Back in the late ‘80’s, before Jurassic Park came out and it became common knowledge, I was watching something on PBS that blew my mind. It was a documentary that said the scientific consensus was that modern-day birds were the living descendants of dinosaurs. I'd never heard that before. As someone who likes to think he's well-read and well-educated, I was more than surprised.
So, I went to work the next morning and asked my colleagues, “Did you know that birds were descendants of dinosaurs? You did! How about you?” Turns out, most everyone I asked already knew. Some even looked at me funny. I chalked it up jokingly as, “I must have been absent from school that day!” because that's what it felt like.
I tell you this because I suspect “The Best Advice I Ever Got” is something similar to that, common knowledge for everyone else that somehow eluded me until late in life. It came from, of all people, the CFO of the company I worked for. Word had reached her that I’d had some harsh words with a colleague. She was aware of (and for the most part, liked, I think) my sometimes quick wit and sense of humor. She also knew that sort of thing can cut both ways.
So, alone in her office, as she gently dressed me down, she advised me that before I allow a single word to leave my mouth, I should ask myself the following:
1) Is it true?
2) Is it necessary?
3) Is it kind?
That's it. So simple, really. But putting it into practice, I've found that running whatever it is I'm about to say through those quick filters has saved (I suspect) lots of unnecessary drama, and no doubt, more than a little heartache.
Later on, I heard something similar:
1) Does it need to be said?
2) Does it need to be said by me?
3) Does it need to be said right now?
I like that one too.
So anyway, thanks Doreen! I still remember! It certainly came too late to save myself a lost friendship here and there, or long chilly periods in other relationships that somehow managed to survive. I haven’t always been perfect about it either. More often than not, it’s my attempts at “humor” that bite me in the ass, humor that would not have made it through the filters above. But I’m trying . . .
Happy Thanksgiving to all!
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
Friday, November 2, 2012
From "Fledge"
Mrs. Stetson did not
invite Arthur to ride in her limousine back to the house, but that was okay
with him. The further away he was from her mute bodyguard, the better. He
followed behind the limo a safe distance in his own rental for the twenty-minute
drive through the city and into the elm-lined neighborhood where “Fair Oaks”
was located. The two cars drove up a sweeping driveway and stopped in front of
the pillared entryway.
The
Stetson home was a classic example of ante-bellum architecture that had somehow
survived the fall of Richmond. Jefferson Davis himself was once a neighbor. Man
Bear helped the lady out of the vehicle, sparing a moment to send a sneer
Arthur’s way. For some reason, Mrs. Stetson’s mood had changed somewhere along
the way. She practically skipped over to Arthur, taking his arm in hers to walk
him up the porch.
“Robbie
is going to be so excited to have a visitor,” she said. “Ah’m afraid it’s just
me and the doctors and the therapists who spend the most time with him.”
The
two walked through the front doors into a marbled entryway. Portraits of past
generations lined the walls. A sweeping blue carpeted staircase lay ahead.
“I
would offer to take your coat, Mr. Arthur, but I daresay you’re going to want
to keep it on. Is that all right?”
Arthur
turned and saw her sweet smile. He nodded.
“The
doctors need to keep his room cool for medical reasons, I’m told, and also bear
in mind that Robbie is not . . . looking his best since the accident. But Bill
has assured us we have the finest doctors in the land tending to his care.”
Arthur
thought a moment. Bill? Ah, yes. The new DCI.
“How
did you come to know Bill?” he asked as they walked up the stairs. She giggled
and playfully slapped his arm.
“Mah
husband was the state coordinator for the president’s campaign, silly. Didn’t
you know? Why the president himself has been in this very house. Course, he
wasn’t president yet. But we shared a lovely afternoon, just the two of us,
drinking tea beneath the cool shade of the magnolia tree beside the house. And
what a charmin’ man he is! I tell you, we laughed and laughed. He even told
some old Hollywood stories.”
The
two turned left at the top of the stairs and walked down a hallway, where
Arthur began to notice an odor of some sort hung in the air, a medicinal smell.
Underneath that was a musty aroma that reminded him of socks worn too long. He
began to hear the rumbling of large machines then felt their vibrations beneath
his feet.
Halfway
down the hall, Mrs. Stetson stopped in front of a closed door and turned to
him.
“Now
please, Mr. Arthur, remember he has been awfully sick. But he so likes to have
visitors.” She turned the handle and ushered him in. “You may want to button
that top button!” she laughed as a blast of frigid air greeted them. “Quickly
now,” she said.
Arthur
stepped into the room. It took his eyes a moment to adjust to the darkness. He
knew he would never adjust to the cold. Looking around for the source of the
noise, he saw two industrial air conditioning units had been installed along
the back wall. He turned his head to the right and saw a hospital issue bed
jutting out from the wall.
Machines
large and small lined both sides of the bed, blinking and beeping away. The two
large canisters tucked into a far corner he assumed were filled with oxygen.
Arthur walked slowly toward the foot of the bed and saw the boy for the first
time. He watched the mother move beside him and take her son’s hand in hers.
“Robbie?
I’d like you to meet Mr. Arthur.” She turned to look at Arthur and smiled. “Mr.
Arthur? This is our son, Robert.”
Despite
the frigid cold, beads of sweat broke out upon Arthur’s brow. He felt his knees
begin to buckle. While reaching for the side of the bed for support, Arthur
realized that the roommate had been right.
They’d
shaved his head and attached electrodes to the shorn skull. Arthur couldn’t
help but notice the machine they were attached to wasn’t turned on anymore. Why
bother?
The
greenish blue skin of the boy’s face had already begun to buckle into the
hollows of his cheeks. Capillaries beneath his eyes had exploded, leaving the
skin beneath black. Looking lower, he noted with horror that the boy’s mouth
had fallen open, revealing his blackened tongue. His mother saw it too, because
a moment later he watched her reach over and push it closed.
“He
does that,” she said with embarrassment.
It
was an abomination. Arthur was no doctor, but the boy was clearly dead. Yet
machines on either side kept the blood pumping. An IV inserted into his arm
pumped fresh blood in. Another machine seemed to take the blood out via a tube
coming from his leg. A plastic tube inserted into his trachea kept the air
flowing noisily in and out, in and out. At the foot of the bed was a plastic
bag filled with a brackish fluid that Arthur didn’t even want to think about.
“There,
there, Robbie,” she said soothingly, stroking the boy’s waxen skull. “We’re
gonna make you all bettah now. We promise. We’re gonna make you all bettah.
There, there mah sweet little angel.”

Fledge, the sequel to Applewood, is available from Amazon.Com and wherever fine ebooks are sold.

Fledge, the sequel to Applewood, is available from Amazon.Com and wherever fine ebooks are sold.
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