a dream.  There are a bunch of questions I want to ask, to find out more about where Susan has been, and maybe discuss whatever it was that caused such a split between us for so long, and why I even bothered to find her and wanted to be in touch with her; she might even have a question or two for me…

Graduations

As we continue to trip down memory lane, today is the 30th anniversary of my Bishop Egan High School graduation… it was on a Friday evening, at St. Michael the Archangel Church, when my fellow graduates and I assembled for the last time as the Class of 1980.  We wore our caps, our gowns, and our blue and gray hoods, and waited throughout the ceremony and Baccalaureate Mass until finally each of our names was called, and we rose in recognition of our newly earned alumni status.  What began on a rainy morning in September 1976 drew to a close, never to open again.  All of the structure and daily rituals with which we’d become so familiar, for many of us was now to be replaced with the much more loosely defined activities of college; some would seek immediate opportunities in the workplace, others would struggle to find their purpose and place in the world, while for some of us those distinctions were not so clear.

I’d carried a lot of baggage along the way; some of it had been useful stuff which offered me a source of inspiration and wisdom, while much of it had been dead weight, dragging me down and keeping me from moving forward.  Sometimes, I am a slow learner; it took a long time for me to recognize when it was time to take action and cut loose the excess baggage, put my learnings and experiences to good use, and move on: to finally graduate.

There is no way that I ever imagined, as I write this now, the various directions my life has taken since that Friday evening; living in New Jersey for nearly 20 years, raising two great kids with a wonderful woman I met nearly 19 years ago, whom I never thought upon our initial meeting that I would marry, now nearly 12 years ago.

On a separate note, today also marks the 31st anniversary of the Bishop Conwell High School Class of 1979 Baccalaureate.  I attended the Mass as a photographer for the yearbook, using Warren Stewart’s 35mm camera, and when I was finished taking pictures I had a hard time re-winding the film onto the spool, as I did not know that there was a button on the camera bottom to release the film. I ended up winding the film too tightly until it snapped inside the shutterbox; I tried to be careful and not expose the film by opening the camera and removing the film in a darkened closet when I got home, and I put the film back inside the plastic barrel and then inside the film box and taped it shut.  The pictures I took that night have never seen the light of day, as that film has never been developed and still sits inside the container.  I really should take it out for development, but after this much time I’d be very much surprised if any images were still on the film. I do remember taking a picture of a daisy that Susan had given me at Joe’s party on the night of June 2nd…

This Sunday,  June 9th, will mark the BCHS Class of 1979 graduation; I was out on the front lawn cutting the grass on that Saturday morning when a car sped up my house, parked, and out jumped Susan to run over and give me an enormous hug of excitement.  Later that night, her family hosted a graduation party at her house on Fairview Avenue; I wore my rainbow suspenders, and briefly met her Mom before heading to the backyard to hang out with Joe and some others whom I no longer remember.  I vaguely recall Zsoka being there, and I think quite possibly I might have gotten a ride home with her; Jimi Hendrix was singing Hey Joe as Zsoka and I were leaving.

I rode my bike over to Susan’s house one or two times during the course of the summer, but by August, Susan and I were hardly speaking; she left for school at Davis and Elkins in West Virginia, and her house was sold out of her parents’ divorce.  When I finally saw Susan again in December of 1979, she was living at the Village of Pennbrook apartments and there was no going back to Fairview Avenue again.

Lastly, today is also the 23rd wedding anniversary of my dear friends Tom and Nicole.  They’re living in suburban Atlanta now for I think 14 years, and I don’t see them nearly as often as I’d like, i.e. maybe once/year if we’re lucky.  We used to spend quite a bit of time together in the late 80’s and in the early 90’s when I first moved to New Jersey (they were living in Somerset back then) back before we were all married with kids.  Their oldest now is preparing for her own graduation and college…

Dawn of the Dead

Another memorable date, another Friday night, another week later… May 11, 1979.  I had been granted permission to go out on the Friday night following the prior Friday night’s drunken debacle, and this time Roxy, Joe, and Susan stopped by my house to pick me up to head over to the Morrisville Drive-In to view George Romero’s Night of the Living Dead sequel, Dawn of the Dead.  On the way there, we picked up Ed Wagner (this is where I believe I saw the rhododendrons in purple bloom somewhere along Pennsylvania Avenue.)  To be honest, I don’t remember a lot about the night; I think it was a triple feature, and I do recall riding shotgun on the way there as well as during the movies.  I vaguely remember visiting the snack bar, and probably the men’s room, and at one point I know I was sitting in the driver’s seat (I only have two words: tootsie pop) and before I knew it the movies were all done, it was nearly 2:00 AM, and I was in a whole new world of trouble.  Not for being drunk or high, but rather just because it was so late.  I ended up being grounded for the following Friday, and very nearly the Friday after that, but we’ll get to those dates soon enough.

Our Cross to Bear

Edith came home from the hospital today; her surgery went well, without issue, and now she’s home to rest for the next 8 weeks.  I’ll also be working from home for a couple of weeks, to help her out.

For the first time in over 25 years, I called Susan this morning.  I left a message, she returned my call c. 11:30, and we spoke for about 45 minutes or so before I had to take care of some issues Kate was having, although I felt that we could have gone on longer… it was almost surreal, in a way.

My heart was beating rapidly, and I was quite literally shaking when I decided to pick up the phone and call her (some things never change) and it took 3 attempts before I took a deep breath and hit the TALK button on the phone to send the call.  I listened to her voicemail recording, and left my message, somewhat disappointed but satisfied that I had done what I emailed Susan I would do, and called her.

I was carrying laundry upstairs when the phone rang, and I answered it in our bedroom, and then wandered throughout the house, totally in the zone of this conversation that I’d waited for so long to have.  Susan’s voice initially seemed different than I remembered, but eventually I recognized her distinctive lisp.  We talked about our lives, our families, our gardens… it was good, pleasant conversation.  Susan did thank me for being patient with her, and said that it had taken her a long time to see me as a friend and not a threat; I told her that was all I ever was, and that I have no expectations from her, which I believe is true, but it does make me wonder… I guess I do have an expectation in that Susan will actually help to build this rekindled friendship and really stop hiding from me…   we’ll see…  patience.

Lastly, Happy Birthday today to Nicole T!

The Whole Truth

“How rich and rewarding our friendship might have been all these years if we hadn’t disconnected when we were younger.”

Well, here it is, another May 4th… another year after the year I was a junior in high school, finding myself another year further down the road, now 31 years on.

I pause each year at this time, to remember a particular evening in 1979, for what I consider to be a watershed moment in my life, the critical point in my life when I started along the path to become the person I am today.  To that point, my existence had been sufficient to simply float along, still tied to the apron strings of my childhood.  To be certain, I had started to explore beyond the familiar surroundings of my life sometime in the middle of the prior year, but to that date I had never dared myself to peck at the shell and crack open the egg, until that night.

So, what exactly happened?  Interestingly enough, I’m not sure I remember; not necessarily because of the amount of time and brain cells lost between then and now, but rather because I was flat out drunk on the night in question and I can only remember bits and pieces.  I do remember receiving my parents’ permission to go out on that Friday night, and Roxy driving her big ass car up to my house, with Joe and Susan along for the ride.  We picked up Kenny, and then I rode shotgun as we headed over to Trenton.  I recall the purple flowers of rhododendrons in bloom somewhere along Pennsylvania Avenue in Morrisville (or was that the following week, when we saw Dawn of The Dead at the Morrisville Drive-In?)  It started to rain.  We picked up some beer, somewhere; I sat in the car while side one of Born To Run played on the radio – it was all cool, we were in New Jersey.  Susan told me she was from New Jersey… after a while we stopped for a bathroom break, Joe, Kenny and I pissing near the front of the car, and in my naiveté I wandered to the back of the car to ask the two squatting women if they had dropped something.

From there, things get murky.  I recall kissing Roxy; I vaguely remember something about scraping a guardrail; eventually I exchanged places with Kenny and ended up in the back seat, drinking Tuborg Gold with Susan and Joe. I moved in and out of consciousness, and heard in the distance Joe repeatedly telling me to stop grabbing his crotch.  We made it to somewhere, maybe Burlington, where we stopped in the parking lot while Roxy helped Susan deal with some bad medicine; the Rolling Stones You Can’t Always Get What You Want played on the radio; the most memorable part of the evening was when we ended up in Lahaska at Peddler’s Village, to use the facilities.  I found Roxy in the men’s room, just as she had proceeded to leave lipstick covered lip prints all over the mirror.  We walked back to her car, and I pulled up a clump of yellow flowers, roots and all, from one of the beds and presented them to her.

Somewhere between Lahaska and Levittown, I went down for the count.  We arrived back at my parents’ house after what seemed like an eternity, but I believe it was only c. 11:30 PM.  Joe walked me to the door and practically poured me across the threshold.  I went to my room and passed out, only to be awakened by my concerned parents minutes later, worried that I was permanently brain damaged from the alcohol and whatever other chemicals were coursing through my bloodstream (maybe I was.)

So, what’s the big deal?  I went out with some friends and got a bit plastered – maybe it was the first time, but it was certainly not the last.  No, the big deal was that somehow, during the course of the night’s events, I came to identify something that sparked inside me to question the status quo, to embrace the new, to explore, to examine, to feel, to care, to love, and find out once and for all exactly who I am, what do I believe, and what is important to me. 

Maybe it was all just coincidence, but I don’t think that it was; the friends I was with that evening were friends who encouraged me, who saw in me the potential, and believed in me.  Out of the energy we shared, on that night and others, came the writer, artist, designer, reader, gardener, hiker, lover, husband and father that I am today.

Friends

A good day today.  Woke up at 8:00, dragged my feet downstairs into the kitchen to pour myself a cup of freshly brewed coffee (thanks to Edith) and sat on the living room loveseat to absorb the warmth of the morning sun.  When the weather gets warm, we like to sit out on the screen porch with our coffee and listen to the world wake up, but it was a little colder than I would have liked this morning.

Another cup of coffee, a little more puttering around in my pajamas, and then a little time trying to re-import the music library from the home server into Edith’s laptop so she can re-sync her iPod.  By mid-day, I was out in the yard with the trimmer and lawnmower, with my own iPod playing “Here and There” for a few hours.  All in all, the yard looks OK, although the front lawn is god-awful full of weeds and bare spots that need attention.  For all of the work on the lawn it felt like a mid-Summer day, although it’s just under two months away until the first day of Summer.

By 5:00 I had cleaned up, took a quick shower, dressed and was back in the back yard tending to the grill with a cold Yuengling in my hand.  Dinner, clean up, a little more playing with Edith’s laptop, and eventually by 8:30 Edith was getting Katie ready for bed and Will was reading in his room.  It’s now almost 10:00 and I’m a bit tired, waiting for the pain relief from a couple of Advil to kick-in.

So, a few weeks ago (I Hate Coming Up With Post Titles)  I mentioned that I received an email from Susan; I replied to her note, and then waited for a reply.  Time went by, and I waited some more.  Weeks went by, and by March 10 I had started to express my frustration in a blog post which I did not publish.  The essence of the post was that although I do not have any expectation that I will ever hear from Susan at any time, I actually thought that this time she would reply to my note, and I just didn’t get it as to why she did not.  As it turns out, she did.

I was tooling around with my account on YouTube the other night, when I incidentally clicked on my Inbox link.  I was surprised to find a message from LucarioNinja92 titled “friends” which turned out to be a response from Susan to my note.  Why she chose to contact me in that way, using her daughter’s YouTube account, I don’t understand, but the message was sent February 27,  just 12 days after I had written to her.  Anyway, the short of all of this is that we’ve exchanged phone numbers and agreed that we should talk.  After over 25 years, this could be a very long conversation…

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