Ode to a Small Town

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Schoolhouse

         We only lived there three and a half years.  I know that because my daughter, the realist, pointed it out to me on one of the many occasions when I was waxing poetic about the joy that was Birchrunville, PA.  But its importance in my  life makes that number seem impossible.  I loved that little town.  Still do.

         Wikipedia is rather dismissive of Birchrunville, describing it as “little more than a woodland crossroads in West Vincent Township in northern Chester County, PA. “

         But it was so much more to me and to my family.  First off, Birchrunville was – is – beautiful.  It has rolling hills and quiet lanes and cows and farms and, during our time there, a real live general store that housed the post office AND the one gas pump in town,  (no longer usable).

        That general store was the hub of the town.  I used to walk down in the early morning to have coffee with some of the folks who came by each day. 
        We’d sit and chat for a while over perfectly brewed coffee and homemade biscuits before going back to the real world where kids had to be taken to school and jobs had to be done.  But there was one picture that stays in my minds as fresh as the first time I saw it because to me, it pretty much summed up the heart of Birchrunville.  Each morning when I arrived for my cuppa, there were two vehicles parked in front of the store.  One was tractor…the other a Rolls.  I have always regretted not having taken a picture of those two contrasting machines.  They said so much about the town.

         Our next door neighbor was a dairy farmer.  I found that out on our first day there.  It was early morning and the rest of the family was still sleeping.  I opened the door for my first glimpse of this brand new world and there,, not three feet way from my door, stood a huge COW!  I bolted back inside and peeked out at the massive beastie…I’d never been that close to a cow before.  The cow was unperturbed.

         There was a knock at the door.  It was my neighbor, Mr. Pebbles, bringing me a gallon of milk – fresh squeezed – but I tried not to think about that.  My citified kids wouldn’t drink it…it didn’t look like the milk from the grocery store…there was cream on the top. 

         Mr. Pebbles also volunteered to bring us fresh vegetables whenever he was harvesting.  When corn was in season he’d pick the proper number of ears just in time for dinner.  I’ve never tasted corn like it – before or since.

One of the things that fascinated me most about living in the country-like atmosphere of Birchrunville, was the fact that seasons didn’t just happen, you had to do something about them.  When you lived in the country, there was stuff to be done.  Fences went up and came down depending on snow and wind and rain.  Crops had to be watered or harvested  or protected against extremes in weather – too hot or too cold and you had a problem, And, of course, those cows had to be milked.   My kids got involved in baling hay.  They thought it was fun.  The farmers never told them it really WAS work!

         There was even a turkey farm near by but all I knew about their activity was that turkeys aren’t very smart birds.  I know that because everyone said so.  Personally I thought they were every bit as smart as the local chickens.

         Snow time in Birchrunville was so glorious that it had to be seen to be believed.  The snow didn’t get all dirty and grey the way it does in the cities I’d always known.  It stays white and fluffy and disarmingly inviting.  My neighbor, the one with the cows, used to come looking for me after every snow storm…it seems I had a tendency to end up in a white ditch for some reason and Mr. Pebbles would ride around in his tractor until he found me. Then he’d drag me and my car out of the rut I’d managed to find, and follow me home.  That was thoughty.

         Our school house was located on a curve, on a hill, and when it snowed, that combination was kind of dangerous and many a night we had “drop-in” company when motorists would find there was just no way to get up that hill.  They would slide into our driveway and ring the bell.  Then, stranger or neighbor, they would hunker down for the night.  We got to know lots of nice folks that way.

         It is a fact, of course that, despite all the natural beauty – which can never be over rated – the true heart of the town was its wonderful people.  I made such good friends there.   I even had a Girl Scout Troop for a while and that was a wonderful experience.  The girls were just getting into their teens, a marvelous, perilous age.  And we managed to enjoy each other – a lot. I must admit that the fact that I had access to Dick Clark and American Bandstand DID make my popularity easier to achieve.

         Some of my former Girl Scouts still live in the area and we are in touch – even managed to meet once or twice after my family moved to California.  That was wonderful too.

         Actually, when I decided to write about Birchrunville, the first person I thought to contact was Sara Schick, one of those Girl Scouts I told you about. 

I thought I knew the date the school house was built, but I remember there was a kind of plaque engraved into the wall above the door that listed the builders AND that date.  I really wanted to list both those things.  So I emailed Sara, and she and a couple of her neighbors forwarded the information.  Thank you Rich and Karen and Sara..

         The date was 1863 and the names, which included not the builders but the members of the Board of Directors and the architect:  Charles Scheib, J. Walley, Cliff Emery, Hibberd Smith, Adison Wilson, Isaac Evans and C.F. Woodland.

I remember one occasion when, in the middle of a tremendous freeze, a call went around town that there were ducks frozen in the ice in a nearby pond.  I think the entire town turned out to help free the ducks.  Even the folks who would normally be out during hunting season were there, sliding across the ice, chopping the ice and soothing the nervous birds.  It’s my belief that everyone of those birds was freed and sent on its way.   If I’ve got that wrong, please, don’t tell me.

That little ponds always looked like a Currier and Ives painting to me.  I could imagine skaters waltzing around on that shimmering ice.  I could almost hear the music.

I had, as I said, many good friends there the Gordons and the McCoys of course, but one family in particular stays with me in my memories.  It is the Shoemakers.  Anne and Stowe and their lovely family were my anchor there.   And when I think of Birchrunville, I think of the times I spent with them.

Our children were close in age and so it was easy to go visit and take all the kids because their grounds were large and comfy and there was a pool that sometimes held water and sometimes didn’t. 

I loved their home.  It was always so cozy and welcoming and later, when I went back alone for a while, it was where I went first.  I was never a big outdoor person, but I am a great appreciator of people who do wonderful things with gardens.  And watching Anne and her son Donald work together to turn that garden into a thing of beauty just fascinated me.  Stowe, on the other hand would usually sit with me on the deck (which he and Donald built) and have a drink while we admired the worker bees. 

I have always described myself as an Apres Ski kind of girl.  You enjoy any sport or outdoor activity you like and I’ll meet you at the cafe later.

It is comforting to me that Donald and Diane still live in the wonderful home.  It has changed, of course.  They have done a splendid job making it their own and their two girls, Alex and Caroline, have grown up there…and I envy them that.

I don’t get back there any more.  But I haven’t left it behind.  I have pictures and I have memories.  And they are all lovely.

 

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I’m sorry this is late getting out.  I really hate to miss deadlines.  But honest, I have a compelling reason.  I did my first cabaret on the 15th and couldn’t seem to concentrate on getting both done to my satisfaction.  And allow me to gloat, (with absolutely no humility at all) that we had a turn-away crowd.  It was thrilling.

A HEALTHY LUNCH? I THINK NOT

WARNING:  I am about to pick at another grammatical nit that is driving me crazy.   If you really don’t care about that…shame on you!

The word is “HEALTHY”  As in:

I am about to eat a healthy lunch.

Now it is possible that you feel virtuous when you plan something that, in some minds, qualifies as “Healthy.’  If so, you have been led down the slippery slope of bad grammar.  You are at least guilty of imprecise usage.

For some reason, salads always seem to be described as “Healthy.”  But just stop and think about it.  The carrots you have carefully pealed and over which you have so lovingly drizzled the best Virgin Olive Oil offered at your local grocer’s, and the tomatoes that are frequently the product of your own vines are not healthy.

They are dead.

They have been dead since you plucked them from their snug little grip on life and sliced them in to attractive – but no longer healthy – pieces.

Your lunch is not healthy.  It is HEALTHFUL!   You, on the other hand, can expect to receive all kinds of wonderful nutrients from that healthful lunch that will lead YOU to a healthy future.

Are we all now on the same page?  You can look forward to a HEALTHY life with an assist from a HEALTHFUL lunch.

It’s all about nuances.  The world today seems dedicated to wiping out nuances and that is a shame.

I admit, that when people restrict their opinions to twitter-sized reactions, it is difficult to create a mood.   Think about it.

LOL.

When you type in LOL, are you really sitting alone at your computer laughing out loud?  Or are you maybe just grinning, or chortling or even chuckling?  Those are sort of gradations of LOL and most likely they are exactly what you do while reading little joke jewels from friends on Facebook.

I  hesitate here because there ARE a couple of LOLs  out there that offer a more complete, but monumentally inaccurate, description of your reaction to what is usually a pretty lame bit of humor.  You exercise your independence from LOL by LOLing while ROTF.  And while you are at it, you can occasionally add LMAO.

Do you really think that tells the story of your current activity?  Are you, after reading a joke, likely to find yourself Laughing Out Loud, While Rolling On the Floor AND Laughing Your Ass Off?  That is not only inaccurate, it sounds most uncomfortable.

WINTER’S  TALE by MARK HELPRIN

On the other hand, while dealing with the proper use of words, I am brought to a halt by “Winter’s Tale.”

This book – now film – is 760 pages of the most beautiful descriptive language I have ever read.  And yet…and yet I am not happy because, despite my determined attempts to love the book…I cannot.

I love the language. The emotion, the cities, the entire universes Mark Helprin manages to bring to life are so perfectly drawn, so brilliantly painted with the EXACT word needed to complete every picture.  I am fascinated by each character he introduces.

And still – YET?

According to my Kindle I am only about 33 1/3% through the book – which, by the way, I am determined to finish – if only to make sure I am correct about my thus far diminishing expectations.  But even a third of 760 should be enough to give you a fuller idea of – WHAT THIS BOOK IS ABOUT.

A plot.  My kingdom for a plot.  I know it’s in there somewhere.  But thus far, I haven’t found it.  All of my training and experience makes me believe that if you have to search for a plot, the author has somehow missed the point of a book.

I have read reviews of the book and found that a large percentage of the readers agree with this plaint.

Let me give you an example of the way Mr. Helprin creates a mood.  He talking about the main character who is walking around a well remembered city from long ago.

“…he found for himself a string of holy places (only one of which was a church) to which he could and did return time after time.  He sensed there what seemed to him to be the remnants of the truth and he returned to certain rooftops and alleys the way the lightning repeatedly strikes high steel towers is an argument between tenacity and speed.”

If you HAVE read “Winter’s Tale” and you loved it, will you please tell me why?  If you didn’t love it…tell me about that too.  Or just meet me at the theater and we’ll see what the film folk think it’s about.

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See you next month

 

Aside

What happened to last week?

 

I can’t find last week. 

It seems to have been here and gone before I knew it. It isn’t that I missed anything terrible dramatic – except, of course, the matter of paying a couple of bills and my grandson’s birthday

But it’s  just the idea that today is the 15th of the month, and therefore, I am required, okay, not required perhaps, but expected, to publish a Blog today.  And I look forward to doing that…but the 15th isn’t supposed to be here yet.

I am a stickler for being on time. Deadlines are sacred.  It is only common courtesy that you meet a friend at two o’clock if two o’clock is the time you agreed upon.  If the book report is due on Tuesday, it should be handed in on Tuesday.

 If you have a doctor’s appointment, the DOCTOR should be on time.  Or at least close to it.  I had one doctor who was chronically so late that I made an agreement with his secretary.  I would call about an hour before I was scheduled to show up.  She would tell me how far behind he was and I would actually show up at whatever time she gave me.  I finally decided that, no matter how good he was at what he did,  I deserved more respect than that.  His secretary and I are still friends. 

I live by a couple of time rules.  One of the first is that if you keep me waiting for more that 20 minutes and don’t think to call me to let me know about it, I only give you one shot.

My sister was one of the nicest people in the world – most of the time.  But she had no concept of the importance of time.  She was ALWAYS late.  For EVERYTHING.  It drove me nuts.  So, one time I was meeting her I determined to be late

The thing you have to understand at the beginning is that being late for anything makes me physically ill.  I really shred over it.  But I was determined,    I sat at home, reading a book that I couldn’t understand because my mind kept wandering to the idea of being late.  But finally the clock and I agreed that I could safely head out now and meet her.

As planned, I was late.  But she was later.  She arrived about 10 minutes after me, happily strolling toward our meeting place and giving me a happy, loving smile.  She had a fine dinner.  I got sick.

I’m not sure where I got this dedication to being on time, but I blame it on show business.  Show business is extremely unforgiving when it comes to time.

I agree with the old saw that “The Show Must Go On”, but I believe the line is too short.  It should say,  The show must go on – ON TIME.

I am ruthless in my condemnation when a Broadway Show – or my local NoHo theater shows for that matter – don’t start on time.  That has always seemed to me to be the height – or the depth of something or other.

I think it was Norman Lear who once told me that if a script hadn’t made him laugh within the first 17 second,  he didn’t bother reading the rest.  I rather like to think that was an exaggeration, but that’s what I was told.

       Early on in my California experience, I ran afoul of an unspoken, but almost universally observed, social law. One should NEVER, absolutely NEVER, show up at a party at 8:00 P.M. just because the invitation said that was when the party started. 

When you do that you are ALWAYS the first to arrive, and the least welcome of guests.  Frequently the host is still in his robe and can’t imagine why you are ringing the bell at that silly hour.  One only does that once.  Or maybe three times before one receives an anonymous note explaining why it’s a bed idea.

The fact is that I still act like people will arrive on time – which explains why, when I invite folks for dinner at eight and they come at nine, they are frequently served very, very, very overdone Lamb roast.

As  you have probably figured out by now, this is a rather lengthy explanation as to why there is no Blog this month.

Sorry. 

Aside

A Thinking Back Kind of Time

 

   There is definitely something about Christmas that starts memories flowing.  Not necessarily Christmassy memories…just family kinds of things.

   For some reason or other, this one came popping into my head the other day and it amused me mightily so I decided to share it with all of you, my lucky and indulgent readers.

   One after noon, many, many years ago, one of my boys came home from second grade class at St. Agnes’ School.  He said he had a question for me.

   Now I was determined to be one of those mothers who respected a child’s question.  If he could think of it, I would answer it. 

   “Right,” I said, sitting down next to him on the couch…”tell me your question.”  So he did.

   “What,” he said, “is  upholstery?”

   Not quite what I expected.  But okay.  If that was his question I would give it a shot.

   “Well,” I said, “Let’s look at this couch we’re sitting on.”  We did that.

   “First,” I explained, “The workman builds the inside of the couch.  Then he puts in springs and lots of padding so you can sit comfortably.  You with me so far.”

    He was.

   Okay, so far I’m a big success here.

  “Padding, you know, is just a bunch of heavy material that goes on the springs so they don’t poke you when you sit down.  It isn’t really pretty enough to want it in  your living room.  So the workman now takes some really nice fabric and adds it to the top of the couch.  Sort of like what we’re sitting on now.”

   He nodded and patted the couch reassuringly.  It’s pretty Mom.”

 

   I grinned back at him.  Delighted that my little lecture was so successful

   But then came the rest of the question.

   “So what,” Anthony ask, “does Sister mean when she says “Thou shalt not commit upholstery?”

 

                     ******************

 

       THE TALE OF THE HANGING CHRISTMAS TREE

 

   It all happened because I was too busy to go with the family to picked out the tree.  But it had to be done that day and the Father figure had agreed to supervise the choice.,

  You’d think I’d know better wouldn’t you?

   Anyway..the four kids and Daddy left to bring home the perfect tree.  Their instructions were clear.  Big and bushy, but not so bushy it won’t take ornaments.  Tall, but not so tall that it brushes the ceiling because we need room for the Angel.

   I had more instructions, but the natives were getting restless.  I wished them well and went back to unpacking the trimmings.

   Three hours later, tired but triumphant. The family returned dragging a big, beautiful, aromatic tree.

   From first glance I knew it was, indeed, perfect  But then they stood it up so I could see in in all its glory.

   They stood back and waited for my reaction.

   “It’s BENT” I said.

   They all began their protests at the same moment.            “What?  “What do you mean BENT?”  “It’s perfect.”

   The Father, who did not like arguments unless he started them, told everyone to stop immediately or he would throw the tree out the door.

   Silence reigned while we all stood and looked at the bent tree.  At this point Lancer, our beautiful German Shepherd joined the fray barking furiously and racing madly around the room. 

 

   He actually worried me more than the kids.  He was eyeing the tree as if it were an indoor fire hydrant.

   The kids stared at the tree and then at me…glumly.

   “What do you want to do about it Mm?”  one of them asked.

   The tree stood quite still..looking unloved and crooked.

   And that was when I had an epiphany.

   “We’ll hang it from the ceiling.  That way it will be  as straight as it can be, Lancer won’t be able to knock it  over and the cat probably won’t try to climb it.”

   And so it was done.

   We suspended the tree from the center of the cathedral ceiling in the family room where it swung free and sparkled every time Lancer raced under it, sending it spinning.

   I found it a logical and practical and beautiful solution.  The kids thought it was great because nobody else had a hanging Christmas tree.

   However…one of my neighbors stopped in to tell me that, while she, too,  liked the idea of the hanging tree, some others did not.

   She said I shouldn’t worry about it because she set them all straight,

“I just tell them, it’s okay, they’re in Show Business.”

 

Apparently that explains everything.

 

AND YOU WOULD LIKE TO SELL ME WHAT?

AND YOU WOULD LIKE TO SELL ME WHAT?

I always kind of took it for granted that I understood what people expected when they bought advertising space – whether on paper, on line or on television They were planning to sell someone something. Right?
Apparently that’s just a sidebar to some really, really clever word and picture play, prepared, I don’t doubt for a moment, by some very happy, fun-loving men and women, who enjoy their work – a lot.
In all honesty, I think some of the minute stories presented in the name of advertising, are among the cleverest of the digital world. There’s just one problem.
What are they selling?
Think about it. Are we supposed to rush out and buy a particular insurance because some cute little lizard-like thing thinks we should? Or maybe you lean toward a loud-mouthed duck? Neither explains to me why I should give up my already satisfactory insurance and run out to follow their lead.
Way back when I first started noticing that I didn’t even know what the product was, there was The Car That Zigged. A year into that ad, a friend who owned one of those car told me he had just recently figured out they were selling the car he already had. But, since neither of us was really enticed by zigging, we didn’t go out to buy it.
More currently, there is the ad of the Flying Car Doors. It starts with a young (of course,) ,pretty (of course) young woman standing beside her car which has apparently just had its door ripped off.
We go from that to a picture of a young man standing looking confused, watching car doors fly by. Did I mention he was pretty too? Well, he was.. Now back to the flying doors – which, by the way, are now white, even tho the original car that lost its doors was black. Apparently there was an epidemic of lost doors.
After several concentrated moments of watching the doors, we finally see a Cadillac – black again – which roars into the picture in all its normal grandeur. Granted, I know the name of the product. But then I knew that before I saw the ad. Now, however, I’ve lost respect for the company’s judgment
Oh, here’s a good one. You may really want to run out and buy one of these cars after watching one of them drive onto a beach, and four bikini-clad girls – gorgeous,( of course) – get out, giggling and tugging at their bikini bottoms, while the camera hones in on a ugly crab-like being that has apparently spent a part of the journey, nibbling on their butts,
Okay – so we have four itchy ladies and a VERY content crab creature. But would that sell you a car?
“But wait” – as the shill says – “There’s More!”
There is that series about a cow – a very big, nasty, not house-trained cow that shows up in milk commercials. I have seen him in the bathtub and on the table in the dining room., Even playing poker with the lads. Some of the pictures are cute – if unexplainable – but would they convince you that what you need when you find a cow in your home is a drink -of MILK?
For some reason, advertisers seem to gravitate toward stupid people. Usually a husband. Or they just adore pushy clients like those who take heartless advantage of helpful salesmen who don’t have enough common sense to say no when someone asks them to play the part of a football dummy or move a washing machine single handedly. That one is a favorite. The poor idiot guy tries his best to move the washing machine for the little lady, but when he ends up under it, she makes sure the machine is okay so she won’t have to sue him for dropping it. Again: WHAT? Why would (a) a man, however well intentioned – try to lift a washer, when he knows the best result he can expect is a hernia – or (b) Why would you, as a customer, ever ask someone to do such an impossible task as an inentive to buy their car?
Okay, I know these are not intended to portray real situations, but they ARE supposed to inspire me to run out and buy the product.
There are so many, too many, commercials interrupting my Facebook experience or my Big Bang joy, that I resent the fact that they don’t even seem to remember their purpose.
Get on board guys. Intelligent people buy your products. A little respect please.
Oh, right. There IS one more. And this one to really hard to believe. I don’t remember what was being sold. I think it’s about getting legal help in a lawsuit. But it goes like this:
“If you have recently suffered a heart attack or EVEN SUDDEN DEATH, you may be eligible for…

CLICK!

Aside

A WORD IS AS POWERFUL AS WE MAKE IT

 

I have often been told, “a word is just as powerful as we let it be.”  I think it was one of George Carlen’s arguments against what he saw as a prudish, unrealistic objection to words that many people found repugnant. He felt that, if everyone just took the words up and accepted them they would loose their power.  They would just fade away than then people could go back to speaking more pleasantly.

I disagreed with him.  Those treasured four letter words that he defended so vehemently were created expressly to be – well – unpleasant, and, as soon as they loose their ability to offend, people discover – or invent – others.

So I take frequent stands against what I see (and hear) as vulgarity.  I let it be known that I do not appreciate it.  Actually I find it lazy and dull.  There are so many marvelously insulting words in the English language already available if folks would just learn enough to use them well.        

An example:  I was married to a very short man.  He made Napoleon and his complex seem tame.  His whole world was affected by his lack of height.

We fought – a lot.  But in all those fights I managed to avoid the one word that I knew would kill him.  I never called him “little.” 

It would have ended with me winning the battle, but it would have destroyed my opponent and I didn’t really want to do that.  No four letter word could have done that for me – or to him.

On the other hand, there are words that are perfectly good words that have been corrupted into being accusatory, pejorative, and/or insulting when they really shouldn’t be.

I remember reading an interview in which Harry Belafonte was asked how he felt about being described as a “tall, handsome black man.”  He said that he would prefer to be thought of as tall and handsome without the BLACK.

Admittedly I have never experienced being black.  And being white doesn’t often come up as an accusation.  At least not in my part of the world.

Mr. Belafonte heard black as  – what – limiting?  Pejorative?  Condescending?     It certainly has been used frequently as all those things.

On the other hand, if a tall slender, magnificent blonde walked in to a room, no one would leave out the word blonde in describing her.  It is part of the whole picture and is sometimes helpful.

 

I remember one time I was asked to meet a producer friend of a friend of mine.  She told me his name was Alan and he was VERY tall.  VERY good looking.  VERY talented.

What she didn’t tell me was that the man was black.  It really would have made it a whole lot easier to identify him as the gorgeous black man sitting two tables down who smiled at me rather tentatively several times before coming over to ask If I were, by chance, Betty?  And was I waiting for Alan.  In which case, here he was!

I ran in to this sensitivity while I was teaching script writing at Temple University in Philadelphia.  We were looking through some old scripts and one of my students – a black student – called my attention to a description of a guest on the show as “BLACK”

Why, he wanted to know, would they point out that the actor was black?  Would they do that if it were a white actor?

I was able to tell him that, if the show were predominately a black show then the introduction of a character who was white would definitely be noted.

It wasn’t an accusation, just part of the description.

Later, I ran into another variation on this theme while working on a Jewish newspaper.  I used the word Jew in a headline.

WRONG!  The acceptable word was Jew-ish.  Same reasons, different presentation.

The word Jew was seen as – what – limiting?  Pejorative?  Accusatory?

Well, yes. Through history the word  Jew has certainly been used in an inflammatory way. So now a Jew is Jew-ish.

How sad.

It is a word that should bring to mind amazing discoveries in the worlds of medicine, music, science, religion…name it, you will find Jews right there at the top of the heap..

My point, which I have been around the barn a couple of times before reaching, is that these terms must go back to being accepted as descriptive.  If the person being described as Black, or Jewish, or Catholic, or Latino etc refuse to recognize it as anything less than a compliment, people who hate will have to look elsewhere for their targets.

At least it’s a place to start.

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Aside

     A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON MY WAY TO THE RODEO

 

Apparently my mention of  cowboys and rodeos last month, tweaked some interest on the part of my much appreciated readers.

Mine too.

I really did enjoy the time I spent all dressed up in a bright blue, beautifully embroidered (what I considered) western shirt and  riding pants and boots with slanted heels.  We knew the attire was authentic  because we all bought it from Rodeo Ben…Philadelphia’s version of “dresser to the star cowboys.”

I didn’t arrive at the rodeo bronco ready.  I also didn’t leave the rodeo bronco ready.  At least I was too smart to try that.  But the rest of the stuff I really loved.

It happened like this.

My father, Jack Steck, was kind of Mr. Philadelphia Show Business for a long, long time, and one of the many stops along the way was a Country Western RADIO show which he hosted every Friday night for about three years in the Town Hall in Philadelphia.  Father dubbed it Hayloft Hoedown.

There was a cast of – well, not thousands – but definitely 45 –  singers, dancers, comedians and relatives.  We relatives just sort of lolled around the stage, sat on bales of straw and looked authentic.  We also laughed loudly at the comedians – funny or not – and applauded frantically for the singers and dancers.  I had fun, but I did feel a mite underappreciated.  I even practiced a yodel but no one ever asked me to use that particular talent..

When my big shot at stardom happened, I was – well –  ill prepared is way understated.

You see, I never mastered the one basic talent I needed most.  That ability to admit I didn’t know something.  So, when the leader of the square dancers asked me if I could square dance I said “Sure.  Why?”

I should have asked that question first.  Turns out one of the ladies was pregnant and couldn’t dance that night…or for the foreseeable future.  So would I like to sub?

All right.  I can and could at the time do almost any kind of dance.  And since these fellows had been dancing for many years, I figured I could follow them anywhere.

I was wrong.  Dancing on stage?  Yes…but when I found out that the question included on doing the same dance on horse back…well, I should had said something like “Are you out of your mind?

 

But, of course, what I said was “Sure,”

Which explains why, for the next week, I spent a whole lot of hours racing through the woods of New Jersey, learning to control a dancing horse.  After all, one can’t make one’s debut as a rodeo rider until she at least knows which end of the Sleepy Hollow Ranch arena is marked off for her entrance.

I must explain here that I was not a total novice at riding.  After all, I was a graduate of Notre Dame High School in Moylan, PA, and one of our options was learning to ride a horse.  English style, of course.  As I remember it, the western saddle was treated with scorn and condescension, and I admit that riding one was a great deal like sitting in a rocking chair.  However, I stopped acting haughty about the skill involved when I learned that my insistence on saying “Yes, I Can!” was going to take me down some long and winding roads…like the one with the barrels at either end of the arena where we would dash madly one way, switch horses without touching the ground and race madly back to where we came from.

Do we need to discuss the number of spills I took learning how to do that?

No we do not.

We also don’t need to discuss the relay races or flag twirling.  We could mention that at any given moment, some part of my body was bluer than that shirt I told you about.

The fact is, that with all that practice and all the racing around,  I probably got more strange looks and requests for photographs when I was walking the Brahma Bull down to the lake for water.

That was my off-stage job at Sleepy Hollow.   Everyone took turns at the various behind the scenes duties, and this just happened to be mine.  The thing is, the lake we headed for was off the Ranch grounds and unsuspecting motorists who suddenly came upon a girl in a cowboy outfit and a bull apparently out for a stroll, were understandably shaken.

He was a good natured animal as bulls go I guess, but the thing you had to learn was that a Brahma Bull WILL NOT BE HURRIED.  To say that we strolled was like speed warp.  If we’d traveled any more slowly we would have been backing up.

On the program the bull was called something really provocative – like Devil’s Horn or something…But in private we referred to him as Pansy.  He was a sweet heart.  Just slow.  I think the fact that he tied up whoever had the job of walking him was what kept people from volunteering for other competitions.  On the other hand, as far as I was concerned, it kept other people from volunteering me for any other events.

 

 

WORD OF THE MONTH

 

I used the words “in camera” recently and someone in the group challenged me as to its authenticity.  It’s really a rather  lovely phrase meaning in a chamber or in private – secretly.

I realize it is not used frequently but it shouldn’t be unknown.  There are so many wonderful words out there just going to waste as we hurl ourselves into the slippery habit of using the shortest, and frequently the ugliest, words we can come up with at a given moment.

Remember, the more words you know, the more effective you can be whether you are being loving or scathingly insulting…the choices are almost endless…you just have to know what’s available to you. 

Aside

      
DINNER IS SERVED!
 
     I’ve spent a lot of time recently considering how the world has changed in the past few years.  The big subjects are very obvious.
Transportation for example.
     I made my first cross-country flight from my home in Philadelphia to California, in a prop plane!  Anyone but me ever ridden in a prop plane?  It’s a very different experience. And VERY slow as compared with leaving on a jet plane.
    Actually, that wasn’t my first plane trip.  I made my virgin excursion (had to use the phrase, I love it – virgin excursion.  Yep.  Still like that sound.) riding in a two-seater with one of the cowboys I mentioned in a story about rodeo riding.  If I didn’t, I will in a later Blog.
     Anyway, we were working a rodeo together and the guy mentioned he’d just gotten his pilot’s license and his wife wouldn’t fly with him.  Would I?  But of course I would.
     Apparently he thought he was still taming a Brahma bull and he rode that critter nearly to death.  But it was one of the most exhilarating experiences of my life,  We buzzed the rodeo and waved at the  cowering crowd.  It was great!  And yes, I would do it again in a heart beat.  
Communication:
    
I remember having a “Party-line” telephone. That meant we shared our phone line with at least one other family,  Sometimes we had two sharers which meant the best thing we could hope for was that they had no long winded relatives who would tie up the line for hours, chit-chatting about stuff that wouldn’t/couldn’t,  be half as exciting as the stuff we wanted to chat about.
     We moved on from that to a private line, which made my family one of the elite. Being VERY thoughtful people, we were careful not to point out the discrepancies in our situations. “OH, we would say with just a note of pity slipping thorough the thoughtful line, “you STILL have a party line?   Oh yes, I remember them. We used to have one.”
     The thing about party lines was that you could hear everything the other parties had to say, so the phone was a marvelous way to get information around without actually telling the story yourself. So if you did something wonderful you could expect the news to turn up someplace where everyone would learn about what a nice, clever, thoughtful, soul you really were without you ever having to point it out yourself.
     Now days I carry my phone with me.  It tells me everything I want – or don’t want – to know.  Like the time in Tokyo or what that Beiber(?) person did with his car last night.          On the other hand, it also allows everyone – I mean EVERYONE – to follow your every move.  If you doubt me, call your local government.
DINNER IS SERVED
    
However, the one thing I have been thinking about that really hits home about the societal changes in my world, are the words “Let’s get together for dinner!”
     When I was a kid, getting together for dinner meant just one thing.  You would be coming to my house for dinner.  And there would be plates!  Real, china plates that had to be washed by hand because the dishwasher was still a dream machine.
We had special plates for dinner when guests were coming.  For one thing, they all matched!  Okay, they might have been Depression Ware Pink, but they were ALL Depression Ware Pink!  That was a true sign of class!
     And dinner would be special.  For one thing, it might be the only time in the month that you ate actual meat.  We ate a lot of gravy that came in little packets that had to be mixed with water.  It was Beef-Flavored and we served it over bread which cost five cents a loaf.
     But the thing was, when you were invited to dinner, you knew you were special.  That the inviters cherished your company.  It was a lovely sensation.
     If you were a kid, it also meant you had to be on your best behavior,  No getting up and down and running around the house.  No  playing with the radio or any of that nonsense.  You were there for dinner and Dinner you should have. And enjoy.  That was one of the rules.
     I particularly remember one grand evening when my Mother invited our rich friends (the Kennedys) over.  Our whole family prepped for weeks.
     We had good manner drills and polite “speak only when spoken to” drills.   And drills on how not to slurp soup!
     And then there was dessert!  For this particularly grand occasion, Mother invested in ECLAIRS…otherwise known as “heaven on earth.”  And she warned us that the éclairs came with forks and we were not to say “Ooooh what are the forks for!”  So we didn’t.
     However, my father occasionally had a skewed sense of humor and when the éclairs were served he said loudly “What is it we’re not to say?   Wait – Oh yes, I remember.  We can’t say ‘OOOh what are the forks for.”
Everyone at the table laughed heartily except Mother.  I had the feeling she would never smile again.
     Anyway, I miss those important dinners.  I enjoy the picnic atmosphere and I am aware that a perfectly grilled steak or chicken served on paper plates is hard to beat.  But I would like to go back to an occasional EVENT-type dinner invitation, where all parties, including the kid, have to be present in the room as opposed to MIPA – Missing in Phone Action.

                      *************  
     On to my WORD of the month:  This time it’s about a word I really, really dislike.  It’s SOLIPSISM. According to my dictionary the word suggests that “the self is the only existent thing.”  Doesn’t that sound small minded?
     On a happier word-note…last night I heard a word I like but seldom use. The word is CHIMERA and I came across it many years ago while taking a brief plunge into Greek mythology.  There, chimera is a fire-breathing she monster having a lion’s head, a goat’s body and a serpent’s tail, not exactly warm and fuzzy.  These days you can find a more modern use for the word as an illusion or an unrealized dream.  It truly does come “trippingly to the tongue.”  I don’t remember who I’m quoting but I know I didn’t make that up.
 
By the way, if you come across a word that you have never heard before or a word that conveys something special to you, let me know and I’ll add it to my list.  Thank you all for reading.
 
                                    BETTY

 

Aside

THAT”S JUST PLAIN STUPID!

 

          I might have mentioned at some point, that I was getting a new – make that a different – car.  It’s a Kia and I’m liking it just fine. 

IN honor of this occasion, I have decided that I will hone my driving skills in order to guard against all those strange bumps and bruises that seem to appear almost magically once the car belongs to you.

         Among friends who have ridden with me, I am not noted for my patience.  I don’t like to be challenged on the road and am a bit quick to take offense.

I swore to myself that this time would be different. 

This time I would remain calm and controlled and avoid  aggressive drivers who, like me, react badly to real or imagined challenges of the road.. 

This time I would observe all the rules…use the turn indicator as needed, observe the speed limits whenever possible, stuff like that.

         Then I ran afoul of the law about  keeping one car length between you and the car ahead of you for every 10 MPH you are traveling..

         Really? 

Have you ever tried to do that on a freeway when all the cars are doing 70 or more MPH and jockeying for space?

I tried.  I really tried, but all I succeeded in doing was reinforcing something I (subliminally) already knew.

IT IS IMPOSSIBLE! 

Every single time I slowed down to allow the car in front of me to reach the proper distance of at least six car-lengths ahead, seven drivers from on either side of me, would speed up and jockey to fill the room.  Most of them seemed to be swearing at me for one reason or another.

I studied the problem from many angles.

Perhaps, if I just kept a steady 65 MPH this thing would automatically work itself out.  It didn’t.  It DID manage to infuriate other drivers who wanted to be doing 75.

Perhaps if I adjusted my speed and went a bit more slowly…but no, those others drivers seemed to resent that at least as much as the steady pace.

Then, rather unexpectedly the other day, the pace slowed.  With no visible cause, we were all coasting at about 20 MPH.  Then 10 – and then…no miles at all.

There was no explanation available.  I checked the radio but they didn’t’ seem to know yet that the 101 was in crisis. 

So we sat.

Suddenly the irate drivers who’d been so hell bent on getting to the head of the non existent line were glancing around making questioning gestures, throwing up their hands in mock despair. 

But friendly. 

We were all in it together.

Until we weren’t.

Just as suddenly as it stopped, the mass began to move again.

I tried waiting until the car ahead of me got a six car start.

Again, all the once friendly co-captives began blasting their horns and sweeping past me, obviously mouthing words I didn’t want to hear.

So I gave up.  It is my considered, and reasoned opinion, that the only way to obey that law is by backing up.  And, while I didn’t consult their damn book, I bet that’s against some law too!

                  ######################

I’ve got a new word for the month.  I don’t remember ever even seeing this word let alone using it in a sentence.  It’s LOUCHE. 

I came across it yesterday while reading AT HOME  A Short History of Private Life by Bill Bryson, and, according to my dictionary it means disreputable or of doubtful morality.

You’re welcome.

                  #######################

 

 

 

 

 

 

HARDLY A WORD WAS SPOKEN I spend a lot

Aside

HARDLY A WORD WAS SPOKEN

 

I spend a lot of my life in thrift shops.

 

Wait, let’s start over.  I spend too much of my life in thrift shops.  It’s kind of an addiction.  But I get some of the best buys in the world.

 

My favorite shop at the moment is one run by the Council of Jewish Women. Actually, there are several of them near me.  I love them all and they love me.

 

Most recently I was at the one in Van Nuys, searching for some summery blouses among the group marked SHORT SLEEVE BLOUSE  $5.00 AND UP.

 

The spaces between the racks holding all these treasures is very small, and you almost always literally bump into someone coming up the aisle you are going down.

 

Now this can be a pleasant experience or a  nasty one, frequently, I believe, depending on how successful your trip has been so far.  At the moment, I was not doing too well.

 

The woman earnestly searching her way toward me argued against this idea.  She picked up and put back each item thatKcaught her eye, never quite finding whatever she was looking for.

 

Once or twice I watched her linger over  a particular blouse, obviously hoping things would improve.  They didn’t.  At least not while I was watching.   But she kept smiling.  Inevitably we met and some had to give.  So we did that little dance where we both moved alright, always in the same direction.

 

But she kept right on smiling, so I did too.  I was certainly not going to be your typically unpleasant bargain hunter.  We finally worked it out.  Silently, grinning like Krazy Kat.

 

She reached out and picked up another pretty blouse, and this time she looked SO pleased.  She liked it.   Very lightly, she touched my arm.  She held out the chosen piece and ask what I thought.  (At least I hoped that was what she was doing because she spoke only Spanish, while I on the other hand knew only two phrases in Spanish:  “¿Dónde está el baño de damas and cuánto cuesta?)

 

Neither seemed to fit the occasion.  She as waiting.  She asked again.  The pressure was mounting.

 

Bueno? I ventured?

 

That did it.  She practically swooned she was so happy.  I, on the other hand, in fear of the idea that she might think I knew what I was saying, would continue the conversation, fled to the comparative safety of the  LONG SLEEVE WOMEN’S BLOUSES $6.00 AND UP aisle.

 

Things didn’t get better for me.  I wasn’t even slightly tempted to buy anything.   Which is not a good thing.  I really, really love finding something lovely hidden in the dross.

 

If I didn’t know how pleasant I just insist upon being, I would have to describe my mood as  – GRUMPY.

 

Until…

 

Another light touch on my arm, and there she weas again, beaming a  me.   She was holding out a lovely pink and grey,, long-sleeved dress.

 

I said Bueno again and hoped for the best and she said “Si.”  But she didn’t go away.  She held out the dress to me.  She gestured and postured and almost bowed until I understood.  The dress was meant for me!

 

This time she actually did bow and she took hold of my arm and lead me toward the mirror on the wall.  She pointed to the mirror.  She pointed at me.  She pointed at the dress and she bowed again.  Still beaming.

 

I took the dress.  I held it up to me and it was lovely.  I checked the size.  It was a four!  Okay…I haven’t been a size four since the day after I was born.  I stopped smiling at the mirror.   I stopped smiling at the lady.  I tried to hand the dress back to her.  But her eyes lost their sparkle and her face didn’t beam any more,  She looked so sad.

 

I checked the price.  $8.00.  A small price to pay for someone’s joy, I thought.  I figured I could buy the dress.  She would continue to be happy.  I would continue to be flattered that she thought I could fit into it.  That’s a lot of happiness for eight bucks.  I could redonate next week.

 

But wait, as the saying goes…there’s more.

 

I brought the dress home, and just on a whim, I tried on the pretty size four.  It fit.  I stood and stared at the lady in the mirror.  It was still moi, but I was WEARING A SIZE FOUR dress.

 

Expect to see a lot of this dress,  I may only take it off every now and again to have it cleaned.  Did I mention that for the eight bucks I got a pure silk dress from China?  Well is was and I did. 

 

You may not get to see all the delicate detail of the design because I plan to wear the dress in-side-out.  Because this time the beauty isn’t in the eye of the beholder,  It’s in the heart of a size eight woman wearing a size four dress that fits.

 

                                    ************

 

                            IN SEARCH OF CIVILATION

 

As you have probably noticed if you’ve read more than one of these Blogs, I am not inclined to take on deep, gloomy topics.  There are enough people doing that already.

 

However

 

Right.  Spoiler alert.  I am about to get – DEEP.

 

I love the English language.  I find it colorful and even beautiful sometimes.  But those times are growing dramatically  fewer.

 

Since starting on Facebook I have been delighted by some of the things people get excited about.  Animals.  The scenery that surrounds them.  Their families.  A trip to The Canyon.  All kinds of things.

 

But I have also been appalled at the hate that I read everyday – the name calling where which people of all persuasions feel free to vilify anyone who takes a view opposite their own.

 

Theoretically we agree that free speech is one of the world’s – our world’s – great gifts.  But we only seem to want it for folks who think as we think.,  Everyone else is fair game.

 

Believe me, abusing the opposition is no way to make someone see the reasonable, clear headed, rational being you are. It just reinforces something they already think they know about you:  That you are narrow-minded, opinionated and unwilling to listen to any beliefs but your own.

 

 

AMEN.