Archive for December, 2009

Christmas Dickie-Quickie

Friday, December 11th, 2009

Hark ! the Christmas letters are flying in here. Please send yours to Dick@DickSummer.com  Thanks. To find out what this is all about, go to the podcast at www.dicksummer.com/podcast/latest  Here’s one from Proud Podcast Participant Bob Conklin:

Hi Dick

          I am going to attempt to put this set of memories to paper. It is not a single story per say but rather a collection of what I remember. I say attempt because I suffer from that affliction that I suspect most of us Louie Louie generation men suffer from, the one that tends to cause excessive moisture to collect over the lens of your eye blocking the ability to see the text clearly. Here goes:

 My dad was a firefighter for the City of White Plains, NY where I was born and raised. Being in that job meant that there was more then a good chance he would have to work on Christmas as well as my birthday, New Years day and any other holiday you care to mention. As an aside his birthday was December 24th so that meant he generally had to work his birthday too. Dad made sure the 3 kids and mom, my older brother and sister then later on my baby sister who never made it to her first birthday, always would go to Christmas Eve services. Our church held a true midnight service, where the Christmas story was told and at the stroke of midnight Silent Night was sung with the pipe organ quietly playing along. We held candles and sang our hearts out. Our church used real candles on the alter and in the pews. As I grew older I remember that the city told our church that in order to keep using real candles they would have to have a Firefighter in church to monitor the service. I can still see my dad working his magic to arrange his shift to make sure he was at church for the service before heading back to the station so finish out his shift. Dad never let on that it was he who would request that assignment because for as long as I can remember he was the dispatcher and that was a job that not all firefighters could do. Looking back now that he is gone, I am saddened that I never said thank you to him for doing what he could do to be near us even though he was working to serve our city. (There it is that affliction I mentioned earlier) On the rare times that he did not have to work, he would still wear his dress uniform and take us all in the old Chevy to church and secretly smile to the firefighter that was on duty while dad would hold my hand.

 Damn its hard to type through the tears that always come.

 Merry Christmas Dick!

Make Your Mark With Hark !

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

Hark ! a Kris Kringle crunch of Christmas stories came in…thank you for them…and a couple of Christmas comments too. Here’s one from Proud Podcast Participant Elaine, from Cambridge Massachusetts. She says Santa must be a woman. Men can’t pack a bag…men wouldn’t be caught dead wearing red velvet… men don’t answer their mail…men would freak if somebody said they had a belly like a bowl full of jelly…and besides…being responsible for Christmas would require a lasting commitment.

 And Hark again ! Proud Podcast Participant Jim King wants you to know that Santa’s primary language is North Polish…he rides a Holly Davidson…and he and his wife get around on an icicle built for two.

 And Hark one more time…I’ll put some of your Christmas stories  on some of the upcoming blogs at dick summer dot com. Please send them to dick@dicksummer.com  

Did you notice how the word Hark got your attention. Practically gave you whiplash didn’t it. Every year about this time, I remember the words of Big Louie, his own bad self…the Chief Mustard Cutter of the Louie-Louie generation…who always says, “The hell with well…make your mark with Hark.” And I mean to bring them to your attention all year long…but somehow…I tend to forget things like that…along with where I put my glasses, my email password, and what the heck it was that my Lady Wonder Wench wanted me to pick up at the grocery store. That’s one of the problems that comes with being a member of the Louie-Louie Generation I guess.

 One of the other problems that seems to come with being a member of the Louie-Louie Generation is that people don’t pay enough attention to us. I like attention. Using the word Hark will get you some attention. Look what it does every year for the herald angels. I don’t think anybody would even notice them if they weren’t always saying Hark.

 So…how…you will ask…can I casually work the word Hark into my every day conversation so I can get some attention too?” I’m glad you asked. Well here’s how. Have you ever noticed that when most of us are asked a question, we almost always start our answer with the word “well ?” Even the tv news guys do it. “Well…what’s the weather going to be like tomorrow Al?” “Well…probably nice if it doesn’t snow.” Even our leaders talk that way. “Well…what are going to do today Joe.” “Well Barak…let’s check out those Iraqui oil wells.” You even hear that in hospitals, where nobody is really well. My buddy Bob had a serious operation the other day. Fortunately it was successful. We know that because when we asked the doctor, he said, “Well, he’s going to get well.” We said “Swell.”

 So…just substitute the seldom used word Hark for the over used word well. Think how classy Rocky Balboa would have sounded if instead of saying “yo” he said “Hark.” “Hark” even covers boo-boos. The herald angels got away with rhyming “Proclaim” with “Bethlehaim” because when you start a statement with “Hark” people get whiplash…and you can get away with almost anything. Try it. “Is that some other woman’s lipstick on your collar ?” Hark…I can explain. “Hark…I’m pregnant.” “Hark…I got fired.”

 Cleverly using the word Hark instead of well is not the only way to get attention of course. When the weather outside is frightful, if you go around dressed in your gay attire, wishing everybody fa la la la la…that will do it too. As will going for a ride in a one horse open sleigh…on route 95. But considering the possible consequences of things like that, when you want attention, it’s probably better to just make your mark with hark.

 Ok, I said let’s swap some Christmas stories. I put one of my favorites in the lovin touch personal audio cd. It’s about a Christmas a long time ago…my first Christmas with my Lady Wonder Wench. It’s called Christmas Warm.

 The story really is pretty much how it really happened. Hard to believe it was so long ago. It was before cell phones. We really did have outdoor telephone booths then. I sometimes think I wish I had known I’d have been lucky enough to have all the Christmas-es we’ve had since then with her. But maybe not. Maybe that’s one of the lessons of Christmas. Don’t try to improve on miracles.

 Christmas Warm is from the lovin touch personal audio cd. If you like it, you can just keep the podcast. Or if you want a fresh copy, just go back to dick summer dot com, and download if from the lovin touch icon on the home page.

 Since we’re swapping Christmas stories and I just told you one of mine…it’s your turn. So here’s a note from Proud Podcast Participant Paul Berge. He says, “I refuse to grow up. I still want a bb gun at Christmas, and I promise I won’t shoot my eye out. And I want real Lionel trains under the tree…and I still have faith that we’ll eventually find X-ray glasses that really work…and everybody will admit that Bosco is far superior to CocoMarch… and the ’59 Chevvy was the best car ever…and how about Yoohoo in bottles…and Three Musketeer Bars for a nickel… and nickels…and singing Christmas songs with the guys you like singing harmony with on warm summer evenings out on the stoop…and nothing to do…and no guilt about doing it. Merry all them holidays.” Thanks Paul. One of the best parts about Christmas is the memories. The sweet ones and the bitter sweet ones. The ghosts of Christmas past, helping us get ready for the ghosts of Christmas-es yet to come.

 The holy guys say, “Don’t forget that Christmas is a religious feast.” I think they’re missing the point. I don’t even think it makes much difference if Christ really was the son of God. I think the point is that He gave us lots of good ideas, and lots of love. That’s why his birthday is so neat. And so is Hanukkah, and Quanza, and Solstice, and any other holiday that involves candles, good stuff to eat, a bb gun, a night flight in a small plane with someone you love, and some great loving. Especially that great loving. I like mine long, and gentle, and warm. I think that’s what you’re telling people when you wish them…Merry Christmas.

Dickie – Quickie

Monday, December 7th, 2009

The Christmas letters are pouring in. Thank you. Please send yours to dick@dicksummer.com . We’ll post most of them right here or on the podcast.

This one is from Carol:

Dear Dick, Well here is a Christmas story for you.

 I think I was 14 or 15 years old we (my family had already done the Christmas shopping) were a church going family. I was a member of the choir… a soprano. Because many of the choir members were going to be traveling the director asked me if I would sing a solo the Sunday before Christmas. I excitedly said yes.

 So with the music in hand I went home and asked my Dad if he would help me practice. My dad played both the piano and the organ (otften at the same time… we had an organ and a piano in the dinning room/livingroom side by side). My Dad took his music very seriously but I loved to hear him play and I would often lend my voice to whatever he was playing. We practiced together after dinner for at least two hours or until dad thought that it was good enough. I also practiced when the choir practiced at church.

 I usually never got nervous when I sang in front of people but when the Sunday rolled around I had huge butterflies in my stomach. I received a wonderful piece of advice from a  cherished family member( my godfather) he told me don’t look any familiar faces just look straight out into the church. I told him that I thought that was a great piece of advice but that I was afraid of heights and I would be in the loft at the front of the church. My choir director said that if youlook straight out and not down I would be okay.

             Well you know as I stood in the loft I looked straight out and in the middle of the church pews was a row of every relative I knew. However instead of making me nervous I was really calm. I saw my godfather make a gesture with his finger raising up his chin. The Song I sang was “O Holy Night” I was only concerned at that time of making my notes.

     I was shaking so bad that I thought my voice would crack. I took a deep breath and I could not hear a note but everyone else did. After the service was over at the reception, a person that I don’t even know came up to me and thanked me for giving her a Christmas gift that she thought that she would never get again. Apparently she was going deaf and all that she wanted was to hear her favorite Christmas Carol again. I told her (my uncle heard me say it) that I was given a a gift and I was glad that I could pass it on and make someone’s holiday a special one.

                                                                   It made me realize many years later and even to this day that if you are graced with a gift that you need to share it and never take it for granted. You may not think that anyone is listening but if you see one person smile that you have made a difference.

Carol 

The Christmas Connection

Saturday, December 5th, 2009

The Christmas stories you’ve been sending in are AMAZING. I want to get as many of them as I can on the Dick Summer Connection. So I’m going to post one new one almost every day… right here.

 If you’re wondering what this is all about, go to www.dicksummer.com/podcast/latest … and jump into the Christmas pudding with the rest of us.

 Here’s a new one from Proud Podcast Participant Bill Ervolino from New Jersey:

 An Italian Christmas

by Bill Ervolino

I thought it would be a nice idea to bring a date to my parents’ house on Christmas Eve.
I thought it would be interesting for a non-Italian girl to see how an Italian family spends the holidays. I thought my mother and my date would hit it off like partridges and pear trees.
So, I was wrong. Sue me.

I had only known Karen for three weeks when I extended the invitation.
“I know these family things can be a little weird,” I told her, “but my folks
are great, and we always have a lot of fun on Christmas Eve.”

“Sounds fine to me,” Karen said.

I had only known my mother for 31 years when I told her I’d be bringing Karen with me.
“She’s a very nice girl and she’s really looking forward to meeting all of you.”

“Sounds fine to me,” my mother said.

And that was that.
Two telephone calls.
Two sounds-fine-to-me.
What more could I want?

I should point out, I suppose, that in Italian households, Christmas Eve is the social event of the season — an Italian woman’s reason d’etre.
She cleans. She cooks. She bakes. She orchestrates every minute of the night.
I should also point out that when it comes to the kind of women that make Italian men go nuts, Karen is it.

She doesn’t clean.
She doesn’t cook.
She doesn’t bake.

And she has the largest breasts I have ever seen on a human being.

I brought her anyway.

7p.m. –

We arrive.
Karen and I walk in and putter around for half an hour waiting for the other guests to show up. During that half hour, my mother grills Karen like a cheeseburger and cannily determines that Karen does not clean, cook, or bake. My father is equally observant. He pulls me into the living room and notes, “She has the largest breasts I have ever seen on a human being.”

7:30 p.m. –

Others arrive. Uncle Ziti walks in with my Aunt Mafalde, assorted kids, assorted gifts.
We sit around the dining room table for antipasto, a symmetrically composed platter of lettuce, roasted peppers, black olives, salami, prosciutto, provolone, and anchovies.
When I offer to make Karen’s plate she says, “Thank you. But none of those things, okay?”
She points to the anchovies. “You don’t like anchovies?” I ask. “I don’t like fish,” Karen announces, as 67 other varieties are baking, broiling and simmering in the next room.

My mother makes the sign of the cross and things are getting uncomfortable.
Aunt Mafalde asks Karen what her family eats on Christmas Eve.
Karen says, “Knockwurst.”
My father, who is still staring in a daze, at Karen’s chest,
temporarily snaps out of it to murmur, “Knockers?”

My mother kicks him so hard he gets a blood clot.
None of this is turning out the way I’d hoped.

8:00 p.m. –

Second course.

The spaghetti and crab sauce is on the way to the table. Karen declines the crab sauce and says she’ll make her own with butter and ketchup. My mother asks me to join her in the kitchen. I take
My “Merry Christmas” napkin from my lap, place it on the “Merry Christmas” tablecloth and walk into the kitchen. “I don’t want to start any trouble,” my mother says calmly, clutching a bottle of ketchup in her hands. “But if she pours this on my pasta, I’m going to throw acid in her face.” “Come on,” I tell her. “It’s Christmas. Let her eat what she wants.”
My mother considers the situation, and then nods.
As I turn to walk back into the dining room, she grabs my shoulder. “Tell me the truth,” she says, “are you serious with this tramp?”
“She’s not a tramp,” I reply. “And I’ve only known her for three weeks.”
“Well, it’s your life”, she tells me, “but if you marry her, she’ll poison you.”

8:30 p.m. –

More fish.
My stomach is knotted like one of those macramé plant hangers that are always three times larger than the plants they hold. All the women get up to clear away the spaghetti dishes, except for Karen, who, instead, lights a cigarette.
“Why don’t you give them a little hand?” I politely suggest.
Karen makes a face and walks into the kitchen carrying three forks.
“Dear, you don’t have to do that,” my mother tells her, smiling painfully.
“Oh, okay,” Karen says, putting the forks on the sink.
As she reenters the dining room, a wine glass flies over her head, and smashes against the wall. From the kitchen, my mother says, “Whoops.”
I vaguely remember that line from Torch Song Trilogy. “Whoops?”
No. “Whoops is when you fall down an elevator shaft.”

More fish comes out.
After some goading, Karen tries a piece of scungilli, which she describes as “slimy, like worms.” My mother winces, bites her hand and pounds her chest like one of those old women you always see in the sixth row of a funeral home.
Aunt Mafalde does the same.
Karen, believing that this is something that all Italian women do on Christmas Eve, bites her hand and pounds her chest. My Uncle Ziti doesn’t know what to make of it.
My father’s dentures fall out and chew a six-inch gash in the tablecloth.

10:00 p.m. –
Coffee, dessert. Espresso all around. A little anisette. A curl of lemon peel.
When Karen asks for milk, my mother finally slaps her in the face with cannoli.
I guess it had to happen sooner or later.
Karen, believing that this is something that all Italian women do on Christmas Eve, picks up cannoli and slaps my mother with it.

“This is fun,” Karen says.

Fun? No. Fun is when you fall down an elevator shaft.
But, amazingly, everyone is laughing and smiling and filled with good cheer — even my mother, who grabs me by the shoulder, laughs and
says,
“Get this witch out of my house.”

Sounds fine to me.

Thanks Bill. Manga ! And please…everybody…send your Christmas stories to Dick@DickSummer.com Send the sweet and the bittersweet.

Christmas is both. Merry Christmas/Hanukkah/Quanza/Solstice.

Dickie – Quickie

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

We’re swapping Christmas stories, and it’s your turn. (To find out what this is about, go to www.dicksummer.com/podcast/latest.) This story is from Sheri Shanks. She’s confirming the “Pick A Person” idea in the podcast.

You asked for Christmas stories, but what I have to tell you is actually a No Christmas Story.  In December of 1999 my two children moved with their father and their step-mother about 20 days before Christmas to Ramstein Germany.  Their step-mother was in the Air Force and that is where she was going to be stationed for at least 4 years.  I would get to see my children, once a year, for about 3 months in the summer.  So we had Christmas early.. the apartment was decorated inside and out with the help of my finance…. and I knew that Christmas day was going to be rough, I would get thru it.  We said good-bye to the kids around the 5th of December, and 4 days later, my finance left me…. no note… no phone call… nothing… just the key to the apartment in the mailbox and all of his stuff gone. I was devastated.  There is no words to describe the totally emptiness ….. my children were gone, my mother had passed away in 98, all my family were more than 300 miles away and I had no way to get there.  I woke up Christmas morning to an empty house, and an empty tree.  The child in me felt like I had been the worst child ever, because Santa didn’t come.  

This year is going to be better.  I live with my daughter, there are 3 children… we will be going to my son-in-law’s parents house with a big family celebration… and I will be right in the middle of it all.  I didn’t tell you all this to make you feel sorry… what I really would like you to do is tell you listeners and readers that if they know someone who will be alone at Christmas, and even if they have invited them to come share it with them… most (including me) won’t go because Christmas is family, and you aren’t feeling.  But the next best thing they can do is go over to that person’s home… don’t call in advance… show up with a plate from your Christmas dinner, or a plate of cookies, just something to eat.. and a small gift… believe me when you wake up Christmas morning and have nothing to unwrap and alone…. having someone show up at your door… does so much for that person.  The gift need not be much, a holiday candle, or any kind of candle, a small gift certificate to that place…. heck even a small fake decorated Christmas tree……. that person’s whole day would be so much better… you don’t need to stay long… it’s better if you don’t because they aren’t gonna want you to see them cry.  Be Santa… leave the gift at the door.. knock and run.. sign the card… from Santa….. I know a lot of people do things for
the homeless at this time of the year, but there is another group that gets totally forgotten… and it’s those that have no one…. I’ve been there more times than I ever want to.. and I will never let anyone I know NOT have something to open on Christmas Morning… we are all still kids at Christmas… we still believe deep in our hearts that Santa is real…. and when he skips our house…. it really hurts…..

 Now go watch a comedy in your big papa chair……. and I’m going to
listen to Quiet Hands as I fall asleep……. you put me to sleep every
night… and I mean that as a compliment…….. 

 Please send your story to Dick@DickSummer.com. And Merry Christmas/Hanukkah/Quanza/Solstis.

Dickie – Quickie

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

We’ve been swapping Christmas stories. (To find out what this is all about, go to www.dicksummer.com/podcast/latest ) Here’s one of mine:

This is a Christmas story that only goes back to 1971. And it might have been over in 2006. But it was too good for some folks who heard about it to let that happen. It was Christmas Eve, 1971, and a young guy by the name of Larry Stewart was down on his luck. He was homeless, out of work, and out of money. He hadn’t eaten in a couple of days, when he walked into a diner, and ordered a big meal. When the bill came, he said he’d just lost his wallet. When the owner walked over to the cash register, he figured he was going to have a problem. But instead, the owner slipped a $20 bill into his hand and said, “You must have dropped this.” Larry never forgot that.

 Fast forward to Kansas City Missouri, Christmas, 1981. Over the holidays, a mysterious stranger dressed up like Santa Claus started showing up in bus stations, thrift stores, Laundromats and skid run hotels, handing out $100 bills to people down on their luck. He just slipped the bills into their hands, said “Merry Christmas,” and walked away into the night before people even had a chance to understand what was going on.

 He did that for 26 years. Then in 2006, that Secret Santa who had never revealed his name let a tv reporter catch up with him, and his story got on the air. It was Larry Stewart…the young kid who needed a break…and got it in that diner all those years ago. He had become a successful business man. And every Christmas Eve, he played Secret Santa. He had given away more than $1.3 million dollars to needy people all over the United States since he started.

 It’s a great story, and a true one. And you may wonder why after all those years of being a Secret Santa…giving money away anonymously, Larry Stewart let the tv reporter tell his story in 2006. And here’s the answer. Larry got cancer. He knew he only had a few months to live. He was hoping some other folks would pick up where he left off.

 Larry died the next April. But in the last couple of years…since Larry’s story got on the air…Secret Santas have been spotted giving away $100 bills all over the country, just the way Larry did it. They dress up like Santa Claus, go to some places where Santa might not otherwise make a landing in his sleigh, slip some money into some very surprised hands…wish a quick Merry Christmas, and then quickly disappear into the night. Just like Larry.

 It’s a real Christmas story. It only goes back to 1971, so it’s not very old as Christmas stories go. But it is a true one. And I guess some folks just feel it’s simply too good to let it end. And I agree.

I’d love to add your Christmas story either here or on the podcast. Please send it to: Dick@DickSummer.com  And Merry Christmas.     

Dickie – Quickie

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

Lots of your Christmas stories coming in. (Please send yours to Dick@DickSummer.com)  And check out what this is all about at www.dicksummer.com/podcast/latest Here’s an especially  important one from Proud Podcast Participant Bob Conklin.

Hi Dick

          I am going to attempt to put this set of memories to paper. It is not a single story per say but rather a collection of what I remember. I say attempt because I suffer from that affliction that I suspect most of us Louie Louie generation men suffer from, the one that tends to cause excessive moisture to collect over the lens of your eye blocking the ability to see the text clearly. Here goes:

 My dad was a firefighter for the City of White Plains, NY where I was born and raised. Being in that job meant that there was more then a good chance he would have to work on Christmas as well as my birthday, New Years day and any other holiday you care to mention. As an aside his birthday was December 24th so that meant he generally had to work his birthday too. Dad made sure the 3 kids and mom, my older brother and sister then later on my baby sister who never made it to her first birthday, always would go to Christmas Eve services. Our church held a true midnight service, where the Christmas story was told and at the stroke of midnight Silent Night was sung with the pipe organ quietly playing along. We held candles and sang our hearts out. Our church used real candles on the alter and in the pews. As I grew older I remember that the city told our church that in order to keep using real candles they would have to have a Firefighter in church to monitor the service. I can still see my dad working his magic to arrange his shift to make sure he was at church for the service before heading back to the station so finish out his shift. Dad never let on that it was he who would request that assignment because for as long as I can remember he was the dispatcher and that was a job that not all firefighters could do. Looking back now that he is gone, I am saddened that I never said thank you to him for doing what he could do to be near us even though he was working to serve our city. (There it is that affliction I mentioned earlier) On the rare times that he did not have to work, he would still wear his dress uniform and take us all in the old Chevy to church and secretly smile to the firefighter that was on duty while dad would hold my hand.

 Damn its hard to type through the tears that always come.

 Merry Christmas Dick!