Peter and “The Iron Horse”

People frequently ask me just what the first symptoms of Alzheimer’s/Dementia are; frankly, in its beginning stages there is no perceptible difference in the individual under siege from this vicious disease.  I outlined this in an earlier post where in Stage I of the disease, behavior and memory often show no signs of impairment.

That was the case with my mother who was able to recall, at length, a cherished memory about one of her four siblings who tragically died at a young age.  Mary Patricia never forgot the details surrounding her favorite brother, Peter, and his untimely death when she was just 14 years old. 

What follows is a story she related to me many years ago and one I now share with you.

Let’s go back to 1933; a good year for people like “Machine Gun” Kelly and Ruby Keeler; gangsters and movie stars managed to thrive, even in those difficult times.

America was in the pit of the Great Depression; the only Senators in Washington who made claim to a pay raise were those who donned knickers and won the American League pennant, a feat never to be repeated.  The New York Yankees weren’t in the money; they finished second.

Peter Strollo, who loved the Yankees, turned 13 that year.  His admiration was only natural because his father (my grandfather) was the manager of the boatyard at New Rochelle’s Hudson Park at that time.  Lou Gehrig, who lived only a few blocks away from the boatyard was an avid fisherman and owned a motorboat named “The Water Wagon”.   Peter’s father, who Gehrig called by his first name, Frank, often accompanied the slugger on fishing trips. 

This was right up my grandfather’s alley as he took any opportunity to have a good time being the consummate “man about town”.

One excursion had Babe Ruth joining his teammate, and Peter’s father, for an all-day fishing and drinking jaunt out on Long Island Sound.  The good times rolled along with all three men falling overboard, fishing gear in hand, laughing like fools; fortunately, no one was hurt. 

Lou and Babe

The New York Yankee’s friendship with Peter’s father landed the young boy his most prized possessions…a bat, baseball and glove given to him personally by Lou Gehrig and which the boy slept with each night.

Then, one day in 1933, Peter fell sick with Strep Throat.  (My mother recalled that in those days illnesses like that were more serious and the family doctor just didn’t know how to properly treat the boy).  As the family watched helplessly, Peter’s condition worsened almost overnight…. and he died.

Peter’s mother placed his cherished Gehrig gifts in the coffin by her young son’s side.  Not so much an act of sentimentality as it was a mother’s instinctive knowledge that, to a boy, heaven as a spiritual concept need not be paved with clouds but simply a well-oiled patch of infield dirt. 

Surely comfort could be found in the afterlife with the working tools of a modest man known as “The Iron Horse” who batted cleanup for the Yankees and never called in sick for 13 straight years.

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Don’t hate me because…….

What’s wrong with being “special”?

Somehow, society continues to dwell on those who are deemed “different”,  people who are not part of the twisted perception of what many feel is “normal”.  This delusion creates a sick need to lash out, using excessive torment and ridicule,  in an effort to control or even eliminate that which makes too many of us…….uncomfortable.

We would like to believe that each of us is special, in our own way; nothing wrong with that.  That attitude fails to prevail where others are concerned; people with special mental or physical needs or who have different political, religious or racial backgrounds.  This is where the endless debates begin.

The news, of late, has focused on the tragedy of a promising young male college student who committed suicide after he was exposed for being gay.  Unfortunately, stories such as this are the focus of media attention week after week with one more recently taking place in New York City that involved a militant street gang’s horrific abuse of young men they “thought” were homosexuals.

It’s elementary, and of no surprise, that the seeds of such intense hatred have been implanted in the minds of people for centuries.  Civilization has made great progress in many ways but still manages to remain in the dark ages where coping skills are concerned.

Some believe that those who are grouped into categories should not receive special treatment; I disagree.  Most who were born handicapped, or gay, fight for their survival while others stand back and hurl obscene labels in their direction as if they were criminals.  All special people share a quest to live an average life and should not have to deal with copious amount of human ignorance that results in unspeakable situations.

Coping skills?  Direct that effort at all the supposed “normal” people who bully and persecute those who don’t fit their bill of what a human should look or act like…..or who they should fall in love with.  Stop the hate of others because they do not conform to your limited perceptions of normal human behaviors. 

Don’t hate because…..it’s the accepted thing to do; tolerate and support the truly special people out there.

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Just sayin’…..

Expressions…we all have our favorites and some are downright annoying after people hear them a zillion times.

Growing up, if I even thought about repeating comments other kids made, much less say them in the presence of my parents or grandmother (who lived with us), the consequences were….unpleasant.  Still, when safely out of their eyesight and away from their uncanny hearing abilities, there were no holds barred on what came out of my mouth.  I was a rebel, saying “damn” in the playground of the parochial school I attended but the guilt of my wicked ways would always send me to the Confessional every Saturday afternoon out of the fear of burning in hell.

The 60’s rolled in along with “groovy” in front of everything; food, clothes, boys, cars…you name it and, if The Mindbenders weren’t on the radio reminding you about love being groovy, Simon and Garfunkel were singing the “The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin’ Groovy)”. There was no escape until the 80’s hit and groovy bit the dust only to be taken over by……”funky”.  This word, a slang term for a bad odor,  had actually been around for more than twenty years in the music industry but not considered polite terminology until some time later.

I, for one, become nauseated whenever I hear….”bling”.  Anyone ever having the misfortune to catch just one episode of “Bridezillas” can attest to the fact that most of the classless, foul-mouthed women who shouldn’t be allowed to marry (much less procreate but most already have their children IN their wedding party) are featured on this program.  The only time every word out of their trashy mouths isn’t a cuss-word is when they’re spewing “bling” all over the place.

      
I gotcha “bling“….right here!!

I’m sharing a great website where you can peruse to your hearts content through a compilation of American Slang; it’s set up for easy browsing.

                                                http://www.alphadictionary.com/slang/

A few samples of what you will find…….

Fab! …….(Today, it’s “Fabulous”…my oldest daughter beats this one to death)

Gag me with a spoooooooon!…..( This became a household phrase after Moon Unit Zappa’s “Valley Girl” song)

Gnarly! 

Take a Powder!

Skank!…..(I happen to like this one and still use it often)

Whatever your word, or chosen phrase, is….just remember that saying it repeatedly will ultimately annoy someone like me.  Worse yet, you might incur the wrath of a fellow blogging-friend who writes the most incredible posts; ticking her off is worse than spitting into the wind!

Just sayin’…..

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