I’m hauling a pickup load of roughly 60 chickens and 7 ducks to the butcher today. Route requires that I run a stretch of the interstate. Tarp’n'bungees, don’t fail me now!
And should you spot me out there, I recommend you not follow too close…
I’m hauling a pickup load of roughly 60 chickens and 7 ducks to the butcher today. Route requires that I run a stretch of the interstate. Tarp’n'bungees, don’t fail me now!
And should you spot me out there, I recommend you not follow too close…
In the wake of the spring book tour I’ve made a concerted effort to excavate the hidey-hole I call an office. For one thing, I exposed the entire floor surface and vacuumed. Three years I’ve been in here, and this was the first time that particular home appliance cleared the sill. Please note time will not destroy carpet-bound Cookie Crisps, although they do lose their zing and the lint will catch in your teeth.
In digging, I came across a piece of paper I’d been looking for ever since we moved. I was trying to fill in the blanks about a section of Coop in which I wrote about the funeral of my friend Ricky, and I was certain I had made notes about the day while sitting in my car at the cemetery. In the end I decided I was mistaken, gave up, and wrote this on page 139:
I made it graveside and stood in the cold wind while one of his friends put a boom box on the headstone and played a song I should have written down because now I can’t remember.
But this week while sorting trash from treasure I found a simple remembrance card. On the back, my scribble:
The priest did his thing by the book, then Ricky’s sister played “Fire & Rain” and “Vincent (Starry Starry Night)” on a boombox. Someone lit a pack of firecrackers, and we all retired to Hardees.
Recently my oldest daughter and several of her dance classmates performed a ballet version of “Vincent” and the combination of the song lyrics and my daughter moving so graceful-ghostly through the blue light in her white costume left me searching for breath. Now her two-year-old sister puts on her purple spangled gown and requests the same song. Her tottering interpretation elicits the same emotion, no matter that her diaper droops and she tends to collide with the couch.
I cannot speak for Ricky, but I suspect he – as well as the Vincent in question – felt deeply the potential beauty of existence while simultaneously despairing over the waif’s chance it stands against the more brute forces of reality. I think this helps explain why the sight of our young children dancing in purity and joy leaves us simultaneously transported and terrified.
I’ve said it before, but if you’re ever in the Chippewa Valley, a visit to the Chippewa Valley Museum is worth your mileage. It’s an unobtrusive structure settled close to the earth beneath big white pines remnant of the lumbering days of yore (that filled nearby Half Moon Lake with sawdust). Their Farm Life exhibit (and the word exhibit doesn’t convey the half of it) has attracted national attention. I don’t know how to describe it other than to say it’s real, heartfelt, and right. They’ve just posted some YouTube clips to convey a sense of it.
Not posting real often or with any complication for a few days as I am in the company of a two-year-old for five days while Mom and nine-year-old do some visiting. Yesterday we ran errands and made the same joke (about why you can’t get out of the car at an active intersection) (you had to be there) (and we were) sixty-seven times in a row because it remained hilarious and it was funny again this morning as we scrambled the eggs we gathered together. We also reprised the wildly giggly lip noises that so effectively kept us occupied during yesterday’s fifteen-minute wait at the bank drive-through.