Tag Archives: family

Cancer Chronicles

SUNP0003

In the back of Janet’s closet I found The Thing I hoped had been lost forever. It’s still here.
On our honeymoon forty-five years ago in the Smoky Mountains, we had a pastel (that’s colored chalk, I think) portrait done of ourselves. The artist was a college student working for the summer and was quite chatty. He had us pose separately. I knew something was wrong when he turned to Janet and asked, “Does he ever smile?”
Yes I did smile and I thought that was what I was doing, smiling, not grinning. Smiling is turning your lips up at the corners. Grinning is showing off your teeth. Off to the side of the artist’s space was a portrait of a young woman grinning. The artist had carefully outlined every tooth. Poor woman ended up looking like Minnie Pearl.
It didn’t make too much difference how I looked in the drawing. Janet looked nice, and it was going to be a Christmas gift to her parents. We showed it to some friends and one of them said we looked like Ichabod Crane and a very tired Liz Taylor. I couldn’t help looking like Ichabod Crane. The artist gave me only half a neck. I did like the idea I was married to Liz Taylor even if she did look very tired.
After Christmas my mother-in-law hanged the drawing in a spare bedroom and gratefully I didn’t have to look at it too often. Like any young man I foolishly did not think to the future. After my mother-in-law died, of course, The Thing came back to us. Janet knew I didn’t like it so she hid it in a closet where it remained hidden until recently.
I would trash it but I’d hate to get rid of the reminder that I married a woman who looked like Liz Taylor. This is among the quandaries we face when going through a loved one’s things after cancer has taken them away. I suppose I will turn to my favorite option—put it back where I found it and let my children decide what to do with it when the time comes.
I still can’t get over that someone thought I looked like Ichabod Crane. Why on earth would Liz Taylor—even when she was very tired—want to marry Ichabod Crane? Although I’m glad she did.

Cancer Chronicles

I recently decided I wasn’t smart enough to own a smart phone. I would be much happier with a dumb one.
Many years ago, Janet decided I needed a cell phone. I had just had a heart attack and had a stent inserted. She didn’t want me to have another heart attack all alone with no one to take me to the emergency room. I could call her. I tell stories at a lot of different places so if I had any palpitations I could call 9-1-1.
This phone had everything on it. Facebook. Video games. Map directions. Anything I wanted on the internet was on that cell phone. The only problem was that I used up all my minutes halfway through the month so I had to put that stupid smart phone in a drawer for two weeks until the next billing period began. It would be dumb to pay for extra minutes.
This also illustrates the irony of our lives. If one of us was going to die early we both figured it would be me with the bum heart. Who knew Janet would develop breast cancer?
It’s been over a year since she died, and I figured I need to go back to the simple reason Janet had for buying the phone in the first place, so I’d be able to call for help if I had another heart attack. She didn’t buy it so I could play games. I cancelled the contract with the old company and found a new phone that made calls and sent texts. That’s all I needed.
Then I got a bill from the old cell phone company for $350. It seems Janet had been paying off her phone and mine a little bit a month and we still owed $350.
Once again I found myself taking my lumps and paying for two cell phones I wasn’t using. Then it struck me that they were still in good condition and maybe I could sell them. I have a friend who knows all that computer stuff and he said they were worth some money. The only problem was he had to know the password and code word to make them operable for a new owner. First I had to come up the answer to the personal questions: what was the name of your first pet and what was the make and model of your first car?
Remembering it was Janet who set the phones up, I had to remember her first dog and her first car, things she had before she even met me. No problem. I knew every detail of her life. Easy answers. The next part was a little harder. I had to come up with her password. Luckily I still have her little blue book of codes and passwords. I found it—matthew2526.
The phones have been sold. Out of curiosity I looked up Matthew 25:26:
His master replied, “You wicked, lazy servant! So you knew that I harvest where I have not sown and gather where I have not scattered seed?
Isn’t it wonderful? I may know the name of her first pet, but I will never comprehend the furthest reaches of her complicated intelligent mind. That’s what made living with her for forty-four years so exciting.

When Grady Met Hallie

My father Grady didn’t really notice my high school graduation. He was on the verge of breaking up with his sweetheart Ovaline.
I knew something was wrong but didn’t ask any questions. One day I saw Dad sitting on the edge of the front porch reading a letter. No one had ever handwritten a letter to him before so I suspected it had to be the girlfriend, either breaking up or pleading with him not to break up. Ovaline could have been described as a golddigger but in our low income neck of the neighborhood she was more of a hamburger digger.
Suddenly I was able to use the car on Saturday night for dating. If I hadn’t been a good Southern Baptist boy I would have broken out in a dance. Grady had finally gotten wise about Ovaline. My joy was tempered a bit because I didn’t want to see him slump back into his old ways of sitting home on weekends staring at the television.
Then along came Hallie.
Actually Hallie had been around for years. (Pay attention because we are entering into the complicated relationship realm of soap opera.) Many years ago when Hallie was a young Catholic woman she caught the eye of my mother’s Uncle Charley who already had a couple of kids with his current wife. This was 1930s Texas where decent people didn’t do things like that. Tongues wagged across town when Charley divorced, married Hallie and started having another brood of children. My mother’s family was horrified that this redneck temptress had stolen their dear sweet innocent Uncle Charley. Needless to say, Hallie was no longer welcome in the Catholic Church so she joined the Baptist church alongside Charley’s other kinfolk.
I had vague memories from the middle 50s that Mom was in a dither because she had to write Uncle Charley’s obituary. He had been her favorite uncle. I had an inkling that she even liked Hallie a lot. Kinda like whoever made Uncle Charley happy was all right with her. That’s why she wanted the obituary to be sympathetic. The last I heard about Hallie was that she was working as a waitress at a local café.
By the early 60s Mom died of cancer. Dad was fifty-two and spent two years just plugging away at his job and not enjoying life at all. Then he met Ovaline who was ten years younger than him and did a good job of making him feel ten years younger too. She worked at the same café, coincidentally, as Hallie.
I was left on the outside looking in so I didn’t know what was going on. It seemed like when the Ovaline Express derailed, Hallie was there to clean up the wreckage. I heard Dad on the phone confiding to someone (I didn’t know who, possibly his sister) that he would like to start seeing Hallie but that she was ten years older than him. What would people think, he asked his confidante. I thought the person on the other end must have told him not to worry about it if Hallie made him happy. It sounded like something my aunt would say.
I liked Hallie because she seemed much more interested in what I was doing than Ovaline ever did. Hallie had a sweet smile but she always said what she thought. Hallie dished the dirt on Ovaline. Before a date with Grady, Ovaline told the other girls at the café that she was going out with the old man to see how much money she could get him to spend. Another time Ovaline laughed about how she just barely got Grady out of the house before her new boyfriend showed up.
“I was so mad at her I could spit.” If thoughts could kill, Hallie would have murdered Ovaline with no regrets.
After they finally decided to be a twosome, Grady started to smile again. Hallie even had Grady bring me along on their dinners out.
“You order anything you want, and Grady and me will split a hamburger.”
I think she offered to split a hamburger as a crack about Ovaline.
Hallie was not there when I graduated from the local junior college, and she was mad at Grady for not inviting her.
“He had better not thought I didn’t want to go because I did. He should know by now I love you boys.”
She was definitely in attendance when I graduated from college two years later. And it was a hour and a half drive from home, definitely a major expedition for Grady.
Through the years she shared some of Grady’s private thoughts about me. He told her that I was the only one of his boys who never asked him for anything. I didn’t tell her, but I didn’t ask him for anything because he wouldn’t give it to me anyway.
They were very good for each other. They played bingo once a week. Sometimes she talked him into driving her to visit her children who lived all the way over in Shreveport. That was a good three hour drive. Mostly she cooked him a meal and they watched television. Then Grady gave her a little kiss and went home to his own bed.
They went to church every Sunday night. One time he had the motor running, ready to go home when Hallie kept talking to friends in the parking lot. She had the car door open ready to get inside but there was so much to gossip about she finally shut the door. Hearing the door shut, Grady thought she had gotten in the car and drove off. When he realized it was awful quiet in the front seat he looked over and saw she wasn’t there. He made a quick u-turn and went back to the parking lot where she was still talking.
They only had a few of differences.
“Grady! Do you have any life insurance? You don’t want Jerry to have to pay to bury you!
“Grady! You know if you don’t stop smoking those cigarettes they’re going to kill you!”
“Grady! You didn’t stop for that red light! Are you out to kill me?”
You’d think that would make him mad. But she had a cute way of being bossy, and it made him laugh.
Her biggest gripe was that he promised her that they would get married after all the boys left the house. The problem with that was my oldest brother had mental problems and couldn’t hold a job so he wasn’t going anywhere. When he finally died, Hallie thought her time had come but not really.
I told her she was better off having him over for supper and television and then sending him home. He did not have the best personal hygiene and I didn’t think she would want to keep cleaning up after him.
They did end up in the same nursing home. He was on one end of the building and Hallie was on the other. A day didn’t pass without her rolling her wheelchair down to his room and saying, “Grady! You better not be in there smoking one of them cigarettes!” Everybody in the home could hear him laughing.
Hallie was the first to pass away. After all she was the older woman. Dad didn’t lasted much longer than that. Grady had spent more time in Hallie’s company than he had with my mother. Most of his marriage he was out working while his retirement was all with Hallie. And she knew how to make him laugh.

Cancer Chronicles

The other night I caught King Kong on television—not the 1930s classic, not the 1970s mistake, but the one made by Peter Jackson of Lord of the Rings fame.
Janet and I went to see it on the big screen when it first came out and really enjoyed it. Of course, nothing could match the original but this one came close.
When Jackson’s Kong came out on DVD I asked Janet if she wanted to buy it. She said she didn’t remember seeing it. This was just before she was diagnosed with breast cancer. I believe cancer begins and grows for many years before it can be diagnosed, but it still can make its presence known.
I suggested we should go ahead and buy the movie because I knew she already liked it even though she didn’t remember it. Janet firmly said she didn’t want to see the movie. That was the end of the discussion. I believed Janet was bothered by the fact she could not remember something like a movie. I’m sure she was wondering what would she forget next. Things like cancer and forgetfulness never are part of a person’s plans after retirement. I never mentioned the movie again.
On the night I watched King Kong on television I smiled because it was as good as I remembered. But I didn’t watch the final scene.
I already knew how everything was going to end.

Grady Starts Dating

My father never remarried. Mom died when she was forty-nine. Grady was fifty-two.
Two years later a shift in the natural order of things was in the air. I knew it. Grady started taking baths. He stole my bottle of English Leather.
She was a waitress at Grady’s favorite greasy spoon. He sold a lot of Royal Crown Cola there. Her name was Ovaline, and she was a good ten years younger. Her hands were all over him.
I was sixteen and sick to my stomach. He never took us to the movies. He ate popcorn in the dark with Ovaline every Saturday. He never went to church with Mom. He attended Ovaline’s church every Sunday. I had just gotten my driver’s license and looked forward to dating. I could get the car on Friday nights, maybe.
The worst part for me was that Ovaline’s son was one year ahead of me in school. I sang in the choir. When I told Grady we were having a concert he had only one question.
“Was Ovaline’s son in the choir?”
“No.”
“Oh. Well. She wouldn’t be interested.”
And if Ovaline wasn’t going, then Grady wasn’t going.
The only problem with Ovaline’s son—whose name I have mercifully forgotten—was that his only interest in high school was banging girls in the back seat of his car. Of course, he didn’t want mommy and her new boyfriend intruding.
On the other hand, I had no private life. I had a public life with activities at church—not Ovaline’s church. My other favorites were Key Club, DeMolays and school choir. Nothing on her radar. In other words Grady was not a witness to my life.
My brothers, twenty-two and twenty-eight and still living at home, absolutely despised Ovaline. When Dad wasn’t around, all three of us would call her Ovaltine.
“After all,” one of them said, “Grandpa didn’t remarry after Grandma died.”
Grandpa died in the state mental hospital. I can’t say whether he was institutionalized over the lack of Grandma’s love or because he was always frigging crazy.
“Dad’s disrespecting Mother’s memory,” the other brother said.
It was too late to respect Mom, I thought, but kept to myself. He should have taken her to church or the movies or anywhere for that matter. It didn’t make any difference now.
The truth is this: he was unhappy when Mom was alive. He woke up early, went to work, came home late, ate supper, watched some Westerns on television and went to bed. He never smiled.
Now he was out among the living. Ovaline’s friends were Grady’s friends. They went on picnics in the park. They actually invited me along one time. I saw my father laugh.
Even at sixteen I acknowledged the pain of losing a wife after thirty-five years of marriage. It was none of my business why he was unhappy. Everyone had the innate right to laugh. I wanted him to be happy with a woman.
Just not with Ovaltine.

Cancer Chronicles

Me and ties (1)
On Easter Sunday I wore to church the brightly flowered tie Janet made for me forty-five years ago, and it still fits.
She made several ties the first year we were married. She bought the pattern at a fabric shop and went to its remnants table and picked out all the patterns and colors that appealed to her. Every man on her Christmas list got one. I got a rust colored one with little flowers for Christmas and the one with the big flowers for Easter. She cut it so the biggest flower was right in the middle of the widest point of the tie. If I tied it properly, a blue flower with a red spot was perfectly situated in the center of the knot.
Back in the seventies it was my hippie tie. That’s about as close to counter culture I got back then. When I really wanted to shock people I wore it with a bright pink shirt. This was, of course, in Dallas, Texas, where such things easily shocked people.
In the last ten years or so it had become my storyteller tie, usually with a pastel pink striped shirt which seems to delight the children who listen to the stories. When I set up my tent to tell stories at the local arts and crafts festival, I always get compliments on the tie. And I am always quick to tell people Janet was the one who made it.
In the fall I wear the rust colored tie with an orange shirt when I tell harvest stories. I have a spider web tie I wear with a black shirt to tell Halloween stories. When I tell stories on the farm I forgo ties altogether and rely on bib overalls, white shirt and a bright bandana around my neck.
I bet you didn’t know wardrobe selection played such a big role in storytelling.
Well, the ties Janet made for me mean much more than just an accessory for storytelling. They’re another way to keep her close to my heart.

How Grady Lost His Name

I stood with my aunt over my father’s grave after the funeral service. The first thing I noticed on his tombstone was that my father died exactly thirty years and three days after my mother died.
For years the only sign was the little metal one left by the funeral home. That bothered me, but I knew better than say anything to Dad. He moved in his own good time. Eventually he bought a wide stone with three names, Mom’s, his and my oldest brother’s. My brother had his own set of problems so Dad knew he would have to take care of his final arrangements. Of course, Mom’s birth and death dates were carved in, but Dad’s and my brother’s only had the birth dates. Again this bothered me but I said nothing. On this particular day all three death dates were now carved in stone.
The second thing I noticed was his name on the stone: Major Grady Cowling.
His first name was not Major. He never served in the Army. He had only one eye so they didn’t even want him in World War II. Actually, he was named for the doctor who delivered him, a Doctor Mager. Dad did not like that name. He insisted on being called Grady. His signature for legal documents was M.G. Cowling.
I couldn’t blame him for that. I would have hated being named after the doctor who delivered me, a Doctor Thayer. I had a lisp and a problem with saying “r”s. People would have thought I was saying “Sarah” instead of “Thayer”. It was bad enough that I said “Jeh-wee”.
No, my father didn’t like his first name because when he was a boy playing war with friends they never let him be the general because he was “Mager”. Even when he was too old to play war any more, he still resented still being “Mager”. I only knew this story because mother told me. Dad didn’t like to talk about such things.
After I grew up, moved away and came home for the occasional visit, I noticed letters and bills at his house were addressed to “Major Cowling”. When I asked him how come his name was misspelled, he replied, “Aw, they can call me anything they want. It doesn’t make any difference.”
“But Mom told me your name was Mager with a ‘g’.”
“It doesn’t make any difference.”
He even signed his Christmas cards, “Your Father, M.G. Cowling”.
I had always mistrusted my own memory and judgement. Maybe I just dreamed my mother told me that story because every place I found his name in print it was listed as “Major.” My mother, father and brothers did have a habit of lying to me about things because it was so much fun to see the look of surprise on my face to learn something unusual. Also it was easier to tell me a quick lie than to explain the difficult truth. For example, when I was fourteen I overheard my father on the phone telling his sister that Mom had cancer. When I asked him about it, he told me I misunderstood him. After she died three months later I asked him why he lied to me. He said he didn’t know what else to do. Even now I’m pretty darn gullible.
It wasn’t until the last few years when I had to get a copy of my birth certificate for something or other that I saw an official State of Texas document with his name as “Mager Grady Cowling”. I had to admit, it was quite a relief to have it confirmed. When he said, “It didn’t make any difference,” he literally meant it didn’t make any difference to him.
How terribly sad to be so beaten down by life that my father had no spirit left to fight for his own name. He accepted the spelling that was easiest for everybody else, even though he hated it.
I don’t really know what life lesson there is to be learned by this. If anyone figures it out, please tell me. I’m so gullible I’ll believe anything you say.

Cancer Chronicles

The old adage “have someone eating out of the palm of your hand” doesn’t mean what most people think it means.
I know it’s supposed to mean that you have someone believing your lies, but that’s not true.
Since Janet died last year I’ve been feeding our little Chihuahua who is 12 years old. Her boyfriend, a fifteen-year-old chiweenie, died about six months ago. Since then she won’t eat unless I scoop the dog food into my palm and let her munch from my hand. She eats about two hands full then turns away. Her boyfriend would keep gobbling away as long as there was food in front of him, but she knows when to stop. That’s good because her little legs couldn’t support more than her five-pound weight.
I’ve never liked to have a dog licking me too much nor have I liked to hear a dog slurping or crunching. Since this has become our nightly routine, I don’t mind so much. In fact, it’s rather soothing. She has not bought into a bunch of lies I have told her. She trusts me completely to have good food in my palm ready for her to eat. It’s reassuring to know this little creature relies on me. It’s a responsibility. It’s my goal never to let her down.
It’s like the forty-four years I had with Janet. Sometimes I ate out of her hand. (Not literally, figuratively. Think about feeding the soul.) Sometimes she ate out of my hand. We knew we were safe in each other’s palms. Mostly we fed each other, not self-consciously but knowing this was the way it was supposed to be.
So when I sit there at night with the tiny dog eating out of and then licking my palm, I know Janet is still feeding my soul from her hand.

Mumbling Like Grady

The other day I was driving down the road and realized I was mumbling just like Grady. Well, not quite like Grady. I have better diction. And I have enough manners not to talk to myself when someone else is in the car.
Grady was my father. I never knew who he was telling off or what that person had done to make him mad.
I suspected he was griping about one of his customers. He sold Royal Crown Cola and Nehi sodas to local grocery stores, and some of these grocers could be a pain in the neck. You see, back in those days the drinks were in glass bottles. The customer only bought the contents of the bottle. The bottle could be brought back in for a refund. Some kids wandered the roads looking for stray soda bottles and turned them in at the grocery store for two cents each. One grocer waddled as fast as he could out back to make sure my father had made an accurate count on the number of empties. This guy was sure that my father would cheat him by claiming he had fewer empties than he actually had.
The only thing my father went on the record as saying about the man was, “Well, I feel sorry for his wife.”
Dad knew if he said any more than that it would get back to the grocer. Gossip traveled fast in our little town. To get even, the ol’ cuss might drop carrying Royal Crown altogether, and Grady needed that money.
For a while my brother worked with him on the truck. Remember, the soda came in glass bottles which were in wooden cases which held 24 bottles. Some people liked the newfangled aluminum cans, but Grady thought they were a fad and carried as few of them as possible. Anyway, those wooden cases were heavy and as my father aged and the summers heated up, he needed all the help he could get. We could choose a straight $50 a week or ten cents a case as our pay.
My brother was offended because our father didn’t acknowledge his presence in the cab of the truck. He told me when they stopped for lunch, our father sat in a booth and continued his indecipherable conversation. My brother said he situated himself opposite Grady. Nodding, he pretended he agreed with whatever our father mumbled.
Eventually my brother moved out to join the Marines. I took his place on the truck during the long Texas summers. I didn’t care if he talked to me or not, which is kind of sad when I think about it. I stared out the window, trying to decide if the miles and miles of empty Texas plains were beautiful or just plain boring. At the cafes I concentrated on my food. This was one instance when Grady didn’t care how much I ordered off the menu. For a skinny teen-ager I was hungry. Throwing those cases around under the Texas sun worked up an appetite.
By the time I left for college, my father stopped mumbling long enough to tell me I worked harder than my brother. He also told me to stay away from the sexo-maniacs. (Don’t ask me what that means. I still haven’t figured it out.)
I learned a lesson though. I talk to my son when we’re driving down the road. Now if I could only get him to listen.

Cancer Chronicles

I’m still going through stuff, deciding what to sell, give away or throw out. I’ve a couple of items I tried to sell but no one was interested. Now I’m trying to decide what to do with two statues of a naked man and woman locked in an embrace.
The first one was a wedding present from a woman who worked at the same newspaper I did when Janet and I married. It was a plaster reproduction of a Rodin sculpture. He did many variations on The Kiss. The woman had stained it a dark brown which made it look like it had been carved out of wood. For forty-four years the figurine sat in our bedroom and gave Janet and me plenty of giggles.
When our daughter married her first husband, the wedding was in the Bahamas. While we wandered through an open-air market Janet and I found an actual wood-carved figurine of a naked man and woman. This was not a Rodin look-alike but a Bahamian interpretation of a couple in love. The man was noticeably too skinny while the woman had an ample bosom and behind. We thought since our wedding present had brought us so much luck and pleasure we decided to buy this one for our daughter and her new husband.
Our daughter unwrapped it and said, “Oh great. My parents just gave us a pornographic statue.”
Perhaps providentially, that marriage ended in divorce. However, she and her new husband discreetly returned the figurine to us shortly after their wedding. Honestly, Janet and I were stumped over why they didn’t like the statue. I mean, it was made of real wood, like teak or something. Since then, the Bahamian couple joined the Rodin knockoff in our bedroom where we had twice the giggles and twice the fun.
Even though our house is overrun with stuff that needs to go, the two statues are staying. I think that’s what Janet would have wanted. I need the memories more than the couple of bucks I might get for them.
After I’ve passed on, my daughter can decide what to do with them.