Stains

Fragments of life
Fall upon my being
Creating my direction

Spent years
Lifetimes expended
Aspersions pursued

Reality exposed
Expectations unmet
Stains upon our dreams


Posted in Aging, Free Verse, Life, Poetry, Reflection | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Concepts

My name is Mark and I’m 37 years old, an engineer, and single. I was married, but it didn’t work out. We eventually divorced and I moved into a condo, but as my mom aged, I found myself spending more and more time supporting her. Ultimately, it made sense to rent out the condo and move back home.

Although I don’t really have a desire to live at home, I feel an obligation to my mother. She raised me as a child, alone after my father left. She worked hard to make sure we were both secure. I don’t remember ever missing a meal. I grew up happy. Any opportunity that was possible, she helped me pursue.She was the reason I got into college and had the opportunity to study without worrying about the money. In my eyes, she is the reason I am an engineer today.

As it is with most days, today I spent about nine hours staring at a screen, developing programs, and possible improvements to the internet. It is fulfilling work that pays well and I enjoy the challenges, but it is also very demanding. Long hours are not uncommon leaving little time to establish personal relationships. It was the primary issue that destroyed my marriage.

I normally unwind at a local pub after work. The atmosphere is relaxing and many customers appear to be like me, looking for some release from the problems of the day. However, some time ago, I noticed a guy that seemed always to be there when I arrived, always sitting at the same corner table, always alone. I found him interesting because he is not like most of the customers. By that I mean I never see him share a conversation with anyone. Instead, he observes the activity around him like it is theater, watching the evening unfold without participating.

I take a seat at the bar and order a drink. From my stool I can see him via the mirror behind the bar. He mostly just sits sipping his drink, occasionally looking around the room. There have been occasions when our eyes have briefly met but he always quickly looks away. When Eddie the bartender brings my drink I ask him what he knows about the guy in the corner. He looks in the direction I have indicated and says “He drinks Manhattans.

That’s it. That’s all you know? He’s in here all the time.”

Eddie replies “Look, he never sits at the bar so I’ve never talked to him. He always sits over there. That’s Sheilas table. Ask her”.

As the evening progresses, Sheila moves up to the bar with a tray of empty glasses and new drink orders. I decide it can’t hurt to ask so I say “Shelia, what’s with the guy at your table over there in the corner. I see him in here all the time and he’s always by himself, Does he talk to you?”

“No, not really. Kind of stays to himself” she says. “Not much for conversation, but that’s OK. He’s a good tipper.”

Has he been coming in a long time” I ask.

“Honey, I see a lot of customers every day. I don’t keep track, but I’d say maybe a few months. Why, do you know him?”

“No, just curious” I reply.

“Well, it’s a free country you know. As long as he keeps tipping, he’s welcome at my table” she says while picking up her tray and disappearing into the room.

After a couple of drinks I decide to approach him. I order a Manhattan, pick up my drink and walk over to his table. I place the glasses on the table and slide the Manhattan toward him. “I’d like to buy you a drink I say smiling”. My presence is met with silence. The only thing that moves are his eyes, slowing rising to meet mine.

“Why” he says. That was it. One word. A question that we both have. A question requiring an answer, but, being so challenged, I struggle for one.

“Well, whenever I come in, I see you here, always sitting where you are right now, never interfacing with anyone so, I thought I’d take a chance and buy you a drink and see if you would like a little company”.

Again the response is silence. I begin to have second thoughts about my decision. “Look” I say “I’m sorry. I guess you prefer your solitude, and I respect that” picking up my drink I say “cheers”, and turn to leave.

“Sit down” he says. I turn and see him motion to the seat opposite him. Hesitantly I return and, placing my drink back on the table, slide onto the seat.

We sit in shared silence for a few minutes, the pregnant silence prompting me to feel obligated to say something, so I ask “do you live here in the city”?

“I did some years ago but decided to move on..

Why did you come back” I ask.

After some thought he says “Curiosity I guess. Wondered what yesterday looked like today.”

I stare into my drink and hesitantly ask “why did you leave”?

Again, I watch his stare. Eyes guarded and questioning. Searching for something. Revealing nothing.

“Freedom” he finally says. “An escape from responsibility I guess, from the realities that surrounded me. Today I think maybe it was fear”

“Fear?” I say. Fear of what?”

Again, the eyes stare at me as if measuring his response. Finally, almost in a whisper he says “I was younger then you are right now. I thought I had the world by the ass. Then, one day, life tapped me on the shoulder, and I realized I wasn’t who I thought I was. I wasn’t the guy that was smarter then anyone else. The guy that was in charge of his life. I panicked, and I ran.”

I just sat and listened, unable to respond. I decided that asking questions was the wrong thing to do. He had just opened up and anything else I could say would seem like I was intruding. So I decided to try and lighten up the conversation a bit. “I imagine the town looks a lot different to you today then it did back then” I said.

He thought a moment and said “yes and no. Oh sure, the town physically has changed, but it still has a feeling that remains. When I came back, I guess I was looking to recover something. Maybe it was my youth. Maybe I was trying to recapture something. Something I lost when I left”.

Sheila came by the table and I ordered another round. “I’ve lived here my whole life” I ventured, feeling a need to open up a little myself. “Never had a desire to leave. Everything I know is here. I have a good job that allows me to live comfortably and take care of my mom. I guess this is good enough for me.

You married” he inquires? “family, kids”?

“No, no kids, but I have been married. It didn’t work out, but it was my fault.. We both wanted what we didn’t have. My job was demanding and I just felt I couldn’t give her what she needed. She deserved more. I was the one that filed for divorce. I saw it as setting her free”.

We sat in silence for a while, like two boxers studying each other, each waiting for the other to make the next move. We mostly stared at our glasses, occasionally shooting a glance at each other. I felt like I needed to say something, but I had nothing to offer other then more questions.

“I was married once” he ventured. Like you, I thought she deserved more also. Unfortunately it was more then I felt capable of giving”. After falling quiet for a few moments he said “so I walked away. Not proud of it. I never forgave myself for that. Still don’t”.

He stared at me, as if looking for a reaction, or rejection, or perhaps a response, his eyes never leaving mine. Maybe it was the drinks, or just finally putting his feelings into words, but I felt like I had just heard a confession. one that he never thought he would give.

“That must have been very hard” I said. “But we all make mistakes. I lost my dad when I was six. I was too young to really remember him. My mom would speak of him though. She said he was a good man and I would have been proud of him, but he had to leave. She wanted me to know that even though he wasn’t there, he still loved both of us.”

He didn’t say anything, just gazed off like his mind was struggling with something that it was having difficulty comprehending. Like a silent question had been answered. Whatever it was, I had the feeling that I was sitting alone. His mind was preoccupied with something that I couldn’t share. Something he hadn’t expected to reveal.

He polished off his drink and stood to leave. He looked at me for a long moment. Then he said ” Thank you for the drinks Mark. I am pleased to meet you. Tell your mom I’m sure she is right. Your dad always loved you both. Then he walked away.

I sat there for a few minutes running our conversation through my mind before it occurred to me that he called me Mark. I never told him my name.

Posted in Fiction, Life, Relationships, Senses | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments

I Have A Friend In Chicago

I have a friend in Chicago that I have never met. Facebookers would probably say “what’s so strange about that, I’ve never met most of my friends”. Not my problem. My perception of a friend would not share many similarities, if any, with yours.

How did we meet? Well, it was right here. This friend chose to read something I posted and left a comment that gave me a little insight into who they were. My initial reaction, since substantiated, was that we didn’t really have a lot in common. Over time our opinions, likes, personal backgrounds, political views, preferred environments, hobbies, habits, slowly revealed themselves. One would think that I was engaging with someone so foreign to my psyche, that our only communication would be to argue. But that was not the case.

I went back to check how long my friend has been following my posts and me theirs. It looks like it was 2013. Wow. Thirteen years. How could that happen? Well, I suspect it was because we put all of that aside and chose to focus on the person instead.

I can’t speak for them, but I have always looked forward to their comments, knowing that they would often skewer beliefs I held dearly. But what I could always depend on is that they would give me their view with no sugar coating. I will admit that (another difference) they appear to be more verbally aggressive then I am. Nothing wrong with that. It might even be an advantage.

But here is where I am going with this. I am so put off by the polarized world I live in today where political parties or other mindsets restrict who is your friend.. Fortunately, I live in an area that still displays to some extent, a live and let live attitude.

I believe friendships emanate from the mind and the heart. You instinctively choose and accept your friends. You don’t look for the differences. You focus on what makes you the same.

So, my friend in Chicago, given our obvious differences of opinion, I thank you for taking the time to listen to my perspective of life and share yours with me.

Posted in Friendship, Opinions, Perspective, Reflection, Relationships | Tagged , | 1 Comment

What I Said Was

I remember an old saying “say what you mean and mean what you say”. Boy, what happened to that? It seems that today, if you watch enough television or get your news off the web, you, like me have found yourself watching a lot of statements that seem to be void of conviction. How often have you heard or seen someone saying “I was taken out of context” or “I was misquoted”. It kind of reminds me of driving in a demolition derby. If you reach the point where you can’t advance, the only solution is to back up.

I don’t want to get into politics, but I will just say this. I think, without exception, regardless of party affiliation, today’s statements always require tomorrows clarification. Several years ago, I had never heard the word ‘spin’. At least not in today’s vernacular. It seems, however, that today, everything that is said is open to speculation. The problem is, it is by the speaker.

I’m not trying to beat up on our government or even lay this at there feet. If any one of you has ever tried to challenge a contract or warranty, you know where I am coming from. Suddenly the words that spelled out their obligations as opposed to yours are still the same, but the intent has changed. What your contract really says, right down here in the fine print is “what you think this meant is not what it really meant”. I can assure you it is right because our attorneys wrote it.

I’m old enough to remember when a handshake guaranteed a mans word and worth. Today, a man’s word doesn’t guarantee either of those things. I think it is because of the erosion of family values and the security a true neighborhood environment provided. Your words meant something back then because they were spoken with conviction. You said it because you meant it.

I am glad to live in Maine because there is still a trace of yesterday existing here. There is still home town honesty. People still have unmanned farm stands where it is up to you to be trusted to pay. I have friends that became friends because of mutual trust. When they say something, I can believe it. I, however look around at the groundswell ‘from away’ that are moving here that don’t appear to share our values. The value of the spoken word does not seem to mean the same as it does to us. But, they may feel the same.

Courage is the willingness to speak the truth about what you see and to own what you say.

Seth

Posted in Insight, Opinions, Random Thoughts | 2 Comments

Chillin’

It’s one of those nights. Weather wise, this morning was great. Kramer and I spent time checking out the neighborhood in anticipation of the rain that was forecasted and, we did in fact get this afternoon. I was again so happy to experience the explosion of greenery that surrounded me. Trees that just a week ago had displayed only buds had burst forth. Neighbors homes retreated into the seclusion provided by the long awaited awakening of spring. My wife loved it, as do I. Business having taken us to several states, she had often surmised that she would never see her beloved New England again. Never come home so to speak, but we did.

I have to admit that Fall is my favorite time of year. Time to take out the sweaters, see your breath in the air, admire the beautiful colors of the dancing leaves. Say goodbye to summer and prepare for winter. But spring has it’s own personality. It speaks of rebirth. Anticipation of warm days to come and Mother Nature’s beckoning to us to join her in the world she provides.

It has been seven years now since I lost her, but I cannot spend a season without sharing it with her in my heart. So here I sit. Not a night for TV. No, instead a night for reflection. I am instead sitting here listening to music that brings back memories. Tonight, she dances in my mind. What we had. What I still have. I have on occasion been asked why I still wear my wedding ring. It’s because it is a symbol of our life and our love. If I remove it and look through it, I see a lifetime of memories. Life may have it’s limitations, but love doesn’t.

So, tonight I will sit here listening to music and giving thanks for what I have been given. It’s just one of those nights.

Sometimes the break in your heart is like the hole in the flute. It’s the place where the music comes through.

Andrea Gibson


Posted in Life, Loss, Love, Reflection | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

Frankie

In the years that I have been volunteering with the Greater Androscoggin Humane Society, my involvement has been mostly beyond the shelter itself. I’ve driven a van and participated in local events. However, when opportunity arose, I would always walk the row of kennels looking at the dogs ready for adoption. I even played Santa to them one year. I’ve always been a dog person since I was a kid. My wife however had a thing for cats so, over the years, we have had a few of those as well and I will admit I loved every one and, like so many others, I have never met a kitten I didn’t like.

The other day I received a letter from the shelter that was a reminder that kitten season is upon us and they could use my help. Upon reading it, I was enlightened by how much I didn’t know about kittens, so thought I would share some of my enlightened knowledge with you, and I am going to use a kitten named Frankie to help me.

Often, when kitten season arrives, the shelter has an influx of orphaned, abandoned, or rejected newborns that are too young to eat on their own. So was the case with Frankie. Her mother had arrived at the shelter pregnant. She was quickly put in a foster care and soon became the mother of four kittens. However, for whatever reason, the mother chose to abandon two of them. Upon realizing this, the kittens were quickly brought back to the shelter. They were only about three hours old and, without the warmth of their mother, were very cold. It took three hours to warm them up and get them to begin nursing. One of them was Frankie.

Frankie’s sibling unfortunately was unable to hold on, but Frankie was a fighter, being hand fed every two hours, day and night while keeping her warm, monitoring her weight, and providing any medical care necessary. Frankie is five weeks old now and is going to make it. But she is just an example of the work that the shelter does. In those same five weeks, another fifteen bottle babies have been placed in foster care, each at a cost of over $250 per kitten in formula. supplies, vet checks, and foster support every four weeks.

Today I have a much greater appreciation for the work that the Humane Society does. Now, when I look at the cute fluffy little furballs that are waiting for adoption, I think of all the love and support that has been provided just to assure they get that far.

Thank you to all the staff, volunteers, and foster families that provide their love and care every day.

Posted in Compassion, Insight, Kittens, Life, Pets, Reflection | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

The Price Of Progress

Our Hannaford grocery store is growing. I mean big time. So big that I suspect the little battery operated carts provided for those that have difficulty walking will be at a premium. We are going to have people limping into the store in hopes of qualifying. Maybe not.

So is life in a small town. Enlarging a store in New York or Chicago would probably go unnoticed. Happens every day. Not here. This is a big thing. I remember when it was announced that the original store was going to be built. Emotions ran high and all the naysayers found a new reason to complain. Everything from the insolence of even considering bringing a commercial business into a residential area to worries about the increased traffic were paraded before the residents. However, since the nearest Hannaford was about ten miles away, the voice of reason prevailed and the store was built.

Today however, if someone decided to close the store, there would be an uprising not seen in Maine since the French and Indian war. But making it larger is another issue. You see, all of our businesses are kind of, well, small. I mean Hannaford already dwarfs McDonald’s, Dollar General, the NAPA store, the public library and our Town Hall. So to make it bigger is kind of intimidating. We are not used to big, until of course we have it.

We are probably six to eight weeks away from completion and experiencing the ‘grand opening’. In the interim, we have all been confronted with the transition. I mean, to put it kindly, NOT BEING ABLE TO FIND ANYTHING. Sorry, I got a little emotional there for a minute. As a relatively rational human being, I know there are going to be disruptions. But as a guy, upon waking, who has no clue what he is going to have for dinner (when I was a kid, we called it supper) I spend a lot of time in there. And I have to say, so far, I’m not happy. If I wish to buy some dog food for Kramer for instance. I knew where it was, and, initially, it was still there. However, a couple of days later, it was on a ‘temporary’ shelf, about a quarter mile down in the ‘new section’. However, within one, maybe two days, it was now in its new home, surprisingly not that far from where it started.

I know I am being cynical, but as a ‘person of age’, I just want it to be over. I don’t want to spend a lot of time there, but must admit, I have met a few very nice people that, like me, are aimlessly wandering around kind of like in the Zombie movies. We smile, speak of things like ‘do you know where I can find the flour? Then we exchange telephone numbers and agree to keep in touch, and, being small town, we probably will.

Posted in Humor, Insight, Maine, Random Thoughts | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

It’s Spring, Almost

Well, it is Spring, so I am told. The calendar says it, so I guess it is true, but, in reality, I’m still a little skeptical, or maybe cynical is the word I’m searching for.. I just know that when I walked Kramer this morning I put on a heavy coat along with a stocking cap pulled over my ears. The thermometer said it was 34, with a promise of a balmy high of 47 later today. Can’t wait. Usually our first signs of Spring are the buds on the trees, however, so far they haven’t appeared to be that enthusiastic about jumping into the season.

Maybe it’s just me, but it seems that Spring used to have a synergy with something called warm. Oh sure, I know it is only April. I remember the old saying “March winds and April showers are sure to bring the May flowers”. Well, we have had a bunch of those showers, some of which were severe enough to dent the roof of a Volkswagen. In fact, the other night we had a thunder and lightning storm that made me think that Spring was the last thing I was going to have to worry about in the morning.

I bought a bag of weed and feed for my lawn a couple of weeks ago. Perhaps my timing was a little aggressive, but I was tired of putting down fertilizer and then watching how well the dandelions grew, requiring me to later walk around zapping them with a weed killer. Not this time. Not on my watch. I bought one of those fertilizers with a pre-emergent weed killer. They are a little more expensive, but I thought of the satisfaction I would have from only having to do everything once.

Well, we had some rain yesterday and there are showers in the forecast for tomorrow, so I decided ‘today is the day’. This afternoon I put on my coat, extricated my spreader from the bowels of the garage, and headed for the yard. Now, my spreader is not what you think of when you tell someone you have a spreader. They picture something with a trough and two wheels. Mine is a little hand held thing with a battery operated trigger. You fill the hopper, pull the trigger, walk oh maybe 50 yards, stop and fill the hopper again and repeat, etc. etc. Don’t get me wrong, it works great, but I wouldn’t recommend it for a large yard.

For a while, I was doing fine until I realized that when the breeze blew, the little pellets were blowing right along with it, frequently landing where I had already been, requiring me to stop until the breeze did. However, not to be deterred, I did it anyway and now it’s just wait and see. Worst case scenario is, if I do get dandelions, they will all be in rows and I can deal with that. So now, I will bide my time waiting for it to get warm enough to sit on the porch admiring whatever comes up, and complain about having to mow it.

Now. About those May flowers.

Posted in Home, Humor, Nature, Random Thoughts, Spring | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

So Then I Said

I started this blog back in 2012 without a clue why or where I wanted to go with it. Ironically, all of that holds true today. I never know where the next post is going to come from,, or go. I just know I have something that has caught my attention and I want to talk about it.

When I first started it was at the encouragement of a good friend of mine. I was hesitant to try and engage readers that have opinions of their own and really don’t need anyone else to tell them what to think. So, I decided that, whatever I wrote, it would not be judgemental or intended to advance a preconceived opinion or conclusion.

Writing, at least for me, is about expressing myself without concern for how my thoughts are perceived. Of course, I have an ego like everyone else and I value likes and comments, but it is not the reason I write. If it were, I would have stopped writing a loooong time ago. My stats would lead you to believe that I have 836 followers, yet most posts don’t inspire a lot of response, nor does the number of people that read them. Like Facebook, there are collectors out there, but again, that‘s not the reason I write.

I have found over the years that the written word makes more of an impression on me then does the spoken word. Maybe it is because it is more permanent. If I want to refer to it tomorrow, it is still there. I can read it again, see if I missed something, or drew a conclusion that may be subject to further consideration, while the spoken word is there but for the moment.

Natalie Goldberg, a popular American author and speaker once said “writers live twice”. That kind of hit a note with me because I seem to write a lot about what I’ve lived. Reflection, memories, love, losses, triumphs are all in the mix. Recalling the experiences I was privileged to have. They are my selfies of yesterday and the things that I want to share. Maybe invoke a memory or two from a reader. Perhaps light a spark in someone that wants to invite us into their life.

So, I write. For me, my success will not be found in the number of followers, or in the number of likes or comments nor in the number of posts I make. It will be in the satisfaction I get from sharing the things that are and were important to me over a number of years. I love where I have been and what I did, and I am comfortable with where I am today.

So then I said……………

Posted in Insight, Life, Perspective, Random Thoughts, Reflection, Writing | Tagged , , , | 6 Comments

Kramer’s Korner

Hello again admiring fans. It’s Kramer, but you already know that. I’m just stopping by to check in and bring you up to date on what I’ve been up to, which I have to admit hasn’t been much.

I’ve been trying to stay low key, what with the weather March slapped us with. What I call ‘tall snow’, days cold enough for Bob to try and get a coat on me, and winds that threatened my ability to remain anchored to my environment. But, at least it provided me with a few warmer days, allowing me to walk through some mud. Enjoyment has to be taken where you find it, right?

There has been one thing that has happened since the last time I wrote. In one of his posts, Bob mentioned his concern for senior dogs. He has volunteered with the Humane Society in our area for several years and has seen how the senior dogs get adopted last, if at all. He has always had a soft spot in his heart for them, he so he has also been donating to a local shelter that is dedicated to just that, providing a retirement home for the seniors. We recently visited and met the owners and canine residents of the Finally Home Senior Rescue and Retirement Home. Actually, he visited them while I stayed in the car. I guess he didn’t want to overwhelm them with my presence, however, one of the owners did come out to meet me and, of course, stated the obvious “oh, he’s so cute”, but I digress.

As I suspected would happen, Bob is now going to support them as well as the Humane Society. They, like any other non profit rescue organization are always in need of donations of money and supplies, so Bob is going to see what he can do. I’m OK with this as long as it doesn’t impact on me and my quality of life. As long as he continues to provide me with his attention, food, bed, rides, etc, I’m cool. Plus, since none of the residents are up for adoption, I know he can never bring any of them home. That’s a big plus right there.

Next week, I go in for my spring grooming. That means that I will come home nearly naked and I will again suffer the indignity of people saying ‘his head looks so big’. But a well placed treat will go a long way toward salving the indignity I will suffer. But hey, to know me is to love me. I know you can’t help yourself and I want you to know that I appreciate it.

Well, I guess that’s it for now. I’ll check in again from time to time. Until then remember, there are still a lot of dogs, yes, puppies and younger dogs that are still looking for their forever home and would love the opportunity to adopt you.

Bye for now

Kramer

Everyone’s favorite Pekinese

Posted in Dogs, Humor, Life, Pets | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment