Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Reading Steinbeck in Japan, Part II

She sets the alarm for 4:30 am but wakes a half hour early. It is the fourth day of 5:30 am football practice and her body has adjusted to the new schedule. She polishes off a chapter in a Denise Mina mystery waiting for the teakettle to whistle.

The sky lightens from dark grey to pearl over weather mountain as she sips her refreshingly bitter French-pressed coffee on the patio, pondering the new growth on the photinia hedge and wondering who decided to switch from cedars to photinia in mid-hedge. Perhaps the nursery ran out of cedars, or maybe the spot where the two shrub varieties meet marks the point where the yard ended years or decades ago. She tries in vain to shake off the cynical thought that a Master CFAY Landscaper - assuming the position ever existed - switched to maintenance-intense greenery to create jobs for his children and cousins.

The prospective defensive end pokes his head through the patio door at ten minutes past five. "Ready?" he questions in a remarkably pert and friendly tone of voice. In the week since Dad deployed and Mom took up the mantle of Responsible Parent, PDE has come to realize a friendly tone is essential if he wants a ride to the locker room. He is starting to develop the mom awareness his sister mastered at the age of five or six.

The football field is half a mile from the house at most but she doesn't mind giving him a lift. There are no other cars on the road at 5:15 am. Dawn is good for practicing driving on the left side of the road, flicking the turn signal instead of the windshield wiper to indicate a change in direction, and reversing into parking spaces (see right). When practice ends at 2:00 pm she'll have to play chicken and bumper cars with newcomers who unconsciously swing into the wrong lane when turning.

PDE has four, and maybe five, uncles who will roll their eyes when someone tells them she is driving him that short distance to football practice but she knows exactly what she is doing and why. PDE has required minimal transportation in his teenage years. His siblings were a captive audience for 8-10 hours a week at this age and had the good fortune to absorb all the random drops of wisdom she simultaneously free associates and spews when she's behind the wheel of a motor vehicle. The engine's power thrums up the drive shaft, the steering wheel vibrates slightly as the power transfers to her body, her mind goes from zero to 95mph faster than the Indy 500 pole car.

Have pedestrianism and mass transit caused him to miss out on some crucial information, perhaps the keys to a happy and productive life? Does he know to glance at his feet occasionally to avoid stepping in dog poop? Will he remember that the last movement in Tchaikovsky's War of 1812 Overture is the tune to the St. John's High School Alma Mater? Has she emphasized that his family will always be there for him and so will the Church and that more times than not they are both the same thing and that if he turns his back on either he will not be the first but he can always come back and he will not be the first to do that either? Or that he shouldn't worry too much if he doesn't like the writing style of a famous author since it's probably just genetic?

7 comments:

  1. Perhaps PDE could have some quiet time to study his playbook.

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  2. I guess the 15 minute drive to take Sydney to school for the next 9 years and Julia the 4 after that will be theraputic. I will think of that when I drive her day after day. Thanks for the tidbits of knowledge!

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  3. Switch over to Clair Bee mode. Single mom raising young high school athlete is very appropriate. (And the good news is your husband comes back, unless Mike's ship has a kiln...)

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  4. I don't think that PDE has missed out on much by not having that car time with you. He has enjoyed much more one on one time with you than his sibs. (look! I finally figured out how to comment - aren't you thrilled!)

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  5. Anonymous: The playbooks were handed out during spring practices. Matt finally worked up the nerve to ask for one on the sixth day of practice.

    Kathleen: Take the bull by the horns, paste a big grin on your face, and show those other parents how to organize a carpool. You will not regret it.

    Coach: Okey doke. I'll get right on it as soon as I finish "On Mice and Men." Which could very well be after I see you in October.

    smv: You are officially my favorite sister for using the word "enjoyed" where others might have written "endured." I am glad to have written a post obnoxious enough to inspire you to scale new intellectual heights.

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  6. I just want you to know that the rather obscure reference (to most of the world) to Clair Bee/Chip Hilton did not come from me. Dave

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  7. What time do you go to bed that you are up and reading at 4 a.m.!?

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