Eamus Catuli AC0871108

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If I had to guess, I would say he had once been a hippy, but those days were past him now.  Now he found whatever was to be found in the working of a 9 to 5.  He had just a few more years to go.

“Man, did you really see the World Series?” he asked, looking at my jacket.

“Yeah.”

“Well you should be happy.  Your team won the whole damn thing,” he smiled.

I laughed.  “Actually, my team is kind of the Cardinals, and I went in 2014.  The Royals won Game 6 that year, but they didn’t win 7.”

“Well this year they didn’t need 7.  Did you see any Cardinal postseason games, then?”

“Last fall I saw Game 3 of the Division Series.  First time I was ever at Wrigley.”

“That was your first time at Wrigley?  Man, I would have love to have seen that.  I’m a life long Cubs fan.  What did you think of The Friendly Confines?”

“I had a pole that blocked my view of home.  The upper deck was right above us.  That was the game they set the record for homeruns.  I’d hear the crack of the bat, a ball would could barreling out from behind the pole, shoot up out of sight above the deck, and I would watch the outfielders to see if it was going to stay in or not.  Best seat I’ve ever had.”

“I took my boy to Wrigley.  We just got it in our heads we were going to drive out there, so we did.  I pulled up at 10:30 in the morning, went up to the ticket window, and told the guy I needed two.

He said, ‘I’m sorry man, but we’re all sold out.’  I was heartbroken.  Walking back to break the news to my son, he called out to me.  He said, ‘I can get you two tickets, but they aren’t going to be next to each other.  There will be 6 or 7 rows between you.’  I told him that would work.

Turned out it rained just ahead of game time.  It was a short delay, but hardly anybody showed.  We got to sit wherever we wanted, like we had the whole place to ourselves.

The Cubs were down 6 going into the ninth.  It was getting late.  I told him we ought to head for the car, but you know how boys are.  He was convinced they were going to pull it out, and he begged me to stay.  So we did.

Would you believe they won that damn game?  I still can’t believe it.  Best day of my life.”

And there he was, just in front of me, and back at that day at Wrigley, like he’d been a thousand times.

On his hand he wore no ring.  I went on to ask him about his son, and the conversation always remained in the past tense.  This man thanked God for his work.  He also thanked Him for baseball.  I thanked Him for a jacket.

Something More Than Free

 

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Spring

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Our first calf of the year was out of a bull called Woodhill Gusto.  The calf, also being a bull, I dubbed Gus.  His mother has raised a couple of calves by now, and given the two she raised and the calf before me, I expected Gus to be a good one.

He was a thick rascal, had good, heavy bone, and his rear legs looked like springs still trying to uncoil.  He was particularly quiet, and his mother was particularly cautious.  I was particularly pleased.

“We had a calf this morning,” I told my father, as I hurriedly changed direction to get on with the rest of the work of the day.

“What was it?”

“A bull,” I said, keeping my expectations to myself.

My father, about to be 70, checked the group Gus was in the next day.

“That little shit is running and hopping now,” he said with a smile.  I partially acknowledged it.  Something new had no doubt come up, and I was once again in a hurry.

The next morning was my turn again, and I found Gus on a pile of cornstalks.  Secretly wanting to see the same performance Dad had, I went to get him up.  He was lethargic, as new calves can often be, and his mother wasn’t around.  Sometimes, when they become fully alert, they panic and take off in any direction, so I was content to let him be.

That evening, making the rounds, I found him in a different spot on the same pile, dead.  I had a veterinarian do a necropsy on the calf, and we found his abdomen pooled with blood.  On his liver was a two inch laceration, barely more than a scratch.

“I think this calf got stepped on,” was the pronouncement.

Spring was here.  New life brought into the same old one.

A few days later, with more calves on the ground, I came home to find a heifer needing help.  I had to pull the calf, a big, bulky thing.  While the mother had no trouble mothering him, he couldn’t seem to get the whole nursing thing figured out.

Twice a day I’d latch her in a headgate, get the calf’s mouth in the right vicinity, and wait.  An index finger in the corner of his mouth would try to entice him to get the party started.  If it didn’t work, you’d milk her out and try it with a bottle.

One morning you walk out and finding a standing calf and cow.  The cow has a teat that’s wet.  The calf is looking at you like, “What the hell are you doing here?”  And they are off and running.

This is spring, too.  From the old one, new life.  It’s no wonder they placed Easter here.

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Namaste

 

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I once listened to a man speak about how to make it through life while keeping our head above water.  Someone asked him about meditation.

“I tend to view meditation as an escape from the world, a form of distance.  We all have our escapes.  I find the world is always waiting for us when we get back.”

“Isn’t the point of meditation:  to escape the world in order to come back refocused?”

“That’s always been the idea, I think.  I’m just not sure I’ve ever seen it work.  It feels good, but distance usually does, and we tend to make whatever form we chose an end in itself.  What I’m interested in is how we might deal with the world by remaining and  becoming more present in it.”

For some men, to meditate is to fish, and it has been that way since ancient times.  Even Christ called a few of them from their boats.

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For me, on the ice of Devil’s Lake, North Dakota, in a shack with a partner, over the low roar of the propane heater and staring at the lights of the Vexilar, I wasn’t aware of any distance.  In the stillness of waiting for a fish to bite, I thought it was all present.  The past, the dead, present worries, and the future.

A fish would bite, and they were gone.  Then things would get still, and they would come back.  Perhaps I never was much of a fisherman.

Sunday morning was the start of the third and final day.  At 6 am it was already starting to get slushy on the ice, as we drove down a boat ramp and out onto 90 miles of water in a Chevy Tahoe.

“You know I was nervous enough on Friday, when it was cold,” I commented to our 19-year-old guide.

“Don’t worry about the water.  It means the ice is still strong beneath it.  I don’t start to get nervous until the water disappears.  That means it is soaking through.

After it soaks through long enough, it leaves the ice honeycombed and gives it a hollow, crunchy sound.  When you hear that, you panic.  You’re about ready to fall through.

Today will be the last day we drive trucks out here.”

“Have you ever went in?”

“Last year was the first time.  The ice was getting thin and I was on a four-wheeler with my father.  He tried to blow over a crack in the ice, but the shelf he crossed over on was broke as well.  As he drove onto it, it stood up.  Dad jumped, but I was backwards on the rear rack and daydreaming.  When I hit the water, it was so cold I clenched my fists, and rode the four wheeler all the way to the bottom.  It felt like it took five minutes to get to the surface again.”

“What did you think of that?”

“That will wake you right up.”

I had no doubt.

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Friday was cold and blustery, and I spent most of the day with my foot holding the frame of our shack down so it didn’t flip over.  Saturday was the big day catching fish.  Sunday we caught walleye before the sun came up, but after that, moving to deeper water for perch, all most of us caught was a buzz.

We wouldn’t mind it none.  The temperature climbed into the mid 50’s.  The sun above us beckoned.  One by one we flipped back the tarps which had been keeping the cold out and our thoughts in, and we sat on the ice in the sun.

Looking out at the expanse we sat on, I thought of our guide.  Someday we will all make the plunge beneath the cracked and shrinking ice.  Today wasn’t the day, though.

We set our poles down, and on the winter ice, in the springtime sun, the boys of summer played ball.  On Friday we caught the wind.  On Saturday we caught fish.  On Sunday we caught a good time, with the whole world beneath our feet.  Namaste.

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