Haut Oven Kaput [wood stove done for]

September 28, 2007

Oma’s old wood stove was kaput. Since she is planning to move, Oma’s been gradually having repairs and improvements made. We know this much.

I remember the time I discovered the wood stove was kaput. The news spread quickly and loudly through the house and reached the fire department soon after.

We hadn’t used it in years, but I thought I’d show off the fire building skills I’d honed during our 18 months off the grid. The fire department had visited our cabin as well.

I found appropriately sized pieces of wood in the garage. Unlike the wood colored sponges we used to burn, these were bone dry scrap lumber, like pressure-treated 2″ x 4″ chunks and particle board.

I loaded the stove full and, with copious newspaper from the recycling, lit it. After I closed the door I noticed that one of the glass panels was broken. This meant more air was rushing in and I could not extinguish the blaze by closing the flue or smoke would billow into the living room. Or that’s what I thought might happen. Instead I thought maybe we should wait and see.

We saw the chimney pipe start glowing red hot. We heard wind whooshing, fire crackling, and metal creaking. So I called 911.

We hadn’t cleared all the boxes and papers and clutter from the family room by this point. I’m talking about an incident from Thanksgiving 2005, I believe.

When the four firefighters arrived they exchanged quick and coded glances that said, “This place is a tinderbox. Good thing they panicked or we’d be checking dental records.”

By then the glow had faded somewhat and they opted to simply wait for it go out. Then they proceeded to pry panels off the wall to see if anything had caught on fire behind the flue. It hadn’t. Now Oma had another mess to clean up.

The following day I put the stove door in the garage. On a subsequent visit I put it out in the trash. I caught a bit of flack for that when Oma found out, but she hadn’t replaced the glass.

Now she has a gas stove in that spot.


Kagami Reunion Performance

September 27, 2007

Tentatively set for Doranne Crable’s birthday next Spring.

Contributions by Kagami Butoh Alumni either live or via other media (vodcast, cd, film, conference call, etc.)

Discuss.

[Idea generated after a conversation with Mara West]


The surprise trip

September 26, 2007

Sunday, after the reunion, Bracco comes over to survey the damage. It’ll be $20/hr no matter what he does. [compare to my flat rate of $100/ day (up to 10 hours w/ paid lunch break)] The bulk of his visit will be devoted to removing the bulk of the debris I’ve accumulated. After multiple mowings and rakings I’ve shortened the straw grass from 5′ to 5″. I piled the grass and weeds all over the yard. It’ll fill his truck easily.

We request a better transition from the last step off the deck to the yard [It gets floody and muddy]. He advises a 1/2 yard of 3/4″ minus gravel. I later learn that the ‘minus’ means ‘and smaller and smaller down to dust’. It packs better.

A few weeks later I ride the Greyhound with Orion back to Oma’s.

greyhoundwdad2sm.jpg

We decided that morning that he could ride along with me to Portland.

The bus is late. The bus is crowded. I get us two seats opposite each other. The guy in the window sleep wakes up and tells me there’s other seats behind him. I say, “Yeah, but I gotta have this guy with me!” That shuts him up. Orion doesn’t want to sit across the way. He wants to be in my lap.

greyhoundwdadsm.jpg

By Exit 104 shortly after departure we’re falling both asleep.

Bracco liked the idea of meeting on 8/8 at 8am, but I think we didn’t get started until 10. After hauling the debris and laying gravel we got Oma’s old wood stove up on his truck. He said he was also a scrap metal recycler, so we didn’t have to leave it on the curb and wait for some other dudes mom had lined up.

We planned to have an adventure alone after Trish joined us. The trip turned out to be Tony’s way of Re-Using instead of Re-cycling the stove. We drove it out to Horning’s Hideout, his home away from home.


extra years, extra beers pt. 1 (password req.)

September 25, 2007

WARNING: ADULT CONTENT

Mike Lanz. The name rang out of Janine’s mouth but echoed in my head: in Ron’s voice. Yes, they had become friends.

Read the rest of this entry »


extra years, extra beers pt.2

September 25, 2007

So what? And why do I keep picking on Ron? I’ve noticed some parallels in the lives of two other men: Tom and George. All three:

  1. Are over 40
  2. Are the youngest of 3 or 4 (I’ve never seen Tom’s siblings)
  3. Still live in their parents’ last home (Ron has the only living parent)
  4. Deliver newspapers (Oregonian, Olympian, Detroit Free Press)
  5. Haven’t read this blog! Do not read for pleasure. Do not generally read the papers they deliver. (Ron reads the obituaries)
  6. Quit college or never started.

Ask yourself, “Who has a paper route?” Answer yourself, “A Kid.” These guys are not growing up in the same way as their siblings. This has its advantages, of course. It’s called neotony: the continuation of juvenile characteristics into adulthood. It’s been said that culture itself is a neotonizing force. It keeps you from having to think.

In the spirit of generalizing, these three are “draw-string-collar workers” which is a neologism, or invented phrase of my own, thank you very much.

Draw-string-collar ‘jobs’ include all those marginalized positions taken by perpetual adolescents. They work indoor-outdoor, swing-shift/ graveyard-shift/ perpetual shift. They work outside the box. They work for cash. They wear hoodies. They panhandle. They sell drugs. They are DJs. They are newspaper boys.

Compare to the other collars (dates courtesy Word Spy):

  1. White-collar worker (1921)– business types
  2. Blue-collar worker (1950)- manual laborers and factory wokers
  3. Pink-collar worker (1975)- clerical workers, waitresses, nannies, cosmetologists
  4. Plaid-collar worker -Rural workers (see Wikipedia’s plaid collar crime)
  5. Gold-collar worker (1985) – professionals; over 55 (see Word Spy) OR “knowledge worker”/ “Professional ecclectic” (see World Wide Words) OR (Wikipedia)[as a marketing term] full/ part time service industry workers (i.e. McDonalds, Starbucks) with high disposable income
  6. Scarlet-collar worker (2000)– female pohr.noh.graf.ik shop operators
  7. Dirty-white collar worker (1980) – corrupt businessperson
  8. Open-collar worker (1988) – people who work at home
  9. Green-collar worker – workers providing environmentaly friendly products or services
  10. Grey-collar worker (1981) – (Wordspy) skilled technicians OR (Wikipedia) health care, aged care, child care and the personal service sector, or protective services and security, or beyond the age of retirement
  11. Black-collar worker (1998)- miners and oil workers (see Word Spy) OR Media Males, creative or entrepreneurial types that wear only black (See The Spoon Blog)/
  12. Dog-collar worker [UK](1991) – they wear the Roman Catholic Priest’s collar
  13. Frayed-collar worker (1995) – working poor
  14. Steel-collar workers (1980) – Robots
  15. Polka-dot-collar workers (2005) – Clowns and Comedy Consultants
  16. Draw-string-collar workers (2007) – Labor Ready/ Manpower light industrial temps/ substitute recess paras/ newspaper boys, hip-hop artists, DJs, hoods

The closest match is an open-frayed-gold-collar. Ron had basically colonized one of his offices at one point, so work was home. He lived in the loft when he first showed me his guns. Now they’re in the garage of his mom’s house. Plus he can’t seem to save but for working ALL THE TIME!

I’ve totally had that collar. Now here’s another thread. If you jump from the mundane color to collar palette matching to the broader context of the social stratifications of class (as Wikipedia does) you might notice that above most of us are further gradiations. For example, the varying degrees of RICH: nouveau riche, gentry, old money, nobility, upper class, ruling class, political donor class, power elite. There’s nothing stopping us from putting a coded collar on them too, however. If we have a gold-collar already why not:

  1. Platinum-collar worker
  2. Titanium-collar worker
  3. Diamond-collar worker
  4. Bling-collar worker
  5. Uranium-collar worker
  6. Rhinestone-collar worker
  7. Whatever-else-you-wanna-put-in-there-collar

I suppose this leads into a question for my Comedy Consulting intake form: what collar-worker are you? What collar-worker would you like to be?

And what about those extra years? What about those extra beers? Well, landed-gentry readers, it goes like this: I led you on a 90 year goosechase when we could’ve found the goose in 20. You see, I was at the bar…

You remember the bar? and the smoking section? and I was whiling away my time because the docs had told Trish that our boy might be having an APPENDICITIS! and I was going to miss the midnight release of Harry Potter 7!

So I needed a ride home, and who should offer but Tony Bracco! I’d been trying to call him all week to work on Oma’s yard for the party, but he hadn’t returned from Oregon Country Fair. I finally get to see him AT THE BAR! and his lovely wife too.

When we got to the car, she crawled in the back and lay across the two car seats and fell asleep!

Eventually (weeks after the party), I got Tony to come and work on Oma’s yard! While she watched the kids watch tv!

Then he and I took her old wood stove out of the house and hauled it to Horning’s Hideout! But wait, that’s too far in the future.

First we have the picnic. Ron does not show up. He does not answer his phone.

I get stuck grilling, but Galloway gets stuck bringing charcoal and lighter fluid and 80s music. We have a few photos taken, but our biggest group pic only features about half the gang who came. I get stuck with a case of unopened stubbies that last nearly as long as this narrative.

groupshotsm.jpg

Dan, Kathy, Rob, Tony with Luna, Andy, Chris, Mike G, Justin [not pictured: Susan, Mike D, Jean, Jennifer, Julie, Scott, Deedee]

But wait, first we make a final stop in the Safeway near the park. Heading for the exit I notice a lone copy of HP7 standing on end at the Lotto & film counter!

I grab it and say, “Look! Look! Hey, is this for sale?” Of course it is. Last one in the store.


Wasted years, wasted beers

September 10, 2007

I brought up Ron and flashed back a whole year because he came up in conversation out in the smoking section. In fact, I’d seen him, watched DVDs (Final Destination 2 & Hostel) and checked out his newest guns on this visit.

In point of fact, I’d invited him to the picnic barbeque on the condition that he NOT bring any guns and NOT mow us all down. I joked that we’d have a metal detector wand and frisk.

He said he’d come, but it would only be to see me. He wasn’t interested in any of the others for ill or nil. I did let on that Tony Bracco was in contact with Cary Carlson. Ron and Cary weren’t speaking (and hadn’t for years). Always the therapist, I hoped I could get them back together. They had been best friends. He and Ron had planned a camping trip, but shortly before their scheduled departure Ron’s boss asked him to work. Ron acquiesced. Cary fumed. Ron walked away from the relationship and left a brand new sleeping bag (and a brand new eighth).

Actually Ron was there when I smoked my first cigarette. He GAVE me my first cigarette. He had invited me to sit in on his college Life Drawing class: to see the nekkid lady, of course. Afterwards he was smoking, and I said, “Gimme one of those!” I got a laugh out of him. He even narrated (to the universe), “Now he wants a cigarette!”

The day before the bar Trish and Orion arrived in West Linn, and we took Tasha for a walk down to what I call the 100 Acre Wood. Most folks call it the Mary S. Young state park. Someone had upgraded the park with signs at each of the trail intersections. Wouldn’t these have been useful 20 years ago, in the middle of the night?

Well, Mary S is the 100 Acre Wood because of Big Stones and Rox down at the bottom where the park meets the river and both are from Winnie the Pooh. It’s 3.19 Acres, actually with 8 trail miles, and it’s big enough to get lost in, especially in the middle of the night. Mary S. has great big trees and will probably be around for every class reunion party I could ever have. Plus you can walk there from Oma’s house – which won’t be her house by the next reunion. Anyway, Mary S. was a strong contender for our picnic site except that it doesn’t have playground equipment, so the new fangled Tanner Creek was going to have to do.

I got to talking about some of the high school issues that might come up. If we look at all of the articles for the Amplifier we’d see a pattern.

a) I always expressed a personal opinion.

b) I frequently had opinions about particular girls

c) My opinions were seldom favorable.

When I volunteered to cover the dance and drill team, the Debutantes, the laughter in Mr. Steven’s room erupted like Mt. St. Helens and darkened the skies of free speech.

I first had Greg Stevens as a teacher in 8th grade, and he’d liked my writing, so I was loyal. He was an Australian ex-pat. He ran the photography class, the yearbook and the newspaper. I don’t think he believed his role included editing the content, but maybe he left me alone to learn from my own mistakes in that regard. I generally did not embarrass myself with grammar or spelling.

When the Debs won second at the state finals I wrote a typically gonzo piece that the coach intercepted before it went to press. Debbie Bujanski coached the team. They were Deb’s Debs. Cute, huh? She was also a math teacher. She’d been my geometry teacher, and I had had trouble staying awake – even in the front row. She was pale with short and pale blond hair. She was quite heavy set and generally jolly, but she had a temper. I nicknamed her The Albino Rhino. I never tempted fate so much as to comment on her size in my articles. It still strikes me as ironic that she would inevitably have had to teach dance moves she couldn’t do.

I count among my blessings that I never did see her attempt to demonstrate the shimmy-shake.

I recall that she had asked to discuss a prior article with me and the student editor, Stephanie Nutt. I surreptitiously taped the ‘conversation’ basically a preview of her wrath.

When the state piece caught her ire she stampeded over to Stevens’ room and demanded it be cut. She said, “I’d rather see nothing go in than that!”

It could have been a teachable moment for us all.

As a clown you learn that you, yourself, must be the object of ridicule. As a journalist, even a gonzo journalist, you might expose your own foibles but should take down as many of the bastards with you as you can.

Stevens reluctantly removed the piece. I was still in shock over the power of my words to stir emotions. I figured, “It’s not fair, but I did my job: observe and write. My grade will not be affected.”

At the park with Trish, I let her know that the worst was yet to come. After all, I may have quoted individual Debs but mainly I meta-mocked the idea that they deliberately attempted to lose their individuality.

“Personally, the idea of conformity and exactness does not call forth any positive emotions in me. I am afraid of the very type of mass uniformity that I had asked to go and report. ‘A learning, growing experience,’ I thought. The same sort of thing that all my teachers have been promoting. All Dance & Drill teams aim at precision. Their whole achievement brings on The Fear in me.”

I wrote a ‘worse’ piece after I’d been snubbed by my Slave for the Day. The Leadership Class had decided to auction off a popular girl to raise money for a dance. I decided I had to have her.

I had to be at a Thespian meeting, but I told two friends to bid my net worth of $27 on her. They wound up adding their own money so I could win her. The next morning, she met me and acted less than subservient to my every wish. She wouldn’t hold my hand as we walked through the hall to my locker. Was that too much to ask of the future homecoming queen? I told her, “You can go” but I hadn’t intended to free her. I expected to organize my tasks and commands and continue my power play through the remainder of the day. At lunch time she had split with her friends. My bidders were incensed and demanded satisfaction on my part, but they were only offered a half-refund by the Leaders. I acted like it was no big deal, but wrote an article called Lucky in Cards, Unlucky in Love. Ouch. The pen is mightier than the snub. I dreaded seeing her again, but I gradually wrapped my mind around the idea that I’d make some sort of apology and explanation.

I was about finished telling Trish about the hazards of giving a sexually frustrated adolescent a free column in the paper.

Mister Stevens, it turns out, was a bit sexually frustrated himself. In one issue he had created an ad for the local tanning salon with two bikini clad girls in the snow: an image that spurred the horse of puberty for many of us. Mr. Stevens no longer works at West Linn High. I got word from Jason Haas that one day he took more than pictures. He took, so Jason alleged, liberties.

Be that as it may, Mr. Stevens surprised me during our graduation ceremony by conferring on me an award for Excellence in Journalism along with a pin depicting a miniature printing press: his rebuttal to the Albino Rhino.

It kept me writing through the years to have earned that small token of his regard.

We reached a crossing of trails in Mary S. and Trish decided to take Tasha home. Orion and I continued down to the Wall (AKA River Viewpoint) and past the waterfall all the way to the river.

Orion promptly fell between a big stone and a rock at Big Stones and Rox and cried in pain, so we made our way back up to Oma’s as the sun set.

I told you that story so I could tell you this one: at the bar the following night I finally had the chance to stammer my apology to my one-time slave and she absolved me. She hadn’t wasted the 20 years in regret or recriminations. She’d put it out of her mind. We’d all forgotten things.

Jen Galloway seemed to have credited me with introducing her and Mike at a place called Humphrey Yogurt’s. I don’t recall such a place. Chris Bair credited me with giving him a copy of Santana’s Abraxas and blowing his mind. It’s possible, but I don’t recall it.

So now we’re back to the bar. I’m showing off my bottle of beer none too discretely and trying to ask if people have openers on their key chains. Little hors d’oeuvres are provided, but we’ve soon gone through them. As soon as I get my bottle opened I’m caught by the waitress and informed of the liquor laws. Jay tries to get me to pour it into his empty glass with his back turned to her. I drop the bottle face down into the glass and the bottom breaks out of it, spilling my beer on the floor.

Then he offers to buy me a beer. Eventually, four people have bought me beers.

At some point Trish calls and tells me that Orion’s still complaining of stomach pain, so they’re taking him to the hospital. Maybe they’ll be done by midnight. Then she calls back to say the doctors are talking possible appendicitis. I need to get my own ride home. Luckily, lots of folks still live in West Linn. Unfortunately, this ruins our plans to get Harry Potter 7 in the middle of hundreds of would-be-wizards.

The pressure to be done reunion-ing by midnight is off. I’m out in the smoking section and Janine offers me a free beer. I bring up Ron’s name. She tells me the sordid tale of their horrible date, his attempted suicide and the how he later befriended her rapist.


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