Only very rarely over the past year have I stayed in one
place for more than a few days. The last
time I stopped moving for a full week was when I met my parents in Buenos
Aires. But I felt more than ready for a break
from campsites and cheap motels, and spending another week with my parents –
this time at their home in Prairie Village, Kansas – sounded perfect.
It was fantastic to catch up with Mom and Dad, my sister Ann
and her husband Dan, and my nieces Elizabeth and Kate. I ate extremely well – many unbeatable Mom-cooked
meals (and travel-themed cookies), a burger at Winstead’s with my dad, a second
trip to Winstead’s with my friend David, and a great lunch with Elizabeth.
I also had a chance to see Ed, my boss at the job I left to
take this trip. The fact that I really
enjoyed working with Ed was one of the things that made it difficult to choose
nomadic wandering over gainful employment, and he and I have kept in touch. Ed let me know that over Labor Day weekend he
and his family would be in Kansas City (where one of his sons had a baseball
tournament), so we arranged to meet at Gates for some old-school BBQ. It was a lot of fun to reconnect with Ed and meet
his wife Hope and their three sons.
At my parent’s house I spent hours watching the action outside
the kitchen window. Over the years my
mom’s careful management of a birdbath (heated in the winter, of course) and a
dizzying array of feeders has turned their back yard into the premiere hotspot
for suburban Prairie Village wildlife. At
any given time the view at the window might include chipmunks with stuffed
cheeks, dive-bombing hummingbirds, a family of squirrels, a male and female
cardinal, finches, rabbits, and belligerent blue jays. Occasionally a hawk will pass overhead and
cause the feeder crowd to scatter as quickly as teenagers who realize a cop has
just shown up at their house party.
Lately Mom had been throwing peanuts out the back door so
regularly that the squirrels and chipmunks have come to expect it. As I watched from the kitchen one morning a
particularly demanding squirrel literally flung itself against the window in a brash
attempt to trigger Peanut Time. “There’s
never a dull moment around here,” my dad likes to joke.
Before hitting the road again I caught a Royals game with
David. We headed over to the ballpark on
a beautiful Sunday afternoon, and, with the Cleveland Indians in town for a
meaningless series, we had no problem picking up last-minute tickets. It was my first visit to Kaufmann Stadium
since the renovations were completed in 2009, and I liked the new look.
What a fun and relaxing week – just what I needed. Thanks again Mom, Dad, Ann, Dan, Elizabeth, Kate,
David and Ed!



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