Carnations Thursday, Sunflowers Friday |
Friday afternoon when I arrived at my apartment door, I found another bouquet fastened to my doorknob. Just that morning I'd given a copy of Chicken Soup for the Soul: Young at Heart to a resident in my building. She'd read my story, "The Bet," about how I met my late husband. Then a few hours later, as she left her physical therapist's office, she spotted a flower vender hawking freshly cut sunflowers and decided she had to get some for me. My story, that relates the role sunflowers played in the early days of my relationship with Ken Wilson, is pasted below.
This morning I met with one of the Los Angeles County Peace Corps recruiters, who is recruiting her own mother and her mother's close friend, a professor at East Los Angeles College. The women wanted to talk with someone who had served as an older Volunteer. Since I was 50 when I joined back in 1987, Tiffany Tai thought of me, so we rendezvoused at a nearby Spires. Tiffany brought me dragon fruit and Dr. Shirley Huang Batman brought me a handmade pinwheel pen, with a butterfly jewel from Lukang, Changwa, Taiwan.
I never tire of learning...and today I have learned about both a fruit and a town previously unknown to me. Here's some facts about each:
Quick facts about Lugang:
- It's one of Taiwan's oldest towns,
- Lukang means "Deer Harbor",
- it was central Taiwan's most populous city until the 20th century,
- Lukang's port used to bustle with immigrants and trading junks from mainland China (during the Qing Dynasty),
- the town is well known for having the most gorgeous temples on the island, curiously curved streets and fine traditional handicrafts.
- Pitahaya has edible miniscule black seeds, similar to a kiwi's.
- The skin is NOT edible.
- Indigenous to Central America, it is also grown and exported from several Southeast Asian countries, such as Thailand and Vietnam.
- While it may seem a little strange at first, it's easy to get to the fruit. Simply slice lengthwise and either scoop out the flesh, or quarter it and peel back the leathery skin.
- Dragon fruit provides health benefits, from a strengthened
immune system and faster healing of bruises and wounds to fewer
respiratory problems.
The Bet
(from Chicken Soup for the Soul: Inspiration for the Young at Heart)
Why not go out on a limb? Isn’t that where the fruit is?
~Frank Scully
~Frank Scully
At 62 I didn’t expect to find love. But on New Year’s Eve,
l998, when online dating still was considered more risky than routine, I
resolved to try Socialnet.com. Long divorced and just returned from a decade
overseas with Peace Corps, I worked in Little Rock,
far from my California
origins. Dateless for eons, I pictured casual Saturday outings to view Renoirs
at the Arts Center
or to share fried chicken and a hike at Pinnacle Mountain
State Park. Love was for
others. I’d settle for companionship.
So masquerading as “Dumpling,” I posted my online bio and
personal preferences, and prepared to review my matches. My inbox promptly
began to fill with a list of potential dates’ screen names and the distance they
lived from my Arkansas
home. To learn more, I’d have to click on the profile. Sometimes I sighed at
the quirkiness of the computer matchmaker. One match, Bettor, I left
unopened…the man lived over 2,000 miles away. Not a good bet for Saturdays in
the park.
Those nearby didn’t always prove to be good bets, either. A
Kentucky
widower wrote that if I helped him raise his four teenage sons he’d provide me
with a new washing machine. I passed. A Wichita Falls
adventurer invited me on a rafting excursion on the notoriously challenging Cossatot River. We’d have to wait, though, until
he convinced his wife that he deserved a weekend away. I declined. An Oklahoman
declared he loved my moniker, Dumpling. He bet that I was one enticing fat
mama. I didn’t respond.
I finally agreed to meet one local widower for supper at
Cajun’s Wharf. The riverside setting, though, reminded him of the seafood dishes
his late wife had prepared. Soon he was sobbing into his devilled crab as he
recounted her technique with halibut, trout and flounder. By the time he began
to wail about her bouillabaisse, I’d finished with my barbecued shrimp…and our
date.
Then one day at work my admin assistant, Bev, asked how
Social.net worked. I pulled up my list, which for months had been headed by
Bettor’s unopened profile.
I ran my cursor over his name. “I’ve never written this guy
because he’s too far away,” I explained. “And with a name like Bettor, I
suspect he’s a gambler. But let’s peek.”
I clicked on his profile and quickly scanned it.
Hmmm. Like me, he appreciated jazz, art, books, dogs, cooking, and travel.
What’s more…he sounded sane.
I glanced up at Bev. “I’ve been to the ends of the earth
with Peace Corps, so what’s two thousand miles?” I pounded out a quick paragraph
introducing myself.
Bev eyed me. “What if he turns out to be The One?”
The next morning I had a response in my inbox.
“My name’s Ken and I think I’m in love,” I read. “I value a
coherent message. Bettor is my Nissan’s vanity plate, which amuses friends here
in Reno. I deal
poker at Circus Circus, but don’t gamble myself, as my three boys will attest.”
He added a link to his domain page, dubbed Sunflower.
I hesitated before clicking on it. I didn’t want any kinky
surprises. So I was delighted to find that he’d filled his webpage with photos
of his three grown sons and assorted grandkids.
“You and your sons
each are more handsome than the others,” I wrote back.
We corresponded with caution, gradually building trust, and
then shared our private e-mail addresses. Eventually we traded phone numbers.
Friends warned about ax murderers, but I believed in Ken’s sincerity. “I don’t
even own a tiny hatchet,” he’d assured me.
Sunday mornings, home from his graveyard shift, Ken would phone.
He e-mailed jokes to start my day, and sent gifts, a wooden car, a casino chip,
framed photos. Then one day I opened a small box to find a ring with a diamond
sunflower. It had belonged to his mother, he wrote.
In turn, I mailed cards with sunflower motifs and a
motion-activated potted sunflower that played “You Are My Sunshine,” the only
song he claimed he knew the words to, aside from the theme from “Paladin.” We
debated how and where we could meet in person, beginning to realize we were falling
in love. “I’ve never had a doubt,” Ken swore.
I decided to attend my high school reunion in California and then visit my father’s widow in Napa. Ken drove from Reno to her place to meet
me, and we toured the nearby wineries. When we paused for supper that first
evening, the waiters all buzzed around after we described our long Internet
romance. They produced a bottle of Chardonnay on the house, gazing at us with
sappy smiles. We billed and cooed like aging lovebirds.
Weeks later I flew back to Reno for his son’s annual mystery party. I
sported a feather boa and toted a stuffed wirehaired terrier, and Ken looked
dapper in his rented tuxedo, as we impersonated detectives Nick and Nora
Charles from the “Thin Man” movies.
I returned for the holidays, suitcase stuffed with
Christmas gifts and decorations, and Ken provided a little tree. His son joined
us for Christmas dinner and presented us with a mouse pad that featured us in
our “Thin Man” costumes.
On New Year’s Eve afternoon Ken taught me some poker basics
so that I could accompany him to work that night. Because of the Y2K fright,
though, the card room crowd was sparser than anticipated so he got a phone call
from the manager offering him the night off. We rushed out to rent videos,
grabbed a bottle of champagne and ordered a pizza.
At midnight we toasted the millennium and made a joint
resolution to marry. On July 1, 2000, we wed at his son’s home in Reno. Socialnet.com sent
us a gift of a Waterford
crystal photo frame. It holds a picture of us cutting our cake and sits today on
the top shelf of a china cabinet in the living room.
Together Ken and I cruised the Mediterranean,
the Baltic, and the Alaska Inner Passage. We hoisted steins in Munich at Oktoberfest. We searched for Nessie
in Inverness, and pub-crawled in Dublin.
We gardened, played a running gin game, watched “Jeopardy,” and spoiled our two
dogs and three cats. I never quite mastered Texas Hold ‘Em. For nine years
Ken e-mailed me those daily jokes. We survived surgeries, spats, falls and
fractures. We wandered those art galleries and picnicked on fried chicken,
just as I had envisioned. I confess that Ken sauntered, rather than hiked.
After a lingering illness, my sweet Bettor died last
spring. But opening his profile proved to be my best bet ever. He indeed turned out to be The One, my
sunshine, my love. He’s left me with a myriad of precious memories.
You can bet that I adore technology. Who knew that it would
lead me to companionship…and to love?
No comments:
Post a Comment