MY JOURNEY

MY JOURNEY
SOMETIMES YOU REALLY DO HAVE TO DO IT WRONG TO FINALLY GET IT RIGHT.

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Being Papa's Shadow
 
Toothless, slick headed, barrel chested, illiterate and wearing faded denim Camel overalls, these would not be the traits of a typical roll model. In the eyes of an only grandson, perfection comes in all shapes and sizes and so did Papa.
     John Bowie, born in the second month of 1900, his age always coincided with the year. All I had to do was omit those first two digits and like magic, his age materialized before my very eyes.
The year, 1959, me, a mere six year old, it sure is funny how certain memories stick in my brain. My first fond recollection of Papa had to be him taking me to his favorite dollar a day fishing spot. That man loved to fish!
I remember spending the night so we could be up at the break of dawn. After all, we had at least an hour drive on the back roads of the South Carolina country side at speeds toping forty five miles an hour, before arriving at our final destination.
The pine four room mill village house heated by a cast iron pot bellied stove smelled of smoke, but was cozy and comfy just the same. I remember they had an oil burning stove in the front room, what uppity city folks called a living room, but they only fired it up for very special occasions like Christmas or New Years. The room remained shut off the remainder of the time.
Granny and Papa slept on their Mahogany bed while I made mine on a make shift cot. Papa always slipped on his overalls before dawn, taking the metal pale to retrieve a load of coal and some extra kindling. I’d wake to him replenishing the stove and stoking the fire. Sometimes he would let me accompany him and carry the kindling, the coal bucket still too heavy for a scrawny six year old boy.
He had an old hickory stump in the backyard for splitting the kindling. Hickory when aged is almost impossible to split so it makes the perfect anvil for splitting wood with an ax. He used this same stump and ax to hack off the heads of hens from his little chicken yard for the main course for Sunday dinner. I left that chore to him.   
That Papa smell, always of smoke and some musty manly odor, comforted me when he gave me that morning hug. Granny would be busy in the kitchen making cathead biscuits and brown sopping gravy for breakfast. She would butter up extra biscuits and top them with melted cheese for us to partake of by the fishing hole. 
The Saturday morning would be crispy cold when we started but would soon warm up making a glorious day for fishing. We had one stop near the end of the back alley behind Papa’s house and that would be to pick up his fishing buddy, Mister Jim Creswell. He too would be wearing those trademark overalls. I would too if they had made them in my size.
In the cab of the truck, bookended by the two elders in denim, I listened as they swapped yarns of fishing, hunting and vegetable gardening. Soon we arrived at the Shoals Junction Fishing Ponds and after paying the three dollar fee, Papa and Mister Jim strategically picked out a prime spot.
Papa, equipped with a rod and reel, armed me with a cane fishing pole, sensing me too young and uncoordinated for the art of casting. The ten foot cane pole posed enough of a challenge for an undersized six year old. What else could I possibly need? It had an affixed line, a sinker, a cork and a hook. Add a red worm and I was fishing. 
Sometimes waiting for a fish bite is worse than watching paint dry. This was one of those mornings. While Papa and Mister Jim towed in fish after fish, my cork remained idle on the water’s surface. Soon I drifted into a boy’s la-la land bored with the aspect of landing the big one. I had never caught a fish before so I didn’t share the thrill of the hunt with my protégé’s.    
My little cat nap, short lived; I was awakened by the tug of something in the murky waters. My cork bobbed a couple of times then submerged with vengeance. Realizing I was rapidly being overpowered by what lied beneath, I yelled to Papa for help.
He just laughed, slapped his knee and told me I was on my own. Unable to keep the pole erect with the added weight of the whale on the other end, I quickly developed my own technique for landing my quarry. Walking backwards I began my version of tug and war dragging the pole and the line toward the bank. With as much exertion as a six year old can muster, I finally pulled my very first fish onto land.
I now stood face to whiskers with a five pound blue cat. It flopped and thrashed, mouth opening and closing making those peculiar fish lip motions wondering where the water had gone. You should have seen the pride on Papa’s face. I had just become a fisherman in his eyes. The black and white photographs later would depict my manly hood unable to hold the blue cat high enough to lift its tail off the ground.
Rewarding me, we ventured to the snack shack where he allowed me my pick from the treats that waited in the little one room tin building. I chose a Push-up, an orange sherbet captured in a cylindrical chamber mounted on a stick. The trick, remove the cap from the cylinder and push the ingredients toward your mouth with the wood plunging stick on the other end. An uncle had nick named me Puss-up because with two missing front teeth, it just didn’t quite come out right. 
Papa and I topped off our snack shack visit with a glass bottle of Coca Cola and pack of salted peanuts. An art, Papa had taught me to take a swig of Coke first then pour the packet of peanuts into the bottle. The salty and sweat mixture that tantalized the taste buds was indescribable. With each gulp, the peanuts shared the liquid nectar and crunching them was the nearest form of ecstasy for a young boy if I had known then the meaning of ecstasy. Today’s plastic bottles just don’t do it justice.
I had earned my right of passage that day, a fisherman among fishermen. If only I had had a pair of overalls, the circle would have been complete. I recounted my story until I ran out people who were interested.
Often when Papa and I ventured off for a day of fishing or hunting, he would leave Granny a note to explain our where-abouts. She still worked in the cotton mill and would arrive home from her shift in the afternoons before we returned from our excursion.
Neither Papa nor Granny could read or write which seemed strange to a grammar school scholar like me. Schooling during their day wasn’t required, working and making a living was. I was probably eight or nine years old when I started noticing these little notes they left for each other.
Actually, there were very few words. They communicated by drawing pictures. Papa would draw a clock with the time on the face to indicate when he would be home. If he was going fishing, he’d draw a fish. For hunting he would draw a shotgun.
Grocery list were a series of drawings of bread, a milk carton, a can of lard or eggs. I thought their ability to get their point across this way just way too funny but it worked. I now appreciate how they overcame their handicap.
Once, during Wednesday night prayer meeting services, the preacher told the congregation that they were going to go to Hell if they didn’t read their bibles. Papa spoke up, “Then Preacher, I reckon I’m heading for Hell because I can’t read.”
My parents both worked the second shift in the same cotton mill as did Granny. Self employed, when Papa wasn’t painting someone’s house or doing an odd job, I shadowed him and can say to this day, it was my honor to do so. He passed on in 1990; I taught you how do the math.
I was his only grandchild and he was the only Papa I ever knew. The life and times of Papa John live on forever in my heart and in my mind. A true southerner, larger than life, I miss trailing in his foot steps and being mesmerized by his story telling. I have many more stories I could share with you about the shadow maker but I’ll save those for another time.   


Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Here's a teaser, the opening for my novel, No Mulligan. Read it and tell me if it reeled you in.


“So tell me Chance, how does it feel to have just won your unprecedented ninth tournament of the year and forth consecutive,” asked sports reporter Cal Mitchell.

            “I’m disappointed in my putting. I’m pulling too many to the right,” replied Chance Roberts, 24 years old and already a mega millionaire on the tour.

            “Chance, you set a course record in your final round today and were the sole leader all four rounds, and you played bogey free for the entire tournament. Your nearest competitor trailed you by thirteen strokes. You must be pleased with your performance.”

            “I missed the fairways on three and seven today. I should have left the driver in the bag and opted for my hybrid instead,” he replied, glaring at his caddy, Scooter Mac Grubber, obviously holding him accountable for the poor club selection.

            “Hilton Head is next. How do you see your chances for a three-peat for this tournament in your young career?”

            “I’m excited to be heading home and plan to spend time with my family in Charleston. I’ve got some work to do before Thursday, so if you’ll please excuse me, Cal, my pilot is burning fuel, waiting my arrival.” Scooter eyed Cal, just shrugged and then followed Chance towards the locker room.

            Cal Mitchell pressed the pause button and sat in front of the monitor, starring at Chance Roberts in freeze frame. It had been only a month ago since that interview. Boy how things had changed in the young gun’s life. Talk about the shot heard around the world, the sport of golf had reached a new viewing audience, only rivaled by those obsessed with the O.J. Simpson debacle. Cal, while excited, he mournfully dreaded his assignment. He had followed young Chance’s career from college prodigy until now, and like everyone else, he had envisioned him taking the sport to new heights. Hell he already had; the ratings and sponsorships were out the roof since he arrived on the tour professionally at age eighteen.

Ratings would peak to an even higher plateau, but sponsorships could take a direct hit. This could drastically impact the gentleman’s game forever. Time would tell how the public viewed the unfolding saga, but Cal’s gut told him that the sport of golf would never be viewed the same again, and this time for all the wrong reasons. Right now, he hated his job, but if he didn’t do it, someone else would, so why not make the best of it he figured.

Every sport had its dark secrets, too many eventually unfolded before the very eyes of those cheering on their favorite teams or players. Baseball had its Black Sox scandal of years gone by, and the steroid controversies which had impacted almost every sports venue, had tarnished many a sports figure and their accomplishments. Cal wanted to yell ‘Say it ain’t so, Chance’, but the ever growing evidence couldn’t be swept under a rug. It seemed more twists and turns leapt out at the news media every passing hour; almost too fast and furious to digest.

The tabloids were making a fortune, as were every major network. Unfortunately bad news captivates the audience much better than those warm and fuzzy stories. There certainly wasn’t anything warm and fuzzy about this one. Cal sighed at the irony in that thought; envisioning Warm and Fuzzy captioned over a tabloid article. 

The phone rang. Answering it Cal remarked, “You’ve got to be kidding me? Right, I’ll head over there immediately.” Hanging up, he jotted down the caption for his next story. DNA evidence reportedly links Chance Roberts to the scene of the alleged crime. Besides reporting sports for the recently launched new cable show, Sport’s Facts, Myths or Rumors, he also posted golf stories daily on his Cal Knows Golf Blog. Right now he dreaded doing both.

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Upcoming event on Sunday, June 1 at Oceanside Village Community Center in Surfside Beach! Books to the Beat!! The Paul Grimshaw Band, Beach Author Network local authors & their books, dinner, music, show. 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm. Benefits Jason's House, which gives kids with cancer a week's vacation in Myrtle Beach with their families. Authors donating percentage of proceeds to this worthy cause & event tickets are only $10.00. Raffles, prizes, and fun!!! Call Pat David at 843-650-2244 for tickets. Bring the family, eat, be entertained, meet the authors, buy a new book & help Jason's House!

Join me and a slew of my fellow authors. Buy books from local authors for a worthy cause. You'll be fed, wined and dined all for the mere price of $10. Eat, drink, dance and buy signed copies from the local crop of authors, all for a good cause.

Thursday, March 27, 2014

author T. Allen Winn: I Don’t Do Strategy Let me state for the record t...

author T. Allen Winn: I Don’t Do Strategy 
Let me state for the record t...
: I Don’t Do Strategy   Let me state for the record that I totally understand the concept, golf is a game of strategy. It’s just not in...

I Don’t Do Strategy 

Let me state for the record that I totally understand the concept, golf is a game of strategy. It’s just not in my game plan. Whompers don’t do strategy or at least, don’t do strategy well. Calculating yardage, verifying the pin placement, selecting the appropriate club or using the best brand ball for your play is serious business to most golfers. Guess I don’t fit into that “most” category and don’t take the game that seriously.

My assessment, strategy contributes to a stressful round as does having higher expectations than what you know to be reasonable. I know my limitations plus I’m too laid back to let any game ruin my day or life. Those who play with me typically have a full appreciation of what they’ve signed up for within the first two or three holes.

Seriously strategic golfers should never invite me into their foursome. That’s why I don’t perform well in those captain’s choice, best ball type tournaments. I have no best ball and I certainly wouldn’t be a captain’s choice for partner; too much strategy for me. I receive a best ball invite because I can putt fairly well. Heck I’ll putt from thirty yards off the green when possible; Texas wedging it to the hole.

I find it comical when my playing partners agonize over their club selections determining if this shot requires their one hundred yard club or their one hundred twenty yard club. I don’t have clubs for ten or twenty yard increments.

I play old man golf using about four different clubs from my bag, more if you count my assortment of three wedges. Par fours and fives; driver off the tee, seven wood or number five hybrid from the fairway, then my bronze headed wedge one hundred thirty yards to ninety yards, 52° wedge between ninety yards and sixty yards, then 60° wedge for all others unless I’m using the putter aka Texas wedge. Par threes, choices are wedge, a nine wood or my five hybrid, unless driver is required. Stating my game plan already sounds too much like strategy for me.

Yardage, I check it only to determine if this is a wedge or wood shot. One of my buddies has one of those Sky Caddies glued to his hip so he can determine the exact distance to the pin. Knowing the distance doesn’t play into my game as much as direction does. My aim and direction doesn’t always agree. Knowing how far to hit it and actually hitting toward that yardage is what makes my game so challenging.  A hundred fifty yard second shot to the green might be a two hundred twenty five yard third shot for me from an adjacent fairway.

Ball selection is so over rated. Use a white one or yellow if you prefer. For the past three years living parallel to the green on a one hundred seventy yard Par three, I have become accustomed to collecting balls. I no longer buy balls. I just wait for them to fall from the sky then sort and egg crate them for later use. So far I’ve accumulated over three hundred with only one broken window. I dump a dozen in the bag when I get low. My buddies often ask when helping me look for my ball, “what were you hitting, how’d you have it marked?” My response, “I’m not sure what brand but it would have had somebody else’s initials on it.” I don’t lose as many balls now because what ever we find must be mine. Now that’s strategy.

Reading the breaks on a green, bet that Sky Caddie doesn’t do that for you? I’ve tried to be a little more patient and at least squat down behind the ball to look for a slope or something. For somebody who doesn’t stalk the hole from every angle for five minutes, I putt pretty well. My toughest vice is waiting my turn as I’m a quick draw both on the green and in the fairway. Slow play is the kiss of death for my game. If I have to wait, the mind wanders all over the place. If I did do strategy then I could probably occupy those long intervals.

It’s fun to watch someone plan their shot. “Should I draw the ball? Is this the place to use a fade? Hook it or slice it? Flop it or bump and run? Sometimes I picture a third base coach out in the fairway giving them the signs. I’d be taking off the bunt sign and having them swing for the fences.

Here’s my game in nut shell. I grab one of the clubs as mentioned earlier to match the scenario. I hit it. It goes somewhere. If it’s my tee shot, I’m ecstatic if it goes far. It doesn’t have to go straight. I address the ball and hit it again, and it goes somewhere else. If I’m lucky that somewhere else is toward the general direction of the green. If not, I’ll whomp it again from where ever it landed. I keep whomping it until I finish the hole or reach double par.

At the end of a hole I mark down my tally. At the end of the round I tally up the damages. If I’m around 100 or just below, I’m happy. If I ended the round with the same two balls I originally pocketed then I’m bragging about the round. If I finish with more balls than I started, I had a remarkable round, and probably had an opportunity to do some nature trails. So goes strategy.

Monday, March 3, 2014

author T. Allen Winn: Join me (T. Allen Winn) on Facebook and help me ch...

author T. Allen Winn: Join me (T. Allen Winn) on Facebook and help me ch...: Join me (T. Allen Winn) on Facebook and help me choose which book I publish next. It's really very simple. Look over the choices below ...

Join me (T. Allen Winn) on Facebook and help me choose which book I publish next. It's really very simple. Look over the choices below and pick the novel you'd like to see me publish. Go to my Facebook page, enter the word 'Contest' and then your choice (number 1 - 14) and I welcome your comments. Contest ends @ midnight March 17th. I'll tally the votes and then announce he winner on the 18th. Thank you for you assistance.


1) The Perfect Spook House (suspense thriller) – In 1969 Eleven Eleventh Graders from Abbeville High will forever be impacted by the events of that Halloween night. An old deserted house of the Cedar Springs Road holds secrets to their past, present and future.  Nineteen years later the adult versions are drawn to that house one more time, this time for answers. Sometimes the past is best left in the past. Digging up old bones can harm you. Driven or possessed, they must see this through and they might like what resides in Pandora’s Box.

2) Outside the Clique (suspense mystery) – Ricky Waddell returns to his home town, Calhoun Falls, for a class reunion, something he had no particular interest in doing. He hooks back up with his pals, the old clique, all of whom still live there.  The clique is not how he remembered them.  An outsider has a chance to once again be an insider but doing so will forever change his life. Recapturing your past comes with a price.

3) No Mulligan (suspense mystery) – The best golfer on the tour, Chance Roberts lives a life, one not viewed on television. Unfortunate circumstances uncover his dirty dark secrets, making him world famous for all the wrong reasons. One event leads to the next and he finds himself in a new game, clearing his name while fending off temptations.  There will be no mulligan.

4) Absent on Arrival (suspense horror) – A getaway in the Smokey Mountains at the secluded Big Blue Resort could be the perfect vacation or it could be the beginning of your worst nightmares. Welcome, we’ll leave the lights on for you just don’t play out in the real world. Ask Jay and Mira Myers, Bobby and Marge McAlister, Dean and Chrissie Waldrop if checking in is easier than checking out.  

5) Last Stand on the Grand Strand (suspense horror) - Chad Reynolds is cornered into a vacation of forced family fun along South Carolina’s Grand Strand. Salt life is in his blood but bonding with in-laws isn’t exactly what he had in mind. Tragedies on the open sea bring forth mysteries from the depths of the dark abyss, a time long ago forgotten, ones that Oceanographer Chad Reynolds and his father-in-law, Professor Frederic J. Bornfreund are determined to solve. Chad’s nemesis Roth Niederwerter has laid claim to capitalizing on the events plaguing the beach community and no one will stand in his way. Foe verses for verses foe...last stand for some  

6) Foot (suspense horror) – Indian lore becomes reality for a trapper turned wagon master when mountain man BN Carlson leads a handful of hopeful frontiersmen westward. Some aspiring to cash in on the gold rush, others leaving their past behind, the patrons of the small wagon train follow their dreams; their second mistake, trespassing into the northern woods, their first, trusting in their fellow man. The Indians honor and protect the Northern Woods. The S’cwene’y’ti defends their territory. No one knows this more than five unsuspecting mountain men seeking to strike it rich as loggers, and a small Indian rescue party attempting to impress their old chief. Get rich schemes in the northern woods bring death quicker than riches. Rescuers soon find themselves in need of rescue. Be warned. Stay away from the Northern Woods!

7) Another Foot, 2nd in Foot series (suspense horror) – In the shadow of Mount Saint Helens, in the 1980’s, two mysteries are about to be solved. Mattie Reynolds has found a journal of an ancestor from the 1850’s, and is determined to prove it fact or fiction. FBI agent Underhill is obsessed with solving one of the most baffling cases in history. Warm trails with take them to the Great Northern Woods. The S’cwene’y’ti still defend their territory, as does Elwood Speed Moore. Sometimes you just can’t win.

8) The Tenth Elemental (suspense horror) – Purchasing a summer home in Maggie Valley seemed the right thing to do. Doyle and Jill Vandergrift, son Travis, daughter Megan will encounter something magical on Jaybird McCracken’s old home place, something not mentioned in the amenities. Who would have thought a simple summer getaway could become the battleground for the world’s survival. Meet Salvatore Perrozi but you can call him Jimmy.   

9) Mack, follow-up to Dark Thirty (suspense thriller) – Just whatever happened to Mack? Follow the continued adventures of Dale Thomas Jackson and his nemesis, Mack Stevenson. Discover what happened to Debra Floyd, Ted Parker, the Shadow Men and the bullies. Overcoming one’s fears and phobias come with a price.

10) Buttermilk and Cornbread, Good Ole Fashioned Nostalgic Nonsense (memoir) – discover growing up in the fifties, sixties and seventies on so on, through my eyes.

11) Lou Who (suspense supernatural) – Lou Stetson has been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. What she doesn’t know is that there are far worse inflictions than diseases that steal the mind. Be warned, there are no miracles, only tragic endings.  Sometimes you must look within to defeat the one in the mirror.

12) The Lord’s Last Acres (suspense sc-fi) – Doc Watson’s holiday celebration takes on an ugly twist when the greatest fireworks show around isn’t what it seems. With a hundred of his best friends partaking in his annual New Year’s celebration, the world as they know it becomes larger than they could have ever imagined. The Watson farm could just be the Lord’s last acres, man’s last hope as the meek might soon inherit the earth.

13) Digging Sea Turtles (children’s) – Join Bobby Duncan as he discovers the wonderful world or Loggerhead Sea Turtles. See the world of beach life through the eyes of a five year old as Bobby saves Scoot from certain perils and begins a journey that will span a lifetime.  

14) The mystery pick (what’s behind door number three?)