You come from a long line of foodies. On both sides of your family tree there is a deep appreciation for meals and treats that are tasty. As I have told you many times, feeding another person is one of the most basic functions you can perform for another; it is both nourishment for the body and the soul. At a young age my mother encouraged your Aunt Patti and I to join her in the kitchen to learn how to make the most rustic of foods taste scrumptious. You know by now that Daddy’s mom, Grandma Carolyn, was not the greatest of cooks; for a decent meal Daddy would look forward to visiting Great Grandma Evelyn’s farm. To this day your Daddy says no one makes scrambled eggs like his grandma. It is true that poor Grandma Carolyn is the target of much teasing about her cooking and many non-family members have said that the stories seem to be an exaggeration of the truth; they have never tasted her food. Your Bumpa was one who doubted the accuracy of our stories about Grandma Carolyn’s culinary skills. Bumpa loved food and would be the last person to intentionally subject himself to a poorly executed dish if he could avoid it; he was incredibly polite and would never insult a chef but refusing to eat the food even if it made him sick so he was not about to take any chances. As a result of having heard countless gastronomic horror stories coming from Grandma Carolyn’s kitchen; every time Bumpa would visit Springfield he would offer to take us all out for dinner. This ruse was effective for a few years until one Christmas Grandma Carolyn was bound and determined that she was going to make a meal for us; it caused some friction between Daddy and me because at that time Bumpa was sick and his stomach was sensitive. To spare Grandma Carolyn’s feelings and Bumpa’s stomach it was decided that we would stop at a restaurant to eat before we got to Grandma Carolyn’s house. When we arrived, the house smelled delicious and the table looked beautiful; there was brisket, caramelized carrots, cold salad and steamed green beans with sea salt. Daddy and I were dumbfounded; it appeared that your Grandma Carolyn could really cook if she concentrated and set her mind to it. To this day I will never forget the look on Bumpa’s face; he was furious at Daddy and me. Throughout the four hour car ride back to Columbia, Bumpa admonished the two of us severely; how dare we let him believe that Grandma Carolyn was a bad cook, how dare we allow him to insult someone in that way by refusing to eat at her table. Daddy and I were well into our late twenties but we both felt as if we were young children after that tongue lashing. Bumpa was not someone who forgave or forgot easily and for the rest of our holiday he made sure that we knew he was displeased with our behavior. Daddy and I felt horrible; not only for making Bumpa feel like a fool but for disrespecting Grandma Carolyn by misrepresenting her cooking talents. For weeks Daddy and I tormented ourselves, apologized to Bumpa profusely and called Grandma Carolyn on more than one occasion to thank her for the meal and to rave about how wonderful it was. You must understand little one that we were utterly perplexed, every experience prior to this was irrefutable proof that Grandma Carolyn couldn’t boil water (in fact there is a really interesting story from your Great Aunt Debbie about learning to boil water, but I will let her tell that story). A few weeks later Daddy received a phone call from your Uncle Aaron: he called to tell us that he could no longer keep the secret, Grandma Carolyn had bought all of the food from Boston Market and had put it in her own serving dishes to make it appear as if she had prepared it. Daddy and I laughed until we cried; partly because we were relieved that our reality of the universe had not shifted as drastically as we thought, Grandma still couldn’t cook. I immediately called Bumpa to relate the story to him for two reasons; because I did not want him to think we would really lie about Grandma’s talents and I knew he would find it hysterically funny. Bumpa laughed long and heartily at Grandma’s deception and at the end pardoned Daddy and me from any perceived crime that had been committed. I believe on that day Bumpa’s respect for your Grandma Carolyn rose ten-fold; she understood her own deficiencies and was clever enough to compensate for them. Well played Grandma Carolyn, well played. How wonderful little one that you come from a family that appreciates cunning and mirth as much as they do food; your cup runneth over.
Posts Tagged ‘Bumpa’
Moving Violations
Posted in November, tagged Bumpa, Cadillac, cars, Driving, false accusation, family lore, Ford Escort, garage, Golf Ball, snow, time teenagers, transportation on November 30, 2012| Leave a Comment »
It is interesting how the human desire for a good story can result in otherwise logical human beings accepting myths as fact. Urban legends permeate every culture and perhaps they were intentionally created in order to add importance to a morality tale. Families are no different; familial history is often passed from generation to generation, each putting its own spin on family lore. Such stories provide a sense of belonging within the family circle and they tie us to our past in seemingly tangible ways. I love these fables as much as anyone; except the ones in which I am the central character. There is one family myth that persists today about my driving skills that are based upon conjecture and an utterly false rumor started by your Bumpa when I first started to drive. It is true that I had a car accident shortly after earning my license (I was not at fault mind you) but I have an exemplary driving record. Although your Daddy would dispute my prowess at operating a motor vehicle, when one compares our citation and accident track records it is clear who the better driver is. However, the false accusation that I am a bad driver began when I was in high school. I had a job at the local nursing home and my shift started at 6am, meaning I had to get into my car no later than 5:30am in order to make it on time. Teenagers are notorious for wanting to sleep to the last possible minute, I was no exception. I would calculate how much time I needed to shower and get dressed to the exact second and roll out of bed accordingly. In the spring, summer and fall this plan worked beautifully. Unfortunately this plan could not be easily executed during the winter months since we only had a two car garage; Bumpa and Grandma Jo would park in the garage and I would park in the driveway. During the winter if a car sits outside overnight a thick layer of frost inevitably covers the entirety of the windshield, this was the case with my little Ford Escort. Rather than get up 15 minutes earlier I would simply jump in the car, turn the heaters up full blast and scrape an area the size of a standard letter through which to navigate. By the time I got half way to work, I no longer had to hunch over the steering wheel in order to see the road. This system seemed perfectly reasonable to my teenage mind; I could persevere my precious slumber and still make it to work on time with a modicum of hassle. To Bumpa, it was an accident waiting to happen and so for a few weeks he would get up when I got into the shower and would head outside to scrape the windshield for me. This routine soon lost its appeal to Bumpa who also valued sleep and a solution was born; in the winter months Bumpa would park outside and I would park in the garage. To me, this was a most excellent plan. For a while it worked well; until the first snowfall when dad had to get up before all of the rest of us to blow out our considerably long driveway. That first snowstorm was a doozy; dumping almost seven inches of wet, heavy snow. My mother drove a Cadillac which took up the majority of her side of the garage and, while my Ford Escort hatchback was small, I had not pulled all the way into the garage and so Bumpa could not get the snow blower out. Bumpa was forced to shovel a three foot wide and five foot long length of snow in order to back my car out and get to the snow blower. Needless to say, Bumpa was not thrilled with me. That afternoon when I got home Bumpa met me in the garage, motioned for me to stay in my car and pointed to a white orb most enthusiastically. He had hung a golf ball from a rafter in the garage and I was to pull my car forward until the ball lightly tapped my windshield. He had measured exactly how far I need to pull into the garage in order to get the snow blower out in case it was needed. Your Bumpa was a clever man and this was a very simple solution to avoid a repeat of the day’s earlier calamity. This is not the story that has been handed down for over twenty some odd years. Instead Bumpa relished in telling anyone who would listen that I had, on several occasions, overshot my distance into the garage and threatened to drive right through the wall. Utter nonsense, it never happened, and I would vehemently tell anyone who would listen how events truly unfolded. My stories fell on deaf ears each and every time. It was more fun to believe the myth than the truth, even though everyone knew that Bumpa was a storyteller and loved to tease us more than anything. There you have it little one, your mama has her own familial urban legend to live down. If you think about it Bumpa’s story, even though it is pure fiction, is a tribute and a gift. Stories keep us alive in others’ hearts, sometimes even long after they leave us. So here’s to history little one, may our stories live for generations to come.
Norman Rockwell Beware
Posted in November, tagged Bumpa, Grandma Jo, Nephews, Norman Rockwell, Patti, Thanksgiving, turkey on November 21, 2012| Leave a Comment »
Thanksgiving Day is almost here and tonight your three “boy” cousins will arrive from Minnesota to spend the holiday weekend with you. I hope very much that this will be a memorable holiday for you, one that you look upon fondly and remember often. In honor of the three musketeers that will join us this November for feast and festivity, today’s story is about their mother. I must say that my sister and I have many holiday tales that we could share with you and your cousins and they usually involve mischief and mayhem; most often at Grandma Jo’s expense. But today your Aunt Patti is the offering on the altar of humility in this holiday musing and it all begins with a tantrum and a turkey. As you know your Grandma Jo is an excellent cook and, for her, holiday dinners were serious business. There would be a fine lace tablecloth, cloth napkins, crystal wine glasses and great-grandma’s silver to adorn our humble table. There was a ritual to these feasts; we would begin the day sneaking olives off the relish tray (one for each finger of course) and end by sneaking extra helpings of whipped cream for the homemade pumpkin pie. These meals were full of laughter, mirth and the occasional under the table goodie for the dog; if you were to describe the scene at our table it would closely resemble a scene drawn by Norman Rockwell. For us holidays were a time of relative peace and harmony; we ate, we played games and we teased each other good naturedly. It is likely due to the nostalgia that my sister felt for the holidays that the “great turkey debacle” came to be. I was in graduate school and was coming home for Thanksgiving and just assumed that Grandma Jo would be hosting as per usual; I learned in an animated phone call to my mom that plans had changed. Patti was bound and determined that she was going to cook the Thanksgiving meal and like it or not we were all ordered to come and have a good time. As soon as we stepped in the door I should have recognized the stench of impending doom. Patti was in a tizzy rushing to put the final touches on the noon meal. Grandma Jo, an excellent judge of cooking times and multi-tasker extraordinaire, recognized a disaster when she saw it. She graciously offered to help with the final prep work; determined that she could handle the task herself, Patti declined the offer. In a final flurry of activity, and a few glasses of wine later, it was announced that we were about to eat. As we sat down to eat we began with a simple table blessing (historically the youngest at the table says the blessing and my niece Kaila was not old enough to say it yet so the job fell to me) and then proceeded to survey the spread before us. We were treated to burnt rolls, lumpy gravy, partially mashed potatoes and a runny substance that I am led to believe was pureed yams. However, the turkey looked amazing! It was beautiful, brown and smelled amazing; we were in for a treat. Our hopes for an edible morsel from Patti’s table were quickly dashed when Bumpa cut into the turkey. In her quest to replicate the Rockwellian perfection from her childhood, she had neglected to clean the bird prior to cooking it. You can imagine the gory site once the turkey had been sliced open; all of the innards had liquefied making the turkey quite unpalatable. One glance at Patti told me she was ready to come unhinged should anyone make a derogatory comment about her culinary talents. Grandma Jo, ever the peacemaker, declared that we could simply eat around the innards since that part looked fabulous. Bumpa, on the other hand, was not about to let Patti off the hook. Bumpa laughed; he laughed long at hard until his face was purple and it was questionable whether oxygen was flowing to his brain. Little one there is something you need to know about Bumpa’s laughter, it was contagious! I started laughing, Grandma Jo starting laughing and, yes, Patti began to chuckle. It would have seemed to any outsider that we had lost our ever loving minds, and maybe we had. Maybe we were so focused on achieving a sense of idyllic perfection that we had lost perspective; Bumpa brought us back to reality. You see little one, Bumpa didn’t laugh to make Patti feel bad; quite the opposite. Bumpa was letting Patti know that it is ok to make mistakes; if you can laugh and learn at the same time, things will probably turn out just fine. This Thanksgiving I hope that there is plenty of laughter at our table, that we live in the moment and enjoy one another for who we are and not some version of what we think we should be.
Up To The Task
Posted in November, tagged Bumpa, Daddy, Grandma Jo, Minnesota, Patti, wooden chair on November 16, 2012| Leave a Comment »
I have mentioned before that your daddy and I met when we were in graduate school; we had our first date in November (on your Grandpa Dwight’s birthday). We went to Olive Garden to eat and we went “dutch,” which means we each pay half; although your daddy was short on cash so I had to pick up the majority of the tab (The events of our first date really have nothing to do with the following story but I have never let daddy forget that I had to pay on the first date and I couldn’t pass up the opportunity to do it again here). The fall semester that I met daddy was a busy one as it was my first semester in graduate school. Since we had only been dating for a little while when the holidays rolled around I went back to Minnesota for Christmas to see Grandma Jo and Bumpa; daddy stayed behind to be with his family at Great-grandma Evelyn’s farm. When I got back to school life was so busy that I was not able to go back North again until the Fourth of July holiday during the summer; daddy was to go with me. I was nervous because Bumpa had never liked any boy I had brought home (in retrospect he was probably spot on with his assessment of these gentlemen). Grandma Jo had already met daddy earlier in the spring when she came down to visit; daddy had long hair at the time and your grandma was not having it! She made up her mind then and there that she did not like daddy. You have to understand that this is a point that grandma denies vehemently now; she says she always thought daddy was a fine young man. Sometimes little one history is subjective and in some cases, revisionist. Your daddy and I drove over thirteen hours north that summer to spend a few days with Bumpa and Grandma Jo. I will never forget the first night daddy visited Minnesota. That night we sat around an old, round oak table that had been in our family for as long as I can remember. Coffee was the drink of choice, as it can still get quite chilly at night that far north if the windows are left open, and conversation was finally starting to flow. You see, daddy can be a bit reserved and shy if he doesn’t know people very well. He would argue that he is waiting to assess whether someone is worth getting to know, I argue he is an introvert (both assertions have merit). Let me preface the rest of the story by stating that, as daddy was about to sit down at the table my sister Patti jumped up and told him to take her chair, as it was one of the wide wooden chairs with rollers. My sister can have a wicked streak in her as she meets out her own tests of suitability; for her resiliency and a sense of humor are a litmus test. Daddy was finally starting to get comfortable talking to Bumpa and they started to chat about Great-grandma Evelyn and Great-grandpa Raymond’s farm. Quite suddenly all four legs of the wooden chair went out from under daddy. The next thing I know daddy’s eyes are as wide as saucers and his face was as red as Santa’s suit. I was concerned that he had hurt himself, until I heard my sister laughing. She was laughing so hard tears were streaming down her face and she couldn’t breathe. Then it dawned on me; she had given him the chair on purpose. On closer inspection of the chair, I noticed she had given him the “trick” chair. The spools on this particular chair had come apart so many times no one could keep count. It did not matter if you were big, small, short or tall; the spools on the chair would gradually separate over time and it was just a matter of bad timing for the person who would be its next victim. This Patti knew, this Patti understood and this Patti planned. For his part, daddy passed the test. He got up, dusted himself off and the conversation went right on along. I could have been mad at my sister for inflicting her brand of social acceptance on daddy, and perhaps I should have, but truth be told; I don’t think I was. I think it was Patti’s way of protecting her little sister and making sure this new addition to our family had the chops it took to hang out with the Pier clan. So little one, in a way I am grateful. It showed me early on in my relationship with your daddy that he was someone to trust, someone who was patient and most importantly someone who can laugh at himself. We are lucky to have daddy. You and I are a lot alike and it is going to take daddy a great deal of patience and humor to deal with the two of us over the years; let’s thank our lucky stars that daddy has already proven he is up to the task.
A Soldier Remembered
Posted in November, tagged army, Bumpa, Christmas, Grandma Jo, Henwood, Missouri, soldier, Veteran's Day, WWII on November 12, 2012| Leave a Comment »
Yesterday was November 11, and it was Veteran’s Day. On this day we take time to remember all of those who served our nation in the armed forces; it is a way of saying thank you to those in the military who are called upon to make sacrifices in order to protect our freedoms. There are many in our family who have served in the military. Grandma Jo’s mommy and daddy were both in the Army during World War II; and your Bumpa was named after his Uncle EuGene who was also serving in World War II at the time and wanted a namesake should he not return from the battlefield. For many to serve one’s country is a calling and I think your Bumpa felt an obligation to serve when he was a young man. But for Bumpa it was not to be; according to family lore, he did not pass his hearing test on the day of his physical exam and was excluded from joining up. We never talked about the military much as I was growing up, except for the summer that Grandpa Henwood came to stay and he would swap war stories with an old man named Pappy Yokum that lived up the road. Although it was not a common topic of conversation, my sister and I did understand that those who served our country deserved our deference and respect. It came to pass one Christmas that this idea of reverence for those in uniform manifested itself on a road trip to Missouri. I must have been ten or eleven the year that Grandma Jo and Bumpa decided that we would spend Christmas with their friends Charles and Norma in Missouri. We set out for Missouri a few days before Christmas as it took well over twelve hours to get there from Minnesota. I remember that the weather was horrible; it was either sleeting or snowing during the entire trip. Many times we would have to pull over to a gas station to clear road salt and dirt from the headlamps and to refill the washer fluid. It was during one of these stops that my father engaged in what I considered to be the most peculiar behavior; he picked up a hitchhiker. You have to understand this was completely out of character for Bumpa; never in a million years would I have predicted such an act. As Bumpa and the stranger got closer to the car, I noticed that the young man who was to be our new companion was wearing military fatigues. I must admit that at age ten camouflage of any kind was a bit scary (it wasn’t as commonly integrated into fashion and pop culture as it is now). Bumpa instructed Grandma Jo to get into the back seat with Patti and me. As the snow continued to beat down on our car as we traveled south, the conversation in the front seat was lively and quick. The young man had flown in on leave and was trying to get to his folks before Christmas. His parents were poor and he had no extra money for transportation, he was relying on the kindness of strangers to get him home for the holidays. It was amazing how at ease my father felt with this young solider; how quickly they fell into comfortable conversation. After a few hours it was time for the young man to change direction again and so my father pulled off at a truck stop that would get him on the interstate that would lead him home. Bumpa gave the young gentleman money for food (I am not sure if grandma was aware of that but I saw my father reach for his wallet when we stopped) and made sure that there was a trucker willing to give him a lift most of the way home. As we got back on the road, Grandma Jo at the wheel and Bumpa in the passenger’s seat, she asked him what possessed him to do such a thing. Bumpa replied that he had overheard the kid talking to an elderly farm couple who had just driven two hours out of their way to help him out so it couldn’t be that dangerous. Furthermore, he argued, if there was trouble grandma was sitting behind the solider in the back seat poised to bonk him over the head with her high heeled shoe! Bumpa had a way of teasing and joking his way through questions and situations that forced him to confront his emotions. If truth be told, I think grandpa was touched by the kid’s story; a young man out of basic training, missing his folks something fierce and doing anything it took to get home. I am not sure of the soldier’s fate, whether he made it home in time for Christmas; I want to believe that he did. I like to think that perhaps he is out there somewhere, telling his children or grandchildren on this day of remembrance about the time when he felt the kindred embrace of his fellow Americans and what it meant to him and his family all those years ago.
A Hard Lesson From An Unlikely Teacher
Posted in November, tagged Bumpa, Grandma Jo, lessons, skunk, teaching, tomatoes on November 9, 2012| Leave a Comment »
Daddy and I tell you all the time that growing up is about making mistakes and learning from them; without failures every now and again it is pretty difficult to measure progress. You may be surprised to note that making mistakes, and by extension learning, is a lifelong process. When I was about the same age you are now Bumpa learned a rather hard lesson about animal physiology and the ancillary uses of the common garden tomato. As you know I grew up in Northern Minnesota on a lake in the middle of the country. The seasons in Minnesota are beautiful but they are very short, especially the growing season. Grandma Jo took advantage of the rich, black soil on the top of the hill next to the house to plant a prolific garden in the early years that we lived there. Bumpa would bury the innards left in the fish house from the anglers’ daily catch right next to grandma’s garden so the vegetables that she planted would be hearty and plentiful. Grandma would can vegetables all summer so that when winter came we never ran out of good things to eat. One summer Grandma Jo’s garden was so robust we had sweet corn, green beans, peas, cucumber pickles, and gallons upon gallons of tomatoes; I can still see the jars in my mind’s eye in seemingly endless lines on the shelves in the cellar. Grandma was so proud of her work and the family would be grateful to open up those jars in the dead of winter and taste a little bit of sunshine that had been preserved by her skillful hands. Fall soon approached; with the changing of the seasons and the drop in temperature wild critters sought shelter any place they could find it and Bumpa made it pretty easy for them to find. The cellar where grandma stored all of her canned goods was very spacious and had several rooms that mirrored the footprint of the house above. In some of the rooms there were very small windows that sat level to the ground. Sometimes Bumpa would open the windows to run hoses or cords through them, depending upon what he was working on down in the basement. One ill fated day Bumpa forgot to close a window and a skunk found its way into our cellar. I bet you can imagine grandma’s reaction when she realized that she had company when she went to fetch a jar or two from her underground pantry. Bumpa tried everything to coax that skunk back out of the window through which he came, nothing worked. Bumpa knew you had to be careful when dealing with a skunk, if they feel threatened they will spray the aggressor with a stink so powerful it will burn the inside of your nostrils. Grandma and Bumpa debated endlessly about how to deal with the skunk (I am sure many of the local farmers weighed in with their opinions as well). Bumpa finally decided that enough was enough; he would get rid of that varmint once and for all with minimal risk of a skunk shower. Bumpa was under the impression that if you could shoot the skunk in the head and knock out the nerve centers the skunk would be incapacitated and unable to spray. Bumpa was a good shot and took the skunk out, but Bumpa was wrong; it turns out that skunk spray can be released as the body relaxes postmortem and the stench is considerable. Autumn in Minnesota is quite chilly with snow flurries often arriving before Halloween, but that fall every window in our house was open in an attempt to dissipate the skunk odor. As you might surmise, Bumpa stunk to high heaven since he was only a few paces from the skunk at the time of its demise. I like to imagine that there was an awful lot of chuckling by our country neighbors when they heard the story; there sure was no shortage of advice on how to get rid of the smell. It turns out that tomato juice is about the best thing you can use to get rid of the noxious fumes. Bumpa took several baths in grandma’s canned tomatoes that fall and it was days before folks could tolerate being in the same room with him. To this day I am not sure if grandma was more aggravated by the smell that hung in our house well past the holidays or by the fact that her precious garden bounty was used as an anti-skunk bubble bath for Bumpa. This story gives me comfort little one; comfort in the knowledge that it is human nature to make mistakes. But the hope is that we learn from our errors and never make the same mistake twice.
All Hallows Eve
Posted in October 2012 Letters 2 Lyla, tagged All Hallows Eve, Bumpa, Daddy, Grandma, Pumpkins on October 31, 2012| Leave a Comment »
I think I have mentioned before that autumn is my favorite time of year. Not only do I appreciate the colors, sounds and smells that fill the senses during this time of the year; I am flooded with memories from the past, happy memories. Since it is Halloween today it is fitting that I tell you a bit about All Hallows Eves past, beginning with the first time I “carved” a pumpkin. My first pumpkin carving memory centers around the round oak table that used to sit smartly in front of a big window that overlooked the resort out on to the lake. I remember the smell of newsprint as grandma Jo had covered every inch of her beloved table as not to be scraping bits of pumpkin innards from its surface in the weeks to come. Then my daddy lifted the giant pumpkins on to the table. The pumpkins were HUGE, at least from my perspective they were. They were nice and round, a uniform shape and a dark orange color; everything you would want in a respectable jack-o-lantern to be. Once the pumpkins were situated on the table Bumpa would have Patti and I step back from the table as he was about to use a very sharp and dangerous looking knife to open the top of the pumpkin and create its lid. Once the pumpkin had been liberated from its cap my sister and I would plunge our little hands into the guts of the pumpkin! How cold and gooey and oh-so-fabulous it was to pull the string and slime from the pumpkin’s belly. Grandma and Bumpa both got in on the fun to help us finish our pumpkins. Patti and I were given markers to draw faces on the pumpkins and Bumpa would cut them out for us; triangles for eyes, a circle for a nose and the most jagged teeth we could conjure up. The smells are what I remember the most; the earthy, pungent smell of damp pumpkin will forever be burned in my nostrils. It is the smell I look forward to every fall as a reminder of the natural order of the seasons and the unstoppable rhythm of life. It is a smell that I shared with your daddy long before you were born. Daddy and I delighted in finding the most complicated pumpkin patterns to carve. Then you came along and changed the meaning of what the ritual means for us. No longer is it a reminder of our youth and early adulthood; now it is part of a larger narrative. One where parents create magic for their children through simple tools and tea lights; where it is possible to make a Sunday afternoon of pumpkin carving and toasting seeds seem like the longest and shortest day of a parent’s life. Watching your delight at your daddy’s deft hands while creating the likeness of Tinkerbell out of an over-sized gourd is one of the most precious memories I have. I like to think, little one, that grandma Jo and Bumpa treasured those times with my sister and me; that for an afternoon time was suspended and we all lived in the present without a care in the world. For Daddy and I those are the times when we are most reminded at how blessed and lucky were are to have found one another; for without which we wouldn’t have you!






