This morning
I went to my late mother-in-law's house
to see that the two men to cut the grass and the two men to blow off her roof had
all they needed.
The men who
cut the grass is an elderly man and his retired son. I found out his son is retired from the Cobb
County Police so I had a lot of names to drop.
The roof cleaners is also a father son crew. Again, the father is elderly and the son is
retired. But their working arrangement
is different. The son goes on top of the
roof with a blower and does all the work.
The elderly father stays someplace near on the ground just in case his
son falls.
What we
didn't know until all four of them and I were standing talking the two elderly
men grew up together. Now they are in
their late eighties and were in school together at Blackwell School and were
buddies a long time. However, the elderly
father of the roof cleaner has dementia and did not remember his old friend. That was a sad note.
Everybody
started working except me and the old gent with dementia. We leaned against the truck and talked. I remember talking to him off and on over the
year. He always smiled when he
spoke.. He has not lost that wonderful habit. He still smiles when he speaks.
He asked me
twice who lived in the house, he remembered being there before. both times I told him and said she is
dead. That didn't prevent him from
asking a third time.
In between
confusing the present and what he recently said or didn't say he told me about
his childhood growing up on a farm on Roberts Road (presently Barrett Parkway). He told me in detail about the corn field and
how they plowed it with a stubborn mule and in detail about how close he and
his Uncle Bob was, and how Bob tried to get his (Uncle Bob's) mother in the asylum
and how his father told Uncle Bob, if he tried that he would kill him.
He also told
me how he and Uncle Bob would rabbit hunt and how they nailed the rabbits
He also told
me his father whipped him for the least thing but yet would not punish his two
sisters at all. As he told me memorable things I saw, even though he was
smiling, his eyes were moist.
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