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A Naked Sunfish Holiday Tradition
Since 2002

Holiday Cheer from Aunt Edith

by
Rick Brown

My late Uncle Wes lived with my Aunt Edith for most of his adult life...although I’m sure it seemed like an eternity to him. He worked for the Bethlehem Steel Company in Baltimore for thirty years until he retired. He worked the night shift getting off around 7 a.m. when he would come home for dinner. In the summer when it was warm...and Baltimore can get very, very humid...he would go to a movie matinee in an air conditioned theater and sleep. If you knew my Aunt Edith you would assume what I did...even as a child...and that was that Uncle Wes worked nights and went to matinees to get away from his wife. He never said much. He was a slight, wiry man of few words. And the few words he almost always uttered were, “For Chrissakes Edith! SHUDD UPP!!”

Aunt Edith Photo

The man was almost incidental by nature. One time...after he retired and he and Aunt Edith moved back to the Cleveland area...my brothers and I were helping him put a refrigerator in a backyard shed because there was no room for it in the trailer they were moving into. After much jostling my brothers and I closed the shed door and thought we were finished. From her perch (as supervisor of course) Aunt Edith looked at the three of us with bewilderment and asked, “Where the HELL is Wes?” And after exchanging confused glances we heard muffled sounds coming from behind the fridge in the shed. “MMMPPPHH!!! Hey!! HHMMPPHHFFF!!!” We quickly opened the shed door, moved aside the refrigerator and liberated Uncle Wes. My brothers and I were all embarrassed and each, in turn, apologized profusely for our insensitive behavior. Aunt Edith broke into the humility with a shriek of, “What the HELL were you doing in there?” Which prompted Uncle Wes to ... once again ... chant his mantra. “For Chrissakes Edith!! SHUDD UPP!!” They were quite the loving couple. Their last name was Crabtree. I am not making this up.

Wes soon was diagnosed with lung cancer. Thirty years in the steel mills and 2 packs a day of Chesterfield non-filters caught up with him. The last time I saw him he was lying on the couch in their trailer smoking the aforementioned brand of cigarettes, quite literally coughing his lungs out ... or what was left of them. “I TOLD him to quit those goddamned things years ago. “ Aunt Edith offered for my contemplation. To which Uncle Wes replied sarcastically (yep, you guessed it) “Cough cough ... For Chrissakes HACK! HACK! Edith!!! SHUDD UPPP!!!” These were the final words I heard my uncle ever say and we all joked at the funeral that these very words were more than likely chiseled into his headstone.

A few years after Wes passed, my brother and his new wife were having their very first Christmas and invited everyone over...including Aunt Edith. My parents were there along with my siblings and their families. This included my brother Jim’s 9 year old adopted son Matt. Matt the Brat was what my father called him. I thought this surprisingly subtle for my Dad. If I knew where Matt is today...and thank God I do not ... I would have to guess some one killed him or he’s in jail convicted of several murders. I honestly don’t care so long as he’s nowhere near me. So Matt the Brat is playing with one of the toys some one so graciously gave him and he broke it. This kid could break anything he got his hands on. But in a moment of diplomacy my father (affectionately known as Snook) said, “They don’t make anything any good any more!!” To which...in the spirit of the season Aunt Edith quipped, “You’re right Snook!! Everything IS SHIT!!!” Well... happy holidays to you too Aunt Edith. Inside my head I distinctly heard a voice from my past reply, “For Chrissakes Edith!! SHUDD UPPP!”

You know...there are lots of reasons to go through life believing that “everything is shit.” There are days when it certainly seems true to me. I have my days when Sartre’s “Hell is other people” could easily be the thought of the day. But...unlike Aunt Edith...I don’t want to spend a big chunk of my life living alone in a trailer. And when I think of this particular Christmas it strikes me how most of them blur into each other...with the exception of a few. And this is one of them I distinctly remember. As much as family...and sometimes even friends ... can annoy a person ... especially at this time of year ... I have come to realize that even some one like Aunt Edith helped make me who I have become. I mean that in a positive way. Imagine ... Aunt Edith’s negativity was so over the top it MADE me consider the positive. I have no idea how she became so bitter. My father did shortly before he died also. Yet they both, particularly Snook, had a positive influence. They were there. Unlike today when some people are not.

This holiday season...regardless of which one you celebrate...take the time to savor those around you...even if they drive you nuts. They may not...for whatever reason...be there next year. And in some strange way, which will surprise you, their absence will make you miss them. I guarantee it. (a possible exception to this uplifting message might be Matt the Brat) And you might consider that next year YOU might not be here. So I suppose my holiday message may seem bittersweet to most...but that’s how I see it. And if anyone feels the need to take issue with my views then I encourage you to speak up LOUDLY...’cause I’ve got one thing and one thing only to say to you.

FOR CHRISSAKES!!!!

SHUDD UPPP!!!


October Light

Translucent light,

crimson leaves

transparent against

the clear October sky.

Last shades of summer,

first breath of cold.

A temporal suspension

in an adagio.

Dennis Toth

http://leavesofcrass.blogspot.com/

 


Book of Face Post

by
Rick Brown

Autocorrect changed “shit” to “shot” but kept “fuck” intact.
WTF?

Truth isn’t truth.

13 likes                            3 comments

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Rick – “Everything you know is WRONG!” Firesign Theater

Karen – That is probably because you say fuck enough that autocorrect knows
               You mean fuck but is still not sure about shit.

Rick – HELL YEAH!!!














Alone in the Neighborhood

by
Morris Jackson




XMAS BALL

by
C. Mehrl Bennett



Flickr Album


Rick's Books, Naked Sunfish Caviar
& Best Bites,
are available at:



Lulu.com


Rick's book, Best Bites is available at:
Lulu.com
&
Amazon.com


Jimmy Mak's new book,
Daddies Shouldn't Breakdance,
is available at:
Amazon.com & CreateSpace.com


Elva Griffith's new book,
The Analysis of H Final,
is available at:
Amazon.com



Holiday Hoopla 27

Shadowbox Live
The Worly Building
Columbus, Ohio

By
Rick Brown

Click Here for the Review




by
Sue Olcott


Click Here



Mister Francis

By
Rick Brown

I worked 31 years for The Ohio State University Main Library. And in that time, I met many interesting … creative people. Libraries are magnets for the “English/History major college grad who has no idea what to do with their lack of marketability” crowd … and beyond. A history major myself … and with 3 years of college library experience … I found a home here. And I fit in … at least as well as any of us educated misfits “fit in”.

Early on in my career … when I was close to 30 years old I suppose … I befriended an elderly gentleman named Mr. Francis. He was a slight, wiry, wisp of a man who walked with a cane and … for no apparent reason … always wore suspenders. And rumor had it he ran the mailroom. I say rumor because he had a habit of wandering around chatting up pretty girls … or anyone who would listen to his stories. The Morelocks (I called the people who worked Technical Services … in the library’s basement … Morelocks … in reference the underground dwellers from H.G. Wells’ The Time Machine. Few of them saw the humor … isn’t that just like a Morelock?) … anyway … they nicknamed Mr. Francis “The Wanderer” after Dion’s 1961 hit song. (You young whippersnappers can Google this stuff … and you should.)

When he WAS in the mailroom, Mr. Francis would regale his college student employees with corny jokes and tales … or at least try to. Unlike the 19-year-olds in the room, I found his stories fascinating. He told jokes that my dad might have. Like: Last night my wife left the bedroom window open … and INFLUENZA! And his reminiscences revolved around his younger years as a vaudevillian. He talked about Columbus’s Southern and Palace Theaters … and some long torn down. He shared the stage with the likes of George Burns, Bob Hope and Henny Youngman. I found Mr. Francis’s tales mesmerizing … endearing … and I believed him. His stories were obviously true … to me at least. He had the 1930s style moustache to prove it. And when he left work for the day he usually donned a trench coat and derby. He was indeed a vaudevillian still.

His wife made him quit the stage … for good … after they married. This was the only story Mr. Francis EVER told me without a glint in his eye … without a hint of humor. I could tell … even in my youth … that he had bid farewell to his true love.

Sometime in the early 1980s Mr. Francis decided to retire. He was certainly old enough. And I’m sure he was weary of the mailroom. Maybe being “The Wanderer” was falling prey to arthritis. He never confided … or complained to me.

The day of his retirement I myself wandered down to the mailroom … around 4:30 … to bid Mr. Francis adieu … wish him luck … thank him for sharing his corny jokes …his past celebrity. I found him alone … beginning to get ready to head for home for the final time. He greeted me with … “Hello and goodbye Rick”. He had his derby on and his trench coat in his arms. I wished him luck … health and happiness … told him the place wouldn’t be the same without him.

Mr. Francis thanked me … paused … and said to me, “You know Rick … you reach a certain age and … well … you start to see the folly of it all.”

And with that he walked out the door.

At the age of perhaps 30 … I wasn’t quite sure what he meant.

Now ... at age 66 … I’m pretty damned sure I do.




Crowd

by

Amy McCrory

Blog:
http://amymccrory.wordpress.com/




Pren

by

Gabriel Guyer

http://www.gabrielguyer.com


Anneliese
by
aNna (Wellman) rybaT

Blog: http://www.annarybat.blogspot.com



copyright notice
Issue 1 - January 2002