A CHRISTMAS EVE BLESSING OF SHINY QUARTERS

Listen to Jim’s 3-minute podcast:

https://youtu.be/El8ACxbJImY

or read his true tale below…

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Life, actually…

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A CHRISTMAS EVE BLESSING OF SHINY QUARTERS

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“Bless your heart,” somebody just pronounced, at the vacated table.

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The eatery is bustling with noisy diners, and a rather rowdy bunch is waiting for the bussers and servers to clear the surface, or at least redistribute the grease evenly so that the source of subsequent sepsis cannot be traced.

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The Bless Your Heart employee is addressing her grand tip of four quarters the previous gluttoneers set adrift on the placemat.

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She is not amused.

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The Bless Your Heart muttering is a form of automatic censure. This longtime denizen of chaotic kitchens and foot-bruising tiled floors and bossy bosses and entitled customers knows how to suppress what she really wants to say until she can grab a smoke next to the dumpster out back.

.The words will not be as pretty as Bless Your Heart, but they will be honest and direct and heartfelt and delivered in philosophical resignation.

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Later in the long shift, at clock out time, the Bless Your Heart woman will stop by Dollar Tree and pick up a few Christmas trinkets to the tune of at least twenty-four quarter tips, wend her way home to her basement apartment that sports a wreath-decked front door and, within, a small musical Christmas Tree with twinkling lights.

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She slides the chain lock in place, groans a bit during shoe removal, slips into a so-soft robe, examines the contents of a refrigerator that holds no surprises, retrieves half a quart of eggnog, then sits lengthways on a caressing sofa, takes a sip while regarding the twinkling tree, looks forward to turning the Dollar Tree bag contents into something that will make her lone grandchild smile and laugh and clap her hands in love.

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The cares of the day loosen their hold, the memories of childhood Christmases loom sweetly, the echoes of distant family and friends diminish, and for just a moment, just a moment, the world takes time to bless her heart

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© 2022 A.D. by Jim Reed

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ALL ABOUT HAND CARVED WHISTLES AND SMALL ANGELS

Life, actually…

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ALL ABOUT HAND CARVED WHISTLES AND SMALL ANGELS

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Another Christmas looms, and what do I have to show for it?

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Each Christmas Down South, I receive kind attentions and some truly marvelous trinkets that remind me of what the world was like when I was four years old.

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One of my favorite Christmas stories from grammar school is the Charles Tazewell tale of the Littlest Angel. The story of the Littlest Angel always sticks with me because of the respect it pays to the feelings of little children, the reverence with which it views the really important possessions of life.

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As you may recall, the Littlest Angel was not happy in heaven because he had left behind under his earthly bed the most important things in his small world.

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Each of these objects had absolutely no significance to anyone but him.

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That’s exactly the memory I cherish to this day. I still value most the small things that remind me of tendernesses long gone.

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I keep little memory-jogging doodads all over my book store and everywhere at home.

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Each attentive family member knows by now that what I want for my birthday or Christmas is not a tie or a shirt or a screwdriver, but a toy or a handmade trinket that is just a little bit special and that is selected out of love instead of duty.

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The rule of buying a gift for Jim Reed, should you ever be so inspired: Find something that makes you smile. Bring me your smile. And if you wish, bring me that special thing that made you smile.

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What was in the Littlest Angel’s box under his bed?

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“A butterfly with golden wings, captured one bright summer day on the hills above Jerusalem, and a sky-blue egg from a bird’s nest in the olive tree that stood to shade his mother’s kitchen door. Yes, and two white stones, found on a muddy river bank, where he and his friends had played like small brown beavers, and, at the bottom of the box, a limp, tooth-marked leather strap, once worn as a collar by his mongrel dog, who had died as he had lived, in absolute and infinite devotion.”

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What really makes my morning today is the fond memory of a little present in the mail from my big sister, sent so long ago and still cherished: A small hand carved wooden whistle with three distinct notes that I toot over and over again all the way to work, enjoying each moment of pure sound, pure love.

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Big sisters still remember what little brothers and small angels love most

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© 2022 A.D. by Jim Reed

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YouTube Video Blog - https://youtu.be/IbNlkQrEKYg

 

A 1950s MAGIC CHRISTMAS MEMORY

Catch Jim’s podcast: https://jimreedbooks.com/podcast

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Life, actually…

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A 1950s MAGIC CHRISTMAS MEMORY

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When I was small–not too small, mind you–the world was still a magical place. I wanted to introduce everyone I knew to this magic world. I thought a smashing way to do this would be to become a magician. A prestidigitator. A master of illusion. A fake fakir who could fool and entertain his superiors all at once.

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Santa Claus, who still existed back then, gave me a big, garish book of illustrated magic tricks by Joseph Dunninger. I spent hours wearing that book out, trying to master the simple tricks within.

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Later, one of my most cherished gifts, my Rosebud, came, at yet another Christmas: a complete paper-covered case full of Mandrake the Magician magic tricks. I practiced alone in my room, tried out the easier ones on my brother Ronny, and spent hours hoarding and cataloging these and other sleight-of-hand acts and gags, dreaming of the day I’d be able to fool everybody at will with my suave patter and my dashing Batman cape (blue on the outside, red on the inside, or vice versa–confiscated from my sister Barbara).

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What I did not yet know about myself was that I was shy, painfully shy, and that my only confidence remained hidden within myself, was only apparent in my heart.

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By the time I got up enough nerve to perform in front of my entire family in the dining room (even my father, though fidgety, sat bemusedly and watched my show), I was nervous but determined to go ahead with the tricks I’d learned. The easiest trick I knew, which I believe Barbara had taught me, was the one where you make an empty glass go through a solid table and land on the floor, hopefully unbroken. I actually pulled this off successfully if slowly, and went through a few other tricks I knew before the performance faded to an end.

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The family watched patiently if stoically. My fantasies had come to a head, had been realized right in my own dining room. I was satisfied and thereafter gave up magic, for I had not yet been given the gift of self-confidence and knew that I could never stand before strangers and fool them, too. I knew my family watched because they had to, because they had manners and could not help but watch, and because they loved me and would have enjoyed the show even if it had been terrible.

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So, my little box of tricks lay stored and labeled by my mother, waiting for re-discovery.

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After that, I went on to other hobbies, including amateur astronomy and sky observation. Now that was a hobby tailor-made for a shy person. I never had to perform. I could be alone a lot and my family would not worry over the fact that I spent entire nights on the roof of the house, peering through a telescope and dreaming my dreams, my starry dreams.

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Even that hobby came to a close abruptly one day, when the Soviets launched the world’s first artificial satellite and suddenly everybody wanted to become an astronaut or a star expert. Since loners have to have their own personal hobbies, hobbies that no one else they know is involved in, the skies suddenly lost their appeal as career fodder.

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I faced the fact that I didn’t want to be an astronomer anyhow. Facts and physics left me cold. What I really enjoyed about the heavens was their accessibility to the poet within me. I didn’t want anyone to require a mathematical formula of me. I just wanted to enjoy the enormous, awesome feelings that came over me when I looked skyward, and I wanted to share these feelings with others.

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Years later, I actually went to a meeting of amateur astronomers and found that they spent little time looking at stars, but much time doing calculations and explaining black holes to each other, and theorizing about the death of the cosmos.

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Sara Teasdale would not have approved, thank goodness. Do you know her poem, the one that best expresses that wonderful feeling the stars can give you if you open up to them? May I share it with you?

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This is my favorite poem:

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Alone in the night

On a dark hill

With pines around me

Spicy and still

And a heaven full of stars

Over my head

White and topaz and misty red

Myriads with beating hearts of fire

That eons cannot vex or tire.

Up the dome of heaven

Like a great hill

I watch them marching

Stately and still

And I know that I

Am honored to be

Witness of so much majesty.

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Sara knew. Sara knew me. Sara knew all about the childhood me. Through the distance of time, through the timelessness of distance, she still holds my hand and Knows.

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I hope your dreamy memories of Christmastime stars are as healing as mine. Get ready. The 25th is just a few days thataway

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© 2022 A.D. by Jim Reed

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YouTube Video Blog - https://youtu.be/lDej6euxudE

 

FLITTY PRISMS AND TWIRLY CHIMES

Catch Jim Reed’s Red Clay Diary podcast on youtube:   https://youtu.be/z1qvAGXjLks

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Life, actually…

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FLITTY PRISMS AND TWIRLY CHIMES

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The joyride celebrations of an Alabama family Thanksgiving are receding in memory fond.

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The looming prospect of family Christmas gatherings creates expectations most pleasant.

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As chaotic as life can sometimes be, celebrations both tiny and huge propel us into reluctantly thinking positive thoughts. Thoughts about what pleasures are still lurking if we stop long enough to pay attention.

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What makes me continue having hope here in this Down South town?

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Well, if I put aside all snarky and fearful and mean-spirited thoughts about the messy past and murky future, I can occasionally make room for small wisdoms, hidden comforts, unexpected joys.

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It doesn’t take more than a few seconds to startle myself alert. Alert to the goodness that endures if attention is paid.

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Fairy-like prismatic colors dance along the walls and ceiling of our ancient home. No kidding. Now and then these jittery twinkly lights force me to stop and find a small portal to the past.

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Daughter Margaret gifted us with this solar-powered spinning prism many years ago. It has been here so long we tend to forget its presence. But on a sunny day the dangling trinket comes to life and gently reminds us of the thousand and one pleasures caused by Margaret’s presence in our lives.

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And on cloudy, windy days we are startled into awareness of another family gift. Sprite-like tinkling music spreads itself throughout the house. Porch chimes once given us by daughter Jeannie reawaken our memories of loving good times, wise and healing laughter.

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Flitty prisms and twirly chimes have lives of their own, powered by absentees Margaret and Jeannie.

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Powered by the singular and persistent nurturing that can be generated by family bonds and family ties.

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Powered by our most human desire to place the tribulations of life on hold long enough to face the reality of unconditional love

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© 2022 A.D. by Jim Reed

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YouTube Video Blog -  https://youtu.be/z1qvAGXjLks

 

 

THE THANKSGIVING DOGS OF VERBENA, ALABAMA

Life, actually…

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THE THANKSGIVING DOGS OF VERBENA, ALABAMA

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Field of dogs.

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We’re in the deep countryside, walking in their domain,

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But they only welcome us

with tongues out and energetic pantings.

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These are fields any childhood would find a way to enjoy.

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Tall grass, fluffy dandelion wisps,

long cattails to use as gentle weapons.

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No alligators in sight.

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We trudge toward a drought-reduced pond

to see what was underwater, hidden for so long.

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The cool air matches the gray sky.

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The dried and crackling weeds match the cool air and the gray sky.

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We think about the century as if it holds some special

quality that previous and future centuries cannot hold.

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But the centuries are just made-up make-believe

centuries that change with each civilization’s editing.

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The crunch of dried plants under our invading soles

is the sound of the afternoon.

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The rustle of leaves brushing against the low-slung belly

of an amazingly short-legged dog is all we hear.

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The giggling of children waging wars with cattails is all we hear.

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No jets fly overhead,

or underfoot, for that matter.

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No interstate rumblings in the distance.

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Just giggles and crunchings and pitter patter of little dog paws and deep breaths taken down into tired citified lungs.

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We walk the feast off and live at the singular moment.

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The drive back to the city is a droning eventless monotone.

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Home free! is what we shout

when our feet touch our old wooden porch,

on the way to the safety of this particular century

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–Jim Reed © 2022 A.D.

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LONG TIME AGO SEEMS LIKE YESTERDAY

Life, actually…

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LONG TIME AGO SEEMS LIKE YESTERDAY

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A mere 65 years ago, I am speeding West on 15th Street atop a thin-wheeled second-hand chipped-paint bicycle. My mission is to get to the Downtown county library and back in time for family supper on Eastwood Avenue.

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Let me back up here and caulk in a few missing details.

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“Speeding” means the bicycle wobbles along at maybe three miles per hour. But to the oh-so-young me, the breeze I’m making feels like racing the wind.

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Traveling West on 15th means jumping curbs. Squiggling over multiple railroad tracks. Bumping around sidewalk-less mounds of clay and grass and dust. Running red lights in order to maintain forward momentum.

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“Back in time for family supper” means arriving home just as my stomach starts to grumble. I don’t have a timepiece. And since I’m safely shrouded within my hometown, I don’t need directions in order to find library or bungalow. I don’t need a compass to tell me which way is West.

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These are things I know because of where I’ve lived on Earth the past dozen or so years.

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And the library. Up till now, the library is my cathedral of books. I know every inch of it.

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Finally I screech to a halt (at least I pretend to screech). Padlock my bike to a bush (as if anyone would ever steal such a creaky piece of machinery). Tuck my shirttail in (this is a library, you know). Race up the stairs of a re-purposed Victorian house where everything worth reading abounds.

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I silently tiptoe past the main desk. Past stern no-eye-contact guardians who stamp and process volumes and volumes of inert knowledge and facts.

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I don’t need no stinkin’ eye contact to enjoy myself in this wonderland. I just need my friends the books. My friends the maps. My friends the periodicals. My friend the Silence.

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I scan past titled spines, rows of beckoning subjects. Past the gaps between, where temporary adoptions have occurred.

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And suddenly it dawns upon me that I have just about completed my so-far-lifelong project: I have read and cherished every book that I care to read and cherish.

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There is nothing new on the shelves between the bookends.

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I still have time to re-visit old favorites. I brush fingers past them one more time. I inhale the unique fragrance of all future and past book cathedrals.

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I check out one last title to take home. To read flashlit under quilts tonight.

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I ponder future prospects.

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As I pedal eastward toward home for a round of corn-on-the-cob-and-cornbread vittles, I pass by the strip mall near Eastwood Park. Wait—the  drugstore has rotating metal racks filled with paperback books. Magazines abound nearby.

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Instead of borrowing and returning books, maybe I can purchase the books I desire! They are only 25 cents and 35 cents each. And the cover art is dynamic and compelling. And I can keep rather than sadly part with them.

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But I have no job. Maybe an occasional allowance. Where will I find the cash needed to start feeding my booklust?

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Hmmm…

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I know! Mother provides lunch money and bus fare most weeks.

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I think. Why eat cafeteria food when I can purchase Food for Thought? Why ride a bus to class when I can walk or bike?

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I hatch a devious plot

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© Jim Reed 2022 A.D.

IN THE HEART OF THE HEART OF THE RED CLAY COAL DUST ALABAMA COUNTRYSIDE

Life, actually…a memory from long, long ago…
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IN THE HEART OF THE HEART
OF THE RED CLAY COAL DUST ALABAMA COUNTRYSIDE
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Memoryshifting is one of my favorite things.
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Way down deep inside me is an erratic but accurate record of everything ever done, all things experienced, every turning point that brought me to Now.
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Hurtling forward in time occurs parallel to snapping backward in time. Adventures and expectations meld together, making each day unpredictable, making me pay attention lest I miss something key to my understanding of the world around me, the life around me.
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Right now, I’m back in time to just a few days ago:
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I find myself deep inside the countryside of Tuscaloosa County, not too far from where all my childhood memories were made concrete.
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I am driving into rural Brookwood, Alabama, where citified civilization is not allowed easy entry. Through automobile windows right, left and straight ahead, through rearview mirrors, lives and locales pass before my eyes,
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Railroad crossings raise their gates. Beneath me, wet orange red clay washboard roads are fore and aft. Strip mine hills surround emerald ponds. Spent earth is all around. Cracked rocks sucked lifeless stare back at me.
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I pass a coal company tower that drops a steady stream of black dust onto five-story-high cones. Further into the old and vaguely familiar land, there are two-laned roads beneath tall trees, bending overhead to form arches, to form long primeval tunnels blocking the grey skies.
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A sense of not having the option to turn back toward the city comes over me.
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Something hypnotically urges me to continue, urges me to see this through, urges me to complete the story of this journey.
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I turn onto a narrow one-laned gravel and orange-colored road. There is no way to tell whether this path continues over the next rise, but I have been assured by those who gave me directions to this place that the road will continue for a way.
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I choose to trust the instructions.
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I have not seen a human for many miles, but there are signs of humans—United Mine Workers lodges and masonic buildings pass by. Mail boxes stand guard here and there.
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At last I come to the end of the path and idle the car to get my bearings. To the left is a double-wide blue-roofed home with porch and deck added on. Down the damp coal-dust yard is an old brick home that seems sealed. Way past that is another home partially hidden.
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I’m supposed to meet the owner of these properties but there is no life apparent. Knocking on doors brings nothing but echoes.  I pull a phone number out and key it in. The phone reminds me with a smirk that this is rural Alabama. No service available. Period.
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I sit for a while in the cold, quiet woods and look at my options. Will I be able to find my way back, since everything looks different from its obverse side?
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Shall I just follow my mother’s childhood insistence that the best thing to do when lost is stay in the same place till somebody finds me. This worked fine in department stores or on town streets. Let’s see if it works here in the faraway countryside of Brookwood.
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Sure enough, the owner pulls up and does all that is promised. Soon, I am examining hundreds of old German-language books that have been waiting generations for adoption. I am in my element. This is the funnest part of my job.
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With fresh instructions on how to get back home, I drive smiling toward Birmingham in a book-laden vehicle on a winding road in the heart of the heart of the country on a very cold and wet day on a tiny dot of earth on an insignificant planet in a universe filled with shifting memories of fond adventures of almost no importance to anyone but me, the recorder of turning points
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© Jim Reed 2022 A.D.

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Listen to Jim’s 4-minute podcast:
or
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TRAWLING FOR DEEP-SOUTH DOPPELGANGERS

Catch this on Jim Reed’s Red Clay Diary podcast:

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Life, actually…

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TRAWLING FOR DEEP-SOUTH DOPPELGANGERS

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I am playing hide-and-seek today, trawling a flea mall for obscure books to adopt in order to surprise my bookshop customers.

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The thrill of the search distracts me from the unsolvable challenges of daily life.

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The market’s scattered browsers are all looking for their special interests, their fond memories. Me, I look for books and their buddies—documents, periodicals, maps, globes and the like.

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Some books hide themselves in undusted stacks. Some call out to me, others cringe and keep silent.

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Anyhow, I am having fun seeking and adopting these paginated orphans. I  clean them up, inspect and shelve them, pass them on to proper foster homes.

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“Oh, look, Granddaddy used to have one of these in his store,” a musical voice chimes from one of the dealer cubicles.

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It is the voice of my sister. But I don’t see my sister anywhere nearby. I stop to listen and verify.

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“Oh, I had one of these in the third grade,” sister Barbara’s light chuckle accompanies her observation.

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Damn, it really is my sister. What is she doing in this flea bitten place? She lives far away and seldom drives long distances alone.

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Still can’t find her, though I am peeking around corners and through antique displays to see whether I can sneak up on her.

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Her pleasant patter continues but seems to move away from me as fast as I stalk her.

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That laughing voice again.

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I forget about books and strive to see her close up and in person.

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I spot the source of her laughter. A woman her size and shape has her back to me. She is with someone I don’t know. I freeze in place.

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What if she is secretly visiting an old friend and doesn’t wish to be discovered by her baby brother? Is this a relative? A covert lover? Is she living more than one life?

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Finally, my mind stops racing when I see her face. It’s not Barbara. It is merely someone who is identical to her, someone whose DNA has perhaps by chance turned up in a stranger she’ll never meet.

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No use going up to this person to share anecdotes about coincidence and lineage. She just might think I’m a weird little old man seeking conversation. Which I am.

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I slink away to another part of the mall and resume trawling for books, my net cast wide.

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But now and then I hear Barbara’s voice. Now and then I recall the wondrous lives we have led. Now and then I need to hear her voice.

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Guess I’ll give her a call tonight

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© 2022 A.D. Jim Reed

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NEVER HAD ONE LESSON

Life, actually…

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NEVER HAD ONE LESSON

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WHOOOO…WHOOO…

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The Birmingham-to-Tuscaloosa-to-New Orleans train whistle brings me out of a sweet 4 am dream. A dream in which I am Gene Kelly cruising effortlessly through drenching rain, not giving a dang about the discomfort of clinging wet clothing and squishy hard soled shoes. Gene Kelly, singing and smiling in perpetuity, his feet barely touching down as he floats, in love and in life.

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Someone asked me the other day, what my greatest wish is. I immediately said, “I would like to be Gene Kelly for just three minutes, just to see what it’s like to draw people out of their troubles and into a few moments of hope.”

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There, I said it. Wouldn’t it be nice to move like Gene Kelly?

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To dream the impossible dream.

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It looks so easy, doesn’t it?

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Fred Astaire once said, ”I just put my feet in the air and move them around.”

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That’s the secret. Fred and Gene want us to suspend disbelief for a moment and make us think it’s that easy to be elegant and inspiring.

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Maybe it is.

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The magician who wows me with unexpected trickery, the trapeze artist who makes me think for an instant, “Why, I could do that!”, the actor who causes me to laugh despite my comfortable gloominess, the self-confident police officer who waves me past without giving me a ticket, the caregiver who smiles while tending to a helpless patient,  the calming grandfather who transforms a child’s tears into laughter.

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These people are helpers, helping me to embrace, rather than contest, the time I have.

 

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We are all performers setting examples, whether we know it or not.

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Like most achievements in life, it might take years to perfect the gracefulness it takes to donate a transformative moment, a moment that someone might need desperately.

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I have many choices each day, but I feel best about myself and the world when I choose to help uplift hope rather than perpetuate fear.

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It can be as simple an act as watching Ferris Bueller playing his clarinet with horrifyingly tuneless results. The joy comes from his earnestness. He thinks he’s making beautiful music. He proudly looks straight at me and says, “Never had one lesson!” and continues his performance.

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I giggle each time this scene repeats itself. It proves that very often a giggle is exactly what is required to take seriously the next important moment of life.

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And imagining myself to be Gene Kelly for three minutes never seems to be a waste of time

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 © 2022 A.D. Jim Reed

DEEP SOUTH AIRPORT WAITING LOT

Hear Jim’s podcast on youtube:

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Life, actually…

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DEEP SOUTH AIRPORT WAITING LOT

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I’m marking time in this Deep South village airport cellphone lot.

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This array of idling vehicles constitutes a sub-village of sorts. A place of temporary inhabitants.

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Those of us who are sitting and waiting do not rent space here. We just occupy space. We scratch our phone screens. We allow ear pods to overwhelm and expurgate our thoughts. We fidget. We await the call.

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The call will let us know whether there are delayed or on-time or early arrivals. The call will let us know that the arrivers have descended safely.

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The call will free us up to focus on the next challenge, then the next.

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There is little to do but stare forth through the windshield and note our surroundings. Green hills and one-way arrows and don’t-you-dare-park-here signs. A lone grey trash receptacle and several metallic light poles and some landscaped trees.

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And people. There are people. Nestled all snug in their bubbles. Linked but oblivious of their links.

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ACs and motors hum and grumble, closed windows and locked doors replace would-be side-by-side conversations between waiting-room strangers.

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We only guess at what lies racing through each others’ minds.

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Evidence of lives being lived abound. Car tags display coded and numbered and lettered mysteries. Stickers and slogans and keyed scratches and red mud and hitches hold clues.

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Other hard-to-read-in-the-dark signs and notices tell us we had better do something or not-do-something or face the unknown consequences. A chain link fence enslaves tall ungroomed weeds.

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Fifty shades of gray clouds loll about in the dark, layered skies. Aircraft materialize and descend and ascend. Remnants of once-present objects stand purposeless.

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The ring. The voice on the phone cheerfully announces a soft landing. Onward to luggage retrieval and loved-ones reception

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Soon the second act commences. Now, breathing resumes

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© 2022 A.D. Jim Reed

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