All posts by Peggy1963

Adulting is hard

One of the things that sucks about getting older is loss. Loss of hair, loss of stamina, loss of strength. Even harder is the loss of friends. Worse is the loss of loved ones.

My mother died unexpectedly at the age of 68. Always healthy and active, still an outstanding athlete, she starting having breathing difficulties and went into the hospital for tests. While hospitalized she suffered a brain aneurysm and died. I was 39.

I was very close to my mother. She was a world-class smartass, and it was years before I stopped picking up the phone to call and tell her something funny that happened. Peggy was very close to her, too. We started dating in high school, so in many ways my parents were intimately involved in raising Peggy to adulthood. Losing my mother so young was hard.

But it might have been easier than what Peggy is going through now. There is clearly more than one way to lose a parent.

We visited Dallas for Thanksgiving in 2011 and noticed a few changes in the behavior of Peggy’s mother. Mary had worked as the office manager for a pediatric practice for many years, and her record-keeping reflects that. Every month’s bills are paid and filed by month, checkbook balanced monthly, everything in its place.

When we came back to Dallas to see her for Christmas we noticed a few month’s worth of bills unopened on the desk in her office. She explained that she had set up some payments automatically and we really didn’t think too much more about it. Until we came back a month or so later and saw past due notices for those same bills.

That began the process of making appointments with different doctors. It soon became apparent that the news was going to be bad. We were afraid of a diagnosis. We got it. And more. The biggest blow was finding out that she was not really capable of living by herself anymore. And it was explained that she could not come live with us because the doctor said she cannot imprint new information, so moving her away from Dallas would be tantamount to torture.

Peggy has worked and driven herself to death to make sure her mother has a wonderful place to live and is being taken care of by people who care. So far Mary knows us every time we come to visit. And she is delighted to see us, so the visits are always comforting.

When we leave Dallas I always try to have something fun planned for Peggy so she can began to relax. Today it was lunch in a place we have always enjoyed. When we come back in a few weeks for Easter I am going to take her to Lake Charles for a few days. Next time it might be the lake.

She needs to be able to get away. Because this hurts. And it’s not going to get easier.

A stop at the downtown Chuy’s on our way out of Dallas

Rodeo Houston

It is rodeo time in Houston!

If you are not from Houston, you really would have to visit to understand the sheer size of the event. If you are from Houston those words conjure images of 80,000 people in a football stadium and the best rodeo cowboys and music acts in the world.

My company is a corporate sponsor for the event and we buy tickets every year to entertain our customers. Additionally, Peggy and I are sponsors so we get passes into every night of the rodeo for all three weeks. We attend as often as we can.

Contrary to popular myth, not everyone in Texas is a cowboy or cowgirl. But just about everyone in Texas owns boots and a hat. The rodeo is the place to show ’em off.

We have attended three nights this week and it is just a blast. The best cowboys in the world show up every year because the money for the event is higher than at any other rodeo in the country except the National Finals. The quality of the competition is outstanding, and the rodeo runs like a well-oiled machine. No downtime is allowed and everything moves speedily to get the musical acts on stage before 9:00.

So far this year we have seen Alan Jackson, Styx and Lady Antebellum. Not all of the acts are country performers, so there is something for nearly every musical taste. We’ll be back later this month to see Bruno Mars, Blake Shelton and George Strait. It’s a blast.

If you ever get invited to the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo you need to drop what you are doing and go.

It is a spectacle you just need to see to believe.

Excited to see Styx
Enjoying the rodeo before Alan Jackson performs

Smokin’

OK, so I know this is odd…

I reached my fiftieth year in life without ever having smoked anything. As a child of the seventies I know that is hard to believe, but it’s true. In fact, the only time I had ever had a lit cigarette in my mouth was as a character in a play. Unlike our former president, I really didn’t inhale.

So, last summer before I turned fifty, my group of close friends was having a get-together in New Orleans. I decided that I wanted to give each of them some cigars at the event. I did not know anything about cigars, so I set out to educate myself on what makes a quality cigar.

Side note — when my doctor told me I needed to start drinking a little red wine every day for health benefits, I did the same kind of research and became fairly knowledgeable about wines. Apparently, this behavior was not an aberration.

Now I am fifty, and I enjoy a good cigar a couple of times a month. We live outside of Houston, so the weather in the winter is fairly comfortable. We have a fire pit and an ever-replenishing supply of wood to burn in it due to our heavily-treed lot. So during this time of year we can frequently be found on the back porch with a fire going, music playing and enjoying a glass of wine and a cigar.

I stress the word “we”. When I decided I wanted to try cigars I told Peggy that I thought it would be cool if we found a cigar that she would enjoy, too. She thought it was weird but agreed to try. I found some coffee-infused cigars that she really enjoys, so we share these evenings on the back porch.

I know it’s unusual to wait until fifty to start smoking, but I don’t really consider it smoking. I consider it enjoying a good cigar with a beautiful woman.

Who is absolutely smokin’!

Beautiful girl on a beautiful night!

Hello world!

So, why should you read what I have to say? What makes me any different than the millions of folks clogging the blogosphere with their ideas and opinions?

Nothing, really…

The best thing about this vehicle is that it allows people with wildly disparate views the exact same access to the public, and the public decides what it wants to read. Without the judgment of third parties determining what is “fit to print”…

The worst thing about this vehicle is that it allows people with wildly disparate views the exact same access to the public… Well, you get the point.

The only thing that makes me different is that I am me. I may (or may not) have original ideas that occur only to me and that may make an occasional visit worthwhile. If I do, come back anytime to see what’s happening. If I don’t, thank you for stopping by and no hard feelings.

Either way, I am going to be here. I hope you come and see me in the movies…