Overheard in the Wolfe House #73

Sam: I can’t invite people on Facebook to my graduation yet.
Peggy: Can’t you create the event?
Sam: I don’t know the date yet. May 12 or May 13. I don’t think I’ll know until right when I turn in the application.

Peggy: I’m thinking about blogging that you’re filling out your graduation application.
Sam: Ok, you can blog about that.

See Sam Drive

Monday and Wednesday I had parent duty, big-time, riding with Sam as he gets accustomed to driving a rather complicated route between home and his internship at nonPareil Institute in Plano.

Very, very cool place, by the way, that nonPareil.

The last leg of the journey is very familiar. it’s the same route as to church. So Wednesday, I just settled back and enjoyed a little nap.

As a widow, I rarely get driven much. Runner Susan knows this. I gush about it every time she and I go somewhere and she drives me.

We were waiting at the light at the last big intersection heading home when I was awakened by the sound of squealing tires and a crash. I could see, somewhat, past the monster Dodge Ram in front of us that there had been a disagreement about the changing light on the cross traffic. The little SUV wanted to stop, but the speeding pickup behind him didn’t. My eyes opened just in time to see the pickup driver open his door and get out, and survey the shards and leaking fluids that used to be the front of his truck.

Sam was nonplussed. His first comment?

“We’d better get out of here before the police get here and we’re trapped.”

This is nice

The Dallas Museum of Art is opening early on Feb. 26 just for families of kids with autism.

While it would be wonderful if the world would let our kids be among them without all the stares and the judgement, sometimes it’s great to enjoy things like an art museum with your own kind. Some people in the arts world — usually a patron, almost never an artist — are extraordinarily intolerant.

I hope there is lots of overlap that day. After the two hours are up, and the regular patrons start coming in, they can feel that incredible, electric energy that comes with packing a bunch of our kids in a space and letting them be themselves and realize there is absolutely nothing to be afraid of.

Overheard in the Wolfe House #70

After reading “P.S. Sorry I didn’t vote for you” at the bottom of Sam’s letter to President Obama about hydraulic fracturing.

Peggy: You don’t have to put that in. He probably doesn’t care.
Sam: It shows my loyalty.