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Friday, July 31, 2020

Moving Day.

The fun of moving day. Boxes, boxes and guess what??? More boxes!

Did I mention that I dislike moving? So the next phase is underway. I moved from my apartment at the end of my lease to Q’s. Yesterday, we got the garage door opener for the house we are both moving to, together. A new chapter in life is about to begin. It is exciting really. The physical labor part can be taxing though, which only makes sense. Take stuff – shove it into boxes – move it – take it out of boxes. A lot goes into the process really. This is probably my 12 move since I have been an adult, if 12, then it would be more. Quite a bit more if you count a few stops along the way. I am blessed though, so I do not want to sound like I am complaining beyond just a sigh of work… I took off TH – SUN this week to make it happen and we have made good progress so far. I hired a couple people to help with the piano and china cabinet, tomorrow. We also get the keys tomorrow.

I am about 1/3 of the way done with Chapter 18 of my novel. We are taking some winding roads friends. It make take a week to finish this one based on the moving. BUT I do have all 30+ chapters outlined. That may change slightly based on a new life that is taking place right now. We will see.

WW. joe



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Tuesday, July 28, 2020

creative writing: devastation. the life after (chapter 17)

Continued from chapter 16 of the Devastation Series.

…Valerie… I remembered all of her help throughout the day and the importance of her being involved with the passing of Dad. I knew, and it was obvious, that I was not going to hold it together. The funeral was the day after tomorrow, and I needed to sober up by then. “Today is the day,” I tried to convince myself, but quickly failed.

It was the middle of the night when, in between spells, that I remembered I needed to call into work. We had a bereavement policy, which I had never used before. I would have to look up the specific details but I knew that I had at least 3 days off. Which, at that moment, were going to be needed for several reasons. I did still have some vacation time left, but I could not remember how much I had accumulated. It took me quite some time to focus long enough to compose the email. After I finished writing it, I edited it with two different apps to cover up my wandering mind and focused past the double vision. I pressed send and bobbled over to the fridge where I topped off my glass after a swig. “Today can be later,” I reminded myself.

The hangover went away as my body saturated in the burning liquid as it sloshed it’s way to my stomach. I had momentarily given in to self-pity. I thought that I was at rock-bottom and didn’t see any way out other than continuing through. I felt the liquid burn into my stomach and several random things came to mind: Dad’s funeral, my falsified paperwork, my mother baking, and the fishing trip that I shared with Valerie at the hospital. Valerie. Once I thought of her, I depressed myself with feelings of worthlessness. I felt bursts of joy thinking about her friendship and simultaneous hot flashes of shame. I imagined that I had let her down. My father would have been let down. No one would understand. I didn’t understand… thoughts intermixed in my mind like a maze of tangled squiggles with no visible ends.

I sat at the desk and looked at the stack of things that I had tossed in a box from previous sorts. I pulled out the photos and scanned over them. They were dated and it appeared to be a different time. Samuel was smiling. It was the picture that I had placed in my pocket when I first walked through the apartments. I straightened the fold and flipped over the photo of a young woman. “Who are you guys?” I wondered. I flipped through the journals in front of me and wondered what it was like then. I knew things were not simpler. I believed it was a fallacy to think one generation had it worse than another. “We walked uphill in the snow both ways…” had transcended time and upgraded to fit the now. Each generation had it bad in their own way. The troubles of the time were unique to it and that part still applied to today. In a moment’s logic, I realized that I had it just as hard or less than others, it just happened to be mine which made it all the more intense and real. In between the spells, I reminisced about life growing up. Fishing trips with dad, a family vacation, the distance that crept in when we were least expecting it in the form growing up or being older.

While wasting time, I opened my shopping app and ordered another bottle of bourbon. Today was already ruined so, I decided to just forget about as much of it as possible. The drink would be delivered around 10 AM, and I would walk to the door to pick it up. I knew not to drive. I thought back to how long it had been since I binge drank. The last time that I remembered doing that was a time when Maggie had left me. She had blamed me for everything that had gone wrong in her life, so it would have seemed, and I apologetically accepted all of it. The thought made me angry and I swigged from the bottle thinking how wrong she was. “What am I trying to prove?” I asked into the air. Of course, there was no answer, but I was awakening in some aspects while dying in others. Something was happening inside of me. Something deeper than the stupor I was engaging in. I felt like things were going to happen, but I didn’t realize the rollercoaster that it was going to take.

I faded in and out over the night. I tried to watch more videos on Samuel’s Mac, but couldn’t stay awake long enough to get into them. I would start one, and wake up as it was ending. So I abandoned that idea with another drink and soon faded off again. I repeated that cycle throughout the night until the morning came. I had given up on keeping it together by that point and succumbed to alcoholism. Of course, that realization led to even more shame and repeat to the cycles. As the sun lasered into my eyes through the blinds, I saw a text from Valerie. “Are you up?” she asked. I did not reply and rolled over with a moan. The next text was alerting me that my delivery had arrived.

I barely kept it together as the wall kept me straight down the long corridor. I focused foot by foot, one in front of the other outside of the complex. A young man, wearing a hipper than life attitude greeted me. “Get’n into it early eh?” He chucked. 

“I never stopped.” I rasped out in a cold monotone admitting it to it out loud. I picked the bag from his hands and teetered left to right back inside. I am sure I heard him scoff at me, but I was hyper-focused on details at the moment. I was possibly reading into something that was not there. My mind was becoming alert with the first physical activity of the day. When I got back inside of 116 I poured a drink from the new bottle. I decided to do spiced rum instead before checking out last night. I remembered ordering but the details were fuzzy at best. The small bag of groceries was a surprise, but the chips served as a breakfast taming the slosh inside of my gut. I grabbed my drink and chips and plopped down at the desk.

Valerie continued to text, or at least that was how it felt. I was ashamed and ghosting her by this point. I suspected that she knew it too. After several open-ended questions without answers, it stopped. I convinced myself that it was for the better. No one would understand me, so I thought, relying on my environmental training. I was just a failure and rock bottom only happened to me. The weight of the burden could almost be felt on my shoulders. Every breath felt like a sigh and every neuron that was firing was against me. I sipped my drink and flipped through the pictures that were piled in a box. Samuel was taking my mind away from the current moments, but that was not solving anything that needed to be solved. I had wished that I found a reason at that moment to carry on.

Hours had passed from my lapses when I jumped up from the couch. An unexpected voice towered over me. “Aaarrrggghhh…” I garbled out. Focusing my eyes I could see long hair draped over a shoulder, the shadows softly painted Valerie’s cheeks and silhouette. 

“Consider this your wake up call.” She plainly stated.

“What does that mean?” clearing my throat afterward. Her eyes were full of sadness and it was obvious that she had been crying. “You been crying?”

“Yes. Jake. I have,” she said in a nearly monotone voice, “I didn’t run from it.” The truths hurt, but it was expected. I nodded, knowing that I had that coming. I reached the side table and condensation coldly ran down the glass making a trail. I finished what was in the glass.

“I suppose you came to tell me all of the horrible things…” I started but was cut off.

“Stop it. NOW.” A stern look glazed over her face. “I don’t know why I am here Jake, but I… want to make sure you are alright and not wasting away in a psoriasis dream or something.”

“I don’t know… Val… I… just don’t know…” I stammered out.

“We have a big day tomorrow Jake. YOU, have a big day tomorrow. You need to at least pull yourself together for that.” She pursed her lips. I flopped back into the pillowy cushions of the couch.

“I know…” I felt like I was taking punishment from a parent, but I knew she was not treating it that way. “I’ll straighten up…tomorrow…” I snickered back, testing the waters.

“Okay, Jake. I am holding you to that.” She looked away and around the apartment. “Looks like you got some stuff done…” She tried to meet my sarcasm with the same. I got up and scooted across the floor in my socks, lazily dragging my feet, while I went to the kitchen for a refill. I pulled down another glass and filled it partway adding ice cubes.

“If you’re hanging out with me, I think you need a drink.” She reluctantly took it from my hands and said thanks in a dismissive tone. After a short time, she shot part of the glass and leaned over from the chair and placed it on the corner of the desk. She became intrigued by the desk and moved so she could properly sit at the desk. I stared off into the distance while she rummaged through the contents.

After a few minutes of silence, she called over to me, “Jake… where did you get these photos?” She held up the bent eared pair that I was admiring earlier.

“One of them was in a box, and the other was in another apartment when I checked it out,” I replied. “Several others were just scattered around while I organized the place… er-uh wrecked it, more-alike.” She was studying the materials on the desk and must have read several of the articles. She continued sitting at the desk and sorted for what seemed like a long time, placing a pile on the right-hand side that she had viewed or gone through. She seemed to sort the photos carefully and fancied the dog eared copy. As I finished another glass, everything became intense for me.

“I am sorry Valerie,” I blurted as I began to sob. My hands covered my face while I started to cry. Thoughts of my childhood of my father were sandwiched with his dying face; the pigment fading and the sounds of machines harmoniously whisking him away. I heard coos immediately and leg touching my left thigh as she rushed right beside of me. “Jake… it’s ok…let it out…” She said in a caregiving reassuring voice. I turned my body, hands over face, towards her shoulders and chest. Her arms wrapped around me in a bearhug type posture while she whispered to me, “It is going to be all-right… all-right.” For the next while, I phased in and out. I was awake, sobered up temporarily by the rushes of adrenaline. She soothed me the entire time.

Her hair was thick but flowed over her shoulders with a bounce. I felt a beauty mark on my cheek as I laid into the divot of her well-defined neck. Her voice became a melody after some kind a scent with sandalwood tickled my nose. Her shoulder wet with tears felt like a memory foam pillow. My mind went still and I explored emotions. She told me stories of my father while he worked around the farm. We could both chuckle at the antics he performed while learning the simple life. In my typical father form, he would make the simple… complicated. We covered a decade that evening, weaving in and out of tears and giggles. It was late when I got up to use the bathroom. On my way back, I took a chug from the bottle. “Tomorrow.” Valerie sternly stated.

“Yes ma’am,” I said with a slosh. I made my way back to the couch. While she wasn’t wrapped around me, she sat close turned towards me. I looked over to see a clock, “11:01” rolled before my eyes. The adrenaline was fading and I was more and more out of it. It was then that Valerie told me the story of how she met my father.

While I think she was telling me at that moment, since I must have appeared “not all with it,” but I held on as long as I could to listen. I learned that she was abused by her ex-husband and ran away. She lived close to my dad and they befriended with common interests. She was close to my age, so he treated her like a daughter. Once, her ex became really angry about a miscarriage. She, like many people, thought that maybe a child would change everything. The world became grayer for a long period and he blamed her for everything. She wasn’t healthy enough, or she didn’t do the right steps… was what she shared. Tears slowly came from the corners of her eyes. It was obvious, to me, that it was from the loss of a child not from the ex-husband – or even the treatment that she endured. I felt her elegant fingers in the back of my hair as if combing down a cowlick. Before I blacked out for the night, I remember fading in and out… she talked to me for hours that night.

When I woke in the morning, she was gone. I groggily came to – and curiosity overcame me, “Where is she?” Or perhaps I did not recall the night correctly, I wondered. I wobbly stood up as a sharp pain struck between my eyes forcing an awkward squint. The light seemed so bright. I felt like a new kitten seeing the world for the first time. One with a terrible headache. I reached to the ceiling and twisted side to side to get my body going. I walked to the kitchen and poured a cold glass of water. I pulled the bourbon from the fridge and took a tiny shot to mitigate the hangover. I turned around facing the desk and couch and noticed a note on the counter. I slid the post-note towards me while widening my eyes. I rubbed the sleep out and read the note. It read: Jake – I went to the store to grab a coffee. I needed to move around for a bit. Your couch hurts. I will be back shortly. – V.

I rummaged through the clothes and grabbed a new set of clothes. I grabbed a dressier shift, jeans, and Nintendo socks. I turned on the shower to hot and cracked the bathroom door to keep the steam in. I turned on a 30’s station over the Echo and went to wash off the nights before. I looked towards the couch and could see two impressions. One where I hunkered on the arm as a pillow and another beside where I was. She stayed close all night long. The image softened my mood and shown a void inside of me. I felt a nurtured warmth that I had not experienced in longer than I could recognize. I slid into the bathroom and into the shower. The music echoed in the hollowed-out room and was muffled under the shower spray. I hummed on along to the song. The class rock was one of those radio hits that you would hear in nearly every rotation. I was mostly done when I was startled. “How are you feeling?” The woman’s voice felt stabbing in the steam.

“Je’sus…” I exclaimed, “Alexa – pause…” The streaming stopped.

“You really need to mellow out a bit more dude…” She confidently cast out. I instinctively covered my man parts and coward backward.

“What are you doing?!?!” I echoed in the shower.

“Re-lax, I didn’t come in… I am back with the coffee and we need to get there before any guests.” She coaxed at me. I studied the shapes in the room through the blurry doors to satisfy my insecurity. She was not in the room. “Get a move-on…” She trailed off into the other room. The music started playing again, slightly louder than before. 

“Comin’ mo-ther.” I snarkily chuckled. I finished the shower, dried off, and got dressed. “Ugghhh,” came out of my mouth as the clothes stuck to my skin in the steam and wetness. I opened the door and the clouds swirled overhead. The cool ambient air whisked across my face and a sniffle overcame me. I looked out from the doorway and marveled at her for a moment. Leaning on the doorway, I watched her mouth the words to the song and nod along to the music. She was looking at the photos again and taking a couple of pictures of them. “What are you doing?” I broke the silence.

“This photo is interesting to me. So instead of taking it, I just snapped a copy…” Smiling back to me.

I walked out into the main room area and saw the steam dissipate around me. I found a backpack and grabbed a spare set of comfier clothes and put them into it. I imagined that I could change if I got hot with dressier clothes or if I was uncomfortable. I stashed a spare phone charger, and a few other items into the pockets, just in case. When I packed, I always tried to think ahead, though it rarely paid off. Many of the protein bars that I pocketed ended smashed, melted, or some other form of disgusting. The one time it paid off – fed the ongoing contingency planning. I packed one of the journals on the table, not paying attention to what order I pulled from. Just in case… I finished tucking things away and we headed over to the funeral home.

The sun tucked behind the clouds but the heat remained. A humidity that felt like a storm brewing was sitting on us and making moving around miserable. The environmental system in the car ran quite cool – just making the in and out harder to bare. The ride over was calm but the anxiety was mounting for both of us. The music was just a thing in the background. The words didn’t register and the music seemed to fade in and out as cascades of thought rushed in. We pulled into the parking lot and parked near the entrance. We backed in and sat facing the city for a moment. The world pressed on. Masks were donned on faces, and drones continued to circulate the streets. I wondered how the world could continue while this loss was happening? I started imagining my view and my happiness vs. the world and its views. Valerie stirred and we prepared to get out. The wind was calm and outside was balmy. Dark clouds were feathered into the sky and the horizon was dark again. “It can’t rain all the time…” I mumbled with pessimistically. 

“But seasons of storms come and go…” Valerie answered. And she was right. Storms just seem to be how it was at that moment.

We were greeted at the door by a man in a classic tuxedo and were shown to a room down a hall to the right. The room was set up for people showing. A light haloed over the casket and a prostrate body was on display. The faded made-up face paled unrecognizably in the light. The coffee-colored casket with a sky blue lining sat half-open in a traditional style showcase. My father froze in a moment of time, eerily still, with cheeks every so slightly drawn in. The observation that I had in the hospital, remained more true at that moment compared to back then. The soul adds definition to a body and without it, the essence of the person is lost.

People came in and shared their love. Friends of Dad’s that we knew and were strangers greeted us and said their goodbyes. The distant family also signed the digital guest log and told quick stories bringing memories to life. It was neat to see Valerie and my life intersect with familiar faces that knew each of us. It made the small world cliche feel very real. We continued greeting and listening to people ramble on with good times until 11:00 AM when a minister friend of the family took the podium beside the casket. He began with a prayer and continued for almost 30 minutes with a precise and colorful eulogy. Time seemed to race by…

The service went fast. I found myself in tangent thoughts from tidbits of stories. The minister would create an opening and I would blaze down a side trail, coming in and out of the service. When it was complete the funeral home emptied and the pallbearers moved the casket to the car. Valerie and I rode in the family car to the cemetery. It was steaming, hot, and cold at the same time. The seats smelled like heated leather and of cheap aftershave. The last portion of the service seemed surreal until I tossed a handful of dirt over the casket in the ground. We stayed around until the last people left and before the teams enclosed the tombs. I don’t remember where the time disappeared to,

The headstone was non-traditional. The stone had the formal marble etchings but also an embedded digital frame. The solar-powered image would change every day and would be altered by his Legacy Site. The stone also had a QR Code installed which would take you to the digital presence of my father. There were many options but we went very traditional: a brief bio, family tree, pictures, and his life’s work and dreams. The Legacy Keepers could alter at any time – but the basics were set up by eulogy and funeral home. As Valerie and I walked away from the pit, a cold and piercing realization happened in an instant. A part of me, too, had died that day, and more was about to… More than I could have ever imagined.

Valerie dropped me off at the apartment. She appeared to be holding it together but needed some time to clear her thoughts and head. I walked into the apartment and tossed my bag near the couch. I opened the door and looked down the hall making sure Valerie had left. I shut the door and opened the fridge and took the cap off the rum. My stomach cramped up with a large amount of alcohol that flooded into my system. I ordered another bottle and went over to the couch until I ran down to pick the bottle up. The day was over in those moments and I lost track of activity and time. I looked at the clock every so often to see hours had passed. I become lost in myself and the bottle for… I was not sure for how long. It had been long enough to finish one bottle.

I do not know what time it was when I heard pounding at the front door. I looked through the peephole and the Police were banging on the door. “Jake open up, we know you’re home buddy…” I panicked, and frantically tried to wrap my mind around the situation, but I could not. I was certain that I was being identified as a squatter. Being away from work – it was probably noticed when researching the lodging situation. A weight smashed into my chest, and I lost my breathing. I had bet it was the ticket that I received. “Was I supposed to appear in court, sh#t… I don’t remember.” I couldn’t think straight. Nothing made sense. In a split-second, I grabbed the bottle, shoved it into my backpack, and fell out of the bedroom window. I realized it was evening and woozily stood. I saw lights in front and decided to dart down the alley. I was not sure what I was doing – but nothing seemed right now.

“What the f*&# is going on?” I hid by a dumper several blocks away. I passed out from stress and alcohol after my heart stopped racing.

Read more of the Devastation Series.



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Monday, July 27, 2020

creative writing: devastation. the life after (chapter 17)

Continued from chapter 16 of the Devastation Series.

…Valerie… I remembered all of her help throughout the day and the importance of her being involved with the passing of Dad. I knew, and it was obvious, that I was not going to hold it together. The funeral was the day after tomorrow, and I needed to sober up by then. “Today is the day,” I tried to convince myself, but quickly failed.

It was the middle of the night when, in between spells, that I remembered I needed to call into work. We had a bereavement policy, which I had never used before. I would have to look up the specific details but I knew that I had at least 3 days off. Which, at that moment, were going to be needed for several reasons. I did still have some vacation time left, but I could not remember how much I had accumulated. It took me quite some time to focus long enough to compose the email. After I finished writing it, I edited it with two different apps to cover up my wandering mind and focused past the double vision. I pressed send and bobbled over to the fridge where I topped off my glass after a swig. “Today can be later,” I reminded myself.

The hangover went away as my body saturated in the burning liquid as it sloshed it’s way to my stomach. I had momentarily given in to self-pity. I thought that I was at rock-bottom and didn’t see any way out other than continuing through. I felt the liquid burn into my stomach and several random things came to mind: Dad’s funeral, my falsified paperwork, my mother baking, and the fishing trip that I shared with Valerie at the hospital. Valerie. Once I thought of her, I depressed myself with feelings of worthlessness. I felt bursts of joy thinking about her friendship and simultaneous hot flashes of shame. I imagined that I had let her down. My father would have been let down. No one would understand. I didn’t understand… thoughts intermixed in my mind like a maze of tangled squiggles with no visible ends.

I sat at the desk and looked at the stack of things that I had tossed in a box from previous sorts. I pulled out the photos and scanned over them. They were dated and it appeared to be a different time. Samuel was smiling. It was the picture that I had placed in my pocket when I first walked through the apartments. I straightened the fold and flipped over the photo of a young woman. “Who are you guys?” I wondered. I flipped through the journals in front of me and wondered what it was like then. I knew things were not simpler. I believed it was a fallacy to think one generation had it worse than another. “We walked uphill in the snow both ways…” had transcended time and upgraded to fit the now. Each generation had it bad in their own way. The troubles of the time were unique to it and that part still applied to today. In a moment’s logic, I realized that I had it just as hard or less than others, it just happened to be mine which made it all the more intense and real. In between the spells, I reminisced about life growing up. Fishing trips with dad, a family vacation, the distance that crept in when we were least expecting it in the form growing up or being older.

While wasting time, I opened my shopping app and ordered another bottle of bourbon. Today was already ruined so, I decided to just forget about as much of it as possible. The drink would be delivered around 10 AM, and I would walk to the door to pick it up. I knew not to drive. I thought back to how long it had been since I binge drank. The last time that I remembered doing that was a time when Maggie had left me. She had blamed me for everything that had gone wrong in her life, so it would have seemed, and I apologetically accepted all of it. The thought made me angry and I swigged from the bottle thinking how wrong she was. “What am I trying to prove?” I asked into the air. Of course, there was no answer, but I was awakening in some aspects while dying in others. Something was happening inside of me. Something deeper than the stupor I was engaging in. I felt like things were going to happen, but I didn’t realize the rollercoaster that it was going to take.

I faded in and out over the night. I tried to watch more videos on Samuel’s Mac, but couldn’t stay awake long enough to get into them. I would start one, and wake up as it was ending. So I abandoned that idea with another drink and soon faded off again. I repeated that cycle throughout the night until the morning came. I had given up on keeping it together by that point and succumbed to alcoholism. Of course, that realization led to even more shame and repeat to the cycles. As the sun lasered into my eyes through the blinds, I saw a text from Valerie. “Are you up?” she asked. I did not reply and rolled over with a moan. The next text was alerting me that my delivery had arrived.

I barely kept it together as the wall kept me straight down the long corridor. I focused foot by foot, one in front of the other outside of the complex. A young man, wearing a hipper than life attitude greeted me. “Get’n into it early eh?” He chucked. 

“I never stopped.” I rasped out in a cold monotone admitting it to it out loud. I picked the bag from his hands and teetered left to right back inside. I am sure I heard him scoff at me, but I was hyper-focused on details at the moment. I was possibly reading into something that was not there. My mind was becoming alert with the first physical activity of the day. When I got back inside of 116 I poured a drink from the new bottle. I decided to do spiced rum instead before checking out last night. I remembered ordering but the details were fuzzy at best. The small bag of groceries was a surprise, but the chips served as a breakfast taming the slosh inside of my gut. I grabbed my drink and chips and plopped down at the desk.

Valerie continued to text, or at least that was how it felt. I was ashamed and ghosting her by this point. I suspected that she knew it too. After several open-ended questions without answers, it stopped. I convinced myself that it was for the better. No one would understand me, so I thought, relying on my environmental training. I was just a failure and rock bottom only happened to me. The weight of the burden could almost be felt on my shoulders. Every breath felt like a sigh and every neuron that was firing was against me. I sipped my drink and flipped through the pictures that were piled in a box. Samuel was taking my mind away from the current moments, but that was not solving anything that needed to be solved. I had wished that I found a reason at that moment to carry on.

Hours had passed from my lapses when I jumped up from the couch. An unexpected voice towered over me. “Aaarrrggghhh…” I garbled out. Focusing my eyes I could see long hair draped over a shoulder, the shadows softly painted Valerie’s cheeks and silhouette. 

“Consider this your wake up call.” She plainly stated.

“What does that mean?” clearing my throat afterward. Her eyes were full of sadness and it was obvious that she had been crying. “You been crying?”

“Yes. Jake. I have,” she said in a nearly monotone voice, “I didn’t run from it.” The truths hurt, but it was expected. I nodded, knowing that I had that coming. I reached the side table and condensation coldly ran down the glass making a trail. I finished what was in the glass.

“I suppose you came to tell me all of the horrible things…” I started but was cut off.

“Stop it. NOW.” A stern look glazed over her face. “I don’t know why I am here Jake, but I… want to make sure you are alright and not wasting away in a psoriasis dream or something.”

“I don’t know… Val… I… just don’t know…” I stammered out.

“We have a big day tomorrow Jake. YOU, have a big day tomorrow. You need to at least pull yourself together for that.” She pursed her lips. I flopped back into the pillowy cushions of the couch.

“I know…” I felt like I was taking punishment from a parent, but I knew she was not treating it that way. “I’ll straighten up…tomorrow…” I snickered back, testing the waters.

“Okay, Jake. I am holding you to that.” She looked away and around the apartment. “Looks like you got some stuff done…” She tried to meet my sarcasm with the same. I got up and scooted across the floor in my socks, lazily dragging my feet, while I went to the kitchen for a refill. I pulled down another glass and filled it partway adding ice cubes.

“If you’re hanging out with me, I think you need a drink.” She reluctantly took it from my hands and said thanks in a dismissive tone. After a short time, she shot part of the glass and leaned over from the chair and placed it on the corner of the desk. She became intrigued by the desk and moved so she could properly sit at the desk. I stared off into the distance while she rummaged through the contents.

After a few minutes of silence, she called over to me, “Jake… where did you get these photos?” She held up the bent eared pair that I was admiring earlier.

“One of them was in a box, and the other was in another apartment when I checked it out,” I replied. “Several others were just scattered around while I organized the place… er-uh wrecked it, more-alike.” She was studying the materials on the desk and must have read several of the articles. She continued sitting at the desk and sorted for what seemed like a long time, placing a pile on the right-hand side that she had viewed or gone through. She seemed to sort the photos carefully and fancied the dog eared copy. As I finished another glass, everything became intense for me.

“I am sorry Valerie,” I blurted as I began to sob. My hands covered my face while I started to cry. Thoughts of my childhood of my father were sandwiched with his dying face; the pigment fading and the sounds of machines harmoniously whisking him away. I heard coos immediately and leg touching my left thigh as she rushed right beside of me. “Jake… it’s ok…let it out…” She said in a caregiving reassuring voice. I turned my body, hands over face, towards her shoulders and chest. Her arms wrapped around me in a bearhug type posture while she whispered to me, “It is going to be all-right… all-right.” For the next while, I phased in and out. I was awake, sobered up temporarily by the rushes of adrenaline. She soothed me the entire time.

Her hair was thick but flowed over her shoulders with a bounce. I felt a beauty mark on my cheek as I laid into the divot of her well-defined neck. Her voice became a melody after some kind a scent with sandalwood tickled my nose. Her shoulder wet with tears felt like a memory foam pillow. My mind went still and I explored emotions. She told me stories of my father while he worked around the farm. We could both chuckle at the antics he performed while learning the simple life. In my typical father form, he would make the simple… complicated. We covered a decade that evening, weaving in and out of tears and giggles. It was late when I got up to use the bathroom. On my way back, I took a chug from the bottle. “Tomorrow.” Valerie sternly stated.

“Yes ma’am,” I said with a slosh. I made my way back to the couch. While she wasn’t wrapped around me, she sat close turned towards me. I looked over to see a clock, “11:01” rolled before my eyes. The adrenaline was fading and I was more and more out of it. It was then that Valerie told me the story of how she met my father.

While I think she was telling me at that moment, since I must have appeared “not all with it,” but I held on as long as I could to listen. I learned that she was abused by her ex-husband and ran away. She lived close to my dad and they befriended with common interests. She was close to my age, so he treated her like a daughter. Once, her ex became really angry about a miscarriage. She, like many people, thought that maybe a child would change everything. The world became grayer for a long period and he blamed her for everything. She wasn’t healthy enough, or she didn’t do the right steps… was what she shared. Tears slowly came from the corners of her eyes. It was obvious, to me, that it was from the loss of a child not from the ex-husband – or even the treatment that she endured. I felt her elegant fingers in the back of my hair as if combing down a cowlick. Before I blacked out for the night, I remember fading in and out… she talked to me for hours that night.

When I woke in the morning, she was gone. I groggily came to – and curiosity overcame me, “Where is she?” Or perhaps I did not recall the night correctly, I wondered. I wobbly stood up as a sharp pain struck between my eyes forcing an awkward squint. The light seemed so bright. I felt like a new kitten seeing the world for the first time. One with a terrible headache. I reached to the ceiling and twisted side to side to get my body going. I walked to the kitchen and poured a cold glass of water. I pulled the bourbon from the fridge and took a tiny shot to mitigate the hangover. I turned around facing the desk and couch and noticed a note on the counter. I slid the post-note towards me while widening my eyes. I rubbed the sleep out and read the note. It read: Jake – I went to the store to grab a coffee. I needed to move around for a bit. Your couch hurts. I will be back shortly. – V.

I rummaged through the clothes and grabbed a new set of clothes. I grabbed a dressier shift, jeans, and Nintendo socks. I turned on the shower to hot and cracked the bathroom door to keep the steam in. I turned on a 30’s station over the Echo and went to wash off the nights before. I looked towards the couch and could see two impressions. One where I hunkered on the arm as a pillow and another beside where I was. She stayed close all night long. The image softened my mood and shown a void inside of me. I felt a nurtured warmth that I had not experienced in longer than I could recognize. I slid into the bathroom and into the shower. The music echoed in the hollowed-out room and was muffled under the shower spray. I hummed on along to the song. The class rock was one of those radio hits that you would hear in nearly every rotation. I was mostly done when I was startled. “How are you feeling?” The woman’s voice felt stabbing in the steam.

“Je’sus…” I exclaimed, “Alexa – pause…” The streaming stopped.

“You really need to mellow out a bit more dude…” She confidently cast out. I instinctively covered my man parts and coward backward.

“What are you doing?!?!” I echoed in the shower.

“Re-lax, I didn’t come in… I am back with the coffee and we need to get there before any guests.” She coaxed at me. I studied the shapes in the room through the blurry doors to satisfy my insecurity. She was not in the room. “Get a move-on…” She trailed off into the other room. The music started playing again, slightly louder than before. 

“Comin’ mo-ther.” I snarkily chuckled. I finished the shower, dried off, and got dressed. “Ugghhh,” came out of my mouth as the clothes stuck to my skin in the steam and wetness. I opened the door and the clouds swirled overhead. The cool ambient air whisked across my face and a sniffle overcame me. I looked out from the doorway and marveled at her for a moment. Leaning on the doorway, I watched her mouth the words to the song and nod along to the music. She was looking at the photos again and taking a couple of pictures of them. “What are you doing?” I broke the silence.

“This photo is interesting to me. So instead of taking it, I just snapped a copy…” Smiling back to me.

I walked out into the main room area and saw the steam dissipate around me. I found a backpack and grabbed a spare set of comfier clothes and put them into it. I imagined that I could change if I got hot with dressier clothes or if I was uncomfortable. I stashed a spare phone charger, and a few other items into the pockets, just in case. When I packed, I always tried to think ahead, though it rarely paid off. Many of the protein bars that I pocketed ended smashed, melted, or some other form of disgusting. The one time it paid off – fed the ongoing contingency planning. I packed one of the journals on the table, not paying attention to what order I pulled from. Just in case… I finished tucking things away and we headed over to the funeral home.

The sun tucked behind the clouds but the heat remained. A humidity that felt like a storm brewing was sitting on us and making moving around miserable. The environmental system in the car ran quite cool – just making the in and out harder to bare. The ride over was calm but the anxiety was mounting for both of us. The music was just a thing in the background. The words didn’t register and the music seemed to fade in and out as cascades of thought rushed in. We pulled into the parking lot and parked near the entrance. We backed in and sat facing the city for a moment. The world pressed on. Masks were donned on faces, and drones continued to circulate the streets. I wondered how the world could continue while this loss was happening? I started imagining my view and my happiness vs. the world and its views. Valerie stirred and we prepared to get out. The wind was calm and outside was balmy. Dark clouds were feathered into the sky and the horizon was dark again. “It can’t rain all the time…” I mumbled with pessimistically. 

“But seasons of storms come and go…” Valerie answered. And she was right. Storms just seem to be how it was at that moment.

We were greeted at the door by a man in a classic tuxedo and were shown to a room down a hall to the right. The room was set up for people showing. A light haloed over the casket and a prostrate body was on display. The faded made-up face paled unrecognizably in the light. The coffee-colored casket with a sky blue lining sat half-open in a traditional style showcase. My father froze in a moment of time, eerily still, with cheeks every so slightly drawn in. The observation that I had in the hospital, remained more true at that moment compared to back then. The soul adds definition to a body and without it, the essence of the person is lost.

People came in and shared their love. Friends of Dad’s that we knew and were strangers greeted us and said their goodbyes. The distant family also signed the digital guest log and told quick stories bringing memories to life. It was neat to see Valerie and my life intersect with familiar faces that knew each of us. It made the small world cliche feel very real. We continued greeting and listening to people ramble on with good times until 11:00 AM when a minister friend of the family took the podium beside the casket. He began with a prayer and continued for almost 30 minutes with a precise and colorful eulogy. Time seemed to race by…

The service went fast. I found myself in tangent thoughts from tidbits of stories. The minister would create an opening and I would blaze down a side trail, coming in and out of the service. When it was complete the funeral home emptied and the pallbearers moved the casket to the car. Valerie and I rode in the family car to the cemetery. It was steaming, hot, and cold at the same time. The seats smelled like heated leather and of cheap aftershave. The last portion of the service seemed surreal until I tossed a handful of dirt over the casket in the ground. We stayed around until the last people left and before the teams enclosed the tombs. I don’t remember where the time disappeared to,

The headstone was non-traditional. The stone had the formal marble etchings but also an embedded digital frame. The solar-powered image would change every day and would be altered by his Legacy Site. The stone also had a QR Code installed which would take you to the digital presence of my father. There were many options but we went very traditional: a brief bio, family tree, pictures, and his life’s work and dreams. The Legacy Keepers could alter at any time – but the basics were set up by eulogy and funeral home. As Valerie and I walked away from the pit, a cold and piercing realization happened in an instant. A part of me, too, had died that day, and more was about to… More than I could have ever imagined.

Valerie dropped me off at the apartment. She appeared to be holding it together but needed some time to clear her thoughts and head. I walked into the apartment and tossed my bag near the couch. I opened the door and looked down the hall making sure Valerie had left. I shut the door and opened the fridge and took the cap off the rum. My stomach cramped up with a large amount of alcohol that flooded into my system. I ordered another bottle and went over to the couch until I ran down to pick the bottle up. The day was over in those moments and I lost track of activity and time. I looked at the clock every so often to see hours had passed. I become lost in myself and the bottle for… I was not sure for how long. It had been long enough to finish one bottle.

I do not know what time it was when I heard pounding at the front door. I looked through the peephole and the Police were banging on the door. “Jake open up, we know you’re home buddy…” I panicked, and frantically tried to wrap my mind around the situation, but I could not. I was certain that I was being identified as a squatter. Being away from work – it was probably noticed when researching the lodging situation. A weight smashed into my chest, and I lost my breathing. I had bet it was the ticket that I received. “Was I supposed to appear in court, sh#t… I don’t remember.” I couldn’t think straight. Nothing made sense. In a split-second, I grabbed the bottle, shoved it into my backpack, and fell out of the bedroom window. I realized it was evening and woozily stood. I saw lights in front and decided to dart down the alley. I was not sure what I was doing – but nothing seemed right now.

“What the f*&# is going on?” I hid by a dumper several blocks away. I passed out from stress and alcohol after my heart stopped racing.

Read more of the Devastation Series.



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Creative Writing: Chapter 17 Error

Hello Readers,

Chapter 17 was published prematurely. The screen froze and when I reset the screen it published. For those of you than cannot wait – feel free to read the unedited version(s). I have a series of editing steps that I perform but this one did not make it through those. I will be publishing the edited version with slight changes TODAY.

Again, I am sorry for the post and if you tried to click on the link (since it would not work). Thank you for continuing to read. Your feedback makes a difference and is part of the incentive to continue this story until the close.

Ww. joe



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Thursday, July 16, 2020

Red, White, Black and Blue

So for starters, I am slacking. I am about 1/3 done with Chapter 17 of the Devastation Series, and have just been mentally exhausted. The kind of exhausted where you scroll for hours on some random site (which happened to be the Wish app for me). I didn’t purchase anything – just admired from the window and gasped at some of the suggested purchases. Brain energy expended… nil. I have a busy weekend with moving coming up and the list that I need to finish. In the meantime, I had a thought come to me about a subject which is painfully dear to me. It has to do with the mess of a world right now. Like an entire stew being baked, and the bottom burnt. The whole stew just seems to have that… that flavor now.

Yesterday, I posed this comment:

A Facebook post by me on 07.15

Between this wall post and the story headline, I received quite a bit of feedback. Several people would have jumped me if I was on the street (so it would seem). I am finding a weird paradox of thought around all of this. And during the post and before I replied – I learned something about life. It is a lesson that I should have known but it was my own little taste of what is really happening in the world.

I am not going to go into my political views (but they will likely leak onto the page). I could care less if you are Democrat, Republican, or some hodge podge combination of that with even a new-age twist. But, you cannot look at the media (which is the main/only source of information) and think “Wow, it’s great. Everything is great!” If you can honestly do that… PM me… I would love to have a sample of whatever you are buying or taking. If you are not a fan of the government at this moment, you will be quick to point out the dismantling that is going on. The mis-information. The constant change of decisions. If you are a fan, you will say we are making major changes and that is creating chaos – but I think you would admit it is bumpy… Oh and during this – we are exposing a lot of racism #BLM, and other forms of harassment (such as #MeToo) or gender fluidity. Sprinkle in a made-up pandemic which, for being a lie, sure is creating a lot of illness and death. And while EACH of these are serious topics that deserve attention, we have the news marketing pushing for the sale of their story which means click bait – phrase picking – boundary pushing pieces to get attention. Which they do… So then, the public picks a side. When you read an article – you develop some bias. A feeling inside… And we end up with this huge Venn Diagram of bandwagonneers. What do we do – we react! As the media and news spreads and changes every few minutes we are playing whack-a-mole except instead of putting it away – we seem to be stoking each of the little fires. If you step back from afar – the mosaic comes into view and the whole damn world seems to be on fire.

So after I posted the above. I thought about the reactions to my little blurb. I should have an opinion – but not that one. And obviously, I was discrediting every American, every sacrifice and was using my little pedestal (not a platform LOL), to explain how I was anti-American. Right… I carefully selected the words. I did not want to denounce America – but did want to say that even I was at my breaking point. So I thought about it for awhile and actually got angry about some of the reactions. It was an interesting place to be. They have the same right that I do/did to comment, which I invited, but it was a quick dog-pile, and people actually were fueled by others comments. So I replied, after thinking about this in context of the world – and all of those micro/macro actions… stories… events…

My closure to the conversation after several replies starting coming in.

There was such an influx of comments and pings and feedback when everyone thought I was bashing America (which to be fair is a sitting target right now). Only a couple people asked to understand. The question. The missing piece. The question, which paints the context for what you cannot get across in a blurb. The comment afterwards was from someone who I admire and is quoted as, “What is really happening is people are being willingly manipulated…” Several people liked it. So — do we know it? Are we so beat-up that we feel like we have to beat down everything and apologize later? But how much damage can we issue to later retract? In a moment we went from an opinionated post – to personal judgement from an imaginary context or a context construed from an egocentric view

I am afraid I will not be able to wrap this to a tight close. There are lots of loose ends and questions answered with questions. I wonder what would happen if we just quarantined ourselves FROM THE MEDIA for 14 days. Shut off Facebook for 14 days. If we need to use something to talk to our loved ones – set up a group chat. Maybe that is the action from this? I challenge each of us to #FacebookQuarantine for 14 days. #MediaQuarantine for 14 days. Maybe it is broader than that and should be #UnplugQuarantine. Do whatever that means to you – but clear your head. Catch your breath and let us stop pouncing on things like a feral cat in the corner.



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Monday, July 13, 2020

Monday, Fun-daze, Gone.

Today, whoa is me. No really, it’s not that big of a deal. I just imagined starting off more dramatic. Just thinking about the weekend and my Friday post with grandiose plans… DUH-DUH-DUH (dramatic sounds)… I had this list of things that I wanted to do. And I successfully… avoided and completely incompleted them. Meh. Whatever, I suppose. My body was telling me different things and I listened. The list, that I created on Thur/Fri,is still true. Every one of those items needs to be done at some point, but I think we forget, I forget, that all of me needs to be at a baseline of good. If something needs to get done, but we do not add the weight of our personal state of being, then we are not weighing the options appropriately. That said, when I drafted the list – I was in a good place at that moment. And then… I wasn’t.

I got home and was really tired. Strangely tired for me. Like a tired that I said, “I’m not drinking more coffee…” and then lean into it. I didn’t stay up any night this weekend. On the weekend, I tend to write and have thinky time until 1 AM or so. We normally go to bed around 10-1030. Well, that is the average; that is the target. I took a nap every afternoon this weekend as well. Which, is also not normal for me. I am glad that I did. Today, which is Monday, I feel all the better for it. So I will adapt. I will re-examine my list of to-do’s and consider the total weight of things.

I think we sometimes build these lists and then convince ourselves that since it was written down we have to push right through it. SMART goals demand follow through, accountability, and often do not get re-evaluated with the fluid lives that we lead. We said… so we should do… I don’t think there is anything wrong with evaluating all of your tasks against yourself (mental/physical). If you break your leg – you are obviously not going to run the marathon. So why do we expect things of ourselves to carry on when we are emotionally or mentally weak. It is like a stigma. If it’s not tangible, it’s not real. It is like we have to have a receipt or justification to… someone… something… Yes, there will be items that must be done – even if your legs are falling off (Monty Python just went Nee… through my head… yes there was a broom horse).

Keep in mind in the example, that you aren’t going to have a list where you feel good and feel bad. When you feel better, you change the numbers… Well I suppose you could feel bad/good at the same time if we look at specific tasks to types of ailment. I digress… Just examples… LOL. All of that to show an example of what I realized and let myself be okay with. So as I start off the new week, feeling slightly rested, I am rethinking my list. I am allowing myself the grace to have not completed what I really wanted to do. Burning out and not being able to enjoy being done – would be pointless, I think.

But, there IS hope! I will be cooking in a short time. I hope to be writing right after that. Since I have it mapped out now, I can’t wait to see it close and culminate to that Ah-Hah. Well, my attempt of an ah-hah anyway.

Rambling now. Ww. Joe



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Friday, July 10, 2020

MY DAY FRI-DAY & WEEKEND WONDERing

I decided to take the afternoon off today and get a jump on the weekend. I have a few goals for the weekend, which may be lofty, but I think there are some things that I want to tend to.

Chapter 17 of my novel. I have most of the second half of the novel complete in my mind. I am still flushing out details – but have the overall story mapped. Most of my work now is interweaving sub plots and bringing foreshadowing back around. It is a lot more complicated that I realized but that makes it just as fun for me to write – and hopefully you to read. I would like to have the next chapter completed, scheduled, and start chapter 18. If it stays 100 degrees outside – then the likelihood increases.

Update my Will. With the Corona Virus (COVID19) starting to pick up in Douglas County, Lawrence, KS, I realized that I have not updated my Will for some time. I mean it’s not like I have a gillion dollars, but I would like to see a few things through. Along those same lines I would like to specifically call out how I would like my funeral to be managed. I do not mean to be morbid or depressive, but the reality is we do not know when our time ends. And it’s not like I would have a second change, “Oh next time, I will do…” Next time I am coming back as a trash panda. I’m naming myself Rocket for sh*ts and giggles.

Move my Author Site to its own domain. I mistakenly purchased WordPress Premium for another year (whoops) and really do not want to put more effort into the business related website that I was into last year. I used to blog about consultant type issues in business and frankly I just do not want to spend time thinking about business all day. So I currently have my domain just redirecting to the WordPress version of my author size. joepederson.com redirects to https://josephapederson.wordpress.com/. I am just going to add that domain to the account, and copy my current site there. Flip-flop… well, sort of.

Engross my mind into a new brainless show. We just finished the Michael Peterson trial via The Staircase and The Innocence Project. I have really developed an appreciation for the judicial system (in all of its error and history). So I am taking suggestions if you have an idea as to what would be good. I like a series that is broken up so that I can take it in bite size increments. I like “thinky.”

Continue packing up for the August move. And there is always the dreaded… mmm…mmm.mmmooove. Move. So while I have an apartment taken care of, there is still the big move that needs to happen August 01. So there is much more packing, organization, and planning to do to get ready. The nice thing is (which the window is drastically shrinking), we have the ability to gradually put away non-essential items. We are still out annoyingly far enough that certain items, although infrequent, really cannot be packed just yet.

Make a meal or two. Lastly – it is time to order some groceries. While I mentioned it in an earlier post, some of the staples are low. I have really enjoyed cooking and baking, and it is something that I look forward to doing. I am thinking about a keto friendly sweet n’ sour pork with riced cauliflower.

So here’s to a weekend that is at our doorstep. Lots to do – but nothing so urgent that stress will take over. What are you doing this weekend?

Ww. Joe



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Thursday, July 9, 2020

instapot keto million dollar chicken low carb

I ran out of time to make anything super fancy tonight – and I am out of some ingredients. So I scrounged around for a high protein/fat keto-based meal. The original recipe, from Pinterest, had a few things that I didn’t have or have time to make. I ended up with a pretty darn good recipe that used cream cheese, mayo, chicken, and the old Instapot.

Ingredients

  • 4 oz. softened cream cheese (I put mine in the microwave for 20-30 sec)
  • 1/4 cup mayonnaise
  • 8 cherry tomatoes
  • 1/4 cup colby jack cheese + sprinkle as a topper (maybe another 2 tbs)
  • 3-4 b/s chicken breast or thighs
  1. Slice the baby tomatoes in 1/3’s or 1/2’s
  2. Mix the cream cheese, mayo, tomatoes and 1/4 cup colby jack into a bowl
  3. Place a couple tbs on top of each piece of chicken covering most of the chicken but leaving a creamy mound
  4. Lay the chicken on the grate in the Instapot and set on manual for 25 mins.
  5. Pull out when done and add a little more of the mixture if you so desire.
  6. Sprinkle cheese on top of the hot chicken.
  7. Serve.

I served with cut cucumbers and a side of the cream cheese mixture as a dip. I also fried some green beans in butter as a side. Turned out pretty good.



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Wednesday, July 8, 2020

creative writing: devastation. the life after (chapter 16)

Continued from chapter 15 of the Devastation Series.

His lifeless mannerisms made it hard for me to judge his next words. I was used to doctors not being warm and friendly – especially specialists, but I would have preferred the AI’s prognosis. Some places primarily used AI for routine visits. The AI would often have an avatar to make the event more human-esk. There were two schools of thought with AI doctors. One was the AI would act as the specialist since computers were able to have the in-depth knowledge of a focused topic. The other group thought was that a generalist has better as AI, since the amount of knowledge that could be sifted through in a single moment, covering more possibilities and able to predict more calculable scenarios. Frankly, I did not care at that moment, I just wanted to be assured and get a solution that resulted in a fishing trip when he got better…
“How bad is it Doctor?” I asked, not really wanting to hear what he would say next.
“Jake, is it” The doctor continued with my nod, “your dad has fallen into a coma. I am pretty certain that it is a complication from the cancer and treatments. It wore heavily on his body, it appears…” He conducted what seemed like an entire lecture explaining the details of what had happened to Dad. His voice faded in and out like a large fan blade was spinning in front of me, or maybe a door being opened and shut. I felt Valerie place her hand on my shoulder and the doctor’s voice came back into focus. “Your father has stopped the break down of oxygen and dispelling the waste gases. All of his motor functions are intact, but he has lost communication from his brain. With the trauma to his body, his lungs have stopped processing, and without oxygen, the brain then ceased to function.”
“Cease-d?” I asked with an emphasis on the past tense.
“Jake…” the doctor took a deep breath, “your father is not really alive. The machines are keeping his bodily functions going, but without it, he would shut down… minutes? Maybe a little longer?”
“What does that mean?” I asked, not wanting to comprehend.
“It means, that we can leave him on this life support, but the duration will not change the result. When the body stops this form of processing – there is nothing we can do to gain connectivity back with the brain. Its a system failure, not just an organ or treatment protocol.” He said plainly, trying to judge my next reactions. Tears welled up in my eyes and one slid off my cheek and hit my jeans. “We can give you a little bit to talk about it, I am sorry, son…” He patted my knee and slid back in the chair then walked out of the room. Valerie’s eyes were filled with water, but she never did cry. Instead, she turned to me, and I fell into her shoulder. The tears quickly soaked her shirt and she cooed along with “shhh-shh-shhh” sounds. She cupped the back of my head; I was stone.

We went on like that for a while after the doctor left. Tears, and shoulders, and empty gazes repeated for a couple of hours. The nurse would check back and see us then leave again. The heart monitors acted like a metronome keeping everything in time. Beep…Beep…Beep… Perfect pace and a perfect beat. If only it was doing anything, I thought to myself. Miniature grieving cycles erupted from deep within, but I did not have any words to paint the pictures of my emotions. I imagine they would have been dark rapid scribbles like a child frantically putting all of his weight on the crayon. Everything felt messy.

Valerie never let go, and I always remembered that. I had a friend in my corner in those moments. She had feelings too – but stopped the pursuit of them and just catered to me. I saw a tear fall from her face, only after I sobbed in my worst moment. We were both grieving the reality, though. We had no hope and that was the most devastating thing for us. You are supposed to go to the doctor, they give you a shot… sew up a wound… give you a treatment… and you walk away better. It just did not feel fair. The doctor finally came back in, likely between rounds. He pulled up the same chair and scooted closer towards us. He got on our level and brought a welcoming-embracing vibe. I did not envy that part of his job.

“Jake,” he started softly with his raspy voice. He touched at my knee, “there was no pain. And you’re not holding on to… Him…” He pointed to my chest, “Hold on here.” My chest expanded as I inhaled with an exaggerated exhale.
“Yeah, I get what you’re saying…” I looked up at an angle to him. “What’s next?”
“Whenever you are ready, we will unplug the power to the machines. His body will start shutting down… It is not something that you have to see or stay for… Some people do and some do not.” He watched Valerie and me as he attempted compassion. 
“I will stay, ” I looked to Valerie, which she acknowledged with a nod.
“Okay then, I will tell the nurses and they will prepare. They will be in to talk you through it…” He patted my knee, “I am sorry, son…” His knees popped as got up. He slid the rolling chair back near the desk then looked back at us and gestured a small wave with his hand.

Valerie saw the tears well in my eyes which she signaled by a squeeze of my arm. “You know, you do not have to…” She started to say when I intervened. 
“Will you stay with me?” I looked to her in a suggestive plea tone.
“Oh honey…” she looked straight into my eyes, “I will if that is what you want – I would really like to for me as well,” she reassured me with a pat on the knee. We sat there with the continued beeps, and oxygen machine creating oxygen. I went to the door and looked down the hall, no nurse in sight. I needed to move around for a moment. I walked out of the room and found my way to the nurse’s station. “May I have some coffee? Or the vending machines?” I asked the quiet elderly nurse behind a set of monitors. 
“Sure dear, just go to the break-room around the corner – you will find vending machines, coffee, and a pod machine if you don’t mind the kind we keep in there.” She pointed around the corner to my left. I forced a smile and cautiously navigated around the corner to a small room tucked in, off to the side.

I walked in and the motion lighting kicked on, slightly brightening the room. I scanned the options in the vending but only felt more nauseous by the sugar-coated frosting lumps that lined the shelves. There were chips, muffins, and other pastries, along with gum, mints, and a small tin of jerky. I decided to pass on the options and looked at the coffee vending machine. I saw the machine was powered by E-VendingPlus which was the most common network of payments for vending. Once set up, a fingerprint could be used anywhere followed by the last four of a security code that you selected. You could opt for another layer of security by text, but it seemed that every time I wanted a treat – the network would lag and I would miss my chance. I decided to get a small cocoa as an offering to Valerie and made the selection. I grabbed a small to-go cup off to the side and poured a cup of coffee for me from the bulk pod coffee pot. I sat that off to the side and went to the restroom around the corner while the cocoa brewed.

I walked back into the lounge and grabbed the cocoa and coffee. I shuffled back to the room while balancing the drinks as to not spill anything. I tapped on the door and pushed my way in. Valerie had shed a tear or two but tucked it all back away by the time I arrived. The nurse had arrived and said she would be right back to discuss what was next. I handed Valerie the cocoa apologetically offering it to her. She smelled it, sipped, and sat it off to the side. “Thank you, Jake,” she said then cleared her throat. I motioned to her that she had a cream-stash. I settled back into the chair and took a few controlled breaths. Moments of stillness passed until the nurse came back in.

She went over the details which were very hard to hear. The machines would be shut off, but the monitors would continue to operate. The length of time would not be certain but they believed that it would not be very long, whatever that meant… She assured us that there was no pain, and that way was the natural way of letting things run their course. She walked around the bed, and touched his face as if to say “It will be over soon.” She tucked the blanket into the bed as if snuggling him in. I realized that he was no longer there. The spirit – the light – the charisma that resided in a person’s body, in their face, was absent. I was confused but also realizing this was just a step in the process. We scooted the chairs closer and the nurse looked to us for approval. I nodded and she followed up with a few clicks then unplugged one of the machines. The room got slightly quieter as the pump creating oxygen stopped. His breaths continued, just shallower and slower.

It took a long time to get through the process. Neither of us had experienced anything like that before, and we had no idea what to expect. We watched his body change, slowly, in fractional increments throughout a couple of hours. We took turns telling a story about life with Dad. Her stories were more recent and mostly revolved around the farm. My stories were of childhood mischief and times before I left home after college. It was nice to paint a semi-seamless timeline and have joy without any judgment or feeling included. I felt my grins and my cheeks tingle for holding them. I saw her light up with stories about his stubbornness. We passed the time with tales of love and happiness. We gave his body a spirit with our words; he was in the room with us. When the very end came, and the light flickered out.

His body slowed and the beeping became less in time and more sporadic. Like a domino set lined up to knock down, the chips started to fall. His breaths became deeper and less frequent. The artificial life that was in his body, slowly faded away, and the little light left snuffed out. We stayed by his side until the very end. The nurse came in and asked if we needed anything. She covered his face with the blanket and finalized that it was done. I touched his hand one last time, before being prepared for display. Or did he want cremation? I would have to ask his lawyer tomorrow. The hands were no longer warm but cool to touch. His hands didn’t grip mine and he didn’t move or gesture as we prepared to leave. I had spent all of my tears for the moment, and Valerie maintained her composure. We walked to the car in the most silence we had for hours. There was an absent feeling among us.

Neither of us were hungry, so I stopped at the convenience store by the hospital. I purchased a cigar, a bottle of Dad’s favorite bourbon, and a bag of vinegar & pickle chips. Valerie didn’t want anything and gave me a sideways frown with my drink selection. I had forgotten about her history, I was only thinking of me. She did not judge me or hold it against me as I got back into the driver’s seat. She had set up some music and had put her hair into a side braid. She was trying to relax, and the music climbed over my babbling while we continued to the apartment. I felt different. I am not sure what that meant, specifically, but the drive was not the same as it was earlier. A lot had happened in the last 24 hours and I had new experiences. I felt like a changed man and blessed to have been by my dad’s side. He was not alone.

The shadows grew darker as the sun started to set and lightning flashed in the sky, flickering in the pillowy gray clouds. The season of storms that disappear and reappear without much warning, was upon us. The wind had started to pick up as we pulled into the parking lo. The treetops bent with the wind pulling into the storm. Valerie looked up and out the front windshield bouncing to the side windows. “I think we are going to get wet…” She murmured at the glass and fogged up the window. I felt weird asking – and I felt weird not asking, “Want to come up? I promise I will not try anything…” I shrugged my shoulders trying to brush off the awkwardness with sarcasm.
“Even being chivalrous, you think with your… You assume that I would even think that – let alone try anything.” She chirped.
“You are full of yourself. Thinking that I was thinking about you thinking…Ok – whatever… you may come read journals or hangout if you so desire,” I chuckled.
“I will stop up for a little bit…” She bounced back unphased.
“Slap your mask down – let’s go.” I asserted sliding my mask down while opening the car door. She did the same. As we walked across the parking lot a rushing sound barreled after us. We picked up the pace and the zipper pulled away dropping a large amount of water on us before we made it to the safety of the awning. I fumbled for my keys and she looked at me with annoyance. “Seriously? Now would be a good time for a thumb…” She was cut off by the swing of the door.
“Trust me – I know what would be more convenient.” I raised an eyebrow back at her. We wiped our feet on the dated rug and the cool breeze from the air conditioning sent chills over us. We creaked and squeaked down the hallway to room 116 where, again, I fumbled for keys. I was getting faster – but mastery was still a distant accomplishment. I swung the door open and saw the bottle laying against the walls I entered along with piles of clothes stirred from the morning rummage. 
“Looks like what I remember…” Valerie poked at me.
“Hush…” I replied shutting the door closing us inside. It was weirdly delightful to have company at that moment.

I walked around and placed the convenience store items on the counter. I acted busy for a moment, then poured a small glass to drink and then settled into the couch. To my surprise, Valerie got up and poured a small glass for herself as well. She added a couple of ice cubes and came to the opposite side of the couch. It was then when the awkwardness smacked us in the face. The elephant had become an entire heard, so it would have seemed. The fact that I was effectively squatting, my father had just passed, we are practically strangers, I am drinking my depression, and we were sitting on my couch may have lent to the feeling. Out of the blue, I spoke out, “Do I have to call the hospital back?”
“The funeral arrangement staff will contact you, likely tomorrow.” She calmly replied.
“What am I doing Valerie?” I asked called out, feeling the weight settle as I took a shot like drink.
“Jake – what does that mean?” She inquired. I shared the thoughts in my mind – and shewed the elephants into a corner. My feelings of oddness, my confusion, and lack of any assertiveness did not unsettle her. Maggie would have been upset. When my mind wandered, she became frustrated, often at a disproportionate level, but that was different with Valerie. She had the makings of a close friend. Times like these make relationships.

I continued to sip on my drink until it was empty which I would refill and repeat. As I took another sip, my wrist motion-activated my watch – 08:45 PM. My words were starting to slur together and emotions were festering the size of my intoxication level. Self-awareness was the first feeling to escape me, which was common for others in my situation. “I am ssoorrry Valer….” I stopped myself as she put a finger to her lips.
“Stop it. I promise you – I am not going to sit by while you drink yourself stupid every night. However, sh*t gets hard sometimes, and everyone needs a moment… Some play music… some write stories… some just talk… and while I think you do other things – a drink is the first comfort ” She trailed off. She was right, of course. The weight was lifted off my chest and replaced with a buzzing lightness that disregarded the very real things things going on. I tried to continue, “I don’t felt… feel… like I had time with him. All of those wasted years, ruined time, because of my choices.”
“Jake, there were some distant times. Rocky even, maybe…” She finished her shot, with a cringe and continued, “But that does not change what you did have. The distant years didn’t remove the good memories that you have. He loved you, Jake. He always talked about you – since I have known him, anyway.”
“How I was not there… or how he wished he could see…” I stammered.
“No, Jake. They weren’t all bubbly and sparks didn’t shoot out of your ass like a unicorn – but he talked about the things you guys did. Or what he knew you were doing. He was p-r-o-u-d of you, Jake.” She continued to emphasize my name to ensure that I was not drifting off. She started asking about what I did remember. It was perfect timing since I was about ready to nod off. I was eager to talk though. That drunken story mode was at the forefront and I rambled on for some time – in and out of conversations. They were all over the place as I excitedly remembered different things to share with her. I took another full shot. I was starting to feel a very tired and tingling sensation in the pit of my stomach. I opened the chips to curb whatever was going on inside.

I remember picking my bobble-head off the couch arm. Like a sprinter taking off after set, I lunged into a run to the bathroom, falling to my hands and knees over the porcelain utility. The alcohol was too much for my system and it needed to rid itself of me. I curled inside of myself heaving everything into the water. The smell impaled my face and splattered on my cheeks and forehead. The sparkling white toilet looked more like a trucker restroom than what I was using just a short time ago. I remember hearing her voice come in behind me. She put her hand on my back and sat on the side of the tub. I was not aware of much outside of my 1:1 with the bowl. Her tone was soothing but her words were unrecognizable to me at that moment.

I remember cramping and wiping off my mouth with a wet cloth. I woke back up later asleep on the couch. The reclining chair was moved close beside the couch, near me and I could see a figure in the darkness. The lights were out and two tiny blankets were being used by us. Her hand was poised by where my head was laying as if she stroked my head. I had so much emotion inside of me, and all I wanted to do was go away… My head was pounding so I went to the kitchen and poured a glass of water. Against better judgement I chugged a shot. Then I gulped another and felt the burn down my throat. I swished the water inside my mouth and spat into the sink. I curled up on the couch and waited for the shot to kick in. I cramped from the drinks, but I dreaded the next steps even more: funeral home and legal things.

The sunlight beamed onto the couch and sweat came over me as I hid in the blanket. An instant heat consumed my body and I threw the blankets off of me. I startled awake and bolted straight up – trying to figure out the recent timeline. The chair next to me was empty, but a blanket was there. I was not alone. Valerie was in that chair at some point, it was not a dream. I remembered a few tidbits from the prior evening. I remembered laying in the bathroom as she sat beside me. I remembered her soothing voice during all of the discomforts. I rubbed my eyes – where did she go, I wondered. My doubt kicked in and I assumed that it was all too much. The loss of my father then watching someone that she just met become a basket-case would not be inviting to anyone. I stumbled over to the kitchen and took another swig. The burning was familiar and I exhaled leaning into the sting.

I was several drinks in when Valerie barged back through the door. I was awake and active as was a buzz. I was in the cheerful state when your brain is creative and smiles decorate your face. “Welcome back?” I blurted out.
“Did you really need to drink more?” She cut straight to the point. She was also being rhetorical. She had a feeling of sorrow or disappointment about her that I would come to know well. She slid her mask off of her head and sat it on the table. In her other hand was a coffee carrier. She twisted a drink out and handed it to me. “Drink this Jake. I need you today. Your dad – needs… you… today.” She had a pleading in her voice that was laced with empathy and frustration. She sat the coffee down beside of me. I looked down and away and grabbed the coffee heading back to the couch.

I got properly dressed and sipped the chai coffee that she got for me. We had to go to the funeral home and she ushered me along. We put on our masks and went to her car. Valerie had an all manual car, which was not common anymore. It was several years older with less tech involved. She was one of the few people that did all of the driving and you could tell that she enjoyed it. She turned on a modern radio new age station. It was peaceful and the voices were soft. It may have even been a Christian station, I could not tell. The buzz took me in and out of an attention span riding to the funeral home. We drove mostly in silence despite, aside from the music, my attempts to spark some conversation. Valerie was not pleased with me – and I only had part of the reason why.

We arrived at the funeral home and were greeted by a larger man in a very sharp grey suit. His tie was from a comic that I used to enjoy, and he had a salesperson tone in his voice. His PPE was of a drawn smile. “Greetings and welcome to…” he trailed off to me. I was in awe of the elegance of the building. The building, while impressive, also started to feel oppressive. I heard Valerie say Dad’s name, and we were guided to a room off to the side. The man showed us to seats and walked around and slid the creaking chair back for him. He sat down and got onto a computer with several clicks. Once he had what he was looking for he muttered “There it is…” and put the information up on the second screen facing us. He proceeded to go through the options that Dad had selected and make sure that we were still on board with those selections. Dad knew that his time was shorter than most – and hated the thought of anyone being burdened by something he caused. Most of the arrangements were pre-selected by Dad.

We spent hours going through each piece of paperwork. The details became clearer to me as time passed. I felt both shame for my actions and frustration as I just wanted my dad back. Valerie was talkative and we discussed many of the items. She had known my father for some time and regarded him as a father like figure to her. When watching them interact the other day, before he passed, it was obvious that he felt the same for her. The fact that she was sitting beside me meant a lot. I did not have to go through that moment alone and I believe that she felt the same. We wrapped up after covering just about every aspect of the service and were assured that this would be a great remembrance.

Valerie dropped me off at the door to the apartment. She instructed me to go get some rest and consider not drinking anything. “It is okay to feel sad, Jake. It is okay to just feel…” She encouraged me to press on and lean into my feelings. The look on her face was more from disappointment than frustration towards me. There was a level of empathy still buried within her as well that sent the cue “I understand you.” She left the apartment and headed back to my Dad’s where she said she would do a quick version of chores. The sun was going down slowly and she didn’t want to let it go another day. I admired her strength and her sense of what was right. I held a slight amount of envy since that is what I wished I was feeling. The door screeched shut and echoed down the hallway as I headed towards the apartment.

I opened the door on the first try and bounded my keys on the counter. I went straight to the fridge and pulled out the large half-full bottle. “You need to sober up, Jake…” I said to myself. I took two big gulps and poured a small glass on ice. The spicy tingle in my throat memories from yesterday and I looked towards the couch. The chair was so close to the couch and the blanket pattern left in the chair indicated she laid right at my head. I recalled several words she said the prior night. Each one was full of tenderness and care. I sipped from the water glass and stood at the bar counter. I noticed the Mac open and a sticky note posted to the screen.

The realization of what was happening in a day started an implosion in me. I took a couple more big swigs from the bottle and carried my drink to the couch. I wanted to think about something else for now, and I was not sure how to do that. I felt like everything was flying at me. If I was a ship at sea – I would have been attempting to stay afloat with a cascade of enemy fire. I walked over and grabbed the Mac, and sat down on the couch. The last code word was circled now; I did not recall it being before. I entered the letters that were circled into the login screen and prepared to shut the book when it switched to a desktop. I could not believe that I got in! There were hundreds of notes and videos scattered throughout layers and layers of specific folders. I was sure that it meant something – but couldn’t stay focused long enough to think it through. I opened the older file dates and loaded the video. It was a vlog or video journal. Samuel had recorded hundreds of hours of discussion. I sipped my drink.

The darkness set in and my body became fluid. Before I knew it the video was playing to the top of my head, I passed out on the couch corner. I recalled waking up a couple more times with even more shame. I finished my glass. Valerie…

Read more of the Devastation Series.



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