Monday, March 30, 2020

Doctor Jim's Story...

Our old pal, family friend Doctor Jim (RIP) related his story one night in Mystic Connecticut after a day of sailing. 

We were staying in his guest room and I noticed a picture of him in uniform, I knew he'd been an Army doc, but in the picture, I noticed he had Airborne wings on his class A uniform. I asked him about the wings.

"Funny story about those, the Army paid for my medical school and I owed them 2 years for each year I was in school. I went on active duty for 2 years in 1960, then I was transferred to the reserve, one weekend a month and a summer camp that I spent in an Army Hospital for 2 weeks. 

In the summer of 67, I was called to active duty for an indefinite period of time. I didn't even know that was in my agreement, but it was. They needed orthopedic surgeons and I fit the bill. 

I went to a refresher course at Fort Sam and the next thing I knew I was on a plane to Vietnam. I was assigned to an Evacuation Hospital and went to work. 

Depending on what was going on, were either lounging around or working 18-20 hours a day. 

During the Tet Offensive, I was working three cases at a time. I had one anesthetist, one OR Nurse, and three OR techs all of us working on three patients at a time. Fast and furious work. I was trying to save legs and arm, hands, anything, and everything. I did more amputations during that week than I'd done in 5 years of private practice. It was brutal. 

When my tour was up, I was sent to Walter Reed. 

Every day I ran across some poor bastard that I had cut a leg off of and now my job was to try to make things better. It was so depressing, I started to go to a counselor at the hospital. I was burned out.

I finally went to my boss and asked him if I could get a transfer, I told him I'd do induction physicals if I had to. You know the "bend over and spread your cheeks" physicals. 

He said, he'd see what he could do.

6 weeks went by, he called me in. He said I have one slot for you, a Special Fores Group needs a medical officer. "I said I'll take it!"

He smiled and said, there's one problem Major, you have to be Airborne qualified. I told him, "I'll do it!"

Off I went to Fort Benning's Jump School, I was 39, pushing 40. I was fat, I drank too much, I hadn't been in shape since I played high school football and I had plenty of gray in my hair. My fellow students in Jump School were around 19 years old and all privates. They couldn't figure out what my story was. 

There's no rank in Jump School, enforced equality. For three weeks I got my ass kicked, I ran, I did push-ups. I sang the Airborne songs and I lost 14 pounds. At graduation, I took my wings the hard way.



I had a week of leave, then I climbed on a jet and flew to Incirlik Air Force Base in Turkey. Our Special Forces detachment was tucked off in a far corner of the base. I spent the next year, fixing the occasional broken finger, taping sore knees and ankles. I kept the Medics up to date. I filled in at the base hospital. 

I gained back the 14 pounds and more and developed my taste in scotch and did a hell of a lot of traveling in that part of the world. One of the best years of my life."

We all miss Dr. Jim. 

Sunday, March 29, 2020

A Story from my Doc...

Talking with my cardiologist a couple of years ago, out of nowhere he asked me, "Ever gotten a DUI?"

"I haven't."

"I have."

"What happened?"

"I'd just gotten back from Vietnam, did all the family things for a couple of days, I even called a few old girlfriends, no luck there. A buddy of mine from my residency at UCLA Medical Center called and said, we should get the gang together and have a few laughs. I said, "Great." 



We met at a bar close to the beach in Venice, I put on shorts and a t-shirt and borrowed my younger brother's Manx Dune Buggy and off I went. I got there about 8 and by midnight I was shit faced, I mean knee walking drunk on my ass. Time to go. I ordered a long neck, slipped it in my pocket and left. I found the Dune buggy in a parking lot a few blocks away, fired it up, the damn thing had a stinger exhaust, the kind with the long chrome pipe sticking straight up in the air."

"I remember those, really loud." 

"It would shatter your ears. I got in the buggy, put the log neck between my legs and pulled out on the street, I drove a few blocks and stopped at a light, took a drink of beer. I looked to my left and sure as hell, I'd had stopped next to a cop. I was staring at him with a beer in my hand. The cop had a big smile on his face. The light changed, he followed me across the intersection, wrote me up for open container, illegal exhaust, and driving under the influence. That god damn night followed me around for years."

"How so?"

"I'd decided to specialize in cardiology, I applied at UCLA, it came up in the interview, it came up in the board certification process, it came up when I joined Kaiser. It's classified as a moral deficiency or some shit like that."

"Did you ever drink and drive again?"

"Only when I had no other choice."

"Doesn't bother me, doc."

"I didn't think it would."

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Seventy-Five years ago today...

Here I am sitting in my cozy little retirement home, typing this on a computer, we have a Pandemic raging across the world. I'm thinking about my father.


Seventy-five years ago, my father was a US Army Air Corps pilot, he was flying a Waco Glider hooked via a long nylon tow line to C 47 tow plane. The glider carried my dad, his co-pilot a squad of Infantryman from the 17th Airborne division, a jeep and a trailer load of ammunition. The Waco was made of plywood and fabric, there was no armor. Dad and his co-pilot were dressed in combat gear. You couldn't tell them from the Airborne troopers, they both had carbines, they would put their carbines to good use once they were on the ground,

They took off from France, the flight to Germany took well over three hours. They were part of the Greatest Combined Airborne operation in history, Operation Varsity. The force consisted of America, British and Canadian forces. 16,000 Airborne troops would cross the Rhine in one fell swoop and land behind the German lines. The "Sky Train" of planes, took 2 and a half hours to pass any given point.

My dad was flying one of 900 Waco CG4A gliders, dad was the 2nd to cross the Rhine. He landed in a field outside of Wesel. He made a good landing, no damage except for the holes ripped in the fabric from the heavy flak. Dad's pants were ripped from the flak and he had a slight wound on his left leg. He didn't worry about it. The Germans knew they were coming and were ready. dad and his co-pilot popped the front of the glider open, the jeep and trailer drove out and the squad of Airborne troopers took off to their rallying points.

Dad and his fellow pilots formed up as an Infantry Company, they rallied to Captain Gordon and marched to their objective, a village on the outskirts of Wesel, their orders "Hold the Crossroads".It was 11 in the morning when they arrived at the village. There were no German troops in the village, just women, children and old men. The German Army was close, they could hear the German tanks coming. They took their positions, they were untested, they waited. They were scared, as dad said, "Shitless".

A Tiger tank appeared on the narrow paved road, as it approached the junction of the two main roads, the pilots opened up with, rifles and machine guns. Nothi9ng stopped the Tiger. One of the pilots was trained as a bazooka man. He blew the track off the Tiger, it stopped dead. The tank continued to fire it's machine guns, the main gun on the turret was swiveling around and the big gun was being leveled, it fired, missed the men and destroyed a house, A pilot, jumped up, ran to the tank, climbed on top, lifted the hatch and tossed two grenades inside. The tank was a smoking ruin and it was a massive iron and steel roadblock. It had been stopped in the exact spot it needed to stopped. Jelinek was awarded the Siver Star for his actions that morning.

The Germans brought up a motorized gun and a tank retriever, the pilots fought them off, the Germans tried a flanking maneuver, the pilots fought them off. The Battle of Burp Gun Corner lasted until dark. The German column was severed by 17th Airborne troops and they surrendered when the sun went down. The pilots dug in where they were for the night. The Germans shelled them and made a few sporadic and senseless attacks, but it was over.

The next day my dad and three of his fellow pilots were sent to find missing American and British troops. The found 2 wounded pilots, accepted the surrender of a few wounded Germans, they took them all to an American field hospital. They spent the 2nd night in the basement of the house the Tiger tank blew down.

On the morning of the third day, they were told to walk back to the Rhine and they'd get transportation back to their base. Dad and his co-pilot stole two bicycles and rode to the river, at the Rhine they traded the bikes for a bottle of liberated German brandy and headed back to France.

4 days later, Dad was in dress uniform with 4 of his fellow pilots celebrating in Paris. Johnson, his co-pilot walked into the glass door of a Paris bistro and broke his nose. One of the pilots got a paper and pen from the bartender, drew a Purple Heart on it, Johnson wore it with great pride the rest of the evening.

Dad was awarded the Bronze Star and an Air Medal. His unit was awarded the Presidental Unit Citation

He came back to the States in May, had a two-week leave and left for Santa Ana Army Air Corps base to prepare for the invasion of Japan, an invasion that wasn't needed. He was home in October of 45 alive and well with a few scratches.

Thanks dad.


Monday, March 16, 2020

A Most Boston St. Patrick's Day

My last St. Patrick's day in Boston as a single man was a multi-parter.

It began at noon, I had lunch at a Japanese restaurant in East Cambridge. My "date", a long-time friend stuck in an unhappy marriage. Lunch was a 90-minute session of complaints, big and small and her brilliant new plan to move her husband into the garage once the conversion to a "guest cottage" was completed.

"Why don't you get divorced, you're the unhappiest person I know."
This good catholic girl answered, "Nobody in my family has ever gotten divorced, I can't be the first, my mother would die." I ate the last tuna sushi and said, "You're the one dying, not your mom. Did she die when you were 4 months pregnant when you married him at the Arboretum instead of in the Holy Catholic Church? No, she didn't, did she?"

She was mute. This woman and I have known each other for a long time. We'd met when were both dating other people, we used to double date. We'd had an unrequited love affair for years.

I'd take her to lunch when she was pregnant. After her daughter was born, I'd carry the baby to lunch and push her in her stroller down Commonwealth Avenue. I'm sure people thought we were married, a happy couple, with a beautiful baby and big German Shepherd living the good life in Boston's Back Bay.

We sure as hell weren't that.

When I was promoted to the corporate office and moved to Florida, she'd call and cry on the phone, daily. I finally gave her an ultimatum. "Pack your bags, put the baby in the car and move down here."

She hung up. I didn't talk to her again for two years. She now lives in New York, the baby has graduated from BC and her husband lives in an apartment in Quincy. They are still "married". 

As the Irish say, "a fooking tragedy is what it was."

Teary-eyed, a kiss on the cheek and she dropped me off at my office.

The radio station was empty except for the people on the air. I did a few things in my office and left to met Tommy and Kevin across Boylston at the Pour House. A Guinness and a shot of Bushmills later. I left to take my dog for a walk, an hour later we met at Daisy Buchanan's at the end of my block. Tommy and good old Kev were in the first stage of St. Patrick's Day shit face.

My girlfriend at the time had gone with me to the New England Broadcaster's Annual St. Patrick's Day Party the year before, she wisely turned down my invitation to this year's event. After a couple of pops at Daisey's, we were off to the NEBA gathering. For unknown reasons, it was being held at Dick's Last Resort, a blues and BBQ place in the basement of the Prudential Tower parking garage. Perfect for St. Patrick's Day, right?

Dick's was in full shit show mode when we arrived, we dragged a table over to join some of our associates creating a table for 8. We ordered, Dick's had no Irish beer, we had to make do with Corona. This prompted Kevy to switch to Stoly Vodka, a well known red flag with that laddie. Kev drank his vodka on the rocks. "Tommy" spotted a TV reporter he knew and dragged her back to the table and they proceeded to fall in love.

With the full approval of my then-girlfriend, I had a date for St. Patrick's Day. A blonde, green-eyed.Lipstick Lesbian in a stylish St. John suit and matching heels. She was stunning.

I had from time to time acted as her beard and functioned as her "boyfriend" to ward off all the assholes who hit on her. Ms. H found me, gave me a hug and a kiss, prompting Kev to say, "You always have the best looking dates, you dick." Ms. H smiled and told Kevin, "Don't be an asshole, I know it's hard but, please try sweetie." She patted him on the head and gave him a peck on the cheek. Kevin was momentarily cheered by the attention of a gorgeous woman.

Ms. H and I danced to a few tunes, while we were slow dancing, she said, "I'm going to find Kevin a date."

We went back to the table, Kevvy was well into his sad Irishman mood. Now Kevvy is a brilliant guy, he's shy as hell and has real trouble dealing with women. He's loaded with catholic guilt, as in he's a good boy with nasty thoughts and impulses he never acts on, in short, he's a complicated man who drinks way the hell too much.

Ms. H is back in a flash, with two women in tow. They're sisters, one a news producer at Channel 7, the other a senior at Syracuse in town to see what a Boston's St. Patrick's Day is all about. Ms. H orders them drinks on my tab and introduces them to Kevin. He perks up, smiles, tugs on his red, curly forelock and mumbles something. The older sister throws down a shot of something clear, takes a drink of my beer and drags Kevin onto the dance floor. Ms. H is beaming. A couple of songs go by and the Syracuse sister joins them. Neither of them notices Kevin can't dance worth a shit and is a least a beat and half behind the band. Kevin is in Heaven.

Meanwhile, Tommy and his TV reporter are so in love, they are giving each other wet kisses at the table.

We're saved by old Billy W, who announces, "Enough of this shit we're going to the Black Rose!"
There's 7 of us, we need two cabs, Billy steps out into the middle of Huntington Avenue and with the luck of the Irish, he gets two Town cabs to stop and off we go.

When I first visited the Black Rose on occasion in the 70s, they were passing the hat for the IRA. Now the Black Rose is an upscale Irish bar in the Fanuel Hall Market, it's on the edge of the financial district, so it's filled with bankers, stockbrokers, and venture (vulture) capitalists and tourists. We last one drink, after fending off a couple of stockbrokers from hitting on Ms. H with bullshit pick up lines, we head to Cambridge for a real Irish bar. Billy does his magic trick and two more cabs appear and we head for The Druid. It's Tommy's favorite.

Ms. H and I order fish and chips and a couple of Guinness Stouts, Kevvy and his girls stick with vodka as does Billy. Time goes by, we join in and sing a few old Irish favorites with the band, the ones I recall, Black Velvet Band and some ditty that starts, "in the year of our lord 18 hundred and six". More Clancy Brothers than Clannad or the Chieftains for my taste.

I notice that Tommy and his "new wife" have disappeared. I ask Ms. H. if she knows where they are. Billy jumps in and says, "my guess is they are making love on top of the dumpster in the alley, it's their wedding night, yah know." We never see them again.

Meanwhile, the grinning Kevin is getting kisses from both the sisters. I notice he is copping a feel or two. They don't seem to mind.

After an hour or so at the Druid, we're tired of the music and the drunken Harvard students. We head for the Cantab on Mass Ave.

The Cantab is a classic working-class bar with a varied clientele. Retired guys and their tired wives, blue-collar workers, students, waiters and waitresses, the occasional drug dealer and other Cambridge hoodlums. It's a fun slice of life in The People's Republic of Cambridge.

We lose Billy, he decides it's time to go home. Ms. H, Kevvy and his dates and I squeeze into seats at the bar. The Cantab is smokey, it's hot and the punky-Irish band is doing their best on the tiny stage. They're playing the Clash's 'London Calling" when we slip in the door. Sitting next to me is an old Irish guy named Jimmy, he's a retired T conductor, we meet only because he tells me I'm sitting in his buddy Duke's seat. He adds with a grin, 'it's okay because the old fuckah went home early, he couldn't stand the god damned band". He makes his point by yelling, "turn that shit down!"

We have a few pints, Ms. H and I dance to a few tunes. We sit down when the pogoing starts. Jimmy pokes me and says, "You tappin' that good lookin' broad?" Ms. H hears him and says, "Of course he is, he makes me scream like a banshee, don't you honey?" She adds an exclamation point by licking my cheek. Jimmy's eyes bug out and he grins like a Cheshire cat, "He does, does he?" Ms. H leans over and says, "Yes he does, but your heart couldn't take the details."

 Kevvy buys me a shot of Old Bushmills, I'd had with drinking it at this point of the evening, I slide the shot in front of Jimmy. he downs it and I've made a friend for life. It's time to go home, as we're leaving, old Jimmy says, "Lad, it must be grand to wake up in the mornin' and see that beauty lyin' beside yah."

"I'll tell you, Jimmy, she usually wakes me up and believe me most mornings she's pretty damn frisky." I get a slap on the back and a "That's my boy." Ms. H gives old Jimmy a peck on the cheek and we're gone.

On the sidewalk, Kevin and the girls are arguing about where to go. Long story short, Kevin got nowhere with either one.

Ms. H is in no condition to drive, I took her home with me. I handed her a t-shirt to sleep in, she stripped down in front of me, pulled the black Bruins T-shirt over her head, tossed her long blonde hair and said, "We can snuggle, but keep your hands to yourself." She crawled into my bed and passed out.

I took my German Shepherd for a long walk.

All said and done, a great St. Patrick's Day, I wish I could have given you a more erotic ending, but sometimes you can only do what you can do.







Monday, March 9, 2020

Carrie 2

Carrie and I buy a car...



Carrie Fisher and I are walking down the street, We're holding hands, we've been walking for a long time.

"Jesus, I'm tired of walking, we need to buy a car to get around," Carrie says. "Walking is good for us, but this is insanity."

"What do you want to get?"

"My Mom had a Thunderbird when I was a little girl, I loved that car."

"Maybe we can find one, keep walking."

In an hour or so, including a stop for coffee and a donut, we realize we're in North Hollywood. Strip Malls, body shops, recycling centers, manicure shops, and tacky bars line the streets. Finally, we see a used car lot and damned if they don't have a white 55 Thunderbird up on a display lift. Carrie is so excited she wraps her arms around my neck and gives me a movie star kiss. Carrie is sweaty from all our walking, so am I, but it doesn't matter. A guy with a neck tattoo sticks his head out of the window of his 4x4 Tacoma, honks his horn at us and yells "Take it to a fucking motel you assholes!" We were kissing in the crosswalk and he had the green. Carrie says, "Good idea." I nod my approval and we jaywalk to a drive up to the door motel called The Loveland and check-in.

3 hours later, moony eyed but refreshed we step onto "Nick the Greek's Only the Finest Pre-Owned Automobiles" lot. Out of nowhere, Nick appears, he's short, wrinkled, he's wearing a polo shirt that's is at least 2 sizes too small. White chest hair is sticking out of the neck of the shirt. He has garlic breath because he just finished a lamb Gyro, his handshake is greasy. Carrie is repulsed by his greasy shake, she sticks her hand into the open window of a customer's tan Camry and wipes her hand on the headrest. I maneuver around so I can put my hand on Nick's shoulder in a gesture of confidence and friendship. I wipe my hand on the shoulder of his maroon polo.

"We'd like to take a look at the 55 T-Bird."

Nick doesn't respond, he's checking out Carrie's boobs.

"Excuse me, I said we'd like to look at the T-Bird."

"Don't I know you from somewhere?" Nick says. His eyes still on Carrie's boobs.

"No," Carrie says.

"You look familiar to me I swear to god I know you."

"Not a chance,"

Nick shrugs and says, "Okay. Let me get it down off the lift. Hey, Alonzo, get that fucking Bird off the lift, we got a couple of hot ones, they want to look at it." An old Mexican guy in a worn, white stained mechanic's jumpsuit comes out of a two-stall shop, The name tag on the suit says Alberto. Alonzo is wiping his hands on a greasy rag. He's wearing knee-high black rubber boots. It took a while, but he got the T-Bird on the ground. It won't start. He heads back to the shop for a jumper cart. Nick looks nervous.

"It's a shit box, Carrie, let's go."

"No, no, it looks like the one my Mom used to have."

Nick turns to me, "She likes the car, you say her name is Carrie?"

"Connie, dammit," Carrie says. "My name is Connie, you fat Greek shit!"

Carrie likes to move around town incognito, can you blame her?

An hour later we drive off Nick's lot in the T-Bird. Carrie is driving. I notice we leave a faint trail of blue smoke every time she steps on the gas, the same thing when she lets off. The valve train is noisy and it has a slight rod knock. It pulls to the left when she hits the brakes. All that matters to me is Carrie is really happy.

"I'm so fucking happy honey, we have a car and we don't have to walk everywhere. LA sucks when you have to walk all the time."

"You hungry?"

"Starved." Carrie whips into In 'N Out. We order to go. We get two Animal style, we share fries and a large strawberry shake On the way out, Carrie drives over the curb, I hear a clunk.

"Stop the car baby, I need to see what that sound was." She pulls to the curb. I look at the car and get back in. I have to slam the door twice to get it to close.

"What happened?"

"A chunk of Bondo fell off the right rear quarter panel. You know this car used to be red?"

"What?"

"Never mind, just drive."

"Let's show our new car to my Mom, she'll be so excited, she'll pee her pants."

"How would you know, she wears those new Depends, doesn't she? Are you going to eat all the fries or are you going to share them?"

Carrie is driving with her knee as we get on the 101, she hands me the shake and the fries. A napkin blows out of the car as she does, we get passed by an asshole driving a silver Audi in 3rd gear, the napkin is stuck in his wiper, he gives Carrie the finger, she flips him back. Carrie turns to me and says with a smile, "Don't you be a pig baby and eat them all." She turns on the radio, LA Woman by the Doors is on, Carrie turns it up, the right hand, aftermarket speaker goes to hell when she does, she starts banging on the dash.

"Get your hands back on the wheel, I'll feed you fries sweetheart and stay in your damn lane." The Doors sound like shit on one channel.

I feed Carrie fries and hold the strawberry shake so she can suck on the straw while she drives, we get off 101 at Desoto and take a right on Roscoe. We stop in front of an old two-story apartment building, it's a fake Spanish with tiny decks in front of the sliding glass doors of each apartment. The decks are so small, two little chairs take up all the space and the wrought iron railings are rusty and peeling. The door buzzer doesn't work. Carrie suggests I toss the rest of the shake at her Mom's window to get her attention. My arm isn't as good as it used to be, but I hit the slider dead center. The strawberry shake looks like modern art as it slides down the glass. Carrie's mom sticks her head out, looks around, she wearing a multi-colored, flowing caftan and has a scarf around her head, The music from her apartment is really loud.

"Carrie, what's that music your Mom is playing?"

"Some bullshit from the "The Unsinkable Molly Brown" last month it was the soundtrack from "Tammy", God I hated that shit when I was a kid. Come to think about it, I still hate it!"

Debbie finally notices us standing on the sidewalk and says she'll buzz us in. We have to wait at the door until someone comes out so we can get into the building. We waited around 10 minutes until an old man with a shirt, tie, coat, and no pants comes out."Carrie, remind your Mom the door buzzer doesn't work" I said as we went through the door. "At least the guy had fresh boxers on."

"I've been telling her that for months." We got in the elevator for the short trip to the 2nd floor. It doesn't take long, seems longer though because the elevator smells like cat pee. Carrie and I take a right out of the elevator, walk to the end of the hall. Carrie says, "Fuck! Mom's place is in the other direction!" We turn around and head back. One of the apartments has yellow police tape crisscrossed over the door.

"Is that where Durst lived?"

"Uh-huh, Mom says he was one weird bastard."

We get to Carrie's mother's door, we both beat on it so Debbie can hear us over the music, Carrie kicks the door and hurts her foot, she's hopping around when Debbie opens the door and says, "Where the hell have you two kids been? I've been waiting forever."

More to come, maybe...

Sunday, March 8, 2020

Boston Girl...





I'm enjoying the sun on a beautiful day by the entrance of Grill 23.  I'm waiting for a Boston girl, she sells billboards, she's bringing me a proposal for a fall campaign. 

Picture this, she's a BC graduate, tall, slim, wearing a Talbot's business suit, in one hand she's carrying a fine leather briefcase with a shoulder strap, in the other, a cell phone. She tosses her long brunette hair while she talks. She's animated as she walks up Berkeley Street. Very animated.



She stops about three feet from me, smiles, waves and continues to talk.

"Look I told you he was an asshole, but you never listen to anybody. What's this the 4th or 5th time he's fucked you over?" She pronounces over "oh-vah".

"I told you he's a loser." (loo-sah) But you're too freakin' thick-headed to pay attention. You are (ah) as dumb as a post aren't you?" (aunt yah)

"Okay, okay, you do whatever (whut-evah) you want, no skin off my ass, know what I mean?"

She listens with a scowl on her pretty face and wraps up the conversation with, "Mary Margret you are (ah) such a  stupid twat!"

She snapped her phone shut, smiled at me and said, "Hey you!"

"Who the hell were you talking to?"

"My idiot sister. I'm starving let's go eat."

Gotta love those Boston girls, she was one of my favorites.

Thursday, March 5, 2020

Sean the Janitor

 I was in my office around 6:30 clearing up some paperwork. Our janitor, an Irish mug named Sean, burst in the door with his vacuum and a pocketful of dirty rags. Sean was always in a hurry.
"Lift your legs so I can get in the kneehole." I spun around in my chair and he made a couple of half-assed passes under my desk. He grabbed a rag, dusted the window sill. He stopped and said, "Ya know, I shoulda stayed in the fooking Merchant Marine."




"I didn't know you were in the Merchant Marine."
"I was an able-bodied seaman, I loved it."
"Why'd you quit?"
"My old lady wouldn't put up with it. I was gone all the time. I'm tellin' ya Bobby, it was the life. Nothing like this cleanin' bullshit. Food was good, Nice, warm place to sleep, hanging around witha buncha good fellas. It was the life, I'm tellin ya. Name a spot on the earth and I've been there."
"Hong Kong."
"More times than I can count."
"Rio de Janeiro?"
"Been there for the god damned Carnival, now that's one hell of a show. I got dragged into the parade by a six-foot-four woman, thought she was gonna break me in half."
"Jesus."
"He had nothin to with it."
Sean sat down, I'd never seen him sit down, ever. He leaned across the desk, "See me fookin' eye, Bobby?"
"Uh huh, it's cock-eyed, what happened?"


Sean smiled, "We was unloading the ship in Port Saud there in Egypt. Some of my shipmates and me went into town to eat, drink and see a show or two. One of them belly dancers took a shine ta me and took me home with her. Ah she was a beauty, golden brown skin, shiny black hair and the most beautiful eyes ya could ever see. I never experienced nothing like her in my life. I'm telling ya, I didn't wanta leave. The woman didn't give me a moment's rest for 2 days.
"Holy shit!"
"That's right. I got back to the ship and I was shaving and I noticed me eye was fooked up, been like that ever since."
"Can you get it fixed?"
"Sure, but I like it like cock-eyed."
"Why?"
"Every time I see it, it reminds of the two best fooking days of me life."

Tuesday, March 3, 2020

A Few of the best...

I love cars, always have and I suspect I always will. I was talking to my dealer buddy the other day about this and he asked, what is the best car you've ever owned. The top of the list was a no brainer.

It's a 1999 Mercedes Benz AMG C43. One of the last AMG built cars before Mercedes took over the small AMG shop. The car was a perfect blend of performance, reliability and the fit and finish were literally perfect. We drove it 158,000 miles and both the Cakes and I wish we still had it in the garage. The C43 was a car you could drive for 10 or 12 hours on a trip and not feel tired or stiff. We had the car for almost 14 years! It always looked good and made you happy when you started it up.

I have to go way back for the next car, all the way back to 1964.


It's a 1959 Porsche 356a Convertible D. I paid $1350.00 for it, today these rare cars, fewer than 2000 built worldwide, are worth over $400,000. Of course, I had no idea what I had when I got the car, other than I knew I was madly in love with it from the first drive. I'd never had a car that handled like the Porsche. It wasn't particularly fast, it had about 90 horsepower. But it could go around corners, it went where you pointed it and once again, that German Quality. Red leather interior, wool carpeting and an AM/FM radio built by Becker. I took an SCCA driving course in the Porsche at Brainerd. I learned lessons in it I've never forgotten. The closest dealer and parts depot for Porsche was in Minneapolis. I had a front wheel bearing go out, I took the wheel off measured the bearing with a set of calipers, I went to the John Deere Distribution Center and spent an hour measuring bearings until I found one that would fit, I was back on the road that night. The clutch went out, I called a Porsche owner I'd met at Brainerd, he said, "Take it to a Volkswagen dealer and have them install a Transporter clutch, that's the clutch set up all the racers use." $135.00 later I was back on the road. I sold the car to a B52 pilot, it was his 2nd Porsche. I hope he took good care of it and I really hope it's still alive.

I went for a couple of years without a sports car and I just couldn't take it so I bought one of these little gems.


A 1970 MGB. I drove it to work, I took the family to the beach in it. It didn't have a backseat, it had a shelf and two little girls and their Cock-a-Poo fit perfectly and the trunk was big enough to hold a good-sized cooler. And of course, I soloed it in SCCA events. Even though it was English, I had little or no trouble with it. I sold it to my brother in law who drove it for years.

The MGB was gone and then 6 years later I found this one-owner gem...


A 1970 Porsche 911T. The last 911 with carburetors. I bought it from a guy who had purchased in German while he was in the Army. The 2nd night I had it, I wound it up to 5,000 RPM and noticed a glow in the side mirror, the damn thing would push a flame out of the exhaust pipe. The next day I crawled under the car and found it had a German Bursch exhaust system, basically a motorcycle muffler for each cylinder bank of the flat 6, the two mufflers merged into a collector pipe. The car was quiet until 3,000 RPM then all hell broke loose, the flame started to appear at 4500 and at 6000 it was about 5 inches long. Beautiful. Fast, comfortable, handled like a Porsche and it looks good. The girls called it "Hilda". I sold it to a young undertaker. He parked it indoors next to hearses.

I didn't have another sports car again until 2008.


I was shopping for another Porsche found an Anniversary Edition 911 I offered the dealer $49,999 for it. He turned me down. Driving back to the office I saw this C6 Corvette at a dealer. The car was 6 months old, a 2007 Z51 model with all the bells and whistles. I bought it for 41k. The car had 9,000 miles on it. (10 days later the Porsche dealer called me and said he'd sell me the 911 for my price.) The Corvette was an incredibly good car, fast, fun to drive and believe it or not it got great gas mileage. I was never under 20 in town and on the highway driving fast I was always in the high 20's or low 30mpg range. Funny story, I took The Cakes out to dinner one night in Ventura, we ordered dinner and a bottle of wine. I don't drink and drive, so I had one little glass. Like a good girl, she finished the bottle of Cabernet Sauvignon and was pretty buzzed. One the way home she said, "You've never shown me what this black bitch will do." So I did. I flipped the computer into sport mode, ran the car up to 115 or so, took our home exit off 101, crossed over the freeway and took a right, I hammered the Vette and set it sideways down the street for a half a block. We parked in the garage in a cloud of rubber smoke. We got in the house and Cakes said with a smile, "Don't ever do that again with me in the car!" The next morning the garage still smelled like rubber.

Sunday, March 1, 2020

Those who won't save themselves,,,


Our business manager was an older woman, widowed, the mother of one, lazy, dependent daughter in her 20s. 

She had the most essential trait required for a business manager, she treated the company's money like her own. She was extremely religious, she kept her religion to herself and that was a good thing.

Tuesday morning she limped into work, I asked: "what's wrong with your foot?" Her answer, "I stepped on something, it will be fine."

Thursday morning, she was using a cane and her foot was so swollen she was wearing a flip flop on her left foot and a regular shoe on her right. Friday it was even harder for her to get around, her daughter had to help her to her desk.

Monday, she was in a wheelchair, her foot was twice it's normal size, the swelling was moving up her leg.

"What did the doctor say?"

"I haven't been to the doctor, I'm praying." She said.

A few more days went by, she was in agony and at the point where her left leg was enormous. I sat across from her, "You have to go to the doctor."

"No Jesus will help me, I've been praying so hard, I know he will help me, I'll be fine, don't worry."

I was worried. Worried about blood poisoning, worried about gangrene, worried she would lose her leg. 

I called her daughter. "Don't worry, mom will be fine, our minister was over last night and we all prayed together."

She was worse the next day, still wouldn't consider going to the doctor. I sat down with her again and asked her a question. She was a believer and she was stubborn. I had an idea, I took my shot.

"Would God have allowed us to gain the knowledge, the knowledge needed to heal the sick, to save sick little children, the ability to study and discover the miracles that have saved millions of people. if it wasn't his will for us to save ourselves and others?"

"I don't suppose he would have."

"Good I'm taking you to the emergency room because that's what he wants you to do, that's what you need to do. It's his will, he wants you to be in the hands of one of his skilled doctors and he wants you to go now."

I drove her to the emergency room. She had stepped on a needle her useless daughter had dropped on the floor. The needle in her heel had worked its way up to her ankle. The infection was to her thigh, she had blood poisoning. The doctor said she was days away from losing most of her leg. After 5 days in the hospital and a week at home, she was back at work. 

She attributed her recovery to fervent prayer.

Her minister came to see me, "You are an instrument of God."

I told him to piss off.