Sunday, August 14, 2022

An American Journey

He has become what is commonly referred to as a man of a certain age, born in the 1950’s and nearing retirement in a nation that bares little resemblance to the one he was born into. In some respects this has been true of every age since America’s founding, change being the one reliable, inalterable fact of our national life. But he can’t shake the feeling that there is something distinctly different in the air now, and he thinks he knows when it all started. It was his first political memory.

The America that he inherited in the 1950’s stood astride the world as the one unchallenged colossus. After World War II, America seemed on the march everywhere. The economy was booming, patriotism seemed like the least we could do to show our appreciation for having been born in such a place. We were the land of Ozzie and Harriet, Leave it to Beaver and Mayberry, or at least we wanted to believe we were. It was never that easy or clean, of course. Hollywood’s ability to distort reality was just as strong then as it is now. Still, America was the land of heroes, at least to him it was. He grew up idolizing John Glenn and Mickey Mantle and Willie Mays. Politics was contentious but always seemed to end at the water’s edge of conflict. We had one uniting adversary, Communism. He remembers the duck and cover drills in elementary school. Everyone knew which side of the Iron Curtain they wanted to live on. America was the answer to Khrushchev and Mao, an emphatic, winning answer. All you had to do was look at them, old men dressed like clowns grinning like feral cats. Our President, on the other hand, was young and handsome with a beautiful wife. He was funny, clever and possessed a winning smile. Then he got shot.

He was still a little boy but remembers the day. It was his introduction to politics. The President had been murdered and his parents were distraught. One minute he was smiling and waving at the folks in his convertible and the next minute his brain was splattered all over his wife’s dress, and Walter Cronkite took off his thick black glasses and said, “The President is dead.”

The next year he remembers the day he saw a President with his own eyes for the first and only time. Lyndon Johnson was giving a speech in town and his father thought the family should go to get a glimpse of him, not because he revered him as some sort of God, but because he needed support…because the President had just been shot and LBJ had the weight of the world on his shoulders. So, there they were standing inside a rope with hundreds of others. A line of limousines pulled up and men with sunglasses stepped out, then the President excited the building and walked ten yards to the biggest car in the line, stopping to wave at them for a few seconds. He was as far away as second base is from home plate. He seemed to look right at the 6 year old boy. It was his second political memory.

After that everything seemed to change. The killing of a President seemed to unleash a fury of unrest in his country. There was a war in Asia and it divided the country in profound ways. Soon an explosion of protests spread over the country like mushrooms after heavy rain. Civil Rights. Get Out of Vietnam. Suddenly, the bloom seemed off the American rose. His father’s generation seemed to be the problem to some. To others it was the fault of the hippies. The divide seemed to get deeper with each riot.

One of the sharpest divides that he noticed, even as a young man, was the divide between the kind of people who attended Harvard and those who didn’t. It was the Ivy Leaguers who tended to believe that Ethyl and Julius Rosenberg were innocent. It was the Ivy Leaguers who were most likely to make excuses for even Communisms worst atrocities. People who didn’t attend college or if they did went to state schools seemed more likely to take America’s side. People like Richard Nixon. But then, he ended up being a corrupt crook, despite his protests to the contrary, so all bets were off. Nothing that has happened since has been able to change this dynamic. Even when the Berlin Wall fell and the newly released Rosenberg files proved their guilt, the Ivy Leaguers contextualized. Even when our own intelligence agency’s sins were revealed the kinds of people who loved Richard Nixon made excuses. The divide was permanent.

Years later Ronald Reagan came along calling America a shining city on a hill. It sparked something in the young man who had grown disillusioned. He so desperately wanted America to be just that, a place of hope and goodness, a country that stood for something. There were others who attempted to call the country back to unity and goodness with phrases like a thousand points of light, and building a bridge to the 21st century, or the optimistic yes, we can. But they all fell flat on his middle aged ears. Something had changed. Politics now seemed like warfare. Suddenly campaign slogans started sounding like battle cries…Courage to Fight for America, Fighting for us. 

Then came…Make America Great Again. It was clever. It called upon our best memories from back when the post World War II America rebuilt Europe, when America was admired around the world for its enthusiasm, positivity, and ingenuity. Whenever anything is ever great it’s natural for people to want it to always be. Some mocked the slogan, not even trying to hide their contempt for their own country…We were never great! This attitude helped Donald Trump win. The experiences of most Americans cause them to be grateful for their country, flaws and all. The Ivy Leaguers never seem to grasp this simple fact. And so, a poorly educated, boorish carnival barking idiot became President and the older man found himself adrift, and keenly aware of the dangers of political nostalgia.  He finds himself in disagreement with people near and dear to him. He hates that politics has such power.

With the election of Joe Biden, half the country followed the lead of their deluded hero and refused to accept the verdict. Now, when the FBI executes a search warrant of the ex-President’s home, radicals start calling for armed resistance. Now, his biggest fear for his country isn’t who will win the next election, but whether the result will bring violence and a further rupturing of the country that has been the only home he has ever had. 

He opens his laptop and pulls up the news for the first time in a while. He reads about Mar-a-Lago, armed groups gathering around FBI offices, and the knife attack on Salman Rushdi. He is overcome with anxiety for the country of his birth.

So much so, that he writes this blog post.

Saturday, August 13, 2022

A Full Schedule

Today is Saturday. I have to be reminded. Sometimes the lake reminds me. There is more boat activity on Saturday and Sunday. This weekend Pam and I have many choices facing us. For instance, today we have to decide whether or not to take in the 20th annual Blueberry Wing Ding in Lincolnville. I mean, can we really afford to miss that…again?


Then tomorrow there’s the free jazz concert in Rockport…



Here’s what the advertisement says: 


I’m thinking that we miss that at our own peril!

What follows would be considered by most as a miscellaneous concern at best, but its the sort of thing that once it lands in your head its difficult to dislodge. each morning when I make my coffee I am confronted with this image…



…and each morning I think…Darth Vader. Am I right? Or am I just crazy?



Thursday, August 11, 2022

A Place Where Everyone…literally…is Welcomed

Sometimes in life you just get lucky.

Last night it was getting close to dinner time and neither Pam nor I had any interest in cooking anything. We had delivered Patrick and Sarah to the airport and were feeling a slight letdown in our spirits which always happens when the kids leave. I was reading a book and she was reading something on her Kindle when she said, “Why don’t we go up to Fraternity for dinner?” That’s the general store just up the road in Searsmont. Although we have ordered sandwiches and pizza from there many times, we had never had a sit down experience there. Since I had no better idea readily available I agreed.

=

This was our view. Just around the corner from that awesome stove was a bar where an older couple sat reading the Knox Courier-Gazette, better known as the “Village Soup”, while waiting for their dinner. Soon, another couple who had finished their meal exited through those red double doors, leaving one of them opened. Then the most marvelous thing happened.



This girl waltzes in and makes her way under the abandoned table to peck at the crumbs left by the aforementioned exiting couple. She did it in a very practiced way as if she had been doing this all her life. No one seemed to notice except the table of Virginians who immediately began discreetly taking pictures. Then, as soon as she was finished she unceremoniously left the same way she had come…



No harm, no fowl…I suppose.

Then I noticed the floor in this picture, worn out and indented by people—and chickens—entering through these doors for so many years. The people of Searsmont are proud of their village. There’s a giant print of an article which appeared in DownEast magazine 8 years ago naming it the “Friendliest Village in Maine”…



While we were there we overheard snippets of conversations between the locals:

-Patriots first pre-season game coming up, and you here that the Bruins got a new coach?

-What about Tampa Bay? Wonder how Tom will do this year?

-Ten more weeks and we’ll see the snowflakes swirling.



The Fraternity General Store in Searsmont, Maine…where even chickens are welcomed.

Incidentally, my Reuben sandwich was excellent.

Wednesday, August 10, 2022

Ten More Days

Pam just left for Portland to take Patrick and Sarah to the airport. The four days we had with them flew by. They loved Loon Landing and even loved the two cloudy days we had during their stay. It gave us an excuse to slow down and enjoy the quiet. They spent time reading and puzzling and taking slow kayak trips around the lake. In the evenings, Pam and Sarah cross-stitched for hours at a time. We managed to have our one and only fire of the summer a couple nights ago. Last night we had a lovely dinner at Fresh&Co in Camden, then dessert at Riverducks, which never disappoints.






This morning Lucy and I ventured down to the dock for some morning fishing. We both had endured quite enough trash-talking from Patrick about the lack of success we had been experiencing during their brief stay. Lucy especially had grown increasingly annoyed. So suddenly a very nice bass hit the line and made two dramatic jumps out of the water which naturally sent Lucy in to uncontrollable hysterics. When I pulled him in I made a call to everyone in the house to come see the evidence for themselves, only to discover that they had all walked up to the guest house. Lucy was disappointed to the extreme so I made the decision to walk up to the guest house with her and the wiggly bass. Once there, Patrick and Sarah appeared at the screen door and Lucy began her maniacal growling and jumping up and down with delight. It was pretty adorable. She loves fishing more than practically anything else up here!



Now, after cleaning the cabin up a bit, Lucy and I have settled in for some reading and napping while we wait for Mom to return, somewhere around 2:00. Its still cloudy and cool, still in the 60’s for the third straight day. But tomorrow promises sunshine and 75. Ten more days before we leave for Short Pump. I am starting to feel the end coming. I’m not sad or frustrated, just grateful we get to be here so long. Besides, there may be a fall trip in the works, plus there’s always next year. Lucy, on the other hand, will be devastated.


Monday, August 8, 2022

Magic

Today dawned cool and breezy, with a soft ceiling of thin clouds turning the lake the color of gray slate. Overnight the winds had shifted from the south to the north north-west. The people who predict weather for a living tell us that the next three days will be like this. We are thrilled. An appearance by the sun is not a requirement for happiness up here. A few cloudy days offer some variety and bring the chance to see the lake in a fresh new way. The most welcome benefit is the cooler temperatures, the warmest of which promises to be in the low 70’s.

Yesterday was stifling and quite miserable, so to make things exciting I decided to take Pam up to look at a property that had just come up for sale on a lake 40 minutes away. The pictures and some of the numbers looked very promising. Plus the trip up and back would be in air conditioned comfort. As soon as we drove up to the place we both knew it wasn’t the one. This is the most frustrating part of our four year search for a lake house, the mystical absence the aha moment. Pam and I know exactly what we want in a place. We can see it in our mind’s eye. We have never been at cross purposes in this regard. Only once in our search have we both felt it when seeing a place for the first time. It was three years ago when we walked onto a place on Beech Hill up near Ellsworth, Maine. The property was for sale by owner and included the furniture, a jet ski, a powerboat, two all terrain vehicles and an old Dodge Ram pick up truck. Nearly everything about the place was perfect except for the fact that it was an hour and half away from Camden. That and the fact that the owner—along with the key to the house—were in Florida and he could not be reached. We spent nearly an hour walking the beautiful grounds and salivating over the dock and the enormous rocks that littered the back yard leading down to the water, and peering through the sliding glass doors of the deck. Ultimately, the owner pulled the property off the market and that was that. He was offering the house and all the toys for an insanely ridiculous $465,000. Three years later when I think about it I practically weep!

Anyway, so we pull up into this sketchy, trashy row of houses and our hearts drop. Inside, the place actually looked better than the pictures, but it just didn’t matter. No matter how nice it might have been the prospect of being surrounded on all sides by other lake houses featuring an architectural vibe that can best be described as shabby-shack just wasn’t ever going to happen. After twenty minutes, we got back in the car and drove back home in silence.

Reading over this its almost impossible not to pick up on a hint of snobbery. Its true. We have become lake house snobs. The fault lies with On The Water In Maine, who have introduced us to some of the most lovely lake house properties in all of Mid-Coast Maine, and the specific property of Loon Landing, which have both managed to essentially ruin us forever. we will constantly be comparing every place we look at to this place. Obviously, nothing will quite do…


We are not demoralized, just slightly depressed. We hold on to the hope that one day something will come up for sale and we will both get out of the car, eyes filled with dazzling light as the clouds part and the voices of angels can be heard singing the Hallelujah Chorus. We were turn to each other and whisper, “magic.”


Saturday, August 6, 2022

Pay Back

I must begin this post with an apology. None of my readers want to hear me complain about the weather when you guys have been sweltering in triple digit agony for a month. Nevertheless, yesterday was one of those rare days in Maine where its filthy outside. Not a whisper of a wind all day with 90% humidity which made it feel like 92 degrees. Yes, yes…I know. But, this cabin has no AC. For most of the afternoon it was hotter inside than it was outside. The next couple of days promise more of the same, with Sunday’s expected high temperature to reach 93. That is a very big deal for Maine. But, enough with the belly-aching. Nature has a way of offering unexpected grace. Last night around 8 o’clock this happened…



It seemed like Mother Nature felt bad and decided to pay us back. Pam had ventured out in the midst of it on her paddle board, leaving Lucy and me fishing on the dock. Even Lucy was enchanted…



At one point it looked as if the lake itself was on fire. Neither of these pictures does it justice but its the best I can do.

Today we drive down to Portland to have brunch with Patrick and Sarah who have been tooling around that famous foodie-town for the past couple of days. After that we will bring them here for four whole days! It will be their turn to experience Loon Landing. The weather doesn’t appear that it will be as nice as when Jon and Kaitlin were here, but the weather is at the very top of things I can do nothing about. Whether is perfect or not…its still at the lake!

Two more weeks here. Time is flying.

Friday, August 5, 2022

Not as Easy as We Make it Look

So, apparently we are due for a cloudy day with a few showers possible. We have had few of either since our arrival here one month ago. I will take advantage of the cloudy/rainy conditions by doing a bit of actually…work. There are bills to be paid, I’m told, along with some misc. professional responsibilities that cannot be indefinitely shirked. Sad.

The first thing I ask myself when I wake up here is, what day is today? Actually, the first thing I ask is, “why the heck are you awake at quarter to six in the morning??” Proletarian habits are hard to break, I suppose. The early bird might get the bird in the working world, but up here all it gets you is a view of fog on a still lake and snuggle time with Lucy. Come to think of it, that’s a pretty good deal.

I would like to point out something about our life up here while disabusing you of the false notion that we just lounge around doing nothing for six weeks every year. Nothing could be further from the truth. Actually, I adhere to a rather strict schedule. My calendar is very full and some days it’s nye near impossible to fit it all in…

5:45 Wake up. Walk into living room, stand at the sliding glass door staring at the lake for several minutes listening to Lucy snoring from the sofa.

5:50 Wedge yourself into tiny bathroom for the necessary morning ritual.

5:55 Brew coffee.

6:00 Empty the cutest little dishwasher in the world…



6:10 Drink coffee while snuggling Lucy, who unlike her owner, has the good sense to still be sound asleep at this hour…



6:30 Check baseball box scores. Continue mourning the tragic loss of Juan Soto to the Padres. Peruse latest “lake cabins for sale in Maine” emails from Redfin and Zillow. Here’s one that has three bedrooms, two bathrooms, gorgeous views of a wonderful lake and 1600 square feet of living space! Now all I have to do is come up with $875,000. Sigh…

7:15 Walk down to the dock for some fishing. 

8:00 Give Pam a hug as she stumbles out of the bedroom. Watch her stare at the lake for five minutes trying to decide whether today is a Kayak or paddle board morning.

8:15 Take Lucy out for her morning perambulation after she finally wakes up. Remember to take multiple sanitary bags since one never knows whether it will be a one or two poop walk.

8:30 Begin grueling decision making process over what to eat for breakfast. Should I have cereal with blueberries, toasted English muffins with peanut butter and raspberry preserves, or should I wait for Pam to return from the lake and get her to make bacon and eggs?

9:00 Compliment wife on phenomenal bacon and egg breakfast, then load up the kayak with gear and head out for morning fishing run…

All this, and its barely nine o’clock in the morning! I’m exhausted just writing about it! Vacationing in Maine is no where near as easy as we make it look, y’all.