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Joseph E Bird

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The Violin

Violin BW 2 for web

The following was inspired by true events.


“I WANT TO KEEP MY LEG.”

“Jack, we’ve been through this. Your leg is dying. If we don’t amputate, it could kill you.”

“I want to keep my leg.”

“At the risk of dying?”

“Of course not. Cut the leg off. But I want to keep it.”

“I don’t understand.”

“What’s so hard to understand? When you cut off the leg, instead of throwing it in the trash, put it on ice.”

“We don’t just throw it in the trash. We have a medical incinerator.”

“I want to take my leg home.”

“Why?”

“It’s my leg. Maybe I’ll make it into a lamp.”

“Just sign the papers. You can’t take your leg home.”

“Maybe I want to bury it. Could I take it home and bury it?”

Dr. Irving leaned back in his chair and let out a long, slow breath. “It’s really not practical. How would you even dig a hole?”

“But could I do it? Is it legal?”

“There’s paperwork. It has to be approved by Administration. They won’t likely grant your request, given your circumstances.”

“My circumstances.”

“You know.”

“I’m not crazy, Stuart. I checked myself in to get some rest.”

Dr. Irving forced a smile. There was no point in arguing. He had learned that years ago. When they were both boys.

“Where would you bury it?”

Jack thought for a moment. “I could bury it next to Monkey.”

“Monkey died?”

“Two years ago. I told you. You never listen to me.”

“I’m sorry. I forgot. I forget a lot of things anymore.”

“Monkey’s not dead. I was just testing you.”

“Why would you do that?”

“I’ll bury her next to Zsa Zsa.”

“I know Zsa Zsa’s dead. I went to the funeral.” Dr. Irving shook his head. “Who has a funeral for a cat?”

“Lot’s of people do. Don’t be so insensitive.”

“So you want to bury your leg in your pet cemetery?”

Jack didn’t answer. Dr. Irving took off his glasses and rubbed his eyes.

“Does your head hurt?” Jack asked.

“No. Just tired. I don’t sleep much these days.”

“They have meds for that, you know. New ones. I got to try a couple at the hospital. The other hospital. Bateman.”

“I just need some time off. I’m going to the beach next month.”

“The beach. I never understood that. We’re going to the beach! We’re going to the beach! All that sand. The humidity. No, thank you.”

“I like it. Nothing like sitting on the deck with a cup of coffee watching the sun rise.”

“Are the kids going?”

“No. Just me. I haven’t even told them. I’m afraid they’ll come down.”

“They worry about you.”

“I know.”

“You’re not used to being alone, and yet you’re going to the beach to be by yourself.”

“So now you’re my shrink?”

“It hasn’t even been a year.”

“Yeah.”

“Murrell’s Inlet?”

“No. Outer Banks.”

“Oh.”

“Katie loved Murrell’s Inlet. I can’t go there. I just can’t.”

Jack nodded. They sat in silence for a moment.

“Are you going to give me my leg?”

“It’s a horrible idea.”

“I’m not crazy.”

“I know.”

Jack pushed himself up in the wheelchair and lifted his leg at the knee and crossed it over his other leg. The good leg. He rubbed his knee under the hospital gown. “They say there will be phantom pain. Like the leg is still there.”

“That’s what they say.”

“I hear voices.”

“Uh huh.” Stuart turned to his computer and began typing. The office was small and sparse, not so much as a family photo on the desk. It wasn’t his primary office, just a space in the hospital to access records and process patients.

“I got a new violin,” Jack said.

“I didn’t know you were still playing.”

“I sat on my old one. Just flattened it.”

“So you got a new one?”

“I had that violin since junior high.”

Stuart turned and faced Jack. “The same one?”

“I couldn’t fix it this time.”

“I’m sorry.”

Jack looked down at his leg, black and brown and blue and scaly and crusty.

“Sometimes I wonder what my life would have been like had you not come along that day. They would have certainly finished the job on the violin, and then started in on me. Maybe I just needed a good beating. Maybe that would have toughened me up.”

“Nobody needs a beating.”

“I went to Bateman for the first time after that. I was fourteen.”

Dr. Irving went back to typing. “I didn’t know that.”

“My first trip to crazy.”

“Stop it, Jack.”

“I know. It’s just an illness. Like the flu or diabetes or a rotting leg. But there is a difference.”

“There shouldn’t be.”

“So you say.” Jack touched the dead skin, checking for pain. He felt nothing. “My poor, sorrowful leg. It’s dying. You’re going to cut it off, and you’re either going to burn, or I’m going to bury it, or maybe I’ll just keep it my deep-freeze for a while. Doesn’t really matter. It’s just an appendage. Notice how I refer to it? It. Third party. Objective.”

“You can’t keep it in your freezer.”

“But up here,” Jack said as he tapped his forehead, “that’s me. My mind. My thoughts. My fears. My hopes. Me. Not it. It’s so hard to be objective and say that I just need medicine or therapy or electricity. I had that once, you know.”

“Electroconvulsive therapy can be effective, and overall, I think your treatments have served you well. You’re a bit of an odd-ball, but you’re not crazy. And if you need to drop by Bateman every now and then to get it all sorted out, so be it. You go to Bateman, I go to the beach.”

Jack laughed. “I think you’re the one who’s crazy.”

“You’re probably right.”

“Even so,” Jack said.

“Even so, what?”

“My leg is part of me, too.” He uncrossed his leg. He wheeled to the window that overlooked the parking lot. “Nice view.”

“Even so, what?”

“I don’t have much. No family. Just Zsa Zsa, now. I’ve had two real friends in my life. You and my violin. Now it’s gone. Well, it’s not gone, just a pile of broken wood and strings. My new one is nice, but it has no history with me. And now my body is leaving me, piece by piece.”

“Just your lower leg. Every other body part is fine.”

“That’s easy for you to say.”

“Ok, Jack.”

“Ok?”

“Yeah. I’ll do the paperwork for your leg.”

“You think the hospital will approve it?”

“They will. And if they don’t, we’ll figure something out.”

“Thank you, Stuart.”

“Two conditions, though. First, we’re going to keep it here until you’re discharged. Then the day you go home, I’m coming over to your house and I’m going to bury your leg.”

“That sounds so odd when you say it out loud, Doctor. Even a little nutty. What’s the second condition?”

“You’re coming to the beach with me.”

Jack turned from the window and looked at his doctor, his old friend. Stuart was still pecking on the computer. He wouldn’t look back. It wouldn’t be proper. Not for friends like Jack and Stuart.

“Go on back to your room. I’ve got to make my rounds. I’ll see you in the morning.”

“Thank you, Stuart.”

Jack wheeled himself to the door and started down the hall.

“The beach,” he said in a whisper. “I’m going to the beach.”


copyright 2016, joseph e bird

Risa

“Once upon a time there was a boy who loved a girl, and her laughter was a question he wanted to spend his whole life answering.”
—Nicole Krauss, The History of Love

A Prayer for Rain

Prayer for Rain Cover - reduced size

Trevor Larson’s future looks bright. He’s a young and gifted singer-songwriter ready to chase the dream and make his mark in the world of music. But a devastating accident takes it all away, and leaves him physically and emotionally scarred.

As he rebuilds his life as an architect, he wrestles with his own self-worth. When he discovers new ways to express himself musically, his physical appearance gives rise to a new musical persona which propels him into a world for which he is not prepared. Ultimately, he must decide if his renewed dream of stardom is worth sacrificing his true identity as an artist and a person.

Set to an eclectic sound track as people come and go in Trevor’s life, A Prayer for Rain deals with the timeless themes: Respect. Contentment. Friendship. And of course, love. It delivers hope when all seems lost.


Available now at Amazon.

It’s an honor to be mentioned.

A Prayer for Rain
Honorable Mention, Book Length Prose, WV Writers Competition, 2016

Song of the Lost
Honorable Mention, Book Length Prose, WV Writers Competition, 2016

See

Was on a late spring evening,
the air was cool and light.

I left the window open,
heard the whispers of the night.

The words arose in quiet tones,
from the sidewalk down below.

The truth’s not there for all to see,
There’re some things you can’t know.

.

Sleep came soft and gentle,
and the hours slipped away.

Till screams of horror pierced the still.
What it was, I couldn’t say.

The veil of night hides many sins,
when darkness says hello.

The truth’s not there for all to see.
There’re some things you can’t know.

.

He asked me for a dollar,
or maybe it was two.

He had to find a way back home,
his daughter had the flu.

I knew that he was lying,
but I didn’t let it show.

The truth’s not there for all to see.
There’re some things you can’t know.

.

I’ll be with you along the way,
our steps go side by side.

Though storms may blow and thunder roll,
my comfort will abide.

But wait, here comes another one,
my friendship to bestow.

The truth’s not there for all to see.
There’re some things you can’t know.

.

Fears that come in sleepless nights,
make restless in the day.

Anxious for the times to come,
we’ve nothing but to pray.

For comfort and a quiet peace,
and mercy free to flow.

The truth is there for all to see,
There’re some things we can know.


copyright 2016, joseph e bird

Lawful Good

Image credit: Memory-Beta Wiki, via http://memory-beta.wikia.com/wiki/Spock.

“The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.”

If you know me at all, you know I like to listen to radio story shows like This American Life, The Moth, and Snap Judgment. There’s another show that I’ve heard a few times that’s more of an interview format called Studio 360. A couple of weeks ago they aired a segment about the concept of Character Alignment.

It has its origins in Dungeons and Dragons. I’ve never played, but apparently in that game you build your own characters. In order to do that, you have to decide what kind of person your character will be. But it’s not enough to say your character is good or bad. So they came up with a character alignment grid. If you want to skip all of these words and go straight to the source (which is much more entertaining), click the link below and skip over to the 33:30 mark. It is, as Mr. Spock would say, “Fascinating.”

Character Alignment

If you’re still reading, here’s the deal.  In the basic grid, there are three rows of three squares, nine squares total.  The upper left hand corner is good, the lower right hand corner is evil.  The degrees of good and evil are in between.

The upper left corner square is Lawful Good. This person is good, and can’t be anything but good.  He/she follows all the rules and treats everyone fairly.  In the world of Star Trek, Mr. Spock is Lawful Good.

To Spock’s right is Kirk. Neutral Good. He’s good, but he’s not above breaking a few rules to get the just result. Think Kobayahsi Maru. To Kirk’s right is good old Bones. Dr. McCoy. Chaotic Good. Yeah, his heart’s in the right place but he can be a tad impulsive.

Here’s another universe for the top row, The Office. Lawful Good is Pam. Neutral Good is Jim. You’ve probably guessed Chaotic Good, Michael Scott.

The next row is Lawful Neutral.  Think Dwight Schrute.  Law and order are everything. There is no right or wrong. To Dwight’s right is Stanley, the epitome of non-committal. To his right is Ms. Chaotic Neutral, Meredith.

The bottom row are the Evil characters. Lawful Evil. I bet you can guess. Yep, Angela. Neutral Evil, Ryan the Intern. And diagonally opposite of Pam, in the lower left hand corner, is Chaotic Evil. The one truly scary character on the show, Jan Levinson.

As a fan of pop fiction, this is indeed fascinating.  As a writer, I think it’s an extremely effective tool. Just like with DnD, I build make-believe worlds and the characters are everything. I like the structure of the Alignment Grid and how it forces you to think of the subtle differences in people. I plan on using it.

As an added bonus (although I’m not sure I want to), you can try to figure out where you fit in the grid. If you’re Chaotic Evil, please keep your distance.

The Porch

She sits on the porch alone

as we drive by.

Stop on your way back.

Past the house,

we turn up the hill that’s almost too steep.

The trees reach out and touch the car.

as if to comfort, as if they know.

In the clearing, faded flowers lean

in front of slabs of stone,

forever marking the place

where we visit those

we can no longer visit.

Gospel music from across the hollow

filters through the trees.

Dusk is creeping closer.

Has it been that long already?

We leave because we must.

 

She sits on a swing

built by her husband’s father,

so many year ago.

We sit in rockers

and talk.

The porch is painted white,

the floor boards brick red.

Once-sharp edges are now round

from years of touch

by those who rest on

the hill above.

The swing creaks back and forth,

a soothing lullaby.

 

Nearby a bird calls in strong song.

Farther away, another answers.

Still another sings the song of

the solitary bird.

A frog croaks.

Just one, for now.

Others will follow later.

A cool breeze brings relief

from the hot, muggy day.

The serenity of the world

from the porch

is comforting.

 

All things of youth

are memories now.

He is gone.

Though there are friends,

though there is family,

she is alone.

She embraces the solitude.

I love this porch, she says.

In the mornings

on the swing

by myself.

I am blessed.

The Lord

brought him

to me.

And he brought me

to this house,

this porch.

And now,

though alone,

I am blessed.


copyright joseph e bird, 2016

Hope springs.

seedling 2 for web

As he awakened to the passing of time, his mind skipped over fall, passed by winter, and envisioned signs of a coming spring. Not outside the window of the conference room, where the shadows of the morning and the afternoon grew longer, and the mountains in the distance transformed into an impressionistic painting, but within himself, where the seeds of optimism and hope that had been planted by so many people over the years, were finally growing.


excerpt from A Prayer for Rain, by joseph e bird, copyright 2016

i am a mist

Now listen, you who say, “Today or tomorrow we will go to this or that city, spend a year there, carry on business and make money.” Why, you do not even know what will happen tomorrow. What is your life? You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes.


from the Book of James

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