This past week, I received a text message from my sister of a dump truck with it's bed in the 'up' position, like it was actively dumping it's load. I was wondering what purpose there was to sharing this with me, when I noticed there were power lines running across the windshield and a utility truck sitting in the road to the immediate right.
Apparently, the driver of this truck was unaware his bucket (?) was still up when he drove through the bustling metropolis of Vega, Texas, taking with him most of the power lines and the one red light. Yes, they just have the one. And it's not a real red light; it just flashes letting you know there is a Dairy Queen and a Subway nearby, I guess. I'm not sure why they even have it other than Vega is a town on Route 66, which was a big deal back in the day but hasn't really been relevant since the 1980s, somewhat like Steely Dan, Care Bears or Larry King.
Consequently, the power was knocked out to the entire town, and by that I mean, the 25 houses and two churches, of which one is inhabited by The Dad. Of course, I'm not talking about the church because he hasn't been to one of those since I bribed him with pancakes back in 2012 when he lived with me. It was Presbyterian. They weren't having a potluck lunch. He has not returned.
When my sister got to her house, she found The Dad sitting on the front porch, sweating like a field hand (because it's Texas and it's 138 degrees in the shade until sometime nearer Halloween) but smiling. Knowing he had missed his lunch because the restaurant that makes the meals for Meals on Wheels had lost power and hesitant to engage with a hungry Dad, she said, "Whatcha doin' on the porch?"
The Dad said, "Oh, some poor fella knocked out the power so I came outside. I can't read in the dark."
Still thinking he hadn't eaten she asked, "What did you eat for lunch?"
He said, "That's the best part. I got two lunches!"
She questioned, "What do you mean, two lunches?"
Looking at her like she was 'slow', he said, "Just what I said. The Sheriff came by with a lunch and then the Meals on Wheels lady came by with lunch. So I got two lunches today."
She said, "Did you ask why they brought you two lunches?"
He stared at her and said, "Why would I do that? If somebody hands you food, you take it. I don't care why they brought it."
She called her friend Jaylie and found out that when the power went out and the restaurant that makes the lunches for Meals on Wheels and the prisoners at the county jail couldn't cook, the Sheriff drove to the next town and bought BBQ for the prisoners. Because he knew the Meals on Wheels wouldn't have any food, he also bought food for their customers and delivered it. Of course, he knew who got Meals on Wheels and who didn't as there are about 24 people in Vega, y'all. For real.
Meanwhile, the restaurant found that it had enough provisions to make sandwiches, with fruit and chips and, not knowing that the Sheriff was delivering food, completed their normal delivery route. It was brought to their attention, not by The Dad, that the Sheriff had already brought meals, so The Dad got an extra lunch.
My sister, thinking that he still had some of the food, said, "Well, good. Since you have the extra lunch, I can eat that for supper and I won't have to cook."
The Dad said, "I don't have any extra food. What are you talking about?"
She said, "The extra lunch. I'll eat it for supper."
The Dad stared at her and said, "They brought me two lunches so I ate two lunches. It's what you do when somebody delivers lunch. You eat it at lunch."
She stared and said, "But they gave you two."
He said, "I know. I ate both of 'em. For lunch."
She laughed and said, "Well, you must be full."
He patted his belly and said, "Yep. It was a good lunch."
She sat down in the chair beside him and after a few minutes he turned to her and asked, "What's for supper?"
A real life version of Frasier, if the Cranes were from Mississippi. Dusty Thompson, displaced Southern gentleman invited his Dad, an authentic Southern Good Ol' Boy, to live with him in CA. When his Dad shows up with the largest LaZBoy in America and a dog named Lulu, Dusty realized the only thing they had in common is the belief that he is adopted. Now that his Dad has moved to Texas, Dusty decided he would keep this blog. Buy my book: https://www.amazon.com/s?k=almost+odis
Showing posts with label Vega. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vega. Show all posts
Monday, September 16, 2019
Monday, March 18, 2019
The Dad is on The Move, Y'all
The Dad
is on the move again, people. I would have warned those in the states between Ohio and Texas, but he left without much notification, barreling
through the Polar Vortex, daring Mother Nature to try and stop him while he
made the 16 ½ hour journey only stopping for food and gas. This time he’s
headed to the Texas panhandle to live with my sister and I needed to give her the benefit of my experience with her new roommate. There
is a very particular process for the care and feeding of the Redneck Man.
When
tackling a project of this scope, there are categories of likes and dislikes
that are surprisingly specific for a man who will literally take a bite of
anything you place in his hand and has been known to wear the same pair of pants for seven days.
SMELL- He can smell bacon cooking 26 miles away, but cannot smell himself at any point in the say, regardless of level of ripeness. You need Febreze. Lots of it. When you think you've bought more than you should, buy more. When it gets to the point that people are pointing and laughing at your buggy in The Wal-Mart, buy two more bottles, just in case. Her GoFundMe website should be up later this week. I am not kidding. Fortunately, he has no problem with anyone spraying his chair and, truly, being sprayed himself, unless the scent is Green Apple or Watermelon.
FURNITURE
– He comes complete with the largest recliner manufactured in America today, a
La-Z-Boy. It will smell, regardless of
covering. His Old Man Smell will
penetrate leather, y’all. He also comes
with a power wheelchair, a very fancy reading lamp, a TV and a special chair
for Lulu, his Boston Terrier, to sleep in.
I informed the sainted Shontyl that she needs to decide where the chair will be located
as that room will then become his bedroom as he sleeps in his recliner and only
in his recliner. Just like his European forefathers, when he plants his chair (instead of a flag) that is where he shall reside, henceforth and forevermore.
KITCHEN
IMPLEMENTS – He will require a coffee pot; he doesn’t care if it’s fancy or
not. It simply must be able to brew his
Folger’s Country Roast every morning. He
will also require a cast iron skillet. It
must be larger than the one you already have.
Regardless of the size of your skillet, it will be too small. One roughly the size and shape of Oklahoma should suffice.
FOOD –
Fortunately, he will eat anything you put in front of him unless it is spinach,
salmon or hummus, which he pronounces as ‘hoo-muss’ and truly believes that is
a foodstuff that I invented in my efforts to be fancy. He will require an extensive amount of red
meat or pork, which is plentiful in Texas. He prefers his steak rare. Really rare. And I quote, "Just cut the horns off and knock the 'moo' out."
TOWN – He prefers a place that is almost not a town. Somewhere small enough to where people often say, "Is that a real place?" The boonies is where he wants to be. He truly loves it when there is an end to a town and then several miles of nothing before the
next town starts. He disliked the Bay
Area of California because “town never stopped.” He was over-joyed to hear that there is just
the one main street in Vega, on which sits my sister’s house, a Dairy Queen, a library and
a truck stop. There is a Baptist Church
across the street from the Dairy Queen.
Odds are he will not venture there unless they have a potluck on Easter
Sunday and even then he'd prefer a to-go plate.
DOCTOR
– He requires a doctor for his myriad ailments and prescriptions. Fortunately, there is a VA Medical Center in Amarillo,
less than 30 minutes down the road. I
may need to give them a heads-up that he’s coming. They need to prepare. I informed my sister that she would need to
go with him to his first appointment to meet his Primary Care Team and let them
know he is an unashamed liar who will only occasionally follow his Dr’s orders
because, and I quote, “what do they know?”
FAMILY
–He doesn’t want to see everybody every day, but he wants you close by. He doesn’t want to go anywhere with you, but
he wants to be invited. He doesn’t want
to babysit, but he wants to see the great granddaughters; he now has two. He is happiest in the boonies with kids and
dogs and the occasional cow.
It’s
going to be interesting to see how this goes.
When he lived with me, it was like Frasier. Living with my
sister will be more like if Uncle Jesse from The Dukes of Hazzard moved in with...well, the closest I can come up with would be Katie Otto from American Housewife.
I promise to keep you informed after gathering the pertinent info from my Saturday calls with Shontyl and the Sunday calls with The Dad.
Somebody should throw up a prayer, or two. Seriously.
Tuesday, January 1, 2019
Southern Baptist Side-eye: A Christmas Tale
Opening the passenger door of the maroon Jeep Cherokee, I
yelled, “Hey Sissy!” to my sister. She
laughed and yelled back, “Hey Spencer!
Welcome back to the boonies!” We
are visiting Amarillo, Texas, for Christmas. Amarillo is a town I never lived
in and it is so far north in Texas, that if states were actual squares, it
would be considered part of Oklahoma.
However, do not say that to any of the residents of this part of the
state. To say no les gusta, Oklahoma, would
be an understatement.
My sister moved here from East
Texas when her daughter (Bailey) married a rancher (Rowel) who manages 50,000 acres
just outside Channing, northwest of Amarillo. Since my mother died, I have
considered wherever my sister lives to be “home”, as in I’ll be home for Christmas. Of course, Amarillo isn’t really the boonies;
it’s an actual town of almost 200,000, mostly cowboys. My sister resides in a teeny-tiny town of
about 900, situated about 30 miles west of Amarillo. I joke that it’s about 15 feet from New
Mexico, but it’s so close you can see the border as there isn’t much to block
your view, the occasional six-foot tall tumbleweed notwithstanding.
My
husband (Tam) and I took the redeye from Los Angeles and we are more than ready
to have breakfast at Cracker Barrel, something we don’t have in Southern
California. Sissy had promised queso, grits,
iced tea, queso, shopping, then more queso and finally, buttermilk pie followed
by just a bit more queso. For me, home
(Texas) is for visiting, eating and shopping, in that order, and the visiting
had already commenced.
Although
I grew up in the South and spent several extremely influential years (ages 12-16)
in East Texas, I haven’t lived in these parts for almost 20 years, so to say I
am “from here” is inaccurate. However, I
would confidently say that I know
these people and how and why they think and act as they do. Tam does not and is somewhat apprehensive,
although he visited the first time a year ago.
Watching the news and hearing
people talk about The South, he is concerned about racism as he is from the
Philippines. I have explained to him
that Texas isn’t truly a Southern state, but that he shouldn’t worry. Most small-town Texans don’t have a frame of
reference for recognizing the ethnic gradations of Southeast Asia. They recognize Black, White and Brown. “If they notice that you’re
dark-complexioned, they’ll think you’re Hispanic and other than possibly expecting
you to clean something, they won’t give you a second look.”
As we ate, Sissy reminded us that her
little church (First, and only, Baptist) was having their Christmas Service
tomorrow and that Victoria, her best friend and the preacher’s wife, was hoping
we would attend. I had assumed this
would be the case and had planned our wardrobe appropriately. I would avoid wearing my brightly colored
chinos; not need to frighten the villagers. Once we exhausted ourselves shopping,
laughing and eating everything we can’t get in LA, including introducing Ben to
the wonder that is a Fried Twinkie, we headed to Vega and crashed at Sissy’s
new house, a scant half-mile from the Dairy Queen.
The next morning, after a breakfast
of sausage biscuits (with mine dipped in cane syrup), we started getting
dressed. I had brought an argyle
turtleneck in a very heterosexual navy, gray and winter white, with coordinated
winter white chinos and grey suede loafers.
It was the least gay cold-weather ensemble I owned, purchased
specifically for this trip. I didn’t want to startle the townsfolk at Jesus’
early birthday party. While I was
chatting with Sissy, Tam walked in and asked, “Which sweater, orange or pink?”
I turned to look and said, “I’m
thinking orange is less gay than pink, but bright colors are always suspect. What do you think, Sissy?”
“Oh, orange is fine. No one is going to say anything.”
“True,” I said. “Plus, you look great in orange. And there is only one other person in America
who looks good in orange and I feel pretty sure that Lupita Nyong’o won’t be at
First Baptist.”
We piled into the Cherokee and made
our way literally one mile down the street, traversing the entirety of the
commerce in Vega, including the aforementioned Dairy Queen, Dollar General and Allsup’s
gas station and deli. We wheeled into
the parking almost knocking down a woman with weather-defying hair, carrying a
cake plate. Bailey rolled down her
window and said, “So sorry, Miss Vonda, I didn’t see you there!” Miss Vonda laughed and said, “The Lord’s
protecting me and this cake. Don’t you
worry.”
We crossed the parking lot and
Bailey’s cell phone rang. She answered
and as she talked, she rolled her eyes and said, “Well hurry up. We’re going inside.”
Turning to me she said, “Bailey and
Rowel and the girls are gonna be late.
They just left their house and it’s a 20-minute drive.”
Matching her eye roll, I said,
“Good lord. I thought Bailey was always
on time, like me or Mother.”
“She’s a little slower these days,
since she had Macy. Don’t forget Olivia
is just three and Rowel can only help with getting Olivia dressed in her gown
for bedtime. It’s one and done. Actual
clothes with the hairbows and the leotards and the shoes are not his cup of tea. Saddling a horse? Sure.
Dressing a wiggly toddler, not so much.
“Come on, I see Dakota’s Mom walking
in the front door and she wanted to meet you.
She was sick last year when y’all were here. She loves your books.”
“Oh yeah, I see her.”
“How do you know which one is
her? Y’all never met.”
“Well, that woman right there looks
exactly like Dakota, but older. That’s
some strong DNA.”
We slipped into the sanctuary and
sat on the next to the back row, on the end by the back door. I always have an escape route; I don’t trust America. We were right in front of Dakota’s mother and
as I didn’t see anyone’s coat or Bible saving their spot, we appeared to be in
the clear.
Victoria came over to say Hi, with
her three kids (Nehemiah, Ariel and Noah).
She gave me a hug and said, “Why are y’all sittin’ so far back?” Hugging her right back I said, “Once a
Baptist, always a Baptist.” Preacher’s
wives have to sit on one of the first two rows as they are theoretically interested
in what their spouse if preaching. The
wife of the Chairman of the Deacons sits on the next row back. These are just the rules in a Southern
Baptist Church.
We turned around and said hello to Mom
of Dakota (Marjorie). Sissy said, “Hi,
Miss Marjorie, this is my brother Spencer.”
Turning to Tam, she said, “And this is my…Tam. Our Tam.”
She looked panicked as she almost said, “Brother-in-Law”. I laughed and said, “Yes! Our Tam is just the best” and gave him what I
thought was a manly punch on the arm.
We hadn’t discussed how to introduce
Tam and we didn’t realize it until Sissy was in the middle of the
introduction. I know that we should have
just been honest but there is no need to bring up all that stuff when we are
only at their church for an hour every year.
You never know if people are open-minded or not, so I don’t feel the
need to poke the bear, as it were.
However, I noticed Marjorie look at my wedding band and look at Tam’s
matching wedding band and give herself that knowing nod and us a sweet smile. No flies on her.
We sat down, and I saw, out of the
corner of my eye, what I thought was my mother.
I knew it wasn’t her as she died almost 19 years ago, but the woman
looked so much like her that my breath caught in my chest.
I turned to Sissy and said, “That
woman looks just like Mother!”
“I know,” Sissy said. “The first Sunday we were here, I hugged her
before I could stop myself. She was so
flattered when I told her why, so she hugs me every Sunday.”
“I totally want to hug her, too.”
“Right?” Sissy said as she called
her over.
“Miss Libby, this is my brother Spencer, from California. I just love your sparkly sweater.”
“Miss Libby, this is my brother Spencer, from California. I just love your sparkly sweater.”
“Well thank you, sweetie. I find that the older I get, the more glitter
I need,” Miss Libby said, laughing.
“Turning to me, she said, “Do you want to give me a hug, darlin’?” I really did and so I did.
Tam didn’t understand what had just
happened and when I was trying to explain, he said, “Don’t most people simply say
hello to someone they only just met?”
Sissy and I laughed. I said, “If they’re not Baptists.”
Once we sat down and the service
started, we were treated to a Christmas song or twelve. I swear, I think
everyone at the church besides Sissy, Tam and I either sang a song or played
the piano. Sitting between me and Sissy
were Olivia (they had finally arrived with Olivia interrupting the preacher by yelling,
“Hey GiGi!” as soon as they saw us) and Victoria’s daughter, Noah and their
kiddie accoutrement, consisting of toys, books, snacks and other Sunday School
debris.
Once we sat down, they had passed
out candles for the Candlelight Ceremony that would end the service. Unfortunately, in a rookie move, I laid mine
down with all the kid stuff, so when the lights were turned off, I had to go on
a treasure hunt, just to be able to participate. Church is like the movies, so I didn’t want to
turn on my phone, so I started picking through the things on the bench and
lifting them up to the little light coming from the narthex behind me. It took me a few minutes to sort through a water
bottle, coloring book, candy cane, toy horse, a second toy horse, the rider of
the first toy horse according to Noah, a children’s Bible and finally my
candle.
Right when they started lighting
the candles, I remembered a service when I was in high school where one of the
kids accidentally caught her hair on fire with her candle and my mother hurdled over two pews like she was Gail Devers in the Olympics, to put out the hair-fire. As soon as she did that, all the kids handed
their candles to their parents.
For some strange reason I got the giggles and before I could stop myself, I let out one quick snort. Although it was dark, I could feel
Bailey cut her eyes in a very judgmental way, just like a Mom. Nothing
says “Happy Birthday, Jesus” like candlelight, stifled giggles and a dash of Southern
Baptist side-eye.
Happy New Year, y’all.
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