Smiles held in the heart

Smiles held in the heart
Smiles held in the heart

Thursday, December 25, 2014



Lets Stay Together


We met April 5, 1972 at the NCO ( Non Commissioned Officers)  club at Ft. Belvoir, VA.
Jimmy and his brother Jerry were there.  Two guys from Midland City, AL
all the way up there.  Jerry was in the AL National Guard on his annual reserve duty..  Jimmy was on temporary duty to Patch River, MD.   Brothers meeting and having some drinks and enjoying the live music.  Talking just a few tables away.

I went to the club that night reluctantly.  My brother, George and his first wife Pat were staying at my parents house while their town home was being built
in Fredericksburg, VA.  They insisted that I go out, but I was busy.  I needed to study for a nursing exam on Monday.  They would keep pestering me to go and finally I said yes.  I changed into a cute outfit I had made not long before.  The styles of the seventies were fun.  Bell  bottom pants and a tunic top in navy blue with a geometric pattern.  I had long hair to the middle of my back and I kept it straight that night.  Gold hoop earrings a little lip gloss and eye make up.

I really didn't want to go and be a third wheel.  It made me uncomfortable to go to a club.  I was 18 and although I had gone out a little to Georgetown with some friends, I really didn't care for it that much..
My friends around home were few.  We had moved back to VA from Stuttgart, Germany where dad was last stationed when he retired.  It was in August and I went right into my senior year at Edison High School.
I remembered a few of the kids from earlier elementary years but never felt like I fit into the High school scene there.
All my good friends I had met and  left in Stuttgart.  I was a varsity cheerleader there from 9th  - 11th grade.  Football, basketball and wrestling games.  Classes, notes, lockers, bus rides, ski trips, gummi bears, German beer!    I even dated a guy named Craig that was from Alexandria, VA and had lived on our street when we were little kids!  His dad was Army, too.  Small world to meet again that far away.  I dated some other great guys  like Stan, John and Charles.  Life was fun but then we moved back to the States like all military brats do at some time in their parents career path and started all over again.

After graduation in 1971, at age 17, I enrolled that fall at NOVA and was accepted into their nursing program.  It was an intensive program that would have a full load of classes 15-18 hrs a quarter and go a continuous 24 months.  When completed you were able to take the State Board exam to become a Registered Nurse.
I had enjoyed being a candy striper teen volunteer in Germany at the Army hospital.  I worked in the OR area and learned how to pack the various surgical trays that were then sent to the autoclave for sterilization.  I delivered the OR schedule to the various departments and even got to watch a surgery.  It impressed me to watch them work and I suppose nursing was what I would do one day.

Jimmy went to Navy boot camp in Sept of 69 and finished training in December.  He was stationed at NAS Glynco, GA.  There he was a jet engine mechanic for four years.  That was right up his alley as he loved anything fast like jets and cars!
Growing up in AL in the 60's had to have been a young boys dream.  All the great muscle cars of the era were hitting the streets for racing each other.
Who had the best bad ass car?  Jimmy of course!  He loved his Chevelle Super Sport painted lemonwood yellow.  Which for those who do not know, is a beautiful creamy pale yellow.  It had an all black interior and a large block V-8 Chevy engine.
He knew every part of that  car and many others.  Stats on engine performance, correct accessories, exact facts like he had memorized the  manual for each model.
He knew all about jets, too and naval ships.  I thought often as he would recite,
"hey, there goes a 66 Shelby Mustang or a F-15", he was the smartest guy I ever knew!

He was also known to have a luckiness about him that never ceased to amaze everyone.  He would get into predicaments growing up and even later in life and come out unscathed.  Lucky.

In high school I did not know him.  I was 18 and he was 22 when we met that night.  
I remember being asked to dance.  It was a song I had not heard before.
Let's Stay Together by Al Green.  The band playing that night was great, in my mind it seemed to be the perfect song at the perfect moment.  God, was he cute!  I'm thinking to myself, wow!  So we danced some more slow songs.  
He was a terrible fast dancer, so I guess that worked out in both our favors as it felt great to be held close and moving slow.   I did not know him, but as the evening went on and we talked about ourselves and with Jerry, George and Pat, it was as though I had known him a long time.  

When it was time to leave, Jimmy asked if he could drive me home.  I told him since I had come  with George he would have to ask him.  It was agreed that it would be ok but, only if we followed them back to the house.
So, we followed them for a little while.  We got to the shopping center and he says, "I'm hungry!"  I tell him to take a shortcut though he parking lot.  Bam, we hit a pot hole.  Some cuss words were said, then he said, "sorry, you probably don't cuss!"  I said " oh, yes I do when the moment is right!"  I guess he liked that answer.  I scored a point with him just on the merit of a slipped cuss word!  Neither of us used bad language very often, we really tried hard not to and especially not to each other.  I can honestly say that in the whole time we were together we had very few arguments.  

Now the wheel is out of alignment and he still has to get me back to the house and then back up to Maryland.
Whomp, whomp , whomp is the sound it makes as we are going slow.  Trying not to make matters worse.  When we get to my house, the lights are out.  We sat in the car maybe another hour.  I still remember how his lips felt so soft.  I was
mush.  He walked me to the door.  Another kiss, this one much better! Whoa!
" Can we go out next Saturday?", he asks.  "Yes" I answer.  I wrote my phone number on his hand with my pen.

Inside, everyone was asleep so I went on to bed thinking, he probably won't  call, there will be something that comes up and  we will never see each other again.  God, was he cute!

On Wednesday night he calls.  I tried not to pick up on the first ring, but, I wanted the phone to ring on Monday or Tuesday!  He had to take his car in for the wheel realignment.  He would pick me up on Friday night about 7 pm.

Friday evening about 5:00 he calls.  I'm thinking, ok, here we go, he's going to tell me the date is off because of car or some other excuse.
No, I'm wrong.  He says please tell your parents I have to pick you up only wearing a tee shirt with my slacks.  Apparently he left his other shirt in his buddy's car when he dropped him off to get his car from the shop.  I didn't see that as a problem so I told mom about it.  Now, remember this is 1972 and there were still a lot of dating rules.  One I  knew was any boy was going to have to be clean cut!  No long hair, ironed tucked in shirt and put together.
Well, Jimmy sure was clean cut but the shirt snafu scored nothing with dad.  Dad was nice but Jeanine told me later he was really pissed off he came to meet them in a tee shirt!  We did stop at Sears and bought a new shirt!

We went downtown into Georgetown and went to a club called The Cellar Door.  Kris Kristopherson  was playing.  Good soft music to listen to.  No dancing.  Just talking, talking,  talking.  He told me about his family and his little home town Midland City, Alabama.  I loved his southern accent and he laughed at my lack of one.  " You'll  laugh if I tell you my middle name."  " No I won't", I say.  "It's Roscoe.."  I had never heard that name before and although it was different, it fit him.  I did not laugh.  I didn't dare ruin anything now.  Jimmy ( not James) Roscoe Windham.
I had to be home by 1:00 am.    It was a great night. But I got home at 1:30am.

The next weekend we made plans to return to the NCO club..  When he came to the door, I wasn't allowed to go because I had arrived home late on the last date!  I did not have a phone number to call him and he was busy all week with work so had not called.
Living at home  sucked!  He didn't care when I told him we had to stay home.
He came in and we spent the evening watching some tv, talking and sitting out on the porch.  Sometimes the simple times are the best.  You can really be yourself.  

So, this went on for  several weeks and one evening he calls and says, "I need to tell you something."  " Tell me", I say.  "No, I need to tell you in person", he said.  " You're married, aren't you?"  "No!"  "I'll explain when I get there".  It is a Tuesday night, he gets there and we go out to the car to talk.  " Remember when I told you I was stationed in Maryland?"  "We'll that is only partly true."
"I'm there only temporarily and stationed permanently at NAS Glynco, Ga.  I have to leave in two weeks."
I sat there and listened to his  confession.  I didn't know what to say other than we would work it out somehow if he really wanted to stay together.  There it was again, that song we liked  "Lets Stay Together."
That weekend we went to Rehobeth Beach and got a room!  Ok, I was in love with him!  He acted in love with me.  We'll have to see if we could do this long distance.

When he had to leave, I wondered if he really meant what he had told  me.
That I was different than any other girl.  He would be back in a month.
He called during the weeks in between on a Sunday evening.
Jerry returned to Alabama and told his parents  and brother about me and said, " Jimmy is going to marry that girl, Cathy, next year!"

Jimmy came back, month after month.  The drive was about 650 miles each way.  He would leave after work on Friday and return on Sunday leaving no later than 11:00 am.  Later he told me he barely ate so he could save money for gas and a hotel room for us!  

I plugged along with nursing school and he was busy with work, too.  Time passed slowly when apart and fast when together.  It was fun just being together.

We did a lot of simple and cheap things while dating.   He was allowed to stay when he visited in the downstairs bedroom and of course I snuck down there when I knew the coast was clear!  We went out to the park in Springfield or into Old Town Alexandria or the NCO Club.
We'd get a room, drink some cheap wine and have a great time.
We were in love,  at least I knew I was!

I went to Alabama that summer during our break at school.  My, God,  I had never eaten such good home cooking in all my life!  My mom was a good cook but it sure wasn't southern comfort food like his mom, Olga and granny, Daisy cooked!  Piles of buttermilk biscuits, a roast, potatoes and  carrots, butter beans, fried okra, fresh squash, chicken and dumplings, sliced bright red tomatoes from the garden.
When they would ask what I thought of something  I'd say, "well it's different",
if it was something I didn't like.  Most of the time it was, "delicious!"

That Christmas of 72 Jimmy arrived later than usual.  He knocked on my window outside the front door to wake me up.  He came in and sat on the old couch my parents had forever.  He acted like he was going to take his jacket off but instead got down on one knee, reached into his pocket and pulled out a diamond ring and said, " Will you marry me?"
"Yes",  is all I could get out of my mouth before he about crushed me on the couch!  My parents either had the sense of mind to stay put or were out cold.
We laid on the couch a long time just holding each other, kissing and making promises we both intended to keep.
We set the date for June 16, 1973.  Just six months away!  I was graduating from Nursing School the weekend prior.  As a coincidence, Jerry and Gayle's anniversary was the same date but 6 yrs prior.

The diamond was small but very pretty.  It had been his mother's first diamond and he had it set and then she mailed to to him inside a box that also had a pound cake.  She had wrapped  the ring box in tin foil and put it in the hole in the center of the cake.   Pretty smart.

All girls dream of marrying.  I didn't really think of it till I met Jimmy.  
I bought a Brides magazine and started looking for a dress I liked.  I knew my mom would sew one just as beautiful as those in the book.  She was a master seamstress.  I picked a full skirt that had a shimmering organza  overlay skirt.  The bodice was heavy Austrian lace and a satin sash at the waist.  I then sewed individual Austrian  lace flowers on the short train.  Mom made the head piece out of the lace and the edge of my neckline on the dress had  pearl trim.
It was beautiful.

The bridesmaid and Maid of Honor dresses were pink and yellow floral with a little cape sleeve effect and had a high waistline. 
My sister, Jeanine was Maid of Honor and Jo Yount was my bridesmaid.  Jerry was Best Man.  Dan Myers and Dave Secrest were the groomsmen.

The Windham family drove from Alabama for the ceremony.  All except Jimmy's dad who said he had to stay home because one of his sows was going into labor.  " WHAT? " I never heard of such a stupid excuse in all my life!
Incredible!  But as years raced on, I found this was not unusual behavior for them.  Drive for hours, visit a few hrs and drive home!  Really! Are you kidding me?

We had the ceremony at the St. Lawrence Catholic Church.  I had to attend a month of premarital classes but Jimmy met with the base Chaplain in GA, was given a little pamphlet, told to read it and got signed off.  There's that luck again!

We had our reception at home.  It was a small house but we had lots of neighbors and friends over.  It wasn't overwhelming and seemed to fit perfectly with our lifestyle and the Windham family, too.  We had a great time.  

On our way out of town, we were about two hours south on I95 I asked if he had put that grocery sack that had all my shoes into the car along with my suitcase.
"Yes ", to suitcase, "no" to paper bag.  I only had the shoes on my feet.  They were heels and we we were on our way to Panama City Beach , Fl for a week.
I just got married and I'm already almost barefoot and heading south! 
 I felt panicked but he said we would stop somewhere and  buy
 some more shoes.
Now you would think I would have made that determination on my own, but my folks were cheap. I didn't have any money of my own.  So, the thought of just going nonchalantly and buying a new pair of shoes was out of my league!

The beach was beautiful.  The sand was as white and  fine as sugar crystals.  The water was a clear pale green and blue.  There was an area Jimmy called the Miracle Strip.  He used to drive down to the beach sometimes with some guys to drink beer and look at girls along the Miracle Strip when they were teens.
The room was a normal room but right on the ocean.  I loved my guy and my first week of marriage was bliss.  

We rented a small 1 bedroom 1 bath trailer in Brunswick, Ga.  It could fit in the bedroom and bathroom I have now!  Jimmy worked in the daytime and extra at night at the fuel depot driving the trucks that refuel all the jets.  I studied for my state board exam.  Right after July 4th I flew up to Virginia, took the two day exam and flew home to wait on the results.  Back then you had to wait 3 months to know if you had passed or not.

In the meantime we drove home to Midland City to visit family.  One day a friend of his
Randy and his wife Sammie, Jimmy and I went out to Dowling's farm.  By the way, that is pronounced "Da Lin!"  We found some stray puppies and took them home.
We fed the pup and tried to train him and walk him.  He was the dumbest dog on earth!
I took him for deworming and shots.  He threw up in the car on a hot August day and with the constant stink in the air from the paper mill in Brunswick, the sulphur water from the hose and the puke, I got sick, too!  
I remember crying that night.  Jimmy wanted to know what was the matter as he hated crying especially since it was me.  I told him about the incident with the dog, the stress of waiting to hear on the exam, feeling lonely and depressed with no real friends, especially girlfriends.  All girls need that!  He just held me and said it would get better.  We were going to go to Alabama when he got out of the Navy in September.  He would be home more and we would get a better place to live.  

We had been saving our spare change for ages and one day I came home with a big Snoopy
piggy bank for us to collect it in.  It was pretty heavy so counting it out one rainy day we had several hundred dollars saved.  We bought our first color tv and a small radio, too!
It helped me during the day and evenings when Jimmy was working.
For years we continued to save our change at the end of every day.  

I found out that I had passed the board exam and was granted a license to practice in AL.
On Sept 5, 1973 at the age of 19 yrs I got a job at General Hospital  in Dothan, Al.
My pay was 3.25/hr.  Salaries were much lower in AL than anywhere.  Besides I was inexperienced.  Jimmy and I didn't care.  We felt rich!

I worked at night.  Jimmy worked with his family's landscaping business in the day and
returned to college in the evening on the GI Bill to get his BS degree in Criminal Justice.
We did that for several years and had only two Friday's  off together out of a six wk schedule.  In the meantime, our daughter Lauren Catherine Windham arrived on
May 31. 1975.  We couldn't be happier and more in love than ever with our new baby girl.

Jimmy was a fool over her!  There is nothing he wouldn't do to help care for her. Always changing her, feeding,  playing, bragging.  He was so proud to be a daddy!

The economy was tanking.  Gas prices were through the roof and we had just bought a gas guzzler!  I hated that car and was glad to get rid of it and get a VW bug.  It was yellow and we drove it all over the place.  He drove it more because traveling to school in Troy and back was a journey.  

One of my most favorite memories about that car was going to the beach with some friends Michael and Brenda.  On the way we cranked up the radio and Elton John was singing "Bennie and the Jets!"  To this day when I hear that song I think of the fun we had
in Panama City getting sunburned.

Jimmy got  his degree and attended the Dothan Police Academy.  He finished his training and started work.  They did not compensate for him having his degree in Criminal Justice.  He told me he could care less and it would come in handy later down the road.

He worked evenings and I worked at night.  We had bought a new trailer that we kept on his parents property at first then had it moved down the street across from his brother Jerry's house.  It was a nice wooded lot with cheap rent.  Much better.

Lauren was growing up and I had a friend who babysat her named  Deborah Woodham.
Her husband Roy was also a police officer.  When Deborah couldn't babysit anymore because she was having a baby, we got a sweet couple from her church who's daughter
Denise helped take care of Lauren.  They really loved and spoiled her.

One afternoon when I woke up, Jimmy told he he had gone downtown to speak  with the Navy recruiter.  I guess he had been going there for awhile because he sounded so serious and had all his talking points ready.  I asked him if he wanted to go back in the Navy.
He said, "Only if you do."  I couldn't believe my ears.  "Yes, I do!"  
Coming from a military household it felt secure to me.  The pay and rank would be the same
as when he left and we could move on in life and make a better living for us.
He talked about his long term plan of going back as enlisted then applying for
Officers Training once in so he could be a Naval Officer.  I was so proud of him
and knew that as determined as he was he would make it happen.
It was the best decision besides getting married and having a child we could have ever made.

We moved to Millington, Tennessee for a training school then to Deland, Fl.  and very close to Daytona Beach. We loved Florida at first sight.  It was close enough that we could still drive home to AL to see the family.  I was working he was working and Lauren had a great baby sitter, too.  We were good.  
Jimmy applied for AOCS (Aviation Officers Candidate School) in Pensacola, Fl.
If you have seen the movie An Officer And A Gentleman, he was just like that.
He asked my father to commission him.  Only another decorated high ranking officer can do that duty.  My father was so proud of Jimmy.  He of course said he would and flew to Pensacola for the ceremony.  Mike, Jimmy's brother was also in the Navy as a Corpsman in Naples, Italy.  Jimmy asked him to be there to give him his first salute as an officer.  
Mike took leave and was there for his brother.  I have the most touching black and white
photograph of my father Col. Walter J. Hewitt shaking Ensign Jimmy R. Windham's
hand and Mike.  It is priceless. 

But, along the course of Jimmy's flight training there was a glitch.  He was too old (28 1/2) to be a pilot.  He could be a NFO ( Naval Flight Officer) instead.  He took it and started rigorous training to learn navigation for the pilots..  Only three weeks before graduation there was a grueling exercise in which they had to remain awake 
for about 36 or so hours and he had to plot the route for their final course assigned.
On the day he went to turn in his charts he saw that there was a minor error.  There was no time to correct it as he was next to present.  
I came home and found him crying in the living room.
I sat down on the floor and put my head in his lap and cried with him.  He never cried again like that that I know of.
He told me what had happened and although he got a pass on the assignment, it impacted him that in real time if that error had been made it could have meant someone would have crashed or been killed.
He decided to DOR ( Drop on Request).
My God, he had worked so hard.  At the time, there was another NFO who had DOR'd and they were not going to release him from the Navy.  He took the matter to court and won the case.  But the process took a whole year to resolve and in the meantime Jimmy had to stay in, too.  He wanted to anyway but it just wouldn't be in aviation.
I was pregnant again and due in August of 1978.  Wendy Jeanine Windham completed our perfect little family.  He doted on all his girls.  I was glad he would be staying in and staying for the time being in Pensacola area and close to home to visit.
He was assigned during that year to the JAG office.  That is the Judge Advocate General office.  With his degree in criminal justice he was a good fit over there but he was glad  to finally be assigned to go to Surface Warfare School.  Afterwards he was assigned to duty on the USS Luce in Jacksonville, Fl.  
Jimmy knew he had to make up for lost time.  As an enlisted man his four years counted toward his retirement but for rank advancement you needed sea duty.
He had none.  He had been in Glynco, GA his entire enlistment.
One ship after another. Five ships in a row over a ten year period of time he chose sea duty.  He was aboard the USS Luce, USS Edward McDonald,  Uss Starke, USS Ainesworth and USS  Platte.  He climbed the ranks of Ensign, Lieutenant,
and Lieutenant Commander.  By the time he retired we had lived in
Jacksonville, Fl, Newport, RI, Norfolk, Va and he had been stationed in San Diego, CA, Seattle, WA the Mediterranean and Persian Gulf.
There were some land locked assignment time, too, but it was mostly spent at sea.  He had caught up with his peer group who at the time of their enlistments were just 21 or 22 yrs old compaired to him being almost 29.

I bought a waterbed once as a surprise back in the 80's when they were so popular.  One of the limited motion ones.  He wasn't very happy about that having had to strap himself down at times aboard the ship in rough seas.
He was a good sport though and put up with the bed as long as I was in it!

Jimmy enjoyed his girls.  He would throw them up in the air in the pool.
He built them a gym out in our back yard to practice their gymnastics. It was complete with a balance beam, horizontal bar and mini trampoline.  They
loved it and him even more.

Jimmy retired from the Navy with twenty years of service and we built a house in St Augustine, FL.  
Over the years, we had taken Sunday afternoon drives wherever we were living.  We would stop at new housing developments and  look at the beautiful model homes.  I would get ideas and he would have ideas.  We saw a beautiful home in Virginia.  We loved the floor plan.  It was a two story farm house and had a wrap around porch.
I took some pictures so we wouldn't forget the features we like the most.

Before moving away from Jacksonville in 1987 to Norfolk, Virginia we were on one of those drives heading south to St. Augustine along US1.  It wasn't developed at all.  We saw a billboard advertising a new development called Quail Ridge Farms.  I jotted down the number and we stopped at a gas station and called about more information.  The realtor met us and took us for a drive around the vast wooded acreage behind Nease High School.  We loved it and could afford to buy a three acre lot.  By the time we left Virginia, we had paid off the lot and had our house plans drawn up to build that beautiful brick home with the wrap around porch on our property.
It was beautiful.  We did not have everything upscale but would work on that as the years went by.
Lauren was a senior and Wendy a freshman at Nease when we moved in August of 1992.  Jimmy stayed in Norfolk, Va until he retired Jan 1, 1993.  Yeah, twenty years!

Times were tight for us there.  Jimmy couldn't get hired in law enforcement because of a hiring freeze.  He put himself through the St. John's Police academy and never could get hired on full time.  He bought a tractor and blade and did landscaping work on his own for developers.  He made our home beautiful by doing all the work himself.   The sprinkler system, laying all the sod and digging out a beautiful pond with fountain out back.  We had a pool table upstairs in the game room for the girls and their friends to come over and hang out.  We made some nice friends in the neighborhood, too.  It was home.

Three years later he got called that he was hired by Duval County Sheriffs Office!  I remember the girls asking him if we could finally go shopping!
"Yes, take them shopping!"

We went to Sonny's barbecue one Sunday.  As we were eating he said,
" I think we should sell the house."  Boom, there it was.  I almost choked!
"No, not now, not after all this work!"  But after awhile it started to make more sense that we should.  We needed the college tuition and Jimmy could be assigned a police car if we lived  in Duval County and he would not have to commute so far to get a pool car and return it everyday and then drive the extra  miles home.  "Ok, we'll sell the house.."

We found a home in Mandarin, Florida.  A bit of fixing up.  It was brick, had a large lot with plenty of parking space.  The girls declared it a perfect "party house!"  They knew about such things.  We had money left over to pay off bills and manage our lives better.  Jimmy had made a hard call on that one, but it worked out well.

Staying Together, that song.  It meant so much for us to be able to do so many things for ourselves, our girls and our families.
Mom moved down from VA five years after dad passed away and about seven months after we moved to Mandarin.  It was nice to have her  here on the next street in a home she loved for the last ten years of her life.

Jimmy used to say, " Life after mom."  Meaning that we would have time to ourselves again since both girls were now married.  Not that it was bad or anything.  We made some long range plans.  We planned a big vacation for our Anniversary every five years.  We started out by going  to Aruba, then to St. Thomas and then Playa Del Carmen, Mx.  In between we made trips to the Florida Keys.  We made at least one to two trips there a year either by ourselves or with the whole family.  
We bought a few boats, one sank with a hurricane and a jet ski.

Life after mom was happening after March, 24, 2007. He loved her, too.

We enjoyed the Keys.  Life there was easy going.  Five o'clock somewhere
behavior!  Sunset cruises, crystal clear ice blue and green water.  Miles of beauty everywhere.  Atlantic on one side and Gulf of Mexico on the other side of the road.  Every single island like a precious string of gems on a necklace strewn across a pale  blue piece of satin.
There is a little island just off to the left of the seven mile bridge heading south on US1.  We used to take the boat or jet ski out there and hang out.  It was deserted with a small sandy beach on the west side and it's east side had a rocky tidal pool.  It was the perfect little place to wade out from the shore before the deep drop off.

No matter where we stayed in the Keys we loved it.
We took our nieces, Savannah and Catherine  and our grandson Jackson down there when the girls graduated High school.  Wendy got married there.  We stopped there on a cruise to the Bahamas.  We snorkeled, para sailed, drank rum runners and beer.  We enjoyed taking the sunset cruises, too.  One of the best pictures of him I took was as he came to a stop on the jet ski and raised his fist the air before jetting off in a huge spray of water toward the dock!  
We got too much sun but never had too much fun.

Jimmy bought a Harley.  I was very mad at him for doing that.  He knew I hated motorcycles!  I had a phobia about them since being badly injured as a child on one.  It never dawned on me he would just go and get one.  That hurt.
He made it up by buying me a pair of diamond earrings just as expensive as his damn bike!  Ha, I have always called my earrings Harley's!
Funny now but it wasn't then.

One of the trips Jimmy took on the Harley  was with his friend David Boyd in Oct 2008.
They trailered the bikes up to the Smokey mountains to ride the Dragon's Tail.
He had a cold when he got home.  I told him to irrigate his sinuses like the ENT doctor had told him to do since having sinus surgery the year prior.  He told me afterward that it had hurt.  That had never been the case before. 

The next evening when I returned home from work he said, " look at my neck!"
The right side of his neck was swollen from his jaw to his collar bone!
"Oh, my God, you have to go to the doctor!"  He had already made an appointment for the next day.  They put him on antibiotics for ten days.
The swelling improved but not enough so they wanted to do a neck node needle biopsy.  That was done on Dec 19, 2008 and was inconclusive but there were cells there they were concerned about.  On Dec 31, 2008 he underwent a surgical biopsy and removal of the neck node.  On January 9, 2009
our whole world came crashing down around us with a cancer diagnosis.

Both girls were pregnant.  We had to tell them and it was the most gut wrenching news to give them.

How can that happen to such a strong and active and fit man?  He was the picture of health that day on the jet ski with his fist in the air!

The study was still inconclusive because they did not know  what type of cancer this was.  It was suspected it originated in his tonsils.  He had a PET scan and a tonsillectomy.  It was stage IVc Nasopharangeal cancer.  Meaning up behind his sinus above your soft pallate at the roof of your mouth.  Taking an imaginary line from your ear to the bridge of your nose and then down through the top of your head.   At the intersection of those two points.  Smack dab in the middle of your head but not in the brain. Rare for the Caucasian race.  Predominant in Asia and Africa!  What? How in the hell do you get that type of cancer?  We will never know.  The PET scan showed distant bone metastasis to his pelvis and femurs.  

A week later he started extensive chemotherapy with three very harsh drugs.  It depleted his blood work so dramatically he was put in the hospital and put on reverse isolation for ten days.  He was violently sick..
All  he could do was lie still in the dark room.  I suited up in protective gear and sat vigil  with him.  I called his brother Mike and I told him how severely sick he was.
Mike knew as he is a nurse, too.  He got on the next plane from Kansas to be here for us.   
Staying Together.  "We shall endeavor to persevere!"  It was Jimmy's mantra.
He prayed to live long enough to see the newest grand babies born which was a grandson Chase in July and twin girls Kannon and Kate in August.  Jackson, his biggest buddy was five.

Many rounds of chemo, radiation, cyber knife procedures,  hospitalizations.  Up and downs along the way.  Losing all his hair, growing it back.   Getting strong again just to be beaten down again.
A short remission.  A chance to celebrate and return to police work.  He never
stopped.  He gave every ounce of himself to trying everything he could. Allergic reactions to drugs, heart rhythm disturbances, anorexia, weight loss, dehydration.
Horrific pain with the bone metastasis. Side effects from radiation. He kept going.
Babysitting all the kids!  He loved that part!

He retired from the police department in May, 2010 when the scan showed it was back.  
He had bought two years from him military service that counted toward his retirement.  He served our city of Jacksonville for seventeen years.  He enjoyed being a patrolman.  He never wanted to climb the ranks as he had enough of administration in the Navy.  
He retired on full disability.  

He started more chemo.  He kept going.

He got strength back, rode his Haley when he felt good and I went, too.

Then in October 2012 there was a chance the bone metastasis pain could be treated with a drug called Samarium.  It attacks only bone mets and since the scan in Sept 2012
he only had bone mets and no soft tissue or organ mets he was a candidate.
It was a one time radioactive IV injection.  Over the following twelve weeks no other chemo could be given as the effects on the blood from the Samarium were expected to be bad, but the pain  would be relieved.
Just the opposite happened.  The blood work looked terrific and his pain was worsening.

He was in the hospital in Dec 2012 for a few days due to the pain, constipation from the pain medicines and a hernia he developed while trying to go to he bathroom.

He went back in the hospital in January 2013 for his MRI on the spine and for IV pain management.

The  MRI showed a tumor through the vertebrae and into the spinal column.
So , not only does he have bone met pain, a hernia and a displacement of the vertebrae, he has a spinal tumor, too!

I discovered the displaced vertabrae on my own when I took a photo in the MD's office of the abdominal scan he had before going into the hospital for the possible bowel obstruction in December.  No radiologist or anyone had ever addressed this with us before.  Going back on prior scans there was never a mention of it way back to 2010.  You can see it is out of alignment at that level on earlier scans.  No wonder his pain was so severe.  No wonder he was having so many other symptoms.
Most people who have this problem end up with back surgery to stabilize it from shifting any further and causing increasing pain, bowel and  bladder problems, impotence, leg weakness, nerve impairment and risk of paralysis.
Jimmy had this.  All of this except paralysis.  But it was way too late for any thing to be done now. 

He came home on a huge amount of  pain medication and a steroid.  The pain was under control but he had to set his clock  and take one or the other pills every four hours.  He couldn't eat much or drink enough and weight was falling off him rapidly.
He had to start wearing depend underwear.
He was unable to sleep.  He couldn't sit, stand or lie down very long at a time.

When  he was in the hospital  he said,  "Honey, why don't you retire!"
It was like being asked to marry all over gain and I didn't hesitate as I said, "yes!"

Let's Stay Together played until his last day with me on February, 5, 2013 at
10:55 pm.


Met April 5, 1972
Married June 16, 1973
I'll love him and he will stay in my heart
forever and ever.
Cathy Windham
2/17/13



Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Broken Child's Heart

I've never had a Christmas season quite like this one.  So sad in so many ways while trying to be happy despite it all.  I'm not talking about my personal sadness.  That I can accept and handle.  It's the sadness of those I can not help or comfort.
The kind that wraps around your throat as you try to speak through tears.  The kind that no child must face.  The kind you want to shield and protect and it would melt like a cheap plastic barrier against a blow torch of reality.  When combined with the love of the season of spirituality, your understanding of the meaning of life pales in comparison.  A child needs a parent
and a home.  How will that happen when so many hands pull them in directions they are afraid of?
Prayer is only a coping mechanism.
Reality is not comforting.
Children learn to survive and somehow grow up bearing painful scars endured under the pretense of love for them that failed.

Thursday, November 27, 2014

Going Cold Turkey

Find some measure of happiness in every aspect of your life. It may not be perfect, but it is your life and happiness ultimately is yours to find. Each day, look for a little peace, find a reason to smile, realize you have more than someone else, and thank those in your life who make the ride worth taking.

I just read the above statement written on another blog called One Fit Widow.  Michelle is explaining her second Thanksgiving without her husband.  I can relate.  This is my second one without mine.

Many things have changed in the way I am able to cope with this loss.  I find that my future would have changed whether or not he had died.  The difference is it is all my future.  Thoughts that came to life once I allowed myself to experience my solitary existance.  I don't feel guilt for thinking only to please myself.  It is a foreign thing to do after many years of marriage and having another person to care for and who helped take care of me.  It had to be learned the hard way.  "Cold Turkey!"

Which reminds me, I did not save my Thanksgiving left overs.
I sent them all home with my daughter to feed her ravenous family!  It actually felt relaxing today going through the ritual of cooking the traditional meal while watching Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade.  I made my coffee and put the dishes together with the ease of Paula Deen.  I didn't scrimp on the ingredients.  Butter makes everything taste better!  

We had a sudden change in our customary outing to gather with other families at the home of my daughter's inlaws.  It was a jolt in the family chain that broke a link.
Everyones plans were altered and will be different forever.

  1. So, this year it is different because someone else has died.

It affects me in an indirect way but it is a significant event for my daughters inlaw family.  They are a close loving group with many of them living here near each other.
My heart grieves for their loss.

There will be ways to help them. Ways that I have experienced that I wish I did not need to share.

This will all take time and hopefully by this time next year, we will all be further along on our road to recovery.

Cathy
11/27/14

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Evaporation


As I turned you appeared out of the corner of my eye.
Strong and lean; no shirt on.
Muscles on arms pronounced.

You shook your hair and water droplets flew through the air in a swirl and then you smoothed your hair back with one sweep away from your dark eyes.

You looked straight at me.
I smiled and walked into your embrace.

When I opened my eyes you were gone.
Vanished in the mist of my dream
and swept away in my tears.

Cathy

Saturday, November 15, 2014

The Nest

In my bed at home
Is where my mind will roam
Late into the night
Sometimes till morning light

Upon this bed my dreams come true
Lying here next to you
Our hearts will beat as one
Our nights spleandor will be won

Our children wrestle for position
Between us in their possession
Wild hair and twisted sheets
Our love is theirs complete

Lie here next to me
The future we will see
Walking hand in hand
Dreaming of our promised land

My eyes will softly close
Your love I only know
Warm hand held in mine
Together for all time

Cathy

Monday, September 29, 2014

Reflection

Looking through cut crystal is the way I see all the precious moments in my life.

Facets reflect love, hope and faith into a pattern that spills a rainbow on the surface of my memory.

When clouds subdue the sun and the day turns to night, the flame of candle light softens the spectrum.

I close my eyes and dream in a kaleidoscope of reflected happiness.

Saturday, September 6, 2014

Writing A Song

I wish I knew how to write a song
About you and me riding along
Arm over shoulder
Sitting close
Your lips on mine
Eyes closed

Just being with you on a cold rainy day
Nothing was noticed as time ticked away
Arm over shoulder
Sitting close
Your lips on mine
Eyes closed

Over the threshold you carry me
Upon the bed you sleep with me
Arm over shoulder
Holding me close
Your lips on mine
Eyes closed

I lay next to you
Life slipping away
Arm over shoulder
Holding you close
My lips on yours
Eyes closed

Cathy Windham

Friday, September 5, 2014

Accepting Insecurity



Feeling insecure in a new place is hard.  Kids often are faced with this without much help.  Growing up in a household that forced one to move, change homes, leave friends and make new ones was an expectation.  Is it possible to honestly recall the first time feeling insecure?

In class a uniform was worn.  That probably helped in many ways.  But outside the classroom and back in the neighborhood it was more noticeable.  You stood out by attending a different school.  You had a different religion and church.  You had different guidelines and rules to adhere to.  You started to compare yourself to those you knew.
You wished for things or lifestyles
that you admired.  You were too young to know but to you it mattered what others thought.

Young teen years.  They do matter.
Awkward, growing, changing almost overnight.  Glasses, braces, clearasil, physical shape, breath, clothes, sports and abilities can make or break a young ones insecurities.

Do you like me?  Do you admit your feelings?  Do you step outside your comfort zone?  Do you take a risk?
A first kiss, what does it mean?
At that moment you can forget your insecurity and live with the hope that your future holds so much more.

Cathy Windham

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

The Bottom Middle Child



After one and two plus three came me, the bottom middle child.  I sometimes wonder if I was that glimmer in daddy's eye or an oops moment.  4/5th's is an odd fraction.
Either way, I'm here representing me in my birth order.

Much has been written and studied about a first born child.  Where do I stack up?  I would hope those who study these sort of things could say "she can hold her own."

She is observant.  She studies a situation and bases her decision after a lot of consideration.
She is strong.  She sees pain and buffers it's impact.
She is smart.  She works hard to tackle the unknown and apply it appropriately.
She is sensitive.  A word can crumble her world.
She is loving.  She's all in.
She is fair.  Weighing all circumstances before making judgement.
She is compassionate.  She will do anything for someone in need.
She is a friend, mom, neighbor, aunt, grandmother and sister.
She is me.

Cathy Windham
8/26/14

Monday, August 25, 2014

Spontaneity

Spontaneity

I have always been a pretty conservative person.  I don't know when I first realized this about myself though.
I was raised in a very conservative household.  Both parents were victims of the depression years.  We did not waste anything.  Toothpaste tubes were squeezed so flat you could use them as aluminum foil.
Jars and cans were rinsed and had
 multipurpose.  Paper grocery bags lined our trash cans and covered our school books.  Twist ties from bread, rubber bands around the newspaper and straight pins from store bought shirts better not be thrown away!
How many uses can you make of a blown out bike inner tube?  Do you know how to make gorilla glue?  I think they stole my dad's basement invention.  We were high on glue fumes and not even trying as it circulated through the a/c ducts!
God bless my dad.  He had a basement to be envied by hoarders.
Need a bolt?  He had it.  Fix a wringer washer, yep, no problem.
Make an old tv or refrigerator last 20 years, he was the man.
I forgot to mention the best find of all, a strand of clorox bottles strung together by old panty hose?
What in God's holy name was that for?
So, in today's age of throw away,
I often think of my dad and wonder as I take the trash out, if he is shaking his head and muttering "that's a perfectly good jar!"
Yes, it is as I decided to spontaneously multipurpose it!

Monday, August 18, 2014

Faith In The Unknown

Light at the end of the tunnel
Silver lining behind every cloud
Rainbow at the end of the storm
Amen at the end of our prayer
Kiss at the end of the day
Dream in the middle of the night
You thinking of me
Me hoping you care
Stars in celestial patterns
Moon illuminating love

Cathy Windham

Thursday, August 14, 2014

By Moonlight




I did not get to grow old with you
ending on a winters day
You promised me a long time ago
you would always stay

I'm reminded as I watch the stars tonight
They're shrouded in the moonlight
The brightest one peeps through the
clouds
I remember us that night

You are gone and I am here
our love forever dear
Waves lap against the sandy shore
Your voice I'll never hear

Cathy Windham
8/14/14

Sunday, August 3, 2014

Life By Candelight

That moment when you're lonely.
When time isn't moving
Your mind races ahead ahead of you.
Suspended in your space.
Wondering why things go
into slow motion while you look at the time lapse
blur  together.
Traffic lights at night in the rain make that vision.
A Monet at the museum does it, too.
An artists brush smears
a stroke on canvas and the colors collide.
Night at home alone made softer by candle light.

Cathy Windham
8/3/14

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Do you ever wonder?

The Kiss

Thinking about that  moment that you remember was special is different to a new couple, divorcée or widow.

Kissing for instance.  With your true love, it is deep and passionate.  You are drowning in each other's passion.
To your past detached love, it's a memory despised because it brings up hurt.

To a love who can not return that kiss, it's a yearning and a dreamy memory.

The only common thing is
the day you were as one.
Why did these things turn your world upside down?


Once done it will never return.  There must be a
plan.  Stay forever, leave for another or mourn.

Each day you are responsible for your own happiness and for that of whom you profess your love.

Cathy Windham
7/30/14


Sunday, July 20, 2014

Why We Care

The difference between
Home town and military brat

Always Starting Over

Taking risks between present/past

Keeping up

Bucking up

Survivorship

Get over it

Fitting in

Commitment

Saying goodbye

Being accepted

Do I belong

Hoarding momentous

Do you remember me

War vs Peace

Purpose vs dreams

Stereotype behaviors

Why is it important to be
Proud, be honest, have integrity

Shirt off your back for a fellow brat

Perfectionism vs praise of
Individuality - control issues of a military parent

Trust vs harboring secrets

Burying emotions

Watching from a distance

Making decisions not to
"rock the boat"

Applying everything to who I am professionally

Realizing you fit in that
round hole

Smiles look the same on all faces

Kisses linger longer when they might be the last

Promises of reuniting in the future

Getting older together and not worried about it

There you are in my world again

I missed you so.....

Cathy Windham
7/20/14

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Am I sleeping or awake?

It is who I am

The day starts easily enough after a seemingly
sleepless night.  It's gone on like this for awhile.

Silently I cringe a little as I slip into bed on my side.  The other side does not get turned down or slept upon.

I do some things differently.  Play some background sounds to lull my mind away from my thoughts.

I time the night in increments of how long I dozed off.  I try not to care what time it is.

My dreams are like previews of a movie I don't want to star in.

The plot is obscure and makes no sense.  I'm shocked not to find clipped edited film on my bedroom floor as I get up.

When the sun comes up
I start the day over.  I'm
older and wiser and
chronically tired.

It is who I am for now.

Cathy Windham
7/1/14

Monday, June 23, 2014

Romantic Promise

I keep your photo close
I look into your eyes
I see the reflection of our love
Between us were no lies

Trusted love, you took me home
I knew you not before
Upon arrival at my door
I wanted to know you more and more

As days and years became the past
Entwined with memories
Ever last
My heart is full to the brink
Then was over within a blink

Forever you will be the one
My soul and heart desires
Tomorrow I will remember us
A love that flames the fires

Cathy Windham
6/23/14

Thursday, June 19, 2014

The Hunt



Chase announced "I'm going to hunt for a frog, granny!"  It was a hot afternoon and I seriously doubted he would find one.  I sat out on the front porch with his mom enjoying a glass of wine together as he ducked in and out of the bushes and leaves.  I tried to tell him that frogs liked cooler and wetter areas.  It was a beast of an afternoon but that did not deter his quest.  I told him it was almost dinner time.  If he found one he could not keep him as I'm sure his frog family was waiting for him to come home safely.

My mind wandered a bit back to when I was little.
We would be gone all afternoon playing down by the creek which ran through a wooded area
behind our house in Virginia.  It was the perfect place to hang out once school was out for summer.
Cool water flowed and you could catch the water
bugs that skated on the still mirror surface in a deeper area.  Salamanders, minnows, turtles, frogs and crawfish lived there.  I heard there were water moccasins but never saw one.  Rattle snakes stayed to themselves, too.  I bet they watched us as we played in their
territory probably very close to them.  We were so lucky.
We built forts and my brothers played Army down in the valley.
There was a large embankment carved out of the clay.  When it rained heavily, the water would boil and swell in that area.  You could almost go rafting on the muddy swells.
Once my friends and I ventured through the storm drain from where it spilled run off from the neighborhood streets.  We were adventurous and oblivious to the danger of doing that.
It was fun to hear our echoes in the large cool concrete tube.  At the manhole one could climb up the rusted ladder and hear a car drive right over you!

I smoked my first cigarette in a huge tree down in the valley that we called the Monkey Tree.
It had thick low lying limbs that made it ideal for climbing.  You could see quite a ways from those higher branches.

Once my sister and I caught a crab when we went to the beach.  Against my parents better judgement, they let us take it home.  We decided to release him down by the creek but I doubt he survived very long.  I have often felt bad about taking him away from his natural habitat and into a dangerous new place to try to survive.

Just then Chase came running up to his mom and I with the cutest,
triumphant giggle and smile as he held up a tiny tree frog for us to see.
He had hunted and had his first catch!  After a few minutes of examining him he let him go among the
shadows of the setting sun and home safely.

Cathy Windham
6/19/14

Sunday, June 8, 2014

Turchino Dreams



Turchino Dreams

She strolled along the cobblestone narrow boganvilla draped road.
Large straw basket in hand held some fresh market purchases.  Strap sandals on tan feet with pink polish.
Her hair pulled back and tucked under her straw hat.
She stops to pet a cat in the window sill before making her way inside her retreat.
Placing the basket on the rough painted kitchen table, she then lifts the bouquet of mixed petals
and runs water into the clear yellow vase with imbedded air bubbles.
She gathers things to make tea.
The breeze from the window cools her brow.
She came here to Capri
to remember a magic moment in her past.
It had not changed except
for the calendar.
Overlooking the Bay of Salerno she observes a rich deep blue of the water and fishing boats tethered at the shore and the rugged cliffs beyond.
She watches the chairlift
climb high to the top.

The tea pot whistles and she pours the steaming water over the tea and closes her lashes and breathes the aroma of lemongrass.

Pen to paper she jots down some random thoughts of her trip here long ago with her family.
It is still vividly fresh on her mind.  It's the love that remained here that
captivates and entices her.

Long afternoon shadows cast their spell on her.  She goes into the town square among the local
shops and restaurants.
A vintage cab crosses her path.  A glass of wine, fresh bread and cheese
awake her senses.  She watches and looks for lost faces among the people who stroll by.  Maybe they
have returned to this magical place and are looking for her.

Cathy Windham
6/8/14






Sunday, May 18, 2014

If you're hurting, you are not alone. This is what I do in those moments.

Say a little prayer
Kneeling with head bowed low
Bring peace into my heart
Dear Jesus, let me know

Troubled heart and tear filled eyes
The pages become a blur
Come lift me up and sing
Praising you in wonder

Oh, Redeemer my heart is yours
Your sacrifice for me so pure
I open my heart to accept you
You have promised eternal treasure

Amen

Cathy Windham
4/12/14

Friday, May 16, 2014

It was just another Friday evening.  It was so perfect and spontaneous.
Kids playing on their bikes.  The skateboard ramp and tree house kept them busy for hours.  A jug of pink lemonade and plastic cups sat at the edge of the porch.
We sat and chatted sitting in old comfy adirondack rockers and sipped on laced drinks.  Laughing together and swatting a bug or two.
The sun was setting behind the palm.  It looked like black daggers against a pink curtain.
Music  made
it feel like a tropical vacation hot spot.
I look at these kids and just love what I see in their faces.  A deep dimple, freckles, shiny tendrils in a messy pony tail, bare feet.  
I realize at that very moment this is my life.
My everything.  It is such a wonderful rush that I want to capture how I see it so I will not forget.
As if I ever would!

Cathy Windham
5/16/17