So that's really my point here. The dock's done.
Tuesday, January 31, 2017
A Humble Reopening
So that's really my point here. The dock's done.
Monday, January 23, 2017
Coleman and The Big Wedding Show
This past weekend I partook in a doozie of a bridal trade
show. I’ll admit I wasn’t amused by the idea. I seemed to have a mental block
on the whole thing and kept putting off plans for my booth’s décor and didn’t
take a vase inventory until the day before. That’s a risky a move Big Lu. This
bridal show had over one hundred vendors in tow. Everything from florists to
caterers, limos and drivers, venues, bridal gowns, hotels, dance floors, cakes,
photo booths, travel agents, and even a plastic surgeon to help you fill out
your wedding dress, if you know what I mean. And then there was me. The grumpy
florist, a lone giggler in a sea of extravagance and up-talk. Naturally I made
Ellen come with me. She can relate to those with visions of luxury and she’s
much better at handling trendy women.
On Friday I picked up my flowers and made my showpiece
arrangement. On Saturday Mom and I drove parts of my display to the auditorium
where we hung my embarrassingly large sign and did a trial run of the table
setting I had drawn up in my mind having only just established my vase
inventory. On Sunday morning Ellen came over at 9:30 complaining about the rain
outside and reminding me she could be in bed sleeping. “Thank you for your
input.” I told her and then we loaded my big arrangement into my car. Ellen
rode with a dozen tiny vases on a crate in her lap. I drove the car like the
whole thing was made of glass and Ellen shrieked at every clink of every vase.
“Don’t worry.” I told her, “It sounds worse than it is. Flowers and vases are
tougher than you think. I do this all the time!” With that, a red light turned
green, I tapped the gas, and my big beautiful arrangement did a face-plant in
the back of my car. Ellen gasped. I sighed and my shoulders slowly inched up to
the bottoms of my ears. “Pull over! We’ll fix it!” Ellen shouted but I decided
the damage was done and we may as well the drive the remaining four blocks to
the venue. When I popped it back upright, my arrangement looked like someone
had sat on it and I quietly fumed while Ellen unloaded the car with her hasty
little steps. I was short with Ellen for three minutes before I realized a
quick fix and then I was embarrassed for having been so angsty about it. Once
my mood recovered, Ellen went back to being burdened by the existence of the
bridal show.
The show itself went very well. There were 800 people milling around, sampling cakes, and having their hair brushed by professionals. Ellen and I chatted with lots of newly engaged couples and Ellen was great about dispensing information about Lux & Union. I was more interested in watching the men make their way down the aisles of girly crap. Some looked truly frightened. Others kept their eyes on the ground. One guy stared as his hands and said, "Oh yeah, really pretty" in response to anything his fiancé said.
At one point, as I finished telling a bride why she can't have Spring flowers at her Fall wedding, I looked over and noticed Ellen was gone. I found her a few minutes later, under our display table eating wedding cake samples and key lime pie.
Across the aisle from us was a fella named Coleman who works for a tuxedo rental company. Coleman and I became fast friends. He thought Ellen and I were very silly gals and he would wander over to our table anytime he wasn't busy with potential clients. Coleman stole the show that day. Coleman made a point of shaking hands with every bride. "Who's getting married?" he'd say to gaggle of girls. They'd all point at the bride and he'd look her straight in the eyes, shake her hand, and congratulate her. He had a way with the ladies. A lovable flirt with big, warm eyes, Coleman wooed and delighted everyone that walked by. Now when fellas came by, Coleman sprung into action. "You there! Hey you! You getting married?" and some petrified fella would nod his head. Coleman would hurdle over tables and shimmy past strollers to extend his hand the the groom. "My name is Coleman..." he would say and then launch into a comedy routine of a sales pitch. People stopped to listen to him even though they had no use for a tuxedo. The vendors on either side of me would inch closer to catch a bit of his banter. I would listen to him in-between my own weak-pitches and once I overheard him say, "We've got every size from midget to Shaquille O'Neal."
When he was done he would come back over to our table. I would imitate his spiel, Ellen would say something sassy, and then he would pull his hat down over his face and belly laugh. We fed him cupcakes and talked about life and saw pictures of his three beautiful little girls. People like Coleman with their great personalities and great attitudes are such refreshing people to come upon. They make you hopeful somehow and excited to see what becomes of them. Coleman wants to own his own business someday and I reckon when he finds out what it's going to be, he's going to steal that show too.
Monday, January 16, 2017
Weirdo's Make the World Go Round
Mom says my
last post was weird. I thought acknowledging it’s weirdness by using the word
“eccentric” in it’s title would cover the little guy’s butt for anyone who read
that and thought, “That Laura girl is a weirdo.”
Nevertheless,
I called it weird first so clearly I can’t be that weird. See how that works? That weird post is
perhaps a great example as to why my brain was no match for standardized
testing or the ridiculous school system as a whole. That said, I was mostly a B
student. I can play your monkey games. I just have no use for them. Now,
languages and creative arts -I got A’s in those classes because that stuff
actually makes sense.
I heard a
great Ted Talk years ago that focused on all the ways academia squelches out
creativity. This post is not a dig on academics. I will say this only once for
you know my indignation is great. Education is very important. Despite years of
verbal outrage and nap-inducing exasperation at attending various educational
institutions, I have healed enough from the trauma to acknowledge the positive
intentions of such organizations. Notice I said intentions.
Now back to
my Ted Talk. In a manor much more graceful and intellectual than the one I’ll
give you here, the Ted Talker told anecdotes about squirmy little children that
couldn’t sit still or stop fidgeting all through class.
He said he
spoke with a woman who had a long career as a professional ballet dancer and
choreographer. He asked her how she found out that she loved dance. She said that her
school thought she had a learning disability because she couldn’t sit still and
focus. They sent her to a specialist who listened to lots of people talk about
her and then he turned on some music and had everyone follow him out of the room
except for the little girl. Once everyone was gone, within seconds she was up
on her feet, dancing around the furniture.
“Your daughter’s
not sick,” the specialist told her mother. “She’s a dancer.” She needed to
move to think. The Ted Talker explained that this woman went on to have a
renowned, muti-million dollar career in dance and inspired thousands of people
around the world while another doctor would have given her A.D.D. medicine and
told her to calm down.
I heard this talk almost ten years ago and I still think about it. It's not that she didn't need to go to school. She needed freedom to use her creativity - to be that dancing weirdo.
I heard this talk almost ten years ago and I still think about it. It's not that she didn't need to go to school. She needed freedom to use her creativity - to be that dancing weirdo.
Anyways, let me
tell you about the Union folks.
Ellen has
started what she has declared to be her last semester teaching. She is not
signing up for another year but has no further plans for what to do with her
life. She doesn’t seem all that worried. Chris continues to be a busy beaver
and has doubled his workload in an effort to lessen his workload. That’s all I’m
allowed to say about that at this juncture.
Dad and I have
been working on the new dock and he finished up the walkway last week. I can’t
wait to get back out there. Buddy couldn’t restrain his enthusiasm and he
darted his mad dash down the walkway and that poor baby stepped on a nail. He
handled it like a champ though and still wanted to patrol the area on his three
good feet.
Last week Dad
put a giant pork butt on the grill for slow, all-day roast. He had to leave the house
for a meeting so he told Mom to check The Butt every now and again and
that he’d be back in one hour. During that hour Mom managed to light the entire
grill on fire, blowing the grill thermometer out of orbit with it’s large roaring
flames. Dad came home to this little pork butt, about a third of the size it
was when he left. Mom was indignant the whole night.
I’ve been
trying to organize myself for this new year and feign an interest in marketing tactics and things of that ilk. I don’t
like it one bit. Too personal. Too horn-tooty. More importantly, Ellen and I
have been using our time wisely, perfecting some new tricks. We'll be ready for Vegas in no time.
Tuesday, January 10, 2017
A Most Eccentric Post
Last week I learned that the Earth’s mass never changes, that
all the mass that once was, still is. Probably I was supposed to
memorize this fact back in grade school but I’m quite certain no one ever told
it to me. I also think I was out sick the day they taught us how to use
fractions but that’s a tale for another time. Now, if I was intelligent and
just learned that the Earth’s mass never changes, I might begin to wonder about
topics like reincarnation or molecular evolution.
But instead, maybe a pair of Hitler’s dress shoes got
separated from each other in a grand explosion at the end of World War II. Maybe
one shoe wound up in the Spree River in East Berlin and the other under a pile
of rocks and rubble. Suppose the rubble shoe would break into pieces or be
burned in a fire and that dirt and ash would live underneath the foundation of
a large office building on the outskirts of town, probably run today by a heavyset
fraulein hell-bent on finding out who’s switching the name labels on the
lunches in the community kitchen. The river shoe might drift all the way to the
Czech Republic, be sliced to pieces by a boat propeller, and some bit of the
patent leather would be eaten by a big, grey fish with sharp teeth. Eventually
the shoe leather would leave the scary fish in the form of a fertilizing pellet
that would drift to the bottom of the river and someday sprout some form of
mutant algae.
Maybe that algae would be scraped up, preserved, and shipped
to Thailand, to a spa in Pattaya that specializes in the Eastern European Algae
Wrap. And maybe some of that Hitler algae would be smeared on two different people
who don’t know each other. Both of their bodies would absorb nutrients from
that algae and then they’d go about their days, off in different directions.
Now, stay with me here. Maybe three years later these two people are shopping
in the same produce market at the same time and they lock eyes across the mango
display. Suppose they’re drawn to each other because of their shared algae molecules.
What if that’s what makes people fall in love?
Suppose happy, pleasant love is two people who like each
other. Gut-wrenching, soul mate love happens because of shared history
molecules. Maybe Romeo and Juliette were made from the same bowl of pasta, eaten
hundreds of years before by a moody teenage boy on a vineyard in southern
France.
Isn't that nice to think about?
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