Skip to content

Category Archives: Stories

Down By The Catfish Pond

21-Apr-08

Catfish Pond
I’ve listed three new paintings for auction at eBay which you can check out here. This one is from my childhood memories of growing up here in the South.

It was 1967. I was nine and my parents were to attend a Saturday evening Sunday School social meeting—a shindig. They decided I should attend as well. Such an event would provide the ideal setting for my first real excursion into socializing with big folk.

I should point out that my parents logic in this decision was as follows:

  • There would be no cussing, drinking, or smoking since we were all good Southern Baptists—at least at church events…
  • All the church ladies thought I was cute as a button anyway, so I would be a most welcome guest…
  • All the church men would be delighted to have me listening in on their conversations and asking kid questions. They had no choice. The church ladies would see to that.

The event was down by the catfish pond at the home of one of the church founders. They had a regular Kennedy type compound as I recall. There was the main house, several small rental houses surrounding it, all rented to their grandkids, and a second main house occupied by their daughter and her family. There was even a daycare center which was run by their daughter. She kept every kid in the church and surrounding community I think—including me when I was just a baby. All of this situated on maybe twenty acres, most of which was woods, a very large vegetable garden, some outbuildings, and of course the catfish pond.

We arrived. Within minutes my face was covered in red lipstick and my hair had been tousled so many times that a little dab of Brylcreem would not do me. I took it like a little gentleman though. I even removed the lipstick myself before my dear mom managed to slobber on a Kleenex and wipe it off for me. Lord I hated that. Note to Moms: NEVER lick a Kleenex and wipe stuff off your little feller’s face. OK?

Down at the catfish pond there were lots of temporary, nylon-webbed folding chairs all around and the more purposed wooden ones you see pictured above. I was to find out, all too vividly, what the waist high, narrow wooden table and pail were for. Atop the creosote pole hung a street lamp of some sort which cast a surreal light in the dusky air. People were all about talking, laughing, skipping stones, pitching horseshoes. The church ladies were trailing down the hill from the big house to the pond, each with a covered dish of some sort, or pitchers of sweet tea. Upon delivery, most took an about face and trailed back up the hill for more—like so many well coiffed, Betty Crocker ants.

Then came Lassie down the hill with a couple of fishing poles and plastic container. Lassie was not a dog. Lassie and Sloan owned the compound. They were the family matriarch and patriarch. I never found out where her name came from, but from my perspective at nine years old, it was akin to a boy named Sue. I couldn’t imagine she was pleased with her name. There were many other southern name pairs present which I believe can only be found in the South. Pug and Thelma. Buford and Beulah. Archie and Polly, Sam and Virginia, Ben and Addie…and my parents, Clyde and Evelyn.

Lassie handed me a cane fishing pole and said “Here. Put chew a worm on there and catch you a catfish.” Then she held the plastic container full of black dirt in front of my face as though I was supposed to know instinctively what to do. “Go on. Git chew a worm.” My first social rite of passage in the adult world I suppose was getting that worm out of that dirt while giggly church ladies and snickering church men watched. First worm I ever handled actually. Didn’t like ‘em. Wasn’t about to poke a hook in one. I stood there, Lassie grinning down at me, and…well I kept standing there, worm in hand. Finally, Pug helped me turn the little worm into a knot on the end of the hook and walked me over to the edge of the pond.

All previously paused conversations resumed and I was left alone with the line in the water and cane pole tightly held with both hands. About fifteen seconds passed and the red and white bobber disappeared under the surface. The pole tip bent significantly and quivering, I shouted for my dad. “Pull it in!” he and a couple of others shouted back. I yanked the pole with all I had and out of the pond popped the red and white bobber and a sizable pissed off catfish. I turned and flung it up on the flat grass behind me and Sloan was on it like a cop taking down a belligerent hippie at an anti-war demonstration. He snatched it off the hook and said “c’mon over here son.” I had never seen a catfish unless it was fried. A live catfish looked downright inedible. I could not connect the dots of what was required to get something so ugly to somehow become a golden breaded slab of good southern eatin’.

We marched to the peculiarly narrow waist high wooden table with the plastic pail beside it. Sloan pulls a ball peen hammer out of the pail with his free hand—the catfish squirming in the other. Clueless I watch. Much to my surprise, Sloan lays the catfish on the narrow table, and with a blow akin to a blacksmith, pounds the catfish’s head with the hammer.

I flinched. As flinches go, it was a large one. About three feet airborne and a step or two past that once I touched down. I looked at my shirt and something I didn’t recognize had splattered on me.

In total disbelief, my wide eyes returned to the table top at the precise instant that Sloan inserted the pointed tip of a thin, curved knife into the anus of the catfish, quickly split it open from tail to gill, and began removing the entrails.

My response? …I puked. Much to Sloan’s surprise I might add. His flinch, though smaller than mine, included a non-Baptist-approved word skillfully uttered under his breath.

Sloan, holding fish to table and pointing to and fro with his knife, gingerly dispatched the church ladies rescue squad who quickly relocated me and cleaned up the accident scene. All so fast that few even noticed. Later that evening, Sloan grinned and winked at me from the other side of a loose circle of the cheap lawn chairs, each with our own bowl of home made ice cream. For a second or two, I wondered if this was what being an adult was all about. Then I went for another bowl of ice cream.

Starbucks Story

11-Apr-08

Starbucks Roswell GA

I decided to actually enter the Starbucks for my cup of coffee this time. Don’t know why. I’m a drive-thru type, rarely venturing indoors. This is a new Starbucks and in an area where the people are more my type. So I decided I’d see how the atmosphere suited me and if I felt comfortable sketching there.

Turns out it was fine and I’ll likely return and maybe become less of a drive-thru type. Also turns out there was a reason my self wanted me to go indoors today.

I saw an old friend from high school I hadn’t seen in thirty plus years.

I recognized him immediately, I’m pretty good at that for some reason. My face/name memory is good. Plus, this particular chap was probably the only person in the entire school for whom I had great respect.

I was on the wrestling team (wraslin’ as the coach referred to it). And Anthony was too. He was the State region AAA champ for his weight class actually. A reserved, mature gentleman would be the best description of him. He didn’t find pleasure in harassing and bullying the underclassmen. Instead, he placed his efforts in honing his skills and had a remarkable ability to concentrate on the sport.

For me though, the story was different. I was a gentleman but far from mature in my self belief. Thus I became a target for the shenanigans my upper classmen teammates conjured in their moments just prior to falling asleep at night. You know, that time when the mind seeks comforting thoughts so as to lull one into a gentle, pleasant sleep. And these clowns, I truly believe, obtained great pleasure from their ideas such that they would fall asleep each night with the delight that tomorrow would bring another day in which they could implement their boredom breaking antics on someone they viewed as passive. And passive I was.

A quick example is in order here. A young freshman football player was locked out of the gym one evening after practice. Not a big deal…except he was stripped of all his clothes first, shoved into a forty degree windy evening, and left wondering how he would get himself out of the predicament. After forty minutes or so of pleading, they let him in. Only God knows what they did then. Hopefully nothing.

I never suffered that level of harassment, but at practice I could always sense the wheels turning in the minds of the tormentors. They constantly had a mischievous grin on their faces when they would look at me. I wasn’t the only target mind you. There were a number of us to choose from. Like so many chickens in the yard, we knew the farmer had the hatchet in his overalls. It was just a matter of who would be eaten for dinner that night. It was a constant psychological nuisance for me and others.

Eventually, I quit the team. It’s not that I couldn’t take it. I simply didn’t need to. Over the Christmas break I finally asked myself why I was on this team. My answer was “Hell, I don’t really know. It’s not making me any friends. The students at large don’t even know the team exists. I’m exhausted… weaker now than when I started. And avoiding the crap is more trouble than it’s worth. Mostly bad, very little good, equals a waste of time. Time to quit and move on.”

Anthony though, was never part of the shenanigans. He was above that. Nobody bothered him and he never bothered anybody. He just won his matches like a machine. It was a given. He would win. And he would not strut about it. He actually tried to teach us newbies key things. He was the only one who did. He was much better at it than the coach. He was just a good person and a great athlete. I dug up the annual at home and in there he wrote “To a nice guy. Shouldn’t have quit wrestling. Wrestle next year. Anthony.”

Could be he was right. I’ll never know. The prevailing sentiment was to “never quit”. But I never bought into it. Some things are not worth continuing and can be quite costly if not stopped. Seemed to me it was wiser to constantly take stock of a situation, give it time to improve, legitimately attempt to improve it myself, and stop fooling myself if it was obviously not going to improve. That meant of course quitting and moving on. The noble Euripides once said, “The wisest follow their own direction.” And so I did.

It came as no surprise to me today that Anthony is still a good person. Owns his own business and does well at it. He treats his employees very well, like people. It was good to see him and to see him doing so well. We need people like that in society. They keep the wheels turning in the right direction. It speaks well of him that after thirty years people want to say hello rather than saying nothing and remembering things they had rather not.

So, what then is the lesson for me in this Starbucks story today?

We affect everyone we come in contact with, even thirty years hence. It is unavoidable. What then is the best way to be? What then is the best way to teach our children to be? What is the greatest value we can bring to the life we’ve been afforded?

Male or female, young or old, be kind, generous, understanding, resolved, fair, calm and thoughtful in your decisions. Be consistent. Know that you may be wrong sometimes and apologize. And if you are fortunate enough to have bestowed upon you a rare gift of talent, use it to emphasize these traits rather than become self absorbed and destroy them. In the end, that will gain you great respect. It is in fact, the only way to obtain respect and keep it.

If there is any endeavor in life that one should never quit, it is the struggle to acquire and keep these traits as a natural part of one’s self. Running into Anthony reminded me of that.

Idle Minutes Gets an Overhaul

08-Apr-08

Well hello dear readers. It has been a couple of months since I posted because I’ve been busy painting watercolors and selling them.

At the same time, I’ve been pondering how to best put the two things I love to do, art and writing, into one online venue.

My first thought was to design another site altogether for the paintings, which I did. I got a few new subscribers on that site and remembered how long it took to get a good following here at Idle Minutes. So, I’m going to scrap that site and combine everything right here at Idle Minutes.

Dunno why I didn’t think of that right off the bat but hey, like Robert Frost I’ve taken the road less traveled and that has made all the difference.

Don’t Worry!

  • I’m still gonna write and sketch just as before…the same illustrated observations on life as usual
  • Tucked into those posts will be a quick note to let my readers know if I’ve listed new watercolor paintings at eBay.
  • Those watercolor auctions will be listed right here on the blog under the “Affordable Fine Art” column at left
  • I’ll also be listing auctions there from my favorite affordable artists who list on eBay.
  • Last but not least, I’ve made it really easy to get Idle Minutes in your inbox - see that red box at left? And those RSS subscription links just below it?

So the changes are all for the better, see?


You’ll have a bit more variety to peruse here at Idle Minutes and I’ll hopefully sell a few paintings to keep my stomach from growling. And hey, you got a new website look and feel in the bargain which lists ten posts at a time now instead of one.

And since I finally have my online act together, I’ll be posting on a regular basis again so your inboxes and RSS readers will have something a bit out of the ordinary to liven them up ;-)

Over the next couple of days I’ll be adding a few things to the sidebars so keep one eye on that while you read the posts.

Thanks so much for reading Idle Minutes and please, comment if you get the urge. I love to hear from my readers and I always respond.

Forest Road

25-Jan-08
Forest Road

I live two hours from the tippy top of the North Georgia mountains — just an hour from the foothills. I go as often as I can and hike or just ride around and look. I take the ol’ sketchbook and paints with me too.

Years ago I discovered the forest service roads up there. These roads are graded dirt and gravel and are used by the forest service for fire control access and land management. Some are well maintained such that a sedan can travel them if need be. As such, the outdoorsy of us just load up the ol’ Toyota and go do a little fishing in a cool, remote stream or lake — or visit one of the more accessible waterfalls.

The young and restless go mountain biking and multi-day hiking and camping on a regular basis. There is Appalachian Trail access up in those hills too. That’s quite handy if you’re actively being badgered to join the AARP and not generally known to be, shall we say…”active”, by your advice giving exercise and wellness experts at the office.

With a little effort you can drive to the AT on a Saturday morning, hike a mile uphill and a mile downhill back to the car, then spend the rest of the day ridin’ around, eatin’ bar-b-que and banana pudding, and being generally lazy and carefree in the cool mountain air — while they go to the gym, play a set of tennis, or heaven forbid run for eight or ten miles in ninety-five degree Georgia humidity, all on a diet of fruit, veggies, yogurt, and tofu.

Then on Monday, when they brag to you about the healthy exercise and eating they did over the weekend, tell your domesticated athlete, city slicker, tofu eating peers that YOU hiked the Appalachian Trail. Hah! Take that!

But I digress…

The painting is from my memory of traveling many of these forest roads. They are calming, remote…and interestingly…they lead to places you didn’t know were there. As you drive along you wonder, “where’s this go?” And that is oddly fun.

Too Pooped to Play

20-Jan-08
Tired Little Kitty

Little pups and kittens, and children too I suppose, just can’t stand the notion of going to sleep. There’s too much to see and do.
It’s not unusual to find evidence they’ve fought sleep ’till the bitter end. Like this little kitty.

Play, play, play…play some more, one eye open, yawn, yawn some more, both eyes closed, one eye open…the yarn is so soft.
Hmmmmmm….both eyes closed.

It happens to me too. I fall asleep on the floor occasionally, beside my dog Rosie, after I’ve thrown The Rat, or Mr. Sheepy, or The Singing Cow for her to chase. She sleepily retrieves it one last time, lays on the carpet and looks at me. I lay down too and pat her ‘ol head and rub her thick, soft coat.

Next thing I know (or more accurately, don’t know) we’re both sound asleep on the floor — the toy just beside us.

It’s some of the best sleep I’ve had that kind of sleep.

They Must Think Men are Really Stupid

17-Jan-08
Undetectable Results

I’m driving, listening to some talk show on AM radio.
Time for the break.
First up is a commercial for a hair replacement solution for bald guys.

It’s a miracle of course.
Totally new.
The only solution that truly works.
Gives a bald guy a new lease on life — women, money, promotion, ability to swim without worry, play tennis, surf — all kinds a stuff a bald guy just can’t do or have because he’s bald.

Then the announcer loudly and excitedly bellows the following phrase:

“Awesome Undetectable Results!”

Huh? C’mon now. Undetectable Results?? What’s awesome about that?
No hair before and no hair after?! Yeah right!

If I’m a bald guy — with no hope for a girlfriend, sex, money, promotions, fancy cars, or the ability to swim without worries — and I pay out the wazoo for new hair, then I dang sure better get detectable results!

Innocent Until Proven Guilty

11-Jan-08
Innocent Until Proven Guilty
“I do not steal shiny objects!”

I’m still conjuring up crow images.

In the process of researching crows I remembered something I had long forgotten. They are pretty smart and they like shiny objects. In fact they find ways to steal them so they can hoard them away.

Reminds me of Emelda Marcos and her shoe compulsion — I’m sure they were shiny.

Anyway, I got to thinkin’ about how a crow might react to the media circus that would result if he were indicted on felony burglary charges. I mean indicting a crow would certainly be a first and the media jumps all over first time court cases.

What Would The Usual Suspects Do?

Nancy Grace would have an Ivy League legal expert on her show offering up his opinions on whether the case was even constitutional. Then she’d have an experienced female behavioral expert chime in on whether this was an in-born behavior or a choice the crow made. And of course the male legal expert and the female behavioral expert would get into a heated debate on the moral aspects of incarcerating a crow for in-born behavior — something he couldn’t help.

Now, since the crow is black, the NAACP would demand equal time on the airwaves and stage a peaceful protest outside Nancy’s studio.

If the case were in fact prosecuted and won by the feds, a precedent would be set and in short order every crow would be caught stealing, filling up our prisons with yet another apparently singled out group — ripe pickings for the American Civil Liberties Union and The Sierra Club — a Save The Crows coalition would be initiated by them.

People in large SUV’s would be driving around with little magnetic black ribbons on the back with “support our crows” written across them.

Then you’ve got your big money crows. The white collar burglars. They would assemble a team of flashy, high profile attorneys, most likely Parrots and Cockatoos. Each case would be a security nightmare because of all the socially deprived stray cats trying to get in and execute their own form of vigil ante justice on the rich bastards.

And The Big Question…What Would Oprah Do?

I can envision Oprah interviewing a defendant whose case was found to be a miscarriage of justice after spending ten years in prison. Eventually freed after the real perpetrator was uncovered, it turned out the poor crow was just in the wrong place at the wrong time. Oprah would naturally shed a few tears upon hearing his story told to America on her show — think tight close-up of Oprah here. Then, in an act of total generosity, in front of millions of American viewers, she would give the crow all her jewelry, free and clear, to hoard away any way he likes. The audience would rise and cheer and America would witness another first, a crow balling his eyes out in gratitude.

Bless her heart!
Bless his heart too!

Mmm, Mmm, Mmm…this is what I do in my idle minutes.