Crime in “the city”

Earlier I described the places I’ve lived in my life, including a few years when my family was in St. Paul. It was during the Coleman era, and things were pretty cool. Our neighborhood there was pretty quiet, but we didn’t take things for granted. Allow me to describe a couple of the wild times we experienced in the big city.

A couple of months after we moved in I went down to West St. Paul one for a meeting with some guys I knew. It was a bitterly cold, snowy, slushy February night and my wife, then 8 1/2 months pregnant with our second child, stayed home to read and to put the oldest child to bed. About halfway through my meeting the waitress at the restaurant I was at came and said I had a phone call (we were poor and didn’t have a cell phone then). The guys and I all said, “uh-oh,” thinking that my wife might be in labor.

It was my wife on the phone, all right, but she needed to tell me that she thought she had heard someone kick our back door. Brave soul that she is, she had gone through the house, double-checked the locks and looked out the windows but hadn’t seen any footprints in the fresh now. She had just gotten through telling me that everything was okay but that she’d appreciate it if I didn’t dawdle in coming home, when suddenly there was another loud noise from the back door. “There it is again!” she said. “I’m calling 911!” and she hung up.

I hustled back to the table and gave a quick description of what was going on while I yanked my coat on, and then passed out orders. “Larry, follow me. Bryan, you call 911 just in case my wife’s call didn’t get completed. You other guys pray!”

It was normally a 10-minute drive from where I was to our house, but I made it in 8 despite the nasty weather, hitting my driveway in a power slide Tom Cruise would have been proud of. A police cruiser was already there and every light in and around the house was on, but I couldn’t see an officer. Not knowing if some miscreant might still make a break for it I grabbed the only weapon I had in the car as I approached the house: a long-handled ice scraper (hey, it had some pointy corners on it, and a nasty edge!). Everything was under control, however, and the policeman had already been through the house and around it without finding anything or seeing footprints. He stayed a few minutes more and after he left my wife and I and Larry, who had indeed followed me, sat around the kitchen table while my wife recovered from a delayed case of the shakes.

She’d kept her wits about her so far, even pondering where best to position herself to protect our sleeping daughter and if our cat would be a good weapon if she threw it at an intruder’s face, but now that the adrenaline was seeping away she had to regather herself. The three of us talked about how weird the situation was, but we couldn’t figure out what caused the noises. Finally Larry got up to leave and walked to the back door. He opened the inside door. He reached for the storm door.

“Uh-oh,” he said. “I know what happened.”

We went over to the door and we could see that the hydraulic arm that closed the storm door was hanging loosely from the frame. For some reason, perhaps the intense cold, one of the bolts holding the front portion of the arm to the storm door had given way; that was probably the first noise my wife had heard. Shortly thereafter the second bolt had given way, causing the arm to break free and give the wooden door a good thump. Crisis over, I returned my ice scraper to the car while laughing at the idea of a home-defense cat.

A year or two later on a summer Sunday morning about 4:00 a.m. we were awakened by the alarm from our neighbor’s garage, the sound of feet pounding down his driveway outside our bedroom window and the chirp of tires and a roaring engine in a get-away. Our house had a detached garage and faced so that we couldn’t tell from the house whether or not the overhead garage door was closed. There were a few times when this chore was overlooked.

With crimes afoot in the early morning hours I couldn’t remember if I had checked on the door the night before. Not wanting to wait to find out if anyone had gotten into the garage I got out of bed, pulled on some jeans and grabbed my new home defense system – a bright red, 28-ounce baseball bat with a Dairy Queen logo on it that I’d gotten when working for the Twins. The coast was probably clear, but why take a chance?

I alertly made my way across the backyard to the garage and gently turned the handle on the side door. Carp! It was unlocked! I paused. If someone had gotten into the garage, and if the big door was closed, I might soon be facing a young, hyper interloper. I decided I’d swing the door open with my left hand and in the same motion reach up and push the button to open the overhead if necessary, giving anyone inside a clear path to escape that didn’t necessarily have to run through me. Just in case, the red bat was cocked in my right hand.

There was nobody there.

Later in the morning I encountered my neighbor. “A little excitement this morning, huh?” I said.

“Yeah,” he said. “The really weird thing is I looked out my window and I saw someone who was clearly up to no good in your backyard and, I swear, he was holding what looked like a red baseball bat!”

I gave him my best Clint Eastwood squint, and made some comment about him hiding in his bed, adding, “a man’s got to know his limitations.”

Now, I’m not going to say how our home security has evolved in the time since then, but if anyone’s thinking of testing our defenses all I can advise is that you be ready for anything, including being rendered helpless by uncontrollable laughter.

Where I live

Shot in the Dark, Spitbull, the Nihilist in Golf Pants, among others, have been debating the merits of living in the city vs. living in the ‘burbs. As someone who’s lived in the country, lived in the suburbs, lived inside the city limits of both Minneapolis and St. Paul, and who currently lives in an inner-ring suburb, I have to say I like it where I am now.

When I was in high school the small-town life didn’t offer me a lot: there wasn’t much to do, everyone seemed to know your business, and I was related to just about everyone in town in some way (not bad in terms of having a built-in social network; on the other hand, family reunions aren’t a great place for meeting women). I later bounced around in a few rental places in South Minneapolis chosen more for convenience and affordability than anything else. They were close to my job and had other conveniences ideal for a single guy: the last apartment I rented had a White Castle across the street, a drive-through ATM behind it, a grocery store kitty-corner from it and a great little pizza place with live bluegrass music just a few blocks away. The neighborhood definitely lacked cachet, however, and in most of my memories of these days the weather is always gray.

When I bought my first home I had to venture out to where the pavement ended (or so it seemed) to find a place I could afford. Coon Rapids was quiet and nowhere near as built up then as it is now, which made it a lot like living in my old home town except no one had gunracks in their pickup trucks in Coon Rapids. It took awhile to get anywhere from there, and it was always slightly embarrassing to tell people where I lived.

Later I sold that place and my wife and I and our budding family moved into a cozy rambler near Wheelock Parkway in Norm Coleman’s St. Paul. It was a tidy neighborhood of older but well-maintained homes but one thing that tended to drive me crazy was that it seemed as if there was some kind of siren – police, fire, ambulance – every fifteen minutes. City life was interesting (see post above) but we eventually moved to South St. Paul to be closer to church and the private school where we had enrolled the girls.

I like South St. Paul. It’s really a small town right next to a big city. We have our own “downtown”, the only franchise in the vicinity is Dairy Queen, and it takes all of 10 minutes to go from one side of town to the other. Our neighborhood is quiet, the people help each other out and the streets are laid out in a quirky enough way that it pays to be a “local”. Aside from having to maintain constant vigilance lest the school board sneak another levy in during an off-year election the city politics, while DFL-dominated, are mostly harmless. And if you’ve just got to have a Big Mac or other taste of civilization and convenience, Robert Street is just a mile away. Life is good!

Know your MOBsters

Few know the Minnesota Organization of Bloggers as well as Douglas Bass, who has blogged as Belief Seeking Understanding, as Apprehension and currently as Crossword Bebop.



He’s now taken the logical step and created a MOB aggregator the top 25 MOB blogs as measured by TTLB and created an aggregator that shows the three most recent posts of each. It’s a great way to go around the MOB to quickly see what people are writing about. I know it’s really going to help me visit many deserving blogs that I don’t always get to during the normal course of things.



Thanks, Douglas!

More than just Cheeseheads…

Apparently, Cheeseheads are only the beginning in Packerland. There’s also cheese — er, well, here’s a picture:

Oh.My.Gouda. No word on whether or not these are available in different varieties such as Sharp Cheddar or Sexy Swiss. Or if there are plans to hook-up with this product:

You can order cheese-bras here. Cheese balls, anyone?

Food for thought

Night daughter Tiger Lilly has a post called “Can You Put God in a Box?” over on the MAWB Squad today about Operation Christmas Child and her approach to filling shoeboxes with gifts for children in crisis areas. Among other things she writes that she likes doing stuff with charity organizations.

I can easily vouch for that sentiment because I remember a time when she was six years old. It was about this time of year and she was flipping through the newspaper looking for the comics when she came across a large ad from the Union Gospel Mission in St. Paul. The ad featured a picture of a ragged looking, bearded man with a full plate of food and a headline that said for $1.79 you could buy someone a full Thanksgiving dinner. She studied that for awhile and then asked if you could really get all that food for that amount of money. I told her it was so. A dawning realization came over her, and she said, “Hey, I’ve got $1.79 – I could buy someone dinner!” To prove it she went upstairs and brought down her stash, pulling out a crumpled bill and counting out 79 cents.

My heart in my throat, I tested her by asked whether she was sure she didn’t want to save her money to buy something else. It was such a rush then to see her respond so naturally and spontaneously that I now can’t remember her response word for word, but it was along the lines that no, she’d rather see somebody get something to eat for Thanksgiving. So a little while later she crammed the money in her pocket and I took her down to the mission where she could give it directly to a friend of our family who was serving as a chaplain there. She brought out her cash, he thanked her and gave her a receipt. I wrote out a check worth a few more dinners and we floated home.

Her $1.79 warmed more than one heart that year.

Monty Policy and the Holy Wail

Leave it to Chief over at Freedom Dogs to sniff out the strong resemblence between would-be female suicide bomber Sajida Mubarak Atrous al-Rishawi and former Monty Python drag diva Terry Jones.

Chief asked if the two might have been separated at birth, especially given the title of Jones’s latest book, “Terry Jones’s War on the War on Terror”, and left either a challenge or invitation for me (another Pythonophile) to offer my take.

It’s not surprising that Jones has written a book (several, actually) since he contributed to the troupe largely through writing and directing and took smaller but significant speaking roles (frequently in drag as one of the pepperpot housewives) when it came to performance. His characters aren’t as readily remembered as some of those created by John Cleese, Eric Idle, Michael Palin or Graham Chapman, but he had some good parts and good lines. As such, I think it’s best to review his book using some of his own words. Imagine the following promotional blurbs on the book jacket (like most of those who offer these mini-reviews in real life, I don’t feel as if I necessarily have to read the book itself; I mean, it’s not like I’m trying to summarize Proust or something).

As the Mom in the “Dead Bishop on the Landing sketch”: “Liberal rubbish! Whaddaya want with yer jugged fish?” (Alternatively, “Well, it’s got some rat in it.”)

As the peasant woman in “The Holy Grail”: “There’s some lovely filth over here!”

As Mr. Spreaders in the “Argument Clinic” sketch: “I’m sorry, it’s ‘being hit on the head lessons’ in here.”

As Mr. Creosote in “The Meaning of Life”: “BLEAUAARGHH!”

Lost Weekend in Madison, 1929

My grandfather’s birthday is today; he would have been 91. In his life he was a farmer, a teacher, a fireman on a steam locomotive, a salesman, a trouble-shooter, a successful businessman and an eternally curious observer of life and the human condition. He was also a writer and storyteller from a young age. Blessed with an eye for detail, a keen memory and the patience to write it all down in longhand, he wrote mainly for his own interest. While he rarely submitted anything to be published, we grew up with his stories of the people he had met and known in his life.

One story we heard often, either in its entirety or in bits, had to do with a true adventure of one of his best friends. Eventually he got the story down on paper. In honor of his birthday and because the story takes place at this time of year and in town not that far from here, I’m posting it. All of the people involved are long gone, as are many who ever heard it told. The written version has never, as far as I know, appeared outside of our family. It is something that I will always cherish, though I must warn those of you want to continue that it is not a story for those with a faint heart or weak stomach.

Fighting through

I took in a little boxing action Saturday afternoon at Central High School as I watched a young man from our church make his boxing debut. I’m pretty certain it wasn’t his first fight, though; just the first one with a referee and a bell and people watching who wished him well.

I’ve known the kid since he joined the family of some friends of ours as a foster child when he was little and was later adopted. I’ve encountered him regularly at church and through some of his schooling and from when his father would bring him to our men’s ministry functions. More recently he’s been part of the youth group my wife and I lead. I think he loves his family and wants to do right and do well, but he’s also been impulsive, oppositional and stubborn since the beginning and ready for a scrap, including times — such as a few years ago when I insisted upon a little one-on-one sit down with him — when I’m pretty sure he’d even have liked to take a couple of pokes at me. In a way, however, you almost couldn’t help but admire his will and the way he’d bow his neck and resist and endure any correction, no matter how long it lasted. You could tell there was something mighty inside that would make a tremendous foundation if it could ever be channeled in the right direction.

He’s 17 now, and several months ago he met up with former pro boxer Sankara Frazier and his Circle of Discipline gym. Frazier’s a hard-nosed guy determined to help kids use boxing to get their act together physically, emotionally and, in particular, spiritually through discipline, focus and hard work. Since then it has been as if a light has gone on in this young man’s head, a light so bright you can see it in his face. It’s as if all the instruction, correction and encouragement he’s received over the years have come together now that he can see a practical application. Since he’s been working with Frazier he’s not nearly as volatile, and his natural charm and wit have come to the fore.

Last Wednesday he was telling me about his upcoming bout and I could tell he was excited. I may be reading too much into it, but I think he was happy not just for the chance to compete but also because he realizes now that people are interested in seeing him do well. I told him I was going to come to the fight, but that he had to be sure to make the fight last long enough to make it worth my trip.

So what does he do? About a minute into the first round and after exchanging a few flurries of punches with his opponent he gets a left jab in, followed by a right hand that knocks the other guy to his knees in a corner. The referee stood the other kid up, wiped his gloves and gave him a standing eight count. When the kid didn’t raise his gloves by the end of the count the ref called the fight and our young boxer and most of his sizable cheering section left our feet. As he moved through the group afterwards we hooked hands and the first thing he did was to laugh and say, “I know, you told me to make it last longer but he just kept leaving it open so I just kept feeding him my right hand!”

“It’s alright – you did well,” I said. “Congratulations!”

It may be just one round, but I think the young man may have finally heard the bell.

Friday Fundamentals in Film: High Noon

It seems that most of the television and movies kids are exposed to today don’t offer much in the way of constructive lessons or examples of how to live your life, especially for young men. Well, just about everything is an example I guess, but good ones are few and far between. There are some movies, new and old, that do offer inspiring examples and over the next few Fridays I’d like to share some of these with you, along with the story of how they were incorporated into a group of junior high and high school aged boys. The first movie in this series is the Gary Cooper classic, High Noon, but before I get into that allow me to offer a little background.

A couple of years ago my oldest daughter was still in private school and I found myself frequently in the company of the boys in her classes. Listening to their conversation and the things that were interesting to them I could tell that the images of manhood they were getting from their entertainment were rather limited: essentially either Homer Simpson or pro wrestlers, and this was showing up in their behavior.

Now this is a complex age for boys already, and these images they were absorbing weren’t helpful. I wanted better for their lives, especially since they were around my daughter, so I tried to think of a way both entertaining and challenging to offer examples to model character in concentrated doses. Almost immediately a plan developed nearly fully formed in my mind. I worked it out with the school and my employer so that I could show a series of movies (with discussion time after each) to the boys on Friday afternoons during the spring semester as part of an elective class where the boys would be graded. Naturally, an afternoon of watching movies was appealing to the lads, but there was a catch. I divided them into two teams, gave each boy a scorecard I designed and announced special rules, only for them.

In order to view that week’s movie, each boy would have to earn a set number of points on his scorecard. The card detailed the point values of various acts of service and courtesy they could earn. There was also a list of things with point values that would subtract from their totals. If a young man hadn’t earned the minimum number of points by class time, he’d have to spend the afternoon in a study hall or in classes with the girls. Not only that, his behavior also affected his team which not only got credit for all points earned by its members, but also for having a full complement present during class time. At the end of the semester the highest scoring team would be treated to a Famous Dave’s feast. In the coming weeks I’ll describe how this experiment played out, along with providing the questions and “thinking points” I brought up with the guys for each movie. If you’re already familiar with these movies then try the questions out yourself. If there are important issues you think I’ve missed in any of the films then feel free to leave your input in a comment. As with the young men, I hope you’ll find this exercise entertaining and useful.

Boys are smelly

That’s what it says on a tee-shirt long coveted by my wife and oldest daughter. I’m guessing that it may also be favored by Claude Peck and Rick Nelson, the writers behind the Withering Glance column, the StarTribune’s paean to metrosexuality and snarky boy-talk on fashion and grooming. In a recent column they took a slap not only at men who wear too much cologne, but also at those whose selected scents are passe.

Personally, I didn’t know that men’s fragrances fell in and out of style like the widths of lapels and ties, but I guess it’s not that surprising. You really can’t promote something as being “in” this year unless there’s a corresponding something that’s “out” and I probably would have realized this if I thought as much about cologne as I do, say, about the air pressure in my tires. I guess I better not dust-off those old bottle of Grey Flannel or Devon Country if I don’t want to get sneered out of Bellanotte (or I could just avoid Bellanotte).

I blame my lack of sophistication on my upbringing. I didn’t have much exposure to splash-on manly scents beyond Old Spice, Avon’s Wild Country (in a cool-looking duck-shaped bottle) or some good old Aqua Velva. (I do remember thinking at one time back then that it would be cool to have some Hai Karate aftershave because I thought, based on the commercials, that it automatically gave you martial arts powers).

Apparently these days a guy has to be sensitive to the dictates of the fashionistas and the nuances of sandalwood undertones. Such complexity outside of my experience makes me conservative and unwilling to take chances. Outside of a good soap and a strong deodorant, the only time I stick my neck out is when I see my wife coming at me with one of those scent samplers torn from a magazine. I try to avoid having my presence be offensive, but other than that what I smell like isn’t that important to me.

I know, I’m missing the point. I’m not supposed to wear cologne because I like it, but because other people (presumably women) do. I hang out with guys a lot and I’m sure I’ve smelled cologne or aftershave occasionally, but it’s never made a memorable impression on me. There must be something about the way a woman’s olfactory receptors are wired to her receptiveness – or at least that’s the story we guys are buying. If you tell us that rolling in fish guts will have women curling up in our laps like the family cat then we’ll do it (yeah, there are guys who’d roll in fish guts anyway, but you get my point). Furthermore, shouldn’t a woman be attracted by a scent that communicates the guy is an earnest, hard-working fellow and a good provider, something like an eau-de-livelongday scent? Instead, why do so many men’s colognes have all the bad boy subtlety of a wife-beater tee-shirt and steel-toed cowboy boots?

And here’s another thing: supposedly, guys wear scents that are scientifically proven (we like that science business) to attract women. But why do women wear perfume? Most of the flowery, fruity things I smell don’t do much as far as piquing my interest. There was a time, though, in the 80s when Obsession ruled the world that I’d get nauseous when I smelled it because it actually reminded me of Shelltox, an aerosol insecticide we used when I was growing up to kill wasps in our garage. If the flowery, fruity stuff isn’t for attracting guys then does that mean women wear perfume for other women? And if that’s the case, shouldn’t guys splash on the flowery, fruity when they’re trying to attract women – even if it smells worse to us than fish guts?

Again, I’m in over my head on this subject, so I’d like to know from other guys what colognes, if any, you wear and why, along with any successes or spectacular disasters you’ve experienced as a result. Similarly, ladies, what do you like to smell on a man, and why? And just so it’s not one-sided, I’ll share this:

The scent that really gets my attention and makes my heart pound is pork cutlets and sauerkraut. Ohhh, baby!