Categories
dogs friendship happiness wisdom work

Sixteen days to go: honoring hometown heroes

 

There are a few people I will really miss in South Bend. Steve is one. He’s Dale’s son, up at Dale’s Auto, on 933 north. Dale’s not running things anymore, but we all remember him well. I made Steve a pillow today, to say “good-bye.” It’s not the first time I’ve felt this special kinship with him or given him a gift: I wrote the poem below two years ago in a strangely poignant moment when I had just returned from a trip abroad and I suddenly realized that my time was ticking down, here in South Bend and… well, in general. What is it about mechanics that, when they are nice to you, honest and reasonably priced, you just love them so much?!

It was a hot summer’s day. I was waiting for a while at Dale’s Auto for my car to be fixed.* Honey Girl was with me. Having a big friendly dog makes it easy to meet people. Before I knew it I was deep in conversation, like with an old friend, with Harold–a guy I had just met! (I understand that he can be found on most days up at Dale’s, now that he’s retired from the GM plant.) The pillow you see above is number 1, “A Souvenir for Steve,” in the brand-new “Hometown Heroes” line of Honey Girl Books and Gifts. They have real jeans pockets for people who know what work is.

***

Dale’s Auto

The low thrumming of a window AC

Out here at Dale’s

Takes me back.

Aluminum siding hot to the hand

Muddy little footprints

Bicker, splash, play

Little boys on their way

I didn’t know then, but we were

All so young and lovely.

 

Harold was afraid of girls

He told me with a sidelong smile

Probably took a lotta nerve

To come and tell me

About his dog and its $600 end,

And Marmalade a ginger cat, a “friendly” cat,

Feline leukemia.

 

Rheumy eyes but good strong hands

Me ‘n the wife, she gets the couch

I got my chair.

65 years and a month

That was a pal from GM, dead, so…

Assembly line, ya know,

Gotta know how to handle it.

What’s for dinner tonight?

Where’ll we go fishin’ come spring?

It’s not so bad

If you know how to handle it.

***

The second hometown hero I’m honoring this week is Harvey down at the ReStore on South Main Street.  I volunteered there some hours this spring. I thank Harvey for giving me work to do. For seeing that I really meant it.  “A working person’s got to work,” he said.**

To receive a job to do gives you dignity and purpose–it’s so simple, yet so deep.

“In honor of Harvey”

Hometown Hero no 2. In honor of Harvey.jpg

 

*a 2007 Chevy Aveo, if you want to know. Just sold it for $450!

**Little did he know that he was echoing a similar thought as the Renaissance French philosopher Michel de Montaigne, who said: “Nous sommes nés pour agir … Agissons donc et autant que nous le pouvons” or “We are born to be active … let’s thus be active, as much as we can.” Michel de Montaigne, Essais (1580).

 

 

Advertisement
Categories
creativity humor wisdom Zen philosophy

a sale, a pillow, an event! and a break

Even pacifists like success and today was a big first for me: I sold the first Original Honey Girl Pillow, in what I hope will be a long line of Honey Girl Pillows!  Each will have its own special vintage feel and Zen vibe. This one’s name is Blueberry. Just had to celebrate a little!

It is not coincidental that, just before remembering to celebrate with you, I was reading my students’ papers about money in French literature. (All my classes in this my final year of elite college teaching are about money. It’s my gift to the world.)

This blog, despite its ethereal air, is part of a larger project that will begin in just 220 days, when I emerge from the cocoon of college teaching and begin running a small business. Through the creation of Honey Girl Books and Gifts and the ongoing “Write YOUR Story” workshops I plan to teach for adults and kids, I hope to contribute to what sounds like an exciting–if widely scattered–alternative economy here in the USA.

It’s not so terribly “alternative” as that, maybe, although I do hope to pay the seamstresses well, and to hire young artists looking for a break. But by creating comforting narrative quilts for individual clients or families, fun Zen pillows for college kids, and the adorable Honey Girl for anyone, my secret hope is to lure people away from digitalia. The future book line will aim for that too. I hope to help people learn to appreciate old-fashioned ways of production, and time-honored means of communicating through cotton, paper, satin, and flannel.

Be real. Together. Be real together. Be real, together. Be, real together!

Happy Thanksgiving. I’m taking a few days off now.