getting back on the horse
What I did on my spring vacation
I’ve been home from work for the past week, burning off vacation time that I would have otherwise lost. I didn’t make any plans, other than to visit Mark’s Aunt Regina in East Texas. I was able to stop by Born2Be Wednesday and watch Sam prepare for regional Special Olympics.
Here he is working on part of his trail pattern
Sam and I took Regina out to lunch and then we took her on a drive to, and through, Mrs. Lee’s Garden.
Regina told us that, back in the garden’s heyday, there were many more daffodils than we saw on Friday. I can’t imagine. The Dallas Arboretum should have so many blooms.
Sam and I took turns taking photos of each other sitting on a rock in the sun. It was a beautiful day.
Then we went back to Regina’s house and helped her change a handful of lightbulbs, something we do for her in about three out of every four visits. Sam put a CFL in one slot, and that bulb just keeps on shining. But we can’t talk her out of the incandescents in the other spots. I forget how frequently those burn out.
This week at home, I raised puttering to competitive sport. Well, maybe not puttering as much as spending time at the bottom of the to-do list, taking care of those things that always seem to languish. The loppers got fixed, for example, as did the hose to the shop vac. Then a whole bunch of stuff got lopped or vacuumed.
Inside the house, I went through my annual ritual of cleaning out files to make room for other paper. I figure if I don’t buy more filing cabinets, then I can keep the paper collection down. It’s hard. I see so many things as source material, holding the potential to be the start of another great story.
While tending the garden, I got plenty of thinking time in. Then turned that into more personal writing time. That always feels good.
About ten years ago, I read a magazine story about how to keep the spirit of a vacation going after returning to the daily grind. It really improved our family’s quality of life to find lazy time together, occasionally staying up late to watch a movie or make an otherwise ordinary meal a grand occasion. A week at home packs its own wisdom for the rest of your days. I think I finally caught on.
Sam’s showmanship at Chisholm Challenge
Sam’s equitation ride at Chisholm Challenge
Sam’s trail ride at Chisholm Challenge
Overheard in the Wolfe House #209
Sam (after nearly 20 years with Riding Unlimited): As I was leaving, I took one last look around at the place.
Peggy: Were you sad?
Sam: Not really. I’ll still see Pat at Chisholm Challenge and Special O. I get to see Tracy and Anita and Mary again. (pauses) I couldn’t give that up.
Four weddings and a long ago funeral
Tonight was the fourth wedding I’ve attended since Mark died. The first wedding came about eight months after, and I was a wreck.
On your own wedding day, part of your heart opens up and it just gets bigger and bigger until your beloved isn’t there anymore.
Oh, mercy, that expansive, empty space hurts on another couple’s wedding day, no matter how happy you are for them.
When I first saw the date on the invitation, the night before Mark’s birthday, I wondered. But it’s also been nearly five years. Tonight, as we were waiting for the bridal procession, I heard the violinist begin the first few phrases of Ashokan Farewell — one of Mark’s favorites. My eyes couldn’t focus, and I could feel my knees and my heart giving way, but then the string ensemble transitioned to another tune.
Then, I told myself that little bit of music was just Mark’s way of winking and letting us know that they were all there …
Congratulations, Megan and Brandon!
Music in the house
I try to live my life without regrets. Watching Sam get up each day as if it were fresh and new taught me a lot. He gets afraid, just like anyone else, but that iron-grip that messes up so many people, he just can’t do it. It’s inspiring. We don’t hold onto fears until they poison your life, turning grievances into grudges and resentments into rancor and hostility.
These days, however, I’m regretting like crazy the day I got rid of my mountainous piano music collection. I began amassing piano music at age 9 and didn’t stop until I reached my 30s, even though I decided, when I first majored in music, that the piano would no longer be my primary instrument.
It was a sweet collection, full of great editions of Beethoven, Bach and Mozart, Gershwin and Chopin, and scores of composers I’d never heard of until I played a piece I liked and learned to watch for more at the music store.
My old piano — a turn-of-the-century upright grand — had fallen into disrepair 15 years ago. Mark was a DIY-er, and somehow Sam got it in his head that he, too, could fix things. He would fix my piano. He was 10 or 11, and I would come home from work and he would have more pieces on the floor. He had the best of intentions, but I was terrified. He’d gutted about an eighth of it before I finally got him to see that it was too big of a job for him.
I started casting about for someone to do it and I didn’t have to go far. A fellow in Krum rebuilt the old beauties. He had a monster waiting list and it took a long time and a fair bit of cash.
I tried keep the overhaul of my piano in Mark’s and my discussions of what to fix or buy next, but it kept losing out.
I’m afraid I let the darkness get the best of me. I’d already put the euphonium in the case (that was because of TMJ.) I thought my music playing days were over. I boxed up all the piano music and took it to the University of North Texas library. Some of it may be in the stacks, but some of it, I’m sure, was sold or tossed.
After Mark died, the house got too quiet. I would get tears in my eyes when Paige would practice her oboe, knowing that those days were numbered, too.
I got back in touch with Phillip Williams, the piano man in Krum, and got on the list. It took 18 months and turned out amazing. My dad had found it for me when I was 9 or 10, spending a $150 with a used piano dealer in Milwaukee. It had been a pizza parlor piano, painted light blue, and then orange. My mom put a faux wood finish on it, which Phillip said was the best thing she could have done. He stripped the cabinet to reveal a gorgeous oak tortoise shell grain.
And I think all the time about how it was the last piano he overhauled.
Phillip had put off heart surgery for years, but told me his doctor said no more. Phillip would finish my old Hobart before he went into the hospital.
Like Mark, who left the house one day and never came home, so did Phillip. I felt so bad for his young widow — she was younger than me — but I didn’t know her well enough to do anything more than send a card when I learned of his passing.
So I play the piano with what little music that stayed hidden as I was cleaning out, plus a few scores I’ve been able to find online.It’s so different now from when I was young. Back then, playing and practice was all about scales and arpeggios and technique and perfection. Now it’s all about heart.
Phillip told me that before the Great Depression there were more than 400 piano makers in the U.S. After, there were just two. He made a little “Hobart – Made in Chicago” sticker to put above the keys for my piano. It’s not authentic. Heck, he even put it on a little crooked.
But I don’t care.
It was all about the heart.
Where running meets writing
It used to be that I ran with RunnerSusan.
It was easy. We were neighbors. Not in the Yankee way, (which we both are, by the way), living next door or across the street from each other, but in the Texas way, where we could be like the two trains in a story problem with 4th grade math. If two runners leave the house at the same time, and one heads west on Frenchtown Road and the other heads east, where and what time will they meet?
And then we’d keep running for an hour.
She moved to a new place, with a peach tree and a patio. It would take more than an hour to meet, so now I race alone.
It’s ok.
One day soon, we’ll figure out how to start the way we started last summer, trail running. Trail running is the best, anyways. If we get going good enough, we might race together this fall, through trails in the woods in East Texas, or up around Lake Ray Roberts.
I’d love to run the Palo Duro Canyon race in October, but a professional conference sneaked onto the calendar that weekend.
Maybe next year.
By the way, fellow Mayborn School of Journalism pals Valerie Gordon Garcia and Sarah Perry joined team-in-training.
We care about blood cancers in the Wolfe house.
A good friend is living with it.
And so is my dad.
Happy Father’s Day, Dad!
Horse bling
Sam isn’t a belt-buckle-wearing kind of guy. When he’d come home from Chisholm Challenge with another trophy buckle, usually from being the best in English equitation, we’d look at it lovingly for a minute. The organizers of Chisholm Challenge order the trophy buckles each year from the silversmith in Placerville, Calif. That was always fun to see, too. I knew the shop since I worked for the El Dorado Arts Council for three years, back when Sam was an infant and toddler.
But then, we’d just put the buckle back in the velveteen box and shove it in the dining room cabinet. (Lots of room in there. We don’t have many fancy dishes.) After a few years, I felt bad. He worked hard for those buckles and he didn’t get one every year for every event. (Unlike Special Olympics medals and ribbons, but I digress.)
I figured it was time for a display. I asked Dad, and the next time we were talking on Skype, he showed me what he’d built. I brought it home two weeks ago and showed it to Sam.
He’s not really a belt-buckle-arranging kind of guy, either. I pulled them out of the box, marveled at the craftsmanship and then arranged them.
I hope he’s a belt-buckle-noticing kind of guy.