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Showing posts with label dad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dad. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Accentuate the Positive

So I know I have been absent lately, but I am taking an expository writing class this semester that is taking all of my creative juices. This is something I wrote for that class....what do you think?



I grew up in Southeast Texas, close enough to the Louisiana border to smell the gumbo and to spend my formative years speaking a smattering of broken English, Spanish, and a few choice French phrases. In my hometown of Woodville, TX, we celebrated Cinco de Mayo every May, yelled “Laissez Les Bon Temps Roulez” (Let the good times roll!) before all hell broke loose on Saturday nights, and sat—without a touch of irony—in a Baptist pew on Sunday mornings with cowboy boots on our feet. My upbringing was a blend of very distinct cultures. Because of these cultures, you can only imagine the mix of accents and idioms that came out of my mouth every time I opened it.

The funny thing about all of this is that I had no idea that I sounded different than anyone else. I was in the middle of a community where everyone sounded just like me. My best friend growing up had a father much like my own, who spoke in a constant string of Texan idioms. My favorite has always been the one we heard most often. Anytime we asked to do something to which he had already repeatedly told us “no”, he would turn to us and say, “Girls, we done stomped them taters.” My own father hated nothing more than my brother and I trying to pull the wool over his eyes. He would frustratingly remind us that he “didn’t fall off the turnip truck last night.” So, as dad would say, I “came by it honest.”

Of course, the way I spoke was only the frame around the picture of my cultural identity. I was the Fair Queen in my junior year of high school. My duties included helping the following year’s auction of the animals at the fair, getting my pictures taken with all the stars of the show-chickens, cows, and pigs-and announcing all the winners of the various competitions. My rival at the time, knowing I would have to announce her pig if she won, named it Amy Sue just so I would have to say, “And this year’s Grand Champion hog...Amy Sue!” Who says Southerners are slow?

Basically, I lived the life that is so commonly associated with the accent-the good parts anyway. However, during my first semester at UT, only three classes into a linguistics course, my professor asked me to stay after class and speak into a recorder. She told me that I had the “worst Texas accent” she had ever heard, and so she set out to determine its origin. That's right; I had my very own Pygmalion moment. I couldn’t understand why, at a university in the heart of Texas, attention was being focused on me for having a Texas accent. And it wasn’t just that professor. Most of my new friends in Austin from all over the country, loved to tease Amy Sue, the girl with two names and the accent to match.

“Professor Higgins” was the beginning of the end for me. I knew that I wanted to be a doctor some day, and I set out to lose the accent so that as an MD, I would never walk into a room and say, "Aight what we gonna do today is, take this here needle and poke ya in da behind. So drop yer draws now." Because honestly, there were doctors in my home town that had done just that, many times. In Woodville, this works, but not if I want to practice medicine anywhere else.

Over the next few years, I practiced distinguishing between words that had never sounded different coming from my mouth. “Ten” was no longer a metal, “pens” were never used for sewing, and I stripped the word “y’all” from my vocabulary. Diction became my new religion. Crooked things were no longer referred to as wompajawed, and I ceased getting “drunk as Cooter Brown”—well I ceased calling it that anyway. I almost completely turned away from the cultures that had defined my identity for eighteen years. What can I say? At eighteen, and in a university with a freshman class three times the size of my hometown, I was easily swayed from my true identity.

I now know what my true identity is, because whenever my guard is down—either from being back home, really tired, or drunk as…well, you get it—my accent and all that it entails, comes streaming out of my mouth and gives me away. I discovered during my hiatus from myself, a few life-changing truths. First, denying yourself is very exhausting, so one way or another, our true colors tend to show. And second, that the stereotypes I was so desperately trying to avoid in myself still drew me to others who filled those stereotypes in my eyes (or more accurately, ears).

I have given up trying to deny my heritage, and therefore, no longer feel the need to hide the accent. The more I meet people with different stories to tell about how they grew up, the prouder I am of my own story. To the rest of the world, people who speak like I spoke, are slow-witted rednecks. But, the veterinarian who shows up at his daughter’s basketball games smelling of…well…shit, and tells his daughter, “Don’t be shy darlin’, daddy just smells like money,” probably attended more of her games that year than the investment banker in some big city who’s perfectly-pressed suit only ever smells of designer cologne.

My own father kicks off his shoes wherever we are because he hates the feel of them on his feet, after a childhood of only having uncomfortable hand-me-downs. I was in high school when he and my mother bought their first home. He hadn’t bought himself a new car until after they bought the house. Yet, when I graduated high school, I drove off to college in a sporty little car right off the lot, because my dad worked to provide things for his family that he himself had never known.

Sure, they are simple people, with simple pleasures. My dad’s most prized possession is his boat he named Knot @ Work, and he and my mom spend as many sunny days possible out on the lake by their house. Summer nights are spent with friends grilling or having a crawfish boil and fish fry. I guess that makes them come across as slow, or lazy, but these same people rally when something goes wrong. When I was in junior high, my dad was in a hunting accident, and the whole town raised money to help us out. I still remember how one of my brother’s friends, who was still in elementary school, sold eight hundred dollars worth of tickets to a Spaghetti Dinner that the local Lion’s Club hosted to raise funds for our family.

Are these the people I am so scared to be mistaken for? Sure, my mom has actually asked me to “run out and shoot another squirrel for the pot” (and I have done it), but she and my dad have also taught me how to sew, knit, cook award-winning meals (without a single squirrel), and change the oil in my car.

Knowing my love and respect for these people, it is truly no wonder that even in this tiny blue dot in my red state, I found and moved in with a friend who at least once a week comes into my room to ask me, “Jeet yet?” To which I reply, “Naw, ju?”

“Naw. Yawnto?” he asks.

“Aight,” I mumble, “whatcha want?”

He’ll stare at the ceiling for a minute as though he is thinking, but the answer is always the same. “How bout sumya fried chicken with a nice scald on it.”

I strived to separate myself from the negative side of the stereotype commonly associated with my accent. The only way I knew how to do that, was to kick off the accent like a pair of well-worn boots. Those boots aren’t a part of my everyday attire anymore because they don’t fit like they used to. However, from time to time, they find their way out of the back of the closet and onto my feet. So, whether I still sound like someone from Woodville or not, I whole-heartedly claim them as my people, and I pray that I never again forget why. I mean, y’all couldn’t beat this life with a stick!

Monday, July 28, 2008

"No pleasure, no rapture, no exquisite sin greater...than central air." - Dogma

Today I thought all of my sins had caught up with me...

Sunday mornings in my house are pretty much the same every week...no one works, and no one stirs before eleven...except the dogs of course.

They usually wake early and demand to be let out sometime around or before 8. At which point I drag myself out of bed, stumble to the back door, let them out, and stumble back to my room....

At this point I am forced to turn on the high powered, industrial sized, incredibly LOUD fan Logan left behind so the the constant barks of my dogs to not keep me awake.

Because on Sundays....oh my do they bark!

Ok, confession time! My dogs are racists. Chloe and Rasta will bark like banshees if a black person (excuse me...African American) is around. I have NO idea why....but they do. Also, Chloe HATES people in hats. She will bark and bark till you take it off....

Anyway...back to my Sunday morning....

We live across from a church...now I hesitate to call it a black church....but lets face it....it is, as only black people attend this church. Also, all the little old ladies at this church are VERY fond of Sunday hats. You see where this is going....

Anyway, so every Sunday morning as the parishioners arrive, my dogs go NUTS!!!! (thus the fan) However, this morning...crickets...NOTHING....

I didn't notice at first, but as I turned off the fan later that morning.....I realized the silence was deafening.

I went to the window to look across the street and realized...NO ONE WAS THERE...not a single car or anything. That's when it hit me...the rapture had come...and I had been left behind....

"SHIT!" I yelled....and then realized maybe that reaction could be indicative as to WHY I was left behind....but still....SHIT!

So I called my parents house immediately....and like any good God-fearing Christian home at 11 o'clock on a Sunday morning....no one answered....or were they just gone....

Two hours later my phone rings....it's my parent's house....FINALLY!

"Dad?" I ask.

"Yeah!" he said...."How'd you know it was me? Usually your mom calls."

"Well Dad," I say, "If the rapture had happened and someone from that house is calling me.....well, lets just say I am pretty sure Mom will be missed!"

He didn't get it....and that is probably best!

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

My CPU is a neuronet processor, a learning computer.

I am in college, so I learn new things everyday...some things are interesting and some things are ridiculous....but still, you learn.

I was complaining the other day to my friend Mindy that when I get REALLY mad, I cry more than when I am sad.

Being that Mindy is eerily smart and has a gazillion letters after her name, she informs me that crying is not a physiological response to anger. (Her degrees are in Psychology and Counseling, so I trust that she knows what she is talking about here.) She goes on to say that we subconsciously use anger as an excuse to cry, but there has to be a hidden hurt to make you cry.

Armed with this thought provoking information....I did what most people do with profound knowledge.....nothing....I got on with my life.....

About two weeks ago I was at the Texas History Museum. I was wondering through the different displays when I came across an elderly African American gentleman looking at an exhibit on the contributions of African Americans to the formation and development of Texas. In particular I see that he is reading the accounts of African Americans who were persecuted later in the civil rights movement. He is standing there reading and holding the hand of a young boy of about five years old.


There are two things that I noticed. First was that there were tears in his eyes as he read the words that I know had to mean more to him personally than I could comprehend.....and second that the hand the little boy was holding had a Sponge Bob Square Pants band-aid on it. I know that the man had two hurts....one that went deep, and caused a physiological response that brought out tears....and one that could be healed by a kiss and a Sponge Bob band-aid. I also know that the first pain will be ok, because he had someone to care enough to give him the kiss and the band-aid.



I smiled at the scene in front of me and moved on the next display.



Last week I had to go to the hardware store to pick up some things for the new house. I am standing in line to check out behind an older gentleman in overalls, sun-worn leathery skin and a camouflage hat. He reminded me of my dad.....southern....handy....and leading a simple life. Holding his hand was a girl of about seven years old calling him "Grandpa". I smiled and then froze. On his arm was a Sponge Bob band aid.

I know it had to have been put there by the girl with the large eyes and pig-tails. Just like the one I had seen weeks before on the hand of the gentleman at the museum, someone had cared enough about his pain to try to patch it....and he had appreciated it enough to walk around with Sponge Bob on his arm.

As I left the hardware store I stopped at Subway to get dinner. There was a bit of a line so I had a little bit to watch the girl behind the counter. She was obviously having "one of those days". She was flustered by every order coming her way. When I made my way to the front of the line, I ordered my sandwich. When she was done, she asked if there would be anything else, and I asked for a chocolate chip cookie. She rolled her eyes and asked me if I saw any chocolate chip cookies. (The case was devoid of chocolate chip.)

Now those of you that know me know that this is usually the point in the story when I would pop off some witty remark to put her in her place, however, I had learned something this week.

I asked her instead, "What is your favorite?"

"White chocolate macadamia nut", she answered with a huff.

"I'll take two. Thank you!"

She handed me my bag at which point I dug out one of the cookies and handed it to her. Her shoulders slumped and her head dropped.

When she looked up, she had a sad smile and tear in her eye. "Thank you", she whispered.

"Your welcome!", I answered and walked outside.

I don't know what her hurt was that caused that tear, but I knew I did not have a Sponge Bob band aid......just a cookie.....

Friday, October 26, 2007

Can you go home again?

Evidently what I need right now is some comfort! I have been stretched to the max emotionally lately and these are the things that usually help.....so I am about to start working my way down the list below.

This is the first time since moving to Austin that I don't feel at home here. I feel transplanted and detached from the people and places that have made this home. (Mostly because my apartment feels like a hotel room since I don't feel safe there anymore.) I have great friends here....I have family close (my brother and Jenny) but I need HOME!

I know there are so many friends that I graduated high school with that only go back home when they are drug by the skin of their teeth. I don't feel that way. I LOVE my hometown. It is tiny, everyone knows everything you do and there is nothing to do there but talk to the people you know. Sound boring as hell? It can be, but mostly there is a comfort in knowing that there are all these people keeping up with you. There is comfort in knowing that everyday is the same and that you can set your watch by the smells coming off the grill at Mr. Kenner's or the time the logs are being dropped at the mill.

Sniffing the air......"Mr. Kenner put the chickens on the grill....bout to start the lunch rush....."

I love that on Thursday's at noon, I know that all the men in that town that I love, will be gathered eating fried chicken at the Lion's Den and that I am always welcome there.

I love that the ballpark is still the best place to get a burger and that we actually go into ballpark-burger-withdrawal in the winter.

I love that when I drive down the main streets in town my left hand never sets on the steering wheel because I am waving at all the cars I pass....and that if I didn't my momma would have heard about it before she left school that day.

That's it.... I have just decided.....I am going home....SOON! I need the smell of the pine trees and the sound of the mill rumbling in the distance. I need the sight of the sunlight streaming through the stain glass windows in the sanctuary on Sunday morning. I need it all! There is a spot I hit on the drive home, where the mesquite trees give way to more majestic pines and the weight of the world that rests on my shoulders gets lifted away with the tree line.

I know I am over simplifying things, but hey....it's a simple place....and for the most part, we are a simple people.

If you don't have a place like this....you are more than welcome to join me in mine. But I think we all have a place that just by being there, makes us stop and take perspective. It makes us look into ourselves and find the peace we have been lacking.

I love to travel and see different place....the sights, the smells....the exotic difference of it all....but I will always need....home.

List of Comforts:

Comfort food: A Sonic DP and my grandmother's Apple Dumplings

Comfort People: Mindy....Mom.....basically the girls....

Comfort Movies: The Princess Bride, The Wedding Date, The Count of Monte Cristo

Comfort Cuddlers: Chloe

Comfort Huggers: Dad (why does a hug from your dad make everything ok?)

Comfort Music: DON'T LAUGH....if I am mad at a boy: Alanis Morsette......... if I am sad about school or work: The Dixie Chicks (I know there is much better music out there....but we are talking comfort here.)

Comfort Clothes: summer - my Dr. Seuss boxer shorts and my "hits happen" t-shirt; winter - my blue zebra-stripe flannel pj's with matching house shoes

Comfort Place: The backyard at my parent's house....laying in the grass between the pecan trees....laying still enough to hear the rustle of the leaves in the trees and feel the caterpillar walk across your hand.....

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Too close for missles, I'm switching to guns.

I honestly have the coolest family in the world! (For those of you that get sick of me ranting and raving about my parents just better stop reading now!)

My mom's side of the family has a family reunion every year. We used to get together at Thanksgiving but we have moved it to the summer when kids are out of school and it is easier to travel.

The last couple of years we have moved around from rafting the white waters in the mountains of Colorado to playing on the beach in California.....




The point is we like to have a good time....and we play HARD!
This year my parents and my mom's brother and sister brought it back to Texas! We spent the weekend at Canyon Lake, TX on the water.....good times!
My dad brought his boat, which seats about 15 people comfortably and our jet ski and we all skied and tubed until we just couldn't stand it.
We shopped and floated the river and got caught up on everything we missed in the past year.
I would just like to give a standing ovation to my mom and dad! My mom and Aunt Kathy and Aunt Jo (Hi Uncle Jo!) planned this whole fiasco. Those wonderful ladies cooked GREAT meals for fifty-five people every night we were there!
My dad hauled his boat, the jet ski, his smoker, his grill, two fish frier's, two huge pots for the shrimp boil and all the propane and paraphernalia associated with all of that from his house to the lake. The trip usually takes about five hours. It took them nine.
Once they were here, my dad spent all his time driving the boat to teach kids to ski and tube and whatever else they wanted. My brother was a HUGE help as well. He really is so knowledgeable when it comes to all that stuff.
Jared's girlfriend....I mean Roxy's mom....I mean Jenny was there this year and got to meet everyone. She is just the sweetest most helpful girl on the planet. JARED WAYNE....YOU HAD BETTER KEEP HER!!!!
I know I got credit for a lot this year, because I wrote the letters and bulletins through out the year to keep everyone informed. BUT I DON'T DESERVE IT!!!! This was a group effort....as any good family gathering usually is.
We had families come from all over California, Colorado, Kansas, Louisiana and of course, Texas. I love this group and I can't wait until next year!
San Diego....HERE WE COME!!!!!

Saturday, June 16, 2007

You may call me My Pearl on Sundays and Goddess Divine on special occasions.

I adore anything Jane Austen as I have said many, many times....(ok, except Mansfield Park....but I still like it!)....I just finished reading Pride and Prejudice for the umpteenth gazillionth time....

Every time I read any of Austen's books I find something hilariously ironic that I missed the first time. Those are the best types of books....the ones that are refreshingly different, but yet comfortingly the same every time you read them.

This time I was reminded of a conversation I had with a very good friend of mine about what she wanted in a man....she had an insanely long list! I am talking LONG.....

At the time I told her that all I wanted was NOT the man on the white horse coming to my rescue. How dull would that be? Plus I am perfectly capable of taking care of myself! (Most of the time :)) I wanted the man on the black horse that had started all the trouble in the first place! But besides that I had no specifics...I wanted to leave more to providence than that....ok...I know...sounds good in theory right, but not realistic.

Of course I have an image in my head (but he's usually naked, so we don't talk much...kidding...kidding....kinda) but I really DON'T want to get all that specific.

Anyway, back to Austen. The wise teacher that she is, has taught me another valuable lesson....and that is....

Well, you will have to read it and figure it out yourself....

What?

Ok, Ok, Geez, I have to do everything around here!

I learned that I don't need to know what qualities I want in a man....I just need to be able to recognize them when seen packaged together in THE man.

Plus, lets face it girls, on the eve of Father's Day, this is probably true for you too, so I'll just be honest....no matter how hard I try to avoid it, I am daily growing to be more and more like my mother, and the man I see in my future has qualities more and more like my dad...

I should be so lucky! Happy Father's Day Daddy! I love you!

P.S. Dad: Insanely loud whistle

Amy: Hyah!

Friday, June 15, 2007

Everybody has words that are a staple to their everyday vocabulary.

Mine are "oops" and "seriously" (ok, and "like", but I am like totally trying stop that one...seriously!".

I think my dad repeats the Serenity Prayer when he is dealing with me.....

God grant me the serenity to accept the things I can not change;

Yesterday:

"Ok, Dad, I got the a/c checked on my car...the guy said he doesn't know what's wrong with it! He said they added more freon and vacuumed out the system, but it's still not working. The compressor is cycling but no cold air!"

"What guy Amy?"

"The Jiffy Lube guy. He said for me to check the spark plugs, cuz that's all he can think of."

"The what?!?"

"The spark plugs."

"Amy....(he always says my name and then follows with a long pause when he is frustrated with me)....are you SURE he said spark plugs?"

"Yeah, and I checked the spark plug for the a/c but it is fine. I told him that didn't make sense because the compressor wouldn't start at all if it was the spark plug."

"Wait you checked the spark plug?"

"Yeah, Dad, what's wrong?"

"Amy.....(another long pause)....where were the spark plugs you checked?"

"Well, there are some in the car and some in the engine, in the box thingy...you know they are all different colors and say either 10, 20 or 40."

courage to change the things I can;

"Oh sweet *&##%#% (I'll let you fill in the blank here.), Amy, those are fuses, not spark plugs....whatever you do, don't go in the A/C place and tell them you checked the spark plugs. They will take you for everything you've got!"

"Oh, well, geez dad, you know what I meant!"

and the wisdom to know the difference.

Today:

"Dad, the A/C guy says I need a whole new compressor and kind of valve thingy."

"Amy, are you still at the repair shop?"

"Yes sir."

"Then just hand the nice man your phone honey."

10 minutes later the guy hands me back my phone:

"Ok, Amy they are going to take you home now and your car will be ready tomorrow. Can you find a ride to work in the morning?"

"Yes sir, what is wrong with my a/c."

....

"Dad?"

"It's the spark plugs."

"You are not funny!"

Chuckles come over the line.

Amen.

Friday, June 8, 2007

for-e-ver. for-e-ver. for-e-ver.


Some of my favorite memories of me and my dad are the days he would check me out of school early for us to drive to Houston to see a double header in the dome!


I loved those times! For my dad and I baseball has always been a bonding tool! He would buy me a program that had the game sheet in the back so I could "keep the book" for the game.


After the game he would check my work and we would laugh over the mistakes. I was probably the only eight year old girl that could tell you what E-3 meant (error on the first baseman) or the ERA of any pitcher on the Astros team at any given time.


As I got older and started playing ball myself, instead of sitting with my dad in the stands and enjoying the game at a "safe" distance, I met him on the field. The most frustrating times were when he was calling behind the plate and I was on the mound. I STILL maintain that the man has a strike zone the size of a Ritz cracker (you know the bite size ones), unless I am in the box and then the zone stretches from knees to shoulders.


Either way, my dad and I LOVE baseball and I can not think of a better time than spending the day on a diamond with my dad. Tomorrow I am meeting my dad to celebrate Father's Day and his birthday that is later this month. I am meeting him to watch the State Baseball Finals.


I can't sleep! I'm too excited!


Love you Dad! (and that was sooooo a strike!)

Sunday, June 3, 2007

Look Guys! Water!!!

My family and I spend as much time as possible on the water! WE LOVE IT!

I got a call from my mom today and we talked about a number of random things (we do this multiple times daily) and she stopped mid-sentence to say "OH! I gotta go. I got a fish!".

And the line went dead. (I didn't even know they were fishing, but it's not that big of a surprise.)
I can pretty much tell you verbatim how the following conversation went on my dad's boat.....

"Randy! Look! I got one! Isn't he big!" Giggle giggle.

"Huge Ginger, absolutely huge. I don't know if it will fit in the boat." This would be said with the most deadpan of voices and facial expressions. I should also point out that my dad has a 24 foot tritoon boat that seats 15 comfortably.

"Well come get it already! It's wiggly." She says while swinging the pole (with the poor fish attached at one end) from one side of the boat to another.

"Keep it still, and I could get it off the line! Jeez woman!"

"Oh! Sorry!" Giggle Giggle.
My dad would reach out at this point grab the fish, take his handy pliers and remove the hook. Depending on the actual size of the fish, he would either throw it back in the lake or toss it at Cadence (my parents freakily human-like black lab).
If the fish went back in the water, he would re-bait my mom's hook, cast for her, slap her on the butt (you should know that that part was incredibly uncomfortable to type), and hand her the pole. (They would do this all over again at least three or four times per fishing trip). If it got tossed at Cadence they would laugh at the annoyed face she made at them for being brought out of whatever dream she was having, and then he would go get this fish, put it the live well before the whole re-baiting ritual.
You should know that fishing only happens between whatever random catastrophe that we run into....today it was my mom "catching" a boat passing them with a family of five. When whatever catastrophe is resolved, it is time for a break, so they will stop for a while, put Cadence's life jacket on her and go swimming! After all of this....it is time to fish!

Catch one for me Mom!