Thursday, December 17, 2009
A Cytotoxic Cell-abration -and- Declaring Nuclear War on Leukemia
I just finished my 32nd, and last scheduled, subcutaneous shot of cytarabine. 32 times I have pinched up skin in my stomach or leg, jabbed a needle into my stomach or thigh, and meticulously emptied this toxic drug into my system.
This follows last Monday's final scheduled bag of cytoxin.
Like most chemo drugs, I have a love-hate relationship with cytarabine and cytoxin.
Both of these drugs are intentionally designed to kill rapidly dividing cells in the body including not only cancer cells, but also healthy hair cells, cells that make finger and toe nails, cells in the mouth and digestive track, and cells in the blood and bone marrow.
These are the only drugs that have made me vomit, they have decimated my blood counts and brought my immune system to zero. They've sapped my energy for weeks, and made me black out whole days or weeks. They led to July's infamous infection that put me in the hospital for 9 days.
In short, they are not easy drugs to take.
But, without these drugs, there is almost no chance that I would be around tonight sitting next to a lit Christmas tree, listening to Bing Crosby and Bob Dylan Christmas music, and typing this post.
In many ways, engaging in chemo is very akin to declaring nuclear war on cancer. Like Truman's decision to bomb innocent civilians in Nagasaki and Hiroshima to end the Second World War, oncologists and their patients decide to drop an atomic bomb on the body in the hope that the death of millions of good cells will bring with them the cancer cells, and many more healthy cells will be safe to thrive as a result.
Tonight, even with my counts decimated to the point that I needed to go to the clinic for a bag of platelets and two bags of blood, I could not help but celebrate the fact that, if all goes well and I can avoid a relapse, never again will I need to dance with the vindictive little devils that are cytoxin and cytarabine.
Much like I hope to never see the use of real atomic weapons in my lifetime, I also hope to never attack my body with these cellularly atomic bombs again.
To quote one of my favorite holiday songs, let's hope for:
"A very Merry Christmas
And a Happy New Year
Let's hope it's a good one
Without any fear
War is over, if you want it
War is over now."
All right, it is the holiday season, and one of the many goals of this blog is to encourage acts of good will. Last year, together, we raised well over $1000 dollars to help fund the construction of the Restoring Hope Transplant House near Madison. This brought me more happiness and cheer than you can imagine. So, in the spirit of the holiday season, here are some ideas to help out others and help make this world a better place.
1. Donate to the Transplant House Again.
The transplant house is still short of the money it needs to open its operation. It's founders have worked tirelessly for years trying to come up with the funds needed, and this is a cause worth supporting if you have money to charitably devote. You can learn more and help transplant patients by giving here:
2. Donate to Clean Wisconsin.
Clean Wisconsin is the non-profit environmental advocacy organization that I work for. We work diligently to keep Wisconsin's pristine areas clean, and restore those that are polluted. We focus on clean air, clean water, and push for clean energy. I work for this organization because I honestly feel that Clean Wisconsin is one of the most effective organizations at protecting and preserving our environment -- something important for a guy who treasures the outdoors as much as I do.
Beyond being a damn good environmental advocacy organization, Clean Wisconsin has been a family to me and has helped me through this last year -- unquestionably the toughest in my life. They've demonstrated their unrelenting support, stayed by me in the roughest of times, made me laugh, and made me feel normal throughout this whole absurdly crazy adventure.
I honestly don't know how I would have gotten this far without the organization and it's people, and I would strongly encourage you to give if you're able. You can learn more and donate here, and I promise we'll work hard to make your money matter.
3. Donate Blood.
Sometimes we don't have the extra cash to donate, but luckily, there are hundreds of ways we can volunteer our time (or our blood), to help out others.
This year I have needed to fill up on blood more often than I've had to fill up my Subaru. Without the nameless and faceless donors who so selflessly donated their blood and platelets, I never could have made it through chemo.
Please consider donating blood and helping out others, like me, who couldn't live without it.
All right, I hope this holiday season finds you all well and chocked full of merriment.
-Sam
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Inquisitive Eyebrows -and- On the Road Again
"Where ignorance is bliss, 'tis folly to be wise." These wise words from Thomas Gray generally apply to life. I'm now learning the hard way they're also applicable to my follicle state...
Because the chemo drugs knocked out all of my hair before radiation, I had no idea which hair loss was from chemo and which was from radiation.
Now that some of my hair is growing back, I was distressed (actually amused) to find that the outside of my eyebrows (within the field of radiation) remain completely bald, as the inside of my eyebrows begin to grow thickly for about 3/4 of an inch.
As a result, I now have a constant expression of puzzlement and inquisitiveness... At least I don't look angry like Uncle Leo (pictured).
So, if you should run into me on the street, I'm not confused -- it's just the eyebrows...
For a quick update, we're now back on track and I'm getting the rough stuff right now (the same stuff that put me in the hospital last time). It's beginning to hit me, but I'm so excited about getting close to a finish line that I remain in really good -- nearly euphoric -- spirits.
Last week Monday I got what I hope to be my final bag of cytoxin. I never thought getting cytoxin could be a celebration, but as I sat in the chair listening to music, I couldn't help but smile and rock out as I thought that this could well be the last of the toxic stuff that I watch drip into my veins.
Tuesday, snow, snow and more snow. 18 inches here in Madison. I was so excited that I headed out into the night for some "sidewalk skiing" despite my inability to find my poles. All went well until a few blocks away my skis began to slide out from under me and I went ass over teakettle in a valuable lesson regarding both Newton's Law and Karma (for gloating about a snowstorm.)
Not wanting to come in, as I would have felt like Ralphy from "A Christmas Story" who had just shot himself with the Red Rider BB Gun, I continued skiing with my elbow and my pride a bit worse for wear...
That night I had another 3am "here we go again," session of blagejeviching, and Wednesday morning I woke up unable to move my elbow as it swollen to a point that it looked as though I was trying to smuggle a racquetball under my skin.
It healed rather quickly, however, and I'm hopeful that I'll get back out on the skis this week -- with poles this time.
My good friend Phil has been in and out of town. It was great to see and spend some time with him. He and I know each other a little to well, and many who have spent time with us have laughed as he and I bicker like an old married couple. We really know how to get on each others nerves, but we have also shared some of our greatest adventures together, and it was fun both to goof around and to reminisce about absurd adventures of the past.
I've always meant to write some "Phil stories" on this blog, but I don't even know where to begin...
That's really most of the excitement. I'm entering what I expect to be a really rough three weeks, but eagerly anticipating getting it behind me -- and hopefully getting back to life.
Any good vibes you can spare would be appreciated.
Festive holiday vibes radiate toward all of you, from me.
Take care, and happy holidays,
sam
Friday, December 4, 2009
Stalling in the Soft White Snow
There is something remarkably magic about the first angel-white snowfalls in winter. Every year, the first snow brings out the innocence and childlike enthusiasm in all of us. Like most signs of the changing seasons, snowfall renews and rejuvenates my spirit.
I can't help but become a small child filled with joy as I try to catch soft white flakes on my tongue during the first days and nights of snowfall. Like the city lights reflecting off the white roofs of houses, part of me glows from deep inside.
This year I've been fortunate to have two first snowfalls. Last week I drove through the beautiful deep woods of Northern Wisconsin on freshly-snowy gravel roads (a barn near Rhinelander is pictured above), and tonight in Madison streetlights reflecting off of snow lights up the streets and houses of my neighborhood.
Well, my counts were too low to start the last leg of rough chemo on Monday so the bad news is we seem to be currently stalled out. The good news, however, is that I feel great and have been fortunate to have the health to truly enjoy the first snowfalls of this winter.
Take Care,
Sam
###
The Silence and Sounds of Snow
As I sit in my apartment
sipping warm cider,
the snow falls silently
outside my windowsill.
The silence of this season’s
first late-night snowfall
provides peace, and
quiets my restless soul.
As I quietly and contentedly
watch the soft flakes silently fall,
it occurs to me that snow
also has many sounds.
Snow squeaks and whooshes
under my thin Rossi skis,
as I speedily glide through a
dense grove of evergreens.
It illicits the innocent laughter
of euphoric young children,
who sled and make snow-angels
on the school year’s first snowday.
Sometimes, after a snowfall,
the surface of the snow is Icy
and, as I walk, each step
provides a satisfying “Crunch!,”
reminiscent of a silver spoon
breaking the caramelized crust
of a freshly-torched crème brulee.
When I hear any of these
familiar sounds of snow,
my usually active mind
falls silent, and I slowly
drift into the strong
and wonderful memories
that these sounds summon.
As I watch the snow
fall silently outside my
windowsill, from the warmth
and comfort of my Apartment,
my restless soul feels quiet, and
I am simultaneously thankful
for both the silence as well as
the many distinctive sounds of snow.
Friday, November 27, 2009
Happy Hunting Season (and Thanksgiving...)
Other than remarkably similar capitol buildings, the world I grew up in is entirely different than the Madison-world where I now live. Comparing the Northwoods to the Capital city is like comparing fried venison sausage to a vegan tofu sandwich, and I love them both for their strikingly different characters.
The locality where we grow up shapes us in profound ways, and as much as we might sometimes try to shed it, the character of our hometowns becomes part of who we are as individuals.
The antique guns that hang on the wall of my home office and the lamp with deer antlers that sits at my desk provide some proof that we may leave our hometowns, but our hometowns never leave us.
Last week my counts were still a little too low to begin treatment, so we decided to wait until this upcoming Monday to give it another shot. This actually worked out brilliantly as it allowed me to come home for Thanksgiving and spend time with family and friends.
This year I certainly have more to be thankful for than ever. Most of all, I am thankful simply for being here this Thanksgiving, and to have the opportunity to spend it at home with family and friends.
Driving around the Northwoods, one cannot escape noticing how different it is culturally from Madison. Hunting season up here is celebrated as fervently as religion. If you think I am over-exaggerating, I would urge you to enter a grocery store in Rhinelander the Friday before the opening of hunting season. Not only will the store be busier than any other time of year, but also 9 out of 10 of the shoppers will be wearing at least 3 articles of blaze orange clothing.
As we drove up, I laughed as I realized that nearly all of the messages on motels, restaurants, resorts, and other highway business signs read "Good Luck Hunters," and then included "Happy Thanksgiving," almost as an afterthought.
Hunting in the Northwoods is a holiday, a tradition, and a rite of passage so intimately tied to our culture that I cannot imagine life up here without it.
As I write, I notice that we have now moved from Thanksgiving Thursday to the aptly named Black Friday -- The largest retail shopping day of the year.
Every year, Americans get injured or even killed as mad mobs rush into Wal-Marts and Best Buys across the country in a rush to find the best sales.
I don't want to be overly critical, but what does it say about our society when in other cultures people may get trampled in religious pilgrimiges and in America we trample each other to death in a mad rush to purchase reduce-priced consumer goods.
While some may argue that Christianity is the most common religion in America, I might argue that it is in fact Materialism.
I hope that's not true. But, unfortunately, it's how I often feel.
Now, as avid readers of this blog will know, late-night consumption of sugary breakfast cereals is a guilty pleasure of mine. In fact, sugary bowls of Life, Lucky Charms, Frosted Flakes, and others often fuel me as I write for this blog.
Well, this Blog Strong blog post was fueled by Cocoa Krispies, and as I poured the box I couldn't help but read a big banner that explained "Helps Build Your Child's Immunity!..."
All of this time the answer to raising my neutrophil counts was right under my nose -- Looks like Monday I'll be eating Cocoa Krispies for breakfast...
I hope you all had a delightful and fun-filled Thanksgiving.
Sam
And finally, a poem to freak out my Madison friends...
“Opening Weekend”
I.
On this foggy 40-degree morn
in Northern Wisconsin
the swift snaps of rifle-fire
continuously pierce the morning air,
sending me back years
to the old hunting camp.
Suddenly, I am once again the
twelve-year-old boy lying on
the 20-year-old couch, warmed by
a scratchy army-surplus wool blanket,
the night before my first day of hunting season.
Too excited to sleep, I lie awake until
3am, fully knowing that I must rise
at four-thirty to beat the dawn to the
tree stand constructed years before
by my father and grandfather.
I load and shoulder my
bolt-action Remington 243,
and walk through thick trees
in darkness, trying to contain
a strong feeling of fright.
There is something about the
deep woods in darkness that
closes in on even the most
seasoned outdoorsman,
especially an Imaginative
outdoorsman.
II.
After getting to the stand, I
shiver in the dark, and sleep
soundly for two hours.
When I wake up, two deer
stand at my bait pile.
As the blurriness of
sleep leaves my eyes,
I realize that it’s Erick and Amil,
two twin yearling bucks that I
recognize from bow season.
I sip coffee as these twins
crunch away on the corn and
apples of my bait pile.
I utter some comments
as if they can comprehend.
“Are you two as cold as I
am on this crisp morning?”
(I’m sure most hunters do such
strange things; it can get quite
lonely out in the woods alone.
Most, however, likely would
never admit to such
bizarre behavior.)
At 8am I unload my rifle
and scurry down the
wooden ladder of my stand.
Time for breakfast.
I laugh as I walk by
Erick and Amil crunching corn,
looking back at me
lacking any trace of concern.
“The big bad hunter has hunger,”
I explain.
“You know, you two
should really be a great
deal more careful, or
you could get shot,”
I say as I laugh
heartily by myself.
III.
The smell of sweet rolls
baking, as well as
camp eggs and turkey sausage
sizzling in cast iron pans
meets the smell of pancakes
and maple syrup, providing an
unparalleled olfactory experience
as I enter the warmth of the
steamy-windowed tar-paper shack.
Dad was the cook and always
the first back in the morning.
I was always second,
Grandpa third,
with Skubie and Josh
trading the fourth and
fifth positions.
(Coincidentally, this also seems to
rank how seriously each one of us
took deer hunting.
On second thought,
Perhaps that’s no coincidence at all.)
After the nearly endless layers of jackets
and insulation were removed,
we’d sit and wait patiently but hungrily
for the morning’s meal at the square
wooden table.
The sweet scent of kerosene from
an old lantern placed in the
center of this table would
weigh the warm air of the cabin.
When all was ready and warm,
Dad would bring pan after pan of
delicious steaming food.
The hunters would relay the morning’s sightings,
then bull-shit about where the big
bucks might be, as we gorged ourselves
on the breakfast Dad had prepared.
IV
After breakfast, my day became divided
equally between reading on the couch
in the cabin, taking naps, and hunting.
I rarely shot anything.
This might be the result
of Grandpa’s and my
affinity for naming deer.
It wasn’t only Erick and Amil.
There was “Old Thumper,”
“Merdle,” and the aptly-named
“Three-Legged Leroy.”
In years of hunting,
I only shot one doe,
and only did so then
because I had a strong
craving for Venison.
V.
Our hunting camp broke
all of the stereotypes.
After dinner, the five men
spent nights chatting,
reading, playing chess,
and building card houses
under the warm glow of
the kerosene lantern.
In my many
years of hunting,
I cannot remember
anyone ever having
so much as a single drink.
VI.
We sold the hunting land
and the cabin some time ago,
but the memories made there
will forever live in my mind’s eye.
I don’t miss hunting,
but I do deeply miss
our hunting camp.
Today the square table where we sat
for all of our camp breakfasts
sits in my apartment’s dining room.
The kerosene lantern that provided
the warm light for so many chess matches
and the construction of so many card houses
still sits atop that table.
Every time I catch the
sweet scent of Kerosene
weighing the air of our apartment,
I can’t help but find myself once again
back in the cabin during hunting season.
And this morning, as I awoke in Rhinelander
to the snapping sounds of rifle-fire,
I found myself once again a young boy
lying awake on a 20-year-old couch,
excited about his first hunting season.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
One Year, How I Got Here -and- Blog Stong's First Birthday
After writing that last post, I realized that it's been exactly one year since starting treatment.
One year ago today, right about this time, I was lying in bed wondering what the day, and the next year would bring.
One year ago today, my parents drove me to the hospital as I stared out the window, wondering if I would ever walk the streets of Madison again.
One year ago today, I was spending a night in the hospital for the first time in my life, frightened, and had no idea what to anticipate.
One year ago today, if I'm honest, I thought it unlikely that I'd be around to type this blog post one year later.
One year ago today, while sitting in a hospital bed, I wrote out what became the first post on this blog.
I like working at my desk better...
In the last year, there have been some rough patches when I thought I'd never make it through. There have been many.
But each and every one of these rough patches has been met by emails, cards, comments, and simple words of encouragement that have carried me through.
In short, you have all gotten me here today, and I'll never be able to thank you enough.
The picture above was drawn and written by my Best Bud Jacques, the son of my friend and former co-worker Shane. It hangs above my desk at my home office and I look at it every day. It is only one example of the thousands of mementos and messages that I keep that have helped me cross the treacherous seas of treatment over the last year.
I had originally planned on doing a long list of shout outs including everything that has helped carry me through then realized that there have been so many that I could never list them all and that to try and miss some would be an injustice.
The truth is that each and every person reading this post deserves my great thanks.
Thank you all for getting me here today. I appreciate all of the little things that you've done (including reading this blog) more than words can express.
Sam
On Yammering On and On -and- How Blogging's My New Drinking
According to more emails and comments than I can keep track of, I seem to be making an awfully high number of women cry lately. As I said on the phone this evening, I just hope these are good tears and not bad ones.
Anyway, I thought it might be time to make people laugh a little as well, so the picture on the right is me (a few years back...) I include it as I'm currently getting "ready to dive back into chemo."
The last two weeks we’ve had a break from chemo resulting from low counts, and as a result, this last week I’m beginning to feel more myself than in more than a year and a half -- and it feels great.
For the first time in about as long as I can remember, I’m actually sleeping 6-9 hours a night, I’m energetic and can actually focus (a little – which is as much as I’ve ever been able to), I’m getting more work done than ever, and I’m actually useful around the house.
My weight is back within my normal 130-135 range for the first time since before I started chemo almost a year ago. Although I must admit that it’s a much softer 130, and that the weight has shifted from muscle to my cheeks and chin (Thank you, corticosteroids…)
I’ve been seeing all kinds of old friends and catching up, hosting movie nights, having people over for meals, and doing my best to get others inebriated.
Having this little break and getting a window to get back to my old ways feels awesome.
Even old dormant problems like tooth sensitivity and random bleeding from one spot in my mouth (no one’s ever been able to figure that one out…), that all disappeared when we started chemo, are now coming back. It’s strange to greet these problems like I would old friends – every time they pop back up I feel like saying “Oh, that’s right, I forgot about you. Where have you been hiding for the last year you sneaky little devil?”
While seeing and catching up with a lot of friends has been great, one concern about it is that I seem to have become a manic talker; I go on and on and on literally for hours with crazy-long story after story. Additionally, I’m writing absurdly long emails, updating my blog at a tornadic pace (Usually I shoot for once a week), and all of this is all on top of writing all day long for work.
And, all of this without any steroids in my system…
I was beginning to get very worried as I’ve always prided myself on being a good listener, and then I realized that, as I have explained in previous posts, I was born a story-teller and have always lived my life alternating between being around friends and telling stories and out in pursuit of adventure to ensure that I always have some new material.
Although I try my best to be a good listener, lately I often talk far too much to let my friends get many words in edgewise…
The very nature of treatment for Leukemia has prevented me from seeing many people often as I often completely lack both energy and immunity. The result is that I’ve had the craziest adventure of my life over the last year, and I have hardly seen any of my friends or family to tell them about it.
As a result, I have more material than I ever have, and I have thus become a temporary manic talker.
On top of all of this, I’m an intensely social individual who is often quarantined at home – working all day at home where I lack a whole lot of interaction doesn’t help a whole lot…
Thus, while at first concerned, I now have hope that I will have eventually caught up with everyone and I can stop yammering on and on. For the time being, I must apologize to the many, many people whose ear I’ve talked off over the last couple of weeks.
On the note of storytelling, I recently realized that blogging is my new drinking.
I used to go out late at night to bars with friends and spend hours exchanging stories. It wasn’t so much the drinking that I ever enjoyed (Okay, maybe a little), but rather it was the opportunity to sit for hours in an inviting and warm place in the company of good friends, that pulled me out into the night.
In this high-paced world, it’s difficult to slow down and focus on nothing but enjoying the company and conversation of others. A Pub or Tavern late at night with a few drinks is one of the few places I have found where this is possible.
That, or a campfire.
I recently had the realization that I tend to blog late at night and do so to share stories with my friends and family – just like drinking. I then always enjoy hearing their (your) stories in emails and comments. It’s a late-night exchange that fulfills most of the things that drinking used to – I just wish I could talk to you all face to face (and maybe have a whiskey or two…)
All right, tomorrow I’m back for counts and maybe starting the second half of round six.
Ahead we have 28 days of rough chemo once we start, then a break to let my counts recover, then a bone marrow biopsy to see if there’s any cancer left (This will be a really stressful week for me of the test followed by waiting for the results.)
As always, any good vibes you can spare would be very much appreciated.
Then, if all is clear, we’re looking at three years of “maintenance,” which is a fancy and friendly word for low-dose chemo. After a year of going to the clinic twice a week, going once a month seems absolutely unfathomable.
I’ve had a great break and this next round is going to be really, really rough, but with a finish line in sight I’m also ready for the final sprint. To use one of my old mantras:
Bring It On.
Sam
Sunday, November 15, 2009
On a Legend -- A Poem about Grandpa "Dewey"
"Hamburger Gravy"
I
At the market after work
I buy a package of ground beef
And some Yukon gold potatoes.
On the Gas Stove
I brown the hamburger,
Seasoning liberally with salt and pepper
Then add boiling water from the potato pan.
“The secret is to use the potato water,”
I turn to her and say.
“I know,” She says
“You tell me every time.”
After adding boullioun for flavor
And flour to thicken,
I smile as
The smell of the potatoes boiling
Along side the simmering gravy
Conjures strong and
Inescapable memories:
II
I’d wait impatiently on the pier,
Fishing rod in hand
For the infamous whistle
Of the old blue and tan Ford pick-up
Headed down South Rifle Road
At a break-neck pace.
The pitch caused by an undiagnosed air leak
was too high for the old man to hear.
It was not, however, too high for the neighbors to hear
And soon the truck became known in the neighborhood
As “Old Whistler”
You could hear her approaching for miles
Like the sound of a pre-pubescent freight train.
As the noise grew louder
The boy on the pier grew increasingly anxious.
The day had been spent waiting for this moment,
Waiting to go fishing,
Waiting to head out on the water with him.
He’d walk down the concrete stairs
And I’d see his dark, leathered, skin
And thick head of bright silver hair
Disappear into the brown shed next to the lake
To get the Styrofoam “Minnie bucket”
From the shelf next to the large fake deer.
He’d kneel down on the pier
Pulling the frayed yellow rope
Of the mildewed yellow minnow cage,
Meticulously tossing out the dead minnows
And carefully scooping live ones into
The blue-rope-handled Styrofoam bucket.
After several scoops he would look thoughtfully into the water
And say “That ought to be enough, don’t you think?”
Then pause and add one more scoop.
Fishermen are always a hopeful lot.
We would head out to Sam’s Point for bluegill,
Radke Bay for walleye and northern pike,
Bible Camp Bay in pursuit of large musky or little bass,
Sometimes it was Tony’s bay for panfish and crappie.
It didn’t matter.
I learned from a young age,
He had taught me,
“Being out here is the mashed potatoes,
Catching fish is just some gravy on those potatoes.”
Only someone who was born before the depression,
Someone whose deep, deep past holds memory of rationing
and the second world war, would ever use such a phrase.
Sometimes I’d get skittish at the sight of
Storm clouds and thunder approaching over
The dark pine forests of the Northern Wisconsin lake.
As it would begin getting
“Darker than the inside of a black cat,”
He would reassure me that everything would be all right.
“What will be, will be,” he would say.
“The good lord will take us when the good lord wants to take us.”
After fishing for hours, we would head back home,
Where Grandma had already peeled the potatoes.
I would watch carefully as he added ground beef
To an electric fry pan, browning it evenly then adding
Boiling water from the potato pan.
“The secret is to use potato water,” he would say.
He would add two cubes of beef bouillon
And finally some flour to thicken.
Hungry from a long day's fishing,
We would binge on this delicious
“Hamburger gravy” served over potatoes.
Grandma always cooked a vegetable as well,
But these were rarely touched by either him or me.
III
Years later, I am many inches taller
But every year as fishing season begins
I still often feel the anticipation of the young
Boy standing impatiently on the pier
Waiting for Old Whistler to come
Barreling down South Rifle Road.
The house is the same, only now with a
Large garage in the driveway
And a Green Jeep has long since
Replaced Old Whistler,
Undoubtedly an exchange greatly appreciated
By his neighbors.
Now he waits anxiously
For my silver Suburu Pick-up
To come barreling down
South Rifle Road,
A trip I find the time to make
Far too infrequently.
After a brief hello to Grandma
We quickly head to the pier where
He retrieves the Minnie bucket
Scoops four or five scoops,
Looks thoughtfully in the water and says
“That ought to be enough...”
Before pausing and
Adding one final scoop
“For good measure.”
We head out to the same bays
Pursuing the offspring of the same fish
That we chased years ago.
Our hats facing backwards
The 25-horsepower Evenrude pushes
The same 16-foot aluminum boat
With all of its might.
He shares stories from the past
And we reminisce about all of the good times
On the water and in the woods.
All the big ones caught,
And the much bigger ones lost.
About the time the loon swam under the boat
Chasing my bright silver doctor spoon,
Or when the musky nailed the side of the boat
After hitting the pink “hell-raiser” bait that he
Had bought at my request with a promise that
“You’ll never catch a thing on that bait.”
After fishing for hours,
We head back home where grandma
Has already peeled the potatoes,
And we chat as he prepares the traditional
Post-fishing-trip hamburger gravy.
“The secret is to use the potato water,”
He always says.
###