Chinese All You Can Eat Buffet

My dad loved a good deal.  He loved getting something for nothing.  He was thrifty to a fault.  He loved money but he did not value material possessions one iota.  Money was a score card.  It separated you from those less intelligent or hard working.  But spending money on ostentatious living was frowned upon.  

When mom was alive, she spent money on the things that she liked to spend money on.  She slipped money to my sister for her children’s tuition, she bought nice presents for her kids and even nicer ones for her grand kids. She liked to dress herself and my dad in designer clothes.  They had a guy at James Davis.  Mom expected Dad to buy her expensive gifts and he did not let her down.

But once mom died, dad settled into a life of frugality that was almost spartan and was certainly comical for a man of his means. He bought his khakis in bulk at Walmart, ditto for his shirts.  He would go all over town looking for the cheapest tomato. But mostly he just did without.

He was a staple at the local Chinese-all-you-can-eat-buffet,
and he would tell me about each day’s offerings, all 58 individual items, even though they rarely changed.  He had a mind like a steel trap.  That comes in handy when you’re blind.  Another story for another day.  Chinese-all-you-can-eat-buffets don’t attract a well heeled clientele.  Dad liked to complain about the other patrons.  One day at the fried catfish section, someone bigger and badder blocked him out and got the last piece.  The lady with the new batch of catfish saw it all go down and she put not one, not two, but THREE pieces of freshly fried catfish on dad’s plate.  He had only planned on getting one piece, but since she had put three pieces on his plate, he decided to eat two and take the third piece home to eat later.  I said, “Dad, these Chinese-all-you-can-eat-buffets generally don’t allow you to take things home.”  He said, “I know, I put it in my pocket.”

OOH EMM GEEEEEEE

Have you ever heard a song that stopped you dead in your tracks?   Most songs have to grow on me.  I listen to them over and over until they are imprinted on my brain.  The repetition is comforting. The Wood Song by the Indigo Girls was the theme song of my mother’s death. I would listen to it ad nauseam and cry buckets. Well, I just found the soundtrack for my dad’s death. This song touched me from the very first moment “The roses came but they took you away.” I’m all in.  I stay in the car until the song is finished.

Dad, you were home in your bedroom just like you wanted. Your last lucid moment had been on Thursday.  Melisse and I were keeping vigil. Waiting. Early Monday the sitter called us down.  It was over.  It was peaceful, it was good.  You were in Heaven and we had no regrets. But then reality kicked in, phone calls, paperwork, funeral home, goons with white gloves.  Melisse took over.  I was spent.  I was up stairs napping when I heard them come to get you.  Two Gothic weirdos right out of central casting.  I swear, one of them had a handle bar mustache and a driving cap.  They zipped you up in a bag and took you away.  They left a single red rose on the bed where you had been.  That part was creepy.

Later that afternoon, I overheard Melisse on the phone with the funeral home. “What do you mean you don’t have him?  Somebody came and got him? Where the heck is he?” Sorry Dad, but we temporarily misplaced you. It turns out “that funeral home up there on Park Avenue” was not specific enough. My bad, I’m from out of town.

Today,pulling into my driveway, I hear this song by The Script.  I sit in my car listening to the rap lyrics, sometimes profane,  until the song is over.  I cry buckets.  I’ve found my theme song for you, Dad.  I miss you.

Look Him Up and Say Hey

There is a one legged man who panhandles on the steps leading up to Neiman Marcus in the Galleria.  I forgot to ask his name.  He uses crutches.  He is holding out on getting a scooter, because that is the beginning of the end of your Independence.  Even though he is quite old, walking around on crutches has kept him strong.  He doesn’t have a prosthesis because his amputation is above the knee.  That is a bummer in the lost leg department.  My mom was lucky to be able to have a below the knee amputation.  This guy wasn’t so lucky.  An aneurysm cost him his leg.  I saw the cigarette  in his change cup.  I was tempted to lecture him on this bad habit, but I figured fate had been hard enough and I would not deny him one of life’s simple pleasures. He is a regular fixture on the steps on the Dillard side of Neiman Marcus.  Look him up and say hey.  And if you do, will you ask him his name?

Night in the Condo

They say the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree. As much as I would like for that not to be true, it is true.  You all now know that my mom checked herself into her bedroom for a year or so of me time.  Truth be told, as an adult, I get this. The total inability to face the day. One misquote that I hate above all misquotes is that God will not give you anything that you can not handle. What a load of BS.  That is not what the Bible says.  There are plenty of web sites that discuss this atrocity, I don’t need to.


Many people probably do coast through life with no single incident that drives them to the quiet room.  But life is hard. Sometimes it’s too hard.  While I have never checked out for a whole year, I have spent a night or two in my walk in closet.  We call it the condo.  I put in an air mattress, a lamp, sleeping bags and a book. We have a spare bedroom. It’s not about that. It’s about total darkness, total silence, four walls that I can reach out and touch. It’s about crawling back into the womb. 

Life is full of tragedy and disappointment and we all respond in our own ways.  Does life sometimes throw us stuff that is too much to bear.  I say, yes it does. Sometimes people rise up to the occasion and sometimes we step over them on our way into the Galleria.  I was watching the golf channel yesterday and this young boy had lost both of his legs in a boating accident when he was 16 years old.  He founded a charity to raise money to buy prosthesis for kids who could not afford them. How friggin noble.  I hate him.

I’m My Own Grandpa

My father’s sister and my mother’s sister were married to brothers.  For real.  That’s more or less how they met.  Or through gall stones, or something like that.  Both of my grandmothers were in the hospital at the same time back when they would keep you in the hospital a week for a tooth ache.  I do think they both had their gall bladders removed or some other spare part.  For whatever reason, my dad would visit my mom’s mother when he would go visit his own mother.  This was BEFORE he even knew about my mother.  You see, my mother’s mother was my dad’s sister’s husbands’ brother’s wife’s mother.  So why not go visit her too while he’s there.  Dad was a single, good looking guy and he had a job.  He was a veterinarian.  Well, Maw Maw knew a catch when she saw one and she also pegged him as a good addition to the family farm.  Plus she practically already knew him, since he was her daughter’s husband’s brother’s wife’s brother. So she started really talking up her youngest daughter who was a senior at SMU, but happened to be visiting a boy at Annapolis that week.  I don’t think mom needed any help getting a date, least of all from her mother, but with graduation looming, she must have been keeping her options open. So, the next time my mother came home, she had her first date with my father.  They went dancing at the Peabody Hotel.  (I never, ever saw them dance.) They must have hit it off.  They got engaged, but lest that put a crimp in her dating , she wore her engagement ring on a necklace inside her clothes.  They got married the month after mom graduated and that’s how I became my own grandpa.


On Strike

I was sixteen when my mother went on strike. For reasons I will never know, she went into her bedroom and she didn’t come out. It seemed like for years, but I don’t know how long it really was. Over a year for sure. I drove around in her big, green Oldsmobile Delta 88. Dad did the Christmas shopping  and Pearline did the rest. She must have come out eventually because I got a brand new Chevrolet Monte Carlo.

It was not a happy time. Things happened.  You would have thought that it would bring us closer together, sharing the secrets. But no, we became strangers. We limped along as a family until we three kids could get the hell out of there.   I left Memphis forever; my sister stayed for a while before relocating to DC and my brother started wearing black.

Once we were all grown, a funny thing happened.  My mother found herself.  She and Dad bought the big, fancy house she always wanted, joined a new church, made new friends, and seemed to enjoy each other’s company for the first time I could ever remember.  My mother came to life. It was a rebirth.  I have tried to make sense of all of this. There are things I don’t know, details of their lives I will never be privy to, my own childish perceptions and misconceptions. I would like to say we had some sort of reconnection as adults, but that didn’t happen either.  It was more like a truce.  And now they’re dead. 


There is no Frigate Like a Book

My mother was sad.  Why, I don’t know.  I can only guess that she did not recognize herself anymore. From posh boarding school in North Carolina, sorority girl at SMU, to whirlwind romance with the man chosen by her mother.  It seems the stuff of fairy tales.  Then the move to a wide spot in the road, three kids in four years, and a husband who worked all the time.  All by the ripe old age of 26. I’m only guessing…..


But my mother was sad, and because she was sad, we were sad too.  She sought solace in books and so did we.  We had library cards from the time I can remember.  We would  pile into the car and head down to the library on White Station Road.  Henry Huggins, Ramona Quinby, Ellen Tibbits, Pippi Longstockings, Harriet the Spy.  These were our friends and we delighted in their adventures.  It’s hard sometimes to believe that my brother, sister and I grew up in the same home.  We are such different people now.  But we all still love to read and for that I thank you, Mom.

Heather was a Bitch

My mother used to say that she’d have to feel better to die. She never really felt very good.  She was always taking naps, reading books, drinking Tabs, smoking cigarettes.  She was thin before thin was in.  She died piecemeal.  If you ever wondered if there are things worse than death, I can assure you that there are.  She had a laundry list of maladies.  She had gangrene in her leg due to peripheral artery disease and had her leg amputated a couple years before she died.  She resisted having the leg amputated for at least a year even though she was in extraordinary pain. Even still, my mother had a sense of humor,  a twinkle in her eye.  She had to do rehab to learn to function on one leg. Part of the therapy was coming to grips with her stump. Mom named hers “Heather” after Paul McCartney’s wife because, as the world discovered, Heather was a bitch.

Black Hole

Well, the bills have been arriving from my recent ER visit and subsequent tests.  I’m a health insurer’s worst nightmare.  I require an operation every five years to replace my pacemaker/defibrillator.  On top of that, I  have the octopus thingy.  For all of you out there in the medical profession, I apologize.  I am a slow pay.  When you are both the patient and the bill payer, something has to give.  For me, it is my sanity.  I’ll wait for that second and third notice.  The bills have to work their way through the insurance system anyway.  No need to pay for something before the insurance company has had its go at it. To determine what you actually owe, you have to steel yourself for the fight.  It is a date with the dark side.  Sisyphus and his rock.  It is insanity.  Oh, wait, I’m supposed to stay calm.  These bills are going to have to wait.

Thin on Kin

The whole dance is fascinating.  The clubbing, the hookups, the late night phone calls.  The entire mating ritual.  Do these hormonal units even get it?  That the brass ring is a handcuff.  I’m not knocking marriage, I’m just saying that sometimes it’s not pretty.  Sometimes it’s not what you signed up for.  But, no, really, it’s EXACTLY what you signed up for.  But did you really mean it?


Rick is a trouper.  He’s my best friend, he’s my support, he’s my family.  He gets up at zero dark thirty to wait for hours for the procedure of the day.  He takes notes when I’m too upset to remember anything the doctor says.  He holds my hand.  He has a phone tree.  A PHONE TREE……  Just in case.  

When I had my V Tach two years ago, I survived despite the odds.  If you want to know more about ventricular tachycardia and cardiac arrest, read I’m Still Standing by Fabrice Muamba.  I spent four days in the hospital and I specifically said “no visitors.”  I was processing.  One particularly tense moment, when it was just Rick and me, I made a comment about how we don’t really have anyone. Rick said,yeah, we’re sort of thin on kin.  That man has a way with words.