De Significatu Verborum

In Fortune’s Uncertainty published in 1667, Charles Croke wrote, “Rudolphus therefore finding such an earnest invitation embrac’d it with thanks, and with servant and portmanteau, went to Don Juan’s; where they first found good stabling for their horses and afterwards as good provisions for themselves.”

So what the hell is a “portmanteau”? Maybe it means his “toilet” or perhaps “change for dinner”?

Where do these words come from, anyway? Who thinks them up? And is it a paying job? (more on this later)

Portmanteau. Let’s look it up. It means a heavy leather case that opens in half. OK, a suitcase. It sounds like something the 1st Class travelers would take on Trans-Atlantic crossings… but certainly not the folks in steerage.

The word is derived from the French porte, meaning to “carry” and manteau, meaning a coat. I guess the French thought that instead of wearing a coat you would put it in a suitcase and carry it… or at least this is what they led the English to believe.

The French recognized that the English were a stuffy people, and only the English would put into play a snobby sounding word: “portmanteau”, when there was already a perfectly serviceable word in existence: “suitcase.”

But there is more. Portmanteau has another completely different meaning. Portmanteau describes a word that is made up of two separate words that combine to create another word. Par example: “smog”. It’s a combination of “smoke” and “fog”. Or the “Pinotage” grape grown in South Africa is not only a cross breed of “Pinot Noir” and “Hermitage” grapes; but it is itself a portmanteau word.

Let’s consider another word. Here is the first sentence on page one of Anthony Burgess’ Earthly Powers, “It was the afternoon of my eighty-first birthday, and I was in bed with my catamite when Ali announced that the archbishop had come to see me.”

That might be the best first sentence of a book that I have ever read. In fact, Earthly Powers is the finest book I have ever read. It was just a bit disconcerting to have to look up a word before getting to sentence number 2. Looking up words became a repeated exercise in this exceptionally well written book. I have never had as much difficulty with vocabulary in book written in English.

OK… do you know what a “catamite” is? At the time of my reading, I certainly didn’t. It is a young boy kept for an older man’s pleasure.

The word is derived from the Latin catamitus, itself borrowed from the Etruscan catmite, which in turn was a corruption of the Greek Ganymede. From Greek mythology we know that Ganymede was the boy (the most beautiful of mortals) who was seduced by Zeus and became his beloved and cupbearer on Olympus. Cupbearer? Hmmmmm. Sounds like a “caddie”, or maybe this Ganymede fellah shlepped Zeus’ portmanteau?

And here I thought that Ganymede was a moon, or maybe one of King Lear’s Daughters?

It’s all confusing. Catamites carrying portmanteaus for Gods. I wonder if the Teamsters know about this?

Folks who study and compile words into a book (a dictionary) are called lexicographers. Verrius Flaccus composed the first known book of this sort during the rule of Augustus. Only parts of the book have survived to this day and regrettably the swear words have been omitted.

Today books of this nature abound.

Samuel Johnson’s Dictionary of English and the New Oxford Dictionary of English are considered to be the best of the early dictionaries.

The Concise Oxford Dictionary features shorter definitions. The entry for Armageddon is “You don’t want to know.”

 Webster’s Dictionary I took that to college.

Webster’s Third International Dictionary this includes foreign words in common English usage. For example, agina is “What a teenaged daughter gives you.”

Webster’s New Universal Unabridged Dictionary this book, besides including all the swear words, since it’s truly universal in scope, includes swear words from other planets and galaxies and colloquial expressions for genitalia. For example, bledzhik is a hysterical term for a Klingon penis. Here is a sentence: Flarczx nug plav zhebitt fung getooch mich leben bledzhik! (man, that’s so funny… I have tears in my eyes!)

And who gets to be a lexicographer anyway? I bet it’s a government appointment… sort of like the Supreme Court… once you’re in, you’re in for life! Then you meet in groups, sit around in dimly lit rooms, surrounded by tons of books, globes and stuffed birds, wearing threadbare cardigans that smell from a combination of moth balls and stale pipe tobacco… and this is for both men and women. And their idea of excitement is to have a spirited debate about the correct pronunciation of plethora… which has to be called to a halt when one of the lexicographers has to leave the table because he or she is experiencing dizzy spells. And they get paid a lot of moolah!

Do you want to trust our language to people like that? Do you want to have catamites carrying around portmanteaus for the rest of your life? I don’t think so.

I think we need a new team, and a new dictionary… a dictionary with an agenda. We will call it the Ash Creek Discerning Dictionary or maybe the De Significatu Verborum. Here are the first two entries:

Troglodyte: “The person who presently occupies the Oval Office.”

Shit-Head: “The sneaky little bastard who always grabs the first guest spot at our Condo.”

Well, there it is… two down, and only 598,000 more entries to go. It looks like it’s going to be a long night.

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The Kitchen, a Midnight Raid

I think you have been there. A dark room, late at night, or maybe put… in the wee hours of morn, a bright light bursts thru an aperture as the refrigerator door opens. The question remains… is the door opened knowing the precise target of your visit. Or perhaps this is a visit of adventure… the item, or items, needed to cure the hunger pang not yet determined.

Midnight raids are solitary incursions, not shared experiences. Their evidence does not reveal the how’s or wherefore’s. The next morning we are only confronted with less of the chocolate mousse cake than the night before.

Did the raider simply take a fork and eat straight from the shelf of the frdge? Or perhaps the cake was taken from the fridge, put on the counter and a neat slice was separated from the main to be consumed while sitting on the bar stool. Maybe a bracing seltzer to wash it down? Maybe enjoy the Science Section the of NY Times that wasn’t read in the morning? All in the privacy of the darkened kitchen in the quiet of the evening/morning.

My Dad, was a Master Raider… I can picture him, a black watch cap, face covered with pitch to cut the moon’s reflection, black turtleneck, black slacks, rappelling down the face of the house from the second floor, taking a glass cutter to enter through the window above the sink in the kitchen. Quietly removing the chocolate mousse cake, one sliver sliced… but lo, the remaining wedge had an irregular edge that had to be attended to… another slice is manicured; but the whipped cream topping is now out of balance… the top third of cake had to be ever so carefully adjusted… all has to be accomplished before the household is alerted.

He looks left and right. Was that a sound? He returns to the surgery. Another whisker of cake has to be disposed of.

He is not alone. His presence has been compromised. Baa Baa is there. Our Bedlington was my Father’s perfect confederate. Baa Baa was an inveterate surreptitious eater… just like my Dad.

The same Baa Baa who peed on my Dad’s leg. And for some reason I am thinking that he did that more than once.

I got to thinking about this last night as I enjoyed an almost ripe banana.

So… as is my custom, late at night, I reviewed a couple of things in my mind. I thought about the story behind the story. About the Baa Baa peeing on my Dad’s leg… about the story I had just written.

As I say… it was a fun thing to write… although there was some factual basis for the tale. That story took four days to write… and I didn’t know where the ending was ’til my third day… or I should say the early morn of the fourth day.

It was then that I decided that the real story within the story, was simply the “remembering”… that an old anecdote (Baa Baa taking a whiz on Dad) had been given a new life. And it is why in my story I wanted to have the two life-long friends, attending a funeral… a time of sadness and loss… still being able to laugh at living… still giving life to a shared memory.

It’s the small stories that make up the big stories… and really, the small stories become indistinguishable from the big stories. The pieces in abstract are always there.

When I raided the “fridge” last Thursday as I was writing the ending words… I knew exactly what I was looking for… I wanted some “Baa Baa peeing on Dad”… I took it out and put it on the kitchen table… And then I kept slicing… more and more.

Just like my Dad would have done.

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In the Kitchen, again…

BEHIND THE SCENES OF “UNCLE RUBY’S BEDLINGTON LIFTS HIS LEG”

William Styron and John Irving are my favorite authors. Irving’s creative story telling skill is intimidating.

But I guess If I could sit down with either of them… probably at Ash Creek Saloon, over a whisky or two, it would be great just to hear them talk about how they generated an idea. What was the source to write such and such? Just to have a look into, what I call, their creative kitchen… where the recipes for stories are conjured.

I can offer no insight into the impetus behind Styron’s Sophie’s Choice or Irivng’s The Son of Circus; but I can share the genesis of my most recent piece.

“Uncle Ruby…” had its origin with the sectional couch that I inherited from Lynn and Alan. When I made the move from the Nest in Derby up to Woodbury the tan sectional became superfluous and after verifying that Alan and Lynn were not interested in re-acquiring the piece I made some inquiries. My kids were not in a position to take it on, although Shaina did say that she and John would certainly be interested on their “next move” (maybe a year off?).

In the meantime, after initially turning down the offer, Gary, himself on the move to his old digs on the Boulevard decided that it could use it.

I explained that he could use it; ’til one of the kids called in on it.

And there is the rub. Shaina has moved back up to Keene about a year earlier than anticipated.

I had to give Gary the news that I would be re-claiming the sectional much earlier than I had thought.

It brought about the following email exchange…

Gary: “Why do you favor your children over me?”

To which he added… Gary:”This will forever be known as the time when you decided to give the sectionals to Shaina over me.”

Then going for the dramatic… Gary:”They’ll write a musical, ‘And The Couch Went to His Daughter'”

Now that was damn funny, so I returned… “good title, we’ll see if Andrew Lloyd Webber can do it… too bad Rogers and Hammerstein aren’t around, I think it would be more them.”

Then from Gary: “Let’s seeMy Fair Couch? The Sound of Cushions? ‘Some Enchanted Sofa'”?

To which I respond: “maybe we should take the music out and make it a tragedy… ‘Three Daughters of King Lear and the Davenport.'”

And then I quickly added, “or maybe, since we’re near the High Holidays ‘The Sacrifice of Abraham in the Lord’s Den (Near the Couch)’… informally known to theatre goers as Near the Couch. We’ll get Christopher Walken to play Abraham… and Rosie O’Donnell to play the couch.”

But then I have second thoughts, “If you still would prefer music, we could switch to opera…The Rape of Lucretia on the Sectional…”

Gary’s response: “Or ‘The Invisible Couch’?”

I return: “I think I am back to the theatre… A Streetcar Named Phlegm on the Sectional….”

And then I finally hit: “or maybe an original work… Uncle Rubie’s Bedlington Lift’s Its Leg…We’ll make them guess that it’s the sectional.”

Gary took one more shot: “Ok. ‘The Morning the Rabbi Slept Late but on the Sofa'”

Shit, that was funny as hell, too; but I had to call a halt to all this stuff… I concluded our chat: “I think we have to stop. I have to try an make a living… I guess I like Uncle Rubie’s Bedlington Lifts its Leg… the best… and as absurd as it sounds… I think I might try and write something around it…”

And that’s how “Uncle Ruby’s Bedlington Lifts Its Leg” was started. It became a writing exercise. In 7th Grade Mr. Hirata told us to empty our pockets on desks and write an essay about what we saw.

I had a title, now write a story. In the 7th Grade I agonized over my writing projects. This was going to be fun.

It seems, however, that “Uncle Ruby…” has been somewhat disorienting to family members, or those who are acquainted with my family history. I do a fair amount of writing about my childhood and family, and those stories are true and based on my memory. Folks… this is a story, although there are familiar ideas and names, it is nonetheless a story of my invention.

For those wishing to keep score.

1. I had no Uncle Lebby. Although my Great Uncle Jenks Cohen was in fact a bootlegger in New Haven, and he did have a reputation for sticking up for folks in the neighborhood. He was not considered a goniff by anyone in the family.

2. My Mother never told me to “mind my own business.” Ever.

3. My Father was not an accountant. He did graduate from New Haven High School (although I think he met my Mother in Junior High School). He attended Fordham University for one semester before joining the work force at J. Press in New Haven.

4. We had two Bedlington Terriers. Their names were Baa Baa and Rocky. They were in fact not housebroken, took repeated dumps behind the wing chair (and elsewhere) and lifted their legs with no sign of guilt or remorse on my Mother’s expensive drapes. Herman and Penny were the names of other pets: Old English Sheepdog and German Shepherd respectively.

5. There is a Shure Funeral Home. The name of the other Funeral Home was Weller. The Shures were indeed close friends of our family, and Mr. Shure’s observation about “burying his friends” was given to my Father.

6. There was an actual “lifting of the leg” event. For whatever reason, my Father decided that the Bedlingtons would also enjoy going with the family to the Drive-In to see a movie. Before the start of the movie, or maybe it was during intermission, he took Baa Baa with him to the concession stand. On the way to get snacks he bumped into someone he knew… and while he talked to the acquaintance, Baa Baa did indeed lift his leg and pee on Dad’s white flannel slacks.

Well… there it is. If you read “Uncle Ruby…” and felt it carried the same voice and quality of my other family/childhood pieces then I think I did well… and it would have been worth a “B” from Mr. Hirata, although I would have prayed for a “B+” (I don’t think I ever got an “A” from him in two years).

If you would like to join in on the fun… here is your assignment: He Didn’t Mean to Open Her Pocketbook.

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Uncle Ruby’s Bedlington Lifts His Leg

First, you have to know this. I don’t think I knew anyone’s real name in my the family ’til they died. When the Rabbi would say their name during services I would have to tug at my Mom’s sleeve and whisper, “Who was Leonard Stone?”

“That was your Uncle Lebby the Goniff”, she would say.

Well, technically he was my Great Uncle… my Grandmother’s Brother who no one liked. Not knowing Yiddish as a little kid, I thought that Goniff was an important position in the community, like a Sheriff or something… not understanding that it really meant that Lebby was considered a no good thief.

So the story goes, my Uncle Lebby had been a bootlegger in New Haven during prohibition. Perhaps harder for a new generation to understand, making gin in your bath tub and then selling it or running booze across the Canadian Border, while in violation of the law, was not regarded as an evil activity. It was just a business, an almost honorable business.

Still it was an occupation that put you in contact with unsavory elements… and you had to know how to take care of yourself. And by all accounts Lebby knew how to take care of himself… which cops had to be paid, which Judges weren’t “clean”. And he wasn’t above putting a roll of quarters in his right fist and busting up a guy in the face.

If the word got out that some Irish toughs were playing it fast with someone in the neighborhood, Lebby would be there. You gave a Jew trouble in New Haven and you had to answer to Lebby.

With the Repeal of Prohibition and the coming of WWII, Uncle Lebby never made the transition into the more traditional ways of making a living. He did some wrong things, and he did some real wrong things in regards to Esther’s parents and family… that would be Aunt Queenie to me, Lebby’s wife. It was then that he would acquire the reputation of being a goniff.

Lebby being a goniff didn’t stop me from asking him to show me his badge… a badge that I knew all proper sheriff’s carried. I was into badges then. He would laugh, take his cigar out of his mouth, cough two or three times, clear the phlegm into his handkerchief and ask me if I liked girls.

Uncle Lebby always wore a clean white shirt and tie. Even on Sundays. His tie never made it to the top of his pants. Still there was something to be said for a man who always wore a shirt and tie… whether it was a warm day at the summer cottage in Woodmont, or when he would take me to Ebbets Field to catch a Dodger game, it mattered not. There was a strange sense of dignity about him.

I liked Lebby… even though his clothes stunk from cigars.

***

Next important fact from my youth. We never went to a Yale game unless Artie’s Dad took us. Although we lived just five blocks from the Yale Bowl and Artie’s family lived in East Haven, we would only go to those games when Mr. Mongillo would drive into New Haven with Artie and his Cousin Sal.

Mr. Mongillo could have parked in front of our house on Alston Avenue and we all could have walked to the Bowl; but he would tell my Mother that he wanted to treat us to a tailgate. So we would pile into his big Lincoln and drive a quarter mile closer to the front gate.

My Father was Mr. Mongillo’s Accountant. I never knew what Mr. Mongillo really did. I don’t think even Artie knew what his Father really did. If I asked my Mother about Mr. Mongillo she would tell me that he was a contractor and to mind my own business.

I thought my Mother had said he was a conductor.

I would ask Artie if his Dad made him play an instrument, and as it turned out, he did… Artie had to take piano lessons.

That scared the hell out me. As far as I was concerned, music lessons were as bad as going to the Doctor. My parents wanted me to play the violin, and all I could think of were those endless Sunday’s when our family was forced to listen to my Cousin Rhoda’s version of the Canon in D on the violin. It was pure torture that interrupted a good day… a day off from school.

And besides, Rhoda wore braces and was forever complaining about eating peanut butter sandwiches.

I would find out that Mr. Mongillo wasn’t that type of conductor. Well then maybe he got to work on New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad! That would be cool! Whenever my Father took me into the City on the train, I would ask if Mr. Mongillo was going to be our conductor. My Father would then correct me, “Mr. Mongillo is a contractor.”

That was the trouble with my Father and me… we always had to correct each other, “But Mommy told me he was a conductor.” My Father may have had the advantage of age and wisdom; but I had the advantage of innocence.

Well… even if he was a contractor… that was still OK in my book. My Uncle Ruby was a Lawyer. I didn’t know what that was at first; but Ruby told me that he worked with contracts… that’s what Lawyers did… It made sense to me: they were contractors.

Contractors/conductors, no matter… but this much can be said, my Father didn’t particularly care for sports, so Mr. Mongillo’s offer to take us to the Yale’s football games was seen as a welcome relief from his Fatherly duties.

If I feel shortchanged now, I certainly didn’t feel shortchanged then. You see… Artie’s Dad was totally cool. When he found the right spot just off of Chapel St., he would park the Lincoln, throw open the trunk and there would be a treasure trove of food and drink.

He would sneak us beers cut with lemonade saying that he learned about this drink when he served in the Pacific during WWII.

Then he would hand me a cannoli, “here Jimmy, have a nosh!”

The best part? Mr. Mongillo always scored great seats (even for Harvard)! 40 yard line, Portal level. We would sit on the visiting team side because it faced into the sun, and Mr. Mongillo worshipped the sun. Before we entered Portal 29, he would pick up a bag of roasted peanuts, a program and then declare, “alright kids, let’s get our seats I want to start working on my tan!” He would say that even on a chilly & damp October Saturday covered in overcast.

***

Here is another detail from my childhood that should not go overlooked. The best dresser in our family by far was my Uncle Ruby. Nobody could touch him. He had tremendous sense of taste… colour, pattern, texture… he put it all together. I remember hearing Lebby say during one of Rhoda’s painful violin recitals, “Ruby? He should have gone into the shmatah business! Not wholesale… retail… to the fancy shmancy millionaires in Greenwich!”

It wasn’t like Ruby was bred to the “carriage trade.” He went New Haven High School (as Hillhouse High School was called then), as did my father and all my extended family. It was where he met and squired Sophie Cohen (she was Aunt Shaina to me).

The caption under his Senior photo in the Yearbook said, “going places…”

And Ruby did go places. He moved to New York after graduating from New Haven to live with a Cousin in Brooklyn. He then went to City College, having claimed New York residency. And upon graduating City College he attended Fordham Law School on a scholarship where he earned his Degree in Law.

He returned to New Haven, married Shaina and joined the firm of Winnick, Skolnick & Bush.

Look at any pictures of Ruby from those days… New Haven High, City College, the beach cottage in Woodmont, Fordham… he had the same impeccable smile… a type of smile that photographers love, a type of smile that is natural and has no evidence of staging. And always dressed tastefully. In my favorite photo, Ruby is wearing white slacks, a deeper coloured sport shirt, a linen weave sport coat unbuttoned, a silk pocket square, a good tan, leaning against a white fence, one foot up on the lower rail, one hand thrust in his pants’ pocket & Shaina under his other arm.

When families started to move from the old neighborhood near Legion Avenue… Mr. Mongillo to East Haven, my Father first to Orange St. and then Alston Avenue, Ruby and Shaina moved to the “country”… to Tumblebrook Rd in Woodbridge. Theirs was one of the first homes on the street.

Since my Father was the older Brother, it would be Ruby and Shaina that would make the drive down Fountain St. on Sunday’s for a visit. But once Rhoda started playing the violin, the family would gather at Ruby’s on those Sunday’s when it was deemed that Rhoda had mastered her next piece.

In truth, Rhoda never mastered anything. But that was not for us to say. As in fashion, Ruby became the arbiter of musical taste for the family. Clothes he knew. Music he didn’t. And I think he knew that Rhoda wasn’t good. It’s just that he had such pride in her.

He had pride in Shaina. He had pride in Rhoda. He had pride in the red 1952 MG he used to drive. And he had pride in his two dumb Bedlington Terriers: Penny and Herman. Two dogs who probably never had a housebroken day in their lives.

Ruby loved those dogs. He loved walking them up and down Tumblebrook Rd. Dressed to a “T”, two professionally groomed snow white Bedlingtons on their leashes. I am sure they cut a fine picture. My Mother would say, “Yeah, Mr. Fancy Shmancy and his hundts.

Aunt Shaina would say that the dogs could barely wait to get back in the house after their exercise so that they could take a shit behind the wing chair in the living room.

And my Mother would say again, “Sure, Mr. Fancy Shmancy.”

***

There came a Labor Day weekend.

The entire family was invited over for a cookout in our backyard. Everyone came, even Penny and Herman… folks from the old neighborhood, too… like the Mongillo’s. Artie came with Sal and we played whiffle ball in the street for the better part of the afternoon.

But we finished our game and went into the backyard where the adults were, and more importantly where my Father, nattily attired for the occasion in his new white slacks and Chemise Lacoste sport shirt, was ready to put the burgers and dogs on the grill. He and Uncle Ruby were engaged in a conversation… and by the looks of things it was a conversation that had been going on for some time. Even Herman looked bored. Ruby always kept the Bedlingtons on their leashes… even in our yard. Penny had curled up by Ruby’s feet; but Heman kept moving about, tongue out and panting from the heat of the afternoon and was perhaps bored by the conversation or just wanting to get away.

The Brothers carried on oblivious to everything… men and women laughing, the clink of glasses, kids running in and out playing invented games. Ruby and Dad just kept talking; but Artie, Sal and I were famished from our ball game and wanted my Father to get on with putting the food on the grill. My Mother had told me it was rude to interrupt an adult conversation. I looked to Artie and Sal… maybe they would get the hint… maybe one of them could make the suggestion that it was “food time”.

I motioned with my head in their direction. Artie shook his head no. Mrs. Mongillo had probably also told him that you couldn’t interrupt an adult conversation… and Sal wasn’t getting the idea either, and with each passing moment looking at the pile of hot dogs and the stack of uncooked burgers, our hunger level mounted higher and higher.

We were not three feet from the deeply engrossed Brothers and all of our fidgeting was for naught (and we were expert fidgeters).

But our rescue was at hand. Without much fanfare, Herman got up, did a quick circle and lifted his leg on my Father’s new white slacks. I don’t know if Herman really had to go, or whether it was merely his contribution to the conversation.

The conversation stopped. The laughter started. The food went on the grill.

***

My Father had told me we all end up at Bobby Shure’s at one time or another. At least if you were a Jew who lived in New Haven. I am told that there was another Funeral Home in New Haven where Jews handled their final arrangements. But for everyone who we knew it was Shure’s and only Shure’s. In much the same way you grow up in New Haven recognizing the supremacy of Pepe’s (even when Sally’s made pizza on Wooster St., too!).

Bobby Shure was in my parents circle of friends. A circle that would gather on a rotating basis at each other’s homes on Saturday Night for a dessert and a shmooze. The Grants, Lewis’, Deckers, Jacobs, Mongillos & more… They had all grown up in the “old neighborhood’, gone to the same schools… shared the same experiences, getting married, the War, raising kids… and now they were sharing experiences of a different sort.

Bobby had told my Father that the toughest part of his business was living long enough to bury your friends. Maybe that’s why he turned over his business to his son. Or maybe it was just time to stop.

I kissed Rhoda on the cheek, hugged her and took my seat, behind the front row. Sitting behind me to my right in the next row was Artie Mongillo, my friend for life. We nod to each other. This time, when the Rabbi said the name “Reuven Feineman”, I didn’t need someone to tell me who we were honoring. We were there for my Uncle Ruby. Besides, there was no sleeve to tug. My Mother had passed on years before. My Father, too.

I looked back at Artie, and smiled. Mr. Mongillo passed on just the previous year. Although Mrs. Mongillo was still going strong, still making the best manicotti on this earth.

We listen to the words, to the prayers that are meant to ease our sense of loss. Muffled sniffles and stifled sobs as tributes are offered… and then… The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. Slowly the pall bearers move the casket down the center aisle. He leads me beside still waters. He restores my soul; He leads me in the paths of righteousness for His name’s sake. Quiet murmurs and a shuffling to their feet of those who came to pay respects. Even when I walk in the valley of darkness, I will fear no evil for You are with me…

Outside, in the freshness of the air and bright sun we greet one and other. Words of comfort and understanding.

Artie and I hug. Catch up on the kids. Then I break into a huge smile, and shake my head. Knowingly Artie nods his head in agreement, looks at me and bursts into his famous laugh, “I’ll never forget the day Ruby’s dog lifted his leg on your Father’s pants’ leg!”

I just laugh, “If I had known that’s what it took to make him stop talking I would have peed on his leg.”

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