Posts Tagged ‘Paradise Sound’

Live! From Paradise! #257

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

Dwayne the Earth Mover called the other day, and he sounded even more surprised than I did.

“Larry B! How you doing? Why didn’t you say good-bye?”

It’s been almost a year since I saw Dwayne last, so it took me a moment to recognize the voice. That seemed to be fine with him because he plunged right on:

“Here I am, figuring life’s like always and you and Gwen the Beautiful are dancing and loving and living the dream, and then I hear from Brannigan that you’ve gone and departed your Mountain for some flatland that’ll be on the ocean floor any day!”

“It’s just for awhile,” I said. “Gwen told Elizabeth what was happening when we saw her at the bank.”

At the mention of his wife, Dwayne was silent for so long I thought his cell had dropped the connection. Then, with his usual fast-talking effervescence: “So what’s it like, starting over in a new place?”

“Tougher than I thought, that’s for sure. Been here a month and still haven’t found the TV remote. The dogs can’t get it into their heads that they don’t have to announce every visitor anymore. Met the neighbor across the street when she came outside to yell at me for yelling in the neighborhood because I was calling out to another neighbor —”

I stopped myself. Because I realized I was running on about…well, about the same kinds of things every move to a new home has brought to my life.

I remembered when I went off to grad school at the University of Iowa and was stopped for speeding just as I crossed the state line. State Trooper got out of his car and came over to my window with a big smile on his face. “Welcome to Iowa, sir!” he said. “Drivers license, please….”

Then there was the time I whisked Gwen to Santa Fe. We’d just gotten married in Vegas, where an Elvis impersonator walked us down the aisle at the Graceland Wedding Chapel and were about to settle down in a house I’d rented on the Santa Clara Pueblo just north of town.

We were treating the drive like a honeymoon. Until we got to Kingman, Arizona, where my hot new truck got so hot it caught fire on I-40. While a local dealer waited for the new driveshaft the truck needed, Gwen and I drove on in a rental car and got home just in time to learn that, as beautiful and modern as the house was, the builders had neglected to install one necessary ingredient.

A heating system that worked.

And how could I forget the first time I wrote anything in this space? It was about an event our first week in Arkansas. When the horse transporters pulled onto the Cloud Creek Ranch driveway with Huck the Spotless Appaloosa and Elaine the Not So Wild Mustang. And promptly got stuck in the mud. For a good long time there it seemed as though the wranglers were going to be permanent residents of The Mountain with us.

None of these things compare, though with the Biggest Move I Ever Made. The one to L.A.

It was over 40 years ago, but I still can picture every detail of the night I arrived at LAX. I was heading for the baggage carousel when a white-haired old lady collapsed to the floor in front of the chute.

Immediately, her companion, an only slightly less white-haired woman, bent down to help, wailing, “Somebody get a doctor! My friend is dying! Get a doctor, please!”

That’s when the baggage started coming down. As I stood there, not able to make myself move, I saw all the other passengers surge forward, stepping over the two women without the slightest visible hesitation, and getting their bags.

Another passenger from the flight turned to me. “Hey, kid,” he said. “Welcome to L.A….”

Dwayne didn’t say much as I told him all this. When I finished, he laughed but didn’t sound amused. “The reason Elizabeth didn’t tell me you were going was that we don’t talk much anymore. Me working in Little Rock, her in Paradise, we kinda came to a parting of the ways.”

“I’m sorry, Dwayne,” I said.

“Thanks,” Dwayne said. “And for the stories too. But I hope you understand, bud. Way things are, I’d rather be stuck in the worst beginning ever than the ending I’m in now.”

I didn’t disagree.

Larry Brody is an author, veteran television writer and producer. He, his wife and their various animals divide their time between the Ozark Mountains and Puget Sound. The other residents of Larry’s mythical Paradise reside entirely in his imagination and any resemblance to actual places or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

Live! From Paradise! #256

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

A new environment means adjustment.

Unfortunately, adjustment doesn’t come easily for yours truly, Larry B,

Back in 3rd grade, my teacher, Miss Hinsberger, clued the class in on what separates humans from other animals.

“Animals,” she said, “have to adjust to their environment in order to survive. Humans make their environment adjust to them, and thrive.”

Being young and smart and “maladjusted” (people weren’t throwing around diagnoses like “autism” and “Asperger’s Syndrome” back in that day), and totally crushing on Miss Hinsberger, I took this wisdom straight into my heart, and worked desperately to make my environment adjust to me so I could indeed thrive.

It didn’t work.

You can’t change people, especially if you fear them, and I feared everyone because, in keeping with my Asperger’s, every moment with other people caused me literal, physical pain.

Being with ten thousand people at a baseball game, or a dozen people at a family gathering, or even one person at home, made me feel the way a claustrophobic man or woman would feel trapped in a windowless room.

Absolute terror, distinguished by:

Shortness of breath.

A nose either stuffed fuller than a Thanksgiving turkey or flooding like New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina.

Complete loss of the ability to focus on anything, including relief from the fear.

School was a nightmare. The only positive moments I had during elementary school were when Miss Hinsberger gave me what I saw as a very special smile and said, “Good work.”

No way could I adjust the situation, nor could I adjust myself to it.

Finally, in high school, I found the “cure.”

And taught myself to dance the dance that would let me be like everyone else.

Okay, not everyone. The guy I faked being was James Dean.

James Dean the actor was dead by then, thanks to having crashed his Porsche. But his screen persona lived.

Quiet. Brooding. Untouchable by anything outside himself. Flashing that little smile at a joke only he understood.

On film, James Dean was the coolest guy who ever lived.

In real life, I pushed myself to become as close to that as anyone ever could.

I worked on my new personality for years. Added layers so I could interact with others more comfortably. Became a James Dean who told stories in life and on paper. Who talked quickly and cleverly and shared that little smile with people so realistically they all believed that I, the coolest guy who ever lived, truly was sharing myself with them.

This flattered the hell out of most people, and they became my friends.

The more friends I made, the more successful I became, professionally as well as personally.

The more successful I became, the less painful life seemed. And the more real my grafted-on personality felt to me. The false confidence and ease became genuine. So did the friendships. And loves as well. I continued growing outward, and a terrific thing happened.

I became the person I’d pretended to be. One step beyond Pinocchio, I was a real live man.

As a by-all-available-standards successful man, I was able to design my life to be as nonthreatening to myself as possible.

I was the boss, and what does the boss have to be afraid of? I worked exactly the way I wanted to work, on only the projects that appealed to me, and with only the people I wanted to work with.

I lived exactly the way I wanted as well. In the country — ranches in the L.A. and Santa Fe areas, even the Ozarks. Surrounded by beauty both natural and man-made. With people who loved me. I even had just the right pinch of “celebrity” and so was treated with what to me was the perfect amount of respect.

Then, to make things even more awesome for my family and myself, off I went to a totally new kind of environment. A small town. A street with neighbors who knew nothing about me, and whom I also knew nothing about.

Yikes!

Here I am, on serene Friendly Street, where everyone else knows everyone and says, “Hi!” and hangs together and —

And it terrifies me. The old familiar feeling of being totally out of it, not getting anyone, feeling invaded every time another set of eyes meet mine is back, full throttle.

So here I sit, back in elementary school, completely freaked.

Time to come up with another dance. One that’ll work where I am.

Watch me now.

Larry Brody is an author, veteran television writer and producer. He, his wife and their various animals divide their time between the Ozark Mountains and Puget Sound. The other residents of Larry’s mythical Paradise reside entirely in his imagination and any resemblance to actual places or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

Live! From Paradise! #255

Friday, April 16th, 2010

It’s been two weeks since Gwen the Beautiful and I moved into our Paradise Sound home, and in the short time we’ve been here we’ve had so many ups and downs that all I can think of is a phrase famously uttered not only by everyone’s favorite detective, Sherlock Holmes, but also by our fave sociopathic infant, The Family Guy’s Stewie Griffin:

“What the deuce?”

What am I talking about? For openers, this:

Move Ups

Youngest Daughter Amber lives just across the Sound, only an hour and a half away…and that’s when the traffic is bad. Oldest Son Jeb lives straight down the coast in L.A., loves the town, and can’t wait to bring his family here to relax and enjoy.

We’re renting a terrific house. It’s Craftsman-style and was built in the 1930s. It’s also in exactly the neighborhood we wanted. Uptown, a three minute walk from shops and restaurants and smack dab in the middle of the small town Victorian charm that made us love this place when we vacationed here last summer.

Our furniture and other belongings arrived at the same time we did. Intact and ready to use.

Medical services also are just a few minutes away. Even the hospital, located halfway across town, is only a five minute drive.

The restaurants are as good as we remembered.

Our street is famous. Locally anyway. For its friendliness and cohesion. There’s neighborhood this and family that. Our first weekend here was distinguished by a block party. The second by a giant yard sale shared by everyone on the street. If you’re a social kind of person who left your previous abode because it was in the Middle of Nowhere, with the nearest neighbor half a mile away, then the name “Paradise” takes on even more significance than it originally had.

Move Downs

We’re renting a house instead of owning it, and it’s for sale. Which means letting realtors in to show the place. And dealing with a rental agent who means really well but keeps exhausting both of us by working so very hard to make a better impression on me than anyone but my wife and family can. (Hmm, I wonder…If I adopt him, will we both be able to relax?)

Our furniture and other belongings have arrived, but we have no place to put almost half of them. An old house means winding stairs and low bedroom ceilings. Which also means I have to use the downstairs bathroom because I can’t stand upright in the one upstairs. We’re not exactly loaded with closet space either. Most of my clothes are in the guest room. (Luckily, not all my underwear.)

About those medical facilities: I’m even happier they’re close by than I thought I’d be. Because they’re getting way more use than I thought I’d give them. I know I told the world I was coming here to recuperate, but c’mon, Universe, can’t you give me more than two nights in a row when Gwen and I aren’t throwing on our clothes to get me to the E.R.?

The restaurants not only are as good as we remembered, they’re also as expensive.

Our street indeed is loaded with enough friendliness and cohesion for even the most social human. Unfortunately, I chose to live on The Mountain because that description just plain ain’t me. (Gwen, however, is in her glory. People to talk to instead of rocks and trees and animals and spirits! A life that’s real in a way she’s wanted more than she even knew.)

Speaking of spirits, I miss my daily conversations with The Mound in the Cloud Creek Ranch clearing. And nothing in our cute little backyard has said, “I love you” to me yet. Not one dandelion. Nor a squirrel. Nor even one of the zillion bones the dogs have dug up. (Some of which look far too much like they should be yakking away.)

Not that our new digs are entirely without magic. There’s the music that wafts out from within the secret door to nowhere in our bedroom every night. And the sound of a dog that isn’t there barking on the upper deck that should, but doesn’t, connect to the house. Oh, and the nice young Victorian-era couple Gwen can only see out of the corner of her eye….

See what I mean? “What the deuce?” happenings if ever there were any.

Gotta love ‘em.

Hello, Paradise Sound.

Larry Brody is an author, veteran television writer and producer. He, his wife and their various animals divide their time between the Ozark Mountains and Puget Sound. The other residents of Larry’s mythical Paradise reside entirely in his imagination and any resemblance to actual places or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.