Home > Creative Writing > Memoirs
Created on: March 22, 2009
"We shut off our engine and the wind filled our sails. It was a beautiful clear night with a million stars. Cruise ships, glittering like diamond bracelets, passed us. Later, we picked up the lights from Great Stirrup Cay, ran inside and made our first Bahamas anchorage . . ."
This is how my Saturday began, reading e-mail from a friend, he and his wife, to spite me, sailing around the world. I met Tim Ramm a lifetime ago while enrolled at Seneca College's Commercial Diving School. After graduating, Tim traveled some, dove a bit, and eventually made a small fortune after resurrecting a business and selling it for significant profit. To make a long story short, I didn't . . . but back to the e-mail.
Tim and Leslie leave the Bahamas but soon encounter foul weather. "We slammed into a huge wave and the engine died. We couldn't go into a strange anchorage without auxiliary power, so we turned tail, the wind and a large sea blowing us home."
Leslie attempts to fix the engine while Tim mans the helm and barks orders over the wail of the storm to clean the filters and bleed the lines!' But rocked by the waves, Leslie drops a tiny screw into the bilge and the engine dies for good. Several hours later, nearing port, Tim braves the wind to take down the mainsail, tethered on while the waves crash around him. He fights with a tangled genoa that's become wrapped around the forestay, turns the ship at a dangerous angle toward the jagged rocks, and miraculously the sail billows out. They navigate the channel, moor the boat, and exhausted, fall into a deep sleep.
I finish the e-mail and look at my Daily Planner with fix the toilet' scrawled across today's date. I'd planned on calling a plumber but the tanking economy and Tim's high-seas adventure stirs a dangerous mix of testosterone and male pride.
"What's the plan?" asks my wife.
"Fix the toilet," I shrug, sailing into a storm of my own.
"No, you're not," she says. "Your back's out and you shouldn't be lifting. Besides," she adds, rubbing salt in the wound, "you don't know how to fix a toilet."
I stand up to argue but my back locks from sitting. I let out a yelp and in painful half-stance, try to convince her that I have to fix the toilet. "Tim's sailing a ship," I tell her. "A ship he practically built himself, through a storm! He's untangling genoas (whatever the hell they are) and bleeding lines (whatever the hell that means). I want to go on but her eyes have turned vague; she has no idea what I'm talking about.
He's navigating
Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:
Memoirs: Accepting being middle-aged
The adage that the numbers don't lie is so true. This is the year I made it to 50. You know the one I'm talking about? The
Just the words middle aged, use to make me feel old. When I turned thirty, my family put signs, up and down the highway.
by Vicki Phipps
Since I'm fifty, I suppose you could say I'm middle aged. Well, okay. So I'm actually fifty-one and will soon be fifty-two,
I sport graying temples and my hairline has backed up a couple of inches in the past fifteen years. I don't believe I'll
At forty four I guess I would be deemed as middle aged. While I was in denial all through my thirties because I felt like
View All Articles on: Memoirs: Accepting being middle-aged
Featured Partner
Sunshine Week is a nonpartisan, good-government effort led by the American Society of Newspaper Editors, but with a constituency that goes beyond print, broadcast and online news media to include students of all ages; federal, state and ...more