Wayne,
When I birthed my second child and they said that it was a boy I heaved a strong, emphatic sigh of relief. I instinctively knew that I would not want to raise a female in the strange and uncivilized social milieu this has turned into.
Bevin and I had a conversation about our offspring's gender at the wake--she, too, has two sons. The strange new teeny-bopper craze, (crazy craze,) has reached Dallas.
But half my age, she and I had more similar coming of age experiences, without so much as a hint of such goings on. What Monica revealed was only the tip of an iceberg of social malapropisms that have come about in the last decade.
Given how Bevin handled all the pressures and responsibilities of the last few weeks as an only child, I suggested that she might want to keep trying until she has a baby girl. Like my own brothers, I doubt that either of my two sons could such handle such weighty responsibilities with the aplomb she did.
Once, when they were teenagers, I collapsed onto the kitchen floor, (a reaction to the food supplement, zinc--on an empty stomach, it turned out.) One of them called EMS and then they both RAN AWAY leaving it to the medics to try to get me to describe what had happened! I sure saw the handwriting on the wall about that time.
Best,
Frances
Wayne Johnson <cadaobh at shentel.net> wrote:
Pale isn't strong enough. Dim unto darkness might be closer.
My goodness times have changed.
My response: yuk and double yuk.
Frankly, I am glad I am not going to live long enough to personally witness the ultimate social pig sty depths the US is approaching. I guess I am just a Romantic at heart.
wgJ
----- Original Message -----
From: Frances Morey
To: survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the 60s
Sent: Monday, January 23, 2006 12:13 AM
Subject: Re: [AGL] Moving on to Monica
Wayne,
Whatever a man couldn't discuss in that era is nothing compared to The Rainbow Party. That's the title of a new book reviewed in the January/February issue of The Atlantic. The review itself is entitled "Are You There God? It's Me, Monica? Whatever it is that you alluded to that could have happened at an "overnight" soiree in the fifties pales in comparison to what today's kids have come up with. The subject matter is, well, totally incomprehensible and in addition unspeakable.
BTW I mistakenly wrote that Guich's sister was named Margaret instead of Martha Ward, nee Koock.
Frances
Wayne Johnson <cadaobh at shentel.net> wrote:
I do indeed remember Green Pastures....quite fondly as it was the site of our graduation class "overnight" party in the Spring of 1956! Yes, have attended other functions there. When last in Austin and we went by I thought it had gotten a little seedy over time but perhaps that is because my "original" visit is still reflected in rose colored glasses. Much went on that night that a gentleman can never discuss.
wayne
And a perfect setting for it, too.
----- Original Message -----
From: Frances Morey
To: survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the 60s
Sent: Sunday, January 22, 2006 2:36 PM
Subject: Re: [AGL] Michele (one L, please) Mason and me at the wake
Guich Koock, that spelling seems right, is a member of the Koock family whose elders founded the landmark Green Pastures. Surely you remember attending someone's wedding there. I've been there on several occasions over the years. He has a sister named Margaret Ward once married to the late Churchill Ward.
I once went to Puerto Escondito back when it was a tiny fishing v illage some 20 years ago. One of the local businessmen, upon hearing that I was from Austn, asked if I knew the Koocks, who regularly vacationed there. Now I hear it's a diminutive Miami Beach. Google up Guich or find him on imdb.com for the impressive list of his entertainment credits.
Frances
Wayne Johnson <cadaobh at shentel.net> wrote:
Who the Heck is Guich Kook?
wgJ
----- Original Message -----
From: "Michael Eisenstadt"
To:
Sent: Sunday, January 22, 2006 1:11 PM
Subject: [AGL] Michele (one L, please) Mason and me at the wake
> so i was standing next to Michele who had driven in from Bastrop and we
> were looking at the people, 3 in a row with hats. One of the hats was a
> real 10 gallon kind tha t you don't hardly ever see except in period
> Western movie. I opined that the wearer must be in real estate. Being a
> Texian herself she bridled at the remark (so to speak). As it was it
> turned out to be Guich Kook. Michele had been in a movie with him decades
> ago.
>
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