Thoughts About A Miracle
It's been a tough day... I'm 1300
nm into what will eventually be a 2000 nm trip in my Cirrus, and
I've just weaseled my way around a serious thunder boomer that sat
dead square over Santa Fe, New Mexico, necessitating tonight's stop
at Double Eagle before the final leg to my old stomping grounds of
Santa Paula, CA. Traveling by airplane is almost always
interesting, and educational, and usually pretty darned fun... but
this is the most dreadful trip I can recall and even more dreadful
is the thought of what awaits me at the end of this sojourn... a final good-bye to
Vicki.
Vicki was my miracle... but not for nearly as long as I wanted
the miracle to last. A decade and a half ago I met this little
imp of a girl, barely five feet tall, a little shy at first but
full of all kinds of energy, silliness, sweetness,
purpose, insight and dreams... and God knows, I love dreamers. I'd
been a bachelor a long time, certainly was no stranger to dating
and all that, but Vicki -- well, Vicki was different. It was a
whirlwind... and before long, the aforementioned miracle
happened... I fell head over heels in love with her (nope, that's
NOT the miracle), and miracle of miracles, she loved me back
(yup... if that isn't a genuine miracle, NOTHING is). This was not
an easy process for her... Vicki has always been pretty guarded
about letting people into her world, she had had some real tough
times on the way to adulthood, but when Vicki let you in behind her
personal defenses, shyness, and caution, it was a truly wondrous
place to be -- loving, funny, interesting, and often about as silly
as life can be. We had a number of great years together... REALLY
great years, we even tied the knot and for the first time in my
life, I found the definition of perfection... as she walked up an
aisle on the arm of her father and stood beside me. For the very
first time in my life, I had no words, and without the Minister's
prompting, I'm sure I'd not have come up with anything
intelligible.

So Long Ago... The Picture I've Carried
Everywhere
I was never happier in my life than when I was married and for
all but the last few weeks, I was having the time of my life. How
could I not? Vicki was in it, after all. They were really great
days... we worked hard, we played harder and we expanded our mutual
horizons on a number of amazing levels.
Life, however, is not perfect... and that which I treasured
above all else came to an end in the loneliest of ways. With little
warning other than Vicki's pronouncement she had some things to
figure out, a three page letter eventually explained to me that she
needed to follow a path in her life that she believed wouldn't
happen as my wife... and rather than risk further hurt to either of
us, she was heading out on her own. I never truly understood it...
and even now, that letter sits on my nightstand, where it comes out
every now and then as I try to digest, still, all that was
troubling her. It was a truly loving letter, but somehow I think I
never learned the secret to supporting her in her dreams as well as
she supported me in mine. And God knows, from my prayers then and
now, there is little more in my life that I would have liked to
have learned than how to be the Husband she wanted to support her
on this journey of hers. Sadly; the opportunity to try and fix this
and try new solutions was not to be mine, because once it became
known that we were not together, there were some truly hateful
folks that harassed her unmercifully, in an attempt to strike out
at me for some of the Aero-Consumer stands I had taken, making any
chance at reconciliation so painful that it never had a chance to
start. Don't get me wrong... the fault is mine and mine alone...
but a break-up is hard enough without others not only egging it on,
but glorying in the pain that they were causing.

15 Years Ago...One Of Our Windy First
Dates... By Airplane
So... She left... and took my heart with her. Over the years,
I've been inordinately proud of all that she has done and despite
missing her and trying to carry on with my own life and dreams,
there was one great satisfaction in all this... that somewhere,
somehow, the little girl that I had promised to love forever among
the gardens on an amazing April day, was out in the world pursuing
her dreams and, Thank God, just being happy. Which, finally, was
plenty good enough for me.
I got to a really good place with all this some years ago...
realizing that if you really love someone, you get past all the
hurt and the disappointment and usual trauma that follows virtually
every divorce and come to a truly wonderful place... where all that
matters is that the person you've come to love, the person that
owns a piece of your heart, is somewhere, safe, sound, happy and
making her way through the world on her terms.
Sadly, tragically, inexplicably, that is no longer true.
Right now, I can't think of anything in my life that I wouldn't
give up to be able to make that so... again... even for just one
more day, but God has this maddening plan, I've been told, and I
have no clue why someone like Vicki couldn't get more time to enjoy
her life. And the bright wide wonderful world that I have so loved
for my 52 years is suddenly and inexplicably bereft of all joy.
Alas... here I sit, with a worn old photo that I have carried
with me for well over a decade -- of this beautiful girl with an
uncommonly lucky guy who looks a lot like me (but not nearly as
grey), on the day of our wedding. I have lost count of the times I
have looked at it and right now, it is the only thing that gives me
a reason to smile. Still it is ever-present in my thoughts
that the Memorial is but hours away and it is a fact that I have to
confront the reality that though we finally started talking a bit
again, that the shy smile and the few quiet words we shared at
Oshkosh, are the last that I'll have for the rest of my life. As
tough as I find that to be, it will simply have to do.
Except for this... we all have our loves... the people we care
for, the people that make our lives better, the soul with which we
find kinship and solace and peace. Sometimes, as much as we may
love these souls, we argue, and say wrong things and act like
idiots... for which we are only too eager to apologize and make
amends... if you have the chance. Don't waste a second on being
"mad." Don't give in to punishing those you love for imagined or
even real transgressions. Get on with your life and get on with
caring for those who make your life worth a damn. Love those you
can... right now... and open yourself up to all those who may come
into your life with friendship, love and kinship and waste not a
precious second of this journey through life because the only love,
in this world, that goes to waste is that which is not
expressed.
I have but one thing to carry me through the next few
hours... the fact that when we finally did get to chat, that I did
not miss the chance to tell her, after all that had transpired,
that I loved her and always would... and that I got her to
smile.

This Is The 'Are You Really Going To Take
My Picture... AGAIN?' Face
So... its off to bed before the day comes again and this horrid
journey continues -- but among my so very many memories at
this moment, is this silly little game that we played on each other
now and then, usually after a long day, as we settled in to
sleep... we called it "John-Boying" after the closing sequence in
the Waltons television show as all the family members would wish
each other a good night... though our version was far sillier (and
is but one of the sickeningly-silly-sweet things that couples do,
that makes others around us positively GAG, God help us).
G'Nite Vic, G'Nite Jimmy
G'Nite Cruser, G'Nite Zoomer
G'Nite Shorty, G'Nite Fuzzface
G'Nite Midget, G'Nite Furball...
This could go on for a while... but it usually ended with a
giggle, or with Vic stealing the comforter (she was, nothing, if
not one of the all-time blanket thieves), until sleep overtook us
both. And the sound of her at rest, often a 'not-quite' snore, was
one of the sweetest most restful sounds of my life. And I will
miss it, and her, forever.
G'Nite Vicki... rest well, sweetheart, may your heaven be as
unlimited as your limitless soul deserves.
James Richard Campbell,
Vicki's Husband... Once Upon A Time