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Storytime Tapestry Newsletter The newsletter devoted to
spreading love and cultural awareness around the world. Today’s announcements Happy Thanksgiving to all our Canadian
subscribers! Happy Columbus Day for all our American
subscribers And now drum roll
pleeeeeeeeeeeeese!!!!!!!!!!!! Storytime Tapestry has concurred the
2,000 membership mark. We actually have
2,009 members to date and growing. NO CANCER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! My prayers have been answered! My son's scan
on Friday has shown. NO CANCER in his one remaining kidney! The transplant
kidney doing well, but he will have to have the remaining one removed at some
stage. For now we are counting our blessings and taking one day at a
time. The biggest scare was that they suspected cancer and now Steve can
breathe freely again. It has been a worrying time for us all. Thank you
Lord for hearing our prayers. Violet
Apted violetsrblue7@hotmail.com Now onto the good stuff! Today’s Queue Stories ~**~**~ Chopper Michael T. Smith The
old pick-up truck, packed with kids, rattled past our house. From the cab, Gussy, one of my school friends, waved to
me. A few moments later, I heard the clicking of claws striking pavement. I looked up and
saw a huge brown-and-black dog run by. His ears flopped up-and-down, and his
thick, pink tongue trailed from the side of his mouth. “That’s Chopper, Gussy’s dog,” I thought to
myself. Chopper
flew by me, eyes focused on the retreating truck. The truck rounded the corner and disappeared from view, with
Chopper in hot pursuit. An hour or so later, Chopper returned, plodding home. He’d lost
the race, but the game wasn’t over. We
lived in a small fishing village. The only road wound around the harbor. In half a mile, it made four 90-degree
turns. Not many people walked those turns, instead, well-worn paths, which meandered
close to the shoreline, shortened their walk.
Chopper
learned those paths. Once
again, I watched the truck make the first turn and disappear from view. Chopper, running madly, appeared soon
after. With his tail stuck out behind him, ears slapping the side of his head, and
that dangling tongue dripping drool, Chopper passed our house. Instead of following the
road, Chopper cut to the right and disappeared into the tall grass. He
reappeared around the bend, just as the truck got there. The truck gained ground, took the second turn, and once
again fell from view. Chopper, not to be outdone, took another shortcut, and caught up. At
that point, they both disappeared over a hill. Eventually,
the truck pulled away for good. It would be a long time before Chopper returned. The chase had been long
and hard. I patted his head as he passed. “Good boy, Chopper. You did well.” He
turned his big brown eyes to me, licked my hand, and continued his journey home. The
next day would bring another chase. Years
later, an older Chopper chased a newer truck. He couldn’t keep up, but he didn’t admit defeat. The truck would be
around the second turn before Chopper came into view and took the shortcut. By the time he
burst out of the grass, the truck would be around the second turn and gone. Chopper
continued on for a while, knowing the way, but soon returned home. One
day, the truck went by, but Chopper didn’t. He’d passed away in his sleep the night before. In life, Chopper had a goal. He went
straight for it. He didn’t waste time meandering. If
he had to jump off the main road, he did. The road everyone else takes is not
always the best. Chopper always knew the best way. Michael T. Smith To read my stories or to sign up ~**~**~ The Cottonmouth and Me. The last time I killed a snake I was in High School. I
wouldn't have killed it had it not tried to kill me. But a little background
first. I've
been catching snakes longer than I've been able to ride a bike. I can see them
when other people cannot. Take me to a new location, one I've never been
before, and I can show you were a snake is hiding. I think very much like they
do. I know why they do the things they do. Very seldom in my life has a snake
surprised me. Remember
the guy who spent thirteen years walking about with Grizzlies? The man was good
at what he did and he was only wrong one time. He wrote about how bears are
fairly mellow critters who really didn't want to or even so much as like
attacking humans, much less eating them. Wouldn't you know it? He ran into a
very large bear who hadn't read the book. Back in
1979 a snake did surprise me. It tried to kill me. I have never had a snake try
to kill me before, at least one I wasn't trying to catch, but that doesn't
count. You know what I'd love to see? I'd love to see hospital take in people
who were bit by snakes and have a sort of triage for them. If you were hiking
and stepped on a snake and it bit you, a product of terrible luck, then you'd
get treated immediately. If you
were trying to catch a snake and got bit then you'd have to wait fifteen
minutes while someone explained to you that you're a moron. If you were trying
to kill the snake and got zapped for your trouble you'd have to write one
hundred times, " Snakes are highly beneficial creatures and I have no
business trying to kill them." before they would even look at you. This,
among other more obvious reasons, is why the Surgeon General doesn't call me
for advice very often. But I
wasn't trying to catch the snake. It was a cottonmouth, yes, and it was a good
twenty-five feet from when I first saw it. I was walking along the edge of a
pond with a shotgun, supposedly hunting doves. I've never been much of a
hunter. I don't like shooting animals. I much rather watch them. Growing up in
the South you have to learn to kill animals and fish and I just rather not. I
can be an apex predator in any supermarket just as well as I can in the wild.
I'm a wild animal in a steak house, and yes, I know that some animal somewhere
has to be killed for this, but I don't have to pull the trigger. The snake
was a cottonmouth and it was fairly large. Fairly large in the name of
Cottonmouths is anything over three feet long. These animals can be as thick as
a football player's forearm. Five feet long is not unheard of but it is rare.
I've seen only one that was anywhere near six feet long, and that's a
questionable estimate because I was so close to it. A friend of mine was
camping in the woods in Drunks
were throwing tents, coolers, sleeping bags, women, rifles, pine trees,
everything in the back of trucks. In the space of about a minute all the
vehicles were heading out of the woods at warp speed. They high tailed it to
the nearest town where they babbled their story to a park ranger. "Don't
want bear eating ya? Then stay your ass out of the goddam woods." I asked
JT how big the bear was. " Eighty feet tall, when he stood up." "Eighty
feet? There are no bears that large, and you know it." "
Get close enough." was his explanation. Mine too. But the
snake I killed was three feet long, maybe four. It wasn't a monster, and that's
what puzzles me. Why would a undersized snake take such a chance at killing
something that much larger than he? The knee jerk answer I get, and have given,
is that Cottonmouths are territorial. But it has only happened once. As many of
them as they are, and there are quite a few, it would make sense that more
people would be attacked. But very few people get snake bit at all, and most of
them are morons trying to catch the snake, or kill it. I'm not the only person
whose ever been attacked by a cottonmouth. There is a gracious plenty anecdotal
evidence indicating that there are times these snake will go on the offensive.
The question is "Why?" In places where cottonmouths and people mix,
and there are many such places, very rarely is there any conflict, except when
the humans start it. So why at all? Of all
the snakes I have ever caught Cottonmouths are the most apt to bite. Worse yet,
when they do bite, they tend not to rapid release like a rattlesnake, or for
that matter, a non-venomous snake, but they sink their fangs in and hold on. Because
they eat frogs, fish, and other prey that might swim away, this makes perfect
sense. Try marveling at this fact while one is trying to kill you. Doesn't work
very well. Snake:
Zero. Shotgun: One. When I got over the fact that a snake had charged me, and
was trying to kill me, I just lowered the muzzle and fired once. A shotgun
makes a mess up close, even with large things, but at this range a snake,
almost any snake, is going to be hamburger. I felt bad, but I'm not going to
try to outrun a cottonmouth near the edge of a pond. I could, of course, out
run the snake, but what if I slipped in the mud? I have
killed snakes since then, but it has always been mercy killings. Snakes writing
in pain after being run over by cars, or beaten bloody by idiots, or torn apart
by dogs, I have, and I will put them out of their misery. Take
Care, Mike ~**~**~ ValueSpeak A Weekly Column By Joseph Walker valuespeak@msn.com NO JERK POLICY All in all,
it was shaping up to be a bad day as we traveled home after the family reunion. For one
thing, the sleeping accommodations at the hotel hadn’t been all that pleasant.
For another, we stopped for gas and paid $3.67 per gallon. $3.67! I didn’t pay
that much for my first car (OK, so it was a beat-up old Buick that my father
gave to me on the condition that I pay for the repairs myself – I think you get
my point). And for a
third, as we were driving we came upon a horrifying accident that had traffic
at a standstill for 10 or 12 miles. Even though the accident was southbound and
we were northbound, it sort of had me wondering if it was an omen of highway
uckiness to come – for us. Then we
pulled into our favorite restaurant for breakfast. If ever there was a way to
lift our spirits, it was a waffle or some French toast or an omelet at this
place. There was even a parking spot right up front despite a crowded parking
lot. I thought things were looking up until I paused by the sidewalk to let
Anita and the kids jump out of the car before I parked it. While they were
sliding out the door a gentleman in a sporty little car came bounding into the
parking lot and took the parking space I was signaling my intent to enter. "Oh
man," I thought, fatalistically. "Here we go. Bad stuff. Bad
day." And I
braced myself for what surely was to come. Not being
the confrontational sort, I sighed, shifted my car into reverse and prepared to
back up and go in search of another parking spot. But as I glanced toward the
sporty little car that had taken my spot, I noticed the man and the woman in
there talking. She was pointing at me, and he was looking in my direction. Then
I saw his reverse lights come on as he backed out of the spot he had
"stolen" from me. He rolled down his window as he approached me. "I am
so sorry," he said. "I didn’t notice that you were signaling to move
into that spot." Well, this
was something I wasn’t expecting. And I wasn’t exactly sure how to react. "Hey,
it’s survival of the fastest out here," I said. "It’s yours if you
want it." "Nah,"
he said. "I hate it when people steal my spot. I couldn’t do that to
someone else." "And I
wouldn’t let him," his wife said, forcefully, from the passenger’s seat. They smiled
and waved and drove back into the parking lot, leaving the space up front for
me. I walked into the restaurant feeling uplifted and revitalized, with a new
positive outlook toward what was surely going to be a good day. Orange juice
never tasted sweeter, nor was there ever a finer, fluffier omelet than the one
I enjoyed that morning. Even the English muffin I ordered came to me slightly
burned around the edges – just how I like it! As we
prepared to go I noticed the couple from the sporty little car finishing
breakfast. I stopped to thank them again for their act of kindness, but they
shrugged it off as no big deal. "Life
is too short," he said, "to waste any time or energy on being a
jerk." I know – I
was stunned by his unique philosophy, too. We live in a time when people seem
to be more concerned with protecting what they perceive to be their rights than
they are in doing what is actually right, and we don’t mind being a jerk about
it if that’s what it takes. I’m as guilty of it as anyone (an awkward encounter
with a crotchety older woman at a recent ball game comes to mind). But I was so
inspired by this couple’s "no jerk" policy that I found myself trying
to live by it for the rest of the trip home – as a motorist, as a customer and
as a husband and father – and you know what? It turned out to be a pretty darn
good day for all of us. So I
commend the philosophy to you. Honestly, it isn’t as hard as it sounds. When it
comes right down to it, it’s really pretty simple: don’t be a jerk. And have a
good day. ~**~**~ Poetry Section ~**~**~ ~**~**~ ~**~**~ Readers Feedback Ref
The Big Fall.
Thank you Clara! Beautiful
story!
Louise Ref: The Bill Fall – Clara
Westerfer - very nice and inspirational
thanks, Rajshri Mishra Senior Writers Chief writer: Sharon Bryant Chief researcher/historian:
Hartson Dowd Agee, Vance; Apted, Violet;
Baker, Kathy; Batt, Al; Berry, Nell; Blaine, Pamela; Boda, Ginger; Booher,
Paula; Buhagiar, Victor; Cassady, B.J.; Costner, Joan Clifton; Cavalera, Robyn;
Crider, Mark; Dees, Mary; Deming, Barb; Doherty, Maria; Dowd, Hartson; Dowd, Helen; Gilbert, Robert,
Jr.; Gold, Ron; Goodier, Steve; Grisham, Mary-Ellen; Braun-Haley, Ellie;
Harris, Kathy Anne; Henry, Linda Ann; Hunt, Sharlett; Hymes, Christina;
Jacobson, Gary; Kiser, Roger Dean; Kerens, Claudia; Kevin, Tim; Jenkins,
Pamela; Liles, Norma; Lily Jodi Flesberg; Lock, Joyce; Marlor, Janice
Bumbalough; Mazzella, Joe; Meeks, Carol; Mizrany, Mary Carter; Morris, Deepak;
Ojeibge, Georgewaters; Petry, Dianna Doles; Roberts, Susan; Shiveley, Debra;
Shaw, Bob; Sims, Richard; Smith; Michael; Streidel, Saskia; Swarner, Ken;
Vaknin, Sam; Verhoeff, Jan; Walker, Bill; Walker, Joe; Warner, Gordon, K;
Walsh, Sue; Weymouth, Barbara J.; Whirity, Kathy; Wainland, David; Westerfer,
Clara; White Robert; Storytime Tapestry Staff Carol Roach -
Founder/publisher Thelma Hartselle - Co-Founder,
Moderator Clara Westerfer – moderator Bob Johnston - moderator |
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