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Appliances, Refi’s and Smoke, Oh My…
February 2, 2011 in Uncategorized | Tags: Humor, Life, Stories | by tomroush | 1 comment
Awhile back we refinanced the house – and for those of you who’ve done that – it means that while all the paperwork is going through, you get a month with no mortgage payment.
Oh how cool is that?
I mean, what could you do with that amount of money if it isn’t spoken for?
If you have any debt, you could pay that down, but if you don’t, and you’re dreaming…
…you could have a heck of a nice dinner for 10…
…you could have a heck of a nice weekend for two…
Or…
You could have something break.
Personally, I think all our household appliances have long conversations with each other while we’re asleep, and they check to see when would be the most opportune time to break.
You know the drill –
You get a bonus at work, and the car needs a new transmission…
You get a tax refund, and the washer goes out.
You refinance the house, and – well, we’ll get to that.
Lord help you if the freezer goes out – that is just mind numbingly gross.
(and yes, I’m sure I’ll write about it – it was kind of funny, as well as expensive and gross – in fact, it was so gross that it gagged the garbage man and – wait – I’d better stop or I’ll end up telling that story right here…)
So we’ve got one month with no mortgage payment…
Wheee!
Which is why the TV decided to blow up – well, not blow up, it died a slow miserable death.
I was telling my mom about it and she, knowing how I keep finding stories in all sorts of little events, said, “That sounds like a story….”
Sigh…
Okay – so here’s “The Story”
The TV we had (the one before this one) cost us nothing – it weighed a ton – was made right here in the U.S. of A. – took two grown men and a small child to lift, and by gummy, this puppy had dials on it.
We’d gotten it from my sister – and it was old when we got it. Remember the phrase “don’t touch that dial”? – It’s what advertisers used to say to keep you from changing the channel so you’d watch their commercials.
This was one of those TV’s… It had “the dial”.
You wanted to watch another program?
You got your butt up off the couch and changed the channel.
With the dial.
You wanted it louder?
You got your butt up off the couch and turned it up.
With the dial.
You wanted it back on the channel you had in the first place?
You got your – yeah – you get the idea…
Under no circumstances did you “channel surf”.
My wife, bless her, has the ability to watch multiple programs at the same time.
I do not have this ability.
She can watch 3 sporting events, two movies, and a cop drama, at the same time.
And she can keep track of them.
She is fully capable of telling you what’s happened with every program going on, and what’s happened – even between commercials.
I have no idea how she does this.
She’s been known to have the radio on and be reading a book at the same time.
When she added doing a crossword puzzle to the mix, that caused my left eye to twitch a bit, but when she brought in the unicycle and started juggling flaming swords while she was doing all that – okay, I made that last part up, the ceiling’s too low for the unicycle or the flaming swords, but still…. 🙂
I cannot do this.
At all.
I, like most men, cannot keep track of that many things at the same time. In fact, as has often been said, I, like most men, have a one track mind… (and no, not necessarily *that* track…)
The weird thing is, watching that TV that way could easily have become an aerobic event – I can imagine the aerobics instructor now for “Aerobic TV Watching”
“Read… and… left… and… turn it up! Good! Feel the burn! Now, turn the channel –“
And…
…that’s about as far as it would go for me.
So it turned out that this TV, the one that required you to do Aerobics to channel surf, had a limited lifespan.
One day Michael called me at work.
“The TV’s broken”
“Broken?”
I mean, the switch had broken – stuck in the “on” position, ironically – quite some time ago to the point where if you wanted to watch TV, you plugged it in.
You wanted to stop watching TV, you unplugged it.
It was definitely basic – without the cable.
So I got home, plugged it in, and it turned on fine.
“See? it works!”
“Wait…”
And sure enough, as the picture tube warmed up – all of a sudden there was this audible “Fwip!” as the picture went cattywompus and sideways for a second and then came back. It was like someone had smacked the TV upside the head.
Fwip?
What the heck is a “Fwip”?
Just about the time I’d gotten that thought through my head, it did it again….
“Fwip!”
20 seconds went by, then another.
…and another.
Pretty soon, all we had was Fwips and no picture – just a bunch of lines on the screen.
Hmmm…
It was when the smoke came out of the back of the TV that I started thinking of Apollo 13…
“Uh, Houston, we have a problem…”
So… being the brilliant deducer of clues that I am, and having years more experience in the ways of electronics diagnostics and repair than my son did, I – uh – came to the same conclusion that he’d come up with…
The TV was broken.
Eventually – we got another one – A 27 inch TV for 179.00 at Fred Meyer. (It was a serious sale)
It was much bigger – much better –
And it had a remote.
You could channel surf AND clog your arteries by becoming a couch potato…
Oh yeah…
That’s the TV that, two nights ago, had a couple of funny little lines on the top.
Then yesterday, it went “Fwip!”
Oh good.
Now Michael, because I have educated him in the ways of complex electronics repair, performed the first task one always does when troubleshooting and/or repairing electronics, which is to smack the living crap out of it.
Surprisingly enough, it worked…
Until I turned it back on…
“Fwip!”
Crap.
So my wife and I went out looking at TV’s, and found one, bought it, brought it home, and I plugged it in, an blessed it and Oh Lordy, did this thing have a big picture… you’d think you were in a theatre or something, it was so big, and we got it at Costco, so it was a decent deal.
I figured we were home free. We were done. We’d gotten rid of the Broken TV, replaced it, and still had money left over. I was thrilled, delighted, and satisfied.
I settled down on the couch downstairs where the new TV was, and watched a program, just to see it so big. It was very cool.
But it seems I missed something when I brought the TV into the house.
Remember when I told you about all the appliances talking to each other?
They do.
And they did.
I completely missed the TV whispering to the old stove, “Tag, you’re it…”
© 2011 Tom Roush
Butthead…
January 20, 2011 in Uncategorized | Tags: Business Communication, Database Administration, Humor, Lessons, Life, Stories | by tomroush | 2 comments
I was talking to someone about being an “expert” at something, and strangely, I’ve found myself accused of being an “expert” too – which just wigs me out no end. I just don’t think of myself as an expert, but I’ve learned I’m in the minority on that. I mean, I do my job to the best of my ability, people ask me questions, and I do my best to answer them.
The thing is, sometimes they have no idea how close they’ve come to a sheepish look and an “I don’t know.” It is at these times that the ability to think fast and type faster has been a great asset.
Come to think of it, the rather strong reluctance to say “I don’t know” to someone is pretty much part of it, too. If someone asks me a question, I’m going to do my best to get them an answer, in part because it’s my job, in part because it’s who I am…
I remember one place I worked, a fellow in came up to my cubicle with the guiltiest look I’d ever seen – if he’d been a dog, his tail would have been so far between his legs he’d have been able to nibble on it. He’d done something wrong – muffed something up pretty bad, and he needed me to fix it. The reason he came to me was because I was “the expert” and he asked me this question about a problem that I absolutely, positively, honestly, had no idea how to solve.
I’d never heard of it, never seen it, and never thought about it.
In fact, in all the years of my life, I’d devoted precisely zero percent of my brain space to this problem.
But he didn’t know that.
And he wasn’t going to know that.
After listening to him describe what he’d done, I gave him a big sigh, “the look” and swung around in my chair to try to figure out how to fix it.
I called up Books Online (the database reference material I needed) and muttered something about “let me see if I can remember the syntax for this thing…” while I found out precisely how to do what it was he needed to have done.
While I was looking, and typing, I was just constantly flipping him crap about what it was he’d done that he needed me to fix, in essence, gently chastising him for muffing up whatever he’d muffed up, but all the while, doing everything I could do to make sure the problem he came to me with was solved. The thing is, this whole ‘flipping of crap’ stuff – it’s what I do with folks, it’s disarming. They realize I’m joking a bit, but they’re just off balance enough to not be completely sure, until – well, we’ll get back to that…
So while I was flipping him crap, I fixed his problem, and swung back around and looked at him “sternly” and told him, “Now go away or I shall have to taunt you a second time…” (a la Monty Python)
Then, figuring the problem was solved, I turned around and went back to the work he’d interrupted when he walked up.
But I noticed a shadow on my cubicle wall – and realized that while he’d stepped outside my cubicle, he’d stayed there and hadn’t moved.
Now one of the things I’ve always done with folks is just – as I said, flip them crap about anything. Often folks tend to put the DBA’s (Database Administrators) on such a pedestal, with the whole ‘bowing’ thing and the ‘I’m not worthy’ thing (also a la Monty Python). (okay, I made that part up, deal with it… :). Sometimes it drives me just this side of nuts – but I have fun with it… I rarely if ever get angry at folks at work, because I’ve been around long enough to realize I am fully capable of doing something stupid – I mean, I’m human, it comes with the territory. My gosh, having the system administrator’s password or being in an administrator’s group only allows me to apply this human stupidity to more machines, far more efficiently, at any given time than they can – so I’ve learned to be very, very careful. But because of this, I just accept that things happen, help them fix it when they muff things up, and then try to teach them how not to do it again. However, whenever someone does something exquisitely stupid, I tend call them a butthead. I didn’t realize it – but over time, it turned out that being called a butthead by Tom had become a coveted thing, of all things, a badge of honor…
Seriously.
If I called them a butthead, then all was right in the world.
If I didn’t, there was this inequality, this buildup of tension that they couldn’t get past, and they thought I was mad at them, and they literally cowered when they came to me the next time.
It was so weird…
So this time – I just went back to work and forgot about it until I noticed that shadow and the fellow standing outside my cubicle, clearly nervous that he’d done something very, very bad.
Not knowing what was going on, I looked at him… “What?” (said still using my ‘stern’ persona)
“You didn’t call me a butthead…” (said with all the boldness of a whipped puppy)
Huh?
“Oh… right…‘Butthead!’”
And he smiled, you could actually see the stress melt off him, and he walked, no, floated away, totally content, his knowledge reinforced that Tom Knew Everything, and that Tom WASN’T mad at him.
And when it comes to communication, either at home or at work – if people, for whatever reason, are only afraid of you – you just won’t be as effective as you can be.
People need to respect you, but they also need to feel comfortable around you. Much to my surprise, Craig’s (yes, Craig, this one’s for you) nervousness when he came up to me showed me how much he respected me, and the way he melted when I called him a butthead showed me that while he was respectful, he was also comfortable enough to ask for help when he needed it
And I’m okay with that.
Patch Tuesday Ponderings…
January 13, 2011 in Uncategorized | Tags: Faith, Lessons, Life, Stories | by tomroush | Leave a comment
Yes, I know it’s Thursday as I write this. However, this is ‘Patch Tuesday’ week – where all the monthly patches from a certain software vendor a little east of Seattle get pushed out and we have to apply them to all the servers at work. It’s a lot of work, a lot of musical servers, and a lot of ‘hurry up and wait’.
It’s during those ‘wait’ moments that I find myself pondering things – and found myself going way back to some computers I saw a long time ago, in a data center far, far away…
A number of years ago – when the electrons in our computers were still young and frisky, I took a college class in data processing. One of the things we did during that time was go to the Washington State Computing Center in Olympia to see how real data was processed in huge amounts.
I remember them showing us one of the first laser printers – and talking about how it could print 21,000 lines per minute. It took many pages just to get it up to speed, and then it was like a very, very fast freight train… it would print statements, bills, invoices – whatever was needed – in astonishing amounts at blinding speed. One of the things the operators had to be careful of was simply keeping enough paper in it. Just like it took a while to get up to speed – it took a while to slow down, and running out of paper with this thing was a bad thing.
I remember walking past some of the computer terminals, which, at the time, looked like many other computer terminals – amber text on a black background. They didn’t look much different than the Apple IIe’s we’d been programming on in class (other than the color of the type).
The keyboards back then were the ones that IBM made during the transition from manual typewriters to what we know now as a keyboard. On these keyboards you had to push the keys pretty hard – and they’d click, both on the way down, and on the way up.
Typing on one of those keyboards was actually almost as loud as typing on a typewriter, and because you got two loud clicks for every keystroke, absolutely anyone sounded fast, even if they were typing with two fingers.
They took us to a room that was full of about 50 disk drives.
And I know, just know, there are some of you wondering how a room can be full of 50 disk drives. Either the drives are really big, or the room is really small…
It was the first one. The drives themselves – the motors – were in this casing a little bigger than a dorm room refrigerator – about waist high. The disks themselves were stacks of disks in dark plastic housings – you could actually see the disks through that housing, and the disks were stacked 17 high inside it– and were about 18 inches in diameter.
There were, as I remember, three lights on each one – a green one, a white one, and a little red one. The white one was lit constantly for power, and as I recall, the green one was – well, if it was green and on, it was a good thing, and as I recall, the little red one was when it was actually reading or writing.
We were told that you could store the name and address of every man, woman, and child in the state on one of them three times and still not run out of room.
It seemed like a lot at the time.
And then we went back to the terminals, and the person leading the tour showed us the power in those terminals. She said there were about 500 of them around the state at the time – and when someone made a request on one of them, asking for an address, for example, the information would come through a dedicated telephone or telecom line to the data center we were in, it would hit the computer, which would look up the information on those drives we’d just seen, and then send the answer back to the person who’d made the original request. You could actually see it sometimes, where this wave of little red lights flickered on for a split second as the request worked its way through the system.
Total time for this? – well, depending on the request, the answer could take anywhere from a couple of seconds to minutes. Complex requests took longer, and you could tell when one of them came, in – a lot of red lights would go on – and it was almost like a little game of electronic volleyball as the information moved back and forth, until all the problems that question was supposed to answer were indeed answered, and then you could see the lights flicker again as the answer was sent out.
It was a pretty neat thing to watch.
And then the person leading the tour told us one thing that sounded so casual that we didn’t realize its importance until much later. We walked back to the computers – at the time we didn’t know the difference between a computer and a terminal – and we were told that if the terminals weren’t hooked up or dialed into the mainframe we were looking at, then they were simply dumb terminals, that’s what she called them. They only had the power that they had inside themselves, they didn’t have the power of this entire data center that was dedicated to doing nothing but solving the problems these 500 terminals sent in all day, every day.
She told us about how, once a connection was made, it was better to keep the connection open than to close it and try to reopen. If you did that – the terminal would have to resynchronize itself with the mainframe computer – and there’d be a lot of data moving back and forth just trying to do that, before you could actually get any work done.
The longer the terminal was off, the longer it took to get back in sync, so even in those days when time on telephone and data transmission lines was expensive, it was still cheaper to leave them on than to use the incredibly precious time on the mainframe computer just to get the terminals in sync – so the terminals were, for the most part left on, and connected to the mainframe.
Let’s move forward a few years.
I now work at a job where I spend my days with computers, irritating electrons all over the world, and once a month, we get what are called “patches” – little fixes to programs where – well, just think of patching a pair of jeans. Either someone made a hole, found a hole, or wore a hole into the jeans, so you patch them. Same thing with software, only instead of patching with needle the patching is done with herds of electrons, and they come from the company that created the software in the first place.
The patches can be pretty tricky sometimes, and it’s good to keep things maintained.
Every now and then something falls through the cracks, or a computer (we just call them boxes) either isn’t able or isn’t set to connect to the net to get all the patches, and then things get weird.
The software on the box, because it hasn’t been able to connect to its creator, has not been patched, and has weaknesses that other boxes don’t have.
The box is out of sync.
The box is no longer synchronized with its source, and the whole process involves the box checking in with the creator, the box and the creator finding out what’s wrong, and what’s right, and then fixing what’s wrong and affirming what’s right.
I talked to a friend about all this, and we came to the conclusion that this was a lot like any communication in any relationship.
Whether it’s a relationship between machines, or between people, or even if it’s a relationship between you and God, check in often. Make sure you understand the other person, make sure you’re being understood. Don’t assume that because you think everything’s hunky dory that it actually is.
At work, we had one box just like this – it had been up and running for 461 days without being patched. While this is a testament to the way the box was built, and the software running on it, there was a problem. The box thought everything was hunky dory, but at the same time, the box was well over a year out of sync, and the time it took to patch that one server was absolutely agonizing. I had to patch some, then reboot the box, and patch more, and reboot again for the better part of a day get the box back into sync, but it would be in fits and starts, and it would be very, very hard, sometimes tenuous where you weren’t sure if you’d be able to get the box back up again. I ran into one box where I simply couldn’t patch it at all. It’d been out of sync – or out of compliance for so long, that there simply wasn’t room on the box to do the patching without rebuilding the entire box.
That was rough.
It made me realize that even though it takes time, patching works much better when it’s done in little steps, and done consistently, and continually. Conversely, the longer the space is between times that you communicate, the longer it takes to get back into sync, and sometimes that can be enormously challenging, whether that’s talking about servers at work, or relationships with people.
And that’s rougher.
The homeless guy on the bus…
January 6, 2011 in Uncategorized | Tags: Life, Stories | by tomroush | Leave a comment
He was dressed in rugged, but ragged clothes, the kind you find yourself wearing when you don’t have the opportunity to clean them, and you don’t have a comfortable place to sit down.
I managed to squeeze in next to him, his duffel bag taking up part of the aisle on the bus, and as we sat there, gently bouncing off each other with each bump of the road.
I looked at that overstuffed bag. It looked like it had all his worldly possessions in it.
He asked the driver about where to get off – and in the 5 minutes left, we talked.
The bag did indeed have all his worldly possessions in it. His house had burned down.
He’d had a demolition business, but that had, for lack of a better word, imploded with the economy.
He’d moved in with his kids, but he realized that this was their time, they had their own children, their own families, and so he was staying at a shelter. Oh, he’d visit them every now and then, but he kept a respectful distance, to allow them the room they needed in this time in their lives.
He said he’d take anything for work, but right now there just wasn’t anything.
The bus stopped.
He got off.
And walked toward the shelter he knew was there.
Tales from the Tree Lot – and the magic of Christmas…
December 23, 2010 in Uncategorized | Tags: Christmas, Faith, Hankie Warning, Holidays, Lessons, Life, Stories | by tomroush | 1 comment
You could see the man had had a hard life as he guided his electric wheelchair to our Scout Troop’s Christmas Tree lot, where my wife was working her shift.
He stopped, and for a moment, didn’t do anything, just breathed and smiled.
Both hands were wrapped around his paper cup of coffee, just like we all hold it when it’s cold out, partly just to hold it, partly as a hand warmer.
There was no question why he needed the wheelchair, he was missing one leg, and the other one had a different look to it.
Cindy asked if she could help him.
“Is it okay if I just sit here for a bit and enjoy the smell? I can’t afford a tree this year.”
He didn’t ask for a giveaway, just asked if it was okay if he sat there for a bit.
“You can sit here all day if you’d like”
He looked up at Cindy, who for that shift wasn’t wearing her reindeer antlers, and wasn’t wearing her little “Cindy Lou Who” jingle bells, she was wearing a Santa hat – but instead of being made out of red material and white fuzz, it was made out of camouflaged material, and white fuzz.
“Why are you wearing hunter’s camo?” he asked.
“It’s not hunters’ camo, it’s in support of our troops. My nephew is in the Army, and so I wear it to remember him.”
“I was in the Army, too,” he said. “They didn’t do this though,” he said, gesturing toward where his feet used to be. “Diabetes.” And he explained how he’d lost both legs to the diabetes and had gotten a prosthesis for that one. He waved Michael, our son to come over, and pulled his pant leg up just a bit – and the leg underneath wasn’t skin colored, but the same camo as Cindy’s hat.
“I’m gonna get the other leg in January, but for now have to go with this.”
It became clear that not only would he not have a tree, but this lonely man didn’t have anything or anyone to help him celebrate Christmas – so he had come to the Tree Lot to find a little Christmas spirit to help nourish his soul.
But letting him go back to an apartment devoid of Christmas just didn’t seem right.
My wife found some of the branches we’d trimmed off other trees and used a little bit of wire that had been holding some wreaths together. She wired them together, so they became a little Christmas tree all by themselves, and gave it to the gentleman.
“Here, no one should be without a Christmas tree at Christmas time.”
He put his cup down and reached for the branches with both hands, looked up at Cindy for a moment, and took the ‘tree’ from her with a reverence not normally reserved for a bunch of branches held together with a little wire.
He held the branches to his face, hiding it completely, and inhaled the aroma deeply.
He held it for a long time, and when he spoke, there was a catch in his voice, and it was a little rougher as he wiped his eyes and told Cindy, “That’s the nicest thing anyone’s done for me in a long time.”
“Now you come back next year and get a tree when you can stand on your own two feet and put it up yourself. We’ll be here.”
“I will, believe me, I will!”
–
Merry Christmas, all – and happy birthday Cindy.
Playing Digital Marco Polo in Seattle…
December 16, 2010 in Uncategorized | Tags: Humor, Life, Stories | by tomroush | Leave a comment
The back of the bus looked empty until I spotted the ringing cell phone laying on the seat.
I looked around. No suddenly averted eyes, no rustling of newspapers.
I picked it up, rather nervously. It was a foreign sounding voice, calling from Hawaii.
I’d just gone through security, and found myself a little unnerved at what was happening. I’d accidentally made it through with some level of, we’ll call it “contraband” that I’d forgotten I had in my pockets, and was still a little jumpy.
Too much Hollywood , I suppose.
All I wanted to do was return the phone, I didn’t want to get involved in any international drama or intrigue, I just wanted to get back to work.
The battery on the phone was almost dead, and the fellow in Hawaii seemed to know some friends of the phone’s owner, so I gave him my number and had him call them and have them call me.
Sure enough, a few moments later – my phone rang, and a young lady, for whom English may not even have been considered a third language, tried to talk to me. I could barely understand her – and she handed it to someone who spoke better English.
They were in the south end of town, I was in the north end, and the bus I was on was heading north-er. I gave them the address of where I’d be, and the fellow said he’d be there ASAP.
Problem was, he didn’t know the city, and even with the GPS he had in the car, he got lost. The one-way streets didn’t help him at all.
I stood in the December drizzle in front of my building with my Subway cold cut combo in a plastic bag, expecting him to come by any second.
Ten minutes passed.
What I didn’t realize was that this would turn into a game of electronic Marco Polo, which, under different circumstances, could actually be a lot of fun.
I saw a silver Ford Explorer go by with two Chinese people looking intently at the building.
“That must be them” thought I, and I called.
Marco: “Are you driving a Silver Explorer?”
Polo: “What is that?”
Marco: “Uh – It’s a car… made by Ford…”
Okay… Scratch one Explorer…
Ten minutes later, still nothing. I called again, got the young lady who didn’t speak English, who handed the phone to the driver.
Marco: “What are you driving?”
Polo: “A black Mazda MX-6 – I’m almost there.”
Okay, a black Mazda MX-6…
…just like the one that came rocketing around the corner as I hung up the phone. Yeah, that would pretty much qualify as “almost there”.
I figured if he had his GPS, he’d be back in a second.
Turns out I figured wrong.
Not knowing this yet, I just stood there and waited.
And waited…
And waited…
Finally I called again and asked where he was – after several attempts, I got it out of him that he was near a McDonalds, and a Bank of America. I could almost see that from where I was at, and at that moment, saw a trolley go by.
Marco: “Do you see the orange Trolley?”
Polo: “Yes! We do! Are you near that?”
I was blocks away, but I could see it. He said he was walking up the street, but I couldn’t see him.
Marco: “What are you wearing?”
Polo: “A black jacket and blue jeans.”
How ironic… So was I, “I’m wearing the same thing – – and I’ve got a subway bag… in my right hand…”
I mean, if I was already into this whole international intrigue thing, I may as well go all in. I suppose I could have told him it was a cold cut combo on wheat, hold the olives.
Marco: “What do you see around you?”
Polo: “AMC Theatres”
That didn’t do me any good, there weren’t any – no, wait, it did tell me something… it told me why we weren’t seeing each other… we were on somewhat parallel streets, that actually joined right about where he’d parked.
Marco: “What’s the name of the street you’re on?”
Polo: “Olive.” (the kind that weren’t on my sandwich)
I was on 7th and Stewart. 7th and Olive intersected a block from where I was.
Marco: “I’ll meet you at 7th and Olive.”
He said something in a language other than English – and hung up.
I got to 7th and Olive, hung a right, and crossed the street – and sure enough, a tall Asian fellow in a black jacket and jeans, code named “Polo”, was walking toward me, uh, “Marco”. With him were two young ladies, one of whom was the owner of the phone.
I held it out – she laughed and took it. The young gentleman in the black jacket shook my hand, introduced himself as Jeffrey, and thanked me for getting the phone to the young lady.
I smiled, said, “You’re welcome,” and headed back to the office with my sandwich, my 45 minutes of international intrigue over for the day…
Secrets of pouring coffee, and other life mysteries solved…
December 2, 2010 in Uncategorized | Tags: Coffee, Communication, Family, Humor, Lessons, Life, Stories | by tomroush | 6 comments
Some time ago I was visiting my in-laws in Michigan, and had to learn how to make coffee all over again.
The thing is, living in Seattle, and having a daughter who’d worked at a, shall we say, ‘Moby Dick’ sized purveyor of coffee (therefore getting me the beans at a lower price than normal) I’d gotten quite used to grinding my own beans, brewing my own coffee, and knowing what I’d get in the end.
It wasn’t scientific perfection I was after, it was simple things, like knowing how much water to put in (until it looked right), and how much coffee to put in (until it looked right), and then letting it brew (until it dissolved any spoon used to stir it) and then it WAS right.
But their coffee maker was different, and at the time, I don’t think there was a Starbuck’s anywhere near there.
I tried to make coffee using their little coffee maker, and did manage to succeed at that, but the next step was so remarkably unsuccessful that I could do nothing but stand there and wonder what had gone wrong.
In trying to pour coffee into a mug (note: you shouldn’t need a degree in physics or thermodynamics to do this) – I managed to pour it all over the counter.
At first, I just thought just wasn’t quite awake enough and maybe I’d just missed, but later tried it again, and realized that the lip of the coffee pot was bent in such a way that instead of the coffee shooting out toward the cup, a good part of it would actually shoot backward under the coffee pot as I was pouring – and miss the mug entirely.
And I’d have almost a third of the coffee on the counter, not in the cup.
Day after day I tried to fix this, pouring faster, slower, different angles, aiming at different spots in the cup – didn’t matter, it just poured out onto the counter, and I’d clean it up.
One day, my father in law walked up and watched with mild amusement while I was trying once again to pour a mug of coffee. This was the guy who’d made coffee with this crazy little coffee maker for years, and I figured that over that time, he must have found some sort of secret way to do this right. So that morning, out of just a touch of frustration, I asked him, “How on earth do you pour this without getting it all over the counter?”
And the answer was simultaneously simple, basic, and brilliant.
“I just pour it over the sink.”
You… just…
What?!
And he showed me.
He poured the coffee into his cup, and it spilled just about as much as it did when I poured it –but he did it over the sink, and while it spilled, it didn’t get on the counter.
And it made me think about the question I was asking and the problem I was trying to solve.
Which was more important?
Getting coffee into the mug?
Or keeping it off the counter?
Because if I could solve one of the problems (getting a decent amount of coffee into the mug) while keeping it off the counter, I could effectively solve both problems at once.
And if spilling a little coffee was irrelevant, then the problem was solved.
You could substitute anything for the two options there, and in this case, a simple solution that didn’t even cross my mind solved all the problems I was concerned with at once.
It was a win-win…
I got the coffee I wanted.
I kept the counter clean.
…and I learned a lot about solving problems from a little off the cuff comment from my father in law Bruce.
Windshields, Rear View Mirrors, and Thanksgiving
November 25, 2010 in Uncategorized | Tags: Holidays, Lessons, Life, Saab Stories, Thanksgiving | by tomroush | 2 comments
The other night I was driving home and was pretty much blinded by some headlights. The weird thing is – these headlights weren’t in front of me, they were behind me.
As those of you who’ve read my stories before know that I drive a 1968 Saab 96. The ones that came from the factory that year had a mirror on each door and one just above the windshield. The ones built earlier had the mirror actually mounted on the top of the dash. The fellow who rebuilt the car before I bought it put the dash of a ’67 in there, complete with mirror, so now I have a car with a total of 4 rear view mirrors, and I was driving home, at night, in the rain.
It was not hard to see what was behind me in this car.
On this evening, in heavy traffic, a rather wide car had managed to find, and stay in, “the sweet spot” behind me where his left headlight was reflected through my drivers’ door mirror, and his right one was reflected off my passenger’s door mirror, and he was far enough back to where he was hitting at least one of the inside mirrors with both headlights.
Anyone looking at me at the time would have seen two round spots of light (one on each eye) connected with a rectangular one on my face.
It was, if you can imagine, bright, and with all that light in my face, I had to concentrate pretty hard to keep from having what was behind me blind me from what was in front of me. Squinting didn’t work – if I squinted enough to make the lights tolerable, I could barely make out what was in the wet darkness in front of me.
Not good.
The next day, I was driving someplace else, and was able to just drive – it wasn’t raining, it was daylight, and I, while being aware of the mirrors, wasn’t blinded by them…
Hmmm…
Something made me look at the size of the windshield, and compare it with the size of the mirrors. Now even though those mirrors were much smaller than the windshield – the night before they’d gotten most of my attention, in large part because those headlights from the car behind me were positioned just right, and it really was hard to see out the front.
I started thinking about this whole thing with mirrors and windshields and why they were useful and when…
And I was kind of surprised and fascinated by the whole ‘aha’ moment that I came up against…
See, the thing is – most of our lives, okay, all of our lives, we’re traveling through this dimension called time, if you will, forward. My personal vehicle for this travel happens to be an old, simple one that works… it’s not fancy, it’s not fast. It’s loud and occasionally obnoxious, but it – well, it works (we could be talking about the Saab or me – up to you to pick that one out 🙂 – and the thing is – let’s say I’m driving someplace… I’m going to spend most of my time looking out the front of the car – to places I haven’t been to yet, to places I’ll get to in the future. I can’t do anything about what’s happening in front of me, but I can prepare myself for what happens once I get there. This could mean I speed up, or slow down, change lanes, or even get off the freeway for a little bit. Bottom line is, what’s on the other side of the windshield is important, and like it or not, can affect my life in both good and bad ways.
I did some more thinking…
There are times ahead when there will be signs of accidents that happened before you got there. I’ve seen it before – where I see a long skid mark heading off the road to make a huge dent in the guard rail. That person was lucky, the guardrail kept him or her from going through it.
There will be times ahead when there will be accidents, there will be flashing lights, highway flares, sometimes there will be tow trucks, ambulances, and police officers. As hard as it is not to gawk, I’ve learned to be careful as I drive by so I don’t become a statistic.
There will be times, I’ve learned, when I won’t get any warning and end up having to swerve, or slam on the brakes, or squeeze through someplace just in time to avoid some major calamity…
You get past it, and while you’re still focused on what’s on the other side of the windshield, you do sneak a few peeks back in the mirror, to see if there’s something you can learn from what you’ve just been through.
Sometimes that’s easy to see, like with those skid marks and a crashed car.
Sometimes it’s easy and important to stop and help.
Sometimes you get there and it’s clear that there’s nothing you can do – either because others are already doing it, or because – well – because you’re too late.
At some point, some of you are going to realize I’m talking far less about cars than I am about life – and that’s where I had my ‘aha’ moment, when those mirrors really had more to do with learning from the mistakes, or lessons, of my past than they did about driving down a rainy highway at night.
I learned that if I paid attention to events like this, it gave me a chance to learn from the mistakes of others without having to make them myself. That doesn’t mean I actually did learn immediately, but it was a start, and that was a good thing.
Sometimes, things behind me – like the car that was behind me at the beginning of this story, seem so bright and so important, that I have a very hard time focusing on what’s ahead of me – be that when I’m driving or in life. I find myself focused on what’s behind me because it just seems so important at the time…
“Why didn’t I do this?”
“Why is this happening?”
“What can I do to get away from this?”
Driving faster to get away from those headlights wouldn’t have done much good, it wouldn’t have been safe to go much faster – I was going about as fast as I really dared to go under those conditions.
And the fact is, I had to keep driving…
But just like in driving, when you need to take a rest, so in life you should do the same thing. Take that time to look back a bit, in your “mirrors.” –
If you made mistakes, learn from them.
If you hurt someone, make it right and ask for their forgiveness.
If you’re the one who was wronged, learn how to forgive.
And sometimes, the person you need to forgive most…
…is you.
So how’s all this fit with that whole size of the windshield compared to the size of the mirrors thing I mentioned earlier? Well, I think the windshield’s bigger because you’re heading forward, car, life, whichever.
The mirrors are there to help you learn from what you went through.
Both are necessary, but spending too much time looking forward means you don’t learn from the lessons of your past. Spending too much time looking back (like at the lights of that car behind me) means you can’t move forward with any confidence or accuracy.
So – this Thanksgiving – take the time to pull over, to stop and look back, using the “rear view mirrors” at the past year, be thankful for, the things you’ve been blessed to get through, but also – remember it’s behind you. There’s nothing you can do about whatever smooth road or total wreckage there is back there.
The only thing you can do is hold onto the steering wheel as best you can, whether that’s of your car or of your life, and drive carefully.
Take care, folks, happy Thanksgiving…
Fifi…
November 18, 2010 in Uncategorized | Tags: Aviation, B-24/LB-30, B-29, Friends, Humor, Lessons, Life, Photography, Photojournalism, Stories, Taking Risks | by tomroush | 1 comment
“You ought to shoot the EAA airshow, you like planes so much!”
“Heh – did the Yakima airshow once. Flew over there in Fifi.”
“Fifi?”
Fifi.
And so of course, I had to explain.
I’m an airplane nut, and years ago was a photojournalist, and any time I could put the two together, I would.
There was a time when a B-17 and an LB-30 (non – combat version of the plane most people would recognize as a B-24) would show up at Seattle’s Boeing field, not much of an announcement, they’d just show up. I went down there with a friend and used up a good bit of the week’s grocery money buying a walk-through tour of the planes. It was a lot of fun… I got some nice pictures – and it was fun to watch and hear the Pratt & Whitneys on the one, and the Wright Cyclones on the other rumble to life.
My wife has said I could start a conversation with anyone, and in this case, I did just that, and ended up chatting with the pilot of the LB-30, who happened to be a United Airlines Pilot living just 30 miles south of Seattle. He gave me his business card.
The LB-30 came back two years later – but with a much bigger friend from Boeing, this being what was then the Confederate Air Force’s (now known as the Commemorative Air Force) mighty B-29, with the decidedly un-mighty name of “Fifi”
Since I’d already seen the LB-30, I figured I’d see what the inside of a B-29 looked like, and used up a bigger chunk of my weekly grocery budget than last time to pay for a walk-through tour of it.
The plane, while huge on the outside, wasn’t made for comfort inside, but utility. As I moved through it, I’d find hand-holds exactly where I reached for and needed them. Definite utility – but there wasn’t a lot cushioning of anything, after all, it was a military plane.
…and as I went forward I saw a leather bomber’s jacket on the map table on the left.
Not just any leather bomber’s jacket – but the one that had the name of the pilot I’d chatted with two years earlier.
And thus began one of my “Only you, Tom… Only you…” stories..
See, this plane had come up to Seattle from Salem, Oregon.
The local CBS affiliate, KIRO, had driven from Seattle to Salem.
They’d gotten on the plane in Salem and flown back to Seattle, videotaping the whole flight.
Exclusively.
From inside the airplane.
It was considered a major coup at the time. They landed, they drove to the station, edited their stuff, and were on the air.
Needless to say, I was down there at the airport shortly after that.
And with that, a most evil and sneaky plan started festering – no – germinating (that sounds healthier) in my mind.
I found myself wondering what their plans were after Seattle -and it turned out they were going to be part of the airshow over in Yakima.
Hmmm….
So the day they were heading over there I went down again, and found the pilot I’d talked to two years earlier…
“Hey, Dick, you got anyone from the Yakima paper covering this?”
(Note: Evil, festering germinating plan being: “I’m planning on doing what KIRO did.” – not because I was brilliant, not because I had permission, but because nobody had told me I couldn’t, and I didn’t know any better than to think I couldn’t just wander down to Boeing field and talk my way onto the only flying B-29 just because I had a camera…)
So I went to the pay phone inside the Museum of Flight, plunked in a few quarters, and called the Yakima Herald Republic, where my friend Jimi Lott had been the photo editor, and asked them if they were covering this. They said yes, they were. So I figured my chances were slim, to none. But about 15 minutes before scheduled takeoff, the photographer still hadn’t shown up, so I called them back and was a little more specific in my question.
“Do you have anyone in Seattle covering this? Someone who’s going to get on the plane and fly with it, shooting all the way?
“No.”
“NOO?”
“No.”
Then I got all young and stupid and just about yelled at the photo editor there for not having a photographer ready to fly back there on the plane…
They didn’t have anyone in Seattle covering this?
They didn’t have anyone in Seattle covering this…
Gad… Didn’t they know what a piece of history this was?
Didn’t they realize they were missing a once in a lifetime event?
Didn’t they –
–the photo editor finally had enough of my attitude and said, “Now what did you say your name was again?”
“Tom Roush…. Jimi Lott’s a friend of mine.”
Jimi used to be his boss.
“Right, so what do you want me to do?”
The light went on…
THEY DIDN’T HAVE ANYONE IN SEATTLE COVERING THIS!
“Well, you don’t have anyone here, right? So here’s what I’m planning on doing… I’m gonna walk out there and see if I can talk my way onto the plane. If I can, I’ll be over there in about 45 minutes or so…. You want color or black and white?”
<stunned silence>
“Uh… Color, I guess…”
“Right. I’ll call you when I’m at the airport.”
“Um… sure…”
I got off the phone with the photo editor, left the Museum of Flight, and walked out toward the plane, which was surrounded by this teeming throng of people, just in time to hear someone yell, “Okay, where’s the photographer?”
And I, Tom Roush…
…who’d driven down there on a whim, and had just convinced the photo editor of a newspaper I’d never seen to buy a picture I’d only be able to take if I could get onto a plane I’d promised the pilot I’d get onto the front page of a newspaper that…
I’d…
never…
seen…
(yeah, I still have to read that sentence a couple of times myself – still working out the catch:22ness of it all)
…called out, “HERE!”
Moses himself couldn’t have parted the crowd any better.
I waved my hand, and “Fwwwwooomp” – Instant walkway. I walked through, feeling simultaneously embarrassed at the attention, and elated beyond words that it was happening.
I tossed my itty bitty duffel bag onto the plane, swung the camera bag up, climbed up, and in 5 minutes we were gone.
They’d started up this noisy little air cooled V-4 Wisconsin motor like my Grampa had on his hay baler – but this was attached to a honking generator. (If you ever saw the NOVA: B-29 Frozen in Time special, it is this generator that broke free and started the fire.) They used the V-4’s generator to run the starter for the number 3 engine. Once that was running, they used the generator on that engine to start up the rest. I could see the tops of the cylinders vibrating a bit through the open cowl flaps as the propellers blew the smoke from starting those big radial engines away.
We taxied out to the runway, and I was treated to one of the smoothest flights I’ve ever been on.
But we didn’t just fly up to altitude, fly over, land… No, we played tag with the LB-30, buzzed a few airfields, and flew past – not over – Mt. Rainier. I hung out the side bubbles and shot up, down, left, right, directions you simply can’t see in a normal airplane.
There was a little stool that you could sit on that got your head up into another little bubble so you could see out the top of the plane. I sat on that and looked out there for a bit – until one of the crew members asked me to let another fellow up – who’d paid $300.00 for the privilege of this flight.
I’d completely forgotten that this might be something people would pay to do, much less be ABLE to pay to do. I got down and was just amazed at where I was and what all was happening. (remember, I’d gone on that $10.00 tour – which had used up a good chunk of my weekly grocery budget.)
As we came close to Mt. Rainier, I asked the crew back where I was if they could get the LB-30 between us and the mountain. They called up to the pilot, he called over to the other plane, and as he flew underneath us, I got some shots of the LB-30 beneath us with apple orchards beneath it
But then, then I got the shot of the only flying LB-30 in the world, taken from the only flying B-29 in the world in front of Washington’s tallest hunk of rock.
And… and it was kind of special…
The next thing I knew we were on approach to Yakima, and we buzzed the Yakima field once and then came in to land. I hurriedly said my goodbyes and explained I had to make a deadline. I found a huge bank of temporary pay phones (this was BC, before cellphones) and called the paper, got the photo department, and got the photo editor I’d gotten all stupid over less than an hour before.
“Hey, this is Tom, I’m here.”
“Here… Here? Where’s here?”
Billy Crystal couldn’t have said it better.
“The airport.”
Exasperated pause…
“WHICH airport?”
Which airport – what kind of a question was that? I mean, I’d just talked to him, I’d told him where I was going to be – where did he expect me to be?
“Well Yakima, of course.”
<more stunned silence… >
…and in a voice tinged with resignation, I heard, “I’ll have someone there to pick you up.”
Ten minutes later, a white Toyota, driven by the same photo editor I’d been talking to on the phone, arrived to take me to the paper, where while we chatted, the film was processed, edited, and then, with a press pass to the airshow, returned to me.
I didn’t really know what to do after the paper went to the printers – so I found a hotel, a Super 8, I think, for $35.00, had some dinner at a nearby restaurant, and went to bed.
The next morning I walked to a nearby Denny’s where I found a whole bunch of Air National Guard photojournalists who were covering the airshow sitting at a table looking at the front page of the local paper.
A picture of an LB-30 in front of Mt. Rainier.
The picture had made page 1.
We talked and laughed and told war stories to each other over coffee, and they, realizing that my car was about 150 miles away, kindly invited me to ride out to the airshow with them. They gave me a press pass, too. I was like the proverbial kid in a candy store. I could go anywhere I wanted. I could get photos of planes I’d never seen before, or since. I could watch the aerial demonstrations of the A-10 Warthog, I could watch things blow up, and I could do it all from in front of the front row.
There was NOTHING between me and the airplanes – in fact, anyone taking pictures of the planes got the back of my head in the bottom of their pictures.
How unutterably cool.
I shot and wandered, and wandered and shot, got sunburned, had a cheap hot dog and chatted with pilots and crew and just had the time of my life, and when they started firing up some of those big engines to leave, I knew it was time for me to head out, too, so I walked into the terminal, found the Horizon Airlines desk, called Jimi to see if he could pick me up at SeaTac, and then bought a ticket back to Seattle for $45.00.
As we flew back, I saw the same scenery as I’d seen coming over, but it was different, and I was different.
Jimi came to pick me up when I got to SeaTac, and we talked and laughed as he took me back to Boeing field and the Museum of Flight where I’d left the Saab the day before. In a few days the paper sent me a check for $35.00 (the same that the Super 8 motel charged me.)
For the price of a flight back and a couple of phone calls, I’d had a weekend to remember, and the experience of a lifetime.
Veteran’s Day, Blowing Oak Leaves, and Little Boys…
November 11, 2010 in Uncategorized | Tags: Faith, Family, Hankie Warning, Lessons, Life, Nikon, Parenting, Photojournalism, Stories | by tomroush | 2 comments
In this blog, I’ve been trying to write stories that have been “baked” – where I’ve spent the time over the years getting to that “aha” moment, where the laughter has finally come, the lessons finally learned, the tears finally dried, and I can share them with you.
This post is a little different.
I’ve been asked by a number of people to give “hankie warnings” on some of these stories, and in honor of that request, please consider yourself warned.
This post is a little more personal than the others, and it’s a number of stories, kind of intertwined.
As I write this – November 8th, it will have been 10 years since I spoke the words below, in front of a well-dressed, somber group of people who listened, who laughed and who cried.
I had been in that last category for ten months, and on November 8th, 2000, these people joined me there.
It was the day we buried my dad.
He’d been in the Air Force. He’d done his time in many countries. It was his time in the Air Force that had him meet my mom, that gave him stories of far-away places to tell, and that shaped my childhood. Some of those stories I’ve recalled in past posts, some are still, as it were, baking, and will be written when they’re ready.
I was at work on January 10th, 2000, when I got “the call”. Those of you who’ve been through this will understand what that means. It’s actually hard to describe the feeling to someone who hasn’t been there, but when I got “the call” – my heart froze, and given where I was, I did the only thing I could do…
I prayed…
…and then I wrote.
I didn’t know whether I’d ever get a chance to tell dad all the things I’d wanted to say over the years – and it seemed that if I was ever going to take the chance, that right then would be that chance, instead of saying all the things I wanted to say to him in a eulogy where he couldn’t hear me, and the words would be empty.
So I wrote a note to him that January afternoon. It’s included in what’s below – which, ironically, is the eulogy I gave for my dad, 10 years ago today.
= = =
Eulogy…
That’s what it says there in your program that this is going to be.
But how do you put into a few words the life of a man who was a brother, a husband, a father, an uncle, a father in law, a grandfather, a teacher — and all those countless other things that a man is in his life?
I’m not going to go into the history of dad too much, you all can read that on the backs of your bulletins. We tried to get as much in there as we could. We’ll also have some pictures going in the fellowship hall so you can see a little more about who dad was.
But right now, I’d like to tell you a little bit about who dad is.
By now most of you know a bit about how this all came about, and for a number of you, the last time you saw him was in this very church on January 8th of this year at Tom McLennan’s Memorial Service.
Dad went into the hospital that night, stayed in ICU at Madigan until May, during which time he had a stroke and some other complications, and later was taken to Bel Air Nursing home in Tacoma, where he died last Friday.
I wrote him a note on January 10th, when things looked pretty bad, his heart had stopped the night before, and we didn’t know what was going on, since he’d walked into the hospital the night before that, and I tried to tell him what he meant to me. I’d like to read part of that note to you, because in a lot of ways, it tells a bit about the thoughts, the feelings, the emotions, and the legacy that he left behind.
<note>
1:45 PM 1/10/00
Hi Pop,
It’s Monday, you’re in the hospital right now, and I’m praying for you.
I have to tell you a few things, just so you know them.
I love you.
— this is so hard to write…
I don’t want this to be the time to say goodbye, but I need to say a few things so that when the time comes, I can say goodbye knowing I’ve told you what I need to tell you.
You know as well as I do that there were a lot of things in our lives that haven’t panned out the way we’d planned.
Because of the time you spent away from the family in the Air Force and at school, I didn’t get a chance to have you around when I really needed a dad.
This doesn’t mean it was easy for you, in fact it was hard. I know now it was very hard for you as well.
But I want you to know that good has come out of that.
I try to spend time with my little boy now as a result, and I’m glad I was able to get my schooling out of the way before I became a papa.
Because you went away to school to improve yourself, I learned that sacrifice is sometimes necessary for future growth.
And good has come out of that.
I learned how much a son needs his father, and I try to be here for my son. So even though you felt very much like you were a failure, you weren’t. You taught me a valuable lesson, one that I will treasure always.
Because of the time you spent fixing things (and the time I spent holding the flashlight for you*)
*He’d ask me to hold the flashlight for him while he was working on something, and being a kid, my attention span was about as long as a gnat’s eyebrow, and so I’d be looking all over, shining the flashlight to what I wanted to see.
I learned how to fix things I never thought I could.
I also expanded my vocabulary during these times.
Because of the way you showed us responsibility, I was able to get a paper route and learn responsibility early, on my own.
Because you helped us deliver those papers on weekends sometimes, I learned that sometimes helping your kids to do the things they’re responsible for doing is a good thing.
Because of the way you told me to take things one step at a time, I was able to build pretty big things at Microsoft when I was there,, one step at a time.
And because you made things for me (like a train table)
and read to me (from Tom Sawyer)
and told me stories (like Paul Bunyan)
and sang to me (The Lord’s Prayer)
and took me to work (where I spun the F-4 Simulator)*
* — in the Air Force Dad was a flight simulator technician — he fixed flight simulators, and one time he took me to work, I think I must have been 5 or 6, and there was this whole line of these simulators — all just cockpits of airplanes, and he, as fathers are known to do, picked me up and popped me in the driver’s seat. I sat there, my eyes huge, as I saw all these dials and gauges in front of me, and it was just so cool and so complicated. — And there was this big stick thing in the way, so I pushed it off to one side so I could get a better look at the dials. I didn’t know that the simulator thought it was flying, and by pushing that stick over I made it think it was corkscrewing into the ground, and all the dials and gauges started spinning alarms went off. I got so scared, I thought I’d broken it, and I looked out at him — he was standing right there, talking to someone else, and with fear and trepidation said,
“Daddy?” —
He turned around, took one look at what was happening, reached in and fixed it. Just like that. He fixed it. I hadn’t broken it. But he just reached in, and with one touch, he fixed it.
and showed me things, (like Wolf Spiders)*
When we lived in Illinois, we discovered that the spiders there are significantly bigger than spiders here in Washington.
So one time Dad was in the basement, doing something, and he called me down. He wanted me to see what he’d found under this can. So, being a kid and being curious, I squatted right beside it, and then picked up the can — to find the biggest, hairiest god-awful ugliest wolf spider I’d seen in my entire life. I jumped up and screamed, and dad was over there laughing so hard. I didn’t think it was funny then, but for years all we’d have to say was “wolf spider” it would bring the whole thing back, and we’d have a good laugh over it.
and surprised me with presents (like at Christmas in 1971 when you told me to clean up a pile of newspapers, and you’d put a bunch of toy trains underneath them)*
*He kept asking me to clean up the papers, but there was always another present to unwrap, another toy to play with, another cookie to eat — and finally, when the Christmas eve was finally winding down and we were cleaning up, I remembered the newspapers and started to clean them up — and underneath was a train set he’d gotten from somewhere, on a set of tracks, just waiting for a little boy to play with them.
and provided for me (helping me get my first Saab)*
*Many of you in this church may remember praying for that very car…
and went out of your way to help me (when that first Saab broke down)
— and the second Saab, — the third one (the fourth one’s out there, it runs fine)
and drove all the way up to Seattle to SPU when I was a student one Christmas to bring me a present — a radio controlled Porsche 928) when you knew it was the only thing I would get.
and visited me at work when I was able to show you where I worked and what I’d become professionally
And supported me in your thoughts and prayers as I became a father in my own right.
You showed me love.
And because you told me, I know you love me.
I love you too.
</note>
I read this note to him several times, never being quite sure whether it got across to him. In August, at the nursing home, I read it to him again, and he looked at me very intently while I read it, and as I finished, there was this look on his face, of peace, of contentment, of, “My job is done.” and for a split second, the stroke seemed to be gone.
He then took the note from my hand and read it himself.
And I know that he knew when he left that he was loved, he was cared for, he was appreciated, and that he would be missed.
We rejoice for him, we’re happy, for him, that this ordeal is over, but we’re sad for us, for the big, dad/Gary/grampa shaped hole he leaves in each of our lives.
— I was thinking the other day about the things I’d miss about him, and I’m sure there will be many to come, but the things that come to mind right now are the little things — and it’s always the little things, isn’t it?
The fact that he’d say “I love you” and “I’m proud of you” so often that we didn’t realize how important it was for him to be able to say that, and now, how important it was for us — the whole family to have him as a cheerleader in the background. There were times he couldn’t do as much as he wanted to do for us, and in his mind, he always wanted to do more — and the fact that he’s no longer in the background, just being there cheering us on — I’ll miss that. We’ll miss that.
I miss his meow — for those of you who don’t know, he had this way of meowing like a cat so you couldn’t tell where it was coming from. It drove us nuts — and we miss it.
I miss him greeting Michael and me with, “Hello Sonshine”
I miss seeing him snuggle my little girl Alyssa, in his lap, reading any of a number of books to her, and the look on her face that told me of the security she felt in those arms.
I miss him standing with mom, waving good bye to us as we left after a visit. — and no matter where we were, when we got together, he’d always thank us for taking the time to do that, to get together as a family, and to include him and he would always remind us, “You are loved.”
We miss him telling us “Remember, a fat old man loves you.”
I miss him yelling at us to shut the living room door. That’s the sound we grew up with. We’d run out, be halfway up the stairs, and hear, “SHUT THE DOOR” — of course, he hadn’t done that for years since he put a spring on it so it’d shut itself. But I miss knowing I won’t hear it again.
I miss him calling me up at night to tell me there was something interesting on Channel 9 (PBS) that he wanted to share with me, even though we couldn’t be together, we could see it at the same time.
When I was growing up, and I’d be upstairs brushing my teeth late at night, I’d hear dad snoring downstairs, — a gentle snore (at least from upstairs) and I knew that that meant all was right with the world.
I’ll miss that, too.
And even though there are many things we’ll miss about him, I know he’s better off now than he was for the last 10 months.
Some time ago I had a dream — a dream of him essentially dying, and it didn’t look as bad as we all generally think of dying.
In my dream, he was laying there, his body all there, but kind of gray, and damaged. It looked like dad, but suddenly he broke free of that body, and he just kind of came up, there was this whole, healthy copy of him, in living color that kind of came out of him like a butterfly comes out of a cocoon, and he was free, he was whole, and he flew away, leaving the gray, damaged body behind him.
After Dad died, Petra was doing some thinking about what his death was like for him, and the image she came away with was this, that dad was in bed, in the nursing home, having just been sung to and prayed for by the love of his life. She laid down on the bed next to him to rest, and dad, who had had his eyes closed, suddenly could see her.
The machine wasn’t breathing for him anymore.
His mind was clear, not muddled by a stroke.
His heart didn’t struggle.
His feet weren’t cold.
We imagine he looked around, saw the things we’d brought in to make him feel at home, saw his beloved wife laying there, who’d been with him for 41 years, for better or worse, for richer or for poorer, in sickness and in health, and with his new, whole body, then left the presence of his wife to be with his Lord.
During dad’s life, we all knew that no matter where we went or what we did, dad loved us, and I am convinced that up there in heaven, he loves us still.
When the service was done, we headed to what would be dad’s final resting place, and on that cold, clear day, the wind blowing the oak leaves around the cemetery, our family gathered around dad one last time as he was given a military funeral, with an Air Force Honor Guard from McChord Air Force Base, a flag, and a rifle salute.
We shivered as we took our places in the chairs under the portable gazebo they’d set up for us, with mom sitting in the front row. I walked away for a bit to clear my head as the ceremony started.
I’d seen the airman with his trumpet, trying to keep his mouthpiece warm on that cold day, and I knew he was going to play Taps – which I’d learned to play when I played the trumpet in junior high school, but I’d never had to play when it counted.
Taps, originally used to signal “lights out” in the military, eventually became the bugle call played at funerals, where it signaled – or symbolized – a final “lights out” for an individual.
I’d heard it played when my friend Bruce Geller died in 1978.
I’d heard it played when I, as a photojournalist, was covering the funeral of Lee Stephens, a sailor from the USS Stark that was hit by a missile on May 17th, 1987, and each time I’ve heard it, it has been like a knife in the heart for me.
It is a symbol of the end of a life, and of a loved one, where they make that transition from living in your life to living in your memories.
I remember, as I shot the funeral of Lee Stephens, how I wanted to honor the grief and sorrow his family was experiencing, but at the same time, I wanted to tell the story that this young sailor, from a small town in Ohio, who’d graduated just a few years before, had people left behind who still loved him.
I remember seeing, through the viewfinder of my Nikon, through a long, long telephoto lens, the look on this sailor’s mom’s face as the sergeant of the honor guard handed her the flag. It was a photo that, while it was “the” photo from a photojournalism point of view, I did not take. The moment was too intimate, the grief was too raw.
I remember her eyes, simultaneously exhausted, numb, disbelieving, and utterly spent as she accepted a flag from an honor guard member, “…on behalf of a grateful nation…”
In walking away a bit, I had unconsciously recreated the view I’d seen through that camera, the photo I didn’t take in 1987 at that cold cemetery 13 years later, and I was not prepared to see that look on my mom’s face and in her eyes.
But I’d seen that look before, and knew what it meant.
We’d had 10 months to prepare for this moment, but the fact is, we all know we’re going to die. Being faced with it as “sometime” in the vague future is one thing. Seeing it in front of you in unblinking reality is something else entirely.
I saw the honor guard fold the flag as precisely as they could fold it
But this time, I wasn’t hiding behind my camera, trying to insulate myself from the pain of a mother who had lost her son.
This time, while I wasn’t a mother who’d lost her son, I was the son of a mother who’d lost her husband.
This time, I was the son who’d lost his father.
I understood things a little more clearly now.
I understood a little more about how much it means to sit in that chair, and have someone hand you a flag, in exchange for someone you love.
As if that wasn’t enough, it was then that they did the rifle salute. For those of you who have not experienced it, it is very much like a 21 gun salute. Retired military members who have served honorably receive a 9 gun salute, a volley where 3 soldiers fire off three rounds apiece. It is done as a sign of respect, of honor. For those not prepared for it, it can be shocking.
The call was made,
“Ready! Aim! Fire!”
Three fingers squeezed three triggers.
“Fire!”
Three firing pins hit three cartridges.
“Fire!”
Three cartridges fired and were ejected.
The honor guard was called to attention, and the command “Present Arms” was given so precisely – they all moved as one. Those without rifles saluted – those with rifles held them in the “present arms” position.
As the three shots echoed away, the only sound left was of those leaves, the movement of cloth, and the click of rifles being presented.
There was a moment where this was all we heard. Leaves rustling, coats flapping, and the stunned silence of those still not ready to let go.
It was then that the bugler, who’d clearly kept his mouthpiece warm, played Taps. He played clearly, with dignity, and with the respect and honor due.
– and through the wind, I heard the sergeant’s words I’d heard years before, “on behalf…of a grateful nation…” drift across on the wind as he solemnly handed the folded flag to my mom.
And at the end of the day, as I watched them drive off, I found myself, in spite of the fact that I had my own family, a job, a mortgage, all the trappings of being an adult, I found myself crying, because underneath it all, I was a little boy who’d just lost his daddy.
I cried for the fact that much as I’d wanted to, there were things left unfinished.
I cried for the relationship that had at times been rough, but had started to mend.
I cried for the relationship that, like it or not, mended or not, was ended.
…
It is Veteran’s Day as this is published…
For those of you out there who are wearing the uniform, or for those of you who have worn it, with honor, you have my greatest respect.
For those of you who’ve lost your sons – like Mr. and Mrs. Stephens, who lost their son Lee, and so many others, and for those of you out there who’ve lost your daddies, my heart goes out to you.
For those of you who are still daddies, remember your kids only have one of you, and they only have one childhood.
It’s not a dress rehearsal, it’s the real thing.
Take the time to be there for them while you can.
Love them. Hug them.
Veteran’s Day, 2010





