Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Ode to Moonbeam

Hi.

Got in trouble at work today.  My [whatever] weren’t up to company standards.

Seems that this door is about to shut.

The wise and foolish who speak for God say, “God never closes a door without opening a window.”

I’ve read the Bible cover to cover quite a few times.  Memorized parts.  Forgotten most of what I’ve read.  But, one thing’s for sure.  That door line ain’t in the Bible.

What the Bible says is that God will be with us when we walk through valleys of death and/or deep, overwhelming waters.

As compared to never allowing us to suffer, fail, hurt or get our butts whupped.


Want a great Bible study?  Look at all the times God uses the words “but God” in the Scriptures.


My job is toast.  But God…


God’s provision, comfort and purpose in my life are not limited or enhanced by my job.

So be it.

**

As I ponder the next steps that must be explored, I remember some of the things friends and others have said. 

“What are you going to do?”
“How can I help?”
“You’re a great editor and an even better writer.”
“You love to write and you love your grandchildren.  Write a book for kids!”


Here’s a truth for you.

There are a gazillion people who would trade lives with me in a heartbeat.

I have it good. 

Healthy.
Well fed.
Money in the bank.
Warm home.
Too many clothes.
The Bike.
I don’t live with anyone who loathes me.
My daughters are well, except for Star’s morning sickness.
I have held my children’s children.
God cares for me.

**


Meeting Moonbeam

Used to spend a week in DC every year at a convention of religious broadcasters.  5,000 of us.  The high and mighty.  And me.  Lots of friends.  No foes. 

Good times.

One year, when I was between wives, I spent some time trying to find a concert in the Celtic-music-rich DC environs.  Made several calls to scope out the who/what/when/where, the cost, and directions, etc. 

Got to be pals with the folks on the phone.

Found a concert that was scheduled for a Sunday night, a slow time for conventioning. 

Took the Metro to Silver Spring, MD to hear my favorite hammered dulcimer player (THDP) and a few of her cohorts.

[I’m listening to THDP's band’s CD now.]

Great concert in a unitarian church. 

(Do you know what renegade unitarians do to their enemies? 
In the dark of night they burn question marks on their enemies’ lawns.)

THDP played a magnificent solo.  Then she introduced a man to the audience.  They were getting married!!  Very cool.  He was a musician too. 

Know what they did?  Played a duet on a single hammered dulcimer.  He played it facing her, kinda upside-down.  How much practice did THAT take?

Great music.

*

So the band took a break.

Saw this rich-hippie-babe-in-velvet lurking about.

Making her acquaintance made about as much sense as trying to flirt with one of the babes on The Weather Channel … through my TV.

Not like I was gonna bring her back to the convention.
My home was [insert distance from ATL to BWI here] away.

She was perfectly beautiful.  To my eye.

**

Not sure how we began to chat. 
She asked me where I was from.  Told her. 
Asked why I was there.  Told her.

She said her friends told her a guy from ATL was coming.
hmmm

Watched/devoured the rest of the concert with her.

Afterward, she was surprised by how much I loved such Celtic groups as:
Boys of the Lough
Altan
Ceolteori
Croabh Rua

Dervish
Kornog
Solas
Paul Machlis

and a close friend of hers: Sue the Wonder Harper, America’s best.


We had a nice time together.

Concert ended.
Time to say goodbye.

Went well.

She asked me how I was getting back to DC.
Metro, of course.

She smirked. 

The way all women eventually smirk at me
when they discover that I am an airhead.

It was now .  Sunday night.

Nope. 
The Metro didn’t run that late from Silver Spring to DC.

Told her I’d take a cab to the nearest functioning Metro stop.
We figured out which one that one was.

Then she offered me a ride there.

Happily took it.

***


The Friendly Moonbeam

No idea what we talked about for much of that trip.

Except
she said she was divorced
and feared/wondered
if she would ever

and this is the word she used

“connect”

with a man ever again.


Tossed the obvious guy facts at her.

She was a magnificent spectacle of a beautiful, intelligent, empathetic woman.

Couldn’t guarantee she’d ever connect with an acceptable man, but knew she’d have many to choose from.

Believe it or not, I tried to tell her – in spite of being at the nadir of my own spiritual orb – that life was more about connecting with God than others.

Gave her my business card.

She dropped me off at the Friendship Heights Metro stop.
(It was a Moonbeam thing.)

Took the train back to the convention.
Remembering her.
Probably saying a prayer for her.
Certainly experiencing her.

***


Connecting with Moonbeam

Not sure what happened next.
But we began to e-mail one another.

Then we talked on the phone a few times.
Then we talked daily.
Then we planned on having me fly to her home near DC.


Back in those days, I had only begun dealing with the devastation of a recent life-shattering divorce.

Had nothing to give to God or man or woman or myself.


Read my Bible.  Loved my kids. 

But my solace was found in Celtic music, not hymns or pseudosaints.

**


A Rare Moonbeam, Indeed

Moonbeam was “spiritual.”
Gentle.  Meditative.  Strongly held moral beliefs.
Way into crystals, feng shui and inner discovery.

I gave christians zero benefit of the doubt to be as deep as Moonbeam.

She was also a champion Celtic harper.
Had a music degree from a fancy school.
Killer smile.  Heart-melting giggle.

Dressed like a hippie princess. 
Always donned hues of purple and lively, earthy colors.

Not showy.  Merely rich enough to buy herself whatever she wanted.

Ladies, can you imagine the velvety, velour-y fabrics she wore?  The open-woven shawls she used to adorn her shoulders on chilly evenings?

Just graceful, imho.


I liked her.

Trouble was in our path, however.

I didn’t believe too much in God, but I knew there was no future in choosing her over a path back toward God.

**

Talked to my pastor. 

He led a church of mostly former or wannabe hippies.  He wasn’t freaked out at all. 

He was like, “Hey, you never know.  If you can control yourself, go visit her.”

**

Talked to Moonbeam.

Told her I’d visit, but I didn’t want to sleep with her.

No, wait.  That’s a big, fat lie.
Told her I needed my own room, because I [oh, you know what I mean].

She thought that was fine.

Told her I was going to call my pastor every night, to be accountable.
Didn’t even freak her out.

**


Chez Moonbeam

wow

Didn’t just have my own room.
Had my own wing in her dandy McMansion.

One of her favorite toys was a like-it-was-made-for-Louis XIV concert harp.  That sucker was about six feet tall and weighed a zillion pounds.
She rented it out to a lady who played in big league orchestras.

**

She took me around town.
Met her friends.
Enjoyed one another.
And ended our days in our own rooms.

We were growing closer.

**

I suppose people can fake closeness.  Maybe it’s common.  I dunno.

Tell you what you cannot fake.  Knowing who is calling you when the phone rings, without ringtones or caller ID.

She used to call my office during the day.  I don’t care a whit if you believe this or not, but the truth is I knew when it was her.

I’d just pick up my phone and instead of presuming it was any of the hundreds of radio stations I dealt with … I’d just say, “Hi, [Moonbeam].

Freaked her out.
She’d call from payphones, friend’s houses and all that.
I’m telling you … with rare exceptions … I knew when it was her.

We were connecting.

**


Visits from Moonbeam

Yup.

She came and stayed at my house.
I vacated at night and stayed with friends.
I’d come back in the morning. 

Once, as I pulled into my driveway, she was on my front porch playing her travel-sized lap harp.  Gorgeous music.  Skillfully, artfully played.  Heavenly.

She came to church with me.  Met my pastor and pals. 

At one of our after-church meals, she played her harp as we ate.  Even sang, if I remember correctly.


I was falling in love.
I can never tell with women, but I think she was too.

**

Showed her around town.

Drove up to the highest hill in the area and let her embrace the vista.

A-tippy-top that hill, my favorite house nestled itself into the landscape.
White.  Low.  Old.  Picket fence.  Vines.  Flowers.  Brick walkway, I think.

Sunroom laying bare the mountains, clouds, rainbows and storms.

It was for sale.


We called the agent.
Turned out Moonbeam had a real estate license.
She worked out a reciprocal deal with the listing agent.
Talked about how much the owners would take.
Could she spin off some of the land?  (We didn’t need the little barn or pasture.)

Moonbeam was convinced we could buy it – easily – if we wanted to live together.

[long pause]

**

I tease a lot about wanting to marry a rich widow.

Might seem as if I have a thing for money or women with money.

Yes, my dad told me, “Robert, it’s as easy to love the rich as it is the poor.”

But when I married My Favorite Wife, I paid off her credit cards and helped her get out of debt.  Helped her get a good job.  Helped her set up a retirement account.  Helped her buy a refrigerator and stuff when she moved into the house I helped her buy when she chose to live life without me.

It’s as easy to love those who aren’t rich, as it is to love the rich.

**

I’ve met women who had more money than some Third World countries.

One had a ministry to women.
One ministered to musicians, as only an unknown groupie could.

Money just gives people more opportunities to do what they want to do, good or bad, imho.

Money isn’t worth loving.
People aren’t worth loving just because they’re rich.

**


Memories of Moonbeam

We flipped the lid on my convertible one summer day and wafted up to Highlands, NC.  Great road trip.

Got up there and Moonbeam wanted to stop at an art gallery.  Like, a real one, but the art was for sale.  It was filled with HUGE artsy-fartsy paintings that you and I could duplicate if we closed our eyes, spun ourselves in a tight circle for about ten minutes, then splattered paint on a canvas-covered wall before we regained our balance.


I will never forget what happened before we got out of the car.

Moonbeam de-convertibled her hair.
Reached for her little tapestry handbag.
Pulled apart the arc-y wooden handles.
And moved stuff around looking for something in particular.

She had this – mass – in her purse that I simply could NOT identify.

Abandoned all guy decorum and said, “What’s that?”

She didn’t know what I meant, at first.

Then she held up the proverbial wad of cash and said, “This?”
Sorry, but I’m still amazed.

Rich people are different in one big way.

They’re rich.

**


The Fading Moonbeam

One of the last times I saw her, I drove to DC to watch her perform with her group at the Kennedy Center.

They were/she was great.

I think I surprised her by waving from the crowd, but I don’t exactly remember.

But I remember hanging out with her afterward around the Kennedy Center – where I worked for awhile while on another lark with another larkette – and one of my favorite places in the whole world, The Lincoln Memorial.

I loved Moonbeam.
Really did.

We just did well together.
Had nothing to do with money or beauty.
We connected.

**

It’s hard to carry on a long-distance relationship.
Calls became fewer.
Plans to visit changed.
Differences in our religions arose.

She/we faded into oblivion.
OK. 
Not oblivion or I wouldn’t have thought of her so much in the past couple of weeks.

**

Friends recently got married.  Popped them a CD of Celtic music.  Gave it to them, not on purpose, in a case where Sue the Wonder Harper wrote a nice note to me.

Then a few weeks ago, my pal Kiddo moved.  Up to one of the highest hills anywhere around.  Like, right across the street from my favorite house.

Yup.  That one.

**

Gotta wonder what would’a happened if I had hooked up with Moonbeam.

Without a doubt I wouldn’t be in the job I’m in today. 
(The one I might not be in tomorrow.)


But no regrets.

OK.  That’s a lie.
I have TONS of regrets

But Moonbeam was a blessing.

A lovely woman. 
Charming. 
A skilled, gifted artist. 
Great giggler.
Easy on the eyes and the heart.

Hope she’s well.

Appreciated … loved … and cherished

in spite of her money
music
beauty
brains
wit or
wardrobe

but because Moonbeam is worth connecting with

if only in clouded memories.

Friday, November 5, 2010

The Men I Love

Hi.

Yup.  I love a bunch of men. 
Have for years.  Always will.
I hope.


Love, Part One

Read a news article about what love does to those who succumb to it.

No, I don’t mean STDs, broken dreams, restraining orders, seeing your kids every other damn weekend or division of other kinds of property.

The good stuff.

It’s all summed up by Jack Nicholson in [insert the name of the movie I’m thinking of here] when he says to a potential love, “You make me want to be a better man.”

That’s love.

****


Love, Part Two


One thing The Princess doesn’t like about me is when I call her The Princess in front of other people and brag about her and tell them how wonderful she is.

Yes, I am working on not doing what flows so naturally … because that’s how she wants to be loved.

I think I’ve made the same mistake with JK.  I love her.  In a love-my-daughters way.  Only.  But she’s also one of my heroes.

Nope.  She’s not perfect.
Nope.  She never will be.
Nope.  I do not care.

It’s not hero worship.  Not idolatry.  Not putting a fragile person on a pedestal.

She simply rocked my world because of who she is, as seen by what she did.

My daughters, The Princess and JK are among those I love.  PJ, too.  Leslie.  Kimberly.  Facebook and non-FB friends.  They make me want to be a better man.  As, believe it or not, did each of my wives … before they made me want to die. 

But I didn’t.

Now they all inspire me to be a better man.

***


Love, Part Three


Yes. 
My love for God makes me want to be a better man.
Jesus is my example.
Savior.
Enabler.

He makes me want to be a better man.

To love my daughters, The Boys, The Princess, assorted loved ones.
And those who, in my humble opinion, do not deserve it.

***


Love, Part Four


I have loved ones who prattle on about America being a Christian nation.

I’ll believe it when christians show it.
Today.
And stop whining about how [insert any group deemed offensive by christians here] are bad people and how they must become more godly.

Want this to be a Christian nation?  Obey the Bible and honor those in authority.  Even if civil disobedience is warranted.

Want this to be a Christian nation?  Love President Obama – who, in my opinion, is an insipid, clueless, megalomaniac who is intoxicated by the deception of his own importance and has no more skill at managing the Free World than I do.

What’s the difference between Christianity and other religions?

How we treat our enemies: with love.
How we treat one another: with love.
How we treat our families: with love.

Just stop all the hateful enemy-bashing about how God hates [insert your enemies here].

Please.

Even if I fail to do so.

***


For the Love of Peter


Peter was my best friend in high school.

I got into a fight in the cafeteria at East High.  After that, my folks scoured the sofa, chairs and car seats for enough money to send me to The Allendale School.

A country day school.

Yup.  Fancy.

Enter Peter.  Great Guy.

Introduced me to The Paul Butterfield Blues Band, John Coltrane, friendliness without hypocrisy, Alfa Romeo Veloce Spiders, and his sister, Karen.  (In no particular order of importance.)

I could write 50 books from our adventures.  Maybe 100.


Peter’s family was lived-on-East Avenue-in-Rochester rich.

One grandfather helped found Rochester Institute of Technology.
Another has a building named after him at Corning Glass.

Peter’s father never worked.  Apart for the times Peter said they drove to his grandmother’s house to shovel 100s into the trunks of their cars.


I loved Peter.  Couldn’t understand why anyone wouldn’t.  Seriously.

For “our” graduation present, his folks funded a trip to the Newport Jazz Festival.

Case of good wine in the boot of the pale-blue Alfa roadster (like the one pictured below).




Peter loved that car.  I can still hear him laugh and point to the page in the car’s owner’s manual that stated the car would go 17/23/19/whatever miles per hour in reverse.  “Only the Italians, Robert! Only the Italians would tell you how fast their car goes in reverse!”

I loved Peter.


Peter did drugs.

Got shipped off to a boarding school in Lake Placid.  They used to hire cabs to drive to NYC.  Came back with mayonnaise jars filled with more drugs.

One kid freaked out and stole the school’s limousine and tried to make a break for it.  Name of the school emblazoned on the side of the biggest vehicle in the county.  One road out of town.

Got caught.
That’s why they call it “dope.”


Peter liked photography.

Lived in a small apartment.
Bought a bunch of cameras.
A dry plate (press?) printer thingy.
Turned his bathroom into a darkroom.
Set up a studio in his bedroom.

Had no place to sleep.

Pitched a tent in his kitchen.  Made from a big flag.
Spikes driven into the linoleum to make sure it wouldn’t blow away.
I guess.


I loved Peter.


His parents grew tired of funding his exploits.

Guess they wanted him to be like them.
Fancy summer home in Canada they never visited.
Subtle island home in the [insert name of islands here].

His folks hated – hated – one another.

Peter didn’t want to be like them.


So, his parents did what rich people do: threatened to cut him off.

Threw him out.  Sort of.

See, rich people do it differently than, “Get out!”
Usually.


They said, “Get out!  Where would you like to go, honey?”
Peter said, “Alaska.”

So he and his dad flew to the Kenai.
Selected a nice corner lot in the wilderness.
Purchased it.
Flew home.

Bought Peter a truck.
A dandy chain-saw. 
A peavey (as compared to a cant hook, no matter what these people say).



Tents.  
Log dogs.  
Timber hooks. 



A shin-hoe (aka “adz”).
Awls. 
A wood shaving thingy you put razors into … with the saddle knob thingy on top.

And the biggest brown-bear (or elephant) .375 Magnum Browning rifle you ever saw.
Couple of draw knives.

And off he went in 1975 to Alaska, to build a log house.

With me.

***


Great Guys and Great Men


To a few random souls, I have achieved Great Guydom.  I shan’t make any sentient soul’s Great Men list, however.

So be it.


I have begun to compile a list of men I deem to be Great Guys and Great Men.

In the days/years? ahead, I hope to tell you about them.

Hope I’ll add a few names to the list.  We’ll see.

Please forgive me if your name does not appear.

My brother, a devout missionary, is a great man; not such a great guy.
My father, a great guy, universally loved, hasn’t been a great man.
Lots of people are one or the other.
Not many are both.

Except these exceptional men.
Whom I love.
Deeply.

Men who are easy to love. 
Who easily love others. 
Who, without exception, love God.
Who would love you, even if you don’t personally love God yourself.

These men make me want to be a better man.



The Great Guy and Great Men Hall of Fame:


Chris Fabry
Broadcaster.  Author.  Father of nine kids. Loves his wife.
Been faithful to God, in spite of tremendous loss and pain.
Changing the world through his writing, radio program and his life.
A great guy and a great man.



David Lane
Professor.  Psychologist.  Wise man.
Recent missionary. 
Survived the loss of a beloved son.
Helped me survive the loss of a beloved wife.
The kind of man that frail people can trust.
A rebuilder of shattered lives, by God’s wisdom.


Gordon Bell
A Brit.  Former missionary to Tibet and Hong Kong.
A pastor; to a church and to hundreds of individuals.
Kind, gracious man. 
Lost his first wife on the mission field.  Rabies.
Worked for him for nine years at a Christian radio station.
A great guy.  A great man.
Unappreciated by some.  Loved by many.
Lives with God these days,


Joe Coney
Recovering fundamentalist christian.
Wonderful example of Jesus Christ in his daily life.
Missionary to various countries and to me.
Loves his wife.  Loves his family.
Cares for everybody.
Humble.  Self-deprecating.  Meek.  Strong.
Used by God in my life at several dangerous intersections.
A man I love … who makes me want to be a better man.


John Batusic
My pastor.  Yes, a missionary. 
A man who represents stability to me.
A great guy, who isn’t afraid to dress up like Dorothy’s scarecrow.
A great man, who isn’t afraid to proclaim biblical truth … kindly.


Joseph Slife
One of the smartest, most learned men I have ever met.
Knows *everything.* 
The ONE person you would use as your Cash Cab mobile shout-out.
Not only loves his wife, but the kind of person who could make the supposedly most awful wife happy, I think.
Dedicated to his kids.  Great writer.
People don’t think I’m half as smart as Joseph, but I really am.  And I prove it all the time.
Joseph’s greatness will be made manifest in generations to come.
One of the first men I thought of when pondering Great Guy/Great Mandom.


Ken Frenke
Never heard of him, right?  A great guy and a great man.
His wife told me that after umpteen years, he’s never said an unkind word to her.
Wow.
Brilliant man.  Gracious in his speech.
A great man who represents God well.
Known for his kindness and wisdom.


Larry Burkett
Writer.  Wise man.  Broadcaster. 
A man endowed with exceptional common sense.
A man of faith. 
Had the honor of working for/with him for fifteen years.
Changed the world before dying on Independence Day in 2003.
We traveled together many times. 
I never saw a more humble, kind man.  Like being with Jesus, almost.
There have been times I doubted God’s love, but never Larry’s.
Did the worst Inspector Clouseau impersonation possible.
But I loved him anyway.


Seth Barnes
Call him a missionary or a writer.  Brilliant or savvy.
Husband to an amazing woman or father to world-changing kids.
Great speaker, etc.
What sets him apart is how he hears from God and obeys.
Lots of people brag about how God told them to do this or that.
Most are bandits and scoundrels, I think.
Seth doesn’t do stuff for God.
God does stuff through Seth, and the others at the organization Seth founded: Adventures in Missions.
If you get to heaven, try to stand on someone’s shoulders.  You might catch a glimpse of Seth WAY up front.

***


How are you doing in the great guy/gal and great man/woman spectrum?

Blessings to you as you pursue what’s most important.