December 18, 2016

A Dudley Do-over

A little over a year ago in the uber sterile operating room of what used to be Animal Trustees of Austin (ATA), I stood over the anesthesia-limp body of my dog, Dudley Do-Right. The surgeon had prepped him for an emergency exploratory surgery, but she quickly discovered when she opened him up that a tumor had wrapped itself around Dudley’s colon, and the removal would mean a painful and uncertain recovery. He was 13 years old.

Mare and I, right there, made the decision to let him go.
 
I cried so hard I thought I’d hyperventilate.

Dudley was our first puppy; I brought him home at five weeks old from a friend at work. He chose me. As co-workers passed this little dachshund-Scottish terrier mix puppy from arm to arm, he shook with nerves. But when he came to me, he nuzzled his little cold wet nose against my neck, immediately stopped shaking, and closed his eyes.

“Oh, he’s yours,” a co-worker said.

I decided to take him home for a trial run, warning Mare in a voicemail that I’d made an executive decision on behalf of our family. She came home to find this little bitty puppy in a huge box. Mare looked down into the big box to see two sad brown eyes staring back at her.
 
Dudley as a puppy. 

“Damn," Mare said. "He’s cute.”

And just like that, he became part of our family. I repeated often, “You’re my baby boy. You’ll always be my baby boy.”

Dudley “Do-Right, Except When He Don’t” went on many Central Texas camping trips, a road and hiking trip to North Carolina, countless visits to dog parks, and thousands of walks in the neighborhood. He wasn’t an on-your-lap dog. He preferred to lay his head on your lap. And he didn't like to be held much, unless he was riding in the car or very tired. There was a special way he liked me to hold him when we were seated together—whenever he was in my arms.

Sleepy Dudley.

But mostly, he was a next-to-you dog. As long as he had a part of his body against ours, Dudley was happy.

He was also at times a grouchy, odd boy. He’d grumble and moan like an old man so often that I began calling him my “My Old Man.” He aged gracefully and faithfully, and he rarely complained unless there was a thunderstorm. He shivered hours before we heard the first rumble. We bought thundershirts and gave him anti-anxiety meds during spring rains, but mostly, we just had to ride out the storm with him and get through it the best we could.

When Dudley started having diarrhea issues in the fall, we took him to the vet, who suggested we try foods that would help him have healthy poops. Instead, he became constipated. One night he was in obvious discomfort, and Mare and I tag-teamed staying up to try to comfort him until the vet office opened. I remember feeling hopeful every time he went out the doggie door that night, hoping that he would poop. He never did. Instead, he dug a hole by one of the autumn sage shrubs and laid down in the cool dirt.

It's like he’s digging his own grave, I thought. But I pushed it out of my mind.

A few hours later, we learned that he, in fact, knew that he was dying.

I wasn’t ready to let go of my Old Man and Baby Boy. I cried so hard for days, and then I shut down. Feeling the sadness was unbearable, so I didn’t. I knew that no matter how many dogs Mare and I fostered, I’d never have another dog like Dudley.


Enter Tucker Trucker


Though Mare no longer worked at ATA, she maintained contact with her canine rescue friends, and one day, Suzy Swingle reached out for someone to take in a 13-year-old dachshund-mix. “Tucker” was being surrendered informally by a woman struggling with multiple life-altering issues. She had to move in with family, but Tucker couldn’t come with her. Instead of sending Tucker to a rescue, where an old dog could very well sit for a long time in a cage, Suzy decided to pitch him to her friends on social media.
 
Mare nudged me one night, pointing to her phone. She showed me a blurry picture of a portly old dog in front of a food bowl and said, “Wanna?”

 Twenty-pound Tucker.
 
“Sure,” I said, without feeling. “Why not?”
 
Suzy brought Tucker over the next day. She carried him from her car to our backyard and warned us that he didn’t like to be picked up—that he seemed to be in pain but she wasn’t sure why.

His former owner had him since he was a puppy, and we all thought it would take time for him to adjust to our home and pack.
 
Nope.

He trotted around our backyard, said hello to our cat, and ignored our three dogs. His first time on our couch, he rolled on his back and growled in ecstasy. It was a pretty uneventful meet and greet, so Tucker stayed.

We started to call him Tucker Trucker because of his hefty frame (we likened him to a keg with legs), but after a while the name faded because we began feeding him quality, carefully measured food (no more table scraps for you, buddy!) and Mare took him for daily walks with our pack. He didn’t have his own collar, so Mare grabbed Dudley’s old collar that sat on his box of ashes on the living room bookshelf.
 
Tucker bore the white eyes of an old dog, a sweet spirit, a misshapen head, and a swollen mouth. He seemed to like his new pack, but he didn’t like to be touched near the mouth.  Mare eventually took a peek at his teeth, and she discovered why he was in so much pain: His teeth were caked with plaque; many were obviously rotten. Tucker’s breath was indeed atrocious. If he gave you a lick, a stinky bacterial scent stayed on your face. You had to wash it off with soap and water.
 
Tucker's mouth was pretty swollen.

A trip to our veterinarian confirmed Mare’s suspicion: Multiple teeth needed to be extracted. It would cost an estimated $1,300. That’s a hefty cost for a dog we were only fostering, so we asked for GoFundMe help, and our loving friends generously pitched in. (It ended up costing about $1,600.)
 
I remember the day I took Tucker to the vet’s office for his dental surgery: His breath was so strong, I repeatedly gagged. I had to roll the car windows all the way down because his breath stunk up my vehicle.

And at the end of the day, Tucker groggily waddled out to me in the waiting room of the vet's office—less 15 teeth. He had only one incisor left up front and two small teeth in the back. He gummed me with affectionate, “thank you” love while the vet explained the surgery and aftercare regimen. I stared into his old, whitened eyes, and I knew we’d be keeping him.

Little by slowly, Tucker began to remind me more and more of Dudley.

Once Tucker understood that he was welcome on the couch without invitation, he’d climb up and lay his rump right next to my thigh—just like Dudley.
 
At night, he’d crawl under the bed covers and rest his head on my thigh—just like Dudley.

Tucker likes to rest his head on me, just like Dudley.

Soon, Tucker started walking around the house, grumping and moaning like an old man—just like Dudley.

Sometimes he trotted through the house with a purpose—just like Dudley.

He'd bark annoyingly from our living room window at passersby—just like Dudley.

Was it because he was wearing Dudley’s collar? Or was it because my Old Man was spiritually saying hello? I don’t know.

All I do know is that today, on a cold Texas day, Tucker is moping around the house, going to Mare at her easel, then to me at my word processor, then back to Mare, wondering when one of us will sit down on the couch and watch football so that he can cuddle with his pack—just like Dudley.
 
So on the week before Christmas, though no dog will ever replace Dudley, I feel like I got the best holiday gift from my beloved friend: A Dudley do-over.

Thanks, Old Man. Merry Christmas to you, too.

October 12, 2016

Kickin’ It at Cowboys Stadium


DALLAS—Dressed in shorts and T-shirts, about 120 Taekwondo students from all over the United States lined up in the red zone of the same football field where Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott regularly throws touchdown passes against opponents. The students’ faces showed a mixture of excitement and nervous apprehension. While the stadium’s massive, 160 foot wide by 72 foot tall jumbotron above showed clips of past Cowboys games, the Taekwondo students bowed to their coaches and began a slow but increasingly aerobic warm-up. Within minutes, sweat rolled from foreheads to cheekbones and dripped from chins onto the artificial turf below. They progressed to agility drills, where 1988 Seoul Olympics gold medalist and coach Arlene Limas reminded them to have “fast feet.”

The students at the inaugural three-day sport Taekwondo seminar in Dallas came with different goals. Most athletes were there because they dream of standing on the podium at the Olympics wearing a gold medal. Some just wanted to test their endurance and build fortitude. Others, very young, were there because their coaches saw something extraordinary in their already swift-yet-smooth footwork. Regardless of the reason, the athletes all knew that they’d work hard this weekend.

D.S. Lee, USA Taekwondo (USAT) Juniors Team coach, organized the Cowboys Stadium Sport Taekwondo Seminar, pulling together 20 coaching colleagues from Virginia, Florida, Illinois, and all over Texas. Lee envisioned a gathering in which coaches could leave their egos on the sidelines and collaborate to build a stronger Team USA for the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games.

The reason why I hosted this event was for the athletes—to give them a training environment that will produce greatness,” Lee said. The event was also meant to “get the coaches to be open to training together with athletes so we can all raise the levels.”

The coaches didn’t disappoint, raising the figurative bar as high as the field goal post overhead in the end zone.

“Keep moving,” Limas, shouted at the students during agility drills. “Good! Very good,” she added encouragingly when athletes pushed themselves.

After the spirited warmup, participants separated into three pods for more personalized coaching. Limas led a group of older students through a series of drills to quicken reaction time, improve the ability to process verbal and visual information, and recognize distance—all in real time.

Athletes test their ability to process visual information in real time.
 
In other pods, younger students worked on balance-challenging front leg kicking drills—keeping their lead leg high in the air and thrusting it forward by pushing off with their base foot. Smiles emerged periodically from members of the group. Sweat continued to drip. T-shirts were well-drenched. These drills may have looked simple and fun to the casual observer, but they were deceivingly challenging.

Two hours later, the students bowed to their instructors, took commemorative photos, and left for a hotel shower, good meal, and an early bedtime. The next day’s training was moved up by two hours; they needed a good night’s rest.

Day Two: Twelve Hours of Taekwondo


Professor Victor Manuel Mendoza Guzman, a sports psychologist with the Mexican Taekwondo Federation, stood before a sea of athletes Saturday morning at Blue Sky Sports Complex in The Colony, careful to pause his message so that USAT Senior National Team Coach Lynda Laurin could translate his message into English. It was important to get the details right. Guzman, a leading authority in sports science, has had repeated success coaching athletes on Mexico’s national team, so Lee wanted him to share his experience with the athletes.
 
Victor Manuel Mendoza Guzman helps an athlete stretch.

Guzman’s work isn’t solely Taekwondo-based. He works with athletes of all sports, evaluating how they move and helping them improve by increasing efficient motion.

“I work on the entire development of an athlete,” he tells the students, “from the development at age nine to world champion—to Olympic champion.”

Guzman began his statistical presentation by humbling the athletes, who just two hours earlier were tested in a series of agility speed drills. He asked for a show of hands of those who considered themselves fast. Half the athletes raised their hands. Then Guzman wrote down a number on a whiteboard.

“Did anyone have this?” he asked, pointing to a time of 3.9.

No hands.

“Or a 4?” he continued.

One athlete toward the back of the room lifted his hand.

As it turns out, most athletes at first aren't fast—not as fast as they can be. Guzman said it’s usually because there’s a part of their body that impedes efficient movement. That’s where sports science comes in.

Guzman and his team specialize in evaluating athletes, finding their deficits, and then prescribing exercises to do everything from loosen tight muscles to build lactic acid endurance. Only then can an athlete truly make gains in performance, he said.

Guzman helps an athlete with resistant exercises to improve flexibility.
 
The students, previously seated on the floor in a semicircle, inched closer to the center of the room to get a closer look as Guzman performed resistance stretching exercises on an athlete to increase his flexibility. Within minutes, the athlete said with a smile that his hamstrings weren’t as tight and that his legs now felt supple.

Smart training involves specific levels of development over time, according to Guzman.

“Sometimes we think, ‘I’m going to do it the way I want,’” Guzman said. “But you have to do it a very specific way. It’s called goal setting.”

Before the students broke for lunch, Laurin gave the world-class athletes in the room a chance to share their experience with the younger, up-and-coming competitors.

Salma Castellanos, USAT Senior National Team member from Laredo, Texas, encouraged seminar participants to keep working hard.

“Even though it’s hard, I keep going and good things happen,” Castellanos said.

Fellow USAT Senior National Team member Ara White of Largo, Fla., agreed.

“You can never give up,” she said. White revealed that she lost a lot of matches earlier in her career. “Every single time, I got third place, third place, third place, third place. Then I started to win. I started to get first place.

“So you can never give up.”

After lunch, participants were back on the mat for another conditioning session. Many of the older athletes had taken seminars like this before—multiple two-hour training sessions a day, each one building on the next technique- and stamina-wise. So they encouraged younger students with smiles and high-fives.

The coaches rotated leading footwork drills to help the athletes move more efficiently. Periodically, Limas would stop a group to make technique adjustments.

“It’s muscle memory,” she said after stopping the participants during a sparring strategy partner drill. “It’s teaching your muscles good habits or bad habits. Put good habits into your training—quality stuff.”

The athletes continued the drill with a little more passion, their previously tired kihaps a little louder.


Two hours later, the coaches slowed down the pace by leading athletes in a series of stretches. The already quiet training area grew more still when a tall young man walked to the front of the room. Some of the younger students lifted out of their stretch a bit to find their parents in the bleachers and point to the man.

“It’s him!” one boy excitedly mouthed to his mom in the stands.

Dressed in black and smiling easily, Carlos Navarro stopped at the front of the room and surveyed the crowd of athletes, now thoroughly tired. Navarro, who represented Mexico in the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, is a fan favorite of many Taekwondo students in Texas.
 
Rio Olympian Carlos Navarro and coach Greg Tubbs.

Navarro offered thanks to his fans for supporting his Olympic journey. To those with Olympic dreams, he advised that they keep training hard.

“It’s in the training that we actually win gold,” Navarro said.
 

After a short break, another session began—with more conditioning drills. Participants donned sparring gear and trades kicks. Before long, the last sparring session for the day was over, and a select group moved into a smaller room to perfect poomsae technique with an expert.

 
Elva Pai Adams, bronze medalist in the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, South Korea, doesn’t spar anymore since tearing a ligament in her knee. These days, she’s drawn to the more precise movements of sport poomsae.

Adams, a member of the USAT National Poomsae Team and an international referee, is well known for providing detail-oriented poomsae corrections—foot placement down to the inch and knifehand blocks at the precise angle.

She spent most of the time late Saturday demonstrating and correcting stances, basic punches, and proper presets to primary blocks. Adams encouraged students to progress smoothly throughout their forms, resisting the urge to rise up and down.

“Don’t bob,” she said, showing students how to maintain their stance between moves.

Elva Pai Adams leads a group of students through Taeguek basics.

She detailed the most current standards of poomsae, reminding athletes that sport poomsae judges take off big points for mindless mistakes like not tucking the fists when kicking.

While the pace of the seminar day’s final session was much slower, the precision was more demanding.

“It’s one movement,” Adams said, showing how to properly return to a ready stance. “Don’t give away easy points.”

Day Three: Mock Tournament Matches


As athletes tried to shake off fatigue and stretch out sore muscles from the prior day’s 12-hour training session, coaches gathered to assign ring duties. On the final day of the seminar, athletes sparred one another in practice matches, applying the drills and skills learned and developed the two previous days.
 
Arlene Limas readies to coach one of her students in a mock tournament match
while Brian Singer acts as head referee.

Athletes were encouraged to take risks—to try new techniques.

“We already know you can score with fast kick,” a coach told an athlete between rounds. “Now we want to try some other things. To get better.”

The athlete nodded and smiled.

Parents sat in the stands as the matches progressed. The majority had watched every minute of the seminar training from the bleachers, and many said they were happy with how the weekend went. Most confirmed that they would return next year if the seminar were held again.

Jody Miner of Florida said her family was determined to make it to Dallas because of the caliber of coaches present. They almost didn’t arrive in time, though. Their original flight out of Orlando was canceled due to Hurricane Matthew’s approach. So the family switched tickets, drove to Tampa, and caught one of the last flights out. Other families from their school weren’t so lucky.

“We’ve been to others (seminars) before,” Miner said. “The level of coaching (here) is unbelievable. It’s well-rounded. My kids are getting the same focus at 10 and 11 that the juniors and seniors are getting.”

Lee said the across-the-board treatment was intentional. He and his colleagues want to help grow Taekwondo in the future by offering athletes exposure to more innovative coaches, sports science, and high-level athletic training—“so we can all learn and grow.”

“I’m passionate about the sport and I know there are other coaches and athletes who share the same passion,” Lee said. “By coming together we all benefit.”

September 15, 2016

The Impact of Others—and 'Muskrat Love'

It was another bittersweet night in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) at the hospital where I volunteer each week. The night started out with the usual finger-to-elbow soap scrub and antibiotic sanitization, the check-in at the nurse’s station, and then the search for the perfect baby to rock. The night ended with a profound need to acknowledge the impact others have had on my life and the lives of others.
 
In the first NICU bay, at the first bed, was a squirmy little one who needed cuddling. I didn’t hesitate.

I don’t know if all baby rockers have elaborate conversations with the infants they hold, but I do. This baby had obviously been on this journey before. His squirms were an impatient sign that he was ready to get this life stuff going. He had things to do! People to meet! Art to create!

Yes, while holding him, I intuitively knew that he would grow up to be an artist. And that he would have something inspiring and powerful to offer the world—art that would change lives. I felt honored to hold him, and soon his impatience waned and he fell asleep. I rocked him for about 90 minutes before his nurse took him for feeding. I told the nurse that I was headed next to see my Ninja Warrior, the baby who’d been struggling for months in another bay.

She shook her head “no,” and her lip curved downward.

“About an hour ago,” was all she said.

My heart sank.

I dragged my Sketchers through the long hallway, wondering if the baby and his parents were still in the bay. They weren’t. In fact, the corner of the bay where the Ninja Warrior had fought so hard for so long—once filled with cards and prayers of encouragement—was already cleaned out, sterilized, and ready for another infant. And yet, the little one’s spirit still seemed to be there.

Boy, what a fighter! I thought. You did good, buddy. You did good. Rest now.

I started to imagine the pain his parents must be feeling—and I started to feel a debilitating sadness myself—when out of a small isolation room erupted the most thunderous cry I’d ever heard.

“Oh, you want to rock her?” asked an overwhelmed nurse with big eyes. “She’s all yours.”

Determined to comfort this baby as best I could, I returned to Expert Baby Rocker mode. I reached into the bed and gently lifted the infant into my arms. She was wrapped as tight as a bean burrito, and she tooted like she’d just eaten one too! Maybe she had gas. Maybe that was the reason that she was so irritable. NICU nurses have a name for grumpy babies like this: “hangry”—hungry and angry. These are the babies who, because of certain circumstances, get a hard start in life, and they’re quite unhappy about it. But this little girl was different. She wasn't hungry. Her diaper was dry. And yet she was inconsolable, and she proclaimed her displeasure loud and long. Repeatedly. This little girl had a feisty spirit and some lungs!

When you rock in the NICU long enough, you quickly realize that all babies are different, and that what works to comfort one doesn’t come close to easing the anxiety of another. However, all babies have a sweet spot—a position, a song or a combination of things that allows them to relax and settle into rest. This little girl was testing that reality.

I held her horizontally, her head cradled in the bend of my elbow. She cried.

I switched to the other side. She cried.

I held her up closer to my chest, and for a minute, she was silent. And then she cried.

I held her up on my left shoulder so that she could see everyone and everything better, and for a minute she was silent again. Then she cried. I switched to the right shoulder. She cried.

I rocked her, bounced her, patted her on the back and then patted her on the rump. She still cried.

I played musical chairs with this little one, trying to find her sweet spot. Nothing was working. And that’s when I remembered my kung fu training:

Never expect. Never compare.

I began to relax when it occurred to me that I'd expected her to calm down and stop crying.

Taking several deep breaths, I began accepting that it was O.K. that she was crying—that maybe that’s just what she needed to do. My job wasn’t to keep her from crying. It was to hold her. So I started to pat her on the rump while singing Captain & Tennille songs. She began to settle a little with a slow version of “Love Will Keep Us Together,” but I guess in another life she knew that Daryl Dragon and Toni Tennille got divorced, so she began to cry again.

Next I softly sang “Muskrat Love.” Now I’m not the best singer (I only sound good in the shower), but there was something about the melody of this song that made her close her eyes for a long second. Then a longer second. Then a minute. And then minutes. I watched as her face relaxed and her breathing changed pace. The monitor’s long white vertical lines clumped together, indicating my suspicion: She had fallen asleep.

I kept humming “Muskrat Love” a while longer, and as I hummed, I wondered if Willis Alan Ramsey, the guy who wrote the song, and Toni Tennille, the singer who helped make the song a hit, ever thought that something they created would be used in such a kind, loving, and powerful way—that it would be a tool to comfort a little baby who came into the world with difficulties and who just needed a little help to heal. I wondered if any of us realize how who we are and what we create affects others.

Soon, the little girl’s mom came into the room, and I handed her over. She remained calm and comfortable.

As I left the bay, I passed the empty corner where the Ninja Warrior fought his last battle, and I said a prayer for all those who would come after him—that they’d have an easier time. That they’d have first birthdays, second birthdays, kindergarten, first dates, college, and babies of their own. And I promised to tell others when they’ve had a positive impact on me—that I’d take a moment out of my day to say to people like Sifu that even though I’m a scattered brain kung fu student who has been missing a lot of class lately, I’m never not on the kung fu floor mentally. I take the art and his lessons with me every day.

So to honor the life of the Ninja Warrior, I challenge you today to reach out to someone and tell them how they’ve impacted your life.

This journey is way too short to not realize how special each of us is to one another.

September 1, 2016

A Life in Three Minutes

What do you do when you hear a NICU nurse say that the baby you’re about to rock “is incompatible with life”? Just what do you do?

I volunteer once a week in the neonatal intensive care unit of a hospital in Austin. I started volunteering in December because of the things I was learning about myself via kung fu: I love babies. (You learn a lot about yourself when you stand still enough and perform purposeful movement of a form called Siu Nim Tao.)

But I knew going in that there are things that come with the territory of a NICU unit, and rocking babies who won’t survive is one of them.

So what do you do? What do you say? You give them a life in three minutes:

You say, “Happy birthday! Happy Thanksgiving! Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!”

You recite the Pledge of Allegiance.

You sing. You sing the ABCs.

You tell them that they were born in a place called the United States of America, and though it's not perfect, it's home. And then you sing “America the Beautiful”:

O beautiful for spacious skies,
For amber waves of grain,
For purple mountain majesties
Above the fruited plain!
America! America! God shed His grace on thee,
And crown thy good with brotherhood
From sea to shining sea!

You hum the tune of every holiday song you can remember, even the ones you've always found annoying.

You say silly things like, “And the Oscar goes to…you!”

And then you sense a tear rolling down your cheek because you realize how hard it’s got to be to be that baby—and the parents. So full of hope and excitement. A life ending before it got a chance to start.

Too soon, the nurse says she needs to get a few stats, so you hand over the Little One for the first and last time, and whisper into the left ear, “Thanks for coming to visit us. Come back again when you can. And stay longer next time.”

August 15, 2016

That Time I Took a Casino Bus Trip from Hell

My mom loved to gamble. Her answer to my nightly alcoholic dad passed out in his easy chair was to drag me to smoky, crowded bingo halls. By God, she loved the adrenaline rush of winning—even though she lost far too often in my high school honors math opinion.

Mamma’s love of gambling started with bingo and, after a divorce and remarriage, she graduated to casinos. She’d spend hours at a variety of penny slots, hoping for a big jackpot that never came. But she absolutely loved it, and after she died, my sisters and I went to a casino on the shores of Lake Charles, La., and scattered her ashes in the water. Because that’s where she was the happiest.

My mom died in August four years ago, so my sister Susan and I decided to honor her memory by taking an overnight tour bus trip to the Lucky Eagle Casino and Hotel in Eagle Pass. My sister found the tour bus company via the casino website, so I never questioned its reputability.

We rolled out of a Walmart parking lot a little after 8 a.m. Thursday in San Antonio, and it was an uneventful start. All the passengers were in good spirits. It reminded me of the time Mamma and I took a bus trip to a casino in Marksville, La. (Riders going TO the casino are always excited. Coming back, their pockets a lot lighter, they aren’t so happy.)


As the bus rolled on, I noticed something out of the corner of my eyes in the front side bus window. Something green was sliding back and forth in a wave. It was water. Green water. At the bottom of a double pane window sloshed green moss. (Gut sign #1 that this bus was not in good shape.)

Two-and-a-half hours later, we pulled onto the Kickapoo reservation, rolled down a long road out in the middle of nowhere, and like an oasis, the casino appeared. We all got off, my sister and I stashed our backpacks with the hotel concierge, and we agreed to meet up at 3 p.m. for our hotel check-in.

All was going well. I even won $20 right off the bat, and to me, a $20 win is a big deal because I’m not a gambler. I’m far too risk averse. I’m cheap and impatient. If a slot doesn’t hit in three tries, it’s like baseball: You’re out! So I spent the better part of the afternoon roaming around the casino tossing in a bet here and there at games that had significance: A goldfish game (fish are my spiritual symbols), a dachshund game for my dachshund mix Frederick, and a game for Paris in remembrance of a great trip years ago that Mare and I took to France.


I looked for my mom's favorite game, Wild Cherries. but I guess it had been replaced with some other new, loud, and visually frenetic alternative.

My sister and I checked into the hotel room, which was very clean and comfy, gamed a little more, lost a little more money, met for dinner, and while she lost a little more money, I went up to the room to watch the Olympics on television. We went to bed early, and repeated the day on Friday until it was time to board the bus at 5 p.m. Susan and I had a great time, and we thought Mamma would have loved this bus trip. We were both tired now, though, and looked forward to napping on the bus.
 
The Return Trip from Hell
 
We boarded late because the driver had to make an emergency phone call. (Sign #2.)

Hope everything’s O.K., I thought. It would suck to be out in the middle of nowhere with a family emergency in San Antonio.

But soon enough, we boarded the bus. It was the hottest day of the year, a blistering 106 degrees with a heat index of 109 degrees, and the inside of the bus hadn’t cooled down yet. The tour coordinator said that it was because the bus door stayed open too long during passenger loading.

O.K. I’ll buy that, I thought. However, the air coming out of my tiny vent wasn't even cool. It was hot air. (A sign of the verbal hot air to come.)

As we began to slowly roll out of the casino parking lot, the bus immediately stalled and died. And the air conditioner stopped working too. (Sign #3.) My trusty gut immediately tensed. I knew that this was likely to be a long trip home.

The bus driver restarted the bus, and it puttered, jostled, and jerked down the road at about 10 miles an hour. I knew that the reservation had a low speed limit, but I recalled us going much faster on this road when we arrived the day before.

Once off the reservation, the driver pulled into a Shell station, and passengers were joking that he must have forgotten to get gas.

“Everybody off the bus,” the coordinator said. “The driver needs to reboot the computer.”

Computer?

My bullshit meter jolted sharply to the right. (Sign #4.)


Susan and I joined the ant line of mostly elderly passengers, many moving slowly with walkers and canes, into the convenience store as the bus took a few test laps around the store.

My gut told me to buy a big bottle of water. Susan snagged some Gatorade.

We boarded the bus again, and the bus slowly pulled out of the parking lot.

At about 10 miles an hour.

And for the next 30 minutes, the bus repeatedly stalled and died; the air conditioner shut off and popped back on several times; and the bus advanced slower and slower—so slow that the driver hugged the edge of the road so that other cars could pass safely on the left. We made it past the U.S. Border Patrol checkpoint when Susan and I, who were seated at the back of the bus, heard a pop.

That wasn’t the computer,” I snarked. Susan laughed.

The bus, now on a two-lane road, advanced slower and slower until it stopped—not quite completely off the road—and the engine and air conditioner stopped again.

“Everybody off the bus,” the coordinator said.

Passengers started to grumble. “I ain’t gettin’ off no damn bus again. I’m stayin’ right here,” some proclaimed stubbornly. Mamma would have been one of those stubborn people. She always walked with a limp due to suffering from polio when she was a child, so she wouldn't have wanted to continue to climb up and down the bus stairs.
 
The coordinator was insistent, though. And when I rose from my seat and carefully made my way down the narrow aisle to disembark, I knew why: Texas Department of Public Safety troopers were outside—hands on their well-armed and equipped hips and not a smile within a thousand miles.

Troopers stopped the bus for a safety check. Thick smoke was flowing from the back of the bus, and the troopers didn’t want a repeat of a tragic casino tour bus fire that killed eight people and injured 40 in May.

Slowly, one-by-one, most passengers left the hot and humid bus for an equally hot 106-degree heat outside in tall, dry grass and uneven terrain.

“Be careful of rattlesnakes,” one person said. They weren’t kidding.

As we stood in the shade of the bus, I watched a frenzy of activity: The tour coordinator called the home office to try to get a mechanic or another bus, while troopers accompanied the driver as he opened the back of the bus. The source of the smoke? A split fan belt and busted water hose. And that's when I also got a good look at the assortment of past Band-Aid-like mechanical repair jobs. (Sign #5.)
 
Always Carry Water

Passengers were ill prepared to be in the heat, and I was never more glad that Mamma was safely in another realm, because she never did well in the heat and would have been the first to croak.

Most passengers didn’t have water and some were even wearing long sleeve shirts. Their walkers and canes didn’t help steady their gait, for the terrain was rocky and there were holes in the ground. One man fell trying to find a place to stand. No one could sit down because there were also ants all over the ground. So we all stood there like a herd of sheep, wondering what we should do. The tour coordinator, still on the cell phone, went into the nearby field and picked up stray branches.

What's she going to do? Start a fire? I thought.

She used the limbs to prop open all the windows of the bus so that fresh air could circulate for those still inside. And soon, she announced that a bus would be coming in two hours.

“Should Crystal come pick us up?” my sister Susan asked. Her daughter was willing to drive all the way from San Antonio to get us. But Crystal would arrive about the same time as the next bus. Why ask someone who has been working since 6 a.m. to drive two-and-a-half hours to get us if she didn’t need to? So we thanked Crystal for the offer, and declined.

In time, the most elderly passengers were starting to show signs of heat exhaustion. A nice lady driving by stopped to give us a big jug of water that she kept in her car. And finally a Border Patrol agent brought out a huge, trademark orange Home Depot water jug. No cups, but it was cold water.

The faces of some passengers were red, and by this time, the troopers were trying to coordinate a  two-at-a-time ferry system in which some of the more ill passengers would be taken to the Pilot gas station 20 miles back in Eagle Pass. There was water, food, and air conditioning there.

So the ferrying began, and though this is might be terrible to say, the process of deciding who went with the trooper felt very much like the sinking Titanic—everyone wanted to go first, but couldn’t, and we wondered when or if the trooper would return.

The sun began to set, providing a much-needed relief in temperatures. It also signaled the start of swarming mosquitoes.

“And there are coyotes that come out at night around here,” a passenger added.

Lovely.

About an hour later, area sheriff’s deputies and Border Patrol agents came with sport utility vehicles and vans to accelerate the ferrying process. By this time, we were way past the two-hour mark of the replacement bus, and there were many folks still left at the side of the road.
 
The Challenge of Keeping Your Cool in the Heat

All this time, I had decided that I wouldn’t complain—that I was hydrated, healthy, and mobile. I was a black belt, and I was fine. A replacement bus was coming. And even if it didn’t, my sister and I would eventually be taken to the Pilot station. I could stay out on the side of the road longer if necessary. But with the sun setting, I began to worry that a car would slam into the back of the bus because only one of the hazard blinkers was working and the bus battery was dying.

I've had a lifelong fear of dying at an early age, and I was slowly becoming convinced that this was it. I would die on the side of the road out in the middle of nowhere with people I didn't know because I wanted to go gambling with my sister.

Some things aren't worth the risk, I mumbled to myself.

“So I’m curious,” I said to the trooper. “Where is the safest place to be in a situation like this? I mean, if a car comes along and careens right into the back of this thing. I’m thinking as far away from this bus as possible.”

The DPS trooper looked behind him, pointing out toward the field. “Actually, I’d be out there.”

But before I could take his advice, a single thumping sound hit the brim of the trooper’s hat.

Plop.

Plop, plop.

Plop, plop, plop...

We stared at each other, then looked up at the sky.

And saw lightning in the distance. (Sign #6.)

Really, Mother Nature?

“Everyone needs to get back on the bus,” the trooper announced.

I wondered whether a replacement bus was coming at all and began making mental escape plans once I got to the Pilot station. Was there a hotel and car rental place in the area? By this time, I needed more water, food, a shower, and time away from the coordinator, who was still assuring us that the bus was gassing up and on its way. (Sign # 7.)

My sister and I left on the final ferrying caravan in the air conditioned comfort of a Border Patrol agent’s SUV. He was so nice and understanding. But now that everyone was safe, I was starting to get pissed. My cell phone had died long ago, so I didn’t take pictures of the folks standing around the bus, evidence of past shitty engine repair jobs, or the algae in the window. I got angry when I thought about the fact that the driver and coordinator didn’t stop in the casino parking lot when the bus died the first time. They should have stopped to fix the problem then. They put the lives of all these people in danger. I was fine. My sister was fine. But everyone else was struggling.

I give most people the benefit of the doubt, but when my gut tells me that someone is telling me a lie, it’s usually correct. And my gut had been screaming since we left the casino.

It was about 9 p.m. when we arrived at the Pilot station, and 10:30 p.m. when the replacement bus arrived.

A smaller replacement bus.

With bad shocks.

And fewer, smaller seats.

But we were rolling again, heading toward the broken down bus to retrieve everyone’s luggage and then off to San Antonio.

The new driver almost hit the old bus when we drove by it because it was raining so hard he could barely see it in the dark. In the driving rain, the driver of the broken down bus darted in and out of oncoming traffic to cart every piece of luggage from one bus to the next. How he didn’t get hit by a car, I’ll never know. It was also a dangerous place for us to be—parked in front of a bus without flashers like a sitting duck.

The driver finally loaded the last piece of luggage onto the replacement bus and boarded soaked. He had nowhere to sit, so he parked his rear in the aisle. The safety violations of this trip were piling up, and I decided that when I was back in Austin, I needed to contact the casino and urge them to sever relationships with this company. The number of customers this tour brings isn’t worth the possible loss of one life. The tour coordinator and driver were too irresponsible to remain employed.

After calming down, I finally drifted into a nap, and we finally arrived in San Antonio at 2 a.m. I’ve never been more happy to see my brother-in-law, Mark, who had waited up all night to drive us the rest of the way home.
 
And What Did We Learn?

1.     One of the lessons of this adventure is to do more research on who I allow to drive me anywhere. I did have a part in this fiasco. I didn’t have to take this tour.

2.     The other lesson is that it’s O.K. for me to back out of an agreement if I don’t feel completely safe. I could have waltzed up the bus aisle as we rolled out of the casino and inquired about the bus’s condition. And I could have refused to get back on the bus while at the Shell station.

3.     Probably the biggest takeaways from this is that it reinforces the fact that I should ALWAYS trust my gut when it tells me not to go along with the crowd—to be the squeaky wheel when others won’t be. I know that I wasn’t the only one whose gut was screaming that this bus wasn't safe. So next time, I’m going to honor my gut.

4.     And lastly, regardless of the fact that my mom loved casino bus trips, I think I’ll take my car next time. Some risks aren’t worth taking.