Sunday, August 31, 2008

Green green grass of home


I laid on the couch so long watching sports this afternoon I was in danger of getting bed sores, so I finally decided to get off my lazy butt and go cut the grass.

We don’t “mow the lawn” where I come from, we cut the grass. And I actually enjoy doing it. It’s good exercise, and it has given me an incredibly sexy farmer’s tan. I suppose I could do it with my shirt off, but I’d have to sell tickets to all the ladies in the neighborhood.

Stop laughing.

My grandmother, who just turned 97, told me not long ago that she hated it when she finally got too old to cut her own grass, because she liked the feeling of accomplishment she always got when she finished. She’s right. I can go to work and sit in meetings and listen to conference calls all day and go home feeling like I didn’t really do a durned thing.

But when I finish cutting the grass, I can stand there and gaze at it proudly, admiring the neatly-cut lines, the smooth surface of the grass, and my chest swells with pride. Michelangelo probably felt the same way when he finished painting the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. The difference is, he didn’t have to do it again one week later.

I take a lot of pride in how my yard looks, and I tend to think unfavorably about a man who lets his get to looking bad. There are many such people in my own neighborhood, including my next door neighbor, who is either agoraphobic or allergic to the sun. His grass gets so high, you could hide bowling balls in there.

Then there are the neighbors up the street who do cut the grass, except for the patch under the car that has been sitting in their front yard for, oh, two months. Perhaps this is a custom in their home country, along with leaving the Christmas decorations up past Valentine’s Day.

I use a push mower, since my yard isn’t all that big, but it makes me feel like less of a man, because a real man needs a good riding lawn mower. I recall the first time my dad let me cut the grass on our riding mower. I felt all grown up, and it was like I was driving a car, except it only went about 3 miles per hour. It was a thrill to get up on that thing and go around the yard.

Then we moved to the country, and the size of our yard grew exponentially. My mother always said my daddy had “taken in too much yard,” and she was right. It took a good three hours to cut that grass, even on a souped-up mini tractor with a blade attachment. The thrill was gone.

I do about 90 percent of the grass-cutting at my house, occasionally “allowing” my son to help out. My wife never cuts the grass, nor do I want her to. I have a few firmly-held principles, and one of them is you don’t let your woman cut the grass. This may be sexist of me, but she’s never complained.

It’s not that I don’t think she could handle it, I just don’t believe in it. Now, occasionally, when you’re riding through the country, you’ll see a redneck woman up on a riding lawn mower wearing her Rebel flag bikini, and I suppose that’s all right. But for the most part, it should be a man’s job. I will let her blow the clippings off the driveway once in awhile. Never let it be said I’m not magnanimous.

I do some of my best thinking when I’m out there cutting the grass. I was lost deep in thought one day several years ago, and didn’t realize I had just run the mower over a yellow jackets’ nest in the ground on the side of the house. About 20 stings later, I hopped back outside, cranked her up and finished the job.

Can’t have the neighbors thinking bad about me, you know.

Friday, August 29, 2008

Drivin' and cryin'


“Tonight, tonight, the highway’s bright, out of our way mister, you’d best keep
The summer's here and the time is right for racing in the street”
– Bruce Springsteen, Racing in the Street

Ah, yes. There’s nothing like the lure of being behind the wheel of a car out on the open road, wind in your hair, freedom in your eyes.

It is a notion that has been romanticized by some of my favorite songwriters. In Thunder Road, Springsteen writes “So roll down the window and let the wind blow back your hair, well the night’s busting open, these two lanes will take us anywhere.” Tom Petty sang about it in Running Down a Dream, and Mark Knopfler’s Speedway at Nazareth is one of the best driving songs ever.

But none of those guys has to commute into downtown Atlanta every day. Trust me, I do it, and it has sucked every bit of romance out of being behind the wheel.

I drive in about 25 miles each way, every day. It takes about an hour in the mornings, usually a little less coming back home. And it is a miracle every day that I arrive home safely, because the highways are filled with morons, miscreants and homicidal maniacs.

I have seen people do all of these things while driving: Text message, watch a DVD, read the newspaper, take notes on a legal pad, eat a salad, apply makeup, and a few things you normally only seen done in a car on HBO’s “Taxicab Confessions.” It is disturbing.

There are all sorts of crazy drivers out there. I enjoy the people who, in heavy traffic, like to change lanes constantly, weaving in and out, even though you can see that cars are bumper-to-bumper for five miles ahead. Through all of their maneuvering, they generally get to their destination about one second faster than if they had just stayed in one lane.

Then there’s the “This left lane is just for me even though I’m going 15 miles per hour slower than everybody else” crowd. There’s a special place reserved in hell for these folks.

And of course, you have the tailgaters. These people believe they need to stay so close to the car in front of them that you couldn’t slide a credit card between the bumpers. How there aren’t a thousand wrecks a day on I-75 between my house and Atlanta, I’ll never know.

One morning, I was driving an Oldsmobile Cutlass and I was right downtown, in morning rush hour traffic, when it died on me. Seems the alternator had crapped out, so there I was, sitting helplessly until the police could come. And how did my wonderful Atlanta fellow travelers react to my plight? By sitting on their horns, shooting me birds, and rolling down their windows to call me every dirty name in the book.

I’m not exaggerating. Osama Bin Laden would have been treated nicer than those people were to me. What did they think, that I broke down there on purpose? I gotta tell you, it kind of hurt my feelings.

I once calculated how many hours every week I sit in traffic, and it depressed me so much I never did it again. I could have used that time to write the great American novel, or work myself into tip-top shape, or figure out that little golf-tee game they have on the table at Cracker Barrel restaurants.

There are days when I get ready to leave work, and I just sit in the minivan for a few minutes without cranking it up because I dread getting into that traffic. Then I have to leave, in part because the air conditioning only works when the car is moving, and if I sit there much longer I’ll melt like the Nazis at the end of "Raiders of the Lost Ark."

There’s been talk of putting a high-speed commuter train down my way, but I’ll be retired before that ever happens. So I’ll just keep on sucking it up, wading into that sea of traffic every morning and every afternoon, and pray the Lord my soul to keep.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

This old house

The house where I grew up was an average sized one-story red-brick ranch house in northern Spalding County, about 40 miles south of Atlanta. It wasn’t the country, and it wasn’t in town, and it wasn’t in a suburb.

I guess you’d just call it a neighborhood, but it didn’t have a pretentious name like Forest Trace or Falcon Glen. I see a lot of neighborhoods with words like “glen” or “trace” in their names. I don’t even really know what a glen is.

The house was on the corner of Vineyard Road and a short, dead-end road that was called Vineyard something, though there wasn’t a vineyard within 10 miles of there. I remember the dead-end road because it featured a tremendously steep hill, which I used to ride my bike up and down. It took me years of trying before I was strong enough to pedal all the way to the top without having to stop.

We moved from that house when I was 15, and many years later, I decided to ride by and see how things looked. I was shocked to discover that the hill, the Mount Everest of my memory, was really barely a hill at all. It was nothing more than a slight grade. How could this be?

The road was paved now. It had been only gravel when I lived there. You don’t see many gravel roads anymore. If you ride a bike shirtless, as I mostly did, a gravel road is a most unpleasant place to wipe out on your bike. I still get queasy when I think of the time I went flying over the handlebars and skidded down the road on my scrawny bare chest. I was a walking scab for about two weeks.

When I revisited my old house, everything seemed smaller. The backyard, where I set Whiffle ball records that will never be broken (all without the aid of steroids, I might add) seemed half the size I remembered. The ditch I used to jump over with my bike no longer seemed as deep and wide as the Snake River Canyon. The world can seem like such a big place when you’re small.

I dream almost once a week that I’m back in that house. I never dream about any other house where I’ve lived – it’s always that one. Maybe that’s the period of my life I most want to re-live.

I remember that my mama used to fuss all the time that the kitchen was too small. “There ain’t enough room in here to turn around twice,” she would say. I wanted to show her that it could be done, but she wasn’t the kind of person you disputed, so I always wisely let it go.

One of my strongest memories of that house is of Sunday mornings. Even though I would grumble and complain about having to take a bath and get ready for church, I was comforted by the sounds and smells Sunday would always bring – bacon sizzling in the kitchen, gospel music playing on the radio (“You’re invited to the gospel jubileeeeeee..”), my dad tying his tie and smelling like Old Spice after-shave. The bacon smelled a lot better than the Old Spice.

I don’t like to go by the house anymore, because it makes me sad. Some obviously trashy people have lived there in recent years and let the house go to hell. The last time I went past, the yard that was always kept up so nice was weedy, the gutters were hanging off the house, and there were so many rusted cars scattered around the backyard, I expected to see Fred Sanford and Lamont walk out at any minute.

It doesn’t matter. They can’t take away it looks and feels in my memory, or in my dreams. Maybe I’ll go there tonight. I hope there’ll be bacon!

Saturday, August 23, 2008

Return to sender


If you ever want to accomplish anything in life, you have to learn to deal with rejection.

This is especially true if you want to be a writer. A couple of years ago, I completed a novel titled Brother to Brother. It’s set in the south, and it features a lot of characters with rough edges, and some humorous (I thought) scenes, and it took me about three years off and on to finish.

My friend Sam Starnes, an accomplished (and published) author in his own right, reviewed my manuscript for me and gave me a lot of helpful suggestions. I started getting up at 5 a.m. to write and work on it for a couple of hours before I’d go to work. I read parts of it to my writers’ group and got a great reaction. I sent the first 100 pages off to a contest and, though I didn’t win, got a nice critique back that said it was definitely publishable.

So, I bundled up my 300-page manuscript, dove into the process of getting it published, and began dreaming of my days of Grisham-like success. Wonder who will direct the movie version? What should I wear when I appear on Letterman? Should I buy a beach house or a mountain retreat with all the money I’m going to make, or both?

I’m sure you can guess the rest of the story. I’ve been rejected more than the president of the high school chess club. But I’m not whining. I realize this happens to almost everybody who tries to write. A lot of successful writers got rejected dozens, even hundreds, of times before they were discovered.

I gave a reading once from my manuscript at a conference in Atlanta. A guy from a publishing house was there and came up to me and told me he enjoyed it, and he’d like to see the rest of my manuscript. I was of course fired up, and sent it off to him immediately. He wrote me back and said thanks for sending it, and he was looking forward to reading it in the coming weeks and he would get back to me.

This was in May. Of 2006.

I called him and e-mailed him a few times, but he seems to have vanished from the face of the Earth. Perhaps he’s been kidnapped. Or maybe it’s like when you’re younger and you’re interested in a girl who isn’t interested in you, so instead of hurting your feelings she just avoids you, hoping you’ll get the message. You know, just give it to me straight. I don’t want to go out with you. Your book sucks. I can take it. At least I’d have some closure.

Of course, it’s hard to tell if agents and publishers think my book sucks, because the biggest obstacle is getting someone to read it. Publishers generally just want to hear from agents. Agents don’t want to see your book, they want you to write a query letter, in which you have to describe the book that you slaved over for three years in one paragraph.

They glance at your letter, deduce whether they think the book has potential to land on The New York Times bestseller list, decide it doesn’t, and send you a very polite form letter rejecting you. I’ve gotten about 20 of these letters (or e-mails) so far.

A publishing house in Montgomery actually asked to see my first three chapters a few weeks ago, and I almost passed out. I haven’t heard back from them, but I’m going with the “no news is good news” philosophy, for now.

The other day I found a listing for an agent who specializes in Southern writers, and likes humorous books. Wow, I thought, this sounds tailor-made, so I sent off an e-mail query. I’ll give them this, they didn’t keep me in suspense. I got an e-mail back in about five minutes, saying my book sounded “promising”, but they weren’t interested. I haven’t been rejected that fast since high school.

Is it discouraging? Of course it is. The late Larry Brown, one of my favorite authors, got 250 rejection slips before he ever got published. I don’t know how he did it.

And there’s always that elephant in the room in the back of my mind, which is the thought, “What if it’s not really very good?” That’s a possibility. Not everybody finds me to be funny – I can read my blog comments to confirm that. Or ask my children.

In the meantime, I’m about 30 pages into a new one, so I guess the smart thing to do is just bear down and try to get it done, and maybe I’ll have better luck. But 5 a.m. comes awfully early.

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Cola wars


I went with a group of co-workers to lunch at a restaurant in downtown Atlanta the other day, and when the waiter came over to take our drink order, I asked for a Coke.

He paused, reminding me of one of my favorite John Prine songs (“There were spaces between Donald and whatever he said”), and said slowly, “We don’t serve Coke products. Is Pepsi OK?”

No, Pepsi is not OK. What is this, a Saturday Night Live skit? I kept looking around for John Belushi. I’m in downtown Atlanta and I can’t get a Coke?

I have never understood Pepsi drinkers. My dad used to be a Pepsi drinker, and this caused me much distress as a child, because I wanted to leave Santa Claus milk and cookies, like every normal American kid. But I was told no, Santa would prefer Pepsi and fruitcake. It didn’t dawn on me at the time that not only was my dad the only Pepsi drinker I knew, he also seemed to be the only person in the world who actually ate fruitcake. OK, so I wasn’t the brightest bulb on the Christmas tree.

I drank too much Coke as a kid, as my standing weekly appointment with the dentist will attest. I remember one summer day, when I was about 16, and I was getting ready to eat my favorite lunch meal – a banana sandwich with mayonnaise and potato chips, and an ice-cold Coke. (Though, if something were really “ice-cold”, wouldn’t it be frozen? Just a thought).

Anyway, there was a problem – no Cokes in the house. I suppose I could have had some water or juice or tea, but I had my mind set on a Coke, and nothing else would do. There was another problem – I was broke. I had a job, but since payday was the next day, I had nothing. If you could put a tuxedo on an elephant for a quarter, I couldn’t have put a t-shirt on a sand flea. If turkey was going for 25 cents a pound, I couldn’t have bought a raffle ticket on a jaybird’s ass. You get the picture.

There was a Coke machine in front of a convenience store about 2 miles away. I figured I had just enough gas to get there and back, and after that I could steal some from dad’s gas can. I scrounged around the house looking for change, and after about 30 minutes of looking under couch cushions and crawling under furniture, I had finally come up with the 50 cents I needed – a quarter, a dime and five nickels. I drove to the store, purchased my Coke, and was on my way back home to enjoy a heavenly lunch.

I cradled the glass bottle in my hand all the way home. I loved its smooth curves. I resisted the urge to open it and take a quick sip. It promised to be just what I was hoping – sweet, fizzy, as cold as an ex-wife.

I pulled up in the driveway, got out of the car, and Big Boy, my mongrel dog, came be-bopping up to greet me, and he bumped into my hand, knocking the precious bottle onto the sidewalk, whereupon it exploded into a million pieces. It took me a long time to forgive that dog.

Remember New Coke? That was the worst idea since Delilah decided Samson needed a trim. I recall my introduction to New Coke. I was at a Braves’ game. I had just broken up with my girlfriend, I was 21 years old and hanging out on a Saturday night with my parents, and Eddie Haas was the manager. Things couldn’t get much worse, right? But then I went and got a Coke.

I took one sip, and that was it. I had hit rock bottom. I looked to the heavens and said, “My God, why hast thou forsaken me?” Coke now tasted like….Pepsi! Was this some sort of a cosmic joke?

Thankfully, they brought back the old Coke, sort of. They use a different sweetener now than they did before the New Coke debacle. Certain convenience stores sell Coca-Cola that is bottled in Mexico, and it tastes like the old Coke. The owner of one of those stores told me that they still use cane sugar in the Mexican plants. I don’t know if that’s true¸ but it sure does taste better to me.

I worked for Coca-Cola briefly, and it was kind of a weird, uptight atmosphere, but they offered the greatest employee perk in the world – Coke machines everywhere that required no money. You just pressed the button, and out popped a free Coca-Cola, in a glass bottle. I probably drank 15 of them my first day.

The truth is, as I get older and thicker, I rarely drink a real Coke anymore. I stick to Diet Coke or coffee, but I’ll still occasionally allow myself a sweet, sugary indulgence.

But never, ever, will I drink a Pepsi.

Monday, August 18, 2008

Teenage wasteland

My house is inhabited by two strange beings who prowl the halls at all hours of the night, eat everything in sight and communicate with me and my wife with only strange sounds and hand gestures.

I’m talking, of course, about teenagers.

I am told that I was once a creature not unlike them, until I evolved into a human being. Maybe I was, but I guess time has wiped my memory banks clean of the experience, because much of what they do is inexplicable to me.

They will stare into a refrigerator bursting at the seams with food and say, “Why do we never have anything here to eat?” They can go downstairs at 2 a.m. and cook a pizza when they’re hungry, but ask them to boil their own hot dogs and they whine like lonesome puppies.

Have you ever tried to get information from a teenager? If you really need to know something, unless you put bamboo chutes up their fingernails, you’re lucky to get anything beyond name, rank and serial number. Mimes carry on better conversations.

Here’s the typical after-school parent-teenager conversation:
Parent: “How was school?”
Teenager: “Grunt.”
Parent: “What did you do?”
Teenager: “Grunt.”
Parent: “Do you have any homework?”
Teenager: (silent eyeroll).
Parent: “Is everything ok?”
Teenager: “Why are you always on my back?”
Parent: “I’m sorry, I’m just concerned. I just want you to know that you can talk to me about anything that’s bothering you, ok?”
Teenager: “I’m hungry.”

When you have a child, along with the birth certificate you should be presented with a chauffeur’s license and a little black cap. You are constantly dropping them off and picking them up. If you ever complain about this, you get the “I didn’t ask to be born!’ response.

Through the magic of cell phones, the little darlings can call you as soon as they’re ready to be picked up and ask you to come get them. Generally, about 90 seconds after the first call, I get a second call asking, “Where are you?” Apparently they are under the impression that when they’re not home I am sitting in the car, hands on the wheel, foot on the accelerator, the car facing the street, so that as soon as I get the first call I can gun it and get there as fast as humanly possible. I’m expected to respond faster than Batman.

I am now presently trying to teach my daughter how to drive. I will give her credit, she is doing pretty well. I do most of the teaching, because when her mother rides with her it usually turns into a screaming match that would make Jerry Springer blush. I try to handle things more calmly and speak in an even tone of voice, even when I’m saying things like, “That was a curb, not a ramp. Now, let’s back off of the shrubbery and try it again, ok?”

Here’s my advice for anyone riding in a car with a teenager behind the wheel. First, take as many Xanax, Valium, Prozac and Vicodin pills as you can without overdosing. Then secure yourself in a straitjacket to make sure you don’t try to reach over and grab the wheel. Blindfold yourself so you won’t see the five near-miss accidents that occur before you even get out of the neighborhood. Then pray silently and ask God for forgiveness in advance for all of the things you’re about to say.

I talk to other parents and they assure me that they encounter the same odd behaviors in their offspring. And I must say, I am very proud of my children and I love them very much. They are both straight A students, very active in school and church, well-liked by adults, and can be a joy to be around, as long as it’s after noon.

And one day they’ll be gone, and I’ll be the one whining.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Looking for Sasquatch


I suppose you’ve read or heard about these two yahoos in Georgia who claim to have found Bigfoot.

It, of course, is turning out to be a hoax. A DNA test on the alleged remains they found were revealed to be from a possum. Either that was one enormous possum, or these guys are full of it. Their evidence is as flimsy as a Britney Spears outfit.

These self-proclaimed Bigfoot trackers are from Clayton County, a lovely part of the south Metro Atlanta area. You know those bumper stickers parents put on their cars saying, “My son is an honor student”? In Clayton County the bumper stickers read, “My son has only been arrested once.”

I have news for you – there is no Bigfoot. It does not exist and is a figment of the imagination, just like other mythical creatures, such as the Loch Ness Monster, the tooth fairy, honest politicians and Georgia Tech football fans.

This reminds me of a joke: An atheist is walking through the woods and he sees Bigfoot, who starts chasing him. He drops to his knees and says “Please God, help me!” God answers him, saying “I thought you didn’t believe in me.” The man says “Well, five minutes ago I didn’t believe in Bigfoot, either!”

Why did these guys have to be from Georgia? Whenever I see anybody from Georgia being interviewed on a television news show, it always makes me cringe. Especially after tornadoes. I believe the TV crews intentionally seek out the least attractive shirtless person they can find with the fewest teeth, and the interview generally sounds like this:

“Well me and Juanita was setting in the den watching the monster truck show on the VCR – my cousin Shorty taped it fer me – and we heared this awful roar like a freight train coming so I yelled to Juanita ‘we got to get to the basement’ and she yelled back that the trailer ain’t got no basement and she wasn’t going nowhere without Thor, which is her little Chihuahua, then the next thang I know the trailer begun to shake and I woke up in a sycamore tree across the road. I ain’t seen Juanita since but Thor turned up at my neighbor’s house and I reckon he’s gonna take up there since all we got left is a ce-ment slab.”

I remember back in 1973, there was an alleged UFO incident in Orchard Hill, Ga., just a few miles from my hometown of Griffin. An old man was sitting on his front porch when he claimed a “golden ball” descended from the sky and burned a spot in his yard about the size of a basketball. The old man claimed it was brimstone from heaven sent down to warn us to stop our wicked ways.

I’m not sure why God would pick Orchard Hill as a place to send a message. There’s nothing there but grain silos and a convenience store. Surely there are more wicked places to drop brimstone, like New York City or Los Angeles or Knoxville.

Believe it or not, the UFO story made the national news. I’m sure it was reported in a patronizing, “Ha-ha, look at these dumb hillbillies” way. I guess it was a welcomed break from all the news about Watergate, which I thought at the time was a big dam. Hey, I was 9. Nobody ever called me a prodigy.

I suppose there is a slight chance that there really is a Bigfoot or UFOs or sea monsters or whatever else people conjure up in their imaginations. I am a skeptic, though, so I’ll believe when I see it with my own two eyes (that’s kind of a dumb phrase – can you see things with somebody else’s eyes?).

Bigfoot, my foot.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Please let it end


The presidential election is still several weeks away, but it’s going to seem like an eternity.

This campaign has already lasted longer than the Cold War. I have a proposition for Obama and McCain. I’ll vote for whichever one shuts up first.

No more ads, speeches or photo ops until the election. No debates or pep rallies or whistle-stop tours or YouTube videos. Everybody already knows by this point who they’re going to vote for, anyway.

Watching a political campaign is a root canal without anesthesia. It’s banging your shin on the car door or sliding off your bicycle seat and hitting the bar. (Why did boys’ bikes have that stupid bar, anyway, when girls’ bikes didn’t? I’ll always wonder).

You know what’s coming. The candidates will keep taking shots at each other. McCain’s supporters will paint Obama as being just left of Henry Wallace. Obama’s people will portray McCain as being just right of George Wallace.

Then there will be the stupid staged photo ops. Why do political handlers feel it’s necessary to show their candidates doing everyday things, like windsurfing or shooting basketball or touring a pork rind factory?

They don’t need to show me that the potential president is a regular guy. Larry down at the repair shop who changes my oil and loves NASCAR and always has a toothpick in his mouth is a regular guy. I don’t want Larry to be president.

I don’t need to know that the president is capable of letting loose and having fun. Being president should not be fun. A president should take a no-fun vow for the entirety of his term in office. Didn’t eight years of Bill Clinton teach us that?

Presidents get too much vacation time. Bush took more vacation time than Johnny Carson. I want the president to work at least as much as your average Wal-Mart cashier. Is this too much to ask?

Maybe this sounds a bit harsh, but nobody makes these men, and now women, run for president. It’s a choice. Lewis Grizzard once said that being elected president was like being sentenced to four years of wearing your jockey shorts too tight. I guess we would change that to a girdle if Hillary got elected.

I have a hard time getting fired up for any presidential campaign, because I don’t trust any politician. When I shake hands with one, I always count my fingers afterward.

Most politicians’ promises are as fleeting as a butterfly in a hurricane, and carry about as much weight. I don’t trust them as far as I can throw them, as my mama used to say.

I had some exposure to politicians when I was a newspaper reporter. Several times I interviewed a state Senator named Skin Edge. What great campaign slogans he must have, I thought. Vote for Skin. I’m for Skin. I hear he did well among the uncircumcised.

I’m not really in favor of all of the drives to sign up more people to vote. I think too many people vote as it is. The next time you’re in the self-service line at Kroger, and you see a guy wearing a vintage Winger T-shirt, staring at the screen with wonder and awe, like a wise man staring at the Baby Jesus, as he slides each beer in his 6-pack of Milwaukee’s Best individually across the scanner, which malfunctions because he’s drooling on it – well, just remember, he’s going to help pick the president.

So let’s try to hang on until November, when our long national nightmare will be over. For maybe a year, until the 2012 campaign starts.

I can hardly wait.

Saturday, August 9, 2008

Pickin' and grinnin'


So I was watching TV in the bedroom Friday night, after a lovely meal at Longhorn’s, wearing only my boxer shorts and my special shirt with a print of dogs playing poker (patterned after the famous painting you can find at many convenience stores), eating a pack of Saltines and watching an old rerun of The Porter Wagoner Show on RFD-TV.

Yes, my wife is a lucky woman.

I was delighted to come across this program. Porter was wearing a resplendent red and gold Nudie suit that can’t be appropriately described in the English language. A young Dolly Parton appeared and sang Jolene, which is about as good as it gets. Then she and Porter dueted on a song called Her In the Car and the Mobile Home Gone. I can’t tell you how happy this made me.

I sort of remember watching The Porter Wagoner Show as a kid, but not that much. He must not have been one of my parents’ favorites, but I do remember the Saturday night ritual of watching Hee Haw.

It didn’t matter where we were – at home, at a neighbor’s house, at my grandmother’s house – we stopped when Hee Haw came on and watched it. Even though as a kid I thought it was corny and I didn’t care for the music, I watched it because I thought it was funny and it had a lot of good-looking women. I’m referring to Nurse Goodbody and the gals lounging around the barnyard, not Minnie Pearl.

Most people I know around my age who grew up in the South recall watching Hee Haw. I don’t know if Yankees watched it. If they did, they probably thought it was a documentary. They can be ignorant about the South.

The show probably didn’t help the South’s image in those parts of the country where they don’t drink sweet tea. There were a lot of people in overalls telling corny jokes and pretending to drink moonshine. But those of us who lived here realized it was just a parody, even though we all have at least one cousin who reminds us a lot of Junior Samples.

At the time, I thought Buck Owens and Roy Clark were just a couple of clowns. I didn’t realize that they were giants of country music, especially Buck. Every great country music star of the day appeared on Hee Haw – George Jones and Merle Haggard, Loretta Lynn and Tammy Wynette, Johnny Cash and Conway Twitty.

This was at a time when country music was good, unlike the river of manure that flows out of Nashville these days. Instead of Waylon and Willie and Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain, you get stuff like Kenny Chesney and Tim McGraw and Keith Urban. Keith Urban’s CDs sound like Phil Collins with a banjo.

You don’t really hear good country songs about drinking and cheating and d-i-v-o-r-c-e anymore. Now it’s either a sappy love song or one of those phony, down-home “I’m from a small town” songs, with lines like:
“Me and Jenny May were sitting on the front porch,
Kissing by the light of the citronella torch.”

OK, I just made that up, but I bet it’s an actual line in a song somewhere, or soon will be.

I guess the real reason I have fond memories of watching Hee Haw is it always made my parents laugh, and that’s a good thing for kids to see. If you’re a parent now, like me, you’ve probably been horrified more than once when you walked in the room and your kid was watching something on MTV.

I don’t mean to sound like a Bluebell ice cream commercial, but that seemed to be a simpler time. I wonder whatever happened to Nurse Goodbody?

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Pet sounds


I was watching this show on Animal Planet the other night, and it was making the point that dogs, our cute little lovable pets, can still be quite dangerous, as they’re not that far removed from being predatory wolves, genetically speaking.

Seems that no matter how sweet and cuddly they appear, they can still revert to their old violent instincts, even if you’re not giving them the Michael Vick treatment.

I went outside and looked down at Lucky, lying on her back, four paws up in the air, feebly attempting to catch a fly in her mouth while farting constantly from the cheese I’d been feeding her, and I gotta tell you – I wasn’t that concerned.

We always had a pet when I was growing up, and without exception, it stayed outside. I thought only rich people and crazy folks kept a dog in the house. We went over to my aunt’s house for dinner one time, and there two big old hound dogs walking around inside like they owned the place. My mom pulled me aside and told me not to eat anything, she’d stop and get me something on the way home.

So that is how I have always viewed the situation – the dog stays in the yard. I’m a little more liberal about it than my parents were. I let Lucky in the house on cold nights, and during bad weather. I take her to the vet, which they would have never done. If the dog was hurt, you put sulfur on it. If it didn’t get better, then your dad would get the shotgun and put the dog in the car one day to go on a little “hunting trip”, and only your dad would come back. Don’t give me that look. They do the same thing to horses.

We weren’t real particular about what we fed the dog. Table scraps, stuff in the refrigerator that was about to spoil, it didn’t matter. I never saw a dog turn down any food. I’ve seen dogs eat other dead dogs. Think about that next time you’re hand-feeding your little Fluffy some gourmet dog food.

We had a cat that lived to be 24 years old with nothing but pure meanness running through its veins. That cat could whip a dog’s butt, jump 4 feet in the air flat-footed and would spit at the devil. She’s pretty much the only cat I’ve ever liked.

A few years ago, I got talked into getting a rabbit as a pet. Talk about a waste of fur. The kids named it Snowball, but I only referred to it as “that stupid rabbit.” We were never sure if Snowball was a boy or a girl. It never got to be around other rabbits, so the point is moot anyway.

Rabbits have no personality, no endearing qualities. They don’t acknowledge humans. When you pick one up, its heart is racing like a teenage boy at Hooters, and it is constantly trying to claw you and get down. Once you put it on the ground, it hops about twice and begins to attack the ground like a gravedigger. Then it takes a dump and crawls under a bush. That’s the pet rabbit experience in a nutshell.

I really didn’t like the rabbit. I used to threaten to get involved with a psycho woman just so she would come and boil the bunny, like in Fatal Attraction. I tried to feed the dumb thing once, and it promptly bit me.

I did feel bad for my wife when the rabbit died, because it upset her, but then she insisted we bury the thing. I suggested we just toss the rabbit out in the back, because Lucky had always been dying to play with it. Lucky used to sit under the rabbit’s cage and gaze up longingly, then give me a look that said, “Please, come on. One time. Just 5 minutes, that’s all I ask.”

But we put the thing in a plastic Tupperware bowl, I dug a hole on the side of the house, sang a few bars of Amazing Grace and laid Snowball to rest. At least I didn’t have to take it on a hunting trip.

Monday, August 4, 2008

So long, Skip


Wow. I can’t believe Skip Caray, the longtime Braves' announcer, has died.

I knew he was in poor health, but the news was still shocking. Even though I didn’t know him, and only met him once, it felt like I had lost a friend.

I don’t know why we feel that way sometimes about people we don’t know. I think with Skip, longtime Braves’ fans felt like he suffered along with us when they were awful, and celebrated with us when they were good. He was our confederate, especially during the lean times. He was our guy.

Hearing him do the Braves’ games on the radio was the soundtrack to my summers when I was growing up. Broadcasting baseball on the radio is an art, and Skip was one of the best. He was funny, sarcastic, insightful, and always interesting.

They made him do that dumb call-in show for a while, and he could get a little bit cranky doing it, but I didn’t blame him, because he would get some of the stupidest questions imaginable. “Yeah, Skip, this is Randy in Dahlonega. Can you tell me how many stitches are in a baseball?”

Skip used to do the Hawks games on TV, and he was just as good at that as he was at baseball. When John Drew would make a shot, he would say “Drew for two.” That line was similar to my favorite Braves’ line of his: “There’s a chopper to Chipper.”

He never minded getting on the umpires, referees or players when it was necessary. If there were a lot of fouls being called in a basketball game, he would say that the people in the crowd “didn’t pay their money to watch tall men shoot free throws.”

Skip used to have a battle with the bottle, and he would joke about it. One night a dreadful Braves team was playing the Houston Astros, and Skip announced that Rafael Ramirez had just tied a record with four doubles that night. “And I plan to break that record after the game,” he said.

Since I’ve been accused of being a cynic myself (shocking!), I loved that side of him. He would read the sponsor promos sometimes with barely disguised disdain. He didn’t like all the gimmicks and sideshows that baseball teams feel they must offer their fans these days. But he loved baseball and the Braves.

I don’t know what kind of guy he was away from the field, and that really doesn’t matter. When I met him, it was at a charity golf tournament, and he was on the driving range next to me, sweating and cursing with each swipe at the ball. It looked more like he was trying to kill a snake than hit a golf ball. I spoke to him briefly, and he was very cordial, though he looked like he was about to melt from the heat.

Maybe it’s not possible to miss somebody you didn’t even know, but I think all Braves’ fans are going to miss Skip. It’s just not going to be the same without him.

Saturday, August 2, 2008

The heat is on


The temperatures are supposed to rise well into the 90s in the coming week, which will arouse a lot of curiosity in people, as every heat wave seems to do.

So, let me save you the trouble of asking. Yes, it is hot enough for me.

For about the next month, be prepared for everyone you see, at work or at church or at social gatherings, to inform you that it’s hot. I guess they tell you this in case you have just emerged from one of those plastic bubbles like John Travolta.

I’m no meteorologist, but I believe there is a simple explanation for why it’s hot:

A. It’s August.
B. We’re in Georgia.

You will rarely hear me complain about the heat, because I hate the cold so much. I’d rather it be 100 degrees than 60. When I retire, you can visit me living in my nice little bungalow in Uganda.

That said, I’m not handling the heat as well as I used to, and I think it’s because air conditioning has spoiled us all and made us sissies. I suppose I can understand it when some New Jersey transplant complains that it’s too hot, but I’m hearing it from people who grew up in south Georgia. This is like Hugh Hefner complaining that there are too many blondes around.

I remember growing up with little or no air conditioning. We had a window unit in our house, which did a great job of cooling you off, as long as you were within 5 feet of it. This made for a lot of family togetherness on summer afternoons.

At night we’d turn it off and sleep with the windows open, so you could drift off listening to the soothing sounds of the evening – crickets chirping, cicadas singing their summer songs, a mournful train whistle in the distance, the drunken neighbors across the street having a domestic disturbance. Come of the think of it, I didn’t sleep much during the summer.

As a kid, I grew to dislike air conditioning. When we would go on vacation, my dad liked to crank the AC up so high you could kill hogs in the motel room. I would come in from the pool in my wet bathing suit, and I always dreaded going in that room. That kind of cold has an adverse impact on your body. Just picture a frightened turtle and you’ll get the picture.

Now, though, I’ve gotten used to air conditioning, so I’ve had a couple of unpleasant commutes home recently in the minivan, because the AC in it will only cool the interior to about one degree below the outside temperature. I sweat through my shirt before I even hit the interstate.

I’d roll down the window, but the air quality on the I-75/85 connector on a hot day is only slightly healthier than the air in Chernobyl. This, combined with the general irritation of driving alongside people who are text-messaging at 60 miles per hour, is going to get me on the evening news someday.

So let’s all just take it easy for a while. Go ahead and complain if you feel you must, but I’m going to enjoy it while I can. I’ll be doing plenty of complaining come January, when, most assuredly, it will be cold enough for me.