Local news…
There’s an article in the paper, reporting on a nearby place
where you can do yoga on a horse.
And away we go.
Whither the weather…
Apparently, the Michigan City weatherman has an ironic sense
of humor, predicting a next-day temperature of 68, but factoring in the
humidity, it’s going to feel like it’s 69.
(The man actually wrote that.)
Otherwise, he got everything wrong. He said, “sunshine” and it rained, predicted
thunderstorms and it drizzled. How does
this guy even go home?
“Dad!”
“I know.
“I wore a raincoat…”
“I know.”
“What do I say to my friends?
“Tell them we use the most advanced meteorological
techniques.”
“But they suck, Dad!”
“I know.”
Drought-ridden SoCal (Southern California) visitors are
literally enthralled, experiencing “the elements.” Although one evening we were taking an
after-dinner stroll and a bolt of lighting flashed down directly across the
street, followed immediately by ear-shattering thunder. That one was too close for comfort. Had we been walking across the street, we’d
have been two Jewish cinders on the sidewalk.
Septuagenarian charcoal.
Watching, sheltered in our protective, screened-in porch – now
that’s a performance! Complete with
(imagined) show-stopping production numbers.
Professsor?
“Didn’t it rai-ai-ain!
Didn’t it rai-ai-ain!
Didn’t it rain, oh
Lordy!
Didn’t it rain.”
One more time...
“Didn’t it rain!”
Clap your hands!
“Didn’t it rain!”
Tap your feet!
“Didn’t it rain, Sweet
Someone! *
Didn’t it rain.”
(* Retooled for agnostics.)
I actually belted that out during a thunderstorm, receiving
(imaginary) compliments from my admiring chorus-mates.
“You sing good.”
“Thank you.”
“You can’t move, though.”
“I know.”
“Stick you in the back.”
Isn’t that wonderful? Your own personal fantasy, and you still can’t
get a break. I could have imagined anything. Did I really need that? Oh well. What are ya gonna do?
A Tainted
Resurrection…
The Dunes Summer Theater
had fallen on terminally hard times. In
the past, we had enjoyed many locally-cast productions at the nearby tumbledown
facility, but acute money troubles had ended its multi-decade theatrical run, a
loss we sincerely lamented.
The organization was flat out adorable. When I once called there from California,
asking for information concerning their upcoming summer schedule, the woman
answering the phone replied, “Well I am in the bath right now…”
It was sad that there was no more Dunes to go to. We missed
its “always-there” availability, its proximity to the cabin, its pristine “Let’s
put on a show” enthusiasm. Their Pirates of Penzance – swear to Gosh – it
was better than Broadway!
Imagine our excitement when, after a series of shuttered
summers, we find the Dunes returned unexpectedly
from the dead. With six new, seasonal
productions, none of which, unfortunately, fit into our travel schedule.
But at least it was still with us.
Curious about the surprise turnaround, we walked over to the
theater one morning – the local weatherman had predicted showers, so we knew we
were okay.
Seeing a light on, we headed to the open back-of-the-stage
area, discovering two “multi-purpose” stagehands who confirmed that the Dunes was indeed healthily back in
business. Proudly, they displayed the old
theater’s upgraded lighting system, its sparkling, colorful coat of paint.
“What happened?” I smart-assedly inquired. “Did someone die and leave you a whole bunch
of money?”
“They did.” I was
startlingly informed. (You can imagine
how that felt – the surprise
“smartass rejoinder.”)
I was initially delighted by the bequeathed comeback. Further investigation, however, revealed
worrisome alterations in its procedure.
The Dunes was now recruiting
professional actors, sacrificing, in the name of “superior talent”, our
opportunity to watch the local assistant manager at Denny’s and the optometrist with the powerful pipes wow us with
their untutored abilities.
For us, that was a significant element of the Dunes’s inestimable appeal – eager
amateurs, absent the sweaty fingerprints of ambition. The Dunes
had indeed returned from the dead, but its inspiring genuineness was now history. Though I was assured the neighborhood
“non-pros” were still permitted to audition.
It’s the classic conundrum:
Is it better to have a miniscule shot because it’s there, or to have no
shot at all because it isn’t? The Pessimist’s Answer: The distinction is negligible. (The Optimist’s Answer: The opposite.
Oh yeah? Tell that to the
stage-hungry factory worker who misses the cut.)
The Dunes was
indeed back. But for me, something
essentially valuable would henceforth forever be missing.
Upbeat ending…
On our first night, we ate at Stop 50, a superior pizza place half a mile from our cabin. (“Stop 50” refers to a corresponding
designated bus stop at the beach.) Ever
on the lookout for souvenir t-shirts, I asked our waiter about his, which had immediately caught my eye.
Our waiter informed us that a co-worker had been
deployed on a military assignment and that, before he left, his pizza restaurant
amigos had made up this t-shirt, honoring
his temporary departure. “I’ll take a
‘Large’”, I excitedly proclaim.
This is the back of that t-shirt, created by the Michiana
pizza place, commemorating their absent, combat-duty co-worker.
Is that cool, or what?
Overall assessment of our weeklong excursion to Michiana,
according to my “Souvenir Merchandise Scale Of Satisfaction” (based on souvenir purchases):
Three t-shirts and a hat.
Not bad for a place where there’s nothing to do.
With any luck, we will be back there next summer, doing,
easily imaginably,
Even less.
Final “Police Call”
entry… (Where else am I going to use these?)
“Police received a
harassment complaint from the 300 block of Vail Street regarding a neighbor
yelling obscene comments from across the street.”
Look out! It’s the
first step towards Armageddon! Who
knows? Maybe they’ll redeploy the Stop 50 soldier to subdue the uprising. I know.
They have bad stuff there too.
But how many places have that?
It’s an unusual place, I tell you. One of our waiters nearly burst into tears
when I rejected ground pepper for my salad.
Out here, I’d get a “Whatever.”
Okay, I’m home now. I
know that because on my recent “Thursday Walk” I saw a man plucking a ukulele, riding
a bicycle. That’s pretty cool too, I suppose…
in a wacky, California kind of a way.
So I’m back.
Wait. Hold on a
second.
……………………………………
Yup, I am back all right.
I got my first unsolicited “Robo-Call.”
In Spanish.
2 comments:
Very nice shirt, I like it, too! Hoorah!
Oops, forgot to ask...how did you wind up with a cabin in Michiana? Not overly convenient to Santa Monica.
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