Snailville

“We lined up our racing snails at the starting gate like microcars spoiling for a fight.” —Los Angeles, California © 2023 Craig Dahlberg

Smallville is the fictional earthly home of Krypton-born Superman. Snailville, however, has nothing to do with the superhero. Instead, it is the earthly home of racing snails, the shelled gastropods that we children set about to compete against one another. Trembling from nerves, we lined up our racing snails at the starting gate like microcars spoiling for a fight.

A snail racetrack should be sloped at a steep angle to encourage the participants to travel roughly in a similar direction. On a good day, given no head wind, a minimum delay for retracting eyeball stalks, and the absence of menacing predators, a snail’s pace reaches three feet per hour. So the finish line should be chalked at a reasonable distance, that is to say, fewer than 12 inches from the starting gate.

To improve our racing odds, each of us kids owned several sizable snails, the sort that is large enough, if given unfortunate circumstances, to produce a loud crunch beneath a careless footstep in a garden, the resulting squishified mess to be laboriously peeled away and cleaned up with stick and leaves.

Ours were handsome snails. Scrubbed of habitat soil, their shells gleamed a lustrous brown and tan. Admittedly, there is little to differentiate one attractive snail from another. Lacking distinguishing elements such as eyebrows, body hair, facial expression, nose, or body tattoos, it can be difficult for an untrained eye to tell them apart. The dexterity of the single foot or the patterns on the shell may be the few indicators of snail identity. Though snails doubtless can tell one another apart, for our purposes it was useful to easily recognize and identify them.

Some might have casually nicknamed them “Goblin Beak,” or “Google Eyes.” We, however, never considered disrespecting them. Instead, because of our devotion for them and the limited space on each shell, we distinguished each racing snail shell with painstakingly painted numbers. Incidentally, a 2018 issue of the Journal of Molluscan Studies declared the metallic silver and gold ink of Pilot brand pens to be the preferred shell-marking identifier. This discovery arrived far too late for our 1958 snail competitions, so I simply painted number “6” upon my favorite snail in acrylic.

When we lined them up atop the bomb shelter, their shells seemed to serve as protective helmets as they spoiled for the start of the 10-inch long snail-paced sprint.

Did I say, “bomb shelter”? Merely 13 years after the end of World War II, a bomb shelter in Cologne, Germany, where we lived, provided the perfect hardened concrete snail race track. The cement slope with padlocked rusted steel door at one end was the entrance to the sepulcher-like shelter, which was buried deep underground. I speculated what bizarre secrets the long-shackled bomb shelter might hold. Might there be decaying wooden tables and chairs and mildewed bedding awaiting those fleeing a feared Allied bombing run? Perhaps there were stashes of hastily discarded Nazi paraphernalia or mold-growing furry children’s toys or faded, unposted love letters. Worse, could it be a ghastly tomb containing skeletal remains, victims of the tyrannical German Reich?

Our snails were mere blisters atop the concrete racetrack, the entrance to the bomb shelter. I would coax, “Go, Number 6!” but my exhortations did little to hasten the slow unraveling of foot from shell and erection of eyes perched like celery seeds atop miniature bendable celery stalks. I had long learned that eye-poking, entertaining as it was, only slowed a snail’s glacial forward pace.

We protected and secreted our prized snails in glass jars, thoughtfully converted into homey snail residences with random leaves, twigs, and shallow water to provide both nourishment and enough humidity to promote healthy gastropod hygiene. Still, we were not perfect snail handlers. We discovered that warm sunny days could prove lethal for snails in glass jars. The magnified sun rays could reduce our racing snail population to empty shells at the bottom of the jar, floating atop brownish tan ooze, liquified snail bodies reduced to soup.

There was always the danger of intruders. More than once, we discovered our best shell-numbered racing snails murdered, their glass jar residences smashed, along with their shells, amid tiny puddles of snail entrails. We would quickly discover that the neighborhood raider kids had struck.

The starting flag dropped, and the shell-helmeted racers commenced their competition atop the bomb shelter racetrack. I coaxed Number 6 onward, yelling into his earless head, hoping for a stiff forward-propelling thump upon his shell from a falling acorn. He tried hard not to disappoint, slime faithfully administered beneath his foot, which was aimed down the steeply sloped cement raceway. It took forbearance and an adherence to the rules to resist dragging a distracted and wandering snail racer half an inch forward; perched upon this bomb shelter, we learned patience—boatloads of patience.

Had Jesus had been born in Germany, and had this concrete bomb shelter been His temporary tomb before His escape from death on that history-bending day, I suspect He would have paused on his way past the rusted, padlocked door. Snailville would have caught his gaze on His way up and out of that black sepulcher—the racetrack, snail Number 6, and us, patiently waiting—and He, just the sort of guest we could only have hoped for.

Mind the Gap

Minding the Gap with Music © 2023 Craig Dahlberg

The street troubadour resurrected familiar songs of bygone days. He lobbed his songs to anyone who would stop long enough to lend an ear and hopefully send a tip his way. As I listened, his melodies floated across the gap of the long-abandoned trolly tracks to his audience, a solitary street person, his music bridging the gap between them.

The British have a delightful cautionary expression, “Mind the Gap!”  It reminds passengers to watch out for the space between commuter train doors and the station platform. Pay attention! Put your brain into it! Not doing do so could alter—or end—your life! So, pay attention to the space around you!

Our musician friend Minded this train track Gap. His music created a bridge across the space, the Gap between him and his vagabond neighbor.

There are many “Gaps to be Minded” that appear everywhere in each of our lives. How well do we manage to “Mind the Gap”?

Fishermen Mind the Gap between the stream banks. Investors Mind the Gap between deposits and withdrawals. Students Mind the Gap between their efforts and their grades.

Here’s a bit of a strange Gap: dogs and their owners. Dog lovers must attest, at least occasionally, to cradle their faithful canine friend’s muzzle in hand, stroke her fuzzy head, peer deeply, deeply into her eyes and wonder, “I love her. Does she think about me, love me? Are our brains synchronized in some sort of Gap-Bridging brain-bond? Is she starting to think like I think? To desire what I desire? Can the two of us bridge the gap between human and animal understanding? Yes! She “gets” me! But then, suddenly, she breaks free from my eye-stare and my head-scratching grasp, yielding to baser doggy instincts, licking herself in all of “those” places, and I realize that, well—all my imagined meditations of human-to-animal societal breakthrough were just that—imagined. Minding the Gap between human and animal will wait for a more practiced Gap-Minder.

There are other more significant reasons to “Mind the Gap.” Children try to figure their parents out. Parents try to figure their children out. Cross-generations have a difficult time of it! How to cross over those blasted Gaps!

What about the friends we value so highly—yet with whom we can easily get askew? Gaps can appear even in these closest of friendships. How do we Mind these Gaps?

And now, the risky one—Minding the Gap with a spouse. There appears to be an unmistakeable “Je ne sais quoi” difference between a man and a woman—a distinct difference in perception, evaluation, activity and verbal skills. These distinctive traits are delightful and invigorating at times, confusing and frustrating at other times. Early on, with infatuation in full bloom, this Gap is small, seemingly insignificant, but if “Unminded,” the Gap can grow with the years, until the Gap is challenging to cross over. Eventually, quarreling, disrespect and indifference can find a home in this Gap, leading to who-knows-what outcomes. Counselors of various stripes may be employed to help us Mind these Gaps and Mend these Gaps.

Minding the biggest Gap of all is, in fact, the one that we might try to dance around. It’s not a Gap like the distance to the moon, or to the sun, or to a distant galaxy. Even talking into my dog’s brain is a piece of cake—or a piece of doggie treat—in comparison to this Gap.

I refer to the Mankind/God Gap. This is an oil-and-water thing. Stir them as we might, this Mankind and God Gap never really mix. We’re not God. He’s not us. What to do?

There’s a weird way forward, and it’s a big mystery at that. To bridge this Gap, it turns out that Moses had a sort of chatbox to God, like a computer creates an interface, an accessibility. Moses’ chatbox was a means of entry into God’s thoughts and language. Imagine that. Able to hear directly from the Almighty.

Moses’ chatbox wasn’t virtual; it was real, happening in real time. The Moses chatbox thing worked like this. Moses would go into the Tabernacle, a place where he would tune in to, and listen to God. We are told that in that place, in that particular space, something spectacular happened: “Between the two cherubim—the place of atonement. The Lord spoke to him there.”1

A pretty amazing event. Truly amazing.

Sometimes when I’m at home alone, I’ll look down the driveway to be sure there’s really no one else around. Then I’ll enter the house and turn up my favorite music really, really loud, until the walls vibrate. I suppose that’s what it must have been like for Moses, Minding the Gap, listening, in that special place. In that space, the Voice between the cherubim must have really flapped the walls of that Tabernacle tent.

I would love to have heard it.

I wonder if that Voice could happen again. Perhaps turn down that volume a bit, and then a bit more, until the music fades away. And then, listen. Just listen and Mind the Gap.

1 Numbers 7:89

To the Dump

Uedorf, Germany, 1959 © 2022 Craig Dahlberg

Each week, a wagonload of garbage arrived at our house situated on the bank of the Rhine River. The wagon, replete with accompanying noxious odors, drew flies like a Disney theme park woos visitors. It was gross stuff, in this wagon. Just imagine your community’s weekly trash and rotting garbage all piled into one nasty, stinking, portable pile on parade—broken furniture, discarded clothing, drained motor oil, bits of string and nails and mangled wood, and a generous anointing of rotting food scraps, the passion of the buzzing flies.

An elderly woman in a tattered 1950’s-era patterned, heavily stained dress perched squarely inside the wagon, straddling the discarded garbage and trash. She wore leather boots and a threadbare baggy wool coat over a shabby sweater. A ragged scarf protected her head from the flies.

Her elderly husband’s mouth and cheeks animated his walrus mustache as he huffed deep breaths, stretching down to hug the next mound of trash to his chest. He heaved it up into the arms of his wife, awaiting the load from within the wagon. She searched for salvageable discards as he reached for the next armload of trash.

Meanwhile, their obedient horse, covered with burlap to guard it against the trash and the flies, awaited their command to move the wagon forward to the next house.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

During Christmas in Germany in the late 1950’s, we gifted our garbage man and his wife a small monetary offering, which they eagerly accepted, along with the other modest gifts of cookies, beer and schnapps from other neighbors. But that was small payback for the service they rendered us, unthanked, week upon week, offloading our stinking refuse into their garbage trailer.

At bedtime after I am asleep, their horse-drawn wagon still enters my dreams. I see that rickety-rickety garbage wagon. I hear the clomp-clomp of the hooves, and the gentle voice of the garbage man reining his horse to a stop at our driveway. He bends low to pick up and deposit my discards into the arms of his wife, atop the wagon. I see him glance at me as if to ask, “Is there any more?”

There’s always more. Scientists tell us that during our sleep state, our brains go through a cleaning cycle, during which the worn-out, damaged tissues in our brain are removed, like so much trash and garbage. The glymphatic system eliminates potentially toxic waste products from our brain, protecting us from disorders, including, very probably, Alzheimer’s Disease.

In my dream-state, this is the stuff being gathered for the garbage man. The exhausted brain cells that have done their job need to be replaced and refreshed. That’s not all. Along with those cells should go the day’s unredeemed endeavors—the worn and weary misguided thoughts, the ill-advised priorities and self-protecting reserve—they also deserve the dump.

Unfortunately, something in me wants to steel against that brain-cleansing process. Instead of yielding my wayward ways and misguided thoughts to the garbage dump, I want to hang on to the refuse of the day. Go ahead, garbage man, move on to the next house, to the next brain! That’s silly, of course. It’s even stupid. Why would I choose to hang onto trash? To hang on to distress? To anger? To being overlooked and ignored? To pride and self-importance?

And so lingers my ancient German garbage-master, peering into my brain, into my dream-state. “Do you vant to keep zat?” he inquires in his Prussian accent, suggesting he has more room on his wagon for anything I want to offload. “Do you vant to keep your broken hopes? Your aches? Your trouble? I can take zem!”

Oh, good grief. Don’t make me choose. I know what I want to do. But can I really let him take all that to the dump to be just—gone? That familiar trash is what I know the best; it has become part of me.

My patient trash man makes one final appeal; he awaits my decision. “Any more?” the mustache twitches. He reaches out to me one more time. I ponder whether there might indeed be more.

And then…I decide. It’s done.

He stoops down to gather my garbage one final time. He makes the day’s perfect pitch. His wife makes the catch.

Score!

The Ugly Smoothie Bus

Painted sky-blue with a bright red staircase at the far end, the ugly bus is too boxy, too oversized for proper use as a smoothie stand. Unlikely umbrellas sprouting out the top, like oversized inverted T.V. satellite dishes, add to the comic effect.

Instead, smoothie stands should be cute, accessible and inviting, not bulky, cold and intimidating. Shouldn’t they?

Recently, I witnessed another incongruous event—a television interview with famed Canadian actor, Donald Sutherland, who is now 82. He is the veteran of over 150 film roles, although he confesses to have never viewed many of those films.

I assumed Sutherland to be self-assured, a man of confidence. Instead, he was surprisingly uncertain and full of comic introspection.

He is especially put off by his own physical appearance. As a young boy, he asked his mother if he were good looking. Avoiding a direct response to his query, and after a long pause, she answered, “Your face has character, Donald.” He escaped to his room to hide.

“It’s not easy to know that you’re an ugly man,” he reflected in the interview.

To be beautiful, to be handsome seems to be what it’s all about. But common sense tells us that looks aren’t everything. Consider King Saul, the most handsome of men, but a royal disaster.

In fact, all of us have bits out of place. It’s those out-of-place, incongruent bits that make us who we are–the knobby nose, the unequal ears, the scrubby brows.

Many of us, like Donald Sutherland, have misgivings about ourselves. Like the oversized sky-blue smoothie bus with red staircase, we feel ugly as a giant smoothie stand.

Yet, it’s that same sky-blue and red paint and odd umbrellas that make the smoothie stand so memorable, unexpected and delightful; there’s an incongruent party going on.

Without those peculiar ears, chin and eyes, we’d miss Donald Sutherland. He just wouldn’t be the same.

And without our own slightly whacky, slightly unexpected but thoroughly engaging bits, neither would we.

Pick me! Pick me!

There is a sort of competition to be the one that is noticed. There are so many other folks that are similar but better, more readily chosen, more noticeable than ourselves. But it’s not really a competition. Attaining our own fulfillment means that each of us serves the true purpose for which we were uniquely created, to fill a particular niche. It’s a narrow niche. Among the masses, we are unnoticed. But within our own wheelhouse, we are each invaluable.

Outdoorsman

Grandson Levi adores the outdoors. Camping lets him run and run and run. Cookie in mouth, he gladly and relentlessly traverses the same short path, back and forth. When he expresses excitement, he squeals with joy. It’s a delightful sound. He smiles a mile wide without warning. He has a passion for anything that is round—circles and the letter “O”. He craves being near and in water, flapping his hands in delight. I admire him because he is who he is without pretense. Through him, I, without autism, will learn to become more transparent.

The Gift of Time

Today’s radio ad reminded me, “The most valuable gift we are given is: Time.”

Couldn’t agree more. I was careful to arrive at CVS just as they opened, getting my wife’s rush-rush prescription dropped off so that she could begin taking her new medications right on time. I’d be the hero.

“They’ll be ready in an hour and a half,” I was informed. Not the hoped-for 20 minutes.

Redeeming the time, I eventually located and dragged a cashier across the store (only three people working at CVS?) to the cosmetology department. Even with the sample my wife had armed me with, the eyeliner’s location eluded us. She begged off to tend the checkout counter. Like a prizefighter surviving the final round, I finally discovered my trophy eyeliner on the lowest, hidden shelf, at home amidst the dust bunnies.

Holding the eyeliner aloft, I scurried to my distant cashier buddy who had, in the meantime, unlocked the fragrance case for me. “Do you have the Charlie Blue?” I querried.

“No Charlie Blue. Sorry. Try Marshalls.”

I paid for my eyeliner and some blush. It was nearly noon. Surely the prescriptions were ready. I waited in the privacy line. No luck; 45 minutes wasted.

The salesperson at Marshalls gave me a pitiful look. “Haven’t carried Charlie Blue in five years. How about one of our other fine fragrances?”

“It’s for my wife,” I explained. “I’d better stick to it.”

“You’re a smart husband,” she offered.

Down the road, Kohls had a vast fragrance selection, but, “Oh, that’s been around a long time. We don’t carry that any more. How about a Vera Wang?’

Vera Wang got into my bag and into my car.

Three and one-half hours after placing my CVS prescriptions, I again waited in the lengthening privacy line. Again, CVS turned me away. Not ready yet.

Five post-prescription hours later, CVS texted me to return to retrieve my cache of drugs.

When I got home, I presented the two small but prized bottles of drugs to my wife, who didn’t quite lavish upon me the well-deserved praise I believed I had earned. Some acts of heroism are without reward.

The morning’s radio ad returned to me. “The most valuable gift we are given is: Time.”

I had had my sermon for the day.

Self-Perception

There are times when we think we earn far below our proper wage grade.

There are times when we think our good looks are undervalued.

There are times when we think we are God’s gift to the world.

Then we view the image in the mirror, and once again, all becomes real.

And we are reminded that those who love us give us more value than we could deserve.

Gargoyle Sleep

In mid-sleep, the thoughts come.

At 2:50 AM, the restless, sleep-grabbing thoughts are insoluble and germinate as quickly as the toxic toadstools growing in the gloom outside our window. We are reminded that we made a mistake. A big mistake. And at this time of night, any mistake will do. Make that plural. Mistakes.

We are beyond help. Solutions simply seem out of grasp. Our consciences are not feeling good right now. Guilt grips us. We screwed up.

The dizzying roller-coaster thoughts grow and intensify. There’s no way to get off.

The thoughts remain in the dark, haunting us like winged gargoyle carvings, and sleep escapes.

By 5 AM wakeup time, we are mentally, physically and spiritually exhausted. The experience threatens to stay with us.

Reason returns by daylight, or at least it’s supposed to. But sometimes kindred crazy thoughts plague us again the next night. And the next night, and they seem just as real.

But we don’t deserve this. Although it all seems so real, this is not ultimate reality.

Ultimately reality is best viewed looking down, rather than from the bottom up. Cynical thoughts lose out to what the Almighty thinks of a life lived in his presence:

You are loved and cherished.

You have nothing to fear.

There is nothing you can do wrong.*

(A quote from a neuroscientist who returned to life after visiting heaven, his brain having ceased all cognizant functioning.)

Every Thought Captive

The preacher suggested to “take every thought captive.” That is, errant thoughts have no place in our lives. Get rid of them.

Unfortunately, those unwelcome thoughts, over time, can become institutionalized as we spend years trying to uproot them.

So, what to do?

This business of taking every wayward, niggling thought captive is a tough nut to crack.

To capture an elephant or another large wild beast, one might dig a hidden pit covered with branches.

To capture a bee or wasp, one might place a pheromone-attracting substance in an inescapable test tube.

A fly just landed–

One of my best friends will have double knee replacement surgery in three days. In addition, he has a heart condition that compromises his situation. He is not himself since he is highly medicated for pain.

He was frustrated at his current condition. He explained, “You’re used to being who you are. All of a sudden, you’re not who you are.”

The fly had landed–it was a difficult thought that landed.

So–how to take this thought captive? Or is it errant at all?

And how to trap–and dispel–the next errant thought?