It was then, during a sweaty daydream about lawn bowling and Jarts with the neigbors, that she challenged my manhood for the
"We have to buy a condo,
"You...can't take care... of GRASS!"
It was sooooo true. I worked Monday through Friday at a sweet private golf course where my job was to show up at dawn and make people happy and better at golf until nightfall. Then on the weekends, my job was to show up 3 hours before dawn to get ready to make people happy and better at golf until two hours afer nightfall. On my days off, I had to play golf so that I didn't accidentally teach these people how to drink 3 gallons of coffee on their drive to work (my only other talent) by mistake. So in truth, I had no time to take care of a sweet, Wyoming-style 5-acre yard with a full baseball diamond in the middle. But I wouldn't relent. She struck a chord with me the way Nels Cline strikes a chord during this. It was hard hitting and real and it
I soon gained a freedom I'd never before had which people referred to as "weekends".
They were strange to me. There were hours with which you could do things, like mow and sleep. You could also coach and ride bikes and go to movies and breath air. IT WAS STARTLING. But the flip side of every wheat penny is still Abe Lincoln...so I had to come to terms with who I really was. I was (and still am) a yellow and black-striped worker bee...to the core.
I don't sit still very well, except during funerals and old episodes of The Benny Hill Show, so I had to keep moving. I became a fanatic at
But every August in Kansas City- when grass falls from the ocean into hell in 30 seconds- my yard would die. It would flourish in May and early June, then struggle mightily past the 4th of July, soaked in firecracker dust and barbeque sauce. Sadly, by the time Leo came to roar around the Zodiac, the Keefe yard looked eerily similar to the illustrated cover of The Grapes of Wrath.
I got better by buying chemicals and invested in watering (GENIUS!) the grass. Now, it's a decent patch of earth.
The point of my little story is
On the way to the grocery store riding in the back of my Mom's car, we'd pass one of my shitty yards with asymmetic lines in it and a dozen 6-inch mohawks of missed cuts and it would be neatly framed by yards on each side where the DAD OF THE YEAR that lived there had spent 3 hours hand clipping every stem for the big yard award show that never happened (but which he felt he won every Sunday morning as he pranced out to fetch his paper with a cup of coffee). My yards had that Pig Pen swirl around them. I needed to change.
But I didn't change. Not until I
And I do this almost for free and entirely to prove to my teenage son
The $10 bill and sense of pride that comes from a summer job.
I love a fresh cut lawn, whether it's my own or not. I love the fact that symmetrical lines in your yard can make the chaos inside your
Maybe, just maybe, I will pass this
Don't try to hire us, though. We have just enough earth beneath our feet to perfect before we can really get to work.
