Michaelstubblefield's Blog

May 3, 2011

Bucket List of Places to Live and Love

“City” is a relative term in my lexicon. If you’re referring to a metropolis or megalopolis, then “you’ve got the right string, baby, but the wrong yo-yo.” Fuhgeddaboutit! Big-city guy I’m not. Don’t need the grind of city traffic, anonymity, mute avoidance from faces of passersby, etc. Give me freedom, smiles, familiar greetings, happy faces and a decent choice of things to do, see and buy, and it’s good. Throw in art, music, culture and personality and it becomes great.

San Domenico church in Siena, Italy

Siena, Italy: What’s not to like about Italy?! Though I enjoy the antiquities of Roma, Firenze and other more notables on the map, it’s the smaller towns in the Tuscan hillsides that attract me, and the ancient tight-twisting streets of Siena are special. I’d love to watch the famous Palio di Siena horse race that occurs in the piazza there — very different from American horse racing. The famous Campanile in the city’s center. Italian cuisine, hospitality. Exquisite ceramic art. Italian extroversion and exuberance. Buon giorno!  Bene! Bene!

Prescott, AZ: Sunny sky, most days! Moderate, four-season weather! Friendly people who aren’t afraid to engage in brisk conversation. Howdy!  Yes, sir!  Western independence with a ready smile, confidence. Crisp, clean look of town. Nicely restored historic buildings. Despite small population, there’s a significant artistic community and obvious appreciation of art. Some good eats, lots of natural space to enjoy.

Carpe diem. Vita brevis!

© May 3, 2011, by Michael E. Stubblefield.  All rights reserved.  Photo courtesy Plinky.com.

Powered by Plinky

January 13, 2010

Climbin’ to the Top

Filed under: Bucket lists,Coffee,Family — BikeWriter45 @ 6:33 am

“In Seattle you haven’t had enough coffee until you can thread a sewing machine while it’s running.” ~ Jeff Bezos

Christmas 2009 was over and New Year 2010 blew in here like a Western Gull riding a Pacific storm while I mostly lay in a state of torpor.  Much of the freshly expired holiday period blurs in my mind, thank-you-so-much to a stomach virus-sinus infection combo that kept me on the move while simultaneously gasping for oxygen and hoping for a quick death to ease the headache and cramping  — not a pretty sight at the time, nor a pleasant thought now.  Cynicism would argue that misery and loathing dominated my winter celebrations.

Truth would quickly rebut, though, with smiles reflecting off the shiny stuff that still stands out in my mind, interludes and bookends in the form of marvelous memories to go along with the maladies.  I’m back at home in the Pacific Northwest and thankfully spent the holidays with my family. The people I love best.  Even with the stresses and strains that normally attend the adult experience of such holidays — meals to be planned and prepared, schedules to be coordinated, gifts to be thought about, shopped for, purchased, transported and wrapped, (and then paid for in January, … or beyond), the visits with or from extended family and friends, and for most, the continuing work schedule — the holidays were long enough to allow some good ones in the otherwise miserable scenario described above.

Little children — my grandkids — are in the forefront of holiday exhilaration.  They’re perennially on my “Bucket List.”  Lucas and Nadia are their names.  And one of my delightful memories from this last Christmastime features grandson Lucas, 5, at front and center.  He’s an athletic and fit little guy who harbors an abundance of pent-up energy — ALL THE TIME!  Even when he’s burning it at a high rate!  (Which is most of the time, I might add!)  Like his mom, I’m at a loss to fathom or explain how he can go so hard, so long, and still end the day with more energy than is fair to the sane adults who are the flummoxed onlookers.  I have long ago given up on my logical (but only cerebral, UNrealistic) conclusion that “he’ll be slow to get started in the morning, what with the level of his activities today.”  He hits the ground running every morning, hardly slows down during his consumption of copious amounts of breakfast foods — or whichever is the meal of the hour, –  and continues the burn right on through the day.  His afterburners kick on at about 4:30 p.m. when most of the adults are ducking for cover.  Believe me, he’s about as close as anyone I know in fulfilling the description foreseen by Jeff Bezos in the quote at the top of this writing — the part about threading a sewing machine while it’s running. 

When Lucas was in Seattle last summer, a bunch of us family adults spontaneously took him to REI’s flagship store in downtown Seattle, thinking he might like to try the climbing wall there.  It’s a large specimen, measuring 65 feet in height and presenting some pretty challenging faces, at least for newer climbers.  And for a 5-year-old, one would argue that it is indeed a daunting spectacle, rearing its head into the glass-ceilinged sky above.

Well, on that summer trip, the climbing roster was full and we learned that an appointment ahead of time is required.  So Lucas’ possible climb was put on the back burner “for another time.” Shortly thereafter, he disappeared from all known adults in the store and we were frantic, hearts thumping and stomachs in our mouths, with the thought that he’d been kidnapped.  Thankfully, (whew!) it turned out that he’d “only” walked off to explore the store on his own.  It’s a big place, sprawling over two full floors on a full city block, with lots of doors and nooks and crannies to hide a kid, so the adults’ fears of having lost him for good were not without merit.  After our initial panic episodes, and upon finding him safe but a little recalcitrant for having been reeled in against his will, all of us adults switched into “You’ve-had-it, young man!” mode and marched out of the store with him in tow — no further thoughts of letting him climb a wall.  We’d already climbed all the walls we wanted to, trying to find him!

Enough of the hair-graying flashback.  Fast forward to Christmas Eve, 2009.  I had gone back to REI on December 17,  when he arrived in Seattle for the Christmas holiday, and made an appointment for Lucas to climb the wall.  He went with me to do that and, as we neared the entry door, I had gladly received his promise that he’d stay right with me and we’d make the appointment first, then look around.  We did that in pretty good form, although I had a little distraction from an insistent young boy who “REALLY NEEDED” a new set of expensive climbing shoes.

“Maybe when you’re 14,” I said.

“But Popop, I need them tomorrow to climb!” he said.

“Nope,” sez I, several exchanges later. 

Christmas Eve broke chilly and bright in Seattle.  When I reached Jessica’s house to pick up the aspiring climber and his parents, Emily and Kip, Lucas was on full ready, motors revved and waiting for the drop of the starter’s flag.  Fully dressed with hair combed, face shiny and shoes on (an unusual condition for him) I could almost feel his nerves twitching with anticipation.  After appropriate goodbyes to all within earshot, we piled into the transport and made tracks the few miles to the REI store.  Lucas could hardly contain himself while the store attendant confirmed our reservation and talked to the climb master to firm up procedures.

Upon entering the area of the climbing wall, known as The Pinnacle, Lucas’ energy surged even more.  He slipped into shoes and his climbing harness, then listened with rapt attention (Huh? A 5-year-old?) to the climb master’s instructions even though she was careful to leave no stone unturned in setting forth the rules and her expectations.  I began snapping photos with my Nikon, probably showing almost as much anxious energy as Lucas, making sure I maximized the possibility of some good pics of the experience.

As we approached the wall after instructions were completed, Lucas was hitched to the belaying safety rope and asked to climb a short way up, then descend to make sure he could do so safely.  That accomplished to the climb master’s satisfaction, Lucas was then set free to make the climb.  No one needed to use a cattle prod on him — he was off in a shot and moved rapidly up the vertical rock face.  Between my presses of the camera’s shutter release, I halfway mused to myself that, once he looked down as he gained height, he might slow down or change his mind and want to come down.  Dream on, Popop!  He only seemed to gain speed.  Meanwhile, his dad was using some coaching words from the ground but, believe me, they were totally unnecessary.  Lucas was clearly full of confidence and had the stuff to back it up.  I thought he looked rather like a sticky-handed, sticky-footed tree frog as he continued to gain altitude.  And when he looked down at us, he paused only to grin really big, then turned and continued his climb.

There were a couple of muscular teenage boys looking on, grinning from ear to ear at Lucas’ confidence and speed.  A couple of times they turned and commented to each other in low tones, then looked over at me and raised their eyebrows as if to say, “Yeah, man!”  They seemed as proud of him as if he’d been their little brother.  His coordination and physical strength, proportionate to his size, were impressive.

I did not time Lucas’ first ascent that morning, but I know that he wasted little time in getting to the top.  He’s like that in all his physical efforts; there’s very little wasted motion — well, that is, if you don’t count as “wasted motion” the anticipatory bouncing up and down that precedes anything he’s allowed to do.   When he reached the summit, the climb master instructed him to move laterally several feet to release and re-attach a carabiner to a new location so that his safety rope would function properly during the descent.  That accomplished, he then began to rappel downward with a look of familiar comfort and reached the bottom all grins and high fives.

During his climb, his dad had quietly donned a pair of climbing shoes and was prepared to make an ascent on his own.  But Lucas knew that there were only two climbs on the ticket, and he wanted to make another.  His dad graciously acceded and Lucas moved around to another face of the rock to embark on ascent number two.

I know I sound like a proud grandpa, — that, I am! — but I’m excited by Lucas’ energy, enthusiasm and interest in outdoor activities and sports.  I hope it’s never a be-all, end-all for him, but I am equally hopeful that his sporting interest and natural affinity will stand him in good stead as he grows to maturity.  I trust that his participation will help him to focus his confidence on teamwork, discipline, concentration, and the reaching of maturing goals that are steps toward coping well in a bigger, much more daunting world ahead.  That’s all a reasonable “Popop” can hope for.

Go, Lucas!

Carpe diem.  Vita brevis!

Michael

© Jan. 2010 by Michael E. Stubblefield – all rights reserved

September 22, 2009

Carryin’ the Water

Filed under: Bucket lists,Family,From where I sit,Listening,Music,Priorities,Tasting Time — BikeWriter45 @ 10:52 pm

Today I drove them to the airport, helped unload and get all the luggage and gear into the ticketing area fifty feet away, then hurriedly kissed them goodbye as I dashed off to respond to the public announcement, “Will the owner of the green Ford Expedition please return to the vehicle immediately.”  It wasn’t a question.  It was a command.  I knew the security at this tiny airport was rigid, but I also knew the guy stood and watched me unload two large suitcases, a Pack-’N-Play, a stroller, a regulation car seat, and a mommy and her toddler.  Somehow, I had entertained the belief that at such a small facility with two other cars unloading in front and no one waiting to do so, the security guard would cut me some slack for five minutes, would give me a break out of a heart of compassion.  Boy, was I naive!  No time for compassion or family feelings, we’re here to stop terrorists!  God knows they must be swarming in through this airport.

DSC_00922009-09-19_13-48-21Well, anyway, I gave quick kisses to Jessica and Nadia, then dashed to my truck and drove away.  “Bye, Dad.  Thanks for all the fun.  Love you!”  “Love you, too, sweetheart, you and that wonderful little granddaughter.  Take care!” Not sure I said that, I was in such a hurry to avoid having my truck towed, but I sure thought it.  On the way home I was, of course, “blue” — something the sky was not.  We’re having overcast skies every morning and most days, fairly atypical for this time of year.  But the effect lent itself well to some of my emotions as I drove.  We’d had five days of real fun together.  Now I’d get home, quickly change into work clothing, then head off for the office.  No time to sit and savor the fun, hilarity and challenges of this wonderful five-day visit.  Only after work would time allow me to enjoy the memories while they were fresh, and by then they’d already be overlaid with a thick crust of the day’s business, so that I’d have to dig deeper to find the nuggets.  But the nuggets, like pure gold, survived the business day’s intrusions in good form.

Recollection of the fun started with my cleaning all the fine sand off two plastic beach buckets with small plastic shovel, scoop, a plastic road-grader toy and an even smaller plastic car, the latter driven by a smiling little Howdy Doody-looking man who’s locked in a permanent, paralyzed wave of his plastic hand.  His face recently had been kissed by those sweet little lips as he was pulled out of a sand castle on the beach.  She just picked him up with her chubby little hands, held him close to her face while she studied him very seriously for several seconds, then pulled him to her lips and smacked him a good one all over his tiny face.  Then she looked up at me sitting there watching, and a big smile broke out on her face.  Such a happy face!  Where was my camera when I needed it?  Tucked safely in its bag to keep the fine sand out of its works!  Argh!

God bless those chubby cherub-hands and that brightly lit face.  She is such a loving child, happy … and a little headstrong at times.  But I’d be disappointed if she weren’t, probably thinking her a tad short in inspirationDSC_01442009-09-20_13-34-05 and intensity for life.  Believe me, she’s got it!

As I thought about her today, the intensity of her personality came back without struggle.  When we played on the beach with a new bucket and shovel for digging sand, she soon decided that shovel work was just too slow and unexciting.  Pulling herself from the sand and picking up her new bucket, she headed for the water, that pounding, roaring surf.  There was no hint of trepidation at the prospect of the water’s force, doubtless because she was totally unaware of it.  She just knew she had a bucket and wanted some water in it.  I trailed close by with my camera, watching those little legs pump down the beach and those chubby cheeks jiggling like Jello with every jarring step on the packed sand near the waterline.  She held her bucket thrust straight out in front by her stiff arm, held parallel to the ground.  Right into the surf she went, then stopped, filled her bucket and turned back toward shore immediately.  The weight lowered her arm, but she grasped the bucket firmly with both hands now, gripping its rim with determination.  Water sloshed out with each step, but up the beach she went at rather amazing speed, given her short little stride.  The look on her face told it all.  There was sand stuck to one cheek and the side of her head where she’d earlier lain down on the sand briefly to enjoy its comfortable warmth that was more than a good tradeoff for any concern about getting dirty.  There had been no thought of getting dirty.  No fragile little wallflower, this one.  Yet she’s tender, a small child with all the curiosity and wonder built inside, wanting to know about life and all it offers.

This same small child must have made twenty or more trips up and down the shoreline, hauling water each time, only to dump it out on her pile of sand and immediately make another beeline for another bucketful.  Jessica and I were amazed.  As we watched her and played with her, as I captured her play in my camera and talked with “Mama” and enjoyed the sun’s warmth, I thought of the piece I published here recently — the one about the young school kids.  I was concerned about what they’re being taught — the fear, the admonitions to mistrust, the tentativeness and imminent threat of that big world out there.  No doubt, all the concerns of careful and loving parents, anxious to preserve their children in safety, come to bear in that mix.  And yet I have to think they are simultaneously forgetting an equally important aspect of life — the ability to live in abiding security and enjoyment, the joie de vivre that we must all have been created to feel and know.  My thoughts on this day, as I rode back home from the airport alone, a little misty-eyed and yet proud as could be, turned to song again.  I thought about my precious little granddaughter’s vulnerability, how strong yet fragile she is.  Even so, I thought of those who protect her, just like I do when she’s with me, and just like I would anytime anything threatened her.  The song’s words surged strong in my mind:

“If You Were Mine” by Fernando Ortega from This Bright Hour CD

When my heart is troubled, and I am weighed down,

Then I like to think of how this lonesome world would be

If I could see your face, or hold you in my arms,

If you were mine,

If you were mine.

If you had a bad dream, I would jump inside it,

And I would fight for you with all the strength that I could find.

I would lead you home by your tiny hand,

If you were mine,

If you were mine.

I would sing of love on the blackest night.

I would sing of God and how His goodness fills our lives.

I would sing to you ‘til the morning light,

If you were mine,

If you were mine.

I would sing to you ‘til the morning light,

If you were mine,

If you were mine.Carp Bch 12 9.19.09

I’m glad I sometimes think in songs .  I’m thankful I have a wife, children and grandchildren to think songs about.  I’m joyful to have tiny hands to hold on big beaches.  I’m delighted those tiny hands feel the joy and strength of life surging through them.

Carpe diem.  Vita brevis!

Michael

© Sep. 2009 by Michael E. Stubblefield – all rights reserved

Theme: Rubric. Blog at WordPress.com.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.