Five Days I’ll Remember

July 13, 2024

As a mental exercise I decided to pick the 5 days that really stand out among all others in my life. Without further ado here they are:

The Day I Burnt My Leg

I was 4 ,maybe 5 years old the day I burnt my leg. Dad had started a fire in the barnyard. My older brother, Jim, and I were playing around with the fire. Jim was two years older than I so he was 6 or 7. My pants caught on fire on my left leg. I don’t remember but Mom told me Jim threw me done on the ground and put out the fire. But the damage was done. I had 3rd degree burns over 90 percent of my left leg.

Mom and Dad loaded me in the backseat of our 47 Plymouth sedan. My head rested on Mom’s lap if you can call it “rested”. I remember that ride clearly like it was yesterday. I had never felt pain like that before and still haven’t in my 70 some years later.

You have to remember we lived on a farm in the back of nowhere, Mercer County Illinois. They drove me into the nearest town with a doctor, Alexis, where Dr. Bowen cleaned out the wound and bandaged it up.

I spent that summer laying on the couch in our living room. We did not have TV yet so I guess I listened to the radio. That may have been where I learned to read. I just don’t remember but I do remember reading pretty well by the time I started grade school at 5 years old. Getting back to the couch, I was hot, the couch was itchy, and my leg hurt like hell.

70 some years later I still have the scar although it doesn’t cover my entire leg anymore.

The Day Kennedy was Assassinated

I was a senior at Alexis High School (another school district that is no more due to consolidation) in Bess Hussey’s English Literature class when the Principal announced Kennedy’s assassination over the Intercom.

Now Bess Hussey’s was the oldest teacher I ever had. She was from somewhere in the South and had never lost her southern accent. The rumor was she could remember when her family had slaves. She absolutely adored William Shakespeare and therefore to her English Literature was every work of William Shakespeare.

Anyway back to John Kennedy; Miss Hussey told us to lay our heads down and pray for his family and for the Country. I don’t really remember what I was thinking then. The magnitude of that event did not hit me until later. Within a few minutes the Principal called off classes for the rest of the day. Since Alexis was a small school in a small town we did not have to wait long for the buses to take us home.

All TV programming was suspended that weekend and was replaced with endless news of the assassination and the aftermath. The TV was not that big of a deal. When you are a farmer you are always busy no matter what occurs in the outside World. Back in those days being good Lutherans no one worked on Sunday. You went to church Sunday morning and in the afternoon you watched the Bear game. Unlike everything else in the nation the NFL did not pause for the weekend, they played their regularly scheduled games. However the TV did not show the games. Instead we saw endless reruns of the assassination, Johnson taking the oath, and carriages drawn very slowly by horses with boring requiem music. Dad was madder than Hell. He was a Lutheran Republican who although he never said so I’m sure he thought the Catholic Democrat Kennedy got just what he deserved. In any case, not important as a Bears game.

The Day We were Married

August 12, 1972 – A day that will go down in infamy – Just kidding. That was the day we were married.

I guess we need to start a few weeks before the day we were married. We have been dating for quite awhile when one day I, out of the blue, proposed. I was pretty stupid back then. Maybe naive is a better description. For example I had not even thought of purchasing an engagement ring. I was still in College with another year to graduate and figured we would tie the knot in maybe a year. Gwen, however, had different ideas when she said how about August which was two months in the future.

She settled on August 12, 1972. Now I was still in college going to the Summer term. Gwen picked the weekend before finals. Take my advice: don’t ever get married in Johnson County, Texas in August. The whole weekend was disgustingly hot. I remember a couple nights before the wedding driving around Fort Worth at 10 PM and it was still 96 degrees. Jerry pronounced Texas uninhabitable.

The rest of this section is a series of vignettes.

Gwen planned and organized the wedding while I took classes. Don’t remember what but probably something from the physics and math departments.

Her dad who was famous all over Johnson County for being cheap, except for buying Chryslers, gave her a budget of $500 which is almost nothing for a wedding even back then. Gwen was great at saving money. For example she took her Aunt Geneva to Neiman-Marcus to look at wedding dresses. Then Aunt Geneva created her a copy of her favorite.

Continuing on keeping the cost to a bare minimum her cousin, Eva, sang for the wedding.

Along the same lines our reception was in her mom and dad’s home.

We planned to have the wedding in the West Side Church of Christ. Because they were a church of Christ they did not allow musical instruments in the church. However they let us bring a a piano for the wedding as long as we removed it before midnight.

We had Friday night practice meal in a local Mexican Restaurant.

That night the bachelor party was in my apartment with Jim, Nancy, their kids, and my brother Jerry. Don’t remember if there was anyone else. We played cards and drank beer all night. I don’t remember any hard liquor. I woke up the morning of my wedding feeling fine so I must not have drank much.

My brother Jim was my best man with two friends from Fort Worth as groomsmen. I don’t remember anything about the maids of honor. Jim’s young son Brian was the ring bearer.

Right after the wedding before the reception we moved the piano out of the church and back to whomever we borrowed it from.

The reception was forgettable I think because I don’t remember anything about it. Plus, I married into a Church of Christ family where everything was sinful except eating and Dr. Pepper.

Our Honeymoon was two nights since I had to get back for finals. The first night was in her Uncle’s lake cabin in Conroe. A real rustic facility. The second was in Houston. Another example of my naivety was that we did not have a reservation anywhere and ended up finding a room at a Howard Johnson Motel. I had a major sinus attack and we spent most of the weekend sneezing into handkerchiefs.

We returned Monday night to my apartment which was now also hers. The next day I aced my final as I did the others the rest of the week.

The day 9/11 happened

A day that will go down in infamy to quote Franklin Roosevelt. I was in Silicon Valley that week – Palo Alto to be exact. When I traveled to the West Coast I had trouble adjusting to the time change and therefore would get up real early and go for a run. That particular morning, which was a Tuesday if I remember correctly, I was watching CNN while I was dressing for the run. A CNN news flash stated a small private airplane had collided with one of the twin towers. I did not think much of it but while on my run listening to KQED, the local public radio station, the story changed from a small private plane to probably a large commercial airplane..

Back in the hotel room I tuned into CNN and watched as the horrified hosts and I watched the 2nd commercial airplane ram the 2nd tower. I was shocked as was the rest of American.

I was there on business for meetings with an associate contractor with Scott Verrei, Dan Corpman, Galyon Kath, and someone else whose name escapes me. Not knowing what else to do, we went to work. The associate contractor was just as unsure as we were as to how to proceed. We held meetings that day although our minds and hearts were somewhere else. We contacted the home office who was just as clueless and told us to stay there until the company decided what we should do.

By Noon that day all the air traffic across the U.S. was grounded and we could not have flown home anyway.

That evening we had trouble finding a restaurant open for dinner. Finally, we found a Chevy’s Mexican Restaurant that stayed open until 7. We ended up eating there every evening because everything else was closed.

The days came and the days went. Garland told us everyday to stay put until they decided otherwise. The planes were still grounded anyway.

Then came Friday morning, the home office told us to procure a couple rental cars and drive home. They decided the drive would take two days and had booked us rooms at a hotel in Flagstaff Arizona. We started off at Noon Friday and arrived at our Flagstaff Hotel at 2AM. Scott, Dan, and I were in one car. Scott and Dan did all the driving while I relaxed in the backseat since I did not care to drive and they seemed to relish driving.

The next morning we met for breakfast real early, 6AM if I remember correctly. Then we drove straight through to Garland arriving sometime after midnight. Twas another boring day with me in the backseat taking naps, reading my books, and watching the scenery until dark.

The drive was pretty uneventful except another car sideswiped us knocking a bumper off. We drove back and picked it up before continuing on.

That was typical of E-Systems to have us drive home during the weekend and paying for only one night’s stay. I’m probably not being fair. The decision was not E-Systems, it was our Building 582 financial guy.

We had quite a week and weekend but much better than some of our fellow employees. A group of our corporate officers were passengers on one of the planes that crashed into the World Trade Center. That resulted in corporate policy grounding all employees for quite a while and when we could fly we had to book separate flights.

The World is a dangerous place and will continue to be as long as it contains the Human Race.

The first three were very easy but after that the choices were much harder to pick.

The day Gwen was diagnosed with PSP

Gwen started having problems years ago. Her first symptoms were not being able to write certain words with her right hand (she is right handed). As the years flew by her symptoms slowly worsened. Little by little she lost use of her right hand and then her right arm. Her speech became harder to understand.

Our family doctor did not have a clue what was causing her problem. Therefore he sent her to a specialist. Over the years one specialist sent us to another and the other specialist sent us to yet another specialist.

Finally one specialist diagnosed her with Parkinson’s Disease. Her symptoms were similar to Parkinson’s but yet different.

There came a day we agreed she could not drive anymore because she had lost much of her neck and eye movement. Furthermore her balance was slowly becoming worse.

We finally saw a Specialist who declared she does not have Parkinson’s because all the normal treatments did not have any effect, and the brain scans are not those of someone with Parkinson’s. He sent us to the Neurology Research Clinic at UT Southwestern to Dr. Virkam Sakkottai.

He studied her brain scans. Had her walk and move some of her muscles. He then started asking questions like: Did Gwen’s problems start with not being able to write certain words?”. We replied yes. He kept asking questions and we kept replying yes.

Finally he said: “Gwen you have Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP).

I have no idea what that meant as I had never heard of PSP.

The doctor then commenced to describe PSP, prognosis for cure (none), and the future we can expect. He spent maybe two hours answering all our questions.

By the time we left I was dismayed. My dad had Parkinson’s, the last few years of which were not pretty. However, It was good to finally have a definite diagnosis after having spent 4 years bouncing around from specialist to specialist with no conclusive diagnosis.

Based on her symptoms he was certain she had PSP at least since 2018. The typical PSP afflicted person lives 5-10 years after the onset of PSP. However he thought she would last at least that long if not longer because of her excellent physical condition (thanks Orange Theory).

As I write this it’s now at least 7 years. Gwen is now confined to a wheelchair. She cannot use either hand or arm. She can only say a few words. Yet, we carry on as best we can, which is all anyone can do.

Contenders

Choosing the top 3 was easy. After that there were many contenders but in the end I chose the last two after due consideration. Others that contended were:

  1. The day dad was run over by the Farmall F20 – Already wrote about this in my blog. Maybe not a good reason
  2. The day my parents moved me to Chicago – Quite a change from Outback Illinois farm to a city of 3 million and a basement apartment with two other students
  3. The day Sara married – Sara’s was special because it was a destination wedding on the beach in Mexico
  4. The day I moved to Fort Worth – After DeVry I accepted a job at General Dynamics in Fort Worth mostly because it was in the West and I had watched every John Wayne movie. I expected cactus, mountains in the background, and cowboys. What I got was not too different from Illinois except dryer and no corn
  5. The day Claudia was born – Our first born. We have just moved to Garland Texas, Gwen caught the flu and went into labor. I drove to the hospital in Fort Worth with her in the back of the van holding a 5 gallon bucket to vomit into. After we arrived at the hospital Gwen was in labor 24 hours before Claudia was born. Those were the days before the husband was allowed in the labor and delivery room so I sat in the waiting area watching bad TV
  6. My first ever day in Australia – What a change. In 1975 Sydney and Australia were very different from the USA and different than they are now.

That’s all at least for now. I better see what Gwen needs.


College Football Season

September 5, 2013
The Corp Marching into the Game

The Corp Marching into the Game

It finally arrived: college football season!  Last Saturday, we traveled to College Station to watch the A&M/Rice match with 85,000 of our closest friends.  One word describes the game today: HOT! The game started at High Noon. The temperature at game time was  92 and there was not a trace of a cloud in the sky nor a hint of a breeze in the air.  The Sun beat down on us like a hammer on a nail!

The Ags were a 27 point favorite but that is not how the game played out. Rice scored first and an atmosphere of uncertainty enveloped the Aggie faithful. After all more than half of the defensive starters sat out the game for breaking team rules. Furthermore, Johnny Football was suspended the 1st half for “not knowing any better!”

The 1st half was murder. The Aggie defense gave up lots of yards willingly and the Sun beat down unmercifully.  The first half lasted forever. The Aggies squeaked  out a 28-21 half-time lead and we all felt lucky. The real score at the end of the 1st half: Sun 1, Texas A&M/Rice 0.

The second half turned out much cooler. The Aggie defense stiffened up. Johnny Football played until Coach Sumlin benched him for taunting the Rice defense! Best of all, clouds hid the Hot Sun for much of the second half!

The final score Texas A&M 52, Rice 31. However many of us believe the real winner was the Sun.


Aggie/Longhorn Final Game?

November 26, 2011

Last night might have been the final game in the long storied history of Texas A&M/Texas football.  This was the 118th meeting of the two schools. The first meeting was in 1894.  Texas called the game off in 1911 for a couple of years because the Aggie players were too mean!!  A&M is leaving the Big 12 after this year for the SEC.  So another tradition bites the dust.  “They” say betrayed feelings over the Longhorn TV Network deal caused the rift.  We may never know the whole story but we do know A&M will be in the SEC next year and there will be no Turkey Day Aggie/Longhorn game!

For a re-cap of what the game meant: The only game in town.  USA today has a good summary of the game itself: USA today

We are ready to BTHOTU

Waiting for the Fighting Texas Aggie Marching Band

The Tubas come marching by in a blur!

Into Kyle Field we go - home of the 12th man

As usual the stadium if full, loud, and rowdy

Half Time: The Longhorn Band says thanks for the memories

Half Time: Fighting Texas Aggie Band in the famous block T A&M formation

Here is the token football photo since this was a football game.


Climate change – myth or reality

September 16, 2011

The high temperature Tuesday this week in McKinney was 107 which was a record September 13. We also reached 100 degrees 70 days so far this Summer which is another record. The old record was 69 in 1980. Luckily, we don’t live in Wichita Falls just a couple of hours Northwest of us.  They have reach at least 100 degrees 100 days to-date this year.

Furthermore, Texas had the hottest June, July, August of any state ever since they started keeping records.

Oh, how could I forget, Texas had the driest Summer on record this year also.

Don’t let the smoke get in your eyes, but Texas is burning.  Wild fires are everywhere fueled by the dry, hot weather.

From down here in Texas it appears  climate change is a reality! The icecaps are melting, New England is flooding,  and Texas is burning.


20 days in a row over 100% in Fairview Texas and Counting

July 22, 2011

Friday, July 22 2011: 81% this morning in Fairview.  Yesterday was the 20th day in a row over 100% here!  100% is not abnormally hot here in Texas, but the 100% temperatures day in and day out wear you down. My plants in the garden are having the same problem. I fear some of them will not survive the Summer.

I have been watching the Tour de France every morning before work this month and the weather is strikingly different over there.  Yesterday snow was falling at the finish line several hours before the riders crossed the finish line.

The climate may not be warming, but, if not, why are the extremes of weather so much more pronounced than in the past?  IMHO there is no way 7 Billion people cannot affect the environment!


A night in Amarillo

June 29, 2011

Yesterday was my 1st day of vacation. Our destinations is our usual Summer vacation to Pagosa Springs Co.  This year I am driving to Albuquerque, picking up Gwen at the Airport, and from there driving to Pagosa Springs.

I really love the drive to Amarillo which is always an experience.  The country is mostly empty and the vistas on go on forever.  While driving I spend quite a bit of time dreaming about the Comanches and Quanah Parker who used to rule this land with an iron fist (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comanche).  I also thought a lot about the dust bowl (see the book “The Worst Hard Time”  http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5128581).  From there I drift off to the eternal questions of why and how we exist in a certain moment of time and place instead of another.  Most of all I am most gratified the Comanches did not capture and torture me and I never tried raising crops in this rain starved land!

The drive always lifts my soul.

On a side note, I made an interesting discovery while driving – a discovery for me as I am sure hordes of others already know about it.  I can play Internet radio on my iPhone and route it through the car radio.  No more local radio stations!!!  Enough of the diversions…

But in the end I finally arrived here in Amarillo which is almost as close to Denver in distance, climate, and attitude as it is to Dallas. I checked in at the hotel and exercised while waiting for my buddy Mike, who moved to Amarillo last Winter, pick me up for a wild night on the town – well, wild for AARP members anyway.

Mike arrives and we are off see the Helium City!  First stop is at Joe’s Tacos for Dinner.  I have the house special tacos which are delicious and very spicy.  I highly recommend Joe’s if you are ever in Amarillo and looking for a causal meal.

Next we cruise down 6th street.  We finally stop at the Golden Light Cafe for beers.  It was established in 1946 and is on the list of National Historic Sites.  The cafe is surprisingly small.  I bet it was a booming joint after the War.  The cafe is staffed by a huge crew of 2 – a lady who is really good looking.  I did not expect someone like her.  The guy – bartender and short order cook – was young and some what challenged.

The Golden Light Cafe

After the Golden Light we shuffled on over the Scooter’s, a biker bar and finished the night there.  We were the only males in the establishment not dressed in black?  However they treated us like regulars.  I met a bevy on interesting characters.  First was Junk Yard Dave who owns a junk yard (what a coincidence)  and quite successful.  He kept buying everyone beers and apparently is a regular.  I think they were all regulars except us. The 2 bar maids were both good looking.  Why are the bar maids in biker bars always good looking?  One of the bar maids kept showing everyone her breasts!  Weird behavior, but maybe normal in Amarillo which is a far cry from Dallas.

Then we topped off the night with a viewing of Mike’s late but much loved mother-in-law’s collection of at least a thousand ceramic Santas!


County road in Palo Pinto County, Texas

June 25, 2011

County road West of Mineral Wells Texas


2 Months 2 Vacations: #2 San Antonio

April 28, 2011

Wow!! – 2 vacations in 2 months is a 1st for me! I could get used to this.  Actually, the San Antonio vacation was really a long weekend – leave after work on Friday, Gwen fly home Monday night, and Marv drive home on Wednesday to babysit C2.

Mission San Jose - 1 of 5 Missions in San Antonio

We started out Friday after work by driving to Round Rock to spend the night free at the Springhill Suites courtesy of Gwen’s Marriot points.  We ate at a local joint, the Blue Oak Grill which was a converted Applebees.  It was kinda Cajun Food.  I would eat there again, but I would not drive to Round Rock just to eat there.

We woke up Saturday morning and discovered a blue northerner had blown in with temperature hovering around 43% and the wind out of the North t 30mph.  After breakfast (can’t remember what we are so it could not have been too good) we drove to Fredericksburg on the back roads, had lunch at The Brewery (German food but the beer is the highlight), and then spent some time window shopping.  Fredericksburg is a great weekend visit:

  •  It is a scenic drive to get there
  • It is not too expensive
  • It is a very relaxed atmosphere
  • It has lots of antic and knickknack shops
  • It has some good restaurants

After we were shopped out we drove to San Antonio, checked in at the Wyndham, and ate at La Fogota.

View from the Wyndham

The Wyndham is our timeshare.  Most places we stay with Wyndham are real nice but they always want to give you a wlecome visit which turns our to be a sales pitch to buy more timeshare.  At San Antonio they are real high pressure. I almost don’t want to go back because of them.

Sunday morning we ate a healthy breakfast in our room at the  Wyndham. Then, we  walked over to the Alamofor 175th anniversary ceremony of the fall of the Alamo (March 6).  It seems a strange think to celebrate – defeat.  However, for a real Texan a visit to the Alamo is a religious experience and on a major anniversary it is doubly so.

175th Anniversary Re-enactment

After the ceremony we ate lunch at Del Weiss Tip Top Diner. It is reported to be Tim Duncan’s favorite eating establishment which I do find hard to believe.  It is a mid-50s diner in not too good a neighborhood, but the down home cooking is delicious.  I think the only reason Gwen goes there is she knows I like the place.

After lunch we drove out to hike the  Government Canyon trails for 2.5 hours ( I love to hike). After rushing back to the timeshare to clean up we had a great dinner at Pasenos at the Quarry and topped off the evening at the movies – The Adjustment Bureau. Pasenos was great.

Monday morning and we ate breakfast at Mi Tierra – okay but if I did not go back I would still live forever,  Walked to Bank of America, got Gwen a new debit card, opened a savings account, and transferred a lot of our money into it.  We had a scare this weekend with her old debit card and therefore cancelled it.  We opened the savings account because if someone got access to our checking account right now there was a lot of money in it – not anymore.

For lunch we walked over to  Schilo’s German Deli.  I had reuben sandwich, cup of split pea soup, and a Spaten Optimator beer – delicious – would go back there in a New York Minute.  It is downtown on Commerce right next to the Rio Casa restaurant which is a river walk staple.

After lunch we packed Gwen’s things and spent the afternoon at the San Antonio Botanical Gardens – very peaceful place.  Put her on the airplane, put gas in the car, washed it, and then back at the hotel I ran through the King William district, tried to work on PHP, and had dinner – left over lamb shank and fruit.


I started out Tuesday by runing the new riverwalk an hour just past Pearl Brewery. Appears it may go or is planned to go to the Witte Museum.   Spent the rest of Tuesday chilling out.  I did venture out to take photos of the Missions.  I got to all five this trip and some great picture of some weird hay bale and iron scuptures — whoop.  Had dinner at Rosariosand back to the hotel to chill out.

Mission San Jose

Hay bale & Iron Sculpture

I got up birght and early Wednesday and drove home.

Best Restuarants: Pasenos at the Quarry.  Schilo’s German Deli.  Rosario’s

Best Event: Government Canyon.


Super Winter Storm 2011

February 5, 2011

The headline this week was supposed to be the Super Bowl however the weather trumped the Super Bowl hands down.  The week started out great.  We went to the Fort Worth Stock Show Rodeo on Sunday.  The weather was great for a January day in Texas – 65% and partly cloudy.  We toured the livestock pens, watched the animal handlers grooming their animals, toured the exhibits.

Preparing for the Show

Typically every rodeo show is sold out but fortunately we purchased our tickets several months ago and had really good seats.  The rodeo was lots of fun as usual. I will never understand why is fun about getting the crap shook out of you by a bull?

The Grand Parade - prelude to the real action

Monday was warm, windy, and humid.  A kind of gloom hung over all of us that day because we all heard the forecast for the rest of the week – ice and coldest weather in 20 years – and not recovering to normal until Friday.

Monday night we kept C2 because their parents were in Houston Monday and Tuesday on Business.  We had tickets to the Maverick game and the weather was not a problem so we took the kids to the game.  When we left the Maverick game last night at 10PM the temperature was 59%.

Tuesday morning when we woke up at 5:30AM the temperature was 28% and the rain was coming down.  An hour later the temperature had dropped to 21% and sleet was in its full furry.   Plano ISD cancelled classes with just about every other school and business in town.   So we played with C2for a good part of the morning.  Finally, took them over to their neighbor who has kids their age and went to work.

Roads were covered in ice but no one was out so we had no problems.  Meanwhile the temperature dropped all day.  Down to 10% Tuesday night

Wednesday morning. Day 2 of bitter cold here with ice still on all the roads.  Getting to work was no problem because everything but Raytheon and BCBS is still closed.  A major power generating station in Texas shut down with  problems so there are rolling brownouts across the state.  Bob reports he has had 3 brownouts at his house this morning. Raytheon is shutting down all non-essential equipment on orders fro Garland Power and Light.   Another 2 hour commute to get home – this is one of the worst part of the week – 2 hours to work and 2 hours home and all of it tense because the few people out driving are no better at driving on ice than I am.

Thursday morning.  Woke up this morning to 9% weather.  We have not been above freezing since 3 AM Tuesday morning.  Day 3 of super cold and ice in North Texas.  I am really getting tired of this and everyone seems somewhat depressed.  At least it cannot get any worse – at least that is what I thought.

Friday morning.  Woke up this morning to 6″ of snow.  We were supposed to get a “dusting”.  I am glad we did not get any serious snowfall.  Day 4 of Winter hell in Texas.  Driving to work today was so much fun with 6″ of new snow on top of ice I can’t begin to describe it.  On days like this I wish I was retired.  We have two installation in progress – One in Denver and the other in England and I have to be at work to support them.   Let’s rename this week to Snowmageddon – but that leaves out the ice and the cold!  Temperature is still below freezing all day.  I am worried that when we do thaw out the the pool pump and pipes will have damage and who knows about the outside faucets?  They are inset into the house but we do not have freezing temperatures that last this long.

Snow, sleet, and Ice - looking out our backyard

Saturday morning.  The Sun is shining today.  Oh happy day! Temperature is 12% this morning which is warmer than some days this week.  We got above freezing and Noon and everything is melting.  I feel a lot better but the jury is still out on the pool pump and the faucets.


1st Camelia of the Season

December 4, 2010

1st Camelia of the season

Another reason to live in Texas.  Minneapolis is buried in snow and the camelias are blooming in McKinney.  This the 1st one in my garden.