On Christmas Eve, Katherine’s mama, Betty …

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It seems I have not sent an update on Mama in a long time, though it has only been two weeks. But oh, what a two weeks it has been.

On Christmas Eve, Katherine’s mama, Betty, died unexpectedly. Betty was also my surrogate mama. She was such an integral part of our lives, the void we feel will be long in filling with retelling of stories of Betty and the impact she had on so many.

Betty was a true southern belle. Possessing classic beauty and grace, she demonstrated command of her environment raising five children on her own while also impacting her community to a degree, and in ways, rarely seen.

As the county health nurse, nurse and head nurse of the local hospital, and retirement center nurse, she vaccinated a large swath of children through the years and medically treated an even broader set of folks from the remote rural setting she commanded.

I use the word “commanded” here because Betty commanded the stage wherever she was. She commanded not with a pushy way, but rather with natural leadership and compassion.

Betty was the mold, which will remain unbroken in the form of her children and in the countless lives she helped mold. Those carrying forward the “shape and essence” of Betty was evidenced at her viewing, church service and graveside service. So many tears, so much laughter, so many folks.

There is so much more to say about Betty, and say it I will. For now, as a way of acknowledging Betty’s impact on me, I add her now as dedicate to this poem, written in memory of Christine (Winnie) Winston and Hoyt Hudgens, Residue. (I am copying this poem at the end of this post for easy reference.)

Wipe away the tear and take the next step in a life filled with bold intent and laughter. Betty commands it!

Mama was in fine form yesterday and I kept the entire room in rapt attention, even garnering a few comments from the gallery. Aye Gosh! I may have missed my calling as an orator. 🙂

Love

Wint

RESIDUE

Where in the world do we go when we die?

Can you really swallow it’s up in the sky?

Maybe it’s hot if below we go.

Does it really matter? Do we really need to know?

What will you change? What will you do?

If I tell you now about residue?

Residue you say? What does this mean?

After living your life, residue is what you leave.

Residue in the lives of those you have touched,

Thoughts in the minds of those you have loved,

Pain and sorrow for those who love you,

Eased by the presence of your residue.

Residue spreads through service you have rendered,

Into the lives of those you have tendered,

Reflected in the acts of those you inspired,

Is residue from a life touched by God’s fire.

(Written in memory of Christine (Winnie) Winston and Hoyt Hudgens.)

Love

Wint

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Granny’s Candy

One of my most vivid memories as a boy is Granny’s candy. Not only may her candy be some of the greatest candy ever made, it is tied to Christmas, giving it perhaps the strongest synapse connection that could possibly exist in a young boys mind. While my parents were creative thinkers when it came to surprising us at Christmas time, showing a willingness to buck tradition for the sake of childhood excitement, one thing that would be unchanging throughout my childhood is Granny’s candy.

Granny’s candy is actually three different kinds of candy. Divinity, Date Nut Loaf and Aunt Bill’s Brown Candy. Aunt Bill’s Brown Candy. That sentence right there, in the words of Augustus McCrae, says itself with no explanation needed. You either know it or you don’t. If you don’t know it, woe to you, you are bereft of the ultimate goodness. If you know it, it says so many things, and the memories that flood your mind are as the candy itself, which floods your mouth with slobber producing ooey, gooey sweetness. Aunt Bill’s Brown Candy must be experienced to be understood. It is the “beyond words” kind of good. If, like me, you don’t mind, and actually kind of enjoy, a good fart, it is also a physical good feeling generator. Few are the fart stimulating foods in this world more effective than Aunt Bill’s.

If Aunt Bill’s seems to have crowded out Divinity and Date Nut Loaf above, it is not due to their lack of admirers, or their like goodness. It’s just hard, really hard, for anything that goes into your mouth to beat out Aunt Bill’s.

So, there is the setup. Two boys conditioned like Pavlov’s dogs to respond with gastro delight to even the idea of Granny’s candy, especially Aunt Bill’s.

My mother’s parents, my grandparents, Granny and 2-Daddy, lived in McAllen, near the border with Mexico in the valley. It was not uncommon for them to travel to Houston and, as is often the case with young boys, regularly my brother and I would be surprised to find them in the house upon our arrival from school. Such was the occasion on the afternoon of “Granny’s Candy”.

On this deliciously fateful afternoon my brother Barb and I came into the house accompanied by Tommy, our lifelong childhood friend.

A bit of an aside is called for here I believe …

As a child, every family I was aware of was something. Either Protestant, Catholic, or suspect. Our house was fairly representative of our neighborhood in that we were Episcopalian and the neighbors on each side were Catholic. Our house included five children, the house on the left nine, and the house on the right thirteen. Tommy was older than me, but younger than Barb. He was best friend to us both. The three of us would go on to do great things together, much to the chagrin of our mamas. Tommy was well acquainted with Granny’s candy.

So, Barb, Tommy and I came into the kitchen through the garage door to be greeted by Granny, who was, as was common for her, busily washing dishes at the sink.

“Hello boys!”, Granny greeted us.

The surprise at finding her there, the air filled with wafting goodness, the love glowing within Granny’s countenance, all spurred Barb and me to jump to Granny, throwing ourselves in her welcoming arms.

“We didn’t know you were here?!” we cried with excitement.

It’s hard to remember why Granny and 2-Daddy elicited the level of excitement from us that they did. Granny didn’t play with us. 2-Daddy seemed always to be on the golf course, reading a book, or watching sports on TV. They did however provide a great distraction to our parents, freeing me and Barb up for doing things our parents otherwise would not have tolerated. I simply don’t remember much direct interaction with them. What I do remember is their love. The manner in which they did interact was, well … loving. My most cherished memory of my Granny was her calling me to her side so she might rub my warts. You see, Granny was a witch. Not the ugly kind, but rather the good, and pretty kind. The kind that can make camp fire smoke turn away, and the kind that can make warts go away by rubbing them.

“You boys want some candy?”, Granny asked.

“Sure!”, we all cried in unison.

Turning to the kitchen counter, Granny lifted a tray of candies offering it to us with a smile of pure sweetness, as was the promise from the candy!

Looking back on this event, I cannot say with any level of certainty, but at least in my mind’s eye, she wore a witches smile at that moment. Imagining the anticipation and humorous excitement that must have been raging to explode within her mind, knowing how “set up” these three boys were by the memories of Granny’s Candies past, she had to be ready to burst! She pulled it off though! Red Skelton could not have pulled it off any better! Her timing was impeccable. For me, this will ever remain the most surprising thing any adult would ever do.

Like gluttonous pigs we reached for pieces of ultimate goodness. Of course, Barb and I grabbed a piece of Divinity. Tommy grabbed a piece of brown candy that looked like a coconut ball.

Barb and I had intuitively grabbed for the Divinity, for its inherent and known goodness, and likely avoided the coconut candy due to unfamiliarity. In hind sight, that should have been our clue that something was amiss. A tray of candy from Granny that included something other than Divinity, Date Nut Loaf and Aunt Bill’s, is suspect under any scenario.

Each little piggy tossed candy into maws and set to ruminating.

Barb and I immediately ran to the garbage can and began spitting! “Good God! Mother of all things good! It was not Divinity! It was Dove soap!”, my mind screamed!

In between spits, Barb hollered at Tommy, whose face reflected total confusion and disgust, “Spit it out! It’s not real!”

Tommy, incredulous as he was, seemed unable to understand what was happening and continued delicately chewing on his cotton ball, which had been rolled in some kind of coconuty melted sugary kind of stuff. I can only imagine, as I did not venture a taste myself, that the coconut balls did not so much taste bad, as they felt … just wrong! Chewing a cotton ball must scream at the mind, “spit it out!”

Finally, sheepishly moving to the garbage can, Tommy shamefacedly began spitting out his “candy”.

Meanwhile, back at Eastwick and the witch’s lair, Granny was about to split a gut laughing, laughing and laughing. She was not laughing at us though. She was seemingly laughing at something unseen, and with such delight as though to discount our very presence. It was like a laugh from a demon in your dreams, except this one was filled with delight and happiness. Probably it touched on something from her past, tickling her funny bone in a very unique way that only she had the possibility of recognizing. Something like residue from an earlier life episode.

“My God!”, I thought. “This is not my Granny! My Granny couldn’t do this. Wouldn’t do this! Who … what … uh … why … what just happened?!”

Barb and I discovered something magically new about our Granny that day. Granny had a deviously funny side to her that we never suspected! She was an absolute hoot! She was the very definition of “hootness”! This episode lives as residue within my soul, and will forever, long as I draw breath.

To the end of my days I am blessed by this occasion in my life. If a person had only this one memory, their remembrance would be rich with goodness, humor and love. Yes, our Granny loved us and delighted in our presence.

Oh, Granny, I miss you so.

Love

Wint

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Identity, Grievances, and Economic Determinants of Stuttering

It just dawned on me … “stutters have been held back by, and in, society since the dawn of time.” This may be MY ticket to ride. If only I could get enough stutters together, we could have our own grievance group by which to gain funds from the government, or crowdsourcing, or from … SOMEWHERE! SOMEBODY! (We will need to find a spokesperson though. This, obviously, may kill everything b-b-before we e-e-even g-g-get g-g-going. The world is so unfair! WWWWAAAAHHHH!!!!)

FUGETABOUTIT!

(D’t h8 me cuz im m-m-me)

wint

(ps … note 2 self maybe baggyass old white guy group? evry1 h8s us yeah! thts it!)

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Age Softens Convictions, but Hardens Resolve

Having spent time reading blogs discovered on WordPress, I suspect most, if not the preponderance, of bloggers are much younger than me. Being that I am sixty-two, this is almost certainly true. Having said that, I am a geeky software tester who not only stays current in technology, but I also work with mostly young folks. I am not your typical sixty-two year old no-ass baggy pants.

Okay, so I might be a no-ass baggy pants, I am hot totally un-hip. I read a lot. My preferred opinion writers include Thomas Sowell, Victor Davis Hanson, Mollie Hemingway, Jonah Goldberg, Peggy Noonan, Erick Erickson, John Hayward, Ben Domenech, Dr. Helen, Glenn Reynolds, Bill Kristol, Katherine Timpf, and Camille Paglia. Not necessarily a “totally hip” crowd, but current nonetheless. A conservative group for the most part, but according to Huey, it’s Hip to be Square“. Now that I am old in age I find it curious that, in my mind at least, I don’t feel old.

In my life I have lived sixty-two years. Three in Europe (Germany), eight in the middle east (Saudi Arabia), and two in the far east (Thailand). During my early teen years, living in Germany with my family, I began picking up my mother’s books to read out of pure boredom, since there was no English speaking television and only Armed Forces Radio to listen to, though serials were great. Since that time I have been reading. Mostly I read fiction and prefer historically based novels. My most often read authors during my life include Harold Robbins, Wilbur Smith, James Clavell and Larry McMurtry. In my later years I read Ayn Rand, George Orwell, etc.

My values have remained consistent throughout most of my life and, given my preferred writers, it is not at all surprising that I find a fair amount of support for them. Also attributable to my age is a high degree of comfort with value based judgments with the younger generations. While I judge them, as we each do every day, I do not convict them of perceived wrongheaded thinking. After all, they are young, I am old, but was once young . I am very aware of the idealism of youth and the way things “ought to be”, in a utopian world. The world we actually live in has people who determine such things as children with down syndrome should be killed. Younger generations simply have not the life experience to plot a path forward for the rest of us.

They say, “the older you get, the smarter your parent get”. How true. Perspective is everything. The older I get, the more harden becomes my resolve that my judgment is fair and just.

My frustrations with millennials, GenX, Y and Z are many, though I will avoid boring you by listing them here. If you have read this far, you know them already.

Be patient with the younger crowd. Appreciate their idealism and energy. Allow them room to grow. One day, should you stick around and not alienate them, together you will look back and laugh, and cry, at their behavior. As I had the privilege to do with my parents. Mostly, love them. As you might have wanted love shown to you, at their age.

So sayeth Wint, the old guy over there at the keyboard.

Wint

P.S. Squid, should you ever get around to reading this, give an old man a break and tell him what’s going on in your life. Your opportunities to do so are dwindling down as each year passes.

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Poem for Debbie

When first we met I was swept away,

Thoughts of you still haunt my days,

Hands still grasp for my first touch,

Moves me yet, can’t say how much.

 

Now apart my mind see’s your smile,

Lazy thoughts of you so I stay awhile.

Memories swarm, your eyes, your charm,

Remembering when I lay in your arms.

 

Fires burn hottest when fuel is young,

Quenching tears now salt my tongue,

Why, oh why, only ashes now?

Life has grown cold since your last bow.

 

What wouldn’t I do to turn back time?

When love was young and yours was mine,

For so long now I’ve carried this pain,

Yet every moment with you I’d not change.

 

This poem was long in wait to be written. As a full grown, albeit young  man, loosed on the world, Debbie was my first passion.  Today that passion is long supplanted by a “once in a lifetime love”, mine for my wife, to whom I have sworn my love and my life.

Wint

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Living Carefree

To a Friend,

Take responsibility and be a good steward of Godly gifts.  Recognizing that all of us are far from perfect is not a fallback position that supports less than stellar execution of a life.  For many years I expected less and accepted less from myself than I knew would be pleasing to God.  I am wiser today.  Wisdom is dear and paid in tears.

No single choice results in success.  While some choices are certainly more impactful than others, no one choice will sustain execution.  A successful feeling in life is a result of a series of choices.

Choices are time bound.  When you have to choose A or B, circumstances will be different later and the choice will be different.  If you choose A, B will never again be available to you.  There may be an opportunity that is very much akin to B, but it will be later in time and a myriad of things may have, and almost certainly will, have changed that make B something different.  An example …

You know your friend is in immediate need and you have an opportunity to support them.  Being there for your friend will mean self-deprivation of some kind.  You chose to indulge yourself.  When you later go to your friend, the sensations you experience will be much different than had you gone to them immediately. 

The impact of life choices cannot be measured real time.  The measurement comes in retrospect when we may ask ourselves, “why am I depressed?”  When I ask this of myself, I am honest enough to include in my considerations my role as a son, a husband, a father, a friend … a child of God. 

Riding above all of this I have a philosophy … if I am trying really hard and not having the kind of success I expect (want), I am doing it wrong.  Day to day life must be easy and fun.  Proper choices beget proper choices and result in a carefree state.  Improper choices beget improper choices and result in depression.  Both are cycles.  Breaking out of the improper choice cycle appears daunting but in retrospect is not hard at all.  Breaking out of a proper choice cycle goes unnoticed in real time unless one is paying very close attention.  For me … I am not able on my own to sustain that level of attention and so make improper choices.  Today, as a result of wisdom, I am fairly adept at recognizing improper choices near real time.  I don’t pray every day but do my best to live an examined life, which to me is a form of prayer. 

Set a relatively small near term goal and let nothing keep you from attaining it.  Embrace the success and allow it to beget another goal and subsequent success.  Watch what happens. 

Call your mother every day to say you love her.  Watch what happens.

Praise God, from Whom all Blessings flow.  Watch what happens.

Practice self-sacrifice (it actually feels good).  Watch what happens.

For God’s sake … practice self-love … which equates to making a proper choice. 

God … thanks for allowing us our failures but I beseech you, give us strength to see ourselves as you see us and so love ourselves. Amen.

– Wint

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Make Love? You Are on a Fool’s Errand!

So the premise of this post may not even be valid, but its conclusions are. Trust me … been there, done that.

The phrase, “Make Love” may have been started during the sixties “Free Love” movement, but nevertheless, we all know what it means today, at least to those of us over say fifty years old. Blend that into today’s millennial generation and I expect it generally means something a bit “deeper” today. Everything is a bit “deeper” these days, huh?

My premise for this article is that love may not be made. Period. It may be nurtured, it may slip up on you unnoticed, it may evolve, but it may not be made. You simply may not make love.

I use the phrase “may not” rather than “cannot” because I believe it is “not allowed” to make love. Otherwise someone may think they have made love and inadvertently muck things up for someone else.

I contend only God may make love and that the resources required to make love are as unknown to us as are those required to make our universe. But have no doubt, love was made for us, the humans walking this planet. We might notice it, might recognize it, might embrace it, might reject it.

According to Wint (that’s me by the way), love just happens to us. It may be possible to kill it, but this is in doubt and likely also not possible. God gave us discretion so we might protect ourselves from undue harm, and so we might discern that a particular relationship is not healthy for us and so we might attempt to “kill” love that exists therein. We might squelch the emotions temporarily, or even long term, but I expect the source of that love will be with us always. I hope so, for I have experienced love denied, usually from those I have wronged, and I hope, through amends, to have the honor of that love again one day.

Often have I witnessed apparent lovers attempt to publically make love, even going so far as to proclaim said love in an act of matrimony, only to see the realization of my premise act itself out in a subsequent act of divorce.

I married my wife in an act of love, but it is only after twenty-four years of marriage that today I know the true depth and texture of my love for her. I was so moved during our vows on our wedding day I cried. Yet, it was more a desire to be with her, to have her, and to make babies with her than what I know today as my love for her. So, even after publically proclaiming my love, I found love years later creeping up on me so strongly that last week I cried again, but this time it was privately with only my wife, where and when I professed a deeper, and stronger, emotion I call love which is quantitatively different than what I felt on our wedding day. Neither my wife nor I made that love. It is separate from each of us, yet shared between us. For so long have I loved the idea of loving my wife more than I actually love her. I am passionate about this. I am confused by it all. Do not accept what I write, but do watch out for love. It will be on you before you know it. Promise.

– Wint

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2015_12_03_Fair_Katherine

On this day, in the year ’58,

You came to this world healthy, awaiting your fate,

On this day, again you are borne,

Into good health, from your heart fear is shorn.

 

May your days be many, with me by your side,

Together may we, always reside,

With love and well wishes, I do say,

To my fair Katherine, Happy Birthday!

 

To Thee I (again) pledge my enduring love and commitment.

Wint

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If I were to write, and you to read …

If I were to write, and you to read,

A poem or piece, that was sure to please,

Would you, in a heartfelt reply,

Relay your thoughts, or let them die?

 

Knowing you to be good of person,

Of which action you’d take, I am certain,

Whether overt, or behind the curtains,

Praise upon praise you’d be blurttin’!

 

(My shameless plea for … encouragement.  Smile )

 

-Wint

Posted in Humor, This and That | 1 Comment

A nickel for each if it was only a dime

There’s a guy I’ve known my whole life,

Through times of plenty and times of strife,

Whether it was his or it was mine,

A nickel for each if it was only a dime.

 

Though each of us had the same father,

His was the bowl and mine the water,

Two of them kept it all together,

Me with mine sloshed in bad weather.

 

With father gone we bid him goodbye,

Now standing alone yet still side by side,

When life’s winding ways leaves one uncertain,

Glance to other for a quick course correction.

 

Brothers by blood, brothers by God,

He smiles down on us with a wink and a nod,

With strength from each other we meet each new day,

To the end of our days so it will stay.

 

 

Offered with unashamed love and the utmost respect to a true man’s man, Barb.

-Wint

Posted in Experience, Strength and Hope (God), Love | 1 Comment