Last Call
At last, Tessie had made her dream come true. ‘Tessie Cal’s Bar’ had come a long way since the day that she had bought it. As she looked around at everything, she realized that it was just perfect, just the way she had dreamed. Everything from the signs hanging on the walls, to the records playing on the jukebox, it was all absolutely perfect. Through Tessie’s eyes everything was perfect, but through the customers’ eyes things looked a little different.
A few of the customers were talking to Ann about how they were worried about Tessie. It seemed that lately she was doing more than having just a few drinks. She was never on time to open the bar anymore, sometime she was two or three hours late. She would tell anyone that asked her any questions about her tardiness, “to just mind their own business.” She never seemed to want to work anymore. Ann was working six days a week while Mike, a customer, was working six nights a week. Tessie was just working a few hours in the morning, and usually on Sunday she would either open late or close early. There were Sundays that she wouldn’t open at all.
Ann was talking to Mike about the situation, and how Tessie always left plenty of money to work with in the register before, but now there were only a few singles and some change. There wasn’t a lot of whiskey or beer to work with. The only thing that there seemed to be plenty of was vodka, which just happened to be the brand that Tessie drank.
Since Danny walked out on her, though in her mind she threw him out, the guys she was going out with weren’t exactly her type. As a matter of fact, one guy she seemed to be with all of the time had just gotten out of jail for murder. Ann decided to try and talk to Tessie, even though she knew it would be talking to a brick wall. Still, Ann went the next morning and waited outside the bar at seven in the morning for Tessie to open. At twenty after Ann got tired of waiting and walked over to Tessie’s apartment to see if she was alright. Ann rang the bell, and when she got no answer, she found the door unlocked and walked in. Tessie wasn’t home, and as Ann stepped over garbage and vodka bottles she knew that Tessie was not in control of her drinking anymore.
Tessie had gone on binges before, but doctors, friends, and family had warned her that working in a bar was not the best place for her. Sometimes in the past she could go six months, or a year without a drink, but once she got started it was bad news. Even DUI Dee was telling Tessie to slow down with her drinking.
As Ann walked back to the bar, she decided that if the bar was still closed she would just go home and call later. She looked in the window of the bar, and knocked once more before noticing Tessie sleeping at the bar. She knocked for ten minutes before she awoke. She let Ann in, and began turning on all of the lights and cleaning up as if nothing had happened. A few customers came in, and when they told her she was late again she just laughed it off and poured them all a drink. Of course she poured one for herself, too.
“What happened here last night?” asked Tess. She had a worried look on her face. The regular customers knew better than to tell her the truth about what had happened, so they said, “Oh you were fine. You did nothing out of line.” This was getting more difficult for the customers to say every day though.
One beer Tom the jokester stopped in Tessie’s bar ordered a small glass of beer and said
“Here is what I got for you today”:
• A guy walks into a bar with a slab of asphalt under his arm and says, “A beer please, and one for the road.”
• A guy walks into a bar with a slab of asphalt under his arm and says, “A beer please, and one for the road.”
.A goldfish flops into a bar and looks at the bartender. The bartender asks, “What can I get you?” The goldfish says, “Water.”
• A guy walks into a bar and sits down next to a lady and a dog. The man asks, “Does your dog bite?” The lady answers, “Never!” The man reaches out to pet the dog, and the dog bites his hand. The man says, “I thought you said your dog doesn’t bite!” The woman replies, “He doesn’t. That’s not my dog.”
• A guy walks into a bar. A horse behind the bar serving drinks. The guy is just staring at the horse, when the horse says, “What are you staring at? Haven’t you ever seen a horse serving drinks before?” The guy says, “Honestly, no. I never thought the parrot would sell the place.”
• A polar bear, a giraffe and a penguin walk into a bar. The bartender says, “What is this, some kind of joke?”
• A guy walks into a bar in Cork, in Ireland, and asks the barman: “What’s the quickest way to get to Dublin?” “Are you walking or driving?” asks the barman. “Driving,” says a man. “That’s the quickest way,” says the barman.
• A man goes into a bar and says, “Give me a drink before the trouble starts.” And the bartender pours him a drink. He drinks it and says, “Give me another drink before the trouble starts.” He downs that one and says quotation mark, give me another drink before the trouble starts.” Finally, the bartender asks, “Just when is this trouble going to start?” The man says, “The trouble starts just as soon as I tell you that I don’t have any money.”
• A tourist goes into a bar where a dog is sitting in a chair playing poker. He asks, “Is that dog there really playing poker?” And the bartender says, “Yeah, but he’s not too smart. Whenever he has a good hand, he starts wagging his tail.”
• A guy goes into a bar, orders four shots of the most expensive 30-year-old single malt Scotch whisky and downs them one after the other. The bartender says, “You seem to be in a great hurry.” The guy says, “You would be too if you had what I have.” The bartender asks, “What have you got? “Fifty cents,” is the reply.
• A Northerner walks into a bar in the Deep South around Christmas time. A small nativity scene is behind the bar, and the guy says, “That’s a nice nativity scene. But how come the three wise men are all wearing firemen’s hats?” And the bartender says, “Well, it says right there in the Bible—the three wise men came from afar.”
• A man walked into a bar, sat down, and ordered a beer. As he sipped the beer, he heard a voice say, “Nice tie.” Looking around, he saw that the bar was empty except for him and the bartender. A few sips later, another voice said, “Beautiful shirt.” At this, the man calls the bartender over. “Say, I must be losing my mind,” he tells him. “I keep hearing these voices say nice things, and there is not a soul in here but us.” “It’s the peanuts,” explains the bartender, indicating a dish on the bar. “The peanuts?” “That’s right, the peanuts—they’re complementary.”
• A guy walks into a bar with a German shepherd dog. The bartender says, “Hey buddy, can’t you read that sign? It says no dogs allowed! Get that mutt out of here!” The man replies, “No, I can’t read the sign—I’m blind, and this is my Seeing Eye dog.” The bartender is embarrassed and gives the man a beer on the house. Later that day, the man tells his friend about it: “I told him I was blind, and I got a free beer!” The friend then takes his dog into the bar and sits down. The bartender says, “The sign says no dogs allowed! You’ll have to leave!” The friend says, “Sorry, I can’t see the sign because I’m blind, and this is my Seeing Eye dog.” The bartender replies, “Since when do they give out Chihuahuas as Seeing Eye dogs?” The man says, “They gave me a Chihuahua?”
• A man walks into a bar looking sad, and the bartender asks him, “What’s the matter?” The man says, “My wife and I had a fight, and she told me she wasn’t going to speak to me for a month. The month is up today.”
• This guy walks into a bar and orders a drink. He looks in his pocket and orders another drink, looks in his pocket and orders still another drink. His curiosity aroused, the bartender asks, “What are you doing? What’s in your pocket?” And the guy says, “It’s a picture of my wife. When she starts looking good to me, I know it’s time to go home.”
One beer Tom the jokester finished up his beer and said” I’m going on vacation and won’t be back for two weeks” and then walked out the door. Everyone shook their head in disbelief the way Tom had just rattled off all those jokes from memory. “Wonder if he’ll be able to do it at all his stops.” “What a nut.” said Ann
Tessie asked Ann to watch the bar for ten minutes while she went to the bank to get some change. This was Ann’s only day off, and Tessie promised to only be ten minutes. After an hour, Ann knew that Tessie was not coming back. She was so fed up she said to the customers, “LAST CALL!” Everyone looked shocked since it was only eleven in the morning, but Ann served everyone one last drink, turned out the lights, and hung the “Closed” sign on the door.
Ann took Bouncer home with her because it was getting to the point where if it weren’t for Ann the poor dog may not get water , food and be taken out on a regular basis.
Three days later Tessie came back and wondered why the bar was closed. She went in and opened up, all the while wondering where all of the customers were. She called Ann and wondered why Ann had told her she had quit. She wondered why Mike had quit. The answer was looking her right in the eye, it was the glass of vodka she had in her hand.
Tessie did the only thing she knew how; she called the liquor distributor and ordered ten cases of vodka. However, they informed her that her credit wasn’t any good. She hung up the phone, and as she looked at the wall beside her she noticed a number someone had written – it was the number to Alcoholics Anonymous.
She had gone there a few times before, but she had never really realized how badly she truly needed it. She called the number, and that night she went to a meeting. The bar went up for sale, and with the money from the sale Tessie eventually got a little music store. She is still going to meetings, and that music store is open on time every morning. She was shocked to see her old boyfriend Danny at an AA meeting. “What are you doing here? You don’t even drink?” “I’ve been going to AA meetings for a long time,” said Danny, “but now I am in reality that the pills and pot are just booze in disguise. I’ve been saving you a chair here at these AA meetings and am sure glad to see you walk in those doors. Can I take you out for a cup of coffee and piece of pie after this meeting? If you let me back in your life I will treat you like a queen 100 percent of the time.” Tessie smiled and said with a sigh, “You know I missed you and your big blue eyes, now that I’m not drinking and you’re not high, you know I like pie, so yes let’s fly. Now she is seeing the world through clear eyes and thinking about writing a book, Through The Eyes of A Musician.
When the new owners took over the business they found more of Tessie’s creative writings and tried to understand the meaning of them all - what do you think ?
While waiting
The reason why misunderstood
restricted and unrelated
At my request excluded, detained involuntary
unable to obtain information
Requiring moments, that seemed like hours
and there are no limits
Simple privileges, upon request
no longer entitled
This thought occurred, quite hard to understand,
while waiting.
Shadow
No matter how I try forgetting
still the shadow follows me.
In the distance I’m regretting
many things that use to be.
Trying to wish and make it vanish
doesn’t seem to work at all.
I know I’ve seen the shadow
but I can’t seem to recall.
Looking far beyond the silence
in a backward glance I see.
Is it just my own reflection
or is the shadow following me?
Dependence
The impossible attempt
to confront the situation
with the utterly unreasonable demands
truthfully unable to understand.
Eventually unable to hallucinate
while having the same problem
avoiding the issue
Completely dependent
and suddenly realizing it.
Reality
My eyes shed joyous tears
as I heard your voice once more
when you whispered you were near
I felt my whole heart soar
With misunderstanding and a little mistrust
I wondered, was it you?
in my eyes an illusion so sincerely touched
I knew not what to do
Looking at the morning rain
I see your teardrops fall
but they tell me that I am insane
and have no mind at all
Should it happen that when reach out
knowing it is you
Looking closely what it’s all about
an illusion that is true.
Great Honor
On occasion, the opportunity
for an individual, we acknowledge
who’s challenges have been created.
Brings together the experience
of recognition, reflecting back
It was a great honor,
and I was overwhelmed.
But at the time
perhaps it was my attitude
towards the situation.
One in a million
They say the chances
are worth the risk
at least that’s what we’re told..
To live in a world
that goes so fast
we’re lucky to grow old.
One in a million
can survive
at least that’s what they say.
to pay the price is hard to do
We must take a chance
each day.
Terror
Deep in the anguish
of the shadow.
I find the uncertainty
of the bewilderment
that is no longer
controllable.
Then it becomes terror.
To understand or reason
I see it in my eyes.
Looking beyond
the silence
then realizing
It was only the wind.
One day
I thought that I had found the key
to the answer locked inside of me.
The question was still torn in two
uncertain of what I should do?
The solution was there, but I had to think
for there are many parts to a missing link.
One at a time, together they fell
the links of the chain, then I could tell.
How could this just simply occur
forever and forever more?
Forever is a long, long time
and can’t be put in words of rhyme.
Yesterday is forgotten, tomorrow is unknown
it has been proven and has been shown.
The key to the answer is plains to see
The problem, solution, and answer are one in three.
Wasted
Qualified and intelligent
yet unable to cooperate.
Unwilling to try
creations left inside,
never revealed
wasted.
Wishing Well
I sat beside a wishing well
thinking about what I would tell.
I thought I’d make a wish to see
Would it come true, especially for me.
I wished that I could find a star
tho I might have to travel far.
If I could find the answer to
this question, that I ask of you.
I’d toss a penny from my hand
hoping you would understand.
An Old Image
Life’s too short for broken dreams
and silent rage can kill.
The timeless gift of life is mine
not idly standing still.
Dreams dwell in my heart and mind
a dissolving thought is hard to find.
With dignity and old image has returned
without a doubt the gift I have received
has made me part of this universe.
My Conclusion
One day I stood and looked
at all my shattered dreams
And in my heart I knew
it wasn’t like it seemed.
Once I had enchanting dreams
of the forest of tomorrow.
A promise I made to myself
that left me full of sorrow.
The silent fear that I once knew
is different from the rest.
And it is my conclusion
I must try to do my best
These faded broken dreams
weren’t always there,
and the tears of love I shed for you
just proves how much I cared.
My eyes look very closely now
at memories that have burned.
Those shattered, faded, broken dreams
no longer can return.
Silent Rage
Restless dreams
and silent fears
thru starry eyes
that know no tears
The roaring thunder
beneath the surface
Quite frequently
disappears and drifts
Once was brilliant
upon the stage
A song in a heart
now in silent rage
Unexpected and uncertain
suddenly a challenge emerges
The thunder roars and echoes
through out the universe
A wild eyed stare
Unaware
Keeps him from singing
It happened in a split second
Tornado
Destructive winds
suddenly for no apparent reason
terrorizing innocent people
who are in the way
this is disturbing
Unable to control
destroying independently
what took century’s to build
and the obsessive fear is
the tornado, will return
but for the moment
all is calm, all is bright