Conversations-with-Mike-3
Yes the cow sink strainer! When it arrived several years ago we laughed
heartily – recently it had gotten rusty and we sent it to strainer
heaven.
By the way – I knew what you meant when you first mentioned the thermos
– but alas, neither of us drink – although I do think Holly likes
morphine, as least she still raves about the one time they gave it to
her in 2001 for kidney stones. I guess the junk addict searches the
rest of their life to find that first fix again – at least that’s what
‘they’ say.
Here’s a story you might not have heard about the old man (succinctly
put lol). Ok he was on a return leg from a Caribbean scuba diving trip
and had a stop-over in Houston that lasted several hours. Holly and I
met him at the airport in the rain – actually Holly went in while I
waited idling in the car. The security guards made me move the car
because they thought I was a suicide bomber - neither Holly or I had a
cell phone so your father’s visit was a near disaster until Holly
happened to walk out of the wrong door by mistake and there I was.
It was too far to drive back to our house, so we drove into Houston. We
took your father to the prestigious Contemporary Art Museum which is
FREE and of course I like art. The museum is a stop-over for
world-traveling art shows and features only the ‘best’ living artists.
The show that month featured large wooden cabinets filled with hay.
Your father picked up one of the brochures and started reading the
usual artistic nonsense they write to explain the work – he was reading
it aloud and came upon the word ‘juxtaposition’ – and the rest of the
day was filled with uses for that word. For instance when we returned
to the airport to drop him off, we noticed how people on the sidewalk
were ‘juxtaposed’ to their baggage.
Suffice to say it was a memorable couple hours in Houston with your
father, and I had to look up the word when we got home.
A year after that visit, Holly and I were at the hobby store and I saw
some tiny wood cabinets made for doll houses. Then I found some stringy
wood shavings off a display case – and after a few coats of stain and
varnish, I created a miniature juxtaposition and mailed it to your
father. And the thing remains on his knick-knack shelf today.
Not realizing how important the ‘juxtaposition cabinet’ plus the
genuine cow head were to your father, I off-handedly mentioned that his
60th birthday gift would rival either gift. He wrote back that my gift
had some big shoes to fill – however the gift had already been chosen
and he may be in for a surprise. We’ll see.
Remind me at the party to tell you another story about your father from
when Holly and I got married.
Gene Haynes