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Tim
Senior Member
since 1999-06-08
Posts 1794


0 posted 2004-02-08 09:43 AM


     I did not like my Uncle Fred.  I know it sounds terrible, but if truth be known, I despised the man.  Yet, the first part of each December, I would unwillingly join my family to make our annual trek to my Uncle’s house in Kansas City where he lived in a small house reeking of liquor and painted with a layer of the result of years of chain-smoking camel cigarettes.
     I would plead with my parents, please let me stay home.   He could care less whether I am there or not.  He does not even know my name, he just calls me, “Hey you.” My father would reply, “Tim, Fred is the only uncle you have and that is that.”  And so, to Kansas City the first part of every December I would go.
     Uncle Fred had a nasty cough.  He kept a coffee can beside his beat up sofa where his incessant coughing would bring up huge globs of the most disgusting glop known to man which he would deposit haphazardly into the coffee can.  Back home, I would have nightmares about drowning in a river of Uncle Fred’s “glop.”  Between the tobacco smoke, the odor of alcohol, and “the” coffee can, I spent most of my time at Uncle Fred’s perfecting my gag reflex.
     My uncle had never married.  It was no secret to a young boy as to why he lived alone.  Who would marry such a revolting person?  Besides the house, you also had to cope with Fred’s less than charming personality.  How could anyone not dread to be in his presence?  His constant harping on any topic raised clearly established to me that not a single thing in my Uncle’s life brought him even a modicum of pleasure.
     Early December had arrived my eighth grade year.  I was already in my Uncle Fred funk knowing the trip was at hand.  It was a sense of youthful joy when mom told me that we would not be going to Kansas City this year as Uncle Fred was not feeling well.  How pleasant early December was when you were not confronted by the “glop.”
     Just a month later, Uncle Fred passed.  The funeral remains somewhat fuzzy in my memory; I do recall but a handful of people standing graveside.  Following the service we went to my uncle’s home.  It was still just as small and just as disgusting.  Dad took me into Uncle Fred’s bedroom, which in our early December visits, I had never entered or even been allowed to looked beyond its always closed door.
     My father took a small wooden box down from the shelf in the closet and sat down beside me on the unmade bed.  He took off the lid, reached inside, then handed me a single sheet of paper and small medal.  “For you,” he said.
     “Awarded to Ensign First Class, Timothy Frederick Johnson, for injuries received on the 7th day of December, 1941 while serving aboard the USS Arizona…”
     Nearly forty years later, in the early part of December, the 7th to be exact, I drove to Kansas City.  I did not drive by where a small house may or may not still be standing, but instead I drove to snow covered cemetery to stand beside a man I wished I’d known.
    

© Copyright 2004 Tim - All Rights Reserved
1slick_lady
Member Ascendant
since 2000-12-22
Posts 6088
standing on a shadow's lace
1 posted 2004-02-09 03:08 AM


my God you have just made the hair on the back of my neck stand up...nice work...helen
KristieSue
Deputy Moderator 1 TourDeputy Moderator 1 TourDeputy Moderator 1 TourDeputy Moderator 1 Tour
Senior Member
since 2003-01-31
Posts 1460
PA, US
2 posted 2004-02-09 10:12 AM


oh my god...I am sitting here in a quiet room and just gasped out loud...said "oh my god" and have tears in my eyes.

how touching

Endlessecho
Member
since 2003-09-05
Posts 398
I live within myself
3 posted 2004-02-09 04:14 PM


Kind-of reminds me of my relationship with my father. Only recently in his dying days am I beginning to get to know him and form a bond.  Even so, I know I'll never know him like I'd like to.  It's hard to get past all the "glop".  
iliana
Member Patricius
since 2003-12-05
Posts 13434
USA
4 posted 2004-02-12 02:20 AM


We were all children once.  Wonderful writing.
skyshine
Deputy Moderator 5 ToursDeputy Moderator 1 TourDeputy Moderator 1 Tour
Member Elite
since 2002-02-07
Posts 3058
Beneath the northern stars
5 posted 2004-02-21 04:47 PM


How powerful...is this a true story? I'm sure Uncle Fred appreciates it. There are lots of people I wish I'd known better...well done.

~sky

Hold on, if you feel like letting go
Hold on, it gets better than you know....
~Good Charlotte

Kahlil
Senior Member
since 2003-04-12
Posts 1881

6 posted 2004-02-22 11:55 PM


Tim, I've got the chills.  What a moving write, what a message!  ~K~
Sunshine
Administrator
Member Empyrean
since 1999-06-25
Posts 63354
Listening to every heart
7 posted 2004-02-23 08:46 AM


We don't always know to scratch the layers
in our youth - or even when later, the person
revolts us so much - we think they have never
done anything worthy in their life...

not until we look behind the closed doors.

How much do I appreciate your compassion?

More than you know.

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