Monday, August 13, 2018

Summer Love Rekindled (and Repaired)


To facilitate the time-honored summer tradition of cheesy or trashy or mushy romance reading, I’ve prepared a love story of my own. In fact, it’s an autobiographical tale of sultry summer love. 

A synopsis for you: After a few failed attempts at a successful relationship, our starry-eyed, rugged outdoorsman – based on me, obviously – is reunited with a beautiful figure from his past.

The action is steamy, even sweaty, as the rendezvous moves from the garage to the back yard on a hot Carolina summer day. Our hunk is overjoyed with the unsurpassed performance of the object of his affection. With tears in his eyes (from the glare of the sun) and a lump in his throat (from the dust and grass allergens), he quietly whispers (so no one actually hears him),“I love you…lawnmower.”

No, that’s not some inexplicable or secret term of endearment for his wife. Instead, it’s an uncreative name for his lawnmower.

Those of you who are familiar with my work may not be surprised by the subject of this story, knowing I have had a curious mow-mance with my old Craftsman push mower for some time. Plus, it sounds pretty awesome for me to say, “familiar with my work.”

Anyway, his dark green Craftsman 6.0 push mower with a Briggs and Stratton engine mulched grass like no other mower he had ever used, was not self-propelled, had no bag attachment, lost its back little flap thingy that, as far as he could tell, really served no purpose, and was approaching 20 years old. And it was perfect for him. They had been through a lot together. There were the confusing days of mowing dirt and the occasional mesquite shoots in West Texas. They’d also had their share of root-toppings here in South Carolina. The incident that one summer when the backyard had gone untouched for over a month and had grown into an Amazon rain forest was scary, but they tackled it like unfettered explorers claiming a new world for their homeland. Then there was the rock episode. He thought he had lost her for a moment back then. Although he put her through abuse at times – a rain shower, mowing over pine cones, leaving her in the old thin-walled green shed during the 3 or 4 frigid Carolina winter days, neglecting her oil and gas treatment, she knew he loved her.


 
Last year, though, his darling lawnmower died a noble death – sputtering and coughing to the biter end. After numerous unsuccessful attempts to revive her with adjustments, filter changes, mouth-to-muffler resuscitation (wait…no, that didn’t happen – honest), and sprays of carb & choke cleaner, his mower was pronounced dead. He was heartbroken. He wasn’t sure he’d ever be able to mow again. But, his wife quickly nixed his proposal for buying goats. Somehow he knew that the grass would continue to grow, that the sun would rise, and that he would have to keep breathing, that he must move on.

So, this summer he put himself back out there. It was scary because he hadn’t been in the market in quite some time. What if a mower required him to do a tiramisu and he didn’t know what that was (you’re welcome, Sleepless in Seattle fans)? He refused to go the online route and check out the hot singles on LawnscapersOnly.com. That’s just sad, people. Instead, he allowed himself to be set up by friends and family. While he was ultimately able to produce grass clippings on his various outings with these viable candidates and keep his lawn somewhat respectable, this method just simply produced no long-term relationships. One mower had a really nice set of blades – yes, two of them. But, even though it claimed to mulch grass, it really just got clogged up and took too long to perform the task. That’s something you really don’t want in a mower, or a lover, come to think of it. Another was one of those fancy zero-turn riding mowers, and while it was easy to handle and enjoyable to ride, it proved more mower than necessary and was actually a little too heavy, tearing up his yard at every zero turn. Again – not ideal on any front.

Our fine specimen of a mowing man - complete with ripped abs, square jaw line, and perfectly tussled hair - tried out his father’s own push mower, which probably explains why dear ol’ Dad dropped by, picked up his son’s lifeless Craftsman that was gathering dust in the corner of the garage and took it to a small engine guy he knew. Well, the fellow works on small engines, he’s not necessarily small. Still, with little hope and a heavy heart, this Don Juan Deere settled on taking advantage of his father’s benevolence and continued using his mower. Days went by and he was coming to terms with the idea that he’d never find another like his precious old green mower.

Then, he went away for a couple of weeks.

Not out of despair. He went on a family vacation to visit his in-laws in Texas. It was a great trip.

He only thought of his mower once, when he used his brother-in-law’s slightly newer Craftsman push mower with a Briggs and Stratton engine. No bag, but self-propelled. It gave him fond memories of stirring up dust and scaring away horned frogs with his sleek new mowing princess. Alas, the memories were fleeting and he knew he would eventually return home to an empty shed.

Upon his return, however, he received unbelievable news from his father. Elated, he plopped on his work boots (in a very sexy, manly manner) and sprinted…or rather jaunted…or probably slogged his way to the garage (it’s difficult to run in those things); tore open the garage door…or, more accurately, slowly heaved it up (it’s heavy and no longer automatic), being sure to expose his glistening, bulging pecs and shoulders during the process; and had to blink his eyes. Yes it was dusty in there, but he was still happy to see his baby back where she belonged! There she was in all her worn out, mistreated glory. He might have hugged her, although there is no proof of that. There was a new sticker on her shell. It said, “Serviced by Randy’s.” It’s as though she’d gone out and sowed her oats, been resurrected, gotten a tattoo, and had now returned. The prodigal mower had come home.



He looked at her. She looked at him. They knew what was about to happen. Absence makes the heart grow fonder and he couldn’t keep his hands off of her. Randy had reawakened her, and although another man had ignited the spark of mowing desire in her, the reacquainted duo’s yearning to mow was more than either of them could bear. He rolled her gently out onto the back lawn and with an expert stroke, cranked her right up on the first try. She’d never had trouble getting her engine going, and this time was no different. She purred. Not exactly the purr of the young tigress she was years ago, but more like the experienced queen lioness, long in the tooth and seductively skillful in her field. It was as though they had never missed a beat. Like riding a bike. A match made in landscaping heaven. Grass was mowed, mulched, and expelled that afternoon. Needless to say, she left him with a smile – a pollen-and-gnat-laden smile – but a smile nonetheless.

After consummating their reunion, they cooled off. He with a Gatorade and she with a…well, she just cooled off eventually. He rolled her back into the garage, gave her a little pat, and told her he was glad to have her back. She sighed and smiled. At least, that is what he thought he saw. The heat index was 104. That may have had something to do with it. In any case, he walked away, knowing that soon he’d return, that they’d be unable to remain apart for long.

After all, the forecast calls for more rain and his grass is bound to grow.


Tuesday, August 7, 2018

The State of Constant, Total Amazement is Deep in the Heart of Texas...and Hawai'i

Captain's Log: Stardate 2018 August 6 11:46 PM CST

On this, the waning hours of our annual summer Texas trip - 1 part family reunion, 1 part pilgrimage, I sit by a pool turned into blackwater by a moonless night and I have an all-to-familiar, innate urge to capture this moment, to create something that will permit me to share this exact time, however poorly it may be. So, I write.

The slack key melodies from my Pandora Hawai'i station accompany the two small citronella pales that are pulling double duty as semi-effective tiki torches and less-than-semi-effective mosquito repellents, as I reflect and imagine. The pale yellow glow from the candles illuminates their corresponding areas to just about a 4-foot perimeter. From there the incomplete shadowy nighttime darkness takes over. I imagine there are tiki torches that cast a glow on pathways between island bungalows, simultaneously flickering in an ocean breeze as my own two "torches" dance in a warm and slight West Texas wind. The crackling rhythmic sounds of the jets from the sprinkler heads that dot the fairway just a few yards away have come and gone. Not quite a suitable replica of a tropical waterfall or Hawai'ian surf, but calming in its own way. And now the air is strangely silent, atypical for this Carolinian's ears. Back home, my thoughts would be struggling to gain a stronghold amidst the southern summer melodious trills and drones of the tree frogs, creek toads, and crickets.

I look skyward and notice that June Hershey's lyrics from the classic Texas tribute are again confirmed. "The stars at night are big and bright" indeed. Go ahead and clap four times - it's okay...probably required by some Texas statute, actually. There is Jupiter in all its glory, dominating the heavens with an egotistical shine that you absolutely must notice. There is also Mars with its marvelously red hue, giving Jupiter notice that another game is definitely in town for stargazers right now. A shooting star zips across the face of the vast Milky Way, which ribbons across a night sky littered with gleaming, brilliant lights. Clap-clap-clap-clap.

As the sounds of aloha surround me, I allow myself to imagine that my South Pacific double is gazing skyward as well and contemplating the same twinkling palette as I at this very moment, maybe even listening to George Strait or Lyle Lovett or Bob Wills, as though we are connecting across some cosmic pathway of brotherhood. My geographic brain tells me that this is probably inaccurate, at least in part. The sky in the islands of Hawai'i, just a few latitude lines south of here, probably look a little different. Heck, the sun may still be out there. Still, it is a nice thought. I envision Israel Kamakawiwo'ole (known as Iz to his bruddahs, of which I am sure I am one) is smiling down at me, strumming his uke, and wearing a Stetson straw cowboy hat tonight in my honor. Well, okay - maybe a palm leaf cowboy hat. But he is smiling...because it's returned to me tonight. I also imagine Willie Nelson, in a lei and aloha shirt, is plucking Trigger (his famously worn guitar) and smiling down on my counterpart. Wait...Willie isn't dead. So, I guess that visualization doesn't really work. Willie might be able to conjure a fitting version of this vision from the back of his tour bus, but I digress.

What is the "it" of which I speak, you ask?

No, it is not some alcohol-induced stammering or drivel flowing from the fingertips of some poor soul who has finally been pushed over the insanity precipice by a life of freakish busy-ness. At least, I don't think that's it. Bar tabs and/or medical records may prove otherwise one day.

No, the "it" is a credo of mine that I stole from a movie. Short version - to live in a state of constant, total amazement.

Now, that's not hard to do tonight. But, tomorrow, when I'm packing for our drive home, aka playing Tetris with my minivan and the luggage, bags, boxes, golf clubs, and various odds and ends, many of which strangely did not occupy space in our vehicle on the way out here, finding that state of constant, total amazement will not be a simple task. Neither will it be easy on our numbing drive down I20...for 17 hours. Sometimes, it's a struggle to live by a credo of such effort and rarity.

The battle against the status quo, normalcy, metaphoric sleep is real for the few. Life often likes to don us with blinders. They become comfortable and safe. We tend to anchor ourselves in the harbors of ritual, shelter, and the ordinary. Coincidentally, or maybe not, this particular credo of which I aspire to pursue was uttered on a boat at sea in the movie. Hmm...

So, for tonight, I've recaptured that state - a mindset of sorts - that delivers me. The world is good and magical and awesome, and I'm here to take part in or at least observe it. It is moments like this that I can recall when I'm on that interstate stretch between Abilene and Dallas or Atlanta and Augusta, where life no longer exists, and is subsequently sucked out of any one traveling through that area. I can recall it innumerable times when I seem buried under life's expectations or stuck on one of life's sandbars. I know that the amazing is still out there, be it in the natural world, the human existence, or the unexplained. And I am thankful that I am reminded tonight, and at other opportune moments, to pursue this state - constantly and totally.

Mahalo, y'all.