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They Couldn’t Save a Thing

February 23, 2011 in Personal

When I was almost seven years old I ate two liverwurst sandwiches on seeded rye bread. With dark, spicy mustard. Washed both of them down with one glass of milk. I did this on a Saturday afternoon at the table in the tiny kitchen where on a different Saturday Butch the parakeet flew out of the window.  Before he made his break he hovered at the window, his blue head tilting twitchy lefts and rights. He fluttered in the air above the sill, landed on his bird feet and paused. He looked up at the sash, back at me and he was gone. This was not the order of things and I worried. Would I be in trouble? Would I be blamed for Butchie’s escape? Should I have told him not to fly out the window that she had left open? When he said goodbye I knew I’d never see him again. Read the rest of this entry →

They Couldn’t Save a Thing

February 23, 2011 in Personal

When I was almost seven years old I ate two liverwurst sandwiches on seeded rye bread. With dark, spicy mustard. Washed both of them down with one glass of milk. I did this on a Saturday afternoon at the table in the tiny kitchen where on a different Saturday Butch the parakeet flew out of the window.  Before he made his break he hovered at the window, his blue head tilting twitchy lefts and rights. He fluttered in the air above the sill, landed on his bird feet and paused. He looked up at the sash, back at me and he was gone. This was not the order of things and I worried. Would I be in trouble? Would I be blamed for Butchie’s escape? Should I have told him not to fly out the window that she had left open? When he said goodbye I knew I’d never see him again. Read the rest of this entry →

They Couldn’t Save a Thing

February 23, 2011 in Personal

When I was almost seven years old I ate two liverwurst sandwiches on seeded rye bread. With dark, spicy mustard. Washed both of them down with one glass of milk. I did this on a Saturday afternoon at the table in the tiny kitchen where on a different Saturday Butch the parakeet flew out of the window.  Before he made his break he hovered at the window, his blue head tilting twitchy lefts and rights. He fluttered in the air above the sill, landed on his bird feet and paused. He looked up at the sash, back at me and he was gone. This was not the order of things and I worried. Would I be in trouble? Would I be blamed for Butchie’s escape? Should I have told him not to fly out the window that she had left open? When he said goodbye I knew I’d never see him again. Read the rest of this entry →

They Couldn’t Save a Thing

February 23, 2011 in Personal

When I was almost seven years old I ate two liverwurst sandwiches on seeded rye bread. With dark, spicy mustard. Washed both of them down with one glass of milk. I did this on a Saturday afternoon at the table in the tiny kitchen where on a different Saturday Butch the parakeet flew out of the window.  Before he made his break he hovered at the window, his blue head tilting twitchy lefts and rights. He fluttered in the air above the sill, landed on his bird feet and paused. He looked up at the sash, back at me and he was gone. This was not the order of things and I worried. Would I be in trouble? Would I be blamed for Butchie’s escape? Should I have told him not to fly out the window that she had left open? When he said goodbye I knew I’d never see him again. Read the rest of this entry →

They Couldn’t Save a Thing

February 23, 2011 in Personal

When I was almost seven years old I ate two liverwurst sandwiches on seeded rye bread. With dark, spicy mustard. Washed both of them down with one glass of milk. I did this on a Saturday afternoon at the table in the tiny kitchen where on a different Saturday Butch the parakeet flew out of the window.  Before he made his break he hovered at the window, his blue head tilting twitchy lefts and rights. He fluttered in the air above the sill, landed on his bird feet and paused. He looked up at the sash, back at me and he was gone. This was not the order of things and I worried. Would I be in trouble? Would I be blamed for Butchie’s escape? Should I have told him not to fly out the window that she had left open? When he said goodbye I knew I’d never see him again. Read the rest of this entry →

They Couldn’t Save a Thing

February 23, 2011 in Personal

When I was almost seven years old I ate two liverwurst sandwiches on seeded rye bread. With dark, spicy mustard. Washed both of them down with one glass of milk. I did this on a Saturday afternoon at the table in the tiny kitchen where on a different Saturday Butch the parakeet flew out of the window.  Before he made his break he hovered at the window, his blue head tilting twitchy lefts and rights. He fluttered in the air above the sill, landed on his bird feet and paused. He looked up at the sash, back at me and he was gone. This was not the order of things and I worried. Would I be in trouble? Would I be blamed for Butchie’s escape? Should I have told him not to fly out the window that she had left open? When he said goodbye I knew I’d never see him again. Read the rest of this entry →

The Easter Daddy

April 4, 2010 in Personal

We had our places where we lived. Thats why I remember the details so clearly. There were many places, many precise, stored boxes to sort through. The first place was called Gail’s. She was the landlady. This Easter happened at the second place, though. In the apartment over Mr. Slatter’s office. He was the landlord that my father got even with when he painted swastikas on the sides of the building. He didn’t have a paint brush so he dipped a roll of paper towels into the can. I don’t remember this. I heard about it.

Read the rest of this entry →

The Easter Daddy

April 4, 2010 in Personal

We had our places where we lived. Thats why I remember the details so clearly. There were many places, many precise, stored boxes to sort through. The first place was called Gail’s. She was the landlady. This Easter happened at the second place, though. In the apartment over Mr. Slatter’s office. He was the landlord that my father got even with when he painted swastikas on the sides of the building. He didn’t have a paint brush so he dipped a roll of paper towels into the can. I don’t remember this. I heard about it.

Read the rest of this entry →

The Easter Daddy

April 4, 2010 in Personal

We had our places where we lived. Thats why I remember the details so clearly. There were many places, many precise, stored boxes to sort through. The first place was called Gail’s. She was the landlady. This Easter happened at the second place, though. In the apartment over Mr. Slatter’s office. He was the landlord that my father got even with when he painted swastikas on the sides of the building. He didn’t have a paint brush so he dipped a roll of paper towels into the can. I don’t remember this. I heard about it.

Read the rest of this entry →