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    Priorities...a Football Vignette

      I’m an unrepentant fan of college football, but only when my alma mater plays.  Big Red; the Cornhuskers; the University of Nebraska team, in case you need it spelled out further.  I don’t watch professional football ever; it seems pretty troglodytic to me, in fact.  But oh; when those scarlet-and-cream Cornshuckers take the field, my heart soars, and I hear the school song blaring, and the crowds roaring, and the stadium full of red-clad fans totally pumped, and just primed to do the wave!  We love our team inordinately, and even occasionally elect former coaches to the House of Representatives.

      I remember Homecoming, and the giant red mum corsages the co-eds pinned onto their woolen coats, as their high heels clicked along the sidewalks; the finally cooler brisk fall air redolent with the spicy scent of the corn-harvesting wafting about the campus.  I can feel myself  back again in the easy camaraderie of the masses of fans heading toward the stadium, thousands upon thousands of Nebraskans, for this wasn’t just college football, it was the raison d’etre of an entire state!  There is no place like Nebraska…where the girls are the fairest, the boys are the squarest… holding hands with my tiny four-foot eleven-inch girlfriend as we headed toward sun-drenched stadium nirvana.

      What could be more innocently thrilling, more invigorating, than a home game with our historical rivals, Oklahoma?  For decades we played the Sooners, OU’s team.  Even those of us who never otherwise bet on anything would put some money down on the home team.  It was a matter of pride and confidence in our boys.  All these years later, I still get jazzed when we play Oklahoma.  I’ll often call my father in Lincoln, and my son wherever he is at the time, prior to kickoff, and again during half-time to either commiserate or celebrate…maybe even when the game’s over; sometimes they’ll call me.  It’s great.

      Now this year and last, they’ve jumbled up the conference, and we’ve played the Oklahoma State Cowboys instead of the Sooners.  But hell; it’s almost as good.  Sometimes I’ll even remember to put on my Grandfather’s ugly red Cornhusker tie while I watch, if my wife remembers to dig it up for me.  She loathes football, and usually reads in the bedroom room during the game, so she brings me the tie in the way of some pointed ribbing.  She prides herself on not even knowing the rules, and breaks up when the announcers talk about tight ends, of which position she was made aware by the John Lithgow character in The Hotel New Hampshire.   When she can tell that I’m yelling bad things at the television, she’ll crack the door, and pretend to need assurance that I won’t beat her if Nebraska loses.  She thinks she’s pretty flipping funny.

      My mom died six months ago.  She had Alzheimer’s, and finally had to go and live in a nursing home.  She was ninety, and in relatively good health otherwise, and might have lived a lot longer, knowing less and less about the world around her.  Once an out-of-control infection almost killed her, but she rebounded from that, even though she was approaching a late-stage of dementia.  I prayed for her to die; life was getting increasing less fun for her.  One night, she sat up in bed, spoke a few words, and died.  She did it right; bye, mom; journey well.

      My dad had spent the last year adjusting to her eventual departure from his world in that process some have called the long goodbye.  He wants to stay in their house, and pays no attention to entreaties from my sister to move to an apartment or retirement home; damn, he’s a stubborn cuss.  A few months ago my sister brought him to Colorado, and she and I shuttled him from one end of the state to the other so he could visit me and my wife and his other relatives around the state.  He’s become something of a different person through all this; he even decided he liked my wife after decades of not, sometime during his stay.  Weird.  Now he can’t say enough nice things about her, and even laughs at her jokes; first sign of a sense of humor I can recall…  He doesn’t even throw a fit when she calls him Old Man, though nobody else can get away with it.  She asks him, “If ya ain’t old when you’re ninety-two, when are you?”  Maybe he finally thought, “Oh.  Right.”

      When my sister finally delivered him back home to Nebraska, we all thought he’d been cured of his sorties out into the world.  Boy, were we wrong.  My brother and his wife invited him to California for a visit to some millionaire’s house they were house-sitting.  Complex travel plans were arranged, and off he went again, after a mere few weeks at home.  He gallivanted around for a couple weeks on the coast, after which my sister and my dad’s infernal poodle picked him up at the airport in Denver.  He was exhausted, and eager to get home.  They spent the night in a small city not far from Denver so he could see his sister one more (maybe last) time, then headed to Lincoln the next morning.

      It was Game Day.  And by that I mean the day the Cornhuskers played the Cowboys.  I’d agreed to keep them abreast of the game by phone until they could get far enough east to pick up a radio station carrying the game.  We spoke by cell multiple times; it was a close game, and just great.  By half-time, Nebraska was a mere three points ahead.  But our last call brought news of a real, as they say, game-changer. 

      My sister had just gotten a call from our aunt, our mother’s sister: her husband, also in a nursing home with Alzheimer’s, plus other complications, had experienced some crisis, and his life was ebbing.  She asked them to come to them in western Nebraska, as she needed their help. 

      The ‘help’ was helping her decide whether or not to pull the plug on my uncle’s life.  Soon.  I pictured where they were on that long, straight highway heading east on the Great Plains and the yearned-for home for dad; now a detour north was necessary.  I cringed at this new burden that had just been laid on my dad’s fragile and aged shoulders.  My God.

      We kicked it around for a bit.  My dad was voting to say “no” to the plug-pulling, even though he didn’t seem to have enough information to make an informed decision.  I thought about it all for a bit, then talked it over with my wife.  We came up with some ideas he might want to consider, mainly about the advisability of being more of a sounding board for Auntie, asking questions and allowing her to decide.  We figured she should have all the votes, really; he’d been her husband for sixty years, after all.  His role should just be a support one.

      The game resumed, and was getting really competitive….I bit the bullet and phoned, knowing they were getting closer and closer to Gering.  I talked to my sister briefly about my thoughts, thinking that she might remember them better than my dad, and might be able to use a few hints.  She then handed her cell to my dad.  They weren’t far from the turnoff to the hospital; I launched into my spiel, acknowledging to him that he was walking into a really fraught situation, and letting him know I’d be with him in spirit.  I didn’t get too far before he interrupted me.

      “Mmm-hmmm…thanks, son; what’s the score now?  How are we doing?”  I told him that Nebraska had scored, and let him know the score…and said goodbye in response to his signing off…

       …and immediately heard my wife, closeted in our room, but obviously within earshot, burst into peals of laughter that turned into choking and snorting guffaws, finally leveled off into occasional chortles and chuckles.  Nebraskans just fucking killed her.

     

    Comments

    What's the score. hahahahaha

    Hell, I'm 60. I figure I got a decade, maybe less.

    We gotta meet our maker, all of us.

    It is just that we forget how this 'experience' affects others.

    This is a sweet, sweet  post.


    Hey, Olde Man; suck it up!  Ya never know when you'll die.  Thanks for thinkin' it's sweet, Olde Dude....    ;~)


    God, you guys are young. Great story, maybe you have to know midwesterners to get it. In her  sixties my Mom moved back to Shelby, Iowa, not far from Omaha. She was completely independent until age 96 but finally we had to put her in a nursing home, I have a lot of guilt over that.  At one point she was being given a questionaire and it came to the nutrition section, which looked to be about three pages. On the first question the woman asked her, what do you eat for breakfast? My mother was really having her on and told her, "a poached egg, skim milk, a large helping of collards and a vegetable". Lunch was more dandelion greens and vegetables than any human could possibly consume, the same with dinner. The girl said,"I think we can go on to the next section" My mother didn't blink an eye but my sister and I were doubled over with laughter and had to duck out into the hallway. Then near the end a nurse asked her, "Jessie, do you know what day it is?" "Tuesday, or Wednesday" was the answer. Then, "Jessie, do you know where you're at?" Mother sprung up with her last ounce of strength and said, "don't you know you never end a sentence with a preposition? I'm in that damned resthome on the hill. Get me out of here." She was gone not soon after, but the stories linger and help the rest of us carry on. 


    Thanks, Oxymora; I loved it.


    OK Stardust -- is this you channeling your masculine side/aka your significant other? Or your significant other communicating to the blogosphere through you?

    Either way: great story, real issues, hard choices....surprise ending. 

    With relatives in Alabama, I get this story. God forbid there should be a conflict between a major life event, vis a vis the Crimson Tide and... a major life event, vis a vis a wedding, baptism or funeral. No question about priorities, there.

    Love the spouse chortling from another room. A sort of running commentary, as it were.

    Thanks.


    WWS:

    1) We are both transgendered, and beyond traditional and conventional assigned roles. 

    2) 'He' likes football; 'I' like the tight ends.  And hunting, especially elk.  Yum.

    3) You're a pretty nosy so-and-so.

    4) I jacked the original story from The Ladies Home Journal.

    5) So sue me.

     


    MMMMMmmmm ... elk. Although, I'm a bit squemish during the whole field dressing thing, so I typically just buy it from our local elk farm (or mooch).


    Christ in a Cadillac, Kent!  That's what you take away?  Elkroast?  ROTFLMAO! 


    Kent?  Who's Kent???

     


    Puts the "K" in KGB. ;-)

    Now I've gotta go get plastic surgery.


    Superman.


    Hahaha I just now figured you're you (yep, quite the cracker jack, I). Cool.

    What can I say? I'm heavily influenced by my stomach ... and elk *is* yummy.

    Besides, wouldn't want to be accused of being a nosy so-and-so! ;-p

    Seriously though, excellent as usual ... although the gender bit messed with my head for a second. ("...Really thought Stardust was a she..."). I have indeed gotten grief in the past for enjoying posts yet having little or nothing to add. That doesn't mean I don't enjoy. (and Dagblog, even has a groovy little counter to quietly note the visit when I just lurk).


    Well, what can I say, you nosy so-and-so?  ;P)  I am me and you are he and we are all toghether...eating elk yummies.  And hoping to remain free-floating gender with not so much baggage that adheres to one or the other X or Y chromosomes, if you get my drift.  My shrink says just not to worry about whether readers love me for my elk sausage recipe or my hunting skills; it's all good!  He/she also says that some writing inspires laughter, other inspires...hunger. 


    Not so much nosy, Stardust, as obviously, glaringly guilty of assumptions without footnotes. My sincere apologies; I "assumed" you were a woman for what are probably glaringly sexist reasons of my own: your repeated suggestion that the solution for never-ending war is to .. end them, for example. Mea culpa.

    Great story, from whatever source, in whatever voice.


    LOL!  Ah; I wuz just funnin' ya a bit...nothing to apologize for!  And see?  I goaded you a bit on gender, and you completely missed my admitting to plagiarism!  Am I good, or what?!?    Innocent 

    "Gender is as Gender does, my pappy used to say..."  (Never knew what the hell he meant by it, but it sort of stuck with me!)


    Sorry, Stardust; no cigar  (I can say that, now) on that plagiarism call; note that I said your story "from whatever source." Ha!


    Shoot; and here I'd promised my pappy I'd learn to read one day.  (Coulda liked that damned cigar, too...)      ;P)


    Don't agree with the ending.

    Someone is on the verge of death. His closest companion is tryng to decide what to do. Other family are involved and deeply concerned.

    Then one of them asks about the score. And the "wife" in the story "bursts into peals of laughter".

     Nope.

    Shaking her head in wry amusement. OK.

    Not peals of laughter in that moment.


    Not so much a fan of irony, eh?  Oh, well...    ;~)  

    So sue me.  The ending, by the way, was the entire point of the story...


    There's no pleasing some people!


    Innocent

    Pssssst...flavius....will it help if i tell you it's a true story; just so blazingly an indicator of avoidance or whatever that it really was fall-on-the-floor=funny?  My wife couldn't help it; i laughed, too!


    I'm not a football fan so when we were cruising down I-80 going through Nebraska some years ago and suddenly found ourselves surrounded by cars filled with people dressed in red, waving red flags out the windows and shouting something I couldn't quite hear, I wondered what the heck was going on.  My husband knew immediately and started honking his horn (even though we had Michigan license plates and weren't wearing red).

    I should have known.  It gets like that around Ann Arbor, too, when Michigan and Ohio State are getting ready to rumble.  (Or Michigan and any other team, but especially Ohio.)

    Love the imagry here, and I had no problem with the ending.  It fit. Old people can be hilarious when they've shed those proprieties we all hold dear.  We think we should be talking in whispers when someone who has lived a long life is about to die.  Their peers know there's not much time left to enjoy the finer things in life.  If the finer things involve a good game of football, what's the problem?

    Love the picture, too.  A nice respite from politics, for sure.


    Yes; the priorities can shift; and what a nice avoidance The Game was for him.  There are times when compartmentalization is a useful response.  I never remembered to ask if the game were on in the hospital, but I like to imagine it was, and that my aunt was glued to the game at my uncle's bedside.  Too fitting for words.

    And the Nebraska is going to the Big Ten next year, and will play Ohio State and I guess Michigan. 

    Dunno why, but I was up for this tune today.  Enjoy....


    This was just simply great.  I'm sitting in the airport in Atlanta getting ready to board a flight for France.  My chief concern at the moment isn't the riots in Paris, or the fuel shortages, its rather whether I can get a broadcast of the Missouri game.  So the humor of Dad's response is not lost on me.  Again, great story.


    So glad you liked it, NWA.  Missouri will be a hot game for sure.  If you can't find a video broadcast, you can log into Nside on this site, and at least listen.  (Click the audi/video dropdown menu.)     http://www.huskers.com/

    Have a safe and good journey to France; envy is pouring from my pores....

    So glad any doubters can hear from you.  Go Big Red!    ;~)


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