Saturday, March 29, 2008
Yeller Dog 2 blog 6
I remember the first time I ever laid my hands and eyes on the trombone. I was getting ready to start fifth grade band and I had been desperate for an instrument that mom and dad could afford. I had the choice between a flute or a trombone. I was a big tom-girl and I didn’t want a girly instrument like a flute, so I went with the trombone. Uncle Hack had a trombone from when he played in Chicago with a jazz band. Grandma Coleman took me to Uncle Hack’s to see if he would let me have his trombone. Hack seemed ecstatic to have someone want to play an instrument he had fallen in love with decades before. He was sitting down to at his kitchen table wearing a grey Green Bay Packers sweatshirt that he always wore when it was cool outside. The poor man had diabetes, liver problems from his prior alcoholism, and suffering from some Alzheimer’s. I sat down across from him at the table and we sat in a comfortable silence while Grandma went into his bedroom closet to get the trombone for me to take home. When Grandma brought it out, I could’ve died with embarrassment at the thought of playing such a thing. It was in a hard black case that had been covered in gold lettering that had started to peel off from age and neglect, the letters spelled out Yeller Dog 2, South Side Chicago, and Hack Crouse on the top and sides of the case. The case was also covered with all sorts of knick knacks: a little plaque on the left side saying “Old sailors never die, they just get a little Dinghy;” a sand dollar on the right side that was now yellow instead of white; a small gold turtle on the left; and the crest of the marines shining brightly on the right side. It was the oddest and oldest thing I had ever seen. I started thinking of how embarrassing it would be to walk in with this trombone case and now I wasn’t even sure I wanted to play the trombone. I looked at Uncle Hack and I could see he was beaming with pride and excitement over the old trombone. I had to smile in spite of myself; I hadn’t seen him so happy since Aunt Jenny died and I didn’t want to ruin that moment. I opened up the case and the smile on my face was no longer artificial. I had fallen in love with this shining piece of brass before me. I opened up the straps that were holding down the pieces and fumbled through putting it together. After I put it together I stared at the master piece in front of me. I found the latch on the slide and tried to move it; it made a horrid kind of grinding sound; so I put the slide back into position and latched it. I started looking at everything else on the trombone. There were dents on the slide down at the bottom and dents on the bell of the trombone, but the dents didn’t hinder its beauty. At the tuning slide I saw a crest of sorts. Uncle hack had put the marine crest on one side and a crest with two skeleton keys with crowns on the head of each key and the keys were crossing on the other side. Then I saw it, Yeller Dog 2, a label that had been stickered onto the side of the trombone’s bell. I remember looking at that sticker and then looking at Uncle Hack, “Uncle Hack, what does Yeller Dog 2 mean?” After I asked he smiled and his eyes light up with an inner fire. He told me about when he was playing up in Chicago in an old jazz band. He had been warming up his instrument and all of a sudden the trombone made a weird sound. One of the men in the band told him it sounded like an old yeller dog. From then on, his trombone was called yeller dog. When yeller dog had finally broken down and he had to get a new one, he named his new one yeller dog 2. He was so proud of his instrument that it rubbed off onto me. We sat down the rest of the visit just talking about his life with the trombone. I knew then and there that he would always have a special place in his life for me.
At the funeral I had played “Anchor’s Aweigh,” and I had put in a glissando just for him. He had been a merchant marine in World War II, Korea, and some of Vietnam. He would never tell me any of the war stories because I was a girl; and the era he grew up in, it was best for women in general not to know the details of the wars. It was weird to know that Uncle Hack would no longer be around. Before he had died he had been put into a nursing home because he needed around the clock care. He didn’t really remember anyone anymore. He did have good days when he did remember everyone, but they were becoming few. A few weeks before he died my mother had woken him up from a nap for a visit and he told her that he couldn’t talk to her long because he was in a meeting with God and Jesus. Even though his memory was fleeting he always asked my mother if I still had his trombone and if I was playing it. I was always remembered because of that trombone and that made me special to him. I loved this man greatly and I still have the trombone. I am saving it for my children so that one of them might play it later in school and enjoy its memory as much as I have.
Monday, March 24, 2008
my first memories of reading
I read somewhere that most children don’t learn to read until they are about 6 or 7 years old. I was reading full books at the age of 5. My earliest memories of reading were mostly in school. I was in a class that was a mixture of kindergarteners and first graders. I was in kindergarten. The school I attended was in Indianapolis. I am not one hundred percent sure of the name of the school, but I think it was called School 67. Some of the schools down there are numbered, like they don’t even have names. I remember standing in front of my class reading books to them. I can’t recall any titles of the books that I read. Since I was only in kindergarten, I imagine that they were fairy simple books. Dr. Seuss books, Clifford, the big red dog books, and other books of the same genre I think was what I read the most. I also remember that I was one of the only kids that could read to the class like that. My aunt worked in the school that I attended and she would work with me a lot to improve my reading. Before I was even in school my aunt would take me with her to work and I would sit in the class with the other kids. I absolutely loved it. I loved the idea of being with the “older” kids and doing what they were doing. The school was located about three blocks from where I lived; I used to walk to school with my aunt and cousins. Three blocks isn’t that far to walk, but I couldn’t get there fast enough. I would skip, run, and dance all the way to school. That was when I was young and thought that going to school was the best thing in the whole world. Now as I have gotten older, I have lost that feeling of excitement and thrill. I wish I had bottled some of those feelings, because I know that they would come in hand on many occasions. I may not have the enthusiasm, but I have the memories, and those will never be lost.
Thursday, March 20, 2008
my most important event, so far...
Memories of my Nana
My Nana, as I called her, would become very frustrated when we didn't know what she was trying to say. Her therapist taught her to write again, so that she could communicate by writing when she couldn't do so with words. Her writing didn't look like it used to at all. Her once beautifully flowing cursive now looked like the works of an elementary student, who just learned cursive. She couldn’t write long, detailed paragraphs, but short sentence fragments that gave us a hint on what she wanted to say.
It was sad for me to see my grandma in this shape. She was a very independent woman. She was a person that liked to go out and do things all the time. Once she had the stroke she was extremely embarrassed to go out in public. Nana cared a lot, sometimes too much, about what other people thought of her. She didn’t ever want to be a burden on anyone. She had to do everything on her own and by herself.
When she finally got to home it wasn’t long before she was back in the hospital. Three or four months after she got to go home she had to go back to the hospital. My Nana now had the pneumonia. It really sucked that she got through her stroke, but was now battling this. I really thought that once she got home she would remain there.
A week passed by, and my Nana was only getting worse with each day that passed. She was still weak from her stroke, and having the pneumonia only made her weaker. She couldn’t fight any longer and I began to realize that she wouldn’t be with us much longer. Her eyes no longer had the will to live, and she was literally skin and bones.
The night she died my parents went to see her at the hospital. They told me that I needed to go see her, but I wanted to go to a friends instead. When they got home they told me that she looked horrible. This was no shocker, because she had been deteriorating for the past week. I didn’t think much of it; I knew that I would get to go see her tomorrow. Or so I though. That night we got a call the she had died. I will never forgive myself for not going to see her one last time. I felt so selfish because I wanted to go to my friends instead of visiting the only grand parent that has ever been there for me. Now she is gone and there isn’t anything that I can do about it.
4. Her name is Marissa
I called my mom to let her know that her second grandchild had picked a snowstorm to arrive in and asked her her opinion in how I should go about getting to the hospital. She suggested I call an ambulance. After getting off the phone I went to Tharon, who was in the bedroom putting on layers of clothing and asked him if he wanted me to call an ambulance. He asked about my contractions and I told him they were mild, however my water had broken and that was my immediate concern. Anything could happen at this point and I did not want to have this baby at home. He returned to the window in the living room looking out to the front of the house. The snow was about four foot deep in the front of our house. It lay parallel with the front step and there was no path to the street. We hadn’t bothered to shovel and the kids footsteps had been long since covered in fresh snow that had seemed to never end.
I called the hospital and told them of my condition and to expect my arrival at some point and asked for their suggestion on how I should get there. The nurse reminded me of the snow emergency and suggested I call an ambulance. After hanging up the phone I did call for an ambulance. They responded in about five minutes to my home. I sat patiently, watching them arrive. I chuckled as I watched my husband struggle to lift boulders of snow with a pathetically small shovel, attempting to make a path for me to get to the ambulance. Momentarily, a backhoe pulled up and began to dig out the snow in a narrow path leading to my front door. Approximately twenty minutes after the ambulance arrived I was on my way to the hospital. Twelve hours later I had a beautiful, healthy baby girl and had a memory of labor to beat all.