I’ve been feeling very nostalgic lately. Trips back home will do that to you. But I’m also nostalgic for times when everyone I know isn’t dealing with doctors and procedures and surgeries. The news wears on you like a thirteen hour car drive. Construction and potholes and detours and speed traps and tolls, and tolls, and tolls all take their toll. It’s good to be back home. For all of you out there who are still on that long trip, here’s to a speedy recovery and smooth sailing.
Most everyone in Louisville heads to Florida for Spring Break. We go to NJ. It is really good to see the family, some old friends and go by some old haunts. Some of the places are gone of course. Progress has taken a bite out of our wonder years, rudely emphasizing that you can’t go back. Meeting with retired buddies will also squash that youthful feeling. I have friends my age that are retired, the President is younger than I am! When the hell did I get old? And why do I need extra strength ibuprofen to help me straighten up after a day long car trip?
Renee came through with flying colors. She didn’t ask to stop once. What a difference a year makes! We made record time both ways. Breakfast, refueling and a couple of normal bathroom breaks barely slowed us. And Renee even drove a chunk on the way home. We ate too much but isn’t overindulgence part of Spring Break? Now it’s double time on the Wii Fit for everyone!
We covered a lot of ground. We squeezed in day trips to both Manhattan and to the boardwalk in Seaside. We hit the Garden State Parkway at rush hour. I used to do 140 miles of that every day. I don’t know how. I think we got our fill of Jersey food and Jersey driving, at least enough to hold us off until the next trip.
Today we returned to the routine. After 4 months, Renee has returned to her five day a week work schedule. We’re going to try to act like a normal healthy family from now until June when the next trip north disrupts the welcome tedium.
While we were in Jersey, Renee’s grandmother also came back home. Other Nana was released after her rehab stint at the nursing home. She’ll never really go back home as her house sold last week and she’s living with Renee’s parents. We spent a good part of our visit sifting through a collection of items that took 92 years to assemble. Thirty days is all there is to disassemble it before the closing.
We rustled through stacks of dusty old dishes and trinkets much the same way Other is processing her thoughts. She travels seamlessly from present to past, sometimes lucid sometimes forgetful. She wrestles with her mind, banging at her temples, trying to will her brain to remember what she knows she should not have forgotten and sometimes remembering things that never happened. But she is much stronger than the reports we received. How many times have you seen a 92 year old doing a stairmaster? It’s a recumbent version but still I was impressed.
So Other, this one’s for you. {Notes: Raggedy Ann was introduced to the world circa 1917, the same year Other was born. It was also the year the US entered World War I, aka the Great War. The precursor to the Roosevelt dime, the Liberty was more commonly known as the Mercury dime. Other Nana and her husband Nat owned a grocery on Mulberry Street in Newark, NJ. It is now a parking lot.}
Raggedy Annie
By Bob Masterson © Old Paint Music 2009
You ran that old deli down on Mulberry Street
Cold cuts sliced thin, boiled eggs, pickled beets
Your fingers were raw, your prices were fair
But your bones have grown brittle, the load too much to bear
You gave a hundred percent, kept everything square
Now when you give it your all, change is all you can spare
Old copper pennies and Mercury dimes
Raggedy Annie give me a piece of your mind
Give me old copper pennies and Mercury dimes
A few scattered mem’ries of simpler times
Rag dolls and hopscotch and pearls of wisdom we find
When Raggedy Annie
Gives us a piece of her mind
You’re looking back, a child skipping in time
Chalk on a sidewalk, don’t step on a line
You raised up a family with an iron fist
Now they’re raising you, it’s a hell of a twist
Give me old copper pennies and Mercury dimes
A few scattered mem’ries of simpler times
Rag dolls and hopscotch and pearls of wisdom we find
When Raggedy Annie
Gives us a piece of her mind
Is there anything left in this modern world
For a Great War rugrat, by-gone girl?
Memories flipped like a coin in the hand
Called in the air, where will it land?
Tumbling truths we try’n understand
Heads n tails tales from Raggedy Ann
They tore down the deli for a Park and Ride
You no longer know me but I’m still by your side
A lot of years we’ve seen, a lot of coins that were tossed
Some of the changes don’t seem worth the cost
Give me old copper pennies and Mercury dimes
A few scattered mem’ries of simpler times
Rag dolls and hopscotch and pearls of wisdom we find
When Raggedy Annie
Gives us a piece of her mind
Old copper pennies and Mercury dimes
Raggedy Annie give me a piece of your mind