Archive for the ‘Letters’ Category

Telling Sandy About Mom

Saturday, October 9th, 2010

Hi [Sandy].

Helping a friend move to Akron later today, and thought I’d peck out a few lines before turning in tonight.

Well, sorry you don’t get out more often when sampling those various water bodies.  But then, I imagine they pay you more than the sample collectors, ‘eh? 

There are ways to address the shower-hot-when-toilet-flushes problem without re plumbing.  For a while, before I replaced our pipes, I put two pressure-regulating valves on the hot and cold water sides of the shower, and set them each to the same value.  Then, when the commode flushed, the balance of pressure between hot and cold supplies held constant.   That worked pretty well for nearly a year, and in addition to pressure regulators, they also have temperature regulating shower valves that monitor the water at the shower head.  Should that grow hotter than the set point or colder, they apply more cold or hot water respectively, to keep the temperature from fluctuating.  Of course, the best overall way to accomplish the same thing is to use at least 3/4” pipe throughout the house, except where you feed individual faucets.  Those runs can still be 1/2”.  But any pipe that feeds more than one faucet should be 3/4”, at least. 

I didn’t know you lived in the Pittsburgh area.  During what years?  I was there from 1979 through 1988.

Thanks for sharing about Dad.  Yes, he was a silent but great guy.  We didn’t talk too much.  But I spent an entire afternoon with him, the last time I saw him alive in March of 1997.  He was conscious then, and I’m told that that was probably the last lucid day he had prior to his death in May, 1997.  In fact, we ordered a Stromboli and split it.  That day, we talked, and we talked, AND WE TALKED.  It was wonderful, and I still miss him, some thirteen plus years later. 

Now, it may be Mom’s turn coming up, and I’m just trying to make sure that she and I say everything we need to say to each other before she goes.  I almost missed that opportunity with Dad, so I can’t risk not being here for Mom.  So, I visit her often and stay as long as my rides allow.  

She’s been away now for going on three months, and you’d think that with all the health problems she’s endured, that we’d be prepared to lose her.  But I’m not; no more so than I was ten or twenty years ago.  In fact, I’m sure I’ll be quite devastated for a while when her fateful day comes.  Sometimes, as I’m lying in bed, half way to sleep, I’ll hear her calling me from the bottom of the steps; like she used to do when she was here and could walk.  Sometimes from that, my own tears running down my cheeks awaken me, and the reality bursts in that she may never come home again.  Yep, this part of our life cycle Amy, the part where you must give up a parent to death, is so brutal; for everyone involved.  Sometimes, it’s so quiet here.  Anyway, I’m sorry to dump. 

I’d say that I’ve learned to be content and actually pretty happy with what I have; though admittedly, I still desire some things.  I still have dreams and fantasies.  But if they never come true, I’ll not fret too much. I mean, ideally, I hope that most of them do one day jump from the cerebral to the concrete.  But even if that never happens, I’m quite satisfied with my accomplishments thus far, and I’ve been lucky enough to experience for real, many of my dreams; most of them in fact.   I actually got to live with my first love for a time.  How many ever did that?  Not many I gather.  Plus, I managed to secure a lead software engineering position at a high tech company for nearly a decade.  I’ve owned a home, and got to live in Philadelphia for a few years and Dayton for nine years; all of these, WONDERFUL experiences.  So, while I cannot accurately claim that I want for NOTHING, I’m very pleased with what destiny, my talents, and my life choices have done for me.  They’ve made me whole.  True.  In the end, I may never get EVERYTHING I want from this life.  But I’m thrilled that I’ve received MOST of it.  Yes.  Life is good.

Alas, I’d best get to bed because it shall be a long day out to Akron and back tomorrow, and I hope to get a fresh start.  So, enjoy your weekend.  It’s supposed to be spectacular weather the next couple days.  Leave your microscope for a telescope and gaze at the stars the next couple nights, which should be quite vivid.  Take care. 

More later.

Tom Hesley

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Plumbing, Mom, Life

Tuesday, October 5th, 2010

Hi   [Sandy].

Wow, don’t get eyestrain, being in front of that microscope so much. :-)

Yes, I hear that Bellwood has great water. I wouldn’t know however, as we have well water here; very HARD well water in fact. Been thinking about a softener, as I just replaced a water heater that only lasted six years. But I’m not sure the added expense of a softener would be offset by the savings in less appliance repairs / replacements over its life time. I’ll have to think about it some more.

Hmmm. Your long work hours remind me of the software engineering job I held for fifteen years. Lots of overtime there. One month in 1992, we worked 8:00 AM until 1:00 AM, seven days a week. I gained some weight that month.

Do you visit those 13 reservoirs personally to collect the samples? That would be a neat way to get out of the office now and then. :-)

Sorry you had to go it alone like that. But if you obtained plumbing skills, at least you could do that work to make some extra money if you needed it. I re plumbed our house here, back in 2008; replacing most of the copper with PVC pipe, and going from a 1/2 inch water main to 3/4 inch one. That really improved the pressure and now, you don’t get scalded in the shower when someone flushes the toilet. In fact, there’s no temperature change at all. We can even wash clothes now while someone showers, and they don’t know the difference.

Working with PVC seemed pretty easy; although I did have to learn to solder copper pipe because I decided to use copper around the water heater, as I didn’t trust PVC to handle the heat there as well. But in retrospect, it probably would have been just as safe to use PVC. So I will use it, if I ever do that job again, which I’m hoping not to.

Goodness, you’ve certainly had a rough year! But it’s great that you’ve emerged from that darkness. Congratulations. I’ve had my bouts with depression as well. But things have been very good over the past eight years or so; particularly now that I’m doing more of what I was apparently cut out to do – writing. I’m happier now than I’ve ever been, and while it took some time to adjust my life to support it and to learn how to be happy, it was well worth the effort. I don’t mean to say that everything is perfect. Mom’s ongoing health problems sadden me deeply. But nonetheless, I like my life – I’m a “life-a-holic” as well.

I saw your Mom and dad last December. They came for a little Christmas bash that Mom held. I always enjoy talking about math and computers with Jim. Once we talked about the special significance of the number zero and why calculators give you an error message when you try to divide 1 by 0. Wow! He’s really very smart.

One day at a time, yes, because the further out you plan, the greater the risks of those best laid plans going awry. Best to keep it short, and simple I think. Do you like philosophy? I must confess that I enjoy writing it more than reading it. :-)

Tom Hesley

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Facebook Tid Bits: 2010-06-19

Saturday, June 19th, 2010

12:00 PM: I’ve been experiencing some problems with my Facebook account (perhaps newbe problems).  Anyway, I’ll look into turning that feature on.

Anyway, I’m sorry to hear about your father.  Mine passed away in 1997.  I help out with Mom too.  In fact, I moved in with her when I returned home from Philadelphia eight years ago. Now, I’m her butler / handyman / caregiver.  I like being close to my family again.  I’ll probably never leave.  Dorothy had it right: There really is no place like home.

I write mostly about my pursuit of true love, from a philosophical perspective.  As you probably remember, I spent a lot of time working that issue while in Ohio.  I thought my experiences and insights gained might help people in similar circumstances.  Check out my work if you like at:

http://tomslovequest.com/

I also keep a journal at:

http://tomsdiary.com/

where I detail my day-to-day life, the hurdles with caring for Mom, weight struggles, technical reviews of the electronic appliances I encounter, and everything else that I feel I’d enjoy writing about.  When something occurs that produces any sort of emotional response in me, I’ll usually document the experience there.

Finally, whenever I have a strong opinion, I write it down at:

http://tomsviews.com/

This site is my soapbox.  :-)

I’m working on getting business pages set up here on Facebook and other social networking places.  Keeping busy, for sure.

Tom Hesley

04:17 PM: Cut the grass today; for the fifth time this year. Hot. So I’ll defer the weed whacking part until tomorrow. Rest.

05:35 PM: It occurs after years of dating, that perfect tens only stay that way for an instant. Then they become as human and flawed as the rest of us. Makes one wonder at the long-term advantage of a ten; particularly once the novelty fades. Once it does, they’re just like fives and sevens; and twos sometimes. :-)

Tom Hesley

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Updating Dale: 2010-05-13

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Dear [Dale],

I’m so glad to hear that you’re still happy at work.  I’ve talked to several recently who were laid off as a result of that outsourcing of which you speak.  So how do they utilize all that vacated development space these days?  Do they still even have local developers?  Do you still see people like [George], [Kyle], [Theo], or [Tracy]?  Haven’t found them on Facebook yet.  :-)

About me: I’ve become a full-time writer and blogger; so far I’ve earned $10 total.  :-)   But bandwidth is picking up (about 6 GB / month), and in addition to the writing, I get to dabble in PHP and PERL code quite a bit.

I also play music for parties, wedding receptions, reunions, and such; though that business turned out far less lucrative than I’d hoped.  But I have 67000 recordings computerized, and the searches take less than a half a second to complete.  Songs can be retrieved by year, artist, title, lyrics in some cases, and genre.

I also take on the occasional PC from local customers to upgrade, which brings in a few dollars now and then.  But though I make significantly less money than when you and I worked the web products and document delivery components, I’m much happier – nothing against YOU of course.  :-)   I guess that ultimately, I just wasn’t cut out for the sort of work I was doing when I ended my employment with you all.  Indeed, writing seems to be a much better fit.  I just hope that I can, in some degree, duplicate the success with the blogs that I enjoyed as a software engineer working along side you.  We’ll see.

It’s hard to believe that your kids are practically adults now.  But if they made it this far, then you did good!  :-)  I never had children.  In fact, I’ve never married, though I did meet someone special, within a few months of the day I left the company.  We’ve hung out ever since.  Sometimes, we date.  Other times, we’re best friends.  But we always enjoy getting together every month or two, and we’ve accumulated lots of great memories through the years.  She’s been a wonderful friend, and my only regret is that I didn’t meet her while still living in Ohio.  If I had, I might have stayed.

Only a handful of days have passed since I began talking to some ex Ohio coworkers.  In fact, until I signed up with Facebook, I’d spoken with practically no one from Dayton in seven years.  But it’s wonderful to be back in touch with some of you again, and so I hope my keen appreciation of your letter is obvious.  Thanks very much for writing, I wish you well, and hope you’ll write again when you have a minute (Do they still keep people overly busy at the company?).  Anyway, take care and we’ll chat again sometime.  Say hi to the cafeteria, the bridge tunnels, and the fountain in front of the main building for me.  :-)  See you.

Tom  Hesley

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Updating Brandon: 2010-05-07

Friday, May 7th, 2010

Hey. I’m so glad to be back in touch with you.

Yes, one big reason I left [the company] was that they seemed to lose interest in pursuing employee home-basing a couple years after I started it. So getting the level of infrastructure support I needed became more difficult. Plus, being home-based effectively dead-ended my career; my last year with them, I got no raise, and my last boss suggested that if I wanted to get my advancement back on track, that I’d need to return to Ohio. Couldn’t do that, as I’d moved in with Mom by then, and really enjoyed living here in my home town again. Nope. There’s no place like home. Managers got frustrated with having to deal with me over the phone so much, and as you probably know, I was thought of none too highly by Release Coordinatation and Software Support (I didn’t think much of them either). So many hardships and tough choices all converged on me in March of 2003 that I had no idea how to deal with. Thus, I just had to get out.

I’ve been a writer for the past eight years, and began blogging my work fourteen months ago. The bandwidth on my blogs is inching upward (5.5 GB / month at present), and so far, I’ve earned $10 from them. J Hopefully though, that will pick up as I post more pieces, more people learn about me, and I better optimize the blogs for search engines.

I suspected you were gay but never felt comfortable asking you about it. However, now that you’ve come forward, for whatever it’s worth, I support you fully, and I’m truly glad that you’ve come out. I did peak at your pictures; you’re much more “smiley” these days. Not that you appeared sad when we ran around together. But you certainly look happier in your present life, and I’m so happy for you now that you’re no longer in the closet. Just be careful who you tell though; there are some real jerks still lurking around out there, and I would never want to see any harm come to you.

I want you to know that I’ve never forgotten how kind and supportive you were to me when we lived together, and throughout my entire sojourn in Ohio. You made the Dayton years possible for me. But eventually though, my vision got in the way too much at work, the higher up the ladder I went. This would not have occurred however, if all the employees there would have been as helpful and understanding as you. If they had, I’d have made president of the company by now. J But eventually, it became clear that due to my home based status and my low vision, I’d hit a sort of glass ceiling there, and found that I simply could not continue working like that. So, I resigned, without a new job to go to. Thank goodness I was eligible for Social Security Disability Income. I do DJ work several times a year, and I have around 68,000 music and radio show recordings on the computer these days, that I play at the gigs. I also perform PC upgrades for the locals (one or two computers a month I work on). But though my income is only a third of what it was as a full-time software engineer, I am much happier myself these days. Leaving was the best decision I ever made.

Sorry about your Mom. Though your work might have suffered, you did the right thing by caring for her as much as she needed. It’s unfortunate that your boss wasn’t more compassionate. But now, you have a clear conscience as well as all those great memories of her, which will enrich the rest of your life. She took care of you growing up, and you took care of her, growing down. That’s as it should be, though our duties in this capitalistic society often make living that way difficult, as you found out at work.

You seem healthy. That’s good. I’m still doing well; though I developed an enlarged thyroid gland in 2002 (probably from the stresses at work J), and I’ve battled high cholesterol too. Otherwise though, I feel great. No girlfriends, but I do hang out with a very special woman from Pittsburgh; we get together once every couple months for a week or two at a time. She’s a lot of fun.

Well, to avoid the risk of this turning into a novel, I’ll close for now. Take care and write more when you so desire. Take care.

Tom Hesley

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Beam Box FM Antenna

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Dear   [Mentat], 

Yep, I remember that Beam Box you owned throughout the late 1970s and well into the 1980s, although I played with it very little.  However, I know just from experimenting with antennas in ham radio, that when you tune an aerial to the desired frequency, and the antenna has a very high Q, you get amazingly good performance. 

Unfortunately, antennas like this for the FM band are hard to come by (with the exception of the Beam Box).  Because of how wide the FM band is (20 Mhz.), you really do need a tunable antenna to optimize reception for individual stations throughout the band.  A simple broadband antenna (like the whips on “rabbit ears” or the old dangling wire behind the receiver) just don’t cut it, although they admittedly work reasonably well when you have no better alternatives. Yep, the Beam Box was great.  I wonder if anyone makes something like that spectacular antenna today?  

Tom Hesley 

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Definitely No Camp: 2010

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

[Mentat asked if I'd be gong to camp this year of 2010.  I responded as follows:]

Dear   [Mentat],

Well,   [Jack]   is skipping out this year to conserve money for the foot parties.  Further, I think he’s disenchanted with camp, like me.  They’ve cut out so much since I resumed attending in 1995, that there are very few activities available anymore that I enjoy.  They don’t do the ten- or twenty-mile hikes anymore, and this year, they’ve shortened the sessions by a day (to ten days, down from  eleven), and omitted a session besides.  This means that our session will likely be very crowded, and with the faulty PA system there, I don’t relish the dining room noise at mealtimes when so many campers attend.  It’s hard to hear announcements about the activities. 

So nope.  I’m not going this year.

Tom

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Update: 2010-02-18

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Dear sister Mary Ann,

Congratulations!  Yes, you mentioned that you were considering applying for that radiology job the last time you were here.  I’m glad you got the position.

Yep, raising children puts demands on careers, I suspect.  J  Hopefully now, you’ll have enough money to meet the needs of your girls as well as their athletic desires.

Well, you seem to enjoy cooking.  So your weekend coming up should be fun.

I am looking forward to a break, but am a bit concerned about Mom’s meds.  There won’t be someone here all the time, although we are covered in the early mornings and early evenings (Joann) and the weekends (Debbie).  Still though, at lunch time and at bed time, Mom will have to take her meds on her own.  Hopefully, she doesn’t screw things up.  I thought of having Joann set out the noon dose when she’s here in the morning, and then the bedtime dose when she comes in the evenings.  That should work, as long as Mom doesn’t misplace them.  She’s getting worse in that regard.  Last night, she threw out her med cup (glass), with a pair of her good earrings in it.  So you and the girls will really have to watch out for this while I’m gone. 

At Carmen’s we’re going to go shopping a few times and really stock her up on the non perishables.  Plus, she has some computer issues she wants me to investigate, and we have this accessible Internet radio for her to try.  Hopefully, it speaks enough that she’ll be able to enjoy it without being able to see it.

Give me a call later today, or tomorrow.  Tomorrow however, Mom has an eye doctor appointment in the morning.  So if you want to get me tomorrow, calling after around 2:00 PM would be best.

Later. 

Tom

Duplicate Songs on iPod

Thursday, February 18th, 2010
A user has numerous duplicate songs on her iPod that keep reappearing after she syncs it, even though she says that she’d deleted all multiple copies from her iTunes library.  So I said to her…  
  
Are you syncing your whole library to your iPod, or just selected playlists? If selected playlists, one or more of your lists might mention the same song. This can cause duplicates on the iPod if you have multiple copies of the song in your iTunes library (same song but different file name or location), and more than one of those copies is mentioned across the playlists you’re syncing. 
 
Of course, now that I think of it, this can happen when you’re syncing your whole library, for the same reason; duplicate songs but each having a different title, or artist, or both.

You could, instead of syncing your whole library, create a playlist that you’ve verified has no dups in it, and then sync just that playlist to the iPod.  Of course with this technique, you’d have to be sure somehow that any recording you add to it does not duplicate another that is already in the playlist; not an easy task.  See below.

Or, you could compare the durations of files that you think are duplicates.  If they’re the same, they may in fact be doubles; but not necessarily so. Thus, you wouldn’t want to just blindly delete files that appear identical based just on their sizes.

Finally, you might try a bit-by-bit comparison between the files.  This would certainly find duplicates that have exactly the same volume and exactly the same audio patterns.  But often, duplicate song files are not processed the same way across different albums; some are equalized or compressed / expanded, while others are “de-hissed,” mixed slightly differently, and so on.  These processes mathematically alter the files and thus, can make their bit streams appear very different from one another when in fact, they both contain the same song. 

Unfortunately, short of knowing both files very well, there’s no sure way to know you have definite dups.  So unless this is causing you excruciating angst, I’d not bother with figuring it out.  You could end up deleting music that you thought was duplicated, only to learn later that it was not. 

Yes, the problem of de-duping music files gets really messy, really quickly.

  
Tom Hesley  

  

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Why Do I Stay?

Monday, February 15th, 2010

From audio journal episode:   AJE-2010-01-29-23-14.

Why Do I Stay? 

What keeps me here with Mom?   You know, with all the trouble we’ve had getting along due to all the irksome and (at times) idiotic choices she makes.  Why do I stick around and put up with that chronic aggravation? 

Certainly a big factor is my desire to live out the remainder of my days here, in this house.  This building has always been a very special and safe place for me because Gram and Pap Jewell lived here, and they without fail, took great care of me from my perspective; spoiled me, I guess, as my sisters would point out with a tone of indignation from having been short-changed of the Jewells’ affection.  I think Gram and Pap favored me because I did not see well, and so my memories of them would seem to be more positive than those my sisters hold. 

Indeed, I pretty much started out life here; this place in the family since I was born, which is even longer than my primary childhood home where we all grew up, on North Third Street in Bellwood.  We lived in Bellwood for twenty-one years, but it came about in 2007, that the amount of time our family lived here along the old highway surpassed the Bellwood house.  Indeed, the Jewell place where we live now, holds many fond memories for me, and thus, nostalgic value no doubt, kindles my desire to stay here with Mom. 

This place feels more like home than anywhere else I’ve resided, because it’s one of the only places I’ve ever lived, where I do not miss being somewhere else.  While making my home in Pittsburgh, I often reminisced about the good times back here, and wanted to visit as much as I could.  The same was true of Dayton and, to a lesser degree, Philadelphia. But in all those spots, Altoona and the grounds surrounding here enticed me, predictably, look forward to the next holiday, when I’d get to come home again.  

Also, leaving this place with my wonderful pavilion in the back yard saddens me every time I depart for a week or two.  Again, this is one of the very few residences to pull so hard at my heart.  Then, while I am away, I worry about things here and hope that no pipes freeze, that no shingles peel off of the roof in a windstorm, or none of our appliances short out while I’m absent.  In some ways, this spot on the boulevard feels like a child to me, that I care for, and worry about, and wish not to stay away from for very long. 

Plus, I like it here because (accessibility issues notwithstanding) it’s exceedingly quiet, and the rent’s cheap too; zero cost actually, although I do maintain the property, care for Mom’s cats daily, and manage her meds and appointments.  I do all this as payment for my room and board.  Additionally, I shop for her groceries weekly, and charge nothing for the labors of any maintenance tasks I perform.  Finally, she and I split the costs of common utilities, maintenance, and upgrade supplies. Yes.  My living here is a great deal for both of us, and I’m sure that this, in and of itself, would be enough to persuade most folks to stick around, in spite of the difficulties of living with a parent. 

In short: A big reason for why I stay is because I just like being here for now and the future, and so, wish to safeguard this property with my presence.  But there’s more too, that makes leaving so untenable: To me, Mom represents the chance I’ve longed for all these years, to get it right when it comes to caring for one’s parents; to take care of someone who took such good care of me, the way they should be cared for; to give them at least the same level of comfort and security that they did me, when I was too young to fend for myself.  I care for [Emmy] like this as well, because I desire to humbly show my compassionate side for those very special people in my life.  Yes.  Perhaps I am trying to score brownie points with God, or hoping to win a favored position in eternity (or oblivion) by loving “unconditionally.”  What’s wrong with that?  If aliens were watching, unknown to me, I’d want my actions to show them a positive view of the benevolent side of humanity. I’d want them to see good, and at least a little bit of the best parts of humanity. 

I stay because I love this place and all the memories it holds.

Not Enough I Love Yous

Not all times in my life saw me as charitable; particularly as a teen-ager, when my grandmother Jewell died. The thirtieth anniversary of her passing happens later this year.  So I’ll probably think a lot about her as that date (July 20th) approaches. 

Just before she left us forever, Gram laid there, in that last bed in which she would ever sleep, looking up at me with dim but definite recognition.  I noticed pleading in her eyes, as she had suffered so much for so long, from the pains of terminal uterine cancer.  I wish I’d been God then because I would have given up all my special powers, to be able to drive away that torturous anguish I saw on her face that day. 

I wished for a lot of things actually; the most mortal of which was to freely tell her that I loved her.  Though I’d struggled with this for years, it was only at the tail-end of that last time I saw her alive in 1980, that I finally managed to blurt it out.  Even then, I’m not sure I could have, had she not been so dazed from the morphine (pain medicine).  Indeed, I might never have said it had she had been fully alert.  Thank goodness I did though, because I’ve carried guilt into the twenty-first century because I didn’t say it enough.  Sometimes, I’m ashamed that I had so much difficulty saying it.  But I imagine that regret would riddle me much more than it does today, if I’d never said “I love you” to her at all. 

And then, she was gone. After leaving her bedside, I headed back to [First Love] in Pittsburgh, and less than two days later, she died, and I was not with her, and in fact, didn’t get the word until several hours later, in the early morning of July 21st, 1980.  Read more about this sad day   here

I stay to say   I love you.

Grandparents’ Deaths Improved Me

But this event, nearly thirty years ago, triggered a change; nudging me significantly toward a less selfish personality.  Now it wasn’t Gram’s death alone that transformed me into a more giving person; but a series of impeccably timed, fateful occurrences that picked away at my childhood self-absorption.    When Gram died, my difficulty saying I love you to dear family members and offering help to others was already frustrating me.  Until that day, I usually could not say it to Mom or Dad, or my sisters.  In fact, I don’t believe that I ever said it to Dad until the last time I saw him alive, in March of 1997. Before that, my bashfulness effectively muted those special words, and I’m not sure why. 

But Gram’s passing as well as Pap’s nearly three years earlier, seemed to dissolve at least some of this shyness.  Probably the biggest event that helped show me how ridiculous and potentially hurtful this fear of expressing love could be, occurred the last time I saw Pap Jewell alive in September of 1977.   While shaking his hand good-bye, he attempted to draw me toward him to give me a farewell kiss.  While pumping my hand, he paused, becoming motionless but still grasping my right palm with his. I did not feel him pulling me.  Honestly. 

Then after nearly ten seconds of this “stalemate,” Mom, who’d been watching us nearby, scolded me, “Tommy!  Come on.  Let him kiss you!”  At that point, I felt his hand begin to tremble, and I never found out if this rapid shaking was him trying to muster all his strength to bring me closer to him, or if he was starting to cry at my resistance.  I’m pretty sure that he, like Mother, thought me mean for avoiding his lips. 

But I was not totally opposed.  I mean, I’ll admit that I wasn’t crazy at sixteen years of age about Mom’s father laying a sloppy kiss on my cheek.  But had I known that he wanted it so, especially as sick as he was, I probably would have been more sensitive on that occasion.  I honestly did not sense his pressure, because his arms and hands, so weakened from his advanced diabetes and other complications of aging, could lift practically nothing.  Indeed, his pulling was so weak that I mistook it for the dead weight of his body, as I had to support his arm even while we shook hands.  So I did not perceive his exertion until after Mom admonished me.  But honestly, and again for the record: I didn’t recognize his effort at final affection.  But after Mom snapped at me, I moved a little closer and his draw became more pronounced.  Then I moved the rest of the way to him, and he kissed me with one of those loud lip-smacks that hurts the ears.  But at that point, his meaning now clear, I didn’t mind; my irritation replaced with guilt for having been so cold to him.  I suppose I had a lot of funny ideas and hang-ups about familial affection as a boy. 

Fast-forward to my last visit with Gram.  I tried to more freely and abundantly to communicate my love for her, to her; an opportunity I clearly missed with Pap.  I wanted to do better this time, with Gram, and when she motioned me to her side for a good-bye kiss, I went to her without objecting.  Indeed, I wanted to do it.  With the whole Pap experience still fresh in my mind, I was determined to be more understanding this time around and thus, more loving.

Though I allowed her to kiss me, and in fact, kissed her back on her right cheek, I still could not say I love you until afterward, while heading hastily out the door, my back to her.  Clearly since Pap, I’d gotten somewhat more expressive of my affection. But still, I wasn’t as open with it as I wished.  In fact, if I could talk to Gram today, I’d tell her repeatedly and profusely how sorry I am that I just couldn’t face her when I said it that last time; particularly since her and Pap both did so much for me without reservation, and all I could give her in our final minutes together was a very reserved ‘I love you’. 

I stay to make up for the affection I denied Gram, and to prove that I have indeed improved.

Making Up For Those Missed I Love Yous

As I said earlier, this year I’ll remember lots about my Mom’s parents as the thirtieth anniversary of Gram’s death approaches.  If they could just read one more letter from me, I’d write that as follows:

Dear Gram and Pap,

I’ll give you ten I-love-yous now as you read this that I should have said so many times while growing up under your kind guidance: 

  1. I love you. 
  2. I love you. 
  3. I love you. 
  4. I love you. 
  5. I love you. 
  6. I love you. 
  7. I love you. 
  8. I love you. 
  9. I love you. 
  10. I love you! 

 

I did love you then, and I still do today, even though I never said it very much.   

You know, my bashfulness so restrained me when you lived, and it not only makes me afraid of women I desire but also, it stills my tongue at times when I really should speak up.  It holds me back a lot; as it did those last days I saw each of you.  Most of the time, it rightly restrains; keeping me from danger and sparing me needless embarrassment and humiliation.  But sometimes, as in that last visit with you Pap and the last one with you too Gram, it should not have silenced me.  For as much as the both of you took care of me, cried for me, wrote to me when I went off to school in Pittsburgh, laughed with me, gave me quarters, dimes, and nickels for the jukebox across the lot from your house at the bar, with all those wonderful memories you gave me, I so wish I’d have been more forthcoming with my affections.  Of course, we can’t change history, and now that you’re gone, I’ll never be able to completely set things right; though I hope you forgive me and  that you understand that when you knew me, I was highly under-developed emotionally, and carried many insecurities which for the most part today, have disappeared.  

I am a much better person now in this regard and my biggest regret involving you, is that you’ll never see the much more loving and expressive man I’ve become.  Now I realize that what I’m about to tell you may not undo all those times when I wished not to bother hugging you.  But for whatever it’s worth, I’m taking what you gave to me without much in return, and I promise you that I’ll not just sit on it.  These days, I’m passing it on.  I’m taking care of Mom now as best I can, to manage both her money and mine, to give her the daily medicines she now must take without fail.  You remember how she is though; typically non compliant.  But whenever she rattles me, and gets me to consider leaving her, I remember you both, and how you stood by me, even during times when I didn’t treat you so well.  I endure her difficult nature in your honor because it would not be fair for me to harbor all the wonderful things you gave to me, without helping someone else with it.  So I must pay forward your love because if I allow it, which I very much do, you can live on through me, and help Mom (your daughter) as I’m sure you would if you were still around.  Please, work through me to care for her. 

Now you might have thought that all the things you taught and exposed me to made little difference.  Well, that might have been true while I was a boy.  At least, I rarely showed much gratitude then, for your many gifts.  But I can tell you now that, though this was a delayed response, how you loved me back then has profoundly influenced the person I am in 2010.    I believe I owe it to your memory to emulate you; especially your seemingly-boundless compassion for close friends and family.  Sadly, I did not blossom under your tutelage until well after you both passed away.  But today, I think I have.  You gave me the desire to care for those very special people close to me who need it, like Mom and [Emmy]. Anytime I feel angry or malevolent, memories of you surface, and this always stops me.  I’m so grateful that I had you growing up because if I hadn’t, I likely would have gotten into many bad things.  Your memory keeps me “on the straight and narrow” these days, and I wanted to thank you for your steady and kind hands that guide me to this day, and show me what to desire and what I’d best not pursue. 

I wanted you to know that your effort was no waste, because not only am I taking care of Mom, but I’m helping out a young woman who is totally blind and who, for many of the sorts of gifts you gave to me, has nowhere else to turn.  She didn’t have grandparents like you.  Sometimes, she frustrates me because she needs so much.  But then I think of you again, and my joy of serving her returns all over. 

To come to think of it, I don’t remember one time that you ever became frustrated with me; not even with all my rants about the school kids teasing me, my resulting anger, and learning difficulties in public classrooms.  Then too, I’m sure that I used to complain about Mom sometimes and how she used to yell so much.  But through all that, even when at nine years old I stole $20 from Pap to buy a radio from another student in Pittsburgh, the both of you never deserted me; lovingly forgiving me for the incident, and teaching me a lesson that survives in my heart to this very day.  I don’t believe I ever stole anything after that. 

I stay to atone for my many shortcomings.

Paying it Forward

These are just a few of the many lessons, generosity, and other gifts that you gave me, and I so want to pay that love forward and give it to folks who need it today.  Sometimes, [Emmy] (she’s the young blind lady that I’m assisting these days) wonders aloud how she’ll ever repay me.  So I often tell her that I expect no payback because in fact, I never repaid you folks (my grandparents) before you died.   Even if you’d lived to a hundred, there just wouldn’t have been time to compensate you for all of that priceless comfort and understanding you granted me.  Why?  Put simply: You gave me far too much to ever repay. 

But passing it on is the next best thing.  Unfortunately, though you both left before I could even get started on loving you back, these days I find great peace in giving to others some of the same generosity you heaped on me.  Knowing the kind of people you were, I trust that you are pleased with me giving your gifts away to folks like Mom and [Emmy].  In fact, had [Emmy] come into our lives while you lived among us, you would have helped her too.  So I’m paying you back the best way I can; by giving to her and others. 

I comfort [Emmy] by insisting with a hundred percent conviction that she owes me nothing, because you already took care of it.  In fact, I’m the one who owes.  You gave me a big surplus of love, on credit  if you will, which I, for many years now, have felt obligated to return to you.  So I’ll do that by meeting some of [Emmy]’s and Mom’s needs.  Since I’m certain that you would consider my debt paid in full if you could see how [Emmy]’s face lights up when I provide for her, and how Mom’s health improves when I manage her meds and appointments, I will pay you back by loving these two women in your honor. So in a sense, I owe them what I owe you, because by showing patience and generosity to them, I sense that I’m repaying you.  Hopefully through me, [Emmy] will know some of what you were, because I’m passing on to her what you paid forward to me.       

So no I expect nothing from her in return, and I tell her just to pass forward what I’ve done for her.  She then complains that there’s no one in her life to pass it to, and I respond that opportunities will present themselves; perhaps not now or not in the next ten years.  But at some point, she’ll come into contact with people who could really benefit from these sorts of gifts.  I told her to watch for these, and trust that this convinced her that she has obligation to repay me. 

I love the both of you, because they way you were has shaped me into the way I am; into a man of compassion.  Now I’m not as kind as Mother Teresa by any means.  In fact, there are many whom I’d just as soon do nothing for.  Though I expect no repayment from either [Emmy] or Mom, my compassion is not unconditional, and it may not even be as unrestricted as yours was.  But I like who I am today, and think that I am generally a very nice person to others. 

I strive to be nice everyday though admittedly, I don’t always do a very good job.  Sometimes, I grow frustrated, and then angry with Mom because she behaves so idiotically at times.  However, I manage to put up with it by thinking of you.  After all, she’s  your  offspring, and so, you’d want her to be cared for when she needs it.  Clearly, she does need it.  So to satisfy your desires, I want to be here for her in spite of how frustrated she makes me at times. 

I stay to pay it forward and pass it on.

Thank You

I want to thank you for this streak of compassion that you put into me.  The way you were made it possible for me to be as good a person as I am; if I’m good at all.  You’re largely responsible for whatever good I am. 

Let me tell you again just how much I love you, for everything that you did for me while alive, as well as all of the good bias in my thoughts that memories of you has supplied me long after I left your funerals.  You impact me today most profoundly, and so, I’ll never forget you.  How could I? 

I’m sure that when the day comes that I’m lying on my death bed, I’ll be thinking of you.  In fact, you’ll probably be my last thought after I take my least breath.  As improbably as I believe this to be, I’ll be hoping to see you again and join you once I die. 

I’ll be hoping for an opportunity to apologize for everything that I did as an ignorant little boy, as well as my lack of appreciation for all that you’d given me to that point, and what the good memories that you were creating then would mean to me in the future.  Those memories helped keep me good.  Thanks for my dearest values that have kept me out of jail and allowed me to maintain a respectable standing in society.  One day, I hope to tell all of this to you. 

I’d explain why I was so selfish with [First Love] when our relationship ended nearly thirty years ago.  I thought then that you might be looking down on me with disgust at the way I treated her.  Well, perhaps you weren’t. But for these and so many other reasons, I truly hope that we’ll meet again someday.  Perhaps one or a combination of you both will be part of the woman that I eventually fall in love with and stay in love with. 

Yep.  You folks were great. Like I say, I’ll never forget you, and I’ll always love you, and I’ll always be so thankful that you guided me as you did and kept me out of serious trouble.  You know, without you, I might have ended up in jail.  I might have become a hellion because, in my teenaged years, especially during the 1970s, I was easily influenced by peer pressure – either overt, spoken or physical pressure, or the more subtle kinds that happen as a result of seeing the other kids behaving in certain ways.  Such witnessing often made me feel compelled to join in because I’d likely get their approval if I followed.  I’m just glad however that you were there to keep me from being influenced too much in bad directions by the crowds. 

Okay, I’ll let you get back to your eternity, and I’ll get back to my life here.  I just wanted to thank you, and I hope you’re doing well.  Perhaps you’re in oblivion now (or you will be once my generation (all those who ever knew you)) passes on.  But maybe your energy is still around and helping me today. Maybe it’s encouraging me to hold my tongue and temper with Mom.

It’s funny how she used to get mad at the two of you for being so nice to me.  But now, because you were so nice to me, I’m finding it easier to be extra caring to her.  What goes around comes around, I guess. 

I stay to thank you.

So anyway, I’ll let you go.  Thank you.  Thank you.  Thank you!   I love you.  I love you.  I love you!  Never forget that. 

Take care.   

Tom

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Key Concepts

  1. A long time living there can transform a house into a home.
  2. Avoiding kisses from grandparents.
  3. Scoring brownie points with God.
  4. Care-giving to both humans and pets.
  5. Cheap rent.
  6. Excessive self focus.
  7. Extra love for the handicapped.
  8. Giving to Mom and [Emmy] what my grandparents gave to me.
  9. Good memories of a house change it into a homey dwelling.
  10. Grandparents spoiled me in this house; one reason I still love the place to this day; all those great memories.
  11. Growing old and frail, and the weakening effects of aging.
  12. Guilt as an adult for having lived a selfish childhood.
  13. Hard to say I love you.
  14. Home maintenance.
  15. I didn’t say I love you enough.
  16. I enjoy a noiseless residence.
  17. I pay my rent (and then some) with work around the house.
  18. I like being useful and needed.
  19. Leaving then missing home.
  20. Living with a parent.
  21. Loved ones lost.
  22. Opportunities for me to give something back.
  23. Pain and agony. 
  24. Parents and their adult offspring living together.
  25. Pass it on.
  26. Pay it forward.
  27. Peer pressure and how my grandparents strengthened me against it.
  28. Regrets make for a better person.
  29. Security needs.
  30. Silence is golden.
  31. Stealing money as a kid.
  32. That hateful thought of relocating again.
  33. That special love of grandparents.
  34. There’s no place like home.
  35. Those to whom I give owe me nothing because my grandparents already paid for it.
  36. Touchy feely.  Too much.
  37. Unconditional love is perhaps not so unconditional after all.
  38. What I give, I got from someone else.
  39. Where to finish out my life.