Wednesday, January 12, 2022

A new journey (from the archives)

We keep moving forward, opening new doors, and doing new things, because we're curious and curiosity keeps leading us down new paths. Walt Disney


On December 27, 2014 my wife and I will have resided at The Rockwood for two years.  We entered the uncharted waters of independent living without a map to guide us on our journey.  We had lived in our own homes for fifty-five years, and now we were part of a retirement community.  We have come full circle.  Our first residence, as a new couple, was an attic apartment in the North Chicago suburb of Niles Illinois.  The four room  attic space above a single family home was our residence for three years.  It was sparsely decorated with mismatched furniture and a few wedding gifts.  We now live in a well appointed, large two bedroom apartment in Webster Groves, a community north of another big city, St. Louis, Missouri.


Leaving the life of home ownership was not an easy transition.  The freedom of your own space with a yard was the American dream.  Our homes held memories of our children growing up and starting their own lives.  The memories fill the senses and keep flooding the mind on a daily basis.  However, new memories of the past two years now occupy our mind.  The old memories will never be replaced but the new ones provide comfort on our journey.  Free from responsibilities of home ownership, we are building new friendships and enjoying a new environment filled with the things we love.  Music, art, and stimulating conversation, now fill our days.  We have also found a new hunting ground for objet d’art and tchotchkies.  My worst fear now is where will I put all of Anita’s unusual treasures.


"Things hidden in my head" Copyright 2013 © Ronald D. Isom, Sr.

Camping with the family

We moved to Belleville, Illinois in 1966 and I began my tenure at Belleville East high school.  We had two children Victoria age three and Lori age two.  Our new home was located in west Belleville behind Abraham Lincoln grade school and West junior high school. It was a very convent location for  our children; no streets to cross, just go through the backyard gate and enter the school yard.  We lived there for ten years.  That was the time period that we started family camping.  We had very little camping experience but we did visit my mom and dad a few times on their camping trip.  Money was very tight and we considered tent camping but the preparations time, equipment and transportation was problematic.  We decided to buy a popup camper which was easy to pull and we had lots of room in or  Volkswagen van for kids and equipment.  We later found out that the van was no very good on hills and we traded for station wagon.  We started or camping experience on weekends and holidays  and soon we were camping  nearby states.  We visited many camp grounds in southern Missouri. For the most part we avoided tourist traps and stay an state and national parks.  It was hard to resist all the advertising signs proclaimed to be the eighth wonder of the world.  The children soon began to enjoy roaming around in nature and enjoying eating outside and spending cozy nights in the camper.  Our daughter Lori did not completely buy into the program but she was a great help with our youngest son Lowell who was still in diapers when we began camping.  Our longest trip was our trip to Disneyland in Florida with a stop in Plains Georgia to visit Jimmy Carter’s home town and of course we stopped at Billy Carters gas station where I purchase a souvenir an of Billy Beer.  When wen got to Florida we camped at a  campground in Kissimmee a few miles from the park.  The heat and humidity of July was bearing down on us. The tent canvas dripped water: it was like sleeping in a sauna.  The children's spirits were high in anticipation of seeing  the magic of Disneyland.  We had three day passes and they could hardly wait for the doors to open.  Buy the third day we had to drag them back to the camper because of Disney overload.




"Things hidden in my head" Copyright 2013 © Ronald D. Isom, Sr.

Sunday, January 9, 2022

Saturday, January 8, 2022

Hand drawn puzzle.





                     "Things hidden in my head" Copyright 2013 © Ronald D. Isom, Sr.

Hand drawn chair from the archive.





                                "Things hidden in my head" Copyright 2013 © Ronald D. Isom, Sr.

The case of the missing blueberry.

“You don't stop laughing when you grow old, you grow old when you stop laughing.”  ― George Bernard Shaw


Here at The Rockwood very small incidents often become fodder for my personal amusement.  Like most of my stories, the “blueberry incident” provides innocent insight in to the process of aging.  I have lived here with my wife for nearly two years.  It is a place filled with aging artists, educators homemakers and people who have lead very interesting lives.


Lively conversations fill the air each morning at breakfast and in the evening at dinner  Two days a week we have a social hour in the early afternoon and we laugh and talk about our experiences and the foibles of the “younger generation.”  We also discuss and joke about our “misspent youth”.


This morning a retired college history professor was adding blueberries to his cereal when one of the blue orbs missed its mark and rolled off the table.  “I have dropped a blueberry” he said, “we must find it before someone steps on it and falls”.  The concierge rushed to the scene of the mishap and four tables of seniors immediately stared at the floor to see if they  could spot the missing berry; complicating the matter was a rug pattern and color that was perfect for camouflaging wayward fruit.  The room was soon filed with raucous laughter and an over abundance of blueberry jokes  That is good aging in a nutshell; laughter and fun each day sparked by seemingly meaningless incidents. 


"Things hidden in my head" Copyright 2013 © Ronald D. Isom, Sr.

Friday, January 7, 2022

Covid Series print 2020


This print is still available at https://www.graficafinearts.com



                               "Things hidden in my head" Copyright 2013 © Ronald D. Isom, Sr.

Covid Series 2020






                             "Things hidden in my head" Copyright 2013 © Ronald D. Isom, Sr.

Alpha and Omega




                                "Things hidden in my head" Copyright 2013 © Ronald D. Isom, Sr.

Lessons in work and play.

My dad had a strong belief that work was not play and you should not have fun when you are on the job. I think his strong conviction come from the fact that he spent many years without work and struggled to find employment during the depression. He was very demanding  and he  expected me to work hard and never complain. If I complained he would just create more work for me. His favorite refrain was “stop playing around”. I was expected to come right home after school and do chores before supper. After supper I had to go to my room and do my homework and go to bed. During the school year it was simple work and school. He was a bit more lenient during the summer. I was allowed to play with my friends for a few hours in the late afternoon and sometimes during the long summer evening. However, most of the time I was playing with my brother and taking care of him. When I was about 12 years old my dad put me in charge of mowing a vacant lot next to our house.  


I was surprised when my Dad purchased an old gasoline powered mower to make cutting the large lot easier. I had been using a push mower and it took about four hours to cut the grass. He was a very good mechanic and he was proud of his restored mower. He  showed me how to start the mower and gave me a lesson on maintenance and safety. I was thrilled with the mower and for the next few months I breezed through the cutting process. The mowing became routine and I started to vary the cutting pattern.  I would cut zigzags and circles; it was sort of an early form of crop circles. When my dad returned home late at night he did not check my work until the next morning. I had removed all traces of my patterned cutting and he was proud of my work and was not aware that I was having fun during work.


My creativity proved to be my downfall one hot summer afternoon. I decided to cut my initials into field. I had a great time making the large block letters. When I had finished putting the final touches on the “I” the mower began to sputter and smoke. Apparently, the aggressive use of the mower as a sculpting tool had taken its toll on the refurbished mower. I checked the gas and oil and both tanks were nearly full. I pulled and pulled the starting cord and checked and rechecked the carburetor settings. In a panic I loosened and tightened screws. The final attempt was removing the spark plug. The wrench slipped and I broke off the tip of the plug. I was in deep trouble. I tried to remember my maintenance lessons as the sun set on my “fun project”. I was frantic and my dad would be home soon. I spent a sleepless night knowing that in the morning my dad would see my handy work and I would suffer his wrath. In the morning I went to breakfast. I received a cheery greeting from my mom and a stern  question from my father. “Did you finish the mowing” after a long and painful pause, I confessed that I had encounter a little problem. He looked at me and sternly and said “that is what you get for playing around”.  I will not bore you with the details of my punishment but I still remember it over sixty-two years later. 


It is both strange and prophetic how we remember and react to  little dramas in our life. I am thankful for that harsh lesson it just made cherish the fact that throughout my working years I never separated work and play; and I still do a lot of “playing around”.



"Things hidden in my head" Copyright 2013 © Ronald D. Isom, Sr.

Thursday, January 6, 2022

Dream Car Contest

In 1953, my freshman year at Belleville Township High School, I spent  many hours drawing cars. The car culture was in full swing and all young boys were dreaming of sleek custom “hot rods”. My ideas were influenced by the futuristic cars illustrated in Popular Mechanics magazine. My Grandpa had a huge collection of the magazines in his workshop. It was the first place I went  when we visited him in Coulterville, Illinois.  I would study the picture intently and dream of building a car.  There was an ad in one of the magazines about the Fisher Body car model contest. I sent for the information and received all the details of the contest. My favorite part was the schematic .  I was able to locate one on the internet and it still gives me the sense of awe I felt as a teenager. I like plans and schematics. I still fill my drawings with symbols, lines and shapes that look like diagrams.


I was really eager to start the build but money was tight and wood and paint for the model would be hard to buy. Also, I did not have the proper model tools or space for working.  I did manage to get some wood but it was not the smooth pine wood that was suggested and I tried carving it with a pen knife.  I would work many frustrating hours on the back stoop of our small Gunnison pre-fabricated house on Wabash Avenue in Belleville, Illinois.  Sitting on the concrete  and carving was problematic  and dangerous. I suffered many cuts and scraped knees.  Well,  to make a long story short, I never finished the model. I still think about that failure.  I had expectations of creating an award winning model and I would have a special assembly at school; all the students would marvel at my achievement.


I have come to realize that the car debacle was a learning experience and I  incorporated it into my life and teaching.  I have had many unfinished projects and many of my students struggled to finish projects. It sounds quaint and old fashion to say that you learn from your failures, but I think it is true.


http://deansgarage.com/2009/fisher-body-craftsmans-guild/



"Things hidden in my head" Copyright 2013 © Ronald D. Isom, Sr.