Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Pelican Brief

Pelicans are underrated.  They don't get the credit they deserve.  Well, just listen to this:  My niece, Olivia, once wrote an ode to a pelican when she was about ten years old.  Here it is:

A clumsy pelican
glides above
the crystal blue
ocean          
Its cream beak
as long       
as a sword
but as dull 
as              
a boring poem.
Its sharp  
oak brown eyes
scan the water
searching                  
for colorful fish.
It dives
into the water
and disappears
under
a crashing wave
Waiting
watching
waiting,
SPLASH!
It shoots up
with a peach fish
in its mouth.
It sways a while
then soars away
into the big
tangerine sun.

This little piece of writing should be required reading for all students everywhere.  It describes a miracle just as it happens.  Pelicans are dinosaur throwbacks with attitude.  Pelicans are the underappreciated soldiers of the oceans' edges. After watching these "swords" dive-bomb into chocolate Jekyll Island waters against that "tangerine sun", I knew it was time.   I vowed to carry a pelican back to Michigan.  I vowed to plant a concrete pelican to stand sentry over my Michigan yard.

*     *     *

While vacationing on Jekyll Island a few years back, my wife, Sue, came down with a sudden and convenient urinary tract infection which made a purchase possible.  When a thing like a cement pelican comes together with a thing like a bladder infection, it's called a thing in Turkish known as "kismet".  And amazingly, the Turkish word for "bladder infection" is "pelikan".

So when there was a lull in Sue's urgent need to pee, we shot off the Island and over the sprawling bridge and causeway to the city of Brunswick, Georgia. Sue got on her cell phone to her doctor's office about her symptoms and reported that she's had these UTIs before, and that all she really needed was for them to prescribe some antibiotics, and to fax the prescription to Rite Aid in Traverse City, and we would call and have them fax the prescription to the Rite Aid in Brunswick...  all this talk occurring while we sat in our car in the Brunswick Rite Aid parking lot.  They said they would let us know in a while.

Waiting for the callback, we killed some time by asking random people where we could buy a pelican.  Finally at a Target store, I sheepishly asked a cashier, "Ma'am, where can I buy a CEEment pelican?"  (Later, I would learn that Sue, who was having a hard time NOT peeing herself as it was, came very close when she heard the "CEEment" come out of my mouth.  I told her I was just trying to relate to the natives.) The cashier studied me for a few silent seconds, and when I explained that I was looking for a CEEment lawn sculpture, her brain light came on.  "Oh yeah, one of those things," she said.  She didn't know, but she would ask the store manager who was organizing shopping carts a good thirty yards away.  I figured she would ask the manager to come over to help, but instead she yelled across the store, "Juanita!  These people want a pelican!  Where can they buy a pelican?"

Juanita yelled back, "A WHAT?!?!"

The cashier yelled back, "A pelican, a CEEment pelican, you know, like you put in your yard."

At this point, I figured every customer in Target was pondering where the hell a person could purchase cement lawn ornaments in Brunswick.  But Juanita took full charge and yelled from in great volume and from a great distance that you go down the I-95 spur, then take a right at the light, then two more lights, then take a left across from the Nissan dealer, and there you are.

*     *     *

Sue again called her doctor's office, this time from the Target parking lot, who then informed her that they refused to write her a prescription for her bladder problem, that she would have to see a doctor in Brunswick, come hell or high water, like it or lump it, and while you're at it, don't call us again.

Because of this, I recalled right then the name of an old Frank Zappa album, "Weasels Ripped My Flesh."  Weasels certainly were ripping the day apart in a bloody, fleshy mess!  As much as we might scream, "FAX the damn prescription, you bastards!", the more they wouldn't.

After a minute of spewing some cuss words, we calmed down and set out.  With the help of a receptionist at a chiropractic office, we found our way to an urgent care clinic.  And while Sue waited for a doctor, I ventured forth to pursue a pelican, per the shouted directions from Juanita.

I took my I-95 spur, took my traffic lights, found no Nissan dealer but found a Honda dealer, took my left, and wound up at a city cemetery.  There were plenty of cement sculptures around, mostly Jesuses and Marys, but none of them were for sale, and none of them were pelicans.  So I aimlessly drove the asphalt streets of Brunswick, lonely as a cloud, until I came upon a traffic light into a Home Depot, with a Home Depot Garden Center of Hope, I hoped.

The guy in his orange Home Depot apron, "Wayne" on his nametag, couldn't have been nicer.  I told him what I was looking for and he dropped everything, actually looked up, rubbed his chin whiskers, and pondered.  He was the vision of pondering.  "I can see it in my head," he said.  "I pass it every day, a great big fenced-in yard with with all these concrete statues.  But where is that?  I drive down from the overpass every day and I can see it from above on the left.  But where is that?  How do you get there from here?"  He finally seized on the solution and gave some clear directions which involved only three nearby traffic lights.

As I was winding my way out through the crowd, Wayne hailed me from quite a distance away.  I figured he wanted to amend the directions somehow, but when I walked up to him he said with a grin, "Do you want to hear my joke about a penguin?"  All these needy customers milling around, and laid-back employee Wayne wants to tell me a goddamn joke!

So he told me this story about a penguin whose car breaks down, and while the penguin's waiting for it to get fixed, he walks over to a nearby ice cream shop to wait, (he was a penguin, after all) and in an hour returns to the garage.  The mechanic walks up to the penguin and says, "Man, looks like you blew a seal."  The penguin replies, as he's wiping his chin, "No, that's just vanilla frozen yogurt."

A pretty good joke, I thought.  But here's an interesting thing about Wayne's telling:  When the mechanic recommended that the penguin wait in a nearby ice cream shop, the penguin told the mechanic that he was allergic to ice cream.  The mechanic pointed out that the shop also served frozen yogurt, which the penguin was okay with.  I've wondered, why the embellishment?  Does it really advance the story by bringing in an irrelevent fact?  Was Wayne just trying to deepen the realism by saying the penguin was allergic to ice cream?  If so, who would believe that a penguin might be allergic to ice cream?  I mean, penguins and ice cream bars are so synonymous.

What I'm wondering is this:  Why do so many storytellers get lost in tangents?  Just get to the point, for godssake.

*     *     *

Wayne's directions were spot on, and within minutes I pulled into one of those concrete statuary businesses that sell all manner of earthly species and inspirational objects. There must have been an acre of CEEment statues. My favorite was a laughing Buddha, but I had come for a bird and, by God, I would leave with one.  The proprietor in her sweet Georgia drawl walked up and greeted me as I perused a throng of Jesuses.

"May I help you?"

To which I replied, "Yes, ma'am.  Do you by chance sell CEEment statues?"

This old wrinkled woman threw back her head and howled at the gods.  She was very happy with me, indeed.  If you can share a bit of irony right off the bat, it makes any interaction with strangers a whole lot of fun.  "Well, I reckon I do," she laughed.

Turns out she had a nice selection of various-sized pelicans, all looking quite content behind their boring-poem beaks.  I picked out a small-to-medium sized statue for 21 bucks, a fair price for the guardian of the realm, I thought.  The Buddha, although adorable, would have to laugh another day.

In the office, the wrinkled woman took my Mastercard and she talked about her "angels", her grandchildren who adorned the office walls in several photographs.  I said, "It's clear you don't like 'em much," to which she threw back her head, howled again at the gods, and wished me a safe journey back up north.

When I arrived back at the clinic, Sue was being discharged with a prescription for the antibiotics we had hoped Michigan would give her.  A urinary tract infection, sure enough. But the wait wasn't long, the staff there were exceptionally friendly, and I had a small-to-medium sized pelican riding in the back seat.  We stopped at Rite-Aide for the medicine, and before we reached the causeway taking us back to Jekyll Island, the antibiotics were coarsing through her veins.

From the top of the bridge south of Brunswick, you are perched atop an enormous expanse, a hundred square miles of salt marsh, a secondary protective buffer lying leeward to the Golden Isles of Georgia. It is a magnificent sight. And from way up there, you can see in the distances squadrons of pelicans in single file as they maneuver for prime position to dive-bomb over peach-colored fish in the shallow waters.

Sue got better almost immediately. She claims it happened when we paid the five dollar entry fee to get back onto the island. I claim it happened the moment the wrinkled woman with the concrete statues swiped my credit card under the laughing eyes of her grandchildren.





Sunday, March 27, 2011

Postcard from Jekyll Island

Having a wonderful time.  The weather is great.  Wish you were here.

A. Jekyll Island is where, during the turn of the century (19th to 20th), the American titans of industry convened at the Jekyll Beach Hotel and smoked big fat cigars.  While smoking big fat cigars, they did things like form the Federal Reserve, merge companies, make millions in minutes, and slap each others' backs.  Their wives or mistresses played croquet on the front lawn.  They built (or had built) opulent "cottages" which you can visit.  Jekyll Island was quite the exclusive playground back in the day.

B. Before entering the Jekyll Beach Hotel to look around, I got a wonderful and memorable dirty look from a well-quaffed gentleman with a sweater tied around his neck.

C. While visiting a "nature center" on the southern side of the island, I wanted to inquire about kayak rentals, but no one was in the place.  Walking back to the car, I noticed a guy down by a salt pond working on something.  I asked if he worked there, but then noticed he was adjusting an accordian.  He told me he didn't work there, and that he was waiting for his girlfriend.  I said, "So, while waiting for your girlfriend, you decided to work on your accordian."  He said, "Yeah, weird, isn't it?"  I told him of course it wasn't, why the hell should a person NOT work on his accordian when waiting for his girlfriend while down at the salt marsh?

D. While visiting the sarcophagii of some French residents from the 1800s, I was maliciously attacked by salt marsh gnats.  Over the past three days, I have had itching welts all over my arms and legs and a despicable case of diarrhea.  There is orgasmic lift, however, in vigorously plowing my fingernails across said welts.  This just intensifies the itch, of course, and brings blood to the skin.  I have learned, now from two exposures, that I am allergic to the bites of sea marsh gnats.

E.  Walking from our condo complex to a nearby beach, there is a sign on a post which points the way.  It says, "Driftwood Beach.  Rated the Fifth Most Romantic Beach in the World."  Driftwood Beach is the home of hundreds of dead trees whose trunks and remaining branches have been half-swallowed by sand.  It is a unique and eery place.  If the sign had said, "Rated the Fifth Most Haunted Beach in the World," I would have been more of a believer.  Romantic?  So, as I was walking amid the gnarled wooden remains, I came across some writing in the sand.  It said, "I LOVE ROGER".  And just like that, words written by my daughter just hours before, there was the proof.

F.  Roger has three tattoos.  Each is oriental calligraphy, small in size, with one on his upper left arm, one on his upper right arm, and one in the middle of his back.  They are beautiful and must convey some mystical truths, I thought.  Truth be told, they mean:  "See Rock City".

G.  While on Jekyll Island, I have had a very annoying song going on in my head:  "Sometimes... all I need is the air that I breathe and to love you..."  I asked Sue if she ever had a song in her head she couldn't lose.  She said that, as a matter of fact, she had had a song going on that very day:  "Jingle Bells."

H.  Squadrons of pelicans protect this place and provide endless entertainment.  Pelicans are so impossible, they deserve their own blog entry, if they'll have me.




Comments are welcome at tombohn2@yahoo.com

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Chasin' Jackie

There goes Jackie, scamperin’ by in his pamper.  All he got on is that pamper.  He's a pamper scamper, I say, and he smell to pee yew, too, and that pamper is fresh new.  "Slow down, Jackie," I say. "Grampa got to change you."  I yells at him, he scamperin' out the room, "Hey you! You got poop in the stoop!"

Jackie yell from the kitchen, “Poop in the stoop! Poop in the stoop!" And he want to play chase like every time when he carryin'
 around a cannonball in his butt.  So I rouse me up off the couch and I yell like I always do, "I’m going to catch you, Jackie, and I's going to dump you in the stinky, stinky city dump!'" and he giggling and he running and hiding from me when I does this.

I say, "Grampa gonna get you, Jackie!" and I open the hallway door and I'm teasing him with, "Now where did that smelly child go? Is he behind this door? Hmmm. No, he ain't. Maybe is he behind this other door? No, he ain't there neither. Hmmm. I wonder where that child could go."

I holler, "Jackie! You got poop in the stoop?  Tell me now, you got a pipe in the dipe? I know you does. Where is that smelly boy who got, what is it now, coal in the hole?"

And Jackie busts out from behind them coats in the closet and he wiggles through my legs, and he's screamin', "You can't catch me, Grampa!” And he does smell, like I say, oh my goodness. There ain't no doubt about it!

And I yells the words he know I will say: "You got poop in the stoop! Here I come! You got a pipe in the dipe? Here I come! You got coal in the hole! Here I come!"

And Jackie screams all gleeful and runs away and goes hiding again in the parlor. I follow and sees him standing still but a-giggling behind a curtain, and his little feet sticking out. He whispers to hisself, “coal in the hole," and giggles again.

I am playing the game, and I say slow and gruff in my low voice like a old troll, "Jackie, you is rank in the flank."

Jackie now is wild with a scream and busts out from behind there and hugs onto my leg, gazing up all sweet. “Grampa, you ain't a monster!"

I know he a bit afraid, but I say I definitely is one, a old troll, and I hoist Jackie over my shoulder, and I say he smell horrible like a rotten sack of garbage, and I’m a gonna dump him in the city dump or change that pamper come hell or high water.  I'm a monster who eats a child who can't stay smelling good, and I carry Jackie up the steps. And I stop on each step and growl low and hungry.


Just turned three and Jackie still going round in that pamper. His momma tell me he won't quit em, cause Jackie want to play the poop rhymes and I should stop it. I suppose I should stop it.

But when we come at the top, Jackie go, “Now say all of ‘em, Grampa. Like you do.”

So I act all bogged down like I is carrying a sack of rocks, and huffin' and puffin', and down the hall I totter with Jackie over my shoulder, and I say each one like he want me to:

"Jackie, you is one stinky child, gone stinky all the way to the pee-yew! Oooo-weee! You must got poop in the stoop!

Jackie say, "No, I ain't!"

"You got crap in you lap?"

"No, I ain't!"

"You got a pipe in the dipe?"

"No, I ain't!"

"You got stink in the pink?"

"No, I ain't!"

"You got shit in the pit?"

"No, I ain't!"

"You got a smell in the dell?"

"No, I ain't!"

"You got rank in the flank?"

"No, I ain't!"

"You got coal in the hole?"

"No, I ain't!"

"You got a stench in the trench?"

"No, I ain't!"

"You got a pack in the crack?"

"No, I ain't!"

"You got a turd in the snerd?"

"No, I ain't!"

"You got a lump in the rump?"

"No, I ain't!"

"You got a clog in the bog?"

"No, I ain't! I ain't! I ain't! I ain't!"

And Jackie, as I sets him down to change, goes from a little voice to his hollered finish-it joke like he always do: “No, Grampa! I gots me a great... big...  cannonball!” 
Course, when he holler cannonball we both laugh, me and my little Jackie, like we always do.

Except this time when I say, "A cannonball, you sure does, Jackie," Jackie say back at me all serious, "A supersaurus cannonball, Grampa!"

Now where did Jackie get that? Where did he get that name, supersaurus cannonball?" What is that? I ain't teached him that. That Jackie! Supersaurus cannonball outta the mouth of that child.  




Comments are welcome at tombohn2@yahoo.com

Friday, March 4, 2011

Exhibit A

Commencement Address Made to the Graduating Class
Associates Degree -- School of Social Work
University of Phoenix, Kokomo Campus
Bypass Highway 68, Holiday Inn Express
Kokomo, Indiana
January 29, 2011
Thomas R. Bohnhorst, MSW, LMSW
In Private Practice
Traverse City, MI

Transcript


Gooooood Moooooorrrrrning  Ko...!!! Ko...!!!  Mo...!!!

(silence)

I've never seen so many Subarus in one parking lot in my whole life!  What, is there a Subaru factory in Kokomo?  No, wait...   That's right: we're a bunch of social workers.  Hey, it's 2011 people.  You can remove the Obama bumper stickers now.

(silence)

But seriously, don't they have any fresh donuts here in Kokomo?  I mean, seriously.

(silence)

Thank you, thank you.  My fellow social workers, I come before you today to tell you a little story, my little story really, about a little social worker with a whole lotta love for his profession. First, let me color in a picture for you, my friends:  The year is 1998, and I am in my agency counseling office, waiting for my next client, flossing my teeth.  Don't laugh.  Flossing does two major things: it stimulates the gums which stimulates the blood which stimulates energy.  I would lay odds that people who take Viagra don't floss very much.  Now, there's a promising research project for you.  But more important, flossing will freshen the breath.  You ever lean in to someone who hasn't flossed for a month?  Especially a meat eater?  Strand of meat gets caught between the molars and just sits there and sits there.  Pretty soon it smells to high heaven.  It's all you can do to breathe without grabbing a gas mask.  But I should talk.  One time, I was flossing and unbeknownst to me, the floss breaks off at my tooth.  The client comes in --  very hyper woman, teen-age daughter ran off with a carnival -- and the whole session she's mesmerized by my mouth.  Turns out that string of floss is hanging out the corner of my mouth the whole time.

By 1998, I had moved through my "unconditional positive regard" phase and what I like to call my "Gestalt funk".  I'll tell you a little secret:  back when I was using Gestalt on agoraphobics, I'd come home from work and listen to Grand Funk Railroad... cranked up full blast!  It was very liberating!  I may not have been able to get people to ride an elevator, but at least I could reverberate my own rafters!  Anyway, that's why I called that stretch of time my "Gestalt funk" on account of that band and because I was kind of  "stuck at home" so to speak.  So, I got past those therapeutic approaches, when I discovered and sank my teeth into Solution-Focused Therapy.  No psychoanalytic mumbo jumbo for these boys.  They were let's-cut-to-the-chase, let's-get-down-to-some-solutions, no-nonsense theoreticians.  One of the things I liked was they said, "If you can resolve the problem in 20 minutes, then just have a 20- minute session."  No reason to sit there examining each other's ear wax for the whole 50-minute hour if you don't need to.

So, in comes Pete, we'll call him.  In comes Pete looking like his pet beagle, his only friend, just ate Pete's last Prozac and then ran across the street and got hit by a truck.  Pete had been doing this to me for three months, coming in every week and whining about every little hangnail or every time someone gave him a disapproving look.  To tell you the truth, I got sick of commiserating with him or figuring out why his mother denied him her breast too soon or maybe conspiring that a different anti-depressant might give him the warm and fuzzies.  So he sits down and I say, like always, "How are we feeling today, Pete?"  Pete starts right in about how the alternator on his van went out, and how he has a headache, and how his mother hung up on him the other day, and blah, blah, blah, cry me a slow-moving, muddy-ass river.

I had had enough!  I wouldn't let him do it to me for one more second!  We needed a solution and we needed a focus!  Right this second!

"Pete?" I asked him.  "What is the opposite of sadness?"  Pete was taken aback a bit, but offered that happiness, of course, was the opposite.  "Pete?" I asked him again. "How can you tell if a person is happy?"  Pete thought a moment, then offered that a happy person smiles and laughs easily.  "Pete?" I asked. "Do you want to smile and laugh easily?"  Pete thought for a moment, and responded that he would if he could.  So I told him,  "Let me see if I can offer a solution."

I stood up, removed my sport jacket and began unbuttoning my shirt.  "Whoa," Pete said.  "What's going on here?"  I assured him it was okay, that I was helping him focus on a happiness solution.  I removed my shirt and stood before him, bare from the waist up.  "Now watch this," I instructed, and took a felt pen from my desk drawer, and carefully drew a pair of crossed eyes and a nose over my belly button which served as a mouth.  Then with both forefingers and thumbs, I squeezed the skin around my belly button to lip synch the words as I sang:  "Swing low, sweet chariot.  Coming for to carry me home..."

Pete sat there stunned, eyebrows raised.  He wasn't smiling and he didn't seem to be breathing.  Then it dawned on me that the song wasn't uplifting enough and it didn't really match spiritually the squinched face on my stomach.  So I decided to change songs, and if I do say so myself, I got pretty good with my belly button.  My stupid little face then went to town, "Put the lime in the coconut and drink 'em bot' together.  Put the lime in the coconut, then you'll feel better.  Put the lime in..."

Pete stood up and started to leave.  I put my hand on his shoulder, and said, "Hold on, Pete.  We're just getting started."  But Pete was having none of it and made a beeline for the door, saying "We're finished!"  And that's the last I ever saw of him.

But, my friends, I was anything but finished.  Oh, the agency director may have fired me over this, but on that day I set out on a new course and have never looked back.  My message to you today is simple and if you don't take anything else away from our time together, at least hold on to these three precious words: pyloric sphincter valve.  Believe me, the pyloric is by far my favorite sphincter.  This sneaky little valve maintains balance between the stomach and the duodenum.  Just think about that for a moment.  Maintains balance.

One time I got drunk at a social worker seminar and a whole bunch of us piled into  the hot tub there at the Wheeling, West Virginia, Comfort Inn.  Alcohol completely disrupts pyloric sphincter valve functioning, and by gosh, I spontaneously vomitted right there, a massive and ghastly explosion, which of course affected the emotional state of my fellow social workers.

My friends, I came away from that experience with a profound appreciation of the pyloric sphincter valve.  Hell, I had never even heard of the sphincter before this happened.  It's amazing how hindsight can...

Oh, is it time for a break?

(silence)

Yes,  I could use a stretch myself.

Wow, is this a fire drill?  Where is everybody going?


End of Transcript
 
 
 
 
Comments are welcome at tombohn2@yahoo.com