Sunday, February 15, 2026

First legal Drink

Fifty years ago this month, my girlfriend took me out to a cocktail bar for my first legal professionally-served cocktail.  As memory serves, we went to the Quarterdeck on south Willamette in Eugene for this momentous occasion.  

A lot of water has passed under the old Autzen Stadium footbridge since that evening.  Pam's life and mine have taken very different courses - each charting our own lives, loves and careers in cities hundreds or thousands of miles apart.  The affection we knew then has evolved along the way, but remains as consistent as any I have known in my life.  

Pam's Christmas vacation she had planned with her daughter and granddaughter in the Bavarian-themed village of Leavenworth was postponed by flooding, and is now their mid-winter Bavarian-themed vacation.  

So last week we celebrated the anniversary of this milestone a bit early at The Cove in Vancouver.  

There is never a bad time to recognize and enjoy a lifetime of dear friendship.  




Tuesday, May 9, 2023

The Deaths and Resurrections of Bobby Gray

I first met Bobby in seventh grade.  Our junior high combined students from three different grade schools, so was a place where new friends were made, and old gangs and cliques were shuffled and rearranged.  Many of my lifelong friendships began within the walls of Colin Kelly Junior High.  

Bobby was a knucklehead, just like most of us.  We were feral—growing up pretty much unsupervised, unmoored, and unguided—with no clear direction for our futures.  

Bobby gained prominence in our gang a few years later, when he was the first of us who got a driver's license.  And he had a car - an old beat-up station wagon.

Pot was cheap then – though low-grade, compared to the concentrated hybrid product available today.  A four-finger 'lid' (about an ounce) could be had for around ten bucks.  That came out to about a dollar apiece when ten of us went in on it.  We piled in to that old station wagon like a big family going to a drive-in movie, and drove out somewhere away from traffic—more importantly, away from cops—and started rolling up joints.  On a good day, we might smoke up the whole lid before we were done.  Given the potency of pot in those days, this wouldn't necessarily preclude doing homework that evening – though I don't think any of us actually tested that proposition. 

For those who were never part of that scene, I should clarify, there is a clear difference between smoking pot  and, for example, drinking beer - a difference that is not subtle.  The mood, the level, and content of conversation were nothing alike.  While a beer bust gets loud, rambunctious, sometimes even violent, a pot party is quiet, and—for want of a better term—introspective.  I use that term loosely, because it suggests a depth of thought that doesn't really apply.  The rare bit of controversy might involve Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, or whether Carlos Castenada's main character, Don Juan, truly could turn himself into a wolf, or if that was just a figment of his peyote-induced imagination.  These conversations might get a little heated, but that usually broke when we lost track of what we were arguing about – around the time the joint came back to us.   

After high school, many of us knuckleheads continued mostly coasting along, smoking a lot of dope, drinking beer (more genially, of course, than the above-referenced beer-busts), and generally extending our adolescence into our early twenties.  But, while most of us didn't take that much further,  Bobby discovered the wonders of cocaine, the magnetic north of so-called 'safe' highs of the era - which we were incorrectly informed was non-addictive.  Because none of us had much money, Bobby began to deal cocaine, to finance his own usage.  Soon enough he had started making some money, and a crop of new friends of the type one makes when they have coke and money.  He wanted less and less to do with us, or anybody else who wasn't part of his his supply chain – supplier or customer.  We were not offended though; with Bobby out of sight, and the joint coming back around, he was generally out of mind as well.  

Then one day, we heard that he had been busted for selling a large quantity of coke to an undercover cop.  We thought he was going to go to prison for a long time, but thanks to a confession, a jailhouse conversion, and the tearful, sympathetic narrative he shared with the judge about the recent deaths of both of his parents, the judge was merciful, and Bobby was sentenced only to time already served.  

Bobby was as good as the words he shared with the judge.  He put drugs behind him, and moved to Coos Bay, on the Oregon coast, to begin his new, clean life.  When I next saw him, he had been reborn; clean, and sober for a year, and fully within the fold of the nascent 'religious right' evangelical movement.  We all understood, and empathized with the religious part of his conversion; seriously, his light sentence was nothing short of a miracle.  I struggled with the political part – but there was no way to discuss any of that with him.  He had totally conflated the religious and the political in his mind.  He regularly—religiously, one might saywatched the 700 Club, and fully embraced Pat Robertson's entire agenda; from combining fundraising with long-distance faith healing, to equating unions, feminism, and liberalism with satanism, and an international Communist conspiracy to destroy our way of life.  

It was all a bit much to take, but Bobby was a long-time friend, and I did my best to maintain whatever connection I could with my resurrected, reborn childhood friend.  

Less easy to take was Bobby's intolerance toward those most like he was prior to his 'rebirth'. 
Insert parts about self-esteem, the need to be 'better' based on a sense of inferiority.  Also, maybe his hostility toward young people who were much like he was when he was young.  

In a way, he seemed to feel that being 'reborn' gave him license to start with a clean slate, and never have to make sense of his earlier life with the one he believed he was living since.  

Years later, when we all turned fifty, a cohort of us began getting together each summer for a long weekend of camping in the Oregon Cascades.  We would drink to excess, smoke more pot than most of us have since high school, cuss, yell, tell dirty jokes (which we could only get away with because wives and other females are not allowed in camp).  Most of us have long since settled into more or less sedate family lives, and for some, the excesses in camp are the only time of the year they let go, and howl at the Moon.

Camping is a mostly non-drama event.  Unfortunately though, the concept of non-drama was lost on Bobby by the time we started this tradition.  His years of abstentious denial caused him to be uncomfortable around people drinking to excess, and the thin skin he had had since childhood led him to easily take offense.  One day in camp, one of the guys said something stupid and insulting about George W. Bush - which was all it took to cause Bobby to storm out of camp in an angry huff, calling all of us drunks, druggies, and 'commies'.

That was over ten years ago, and Bobby hasn't been back to camp since.  Makes sense, since that really isn't his element anymore.  I know many people who are in recovery from substance abuse; some can be around it, and some can't; Those I know who stop drinking and drugging without ever admitting that they had a problem tend to be in the latter group - and Bobby is as intolerant of drinking or social use of cannabis, as he is of variance from his ultra-conservative politics, or any religion other than fundamentalist evangelical Ameri-Christianity.  It's just better that he stays away.  

I should have borne that in mind after Bobby had a near-death experience a few years ago.  His heart suddenly just stopped, and he survived only because his wife, a retired nurse, was in the next room, and heard the change in the sound of his breathing.  She kept him alive until an ambulance arrived.  In the hospital he had a pacemaker / internal defibrillator installed, which allowed him to return to a somewhat normal life.  

The prior year, two of the people we camped with had passed away.  When I told the 'brothers' (as we call ourselves) about Bobby's near-death experience, I asked if we might extend an invitation to him to rejoin us that summer.  It seemed that the coincidence of these losses and near loss might afford us all a chance to start anew, with a fresh appreciation of what is really important to us, and what we can just let go.  Ultimately though, the realization that camp was a long way from medical attention, and that his medical appliances were new, led us to postpone the invitation.  

The next year COVID made the point moot, since we cancelled our camping trip anyway. The following year, I broached the subject again.  The brothers were skeptical; concerned about how his presence in camp would change the tone of the whole weekend.  But they are a decent bunch, and told me I could go ahead and invite him.  

The punishment for this openness came almost immediately.  With an utterly tone-deaf lack of awareness of what it took to get the brothers to allow him back in camp, Bobby started making rules about the changes we would have to make if we wanted him to bless us with his presence.  We'd have to limit our drinking, because he didn't want to be around a 'bunch of drunks', and wouldn't tolerate any politics, because we were all 'commies'.  

I replied to him that, given his feelings, he might enjoy his weekend better at home, or in the company of others who share his values and lifestyle.  His response to this suggestion was angry and defensive - as though we had kicked him out, rather than simply responding politely to his ridiculous expectation that we would change the whole event to attract him back.  He fired off a series of multi-page angry, lecturing emails to us, sharing his life story, his conversion to Christianity, and his recent deaths and resurrections.   He actually said he had 'died' twice in his cardiac incident, and was only saved by his wife, whom he now called 'Saint Marilyn'.  This would be a sweet way of referring to his wife, except that he somehow seemed to truly believe that he had died, and was now imbued with even better insight into the faults of others, and of his own superiority.  He told us that he was trying to save us from an eternity in Hell.  

Then, in a bizarre about-face, Bobby relented, and said he would drive to camp, make a batch of his 'world-famous' ribs, and golf a round with any of the brothers who wanted to ditch camp and go with him.  I don't know how interested anybody would have been normally, but in the aftermath of his insulting tirade, he didn't find any takers.  

The Hooty Brothers are a mostly closed group, with very few changes since we began camping together eighteen years ago.  But when any of the original members suggests inviting somebody, that suggestion is at least considered.  Now though, in the aftermath of that year, I think it would be unwise for me to ever suggesting another, even if they have died and risen from the dead – not once, but twice.  Could be we just aren't worthy of such company.

   


Monday, April 26, 2021

Ray-Bones

SoHey Buck, do you ever run across Ray-Bones anymore?


Buck relates a story about his friend Ray, who had recently passed away.


o   Hated being called 'Ray-Bones', so people mostly just did that when he wasn't around.
o sadflasdfl;asdj
o   Died of alcoholism.  He had stopped drinking a few weeks before he died, but never lost the thirst.
o   Only Buck was with him at the end.  He called Buck over and said, "Smell that, Bucky?  That's the stable. I can smell the stable. I'm heading home."  A couple minutes later, he was dead.  
o  Ray had worked with horses his whole life - everything from ranch work, to a stint on the rodeo circuit.  The job he hated most was leading sad-sack semi-retired horses on trail rides at the Oregon coast.  After his drinking made it impossible for him to hold down any jobs with working horses, this was about all he could get - and eventually, he couldn't even do that.  He said that all these horses thought about, from the moment they saw the saddle, was getting the ride over with, so they could eat some oats at the stable, and just have it over with.  On the way out, with tourists on board, they'd plod like every step was a pain in the ass.  But on the way back, they'd pick up the pace.  And once they got the smell of the stable in their nose, they were unstoppable.  It got to where Ray-Bones would try to arrange the route of the ride, so that they returned from upwind, and the horses were easier to control.  

Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Just a Beer to Get Reacquainted

He slid into the booth opposite her, and sat down.  “Hi, Angela!  How are you?”

“I’m okay.  I, uh,  texted you three days ago, and you just texted me back today.  Is something wrong?”

“Sorry, I’ve been busy.  So how’re you doing?”

“I’m fine”, then, after a long pause, “Why did it take you so long to respond?”

Taken aback, “Um … I’ve been busy.  There’s a lot of stuff on my plate right now.  So, what did you do this weekend?  It was so nice; I hope you got out and enjoyed it!”

She just sat there for a minute, staring at him.  Finally, “No, I didn’t get out – too busy.  You’re not the only one with a lot on his plate right now.”  Then, more silence. 

And more silence. 

Anxious to break the silence (and hoping to prevent the author from using the word 'silence' a fourth time in succession) and more than a little bit thirsty, “So, what kind of beer do you like?  These guys make a great west-coast IPA, and a damn fine milk stout.  I’ve heard good stuff about their red, and some of the others, but I am a creature of habit, so I only know those two personally.” 

“You keep changing the subject!”

“I didn’t know there was a subject to change.  I just got here, and we really haven’t talked long enough to establish a subject.”

“You know what I mean!  Why have you been ignoring me?” 

“I haven’t been ‘ignoring’ you!  I’ve just been busy.”  After a moment, “Is this what you plan to talk about?  Because, honestly, it’s been a long day, and I’m in no mood for drama.  In fact, I can’t think of any time that I’m really in the mood for drama.” 

“There’s no need to be rude!  I’m sorry I brought it up.  I just wanted to know why you didn’t call me back sooner.  It doesn’t seem so much to ask, does it?”   

“Actually, it does.  We seem to have the beginnings of a real disconnect here.  We dated for a few weeks over thirty years ago, and haven’t seen each other since.  So now, on the occasion of our second time getting together for a beer, you’re coming after me like a suspicious wife who finds lipstick on her husband’s zipper – because I didn’t answer your text as quickly as you would like. 

“It’s starting to come back to me why we broke up when we were younger”, He dropped a ten dollar bill on the table, and said, “Here’s for your beer.  I appreciate you coming down here to meet me, but I don’t think I can stick around, and I think this should be the last time we see each other.” 

Unfortunately for all involved, it wasn’t.

Saturday, October 15, 2016

Hooty and Locker-Room Banter

I don’t know much about ‘locker-room banter’. I wasn’t a high school athlete, and at the gyms I’ve gone to as an adult (Golds, 24-Hour Fitness), guys pretty much keep to themselves, while trying to orient their bodies to conceal their junk (‘weenies’, if you prefer). I think we were all grateful when gyms started installing flat-screen televisions in locker rooms – WAY up high in locker rooms, to give us somewhere to divert our attention, and maybe a topic to bring up, if there is a need to break the awkward silence. Bottom line … I think guys are about as comfortable in locker rooms as we are in elevators – less so, because we’re naked. There isn’t much chatter, other than comments about whatever’s on ESPN. And NOBODY talks about sex. Believe me (Okay, I know that this term now means ‘I’m lying’, but in this case, it really is true)
The one place I go where pretty much anything goes in terms of banter is the Hooty – The Boys camping trip each summer. There’s a good reason we don’t invite women or kids; it’s where we blow off steam, drink too much (with car keys safely set aside), howl at the moon, and say some pretty crude stuff. After a morning visit to the Bucks outhouse, you might be asked about the experience, how bad it smelled, and how much you might have just contributed to the problem. We can get pretty gross, but it’s one weekend a year.
It would be a violation for me to reveal much of what’s said, but it gets pretty crude. Here’s what’s never said. Nobody brags about molesting women. Certainly nobody would brag about the liberties they take with women because they are entitled by wealth, fame, or just because they’re creepy enough to do it. A person who did this might escape getting the shit kicked out of him, but either he would have to go over to the other fire, or if he stayed, he’d find himself alone as the rest of us migrated. And he’d damn sure never be invited back. On our one weekend a year, we’re crude and uninhibited – but even then, we’re not loathsome.

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

More Doc Story Notes

It’s the story of a bunch of old friends, who’ve mostly known each other since high school – some a lot longer. 

At this point, my ‘lab-name’ for a couple of the main characters are Doc and Buck (I might change these to something less obvious .. don’t know).  Buck lives in Central Oregon.  During the summertime, he runs a lodge on one of the Cascade Lakes (I’ll need to come up with a fictional name).  He’s cantankerous as hell, but has a good heart.  I haven’t decided whether he is a drinker or a former drinker; if former, I have a cover story for why he quit without actually admitting he was an alcoholic. 

Doc and Buck were roommates in college.  For a while after college, Doc lived in Bend, but then returned to the Valley for grad school.  He’s kind of vague about what he studied (and if his name stays ‘Doc’, he’ll say he is some kind of researcher).  Eventually, it will be revealed that he had been an OB/Gyn, but this doesn’t come out until it is revealed by others). 

I’m fleshing out some of the other characters.  I want them to be fully formed, and really haven’t been able to wrap my head around this enough yet. 

One of the early scenes will be an annual camping trip, where the guys all get together.  Afterward, Doc heads up to the lodge and stays for a while with Buck.  They talk about old times, old stories, friends, politics, and superficialities.  Doc gets to meet Buck’s best friend – a trout that he catches and releases a few times a year.  They mostly spend their days breathing the mountain air, and taking in the views of the Cascades.  Doc heads out into the woods for a few days of backpacking, but smoke from a nearby forest fire makes it prudent that he come back early.  For a while in the woods, it looks like Doc might be in real danger from the fire and the choking smoke, but that becomes less a threat as he heads back closer to the lodge.  He’s questioned by firefighters about where he had been, and for how long – to see if he may have been part of the problem.  Of course, he wasn’t, but they gather a lot of information about him before they’re done. 

Doc tells Buck that he’s thinking of moving back to Central Oregon; gonna get him a place a little ways out of town, and settle into a somewhat solitary retirement. 

The next phase is the move itself.  Haven’t fleshed out much about the move.  Doc asks the old gang to help him move – typical reward being pizza and beer.  They all show up, but mostly stand around eating the pizza and drinking the beer, while Doc, Buck, and a couple young guys from nearby houses do all the moving. 
There’s a bit of filler, as Doc experiences autumn in his new home; the turning of the leaves of the few deciduous trees nearby, as well as the larch needles, first snows in mid-October, then bright and sunny again, then more in November.  He gets into his reading, as well as chopping wood, building his fire each day, and generally getting acclimated. 

The homesites where he lives are spaced at least a quarter mile apart – close enough that you’re not entirely isolated, but far enough apart to afford privacy.  They are a mix of infrequently-occupied second homes, retirees from elsewhere (who the locals call MPAs – metropolitan piss-ants), and locals (generally referred to by the first two groups with a banjo-playing pantomime).  The all somewhat depend on one another, but there are real differences, which keeps a distance between them.  There’s also the issue of the growing crystal meth problem among the locals, and the increasingly frequent break-ins at unoccupied summer homes. 

Deep in the following winter, there’s a huge snowstorm.  There’s no getting in or out past the drifts; too deep for 4x4s, and conditions would not lend themselves even to leaving on a snowmobile – if there were anywhere to go anyway.  Suddenly, there’s a knock at Doc’s door.   It’s a woman, who’s clearly been out in the elements for a long time – and without the kind of clothing.  Doc lets her in, brings her over to the fire, then helps her get her wet coat off, so she can get warm.  He goes upstairs to get her something warm to change into.  When he comes down, he notices that there is blood on her clothing, between her legs – of a type that looks like it might be a miscarriage. 

I don’t know exactly how to frame this next part.  It’s not a miscarriage, but a botched home-abortion.  And somehow, she knows that he’s not only a doctor, but a gynecologist. 

I don’t know at all how to make the transition from here, but here are some elements that form part of the setup for the rest of the story:
·        
The girl miscarries at Doc’s house in the woods
o   There was nothing Doc, or anybody else could have done to prevent it. 
o   The method the girl (or her boyfriend, or both) used to try to abort the baby has left her unable to bear children in the future
·         Abortion is no longer legal anywhere in the United States
o   As part of his practice, Doc had performed abortions in the past – when it was legal
§  This was never a part of his practice he enjoyed, but which he did because he felt that he had to.  In an era when this was less and less available, he felt an obligation
§  This is related to why he quit practicing medicine and retired. 
·        
I    In the aftermath of the miscarriage, the girl changes her story.  She then says she had gone to Doc’s place for help, and he had encouraged her to abort the baby.  It’s a purely ludicrous story, but it gains traction – first locally, then it spreads.  It ultimately becomes part of the 24/7 misinfotainment news cycle, and Doc becomes a national villain – an unreformed abortionist, who has preyed upon this innocent young girl. 


So … not sure where to take the plot from here.  But, as you mentioned a couple weeks ago … my protagonist is in trouble.