Wednesday, December 22, 2021

Inner Sanctum... Heaven and Hell...

 


I was ambushed, twice, once when I was a kid and more recently, by memories that opened a door shut tight for sixty years.

In the early 1960’s, my family spent a few Summers at the Institudo Allende in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico.  An artist retreat and school, we spent time with teachers who mentored us in sculpture, painting, silversmithing, and leathercraft.

Revisiting San Miguel several years ago, proved to be a fascinating walk back in time,  to a place I only recognized in brief flashes.

Sitting on a hard granite bench in that damp stone room, facing what is now the gift shop, I was waiting for my ladies to return. Looking up, I surprised myself, suddenly remembering those images, those faces that I hadn’t spoken with in over sixty years.

Started in 1959, the mural was only a couple of years along when we first visited. It was still a work in progress, but of course, so was I.

Little of the Institudo was recognizable to me as I wondered around, but when I sat down to wait for the girls to come back out of the gift shop, it hit me hard.

Those images washed over me like a tsunami, jumping out from the wall, ferocious with color.

Sixty years prior, I had hidden in the sanctuary of that cool stone room, an echo chamber that magnified the sound of the blood pounding in my ears, panting back at me with each rapid exhalation, I was sweaty from running, racing away from a patch of dry scrub in a distant field, where I had been attacked.

Walking quietly, alone on a dirt path, I had been hit hard from behind. Some kind of animal struck my lower back and beat at both sides of my head. A guttural screaming in my ears matched the savage whipping at my face and eyes.

Screaming inside with fear and surprise, scared and adrenaline loaded, I turned to face my attacker.

A huge black and grey goose with a wingspan wider than I was tall. He was pissed and coming back at me for a frontal assault.

Without forethought, as I spun around, I picked up a thick piece of tree branch lying at my feet, striking that goose one time, viciously, squarely, on top of his head as he flew in to attack me once again.

Wack!

He dropped like what he was, dead weight. God’s marionette strings were cut abruptly the second I landed that club.

Frightened and immediately remorseful for the beautiful body that lay still at my feet, ashamed of taking his life, I had started running, full speed, all the way back to the Institudo. Finally stopping to catch my breath in that quiet stone sanctum, breathing hard on that very stone bench where I was sitting.

It all came flooding back to me. The adrenaline dump that spawned such violence, followed by deep regret. Shaken and sweat cold, I replayed the scene, thoughts of how I could have better handled the attack. It was his territory, not mine. I should have just started running. Having learned about the fight or flight response that very school year, I wished I had chosen flight.

As my heartbeat began to slow and the echo of my rapid breathing quieted, a familiar flash of blue glided past the stone archway into the courtyard, silhouetted in bright sunshine. I knew that blue dress with its billowing pleats of cotton, that young girl, my age. I knew her sweet smile that she had flashed like a laser beam directly to me from across the dining room, shorting my circuits and wobbling my knees.

She kept a secret hidden in the folds of that dress. She thought I didn’t know, but I did. I had instantly spotted her arm, the way she shrouded it, her insecurity, tucked under those blue waves of flowing cotton.

She kept her truncated left arm, her shame, concealed from the judgement of prying eyes.

My first girlfriend.

Blond sunshine, the daughter of another American guest. Birth had shortchanged her in only one way, and had been exceptionally generous in every other. Keeping that arm hidden from view in the pleats of her full dress, it was her big secret.

Everything else about her was perfect.

That shy smile when she caught my eye in the hallway electrified me, head to toe.

When I saw her pass the archway that day, I jumped up and left the cold stone chamber and the trauma of my encounter with death, to trail after an angel wrapped in vibrant blue.

By the time Summer rolled to a close, before both of our families were to leave Mexico and return home, I sat with her there in our special spot, one last time, on that same stone bench, under the watchful eyes of those shrieking visions. Two twelve-year-old kids, whispering like conspirators to keep our words out of the mouth of those crazy images that parroted our words back in that stone echo chamber. It was there that she timidly revealed her left wrist to me, pulling it slowly from under folds of blue cotton, trusting me with her deepest secret.

I already knew, of course.

She thought that I would care, see her differently, somehow damaged. If anything, the opposite was true. I told her that nobody who mattered in this world would ever think badly about her because of it. Anyone who did was a fool.

She lightened as she realized that I had known all along but it made no difference, in my eyes. I thought she was perfect.

In turn, I trusted her with my own dark secret. The goose, my shame. She was sitting next to a murderer.

She comforted me, told me that I did what I did out of fear. I simply reacted. Not my fault. I needed to let it go.

She said I was brave.

At that moment, in that holy place of heaven and hell, I like to think she saw herself in a better light for the first time, bright and untarnished.

That seemed fitting because there and then, in that same cold sanctuary, all those years ago, I was forgiven of my sins, by an angel.

 

 

 

 


Monday, December 20, 2021

Otter's on the Water

 



Otter’s on the Water

We were simply driving around this afternoon, running errands, when Carla suggested that we get lunch somewhere, rather than just go home. That’s how it starts. Ned’s? Corner Sushi? Maybe Patty’s? We live in The Shores, so that’s our turf. “Let’s go to Black Molly! They have that dish you like with angel hair and a crab cake.” I suggested.

That’s when we saw the “Otter’s” sign… and we knew where we were going. Pulled a U-turn, headed East, toward the water. I was happy to see that the parking lot was confined to the parking lot, not stretched out along the access road. There were even a few spaces open. Sweet!

Yup, we walked right in and got a perfect seat.

Fast forward…a waitress we’ve seen before, who really knows her stuff, greeted us immediately. Carla got soup of the day, a Lobster Bisque. Creamy? Lobster forward? Thick, fresh, and decadent? Check, check, and check.  She loved it. Her only issue was that it didn’t; have enough lobster chunks in it. I pointed out the fact that she complains that every meal she gets, out or at home, doesn’t have enough lobster chunks in it, according to her. Yesterday I had to tell her that it’s not normal for her ice cream to come with lobster chunks.  

She admitted her Bisque was delicious.

Then I insisted that she get the Lobster Roll. Like me, it’s huge, hot, and hunky. (OK, I’m none of those things but this is my review, so give me a little slack here!)

Prime rib for me with lots of horsey sauce, Smashed potatoes. Collard greens that had been cooked forever with some bacon or fat back, exactly as they should be.

A tall draft Sierra Nevada with a Tito’s neat. Hey, I went to the gym this morning and I’ve done all my chores, so allowed.

Carla looked hot in her cool overalls, still knocking me out 45 years after she first walked into the newspaper where I worked, looking for a job.

Cozy table against a wall so the assassins couldn’t get to me without risking a fork to the eyeball…

Bright & open inside, expansive out, lightly salted air. Attentive waitress.

Spread out in front of us… lobster, prime rib, a tall hops product ….and a huge serving of gratitude…

Otters was freaking awesome this afternoon.

------------------------------------------------------

Kristin Price This is one of my favorite reviews that I have read

Krista Purcell Ahmad Kristin Price agreed

Gretchen Dozois Thomas Kristin Price ditto

Tara Ann Kristin Price -agreed!

Debbie Lane Kristin Price that is my thoughts too. Made me smile

James Taylor Beautiful as always Maverick

Dominique Tredik Please write more reviews! You are great!

Michele LaRouche McDonough Fabulously written review. Thank you so much.

Melanie Whitney Totally awesome review.

Otter's on the Water Hugh Maverick Haller before I tell you how appreciative I am of this post, can I please say that I've never related more to anything than to the comment about assassins? (I 100% listen to wayyyy too many crime podcasts). More importantly, this review is such a fun read. Thank you so much for the kind words! Please ask for Britt, Lyndsay Nichole Burnett & Steph next time you're in! We absolutely must meet you. We'll make a special Lobster Bisque for Carla will extra extra lobster. Cuz honestly who doesn't want more lobster?! We may have to look into that lobster ice cream too.....Julie Tilton Glisson I loved reading your review! Very well written and entertaining!   Food sounds delicious!

Larry Hession Loved your review. 

Edie Lee I hereby dub this review "fresh"!! Good job!!

Catherine Briggswood Great review

Victoria Lynn Smith Love your recommendation…

Melanie Lowery Limoges This was so fun to read

Dianne Cullum Your reviews are always captivating!

John Andrea Smith Very impressive!

Julie Kay Gustavson Have you considered being a food critic on a regular basis??? Great reviews!!!!

Darlene Thompson Galambos Entertaining read and a kick in the pants to go try that bisque!Kimberley DeBoer Clearly, you're a writer. What a great review!

Callie Wood Excellent read

Kenyetta Stockdale Thanks your review is making me hungry   Gotta go here now

Sheila Bell Love your review. Very entertaining & has convinced me to go to Otters. After reading some of your other reviews I now want to try Hull’s.

Kristie Cochran Well said and much appreciated recommendation.

Cindy Jones Cute.

Cindy Roseman Mellone Awesome review!

Astrid Hallock Craycroft Great review!

Cory Murphy I've never commented on one of these, but this my friend is a golden review!

Shawn DeJesus Thank you for sharing, I honestly love love love your review

 

 

 

 

 

 


Saturday, December 18, 2021

Pot Tales...

 

In 1969, air travel for two suitcases packed with loose pot was relatively safe. No dogs yet, no x rays. I flew from Atlanta to Boston to pick up ten pounds of “shake”. Hit and run. Then I was back in Atlanta, without incident, after grabbing my two full-size suitcases off the luggage carousel.

With all senses on full alert, I could feel the heartbeat pulsing in my ears, drumming timpani in my chest, but no hands on my shoulder saying “come with us”.

No cops, no problems.

In those days, there in Alabama, one joint could put you in jail for a very long time. Ten pounds was a big deal for me, a first.

My college buddies, Howard and Al, picked me up at the airport for the three-hour drive back to school in North Alabama.

The late-night drive was uneventful as we left Georgia and were only an hour from campus in Alabama.

Howard was driving. Being 6’4”, with long stringy hair, he squeezed his oversized frame, all knees and elbows, in behind the wheel. Al was sitting in the passenger seat. It was his Mustang we were driving. Between them, the console featured an ashtray surrounded by black pits burned into the Rayon carpet from numerous cigarettes and joints that so often missed their mark. The floors were littered with Pabst Blue Ribbon empties, foot stomped and flattened.

I sat in the back, a large grey suitcase under each arm.

We were in a dry county.

Blissfully high and road hypnotized, there was only the sound of crickets to pause as we sped by, leaving a fading trail of sound as The Moody Blues sang of nights in white satin.

So close to the safety of the campus, I was finally able to relax, drifting in and out of the conscious world.

Slowly, almost imperceptibly at first, the Moody Blues added a new instrument, some kind of a high-pitched wail getting louder and louder.

Howard looked up into his rear-view. “Oh Shit!” was all he needed to say. We knew. He started to slow down as the flashing lights bathed us in terror. Finally stopped on the side of the two-lane blacktop flanked by endless dark fields of farmer scrub, I sat frozen in place, watching the rotating lights of the patrol car circle around those wide-open spaces like a lighthouse scanning flat seas.

All of us had rolled down our windows to air the car out as two Alabama State Troopers towered over both front windows. On Howard’s side, the eight-foot trooper used his flashlight to illuminate the ashtray overflowing with roaches, then spotlighting the empty beer cans on the floor.

I have no memory of what was said. I was thinking about my dad. A successful attorney with his own firm in Manhattan, dad specialized in international business law, not criminal defense, but he knew people. He and I never had a “hands-on” “I love you dad; I love you son” kind of relationship. It was more of a Ward Cleaver manly handshake kind of thing, but I knew he was always there for me if the shit hit the fan. He had my back. This, of course, was an entire barn load of shit hitting a windmill.

Calmly knowing that I was going to do serious jail time, my question was centered on wondering just how much my dad could do to help reduce the sentence. Would I ever be able to marry, have kids and a life? Did I dare to think maybe I would get away with only 7-15 years or so?

I assumed it to be a Trooper’s wet dream in those days to get their hands on a few long-hair hippie types, from New Jersey no less, in a dry county, speeding, with PBR empties covering the floor of their car.

Oh, and one incontinent clown sitting in the back seat with his arms draped over two suitcases packed with pot in a state that still put marijuana in the same category as heroin and morphine.

Knowing that my dad would do what little he could and that I would spend my foreseeable future in some godforsaken Alabama prison, I started to worry that the troopers may enjoy using those long wooden batons to beat us, just for fun, before taking us in.

All a blur, I remember the lead trooper going back to answer a squawk on his car radio. Returning to the driver side window, he looked down at Howard, handed him back his drivers license, and said: “You boys go straight back to campus now.”

Both cops trotted back to their cruiser and took off fast, siren wailing, kicking up stones in a cloud of dust.

Everything went black and silent as they left. I could smell the rot of plants in the fields, hear the crickets start back up, the pinging of our own car engine, still hot from the drive.

Ever so cautiously, like tiptoeing through a mine field, we began to move again, in slow motion.

We knew that we had just witnessed a miracle, in a remote field somewhere in North Alabama, and that for now, life would go on.

---------------------------------------

Over the next few weeks, in frequent, animated replays, Howard, Al, and I came to realize that the troopers didn’t recognize the smell of pot. They never questioned my suitcases, after all, by friends had picked me up from the airport. They never thought all those roaches in the ashtray were anything other than roll your own cigarettes, which were fairly common at the time.

All they had was a few new Jersey hippie boys, drinking beer when they shouldn’t be, heading back to school.

Bigger prey, and a dispatch that could only have been from a merciful god himself, called them away.

 



Thursday, December 2, 2021

What’s for breakfast?

 



How about...


Five hour roasted lamb w/mini potatoes, rosemary lamb gravy, fig preserves.

Fresh made broccoli/spinach/bone broth soup with a hit of heavy cream.

Homemade key lime pie with buttered graham cracker crust.

Fresh squeezed lemon juice from a backyard tree, stirred with pulsed strawberries, in cold seltzer.



Often, the very best breakfast, is dinner.




Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Robbed, but Richer...

 

2015

We all choose our reaction. No one “makes me mad” I may choose to react with anger, but that's on me. So after traveling the globe for the last eight years without incident, Hannah got robbed yesterday in Texas. She's on a trek throughout North America. Houston proved to be a bump in the road. Not good, certainly, but like all of us, she had a choice in how she reacted to it...

She said:

“This morning, things were stolen from me. Not some things but all of the things I own. I had packed up my Prius with the treasures from the last eight years abroad and sought comfort in finally having them surround me as I headed west. Last night though, someone decided that they wanted, needed, or deserved, these precious belongings more than I did and they broke my car window and pilfered out the only things I can call my own. I've gone through a series of emotions today but immediately I recognized that I am the lucky one in this scenario. I am the one who got to travel to Samoa and buy that little change purse from the ladies who make them locally. I am the one that knew those dresses were made of Egyptian cotton. I am the one who got to wear those beads from South Africa and I am the one who purchased that painting in Greece. The necklace was from Spain, I remembered, daydreaming of cobblestone roads in old town San Sebastián. France was where the leggings that are embroidered were picked up for a big night out in Cannes. The hats came from Thailand, Laos, and Cambodia, to shield me from the scorching sun as I toured Angkor Wat. Prayer beads from Bali, onesies from Australia, my overalls from New Zealand and the irreplaceable Fiji pearls that dangled around my neck for months on end. These things meant so much more to me than the iPad, JBL speakers, cash, or headphones. I can only hope whoever has their hands on them now can feel the power in those threads and beads and know to give them away to people who will cherish them.”

 



Grandpa Maverick

 


My Grandfather, George Madison Maverick, was born in 1893. That’s him on the bottom right, with the big ears. This picture was taken at Sunshine Ranch in San Antonio. No shirt, no shoes, no problem. Grandpa was one of 13. That’s his dad, seated on the left. He was the son of the more famous Samuel Augustus Maverick, who was an accomplished surveyor and attorney. Sam played a leading role in gaining Texas independence from Mexico and was a signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence.

His grandson, my Grandfather, outgrew his humble beginnings on the ranch, earning a doctorate in chemistry from MIT and becoming a VP in the Standard Oil company. By the time I knew him, Grandpa had retired from Standard Oil and was a professor in the school of business at the University of Virginia, living just outside Charlottesville on 325 acres of land that traced back to our family roots there, more than 150 years.

To me, Grandpa was funny and loving, often acting gruff to hide the strong emotion he felt for his family or for any underdog who needed a helping hand, including dogs themselves. His word was his bond and much like another George, that guy who became our first president, I don’t believe Grandpa George ever told a lie. A smart, balanced, accomplished, man, Grandpa, like Grandma, knew he wasn’t better than anyone else in this world, but he damn sure was just as good.

Growing up, I spent a lot of time at their place, “Shepherds Hill Farm”, in Charlottesville, Va. If Grandpa wasn’t in his den reading the Wall Street Journal, he was probably in his shop, working on one of the many chests, tables, and benches he produced toward the end of his life.

I own the large chest he carved for Grandma Ruth, to celebrate their Golden wedding anniversary. He was so happy when a delivery truck lumbered up the driveway with that huge mahogany board he had shipped up from South America, working on that chest incessantly one Summer while I was staying there. The high whine of his router ebbed and flowed in tandem with a million cicadas as he carved patterns into the wood. Dust Devils of smoke and sawdust swirled in spurts from his open shop doors. Stopping by several times a day, I prodded him: “What’s that going to be, Grandpa? What are you making?” With false intolerance for the familiar question, he would say: “You don’t ask Picasso what he’s painting, do you?” Finally, one afternoon when Grandma had taken the yellow Nash Rambler wagon into town to do some grocery shopping at the Safeway Store, Grandpa changed his answer to: “It’s my casket, dammit! I’ll be buried in it!” Apparently he had been telling Grandma the same thing. She always shut such talk down with: “Oh George, stop!” But now, with her taillights just a red speck down the long driveway, Grandpa saw a photo opportunity. He had me help carry that big mahogany chest out into the sunlight and promptly stepped inside and sat down. Adjusting his straw Fedora, Grandpa instructed: “OK, take a picture. We’ll call it OLD MAN IN HIS BOX. But we have to hurry up before Grandma comes back.”



Now, more than fifty years later, that picture I took stares out at me from the open lid of Grandma’s box. It was her anniversary present after all, not his coffin.

The day before he died, the EMT guys wheeled him out to a waiting ambulance. Grandpa was wearing his straw Fedora and holding a neatly folded Wall Street Journal to his chest. The next day, I was alone with him in the mortuary, saying my last goodbyes. I wished him well on his journey, assured him that we would take good care of Grandma, and slipped a copy of the Wall Street Journal under his folded hands. I should have asked where the hell his Fedora was, but I didn’t. I guess it doesn’t matter. If Grandpa had been able to, he would have joked that the straw hat would burn up right away where he was going.

Although I don't believe in such things, if there is a place where the good guys go when they die, Grandpa will be front and center...shoeless perhaps but definitely holding the Wall Street Journal and sporting a worn straw Fedora.



 


Monday, November 29, 2021

Road Trip!

 

A few weeks ago, we drove 750 miles up to Washington, DC for an appointment, and of course, 750 back. Kind of a last-minute thing so we took the car instead of flying. My aversion to flying is exceeded only by my dislike of driving, which, other than when we have a house fire or a bomb threat, is trumped by my strong reluctance to leaving the house at all.

But I wanted to support my wife in her decision to go and knew that ultimately it was not an actual choice one way or the other anyway. If I ever expected to have a harmonious home life again, I had to be like one of our dogs and get in the damn car when told to do so.

They’re a lot happier about it than I am.

Her car is a tiny Honda Fit, like a skateboard with doors and a roof. Siting about ankle level, I could examine the wheels of every other vehicle as we passed, able to judge tire wear and wobble.

On the road, Carla is very stable and predictable, she always drives 25 over any posted speed limit. Then we drift, lane to lane, as she throws her head backward to eat from a large bag of cashews while turned sideways to reach into the back seat, shuffling through junk with her right hand, trying to grab something she doesn’t need right now, if ever.

I soon found that staying braced for a crash, hours at a time, is exhausting.

And the roadkill along the way is depressing. Just on the way up, I counted 6 dead deer, 3 dogs, 1 red fox, and five unidentifiable masses of rotted meat, hair and bone. I wondered if at one time one of those piles may have been passengers in a car going too fast while the driver was digging around in the back seat for a bag of black licorice, somewhere back there. Those piles of death could have been the Shoney’s Big Boy, or anything else that once had life. Maybe even Jimmy Hoffa, a few were about the right size.

I railed on about how insensitive and nasty it was for each state to fail to remove the bodies. “Probably not enough road crew people due to Covid.” Carla pointed out. She’s probably right, but I wanted to be irate and vow that things would be different if I were in charge.

Same thing on the drive back. Lots of roadkill.

Then we got behind this guy who apparently decided to be a responsible citizen and clean up at least one of the bodies by himself. Piled unceremoniously in the flatbed, right next to the grill.

Road-kill venison! Yum! A South Carolina specialty, served at Stuckey’s for many years as “Quirky Jerky”.

With that in mind, I insisted we stop somewhere for a pecan log, and decompress.

Next time. we fly.



 


Railroad Man...

 


The subject of rail travel in the USA came up, prompting me to remember this dust magnet that sleeps on a shelf in our living room, my mother’s handwritten notes still inside.

It speaks of railroads in a different country, more than 100 years ago.



Gold on silver, this calling card case was a gift to my grandmother, Ruth Maverick, when she was a little girl, sitting in the lap of the president of Mexico, Porfirio Diaz (1877-1911).  

Her dad, my Great Grandfather, Oliver Newell, owned and developed railroads in Texas, and became friends with Diaz when helping him to greatly expand Mexico’s railway system. Mexico had 416 miles of track in 1876, a total of 15,360 miles of track by 1910.  Goods, services, people, and business flowed freely for the first time, helping to bring Mexico into the twentieth century.

I remember Grandma telling me of the railroad car her dad, Oliver Newell, owned, sometimes riding in it overnight on junkets into Mexico.

She and Grandpa Maverick both grew up in San Antonio, with close ties to Mexico and the beautiful culture there.

Bathing me when I was very little, I remember her singing softly to me of cockroaches and marijuana. 

Even at that young age, I thought it to be curious subject material.

Spanish:

La cucaracha, la cucaracha,

ya no puede caminar

porque no tiene, porque le falta

marihuana que fumar.

Ya murió la cucaracha

ya la llevan a enterrar

entre cuatro zopilotes

y un ratón de sacristán.

English:

The cockroach, the cockroach,

can't walk anymore

because it doesn't have, because it's lacking

marijuana to smoke.

The cockroach just died

they are taking it to be buried,

among four buzzards

and a sacristan mouse.

 


Monday, November 15, 2021

Each Our Own Captain...


Watching a charter fishing boat head out to sea this morning prompted me to remember a visit from Hannah a few years back. She had been living on Fiji with a native family. The man of the house had lost his life so they all had to struggle for the small amount of protein they were able to add to their diet. Mostly trash fish.
All of her travels had been impactful but this one a bit closer to the bone as she experienced hunger and poverty up close, while surrounded by incredible beauty.. Anyway, she was headed back to the States, a rest stop on her path to somewhere else, and we were eager for the visit.
Always the fearless adventurer, on her own since she was 15, I greatly admired her indomitable spirit and zest for the winds of life, eager for them to blow strong, daring them to knock her down.
She and I decided to go out on a group charter, you know, spend some time together, catching fish and too much sun. She landed a nasty Barracuda. No surprise there. Holding it up, it was unclear which of the two was the most dangerous and likely to draw blood.
Late in the day, sunburned and relaxing topside, I wondered where Hannah was when she didn’t return from a run to the lady’s room. I looked all over the boat, top deck, main galley, along the rails, everywhere. No Hannah. With all kinds of crazy scenarios running through my head, I did my best to remain calm, looking for a logical outcome as I headed up to the Captain’s Wheelhouse. About to knock on his door, I paused, peering through the salt crusted window of his door. Hannah was at the wheel, standing tall, steering us back home with the captain standing alongside of her, telling her what and how.
Apparently on her return from the head, she had seen the captain doing his thing, knocked and said “Let me steer!” Incredulous at being faced with this mermaid who had come on board and was standing there giving him orders, he wasn't eager to turn away a pretty girl with such charming chutzpah. He broke the rules and allowed her in, showing her how to bring the boat into port.
Although she was grateful for his willingness to give her the opportunity, I believe she mostly wanted him to sit down and be quiet. She would have been happier to try to do it on her own.
That’s was her way at age four and it is unchanged to this day.



Gods and Politicians…

 

 


In the early 1970’s, I was in the Air Force, working in a Defense Intelligence agency computer room run by civilians and staffed by a mix of Civil Service, Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines. Assigned to the Pentagon, we kept an eye on Red Chinese missile sites and Jane Fonda.

The day shift guys were old lifers, both military and civilian, with blood alcohol levels that could get them arrested for walking, much less driving. Human pickles. The top guy at DIA and his equal over at NSA, grabbed the head civilian boss and all three drank their lunch at the officer’s club every day. Properly lubricated, they often went golfing afterward, pumped up for chicken fights with golf carts, kegs in the back. Moe, Larry, and Curly, leading by example.

The graveyard shift was mostly young guys like me, stoners, ingesting easy- bake cookies packed with good Jamaican bud in the wee hours. We emptied the only candy machine available in our secure area every night.

Two different approaches to boredom.

Vietnam was winding down, but given the fact that you never cut staff if you can avoid it, every few months when top brass came in to evaluate efficiency, my friends and I were sent home to make it less obvious that we weren't needed at all. It was the least demanding, most unnecessary job I ever had, steeped in cronyism, inefficiency, waste, fraud, and outright theft, all hidden by our high security clearances that made us somewhat bulletproof. The place was fueled by an astounding and pervasive apathy that spread like a virus from the top down.

When my time was up in 1975, I was offered a Civil Service position, a promotion, more money, and a dream job to many with few demands other than to show up. All I had to do was come back in the next day as a civilian and do the same thing I had been doing for several years...which was basically nothing.

I had to pass.

That experience colored my perception of all thing’s government run from then on. Democratic or Republican, doesn’t matter. Human nature is the same. It’s no surprise that our elected officials in DC have the best health care, pay, vacation and retirement packages, while we average citizens do not. No surprise that they threw out the rules blocking their ability to take bribes from businesses and stuff their pockets with cash.

Thieves, swindlers, and the morally bankrupt thrive in such a broken system. We elect con men to guard and promote our interests and are then surprised when they do the opposite.

It turns out that with gods and politicians, we get what we deserve.

 


Mr. Brooks

 


The first time I met Mitchel Brooks, he was standing in front of a pile of freshly split wood...used to fire a black monster of a BBQ smoker behind him.

I had heard whispers around town of his brisket…”unearthly, a gift of god!”.

All Texas, all the time.

Being a Maverick with deep Texas roots, and a foodie with an even deeper attraction to all things that involve meat and fire, I tracked him down at his house out on Rt 13 by the St Johns River.

It was a part time thing for him. For a foodie like me, something worth seeking out.

We had spoken on the phone, so he expected me.

“Maverick?”

“Yup, Hey Michael!”

As I approached him, he pointed at a tattoo I have on my right forearm of Texas Blue Bonnets. The only person to have ever recognized them or mentioned them at all. At Michael’s feet in front of his BBQ table? Texas Blue Bonnets, growing right there on his front lawn.

He had brought a little bit of Texas with him.

That was a double sign from the ghost of Bob Wills that I was in the right place.

Mike is a square shouldered guy, a throwback to old John Wayne movies. Looks like a bronc rider. He’s the refreshing kind of man who stands up for things that are solid and real. A Marlboro man without the cigarettes. Unlike myself, no bullshit.

We’re talking about a guy who uses a picture of Ernest Tubb for his profile picture. How many people under the age of 70 even know who that was?

Mike’s probably in his late 30’s, an old soul.

Anyway, tonight, some ten years after our first encounter in his front yard, we were in his back yard. Mike threw a party. Something to thank his BBQ loving fans for their support over the years…only a few close friends, maybe 70 or so…




Live music, full bar, the best BBQ on the planet, Lonesome Dove on the VCR, a firepit, multiple cases of Lone Star beer, an empty chicken coop, door open, chickens in the crowd, pecking up spills and offerings. The family dog going donor to donor, somewhat dazed, stumbling with a belly way too full of the best AYCE BBQ he’s ever had.

Me too.

Thanks Mike. You make Texas proud, hell, you make us all proud.

 

Thursday, August 26, 2021

Date Night

 

In my 9th and 10th grades, I was the last sibling still living at home. My older brother and two sisters had flown the coop, so I was a single child. That was tough duty. I got a reprieve every Friday night though when Mom and dad went out on their “date night” into NYC.  The routine was always the same. Dinner at Pierre Au Tunnel in the theatre district, maybe a show afterward. My routine was set as well. Mom bought me the guilt dinner of my choice, thinking that I was somehow deprived by not being able to go along with them. Poor Hugh, left at home alone. Of course, I was elated, like Snoopy dancing on top of his doghouse, feet a blur.

Friday nights were my time to wallow in late night TV accompanied by my favorite foods. Like a death row inmate ordering his last meal, I got to choose exactly what the meal would be. It was always the same: Stouffer's Lobster Newburg, Stouffer's Spinach Soufflé, Stouffer's Apple Crisp, and a Coke in a glass over ice.

All of those things were normally off limits to me. I ate what mom cooked, wasn’t allowed to watch TV on school nights (too busy “studying” in my room…right) and in our house, only dad was allowed to drink Cokes. He had his stash, which I was forbidden to touch or even acknowledge. Mom didn’t approve of Coke, or junk food in general, but food rules didn’t apply to dad. Apparently, cigarette rules didn’t either, because dad smoked Kents for breakfast and dinner, washed down with Cokes. Smoked all day at his law office in Manhattan too, his nicotine-stained fingers lighting Kents, end to end.

I was always a foodie though, so I especially I loved my date night feasts. Not surprisingly perhaps, but by my junior year things had changed quite a bit for me. By that time, dinner centered more around rolling joints and making myself throw up out of my bedroom window, splashing nightmarish crime scene images onto the new snow below.  Booze that an older friend bought in Staten Island and sold to me for twice the price, did the trick every time.

And, of course, when mom and dad went out, I never, ever, stayed home.

----------------------------------------------------------

These days, I think wistfully of that brown paneled TV room, and those Lobster Newburg dinners, now long extinct.

My folks left the building years ago, Pierre died in 1984, and I don’t ever blow chunks out of my bedroom window, or anywhere else for that matter.

But when we go out to dinner? I'll have a Coke in a glass over ice, because I can.



 

 


Wednesday, August 11, 2021

Disproportionate Conceit

 


Flowering chives, insects blooming.

Worlds within worlds, able to amaze... 

 when not too blinded by our own reflection,

 to see the universe of miracles that lie,

 just beyond our disproportionate conceit.

 


Culture Diving

 






St Augustine to Gainesville is a deep dive.

Miles of scrub country. A lightly whispered spoil of rotting cabbage still lingers in the humid thick of an unforgiving sweat box afternoon.

Air conditioners sputter and spit under the broken arms of Venetian blinds, hanging out of windows, gasping for air, their bodies long pockmarked with rust stalactites that drool down onto rotting decks made with wood that had once been something else, now patched with ancient roofing tin and staged with moldy couches.

Leprous mobile homes slowly die of consumption. Roofs tarped; sides stained by the desperate clutches of the mud below.

Out there, surrounded by quick cut Pine forests and fields that have leeched Montsanto cancers into the aquifer for 70 years, I love the false feeling of enhanced freedom. Living an under-the-radar lifestyle combined with that spit-in-your-eye, fuck-you spirit.

I admire that rigidity of conviction, regardless of how misguided, that blindly follows the call for a gallows to be built.

Metaphorical nooses hang at the ready, a gauntlet on the road along the way, waving ominously to challenge the demons they see on all sides, oblivious to the fact that the noose builders themselves always seem to be the first in line for their use.




Tuesday, July 27, 2021

We're All Bridgtenders...

 

 


This was the old Vilano Bridge before it got replaced by that high arch bridge on the right. It's a fishing pier now, dotted with concrete benches along the walk out to the end. Hard coquina stations that accommodate sun-fried anglers during the day and homelessness wrapped in soiled layers, at night.

Seagulls fight over the detritus both leave behind.

That oversized Bluebird of Happiness behind us is in training to be a Walmart greeter. Living successfully for many years at the infamous Magic Hotel, up the street, the Bluebird eventually became homeless himself. Life’s twists, turns, and a pickup truck, brought him to reside here, with his peeps.

During the 1990’s, with good friends who lived a few blocks away, we often spent weekends hanging out at their house or at Vilano Beach. A Steve Earl/ Lucinda Williams soundtrack, beer, seafood, beer. The kids spent endless hours in shallow pools, dark browning like so many water chestnuts bobbing in frothy waters.

One Saturday, when the girls decided to spend the night, I went home alone, beer coursing through my veins, driving an old Subaru with my sound system cranked up to “wow!”.

There was less focus on the evils of drinking and driving back then, and I was less focused on that day.

Steve and the Dukes were knee deep in snakes on Copperhead Road when the old bridge traffic bells joined in, clanging out a high harmony. The entire road in front of me started to rise, just a few feet, but enough for me to see the water below. I saw how the raised tarmac would decapitate me on the way down.

The bridge came to a jarring stop that shook my car like an earthquake. Turning down Steve and the boys, I heard more of the alarms screaming at me and saw the manic waving of the bridge tender in the big aluminum windows of his observation tower over the roadway.

Apparently, I’d driven past the crossing gates just when they were closing, as they were then, behind me. The bridgetender saw me too late…he had already pushed the “rise” button on that old vertical lift bridge. Panicking, he immediately slammed the “stop” switch.

Everything shuttered and froze, including me.

I took a breath, the bridge and bridgetender took a breath, and a few seagulls who had briefly frozen in mid-flight, became liquid on their breeze once again.

Bridge locked down tight, traffic arms up, all green lights…I slowly started driving. Driving and breathing.

Leaving Copperhead Road in the rear-view, I invited Louis Armstrong to sing me his version of “It’s a Wonderful World” as we drove home…he did, and it was.

Still is.

 



Friday, July 16, 2021

Chromesthesia …


My favorite “Desert Island Classic” … just the ticket for this kick-back, take me back, afternoon. I embrace and identify with this music as much as any, much more than most.

When they drop me on that desert island, challenged to survive on my own from that point forward, I’ll need a few things: A solar turntable, speakers that I can move around, and an original vinyl copy of the Derek and the Dominoes “Layla” album, oh, and maybe a nice grape Nehi.

Al Wheeler, a college roommate who was never my roommate, turned me on to the album in 1970. Everyone had to pay for a room on campus to reimburse the college for the new dorms they built, but Al rented a place in town too, so I had a private room.

“Layla” played in rotation for months at my place. Occasionally some of us would go over to Al’s for more of the same. He lived on the second floor of a huge old Victorian with several cavernous rooms defined by 12-foot ceilings that framed art gallery walls that showcased their peeling plaster. Each chip, like a concave half peach in an archaeological dig, revealed color from an earlier time, conjuring images of homeowners of an era now known only in old stories and history books.

It was a great place. Al’s small kitchen was more than enough for him, the rooms all tall, bright, and breezy…and somewhat surprisingly, the toilet worked. It was an oasis, an escape from the paranoia that was a very real part of life in North Alabama fifty years ago.

That Layla album played 24-7 over there too. We crushed up some Mescaline, shaking it violently into large bottles of cheap wine, a necessary staple that fueled epic paint parties. Chromesthesia, sound becoming color, was responsible for turning that music into memories that have become welcome kaleidoscopic flashbacks.

My faded T-Shirt shapeshifts into an amazing technicolor dream coat, a time machine and painter’s smock, with the first seven notes of Clapton’s opening riff.