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Susan Pinkowski

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Don’t hesitate to contact and reach me!!
Susan Pinkowski

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullam.

CONTACT INFO
Don’t hesitate to contact and reach me!!

December 2022

A Eulogy for My Old Man

May 6, 2015             My ‘old man’, as he insisted I call him, had been dying for almost ten years now.  You would have thought this eulogy would have been written and rewritten and rewritten, but I never started it until last night.               He outlived the doctor who told him he wouldn’t see the end of 2014.             He outlived one of the largest recorded abdominal aneurysms.             And unfortunately, in his own mind, he outlived his usefulness.  Once he realized that he would be confined to bed, he said, ‘Fuck it.  That’s it.  I’m done.’  And in less than two weeks, he was gone.  And that’s how he wanted it.             I think it was about five or six years ago that I really pushed to get him to move in with my family and me downriver.  I wanted to spend more time on a daily basis with him while he was still able to get out and do things.  He teetered back and forth for a spell, but then decided that he couldn’t give up and move out.  He lived in a run town trailer park in Mt. Clemens, drove an old Chrysler, hit certain spots for breakfast, but mostly stayed at home with his cat.  I couldn’t understand why he wouldn’t want to move.             What I didn’t realize then was what he couldn’t give up on.             He couldn’t give up on his long and valuable friendships with his two neighbors, Ray and Bill, who have been to me, over the years, a great source of comfort whenever I couldn’t reach my dad and feared the worse.  Thank you for that.             He couldn’t give up on his church family and all the friendships and desserts that resulted from that relationship.  I’m especially looking forward to those peanut butter cookies after the service!               He couldn’t give up his independence, no matter that the doctor “suggested” he stop driving five years ago.   He said, “It’s okay.   I stay in the right lane and go real slow.”   Then we all cringed as we watched him turn left out of Ravis (Travis?) one morning after breakfast and the entire road just about had to come to a stop for him.             Yes, he was rough around the edges, gruff and feisty, missing some teeth, and not concerned about wearing spot-free clothes, but once you made your way past that barrier, you were rewarded with the real gold that was inside.  He would do just about anything for you, but only if he liked you.              I remember one specific event in my life many years ago that changed my outlook of him.  He had been divorced for a number of years, and the 30th anniversary dinner at St. John Hospital was coming up.   He didn’t want to go alone.  I was a young hippie then, partying and thinking parents were a drag.  But I felt bad that he didn’t have a date so I agreed to go.  I can’t even remember if it was the standard rubber chicken dinner routine or something more fancy, but what I do remember is this:   when they finally announced my dad’s name to come up for his years of service award, he rose and headed to the stage in his tuxedo to a standing ovation.  I was amazed.  It was a very long ovation, and it turned out to be the only one that night.             When my dad came back to the table and saw the look of amazement on my face, he said, “You didn’t know your old man was so popular, did you?”             It was that moment that made me wake up and take the time to get to know the guy beneath the gruff.   I haven’t regretted it since.

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How NOT to Train your Dog

Why expose yourself to the elements when you can easily train your dog to run out the front door to retrieve your morning newspaper? I was halfway home from not having to run out in the rain or snow in my PJs anymore as I already had a 100-pound chocolate Labrador Retriever.  All I had to do was train him to fetch the paper.  This would be a snap! The first morning of training, I held onto his collar, told him “fetch,” and walked him calmly right outside to the paper, about 30 feet from the front door. (We repeatedly asked the paper carrier that it be delivered right to the porch but in seven years, it hasn’t made it there once.)  I picked up the paper, stuffed it in Buddy’s mouth, said, “good dog!” and took him back into the house, where he was given a biscuit as a treat.  He was starting to get a clue. The next morning, I repeated the process and did the same again, on the third day. By now he was showing keen interest, especially in the biscuit part, and seemed to be putting two and two together.  Even though a veterinarian had told me chocolate Labs were the “blonds of the dog world,” I was optimistic that this could work. Come Day Four, I opened the door and said “fetch.” He bolted out the front door, all on his own, and headed in the opposite direction of the paper, where he proceeded to poop on my front lawn. I fetched the paper myself and cleaned up the poop. This was not part of the plan. On Day Five, I let him out the door on the side of the house into the dog run for his early morning constitution before I had him fetch the paper.  While still in my PJs, I confidently took him to the front door, said the magic word and let him loose. He ran directly to the paper, picked it up and ran around to the right, back between the houses into our unfenced backyard. I ran back through the house, to the side door by the dog run and into the backyard yelling “biscuit! biscuit!”  He dropped the paper in the middle of the backyard and came running for his treat. There was no reward for this kind of behavior.  I retrieved the paper myself from the middle of my back yard.  I should have eaten the biscuit. The next day, I decided to tie a 30′ rope to his collar so that he could not escape again. He had previously chewed the rope in two, so a knot was in place to keep it the full length. I again let him go in the dog run first to avoid the pooping problem.  When we arrived at the front door, I tied the rope to his collar and thought everything was now in place for a successful retrieve.  As it was early morning, I had on my favorite old chenille robe, my hair was doing the Phyllis Diller-Einstein thing, and I called my seven-year-old son to come downstairs to watch what was surely going to be a proud moment.  I opened the door, yelled ‘fetch’ and off he ran, causing the rope to burn through my hands so fast and painfully that I dropped the rope, which landed on my right ankle and immediately burned the skin around my ankle bone. Before I could jump aside, that darn knot caught under back of the wooden front door which then slammed shut, smacked my backside in the process and propelled me in all my morning beauty out on the front porch in the middle of the cul-de-sac. The dog was about four inches from the newspaper, lunging and stretching to reach it so he could trade it for a biscuit.  He could not go any further because of the knot under the closed front door and I couldn’t push the front door open to get back in the house with all this leaping and jumping toward the paper going on. I finally grabbed the rope and pulled him in, without the paper, pushed on the door and stumbled back into my foyer, where my wide-eyed son was still sitting on the steps. We looked at each other and he said, “Wow! That had to hurt!”      It certainly did. Another day dawned and with great trepidation and no witnesses, I got fully dressed and tried it again with nothing but hope and a biscuit.  Somehow that crazy dog grabbed the paper and ran right back to me.  I was stunned.  I exchanged the paper for a biscuit and we were both happy.  It was a resounding hard-fought success after too many failures.  Buddy actually fetched the paper flawlessly from then on, and sometimes I didn’t even have to give him a biscuit!  Getting the paper was treat enough for him.   However, getting the paper from him became difficult.  He discovered that if he shook his head, the inside parts of the paper would fly out and he could get a better grip on the roll.  Unfortunately, I wanted the entire paper, not just the adverts.   Occasionally, I had to wrestle the newspaper out of his mouth because he didn’t want to give it up, biscuit or no biscuit, which resulted in the front page or two being ripped to pieces and slobbered on.  But I felt that was a small price to pay for such glorious success!

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