Friday, December 26, 2014

CONTINUED: Heart Attack



Paul turned to me as the Buick sputtered down the street. “If you step out of line even once, I’ll call Uncle Billy and he’ll get the county here to take you to the orphanage for the weekend.”
I snorted. “Wow, new friends. Get me in the girls dormitory, huh?” Billy was a cop and it would not be surprising to see a police car drive by a few times on the weekend. It was doubtful he would stop in unless he saw other emergency vehicles on the scene.
And so at precisely 1:41 p.m. Eastern Daylight Savings Time, June 20, 1959, Paul and I began life as the odd couple. I checked my watch one more time. On Monday I wanted to be able to tell my friends how many hours I had been left on my own. I wouldn’t mention the presence of my older brother, who in any case wasn’t watching me. He shut himself in our bedroom closet with a portable record player and his Bill Haley records. The player’s power cord snaked out from under the door to a nearby electrical outlet.
Twice I tipped the plug out of the socket momentarily and the record slowed down. From behind the door I heard him swear and punch the little player until I coughed and he realized what was happening. He chased me through the house and down the front stairs and part way down the street. But that was the only excitement all afternoon. The neighbors didn’t start hollering at us, so it turned out that all went well until after supper.
Around five o’clock Paul came out of the closet and made us a light supper. Except for well timed derisive comments, I let him accomplish his work. Although Paul had been assigned the cooking chores, he didn’t know how to cook any better than me, but he was considered more careful around fire. Specifically, I wasn’t allowed near the stove since curiosity got the better of me the month before and I heated up a D cell battery in one of Mom’s Revere Ware copper bottomed pots over an open flame. I did indeed employ a safety precaution by placing a lid on the pot. You could still see the round impression on the ceiling left by the lid when the battery blew up. The explosion made the neatest sound. Not a bang, but a sharp whoosh with a green flash of flame shooting up from the pot.
 When supper was over we sat back and finished up a dessert of candy and bananas. I noticed Paul massaging his chest.
“I think I’m having a heart attack,” he said and leaned forward hunching his shoulders. We hadn’t even begun to argue about who would wash or dry the two plates and two milk glasses.  
“You can’t have a heart attack,” I said. “You’re only sixteen.” But he really didn’t look so good. His face was pale and he wheezed with each breath.
“My chest hurts something awful,” he said.
 “It’s the peanut butter and fried baloney sandwiches you made us,” I said. “Topped off with the marshmallow chocolate cookies and the chicken corn candy for dessert. It’s called heartburn.”
“I don’t think so,” he moaned. “It really hurts.”
“Should I call Uncle Billy?” I said.
“Hell, no. Mom and Dad would never leave us alone again. Ever.”
I was getting concerned. “But if it’s a real heart attack, maybe we should—“
“Can’t you think of something? Remember the time you said toothpaste would work for Athlete’s Foot? Well, it did.”
“It did?”
“You made it up?”
“Not exactly,” I said. “It was based on my long experience in topical ointments.”
“You’re full of crap,” he said.
“Watch your tongue. I invented the use of ketchup for itchy scalp.”
“It worked?”
“I don’t know. I haven’t seen Mrs. Bletcher on my paper route since I recommended it to her. Seemed logical to me.”
“My chest really, really hurts,” he said and moaned again.
I racked my brain and finally an idea came.
 “Take the long wooden spoon Mom uses for spaghetti and stick it down your throat as far as it will go.”
“You mean, like a sword swallower?”
“Yeah, that’s it. Don’t swallow all of it. When it hits bottom, with just an inch or two sticking up out of your mouth, twist it around two or three times.”
“Are you serious?”
“Yes, it’ll mix up all the stomach acid with your food and that’ll take care of the heartburn.”
Paul sat there silent, his face a mask of pain.
“It might work,” I said, “if you don’t choke to death.”
He moaned again.
“Can you ride your bike?” I said.
“To where?
”The hospital. It’s only a mile or two over Pleasant Street. Maybe three.”
“I don’t think I can ride that far.”
“I’m sure it’s just heartburn,” I said.
He seemed to be getting worse as he pushed his knuckles back and forth over his chest. I had to think of a solution.
Another helpful thought came to me. “Where’s the Reader’s Digest Brain Surgery Manual?” That’s what we called the Home Health and First Aid book Mom kept on a bookshelf in the living room. I went and got it, brought it to the kitchen and thumbed through the heavy book waiting for my older brother to get over what I hoped was a bad case of heartburn.
“Here’s a diagnosis chart in the book,” I said. “Let’s go through it. Is the pain inside or outside the chest?”
“Inside.”
“Above or below the solar plexus?”
“What’s a solar plexus,” he said.
“If you don’t know what it is, you don’t have one. Left side or right side?”
“The middle.”
“Well,” I said, “the middle more to the right or the middle more to the left?”
“The middle of the middle.”
“Have you had this pain for over thirty days or less than ten days or –“
“I just got it, for cripe’s sake!”
“Have you participated in any strenuous activity in the past 24 hours? Lifted heavy objects or worked overtime?”
Paul ignored me.
“Does your skin possess a pallor or grayness?”
“I don’t know. Does it?”
“Just your hands from changing the bicycle tire this morning. Is there pain in your left arm?”
“I’m calling a cab,” said Paul.
On the phone he gave our address and asked how long it would take for a taxi to arrive. He said he needed to go to the hospital and volunteered he might be having a heart attack, but refused the suggestion to call an ambulance. “I’m only sixteen,” Paul told the dispatcher,” so I don’t think it’s bad enough for an ambulance.” Dad would have his own heart attack if he had to pay an ambulance bill.
The taxi cab arrived in fifteen minutes and pulled to the curb in front of the house. Mom and Dad and Michael pulled in the driveway seconds later as Paul and I were about to get in the cab. Gone only a few hours, they surprised us.
“You guys are certainly traveling in style,” said my father as he got out of our car and came over to the taxi. He didn’t look very well, his summer tan now rather peaked.
Paul began to whine. “My chest hurts something awful, Dad.”
“Paul’s having a heart attack,” I said.
Dad nodded and smiled. “No, he’s not. He’s got the flu.”
Mom walked over to us and Michael ran along behind her with his tin box. The tape was mostly off and trailed down like a ribbon..
“Your father has to go inside now and lie down,” Mom said.
“What’s the matter with him,” asked Paul.
“He has a bad case of the flu. It hit him just as we were leaving the city. We spent the afternoon in the hospital emergency room.”
“Thought I was having a heart attack,” Dad said. “You’re OK, Paul, you’ll have the heartburn for a little while longer, but it goes away when you start throwing up.”
“Thanks, Dad.” said Paul.”
“But that doesn’t last too long either,” said Dad. “When the chills and the muscle pains start, the vomiting is over.”
“Thanks, Dad,” Paul said again.
“Good thing, too,” said Dad, “because that’s when your other end cranks up.”
Paul was looking worse.
“I should go inside now, Dad.,” he said. “David will give you his blessing.”
“I think I’ll wait for his ordination,” said Dad.
Mom lit another Chesterfield. “I’ll have to call the family and tell them why we didn’t show up. Oh dear, they planned for us to stay overnight.”
Dad laughed. “They’ll forget all about us when they get the gin and whiskey out.”
Over the next few days all five of us came down with the symptoms. I told Michael we’d caught the flu from his Teddy Bear.
“Serves us right,” he said, “for stuffing him in a tin box with only two air holes.”


copyright David Griffin, 2014

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

CONTINUED: So, This Is Christmas ...by Rev. Lou Kavar Ph.D.


As John Lennon sang in a song from my youth, “So, this is Christmas!”

Our images of Christmas are of warmth, good cheer, and peace among people. While there is a good deal of merry-making and celebrations small and large, the world doesn’t stop for Christmas. If anything, our hopes of what Christmas should be make the realities of life seem more harsh and frustrating.

Our fantasies about Christmas gloss over the sacred stories of the birth of Jesus that are the foundation for this holiday day. Perhaps we forget that it was a poor young couple who made a difficult journey and had no safe place to stay. Or we romanticize the shepherds and miss that they were viewed as second class citizens who lived with their animals, didn’t maintain the religious laws of cleanliness, and were not welcome in most social circles. We mistakenly refer to the magi as “kings” but they were foreigners of a different religion and culture. Then, much like today, foreigners of a different culture and religion were viewed with suspicion not a warm welcome. The bottom line is this: the sacred stories of Christmas are about those who were outsiders, down on their luck, without any redeeming social value. Yet, they were the ones who are the central characters for the beginning for our stories about the birth of Jesus.

The sacred stories of Christmas are meant to remind us that hope is born in the lives of people who are struggling, facing hardship, and live in fear. These stories are the most significant when we allow the darkness of our lives to be filled with light – even if that light is just the glimmer of a single star. The depth of meaning in the stories of Christmas is most relevant for those living on the edge who aren’t sure what may come next.

I think the meaning of Christmas is captured in a sermon from the fifth century by Peter Chrysologus, a bishop in Central Italy, who wrote: “God saw the world falling to ruin because of fear and immediately acted to call it back with love. God invited it by grace, preserved it by love, and embraced it with compassion.”

The essence of the sacred stories of Christmas is that because the world is falling apart, because people experience pain and tragedy, because wrapped in fear we fail to do better, grace calls again and again to be people of love and compassion. The hope of Christmas is that struggle and strife aren’t the end of the story. Instead, something new can be born into our world that calls us to do better and to be better.

Yes, so this is Christmas! It’s not plastic sentimentality sold to us by commercial opportunists but it is the opportunity to allow hope be born anew. It is the hope of Christmas that bring us out of fear to a new faith that sets things right.

As I think about the pain and tragedy in the world and in the lives of people I know, it seems to me that we need Christmas more than ever. Indeed, we need to allow our lives to be transformed by love and compassion for the healing of the world.

On these last days before Christmas, I look for this hope as I pray the words of the ancient hymn: O Come, Emmanuel!




copyright by Rev. Lou Kavar Ph.D., 2014
 
Visit Lou's blog  here:

http://blog.loukavar.com/2014/12/22/so-this-is-christmas/

Friday, December 5, 2014

CONTINUED: Once Upon A Time




  Just the two of us ascended in the tiny elevator car.  I had stepped on in the basement, having come in from the street through the waiters’ locker room, stamping the season’s first snow off my cheap shoes.  He got on at the first floor, headed for the private dining rooms on the third floor while I continued to the fifth.  We spoke not a word. He hummed something while I cleared my throat.  Just as the elevator stopped at his floor, I said, “I must tell you something, ♫I Left My Heart In San Francisco♫. 
The doors opened and he stepped out without acknowledging my attempt at conversation.  He may not have heard me. 
I was twenty years old and from a small city farther upstate.  I knew a little piano, but never thought to ask Mr. Bennett if he needed an extra accompanist who could play just about any Chuck Berry song in the key of C.  And not much else. It might have been time for the aging crooner to consider updating his repertoire.  If he could do ♫Sing You Sinners,♫  he could certainly include Chuck’s classics like Maybellene and Roll Over Beethoven.  Forcing his voice up to the key of C should have been no problem for a professional. 
Frankly, I’d probably work for free.  And carry his bags.  I could even try to transpose to A.
I wasn’t very realistic at age twenty.  It’s a wonder I ever got any work done.  On that morning, the most important thing rolling around in my mind was not whether I could remember the wiring circuits that controlled the little magnets that pushed down the long thin blades just in the nick of time to send a punched car to the correct pocket on the sorter machine.   I was ♫Younger Than Spring♫ and my mind kept wandering to the snow falling on the streets of Manhattan and how pretty it looked. 
To some people snow is not pretty.  I have to say I began to lean in that direction as I got older.  But in my early adulthood … a period I now more honestly label my late childhood  … snow was gorgeous.  It would bring to mind a pretty girl with red cheeks sitting on a toboggan wearing a pink scarf and tight jeans.  My thoughts jumped to later, sheltered from a snowstorm in a dimly lit cafĂ©, hunched over mugs of cinnamon-laced hot cider, her blue eyes and flaming red hair tugging on my heart as I sat in ♫The Shadow Of Her Smile♫. Still later, a dark sky arched high above a street lamp shining down on the snow covered sidewalk as our feet crunched along, bodies shivering inside our clothes, anxious to get to her apartment to enjoy each other’s warmth.  For Once In My Life♫, I was in love. 
♫Where Do I Begin?♫  It is probably true that the last person you would expect to make a mature decision about a potential lifetime mate would be an unrealistic older child of twenty who couldn’t remember whether the little magnets that sent a punched card to the correct pocket were powered by a pulse from the cam contact or the detector switch. More alarming, I didn’t care about cams and switches and detectors that morning.  I went back down the elevator and out into the middle of West 52nd Street to build a snowman.  But of course there is absolutely nowhere you can build a snowman on West 52nd Street, except perhaps on the roof of a parked car.  Just In Time♫, I stopped myself from making a mess on top of a very plain late model automobile when I realized I was approaching an unmarked police car.
What I remember best about the girl is she was nice to me.  Most young women I met at age 20 looked right through me as though I was a sheet of glass, like the door in the office building they pushed aside and went through each morning.  To get upstairs to a job, to earn money, to buy pretty clothes, to attract a man like me.  But not me.
In our twenties, most boys and girls were unaware we were simply at the age for chasing after someone else’s life we wanted to share.  That Old Devil Moon♫ had a simple reproductive battle plan  that demanded we couple soon, while we still might live long enough to raise human children to the age of their own coupling.  We humans had no better  game plan than a ♫Firefly♫.
Most of us ran around and tried to look smart, pretty or handsome.  We hoped to meet the one who would serve our fancy, and maybe even our needs.  I May Be Wrong♫, but I probably had no idea what my real needs were.
One definite need was to eat, so I went back upstairs to my job and  I Got Rhythm♫.  I finally came to understand the music of the spheres, the interposer magnets and how to set 8 thousandths of an inch adjustment on the card feed blade.  Maybe This Time♫ I would remember to turn off the power before probing the circuits.
For many of my friends, their one true love or a reasonable facsimile eventually showed up.  Or they got tired of searching and settled for companionship or sex.  Some  gazed with new eyes over old ground that held past  partners.  And if their old lovers were now spoken for, one could certainly find the old personalities wrapped around new candidates.  Some of my friends hoped what didn’t work in the past would work now.  “♫They Can’t Take That Away From Me♫,” they said. Many were disappointed to find you unlearn a good lesson at your own peril.
Evidently all of us believed five or six dates at the movies or tucked into a booth in a quiet bar were enough to form the basis of a lifetime commitment.  Some of us were right.
Biology pounded at the door and families, parsons, chapels, gown makers, formal attire renters and honeymoon destinations coaxed young lovers toward cementing their union.    One of ♫My Girl’s♫ friends had already married a boy who sold hot dogs downtown in an office building to earn money to buy her pretty clothes that made her attractive.  But Not For Me♫.  I wanted the girl who promised she’d sail away with me on a ship called the ♫The Good Life♫.
“For us,” I told her, “it’s ♫A Time For Love♫.
“♫This I All I Ask♫,” she answered, “♫I Wanna Be Around♫.
“♫Because Of You♫,” I said, “I will never walk that ♫Boulevard of Broken Dreams♫.”
 “♫The Best Is Yet To Come♫,” she said.
Tony Bennett may have said the same each of the three times he married.  I still feel that way after nearly fifty years of marriage.  And if Tony and I met again on an elevator, we might agree that for us,  the birds, the bees and the marriage industry, ♫The Music Never Ends.

.copyright 2013 by David Griffin