Ross Cavins Follow The Money Follow The Money
 
 
 

You're projecting.

- Wife Number Two, the Counselor
 

Home
Newest Blogs
Oldest Blogs
Short Stories
Movie Reviews
Book Reviews
Bad Poetry
Dirty Comics
Recommended Books
Recommended Music
Touch My Fridge
Shameless T-Shirts
About Me
Email Me!!!



HackWriters.com
USADeepSouth.com
SwillMagazine.com
HissQuarterly.com
Buran.it (Italian)
DeadMule.com

Chuck and Cletus 2.com
News Satire and Funny Photos.

 Subscribe in a reader





Scrivel.com
Humor-Blogs.com



Top Blogs
Blog Directory
Bloglisting.net - The internets fastest growing blog directory Find Blogs in the Blog
Directory


Blog Search Engine
The Humor Directory
Blog Flux Directory
HumorLinks
Blogging Fusion

spacer.png, 0 kB
  • People can be divied into two types and it seems as if most women belong to that one group I don't.  You know what I'm talking about, I'm talking about…
  • I want to know something.  Who invented the bathroom exhaust fan?  I'll tell you, a genius, that's who.  A veritable God among men.  Whoever it was may have inadvertently saved…
  • UNC vs DukeEvery year about this time, legions of ACC fans begin to tingle with excitement.  The hardwoods have opened up and college basketball is well underway.  Power teams are…
  • I never played football growing up because my mom wouldn't let me.  I was accident prone enough without adding eleven guys to the equation, all in pads (read: armor)…
  • Blame it on the Producer.Back in the spring of 1989 when Milli Vanilli released their smash Album, Girl You Know It's True, a friend of mine introduced them to me. …
  • There's a lot I miss about being married or in a serious relationship.  Cuddling on the couch when we'd watch TV, cooking a grandiose meal for two, taking naughty showers…
  • I was talking with my Mom and Dad the other day and I asked if they'd been to Savannah yet.  My Mom said they hadn't and my Dad spoke up…
  • I had a dream last night, of a girl.  A girl I'd had a crush on since elementary school.  We all have that girl (or guy), the one we noticed…
  • I am now a published author.  Well, semi-published.  Somebody else thought enough to put my words on their site, so I guess that makes me published. Visit hackwriters.com
  • Dangerous LuggageI caught the ass end of a movie on cable today.  I don't remember the name of it but it doesn't matter.  What I want to point out is…


 
Thirty Years Later PDF Print E-mail
Written by Ross Cavins   
Wednesday, 12 August 2009 04:39

Image Second grade.  Mrs. Mim's class.  It was a time of innocence and playfulness.  We were kids who knew nothing of the gas shortage or the real world.  The nation had not yet tasted inflation, political correctness hadn't been invented and computers were the size of an office building.  It was 1978; I was seven years old, and the friendships I forged then would last forever. 

Little did I know.

It is said that the people we meet early in life make an impression on us that lasts a lifetime.  The guy beside me who always reminded me of Mork from Ork; nanu-nanu.  The cute girl behind me with long brown hair, green eyes and a face as sweet as honey.  The aging teacher who pointed at things on the blackboard with her middle finger while we all giggled like she'd said a four-letter word. 

Mrs. Mim's class took a field trip to Kabuto Japanese Steakhouse.  It was one of those places where they cooked hibachi-style on the table right in front of you.  For a second-grader from the sticks, that was pretty amazing.  Fire and knives and food flying everywhere, hot tea served in little cups with Japanese writing, waitresses wearing silk kimonos and nodding at you with every syllable.

We weren't in Mayberry any more and we knew it.

I remember we made our own kimonos with light blue sashes.  I remember the escalator we took inside the mall.  I remember my classmates laughing and having fun and posing for a few class photos, all of us with wonderful bowl haircuts and comatose expressions.  I also remember puking all over myself because I was sick that day (which was the reason I avoided Japanese food for at least another fifteen years.)

Now, thirty years later, at the seasoned age of thirty-seven, and after two failed marriages and a virtual lifetime of triumphs and mistakes, I found myself eating at Kabuto Japanese Steakhouse once again, recalling that trip in Mrs. Mim's class.  It was a different location than the restaurant we ate at so many years ago (I think that one is a Starbucks now), but it felt the same as before.

Fire and knives and food flying everywhere.  Hibachi-style cooking on the table in front of you.  Oriental music piping through the loudspeakers. 

Image Although the memories that flooded me evoked a sense of familiarity, some things were different this time.  The waitresses weren't wearing kimonos.  I didn't have the hot tea in the little cups.  And I also didn't throw up.

But you want to know what the biggest change at Kabuto's was?  Remember that cute little girl with the long brown hair and mesmerizing green eyes that always sat behind me?  Well this time, she was sitting beside me, holding my hand and giggling in my ear like a little schoolgirl.

People, I'm in love with a girl I've had a crush on for thirty years.  Ain't life grand?

Image
Thirty years later.
 

 

 

Comments
Add New Search
Write comment
Name:
Email:
 
Website:
Title:
UBBCode:
[b] [i] [u] [url] [quote] [code] [img] 
 
 
:angry::0:confused::cheer:B):evil::silly::dry::lol::kiss::D:pinch:
:(:shock::X:side::):P:unsure::woohoo::huh::whistle:;):s
:!::?::idea::arrow:
 
Please input the anti-spam code that you can read in the image.

3.26 Copyright (C) 2008 Compojoom.com / Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved."

 
 
spacer.png, 0 kB
spacer.png, 0 kB
   
RCG Hosting - admin - Copyright © 2007-2010 Ross Cavins