A Most Surprising Woman

Those of you have have been reading my posts by now realize that I had what could, at best, be described as a difficult home life.

<Rod Serling’s voice begins>

“Imagine if you, a house where all of the inhabitants would prefer to come home to anywhere but there.

“A house in the country on a quiet road.

“A house filled with mayhem, malarkey, and maybe even…

“Murder.”

Yep, that is where I grew up. My older brother and sister left as soon as they could. And, then, my Dad left too after he found Mom in bed with the neighbor from down the street.

Younger me thought those sounds coming from the barn were the horses but if so, why was Mom showing off our horses to men in the evening when Dad was off fishing.

Throw in a huge helping of mystical mayhem from the fact that our house was haunted. And, yes, I saw them and would swear on a stack of Bibles (if we had one in the house!).

And Mom’s weird-ass seances made it even stranger. Imagine coming home from school and find strangers wandering the house burning sage and calling on spirits.

“I am calling on the spirits to answer me!” she would yell at the top of her voice just as I was trying to shut the door so my friends would not see what was going on.

That is why I had few, if any expectations when I first met Rosemary, the woman who would become his second wife.

I knew Dad well enough to know that he had started seeing Rosemary after he divorced Mom. He just wasn’t the type to have an affair.

On the day in question, he picked us up from the house in his old Ford van and drove us down to her house in the suburbs of Columbus.

On the way he said, ” I want to introduce you to someone.”

“Who?” my little sister and asked at the same time.

“Well, I have been seeing someone and I want you to meet her. Her name is Rosemary. We are going to be staying there this weekend.”

“Are you sleeping with her?” Lisa asked.

“Anyway, she and I have been dating and I want you kids to get to know her and her kids.” he humphed.

“She has kids? How many? ” I asked.

“A boy and a girl both around your ages.”

About that time, we hauled into a subdivision straight off some TV show. And them we pulled up in front of a house that almost looked like something off “The Brady Bunch”. Seriously, I expected to see Alice open the door to let us in.

Instead, a beautiful woman in glasses opened the door and hugged my Dad.

AND THE WORLD CHANGED!

The only way to describe Rosemary is to say now only was she kind, intelligent, sweet and caring but she was NORMAL!

Having her enter our lives was like watching Carol Brady step into the “Twilight Zone” and immediately set the world to right.

Or to put it another way, imagine your mother is Godzilla and the courts have suddenly placed you with Mary Tyler Moore!

I was immediately enchanted and remain so to this day 45 years later!

I LOVE YOU, ROSEMARY!

Somehow The World Kept Spinning

My Dad was amazing!

(Those of you who read my book know this story but I feel it needs retelling now.)

1988

It was a hard drive home.

I had just found out my best friend had died of AIDS while I was living in West Virginia.

The next morning, I drove the three hours back to Ohio in a daze. The service didn’t start until the afternoon and I had no idea what to do with myself.

Feeling lost, I went to the only place I knew I could.

Home.

Yeah, home.

Dad knew immediately that something was wrong. I was gray and rumpled and was clearly in distress.

Rosemary gave me some tea, but I couldn’t keep up the normal chitchat.

Finally, my Dad said, “Son, what’s wrong?”

“Dad, I don’t know what to say.”

“You can tell us anything.” 

“I know but I just don’t know how to say this.”

My father spoke with a note of fear. “We love you, Son, and you can tell us anything.”

Oh, God! They think I have it!

That’s when I completely lost it. Fear, love and hurt erupted in one huge burst. Blubbering, I told the story. The pain and the hurt. The fear and the utter feeling of loss.

“It’s not me. My friend, Larry, died – “

I couldn’t continue. The pain was just too much.

“It’s not goddamn fair! Why? Why!?!?”

I couldn’t stop crying. No, I didn’t want to stop crying. Ever.

“Dad, I am a nobody, but he was someone special. So talented. So—“ The pain welled up.

That is when my Dad did the most wonderful thing he has ever done and one I will remember always.

He put his arm around me.

He put his arm around his 25-year-old son and just let me cry. And cry I did. Down to the bottom of my heart.

Huge, wracking sobs.

And Dad held me like a child trying to make the hurt go away. And, somehow, the world kept turning.

Somehow…

I love my Dad.

(Now that Dad is gone, I hope I can be such a person to others who need it.)

A Smile The Size Of The Moon

I asked everybody to tell me the first thing they thought of when they thought of Dad.

I expected it to be the birdhouses he made – after all, he gave one to virtually everyone he met.

But that didn’t even make the short list.

And, then I expected them to mention how much he loved Johnny Cash music.

That one actually came in third.

Second on the list was how much he loved my stepmother, Rosemary. I would have thought that was a no brainer. Everyone on the planet knew how lucky he got there.

No, actually what almost everybody mentioned was my Dad’s smile. You see, my Dad could put the Cheshire Cat to shame with that smile of his.

It was huge and you always wondered how his face was big enough to handle it. It was simply enormous.

AND, it was genuine!

My father couldn’t have faked it if he tried. And, my Dad was many things but never fake. His smile always lit up a room.

I think I must have still been in the crib the first time I can remember Dad’s special brand of sunshine smiling down on me.

His smile could be kind.

His smile could be uplifting

And, his smile could be mischievous.

It could even be somewhat hypnotic.

It might sound odd but a leaking roof reminded me of Dad’s smile the other day.

Our roof needs replaced next summer and I have been trying to plan and budget to do so. While the budgetting needs work, the actual repair job is what is giving me fits.

You see, I am terrified of heights.

Not just scared of heights. I am “peeing your pants when more than two feet off the ground” scared of heights. I had to wear a cap with blinders to paint the ceiling last Fall.

My father would be soooo disappointed in me. You see, my Dad loved to be on ladders.

Even better if he was on the roof!

One of my earliest memories is when Dad had to replace the roof of our old farmhouse soon after we moved in. The neighbors stopped over and Uncle Bob came out to help. My brother had somehow disappeared again and I was the one drafted to run errands.

My Dad was quite clearly in his element. His smile never stopped or faded as he zipped up and down the ladders like a monkey.

Every so often, Dad would peer over the edge of the roof and ask me to put something in the bucket so they could pull it up with a rope. Nails, shingles, hammers, you name it.

Everything was going along fine when I heard the neighbor go “Shit!” and the rope slid off the roof and landed on the ground with a thump.

There was silence for a minute and then my Dad’s smile appeared over the roofline.

“Um, Micheal, could you please toss that back up to us?”

“Sure, Dad.”

I tried. I swear I tried but the eight year old me was many things but an athlete I was not. Four times I tried to get that rope back up there but the best that I could do was smacking the bottom of the second floor window. The final time it even swung back and hit me in the face and knocked me on the ground.

“It’s not working, Dad. Can someone come down here and get this?”

My Dad’s smile faded a bit.

“Micheal, we are trying to hold this frame in place and we really need that box of nails.” he shrugged. “I guess you are just gonna have to bring them up to us.”

“What?”

“Grab the rope and tie it around your waist and come up the ladder.”

He wanted ME to CLIMB A LADDER?!?

“It will be fine, son. Just come on up.”

And the SMILE reappeared!

I got up off the ground and tied the rope to me.

“HELL WITH IT!!!” I thought. If my Dad could smile while asking me to do that then there was nothing to worry about.

So, I stepped on the first rung. Not bad.

Step two, that was okay…

Step three, I made the mistake of looking down.

Acrophobia is the fear of heights and it can cause:

  1. Dizziness – Check!
  2. Anxiety – Check!
  3. Panic – Check! Check! And, Check!

I grabbed tight to that ladder and closed my eyes.

“Micheal? What’s wrong?” asked my Dad.

“Dad, I can’t move…”

“Micheal, look at me…”

“I can’t Dad…”

“Micheal look at me.” came my Dad’s calm voice.

I turned my head up and opened my eyes and there was my Dad’s smile.

“Now, son, I want you to keep looking at me while you are climbing. Do not look down,”

“But, Dad -“

“Micheal, you know I would not ask you to do something dangerous, right?”

“Yes, Dad…”

“Okay, just keep looking at me while you climb.”

“Yes, sir.”

Slowly but surely, I c;limbed the ladder, Step by step, I climbed up. Dad’s smile never flickered.

It look forever! But, finally, I passed the eaves.

Dad grabbed me and pulled me off the ladder and away from the edge. It’s a good thing he did because that is when I turned and looked out. It was only about 20 feet but I felt like I was on Mount Everest’s peak.

And, it was beautiful! And, my Dad just kept smiling.

Dad perched me against the side of the dormer while they finished nailing the frame in place smiling the entire time. Oh, and he kept humming Johnny Cash songs.

I got my first real taste of beer that night.

And Dad smiled well into the night.

copyright 2021 M.J. Hobbs

The Ghost of Music Past

Since Dad passed a couple of weeks ago, I have been avoiding music. His life was so full of it that I couldn’t listen to anything without thinking of him.

Driving, I would hit the radio and, of course, “Let It Be” would start:

“When I find myself in times of trouble,

Mother Mary comes to me…”

That did it. I lost it right then and there. Good thing there was a place to pull over.

Going to the grocery was the same.

I would walk up to the checkout and, of course, “Help Me Make It Through the Night” came on:

“Let the Devil take tomorrow.

Lord, tonight I need a friend…”

God, Dad loved Kris Kristofferson.

Holding my breath, I grabbed my receipt and bolted to the car and just sat there.

SIRIUS XM really must hate me.

I sat down to do some paperwork at the office after everyone left and put it on random…

OF COURSE, the first song up was “The Living Years”

“I know that I’m a prisoner
To all my Father held so dear
I know that I’m a hostage
To all his hopes and fears
I just wish I could have told him in the living years.”

SHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIT! I desperately hit random.

“The Gambler” started. As this was the last song I ever sang my father, I hit random even before the first word was spoken. Kenny Rogers faded to…

GODDAMN!

“When you coming home, son?

I don’t know when.

But, we’ll get together then, Dad

You know we’ll have a good time, then.”

CAT’S IN THE FUCKING CRADLE???

I lost it.

Good thing I was the only one in the office.

I put myself back together and went home but it was time to walk the dogs. I grabbed the husky and the leash and went for a walk in the park.

Grabbing my phone, I popped on my earbuds and started up YouTube and put it on random.

Things went pretty well for a while. Boston led to Foreigner led to Queen and even Men Without Hats.

As the “The Safety Dance” faded away, that is when it happened.

“I hear the train a comin’

A coming round the bend…”

“Folsom Prison Blues”?

Dammit, I hit fast forward.

Barry Manilow started up and I started to relax when it suddenly skipped to –

“If I were a carpenter

And you were a lady.”

Johnny Cash again?!?

I looked at the phone and hit forward again.

The BeeGees came on and started to disco when IT DID IT AGAIN!

I watched the screen on the phone as it skipped down 20 songs to

“I fell in to a burning ring of fire

I went down, down, down but the flames went higher.”

Sitting down I watched as the screen just kept shifting and shifting

“A Boy Named Sue” switched to “Hurt” switched to “Sunday Morning Coming Down”

Finally, “I Walk The Line”

I had sat down on a bench and the tears had come. I cried until I had no more left and felt something brush me. The husky started to lick my face.

I looked down at my phone and realized the entire play list had switched to Johnny Cash songs.

That is when it hit me.

I hadn’t lost my Dad.

He was sitting right there with me and showing me that he would always be there!

That is when I started to heal.

I love you, Dad.

The Last Song

It was my little sister’s idea, and it was nothing short of brilliant.

As a matter of fact, it gave me an opportunity that I will never have again.

Dad had been placed in the Covid-19 ward and we were not allowed to visit him.

“I called there last night and the nurse put the phone up by his ear so we could talk to him.” she said.

Like I said, brilliant!

I tried to call several times, but he was always unavailable for some reason. Dinner. Asleep, Staff meeting.

And, I kept getting the brain weasels asking me why I hadn’t talked to him. Again and again and again.

Finally, last night, as the Christmas star appeared, I was able to get through.

“Capital Rehabilitative Care, may I help you?”

“Yes, my father, Calvin Hobbs, is a patient in the COVID-19 ward. May I please speak with the ward?”

“Yes, let me get you through.”

Ring…ring…ring…ring. Finally –

“Hello COVID-19 Ward, Jemiah speaking. How may I help?” came through in a Jamaican accent.

“Can I please speak with my Dad, Calvin Hobbs?

“Certainly, you can speak with Mr. Calvin, but you know he cannot speak right?”

“Yes, I know he is intubated.”

“Okay. Give me a moment.”

The line went silent and I waited. Finally, the line came alive with low hissing sounds and the beeping of monitors.

“Mr. Mike, I am putting the phone on speaker and laying it by his ear so he can hear.”

“Thank you…

Dad, I was calling to check in on you. “

Hiss…beep.

“Everything here is going well. We are getting ready for Christmas. The trees are up, and the dogs are running around it.

Hiss…beep.

“Oh, and the cats keeps trying to climb the trees. They think the ornaments are toys.”

Hiss…beep.

“Work is going well, and everyone sends their best.”

Hiss…beep.

“I have been working on that book I told you about. You remember the one that they want to adapt to the stage? It is going well.”

Hiss…beep.

“I am making Grandma’s green jello for Christmas. I will save you some.”

Hiss…beep.

Sigh…

Well, there is always music. My Dad always loves to sing, and I know his favorite song.

“You gotta know when to hold ‘em

Know when to fold ‘em

Know when to walk away

Know when to run.”

The hissing of the machine sounded louder.

“You never count your money

When you’re sitting at the table.

There’ll be time enough for counting

When the dealing’s done.”

“He’s trying to hum along.” said the attendant.

It was perfect!

“I love you, Dad! Merry Christmas!” and the call ended.

The next morning, I got the news that my father had passed…

“You gotta know when to hold ‘em

Know when to fold ‘em

Know when to walk away

Know when to run.

You never count your money

When you’re sitting at the table

There’ll be time enough for counting

When the dealing’s done!”

RIP, DAD!

I do not own the rights to the lyrics for “The Gambler” The other words are my own. M.J. Hobbs copyright 2020.

…And Then The Tornado Struck!

Ever needed a knight in shining armor to sweep in and rescue you?

I have.

With my Dad fading more as each day passes, it has made me think of the amazing things he has done in the past without knowing it.

Ever heard of April 3, 1974?

If you haven’t, meteorologists sure have!

Let me explain.

I was a complete dork. I spent most of my time watching quiz shows and building models.

I bought the ship models using my tiny allowance and I was so proud of the tiny ships lining my shelves. I had tugboats, and submarines, and even aircraft carriers – all of them no larger than a shoe as they were all I could afford but I loved them anyway. They were my pride and joy.

April 3, 1974 was my eleventh birthday. My mother, oddly enough for her, had suggested that I actually invite my friends over for a birthday party. And, so, I had.

Well, let’s be honest, I had taken the invitations to school and had been laughed at as I tried to pass them out.

“Hobbs, you dork! How dare you invite ME to your birthday party?” was how the class president put it.

“I am not that desperate for friends,” said my former best friend who now wanted to be popular.

“Shove that up your ass.” was the response of one of the jocks who I had coached in English.

So, we actually ended up with eight kids confirming and my Mom in a planning tizzy. To my Mom, eight kids meant an eight layer cake, five gallons of ice cream and enough whipped cream to float a goat.

In the rush of all the planning, the birthday boy got sort of forgotten.

My mother did not care what I wanted for my birthday.

“No, you are not getting any ship models for your birthday.” she said.

“But, Mom-“

“But, nothing. You need school clothes so you are getting school clothes.”

No amount of whining, and yes, I whined a lot did a bit of good.

Dad just smiled and shook his head.

Then, came the morning of April 3, 1974:

Meteorologists became aware of a cold front sweeping in from Canada about midnight. It first broached the border about 4 a.m. in Montana.

At first, nothing seemed unusual. Then, the first air pressure readings came in. The air pressure was very high. Unusually high actually.

The first scientists thought the readings were wrong so they sent up airplanes to take new readings. The pilots passing through the storm front reported intense winds and lightning as few had ever seen before.

That was before one of them crashed.

My three best friends arrived at the house about 4 p.m. with the party to start at 5. Mom fussed about and we watched “Chiller Theater”. It was one of my favorites, “Godzilla vs. Mothra” and we were just getting into it when the weather alerts started.

“THE NATIONAL SERVICE HAS DECLARED A THUNDERSTORM WATCH FOR CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN OHIO”

“Mom, there’s a storm coming!”

“Let’s get the table inside.” she ordered.

Just as we got the cake inside and the movie restarted, the skies clouded over.

Godzilla rose over Tokyo harbor and -“

“THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE HAS DECLARED A THUNDERSTORM WARNING FOR THE FOLLOWING COUNTIES–“

About that time the sky opened! Rain came down in sheets and we could barely see the street. The gutters overflowed.

5 p.m. came and went and no one else showed up.

“Must be the rain,” said Mom in such a way that you knew she absolutely did not believe it.

I was crushed.

Dork?

Check!

Nerd?

Check!

Social pariah?

Check, check and double check!!!

Godzilla rose again and began to torch Tokyo.

Mom was on the phone with someone.

“Yeah, no one showed up. Yeah, he is upset but he will be fine. Get home soon.”

Mothra swooped in and –

“THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE HAS ISSUED A TORNADO WATCH FOR DELAWARE, FRANKLIN, MARION -“

“Micheal, it has to be your birthday if all this shit is happening.” said Mom as she tipped back another vodka.

The winds began to howl and we could hear the shutters start to bang in the wind.

Godzilla tackled Mothra and they took off for the sky and crashed into a building –

“THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE HAS ISSUED-“

“Kids! Basement! Now!” shouted Mom.

“A tornado warning for Delaware, Franklin, Marion -” the TV died as the power went out and we scampered down the stairs to the basement.

What we did not know is that the most pwerful storm front ever recorded was sweeping across the Midwest. Town after town was struck. Some were completely obliterated.

Calling the old root cellar a basement was being generous. It was only about seven feet deep and smelled like earth and mold.

Mom turned on the transistor radio. Tornado warning after tornado warning flipped by and the earth shook as lightning struck.

A flash lit up the sky and came through the tiny windows. We gathered there and watched as lightning licked at the barn and the trees in the orchard.

The radio droned on: “Reports are coming in now that the town of Xenia has been completely destroyed…”

“Definitely YOUR birthday…” said my mother.

The wind raged higher and higher. Rain started to seep in around the windows. The dogs started to howl.

The radio broke in “A tornado has just struck Sunbury and Galena and-“

“That’s less than five miles away!” growled my mother looking out the grate.

Howling, the winds grew in pitch and we could almost feel the house rising off its foundations.

I started to cry. This was all my fault for wanting a birthday party.

AND THEN THE OUTSIDE CELLAR DOOR SLAMMED OPEN!

We crouched as the wind and rain reached a crescendo!

Suddenly. a giant came down the stairs and swung the door shut behind him.

“Micheal?”

IT WAS DAD!

“That was quite some storm!” he said. “I could barely drive in it.”

As my father smiled, the room seemed to light up.

“Happy Birthday!” he said as he opened a sack and handed me a huge box.

“Calvin, that has to cost-” started my mother.

“Hush! Open it, boy.” my father nudged me.

The box was simply enormous. “C.S.S. Alabama” was written on the side. In smaller letters, it read “The largest scale model ever produced.”

I opened the box and realized that the model itself was at least six feet long and four feet high once assembled. Huge is simply inadequate. It even came with a small steam engine to propel it through the water once assembled.

IT WAS AMAZING!

And the sun broke through the clouds like a sword. The rains stopped. The world returned to normal.

I later found out my Dad drove through three police roadblocks, flooded roads and hurricane force winds to get home. He had also convinced the shop owner to briefly reopen his shop in the eye of the storm so he could get the gift.

BUT… That’s my Dad!!!

So Ashamed It Made Me Smile

Growing up I was told over and over that there are things you should always be ashamed of:

Psycho mom…

Haunted house…

Being gay…

The last one was the one that had the most effect. I could not tell anyone I was gay growing up for fear of being exiled like my uncle or commiting the greatest sin possible at Big Walnut High School…

Being different.

So I hid it. Ignored it. And just tried to find something else to think about.

But times change and I started to come out during college. As some of you who have read my book know I told my Dad about it and he was really, really great about it. He made me aware that no matter what happened I was still his son.

And he was always my Dad.

As some of you are also aware, my Dad is now in a memory facility. He is slowly fading and more often than not he calls me by my brother’s name BUT he is still my Dad and we still sing country songs whenever we see each other.

However, he does something that makes me smile and feel loved every time I hear about it.

I was talking to my cousin Robert today and what he said made me smile. You see, my Dad has developed a little quirk as his memory has faded.

“Micheal, you know, the last time I talked to your Dad, he insisted on telling me that you were gay. As a matter of fact, he tells me that every time he sees me as if he never had before.”

Yeah, I knew.

It turns out the fact that I am not ashamed of being gay and that I told my Dad so long ago has actually become a matter of pride for my father over the years.

So, every time, I go to see him at the care facility, he insists on introducing me to each of the staff as if for the first time – even if I have already met them dozens of times before.

Dad puffs himself up proudly and he says. “This is my son, Micheal. AND HE”S GAY!” and says it in such a way that he is daring anyone to object!

I have now heard him do this hundreds of times.

I LOVE MY DAD!

copyright 2020 M.J. Hobbs

My Knight In Shining Armor, or the Complete, Uneditted and Totally True Story of Floyd the Pig

This is a bittersweet tale but I think that you will like it. I have published a couple of versions but this is the one I have specifically been asked to republish:

Some of you may think you know this story but you do not know it all, or at least you do not know the whole story and the context in which it occurred.  Many of you have heard parts of it but none of you know the whole story.  I have changed some of the names to protect privacy.

This is the tale of how a group of people in funny clothing saved my life.

Please grant me this one favor: if you start to read this, please read it through to the final end. This story is important to me and is a bit difficult to tell and it will not go where you expect.

Thank you, Zyggie, for asking the right questions last week and making me tell the story.

Prologue:

I have seen the shadows in a desert night.

I have walked the corridors of abandoned buildings.

The landscape of the Apocalypse is dire and wrapped in smiles and pain.

By the late 1980’s, the drumbeats were constant.  They came at you from every side.

TV.

Radio.

Newspapers.

Phone.

AIDS.

AIDS.

AIDS.

And on and on.

Walter Cronkite calmly read the numbers on the nightly news. 10,000. 15,000. 20,000. The spiral went up and up.

“The Federal Government has warned that those who engage in high risk activity…”

“Gay men and intravenous drug users are at special risk…”

“Hemophiliacs and children requiring blood transfusions are being affected in unprecedented numbers…”

Drip.

Drip.

Drip.

It was a constant pounding.

I began to fear answering the telephone. Each week the answering machine contained a new one.

“Jimmy died last night.”

“I had to take Al to the hospital.”

“The funeral is Friday.”

Drip.

Drip.

Drip.

At work it was the same.

“No, you can’t get AIDS from a bathroom door handle.”

“She looks awful. I bet she has AIDS.” 

“Betty lost her son – you know, the fag. AIDS.”

Drip.

Drip.

Drip.

As every drop hit my psyche, a hammer pounded it into my skull.

I felt as though I were drowning. Every ounce of strength that I had was being taken to keep my own grip on reality let alone being there for others.

I know what it means to go insane as I was staring at the Mountains of Madness.

Drip.

Drip.

Drip.

I even tried a therapist to try to deal but he had to keep rescheduling and rescheduling as he got more and more AIDS patients. Finally, he suggested I look elsewhere.

I could have fought a person.  I could have fought an animal but how the hell do you fight something that is a concept? Something that has no body. Something that is stalking you in the shadows but refuses to come out and goddamn fight!

AAAAAAAAAAAAAAIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!

My batteries were dying and so was I.

They say it is always darkest before the dawn.

Enter Floyd, Part I

In an effort to make something out of my life, I had enrolled in grad school. After class, I would hang out in the student union and had fallen in with the science fiction geeks. Big surprise there, right?

Anyway, a bunch of them were talking about some medieval thing coming up that they were all going to.

Did I want to go?

“What is this group called again?”

“The Society for Creative Anachronism. You know, the SCA?”

“Is this like Monty Python?”

“Uh, no.  We really hit people. You have to know about them”

I did not know but had the weekend off and had to do something or I would sit at home and get more and more depressed.

“Hey, Mike. You’re a restaurant manager.  You okay with making dinner if we bring the supplies?”

“Sure.”

Little did I know.

So that is how I ended up in a string tie and work clothes in a forest in West Virginia.

Upon arrival, my friends had determined that there were a few problems with the menu for the event and the facilities.

First, the menu for the feast was unique to say the least. The cook’s idea of proper medieval food was pressed turkey rolls, stuffed with cranberries and sour cream, and topped with American cheese.

That is where the second problem came up.  No one had checked that the utilities were turned on at the site – and they weren’t. So the pressed turkey rolls were served …cold.

Add to this the fact that it had been raining for the entire prior week and the temperature onsite was a balmy 55 degrees and you have the idea.

I had expected to be asked to make burgers and some brats and maybe some mac and cheese.  That’s not quite how it turned out.

Upon my arrival, I had been presented with a 60 lb. suckling pig, a bag of apples, a bag of pears, and a double hibachi.

Seriously?

The only whole animal I had ever cooked was a chicken! At the restaurant, the only pork we served was ground!

All other thoughts flew out of my head as the fact that I had people to cook for filled my noggin from stem to stern.

I am nothing if not a cook.

I had a purpose.

Wading into the battle, there were a couple of issues. First and foremost was the fact that the pig was approximately 30 inches long and the skewers I had been given to spit it with were about 24 inches long. So, before I knew it, my hand was somewhere up a pig I never thought it would be wiring two spits together to hold the pig for cooking.

Second issue: While I could certainly stuff the pig with apples and pears, we had no way of sewing it up.  I didn’t know that you are supposed to bring very long needles and catgut to sew it up and didn’t have them if I did.

So, we came up with a unique solution. Kite string. About 300 feet of it. We just kept turning and turning.  That poor thing looked like something out of “Charlotte’s Web”, but it worked. Then we coated it with honey and spices and popped it on the hibachi and prayed for the best.

That is when the third issue cropped up. What comes out of a pig when you are cooking it? 

Grease! 

Riiiiiiight!!!

Every so often, grease would pour out of the pig and into the hibachi. Flames would shoot up WHOOOSHing up higher than my head. We would pick up the pig, carry it about ten feet away, put it out, wait for the flames to die down and put it back.

“Meltdown!!!” we would scream each time and grab the pig. The tree above us was wilting and we were taking bets on when the eyes would pop.

I won.

Then, we had our final issue.  As we were cooking this juicy pig full of fruit and roasting away, another chemical reaction was occurring. Something was building up inside of the pig.

Right!

STEAM!

Imagine our surprise when the kite string began to burn through and pieces of jet powered fruit began popping out of the pig.

Pop!

Wha?

POP!

DIVE!!!!

POP! POP! POP! POP!

We huddled on the ground behind a picnic table while the porcine wonder continued to expel fruit at escape velocity.  I swear it looked like the scene from the movie “Alien” where the creature explodes out of the guy’s stomach.

Finally, the noises died down and the pig cooked merrily away. 

Not having known better, we had placed an apple in its mouth before cooking and that poor apple had been through hell.

After about three hours of blazing atomic fireball, we decided that the porker was done. Both eyes had popped and we had burned off an ear but it was done. It was a charred mass of pig.

We laid it out on a platter to cool and that is when i saw the loose string sticking out of the charred mass. Pulling on it, the crust began to peel away until it just slid away revealing the most beautiful looking pig ever. It was truly beautiful despite the fact that the eyes had popped and we had burned off an ear.

The cremated apple had stuck to the teeth and could not be dislodged so someone got the great idea to fix it up. Grabbing some nail polish, they painted it bright red.

Carrying it onto the hall, my friends all sat down at the table to eat while the whole room stared at the pig. Then at the pressed turkey rolls on their plates. Then back at the pig.

The cook took one look at the pig and disappeared. I never saw him again.

There was just one light working in the room and that was directly in front of the “Prince”. Staring at his plate, he came to a decision.  Picking up his plate, he wandered out of the light. We heard a thump as a plate emptied into the garbage.

Then, he appeared out of the dark at the edge of our table.

“Please, Sir.  May I have some more?” 

We fed the whole event from that pig.

Floyd the Pig, Part II

Later that same night.

It kept raining the whole day and night. Everyone at the event had either hidden somewhere to drink or were trying to keep warm in their tents.

Guess what I did?

RIGHT!

I was drunk off my ass sitting in a shelter house talking to a friend trying to stay warm and basically babbling. We were so drunk that we were holding each other on the bench to keep from falling off.

The night was dripping along when DJ appeared. DJ was a tall, cadaverous looking, blond man dressed all in black. He had missed dinner and was hungry.

The platter containing the remains of the pig was on a table behind us. What is left of a pig once you are done eating. A few bones…the tail…and what else?  The head.

We heard DJ fiddling with the platter but were honestly too drunk to pay too much attention. Until –

“My, what a handsome pig you are.”

Wha?

We carefully turned around so as not to draw attention to ourselves. DJ had picked up the pig head and was doing his best Hamlet and Yorick imitation. We quickly turned back around before he noticed.

“My, what a sexy pig you are!”

Turning back around, we noticed him staring eye to eye with the pig head. Titillated but slightly terrified, we quickly swivelled back away before he saw.

“My, what a sensuous pig you are!”

That did it. No longer caring and too drunk not to watch, we swivelled around and planted our feet to keep from falling off.

DJ had picked up the pig head and was playing with it.  He has forced his hand up the neck of the pig into where its brain had used to be before I had boiled it away. His thumb went below the tongue of the beast and he began to do ventriloquism with it.

That is how Floyd the Pig was born.

But there was a problem with Floyd.  He had a speech impediment. Right…the apple. He couldn’t move his jaw. Caramelized and covered with nail polish it was stuck there.

So DJ ate it!

Popping the jaw, he began to talk to the pig head. 

“Hi! Would you like to meet my friend, Floyd?”

Who could resist?

Now that Floyd was his best friend, DJ began to make the rounds of the camp to introduce everyone.

Imagine a tall gentleman in a cloak steps out of the dark.

“Hi! Would you like to meet my friend, Floyd?” and he would appear from under the cloak.

We traced him all around the camp by the screams.

Finally, deciding that Floyd was now his best friend, and having introduced him to everyone in the woods, DJ decided that the pig head deserved a night on the town.  Hopping on his motorcycle, he started up and got ready to go.

There was, however, a problem. He only had one helmet so guess who got it?  Right! FLOYD! And he was off into the night!

We later found out he had grabbed someone else’s helmet and it didn’t even belong to him.

DJ and Floyd hit the hottest night spots in Huntington, West Virginia that night, and DJ paid the cover charge for the pig head! All I can envision is a pig head rising above the dancers going “Staying Alive! Staying Alive!”.

As Floyd was now his best friend, DJ was now determined to keep him around as long a he could. If your best friend was a pig head and you wanted to keep him as long as possible, what would you do with him?

You’d put him in the fridge! Right next to the eggs, the butter, the orange juice… and that is what he did and headed to bed.

About six am, DJ’s girlfriend came home from work and decided she wanted some orange juice.

He said all he heard was a scream…and then she began to beat him to death with the pig.

Floyd the Pig, Part III

Have you ever had a really champion hangover?

You know the kind I mean, right? The ones where you can hear your eyeballs moving.  That was me.

To stay dry, I had put my sleeping bag on a picnic table in a shelter house and had gone to sleep. Consciousness was not my friend.

RRRRRRIIIIIIIIIIIPPPPPP!!!

“Te Hee Hee Hee! Te Hee Hee Hee! Quick! He’s waking up!”

RRRRRRIIIIIIIIIIIPPPPPP!!!

“Te Hee Hee Hee! Te Hee Hee Hee!”


Wha?


RRRRRRIIIIIIIIPPPPP!!!


Maybe I better pay attention to this?


Opening my eyes, they were stabbed by the morning light. PAIN!


“Te Hee Hee Hee! Te Hee Hee Hee!”


RRRRRRIIIIIIIIPPPPP!!!


That is when I realized I could not move.


Lifting my head, I looked down my body and realized that my feet were duct taped within the sleeping bag to the picnic table beneath me.  There was another band around my waist. A third band of duct tape was wrapped around my chest and shoulders where they peeked out of the bag.


“Te Hee Hee Hee! Te Hee Hee Hee!”


Turning my head, I saw two ladies standing nearby holding a large roll of duct tape and giggling.


“What is going on?” I groaned out.


“Te Hee Hee Hee! Te Hee Hee Hee! We are going to find out what is under your kilt!”


“Very funny, ladies.  Now, please cut me loose.”


“Not until we find out what is under that kilt!”


With that a five finger glacier came down my boxers and grabbed something no other woman has seen since my mother.


“Aighh!” I shouted and jumped. Or more like skipped as the picnic table moved a few inches as the glacier disappeared.


“We are going to find out what is under your kilt!” and again the glacier returned.


Grab. Arch. Grab. Arch.  Eventually, the ladies jumped on top of me to keep the table from moving.


That is when I noticed that everyone at the event was standing around the shelterhouse and watching…but no one was helping!


Eventually, Randy strode up and pulled them off of me.


“Girls! Leave that boy alone! If he wanted to sleep with you, he would have done it. Just like everybody else.”


With that, he cut me loose.


That is when Randy told probably the only lie in his whole life as he grabbed the band of duct tape around my shoulders.


“If we do this real fast, it won’t hurt!”



Epilogue


Several hours later, after the bleeding had stopped and the ladies had apologized, I sat on a bench drinking a beer and mourning my lost chest hair.


Sitting next to me was Bear, one of the furriest men I have ever met. He was sucking on a cigarette and watching me.


That is when it hit me.


“Whoa!” I said.


“What?” asked Bear.


“I just realized I haven’t thought about the real world for three straight days.”  I felt great!


Bear took a long drag on his cigarette.


“Welcome to the SCA!”, he said.

A Day of Reckoning

I am having a flashback.

I never thought I would smell tear gas again.

As some of you know, last night there were riots in many cities following the death of a man in Minneapolis in police custody. Stupidly, I thought our city was immune.

I was wrong.

As we live about a mile from the city center, last night was filled with sirens and popping and horns honking, and… well, you get it.

Around midnight, I stepped onto the porch. The breeze was from west, i.e. from Downtown and I smelled it.

It was faint but it was there… tear gas.

I have now smelled tear gas three times in my life.

Last night…sometime in the late 80’s…and May 5, 1970.

The second time was easy.

It was a protest march against that fucking bitch, Anita Bryant. You remember her, right? Orange juice spokesman? Former Miss America? Antigay, lying misanthrope?

If you don’t remember her, don’t worry. She will be spending eternity in Hell, anyway. And, I have no sympathy for the woman.

No, the exposure that is causing flashbacks is the very first one in 1970.

I was seven and in the first grade. Like today, the country was undergoing convulsions caused by the incompetence of elected officials.

As a child, I was considered precocious and I knew that the adults were worried but did not understand it all. The nightly news tried to explain but I could not connect it to my own life.

Then, the Kent State Shootings in Ohio happened.

For those of you who do not know or remember, on May 4, 1970, four unarmed students at Kent State University in Ohio protesting against the Vietnam War were gunned down by nervous National Guardsmen.

The nation erupted! Campuses blazed!

Ohio State University is in my hometown of Columbus, Ohio, and the riots there were unrivalled nationwide. Businesses and schools were closed and the city was under siege.

Imagine a seven year old child seeing this and watching their world burn.

That was me.

While my Dad had to stay home from work in downtown Columbus, my mother was considered essential personnel as she worked at Ohio State University Hospital in the heart of the OSU campus. She was a nurse and she was REQUIRED to go to work by order of the governor of Ohio.

In other words, my mother had to report to work in the heart of the inferno.

Even better, my mother was instructed by her boss that she was not allowed to drive her own car to the hospital. It turns out that cars in the parking lot had been torched and no one was allowed to drive themselves so my father had to take her and pick her up.

My mother has heard on the news that the protesters were swarming cars on High Street and that the National Guard had been deployed to campus. She has also heard they were ignoring cars with kids.

SO, what does that have to do with me?

Mom needed picked up at the end of her shift at 11 p.m. so picture me and my Dad driving down High Street in his old Ford pickup. Smoke drifted across the street and burnt out cars lined the way.

My Dad had to check in with the National Guard at the corner of Fifth Avenue and High Street. It was actually the first time I had ever seen a loaded gun in person. The young men were very innocent looking and they looked so scared.

They made us step out while they searched the truck and then waved Dad through.

It was very frightening as we drove down High street and then turned on Tenth Avenue. Burning cars and shattered glass were everywhere. Even the White Castle was damaged by the rioters.

On High Street, the Guardsmen were holding back the rioters from the street. The rioters flowed and ebbed like a storm. Smoke and embers rode the wind and filled the air.

As we turned onto 10th Avenue, the rioters broke through and surrounded the truck. Chants and shouting as they peered in at us.

Then: “There’s a kid in there!” and they backed off.

THAT is when it happened.

As the students backed off and my father began to slowly drive away, I heard popping behind us and looked back to see what looked like aerosols cans flying through the air towards the protesters.

POP! POP! POP! and tear gas filled the air!

My Dad hit the gas just as we both got a big whiff of it. Our eyes began to tear and we started to cry.

The rest of the route was lined by National Guardsmen but the protesters backed off as they started to cry and puke.

The Guardsmen were crying as well, but I don’t think the tear gas had anything to do with it.