Showing posts with label Ligonier Farmer's Market. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ligonier Farmer's Market. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Quick! Gimme $65. I need a new pen!


The clandestine meeting had been set for a public place. Consummation would take place out in the open, but among indifferent strangers.

This tete-a-tete had wholesome origins. My attractions bloomed at the Ligonier Farmer’s Market in early summer in the season of the rising sap.

Of course, I couldn’t let my wife know. I suspected she’d be very upset.

Turns out I was right.

Because in spite of all my painstaking deceptions, guess who also happened to be there at the Barnes & Noble café. It was Val

I was busted. Exposed. Caught with my proverbial pants down. 

The sap had risen and the sap was I.

“It’s not what you think,” I feebly mumbled.

Oh, but it was. The evidence was spread out all over the table.

World’s smallest hooker?

No, more than a dozen or lovely little Duckys.

Pervert? More like a penvert.

The object of my secret desire was not a wayward woman, but a refined, eye-catching luxury pen handcrafted by Dave “Ducky” Owen.

Another long string of my consumer deprivation appears to be drawing to a close. Interest in the new Fred Rogers book is high, sales brisk. So for now I’m flush. Still deep in debt from years and years of bone-headed decisions, but feeling the warm winds of momentary prosperity on my face.

And what’s the first thing you do when you have money burning a hole in your pants?

Yep.  Shop for asbestos underwear!

Then you splurge a bit.

It’s indicative of my station that my idea of a splurge isn’t a Ferrari, a Rolex or first class tickets to some place exotic.

No, mine is the uppity cousin to the humble Bic, a writing instrument that goes for $117.25 — for 300 of ‘em.

But each of those penny pens fulfills the same mission as the ballyhooed Aurora Diamante Fountain Pen, the world’s most expensive writing instrument. The pen is festooned with 30 carats of genuine De Beer's diamonds on a solid platinum barrel.

Out of my league. But that doesn’t mean I can aspire to upgrades.

I became a nice pen guy last year when I was enjoying some success with the Palmer book. A stranger had bought 30 copies to give to friends and stood there and watched me sign.

“I hope I’m not being rude,” he said, “but a great writer like you should be using a great writing instrument,” he said as I blushed at the heady compliment. From his shirt pocket, he pulled out a Cross Century Classic he said cost $130.

But his appeal to my fancy vanity took seed. I vowed when I reached a certain threshold I’d shop the Cross website for classy pens still affordable to a classless guy like me.

And I didn’t tell Val.

Wrong, I know. Spouses all tend secrets in order to avoid needlessly roiling matrimonial seas. Live down and desperate so long any item that’s perceived as extravagance can inflame ire, especially if it’s attained on the sneak.

And, geez, it wasn’t like I was concealing a ruinous coke habit (give it time).

Cross, by the way, produces a “Liberty Unlimited” line made from melted-down metals that include steel from illegal guns confiscated by the police: “Its purchase helps protect and educate kids who are growing up with gun violence.” 

I wish I could buy 1,000 of ‘em.

Anyway, my heart kindled a spark when I saw Owen peddling his pens, made right up the street in Greensburg. They’re magnificent. Plus, there’s a strong appeal to supporting the local guy, an instinct I’ll revisit in a few paragraphs. So, I decided to buy one to commemorate the release of the new book.

And I got busted. 

The pens were all over the table, price tags plainly visible (mine was $65). I felt bad. I’d disappointed her. Again.

But I love that pen. It’s just beautiful, worthy of a great writer — or at least of a writer who’s been told he’s great.

Now, I want you to pay for it.

If you like the blog, I ask you check out the new PayPal widget on the sidebar. Supporting the blog — through donations or book purchases -- has never been easier.

That way I can say with belated honesty the pen was a gift from benevolent blog readers out to express their gratitude.

In this case, it’s the write thing to do.



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Monday, September 19, 2016

Soulful encounters while waiting for gyros


Saturday morning I had one of those moments so sweetly humane you later sit back and think, man, I just hope God was watching.

Even if He was not, a lot of people at the Ligonier Farmer’s Market were. I’d gone there jonesin’ for gyro.

So were about six other people. The long, slow-moving line had me feeling crabby and I began making petty judgements about those who were snaking ahead of me.

The old guy dawdled trying to retrieve the exact change. Surfer dude couldn’t make up his mind on his desired toppings. Worst of all, was the woman right in front of me.

About 60, I guess, she kept a big, four-foot gap between her and the guy in front of her meaning I was practically in the lap of the soap-selling hippy at the stand across the midway.

What kind of monster doesn’t comprehend basic line behavior?

Then just as I was about to begin a nasty Simon Cowell-esque critique of her hair — boom! — down she went, like she’d been drilled by a sniper.

 What did I do?

I in an instant became Florence Nightingale. I dropped to my knees, took her hand in one of mine and began stroking her hair with other to offer maximum comfort.

“Are you all right?”

Note: I didn’t even momentarily pause to consider whether I might have been providing perhaps live-saving care to a potential Trump voter.

I just saw a fellow human being in need and instantly began to render aid.

Her knee had buckled. The only real damage was done to her dignity.

“I’m not drunk,” she said. “I’m not high. Right now, I’m just embarrassed.”

"It's okay. No need to be embarrassed."

She lay there for about two minutes with me holding her hand and assuring her she it was all right.

Then — One! Two! Three! — I got her to her feet. She was still unsteady so we wrapped our arms around one another for another minute, long enough that I knew if someone from our church spied me there’d be a scandal.

And that was it. She got her gyro, thanked me once again and away she went.

I got my gyro and did the same.

As I walked away, I was surprised by claps on the back and smiles from people telling me I was a great guy.

Admit it: You’re jealous.

Who among us doesn’t crave more opportunities to do good? To help. To prove even if it’s just to ourselves that when the situation calls for it, we are decent human beings.

Oddly, it was the second consecutive time in one month when purchasing a gyro led to soulful encounters.

The other was last month when Josie and I were in Pittsburgh’s Strip District to chow and I, as I always, do required tasty gyro from the guy with Pittsburgh’s best mustache, the man who coincidentally makes the city’s best gyro.

The guy shaves lamb meat at a stand outside Labad’s, a Middle Eastern grocer at 1727 Penn Avenue.

He shaves a lot of meat so there’s plenty of time for cheerful conversation. He’s a very kind and friendly man.

I tell him my mustache wants to become his when it grows up.

He laughs.

We talk about what a beautiful day it is and in his thick accent, he says “in America, it’s always a beautiful day.”

I asked my exotic-sounding friend about his nation of origin.

“I’m from Syria,” he said.

Oh, my. I was crestfallen and launched into a bleeding heart sermon about how I pray hostilities cease and homeland justice prevails.

“Oh,” he said, “it’s no big deal.”

Huh?

“It’s almost over. Everything will be fine. You’ll see.”

I couldn’t believe it. I express more soulful concern when I learn there’s a cafeteria bully loose in the lunch line at my kid’s elementary school.

Did he still have family there?

“Sure, they’re fine.”

Was he really talking about Syria? 

He was. 

“It’s very pretty there. Do you know they get a lot of snow? Syria will be fine.”

I couldn’t believe my ears. 

On the one hand it’s encouraging to hear someone — anyone — say things in Syria will soon be swell.

On the other, I now in hindsight realize not every opportunity for us to uplift is going to involve someone who’s fallen down.

And I guess all I really know is this:

I’m suddenly craving gyro for lunch.



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