“Cards are war, in disguise of a sport.”
Mondays are my late day as I go to my neighbor’s at ten and stay a couple of hours. She is from Brazil and thinks her English needs help so we chat. Through our conversations, I get the chance to explain and correct as best I can what she says wrong. Lately it has been subject-verb agreement though I never use those words. She is stuck on he have. She tells me English isn’t easy, and I totally agree.
No weather report today. Just look at yesterday’s and the day before that and on and on. I swear I saw a patch of blue sky but I may have been hallucinating.
I sometimes thought my dad was really born in another country and English was his second language. He had no idea how to spell words. He wrote them the way the way they sounded to him. I had the challenge of translating into English and typing what he wrote for the company newsletter. It took me the longest time to decipher some of the words. I’d read the sentence aloud over and over trying to figure out the word through context. Usually I was wrong. My dad couldn’t understand why I’d miss such easy words. I didn’t bother to explain.
We were a game playing family. Every Christmas we got new games. When we were young, we played board games. When we were older, we played card games. I remember so many nights sitting around the kitchen table playing cards. Cribbage was always my father’s game, and we played every time I visited and every time we traveled together. When it a bunch of us, we played all sorts of card games. Uno was our game for a while. My Dad never remembered to say uno when putting down his second to the last card so he always ended up having to pick up another card. That frustrated him, and he always used the appropriate swear to accompany his mental lapses. We laughed at him. He was never grateful. Finally, after two or three times of forgetting, he took a match book, put it in the middle of the table and said that was his uno. He didn’t have to say it any more. We handed him back his match book without a single word.
We played Jeopardy with clickers so the first person to click got to answer. My dad ignored the clicks. He’d answer whether he clicked or not. We sort of gave up on Jeopardy.
We played hundreds of games of Hi-Low-Jack mostly on Friday nights. One of my uncles was usually there. The bar was set up on the counter, and the kitchen was filled with smoke. Whoever sat out a hand was forced to be the bartender. Those nights were the best. We laughed all night long. We all made fun of my Dad, the perfect target. He bid high and often, and it was a pleasure to take a trick away from him with the jack of trumps. We all did it with a flourish just to antagonize him. If I had three wishes, one of them would be to have one more Friday night at my parents’ house with all of us there playing hi-low-Jack. I’d even volunteer to be the bartender.
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This entry was posted on October 5, 2015 at 1:01 pm and is filed under Musings. You can subscribe via RSS 2.0 feed to this post's comments.
Tags: board games card games, cold, conversations, counter bar, dank weather, game players, hi-low jack, learning English, new games, smoky room, Uno, verb agreement
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October 5, 2015 at 1:19 pm
We had a sunny day here but it started out rather foggy. It was cloudy when I came home though and I mowed the lawn and it was even worse than yesterday 🙂 So high grass and so wet, it looks really sad out there now but at least it is mowed 🙂
We did play Sorry, or Fia with a push as we call it, a lot but mostly we played cards. Whist here at home and Canasta with my friends family. I did play Othello, a board game, a lot with my older brother when I was around 18-20 and I don’t think that he to this day ever has beaten me in that game 🙂
Have a great day!
Christer.
October 5, 2015 at 1:51 pm
Christer,
Some Wednesdays when I don’t post I get more people than when I do. I find that utterly strange. It happened last week. I had far more people than on Thursday and Friday.
My grass might need one more mowing but that’s all. The yard does need to be raked as the squirrels are chomping on the pines and eating the sap then throwing the bunches on pine on the ground. The lawn is full of them.
We played a lot of whist at home, and it was the game at college too. It seems every school has its own popular game.
Enjoy the evening!
October 5, 2015 at 9:55 pm
In my family we rarely played games. My parents were not card players and my sister and I played board games like Monopoly. She claims I always cheated but I don’t remember it like that. 🙂
After my father retired he would sit at his desk in his condo and play Solitaire while keeping score on a pad. He played while he talked on the phone and kept track of this wins versus the total number of games. I asked why he kept score and he had no answer. I think weirdness creeps in the longer we live after retirement. He stopped working at about 55 and died at 87 which allowed him a long time to become weird.
Today was beautiful with a high of 80 and clear skies. This is the nicest weather in North Texas. BTW the Texas Rangers won the American Lesgue west yesterday. They could have clinched on Saturday but they gave the game away in the ninth inning to the Angels. I’m rooting for a Chicago Cub and Ranger World Series.
October 5, 2015 at 10:26 pm
Bob,
Your sister probably lost and needed an excuse. Monopoly is my least favorite game. Intakes days to finish.
I think he was just bored. I know two 90 year olds on my library board. One is annoying, but I think she always was but the other is hysterically funny. We had a brunch at her house the other day with mimosas.
I’d love to see the Cubs in the World Series. One year when the Sox made it the Cubs had a chance but lost too many at the end of the season. Neither had won a series in years. That would have been great.
My Sox were last. The one consolation is they have these wonderful players, all under 24, which makes us hopeful for next year. Isn’t that what we;re supposed to say?
Damp here again today.