Earlier this week, I got a text message from Mr. Accordion.
Mr. Accordion and I were roommates during my tenure at a certain nonprofit that suffered from toxic management. It's funny though how life leads a person on a meandering path, and we end up gaining things from experiences that hurt us at the time. I have current clients who connected with me because of that job. I ended up at Stitch Fix because of that job. And I published my novel as a distraction when I lost that job. So many of the circumstances that led to the success of Parisian Phoenix Publishing launched from a very stressful and agonizing work environment, where I shared an office with Mr. Accordion.
Mr. Accordion retired, and he has spent the last four years at various part-time jobs and spending time with his family. I have only known him about five years, but in that time he has always had a joke to share, leads on good food, and a genuine care for other people.
And the other day he invited Eva-the-no-longer-a-teenager and I for pizza and mini-golf. And who am I to say no to pizza and mini-golf? The venue in question was Lucky Strokes mini golf and driving range and Isabella's Pizza.
They had a strange, vintage upholstered chair in the parking lot with a "free" sign and a school bus with a giant target painted on it in the back of the driving range, if I saw correctly at 175 yards.
The no-longer-a-teenager and I arrived and ordered a medium pizza with capicola and artichokes.
And after some conversation with Mr. Accordion, Eva and I hit the golf range. Now, I did set my Apple Watch to "golf" (and Omada gave me credit for "sports"). It took us 37 minutes to play all 18 holes. (In part because the people ahead of us where having some intense discussion about his marriage and how his wife wasn't taking the couples counseling seriously. At least, that's what Eva heard. How she heard that without her hearing aids, I don't know.
It looked to me like the worst first date ever. She looked disinterested with her back turned, sipping her soda. He would not shut up about himself or his wife. And every time you looked at them, he was standing over to the side with his putter over his shoulder and his ball on the other side of the green.
Immediately, Eva noticed two things:
- I don't even remotely line up the putter correctly.
- I was swarmed by small harmless bee creatures.
And then while following my little pink ball around I fell up an incline and ended up crawling around the artificial turf on my hands and knees. Speaking of my knees, my knees and legs refused enough to let me get the ball out of the hole at each green.
Instead of keeping traditional score, we kept score of who landed each hole first, and who won each hole. We ended up trying, 8 holes each with two ties. None of which would have been possible without Eva's golfing lessons. And her tendency to sometimes hit the ball so hard I feared she might have landed it on the next green.
And I think I had a hole in one, but now I don't remember.
On the way home we stopped at The Spot for ice cream. I haven't been to The Spot since my Stitch Fix days.
I had a dusty road sundae.
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