I come to Thanksgiving in a cheerful mood, counting the blessings, starting with the new pig valve Dr. Dearani’s team sewed into my heart three months ago, which enables me to type this sentence and saves some poor soul from eulogizing me and getting it all wrong. My legacy is that I sang gospel songs and told immature jokes on public radio and thereby took up arms against pretense. “There was a young man of Madras” and “How Great Thou Art,” I love them both dearly. It horrified thousands of managers and vice presidents but I got away with it.
As a Minnesotan, I’m aware that my state is the No. 1 producer of turkeys, an ugly ill-tempered bird with a sharp beak and a single-digit IQ and no redeeming qualities except the meat. Minnesota used to produce computers and semiconductors but then Apple and Microsoft took the business away, and now our state produces 45 million turkeys a year, which means that in early October, there is a possibility that the birds could rise up and take over. We have only six million people, many of them elderly and easily confused, and if a strong westerly wind hit the penal ranches and the fowl panicked and a feathery wave swept east toward the cities and the National Guard assembled a wall of snowplows along I-35 and the stampede flowed over the mountains of carcasses and ten or fifteen million birds hit Minneapolis, late-night comics would feast on us and my state, which gave you Prince and Robert Bly, would be a joke.
And then there’s the GPS lady in the dashboard who leads us through mazes of 18th-century streets in New England towns and there are no more of those “I told you to turn left” arguments. And Google, which lets you type in “Now thank we all our God” and it gives you “With heart and hands and voices, Who wondrous things has done, in Whom this world rejoices; Who from our mothers’ arms” and so forth. And YouTube, where “Going to the Chapel” and “Under the Boardwalk” and “Sugar Sugar” and all the hits of my youth are instantly available when needed, no need to rummage through the 45s. And my WordPerfect software that makes a squiggly blue line under “Leviteracetem” until I correct the spelling to “Levetiracetam.” (My old Underwood typewriter didn’t care one way or another.)
And then I think of the phone call I made in 1992 to the sister of my sister’s classmate. I had called her, at the classmate’s suggestion, six months before to invite her to lunch and she said she couldn’t, she was going on tour with an orchestra in Asia. She was excited about going to Indonesia, Brunei, and Malaysia, which she hadn’t seen before, and I was impressed and wrote her number on the wall and six months later called back. We had a long lunch at a seafood joint on Broadway at 90th and so at the age of 49 and three-fourths I found a partner for life.
She was a freelance violinist in New York, living in a walk-up apartment on 102nd, a woman who loved her work and endured the vicissitudes of freelance, namely the occasional poverty, and never asked help from family. I was a successful writer. I lived in a little bubble, isolated, chained to a computer, a veteran of two unhappy marriages to women I made even unhappier. She was an inveterate walker who on her tour of Asia had ventured alone into strange cities, climbed hills to see temples, braved the language barrier. In New York, she kept her spirits up through penurious periods by walking six, eight, ten miles a day around Manhattan, Central Park, museums, living on crackers, cheese, and coffee.
I tried to impress her, bought box seats at the opera, took her to classy restaurants, and of course she enjoyed that, but what she liked most was good conversation. She was endlessly curious. I told stories about my evangelical upbringing, about the writing life. She is very honest. She is a hugger and my friends and family like her better than me (I’m a shoulder patter). She loves people. She’s adorable. I’m lost without her.
There is an old man in New York Who is cheerfully popping the cork In sheer thanksgiving For the pleasure of living, Thanks to Jenny and a small piece of pork.
There are deals to be had in our little STORE:
Remember: as a paid subscriber to The Back Room, you receive a 20% discount on your purchases.
Till November 21st, orders over $25 will receive a free LAKE WOBEGON BOY book.
We have some deep discounts available in the GARAGE SALE AREA.
Buy 2 or more CD sets of FROM THE ARCHIVES series and receive 20% off the total.
Additional deals will be coming over Thanksgiving weekend.
When I think about all of the people who have helped me along the way to this my 79th year a sort of pie chart forms in my mind.
Parents, teachers and friends occupy wedges in varying sizes but then there is a slim, scarlet slice that, though comparatively small, stands out and shoots directly to the center...to the heart.
It is you, Garrison, and all the years of happiness you have brought to me through your radio broadcasts, books, live shows (I have been twice) and online writing.
My sons, now 43 and 45, grew up spending Saturday evenings with you as our little family gathered for supper with “A Prairie Home Companion” playing. Some subliminal part of those broadcasts must have lodged deeply in their developing brains and so you became a sliver in their pie charts too. Today they are fine men.
For me every day is thanksgiving and today I send back to you a thank you, thank you, thank you.
You’re a national treasure, and the world is so much better because you’re in it, sanding off the rough edges with your gracious humor, and encouraging invitations to embrace life, place, friends, music. When I might struggle, I go to Lake Woebegone and look for Bruno—or stop by the Chatterbox Cafe for coffee. Someday I might not find relief, someday—but so far I’ve never been disappointed! Blessings to you with your new heart valve—and best wishes!