Showing posts with label Mars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mars. Show all posts

Monday, March 5, 2012

All the Reminders in Just One Day

Although we live with reminders and photos of Leif all over our house every day, they are part of the fabric of our lives that we are used to and familiar with, so it's now usually the unexpected or less frequent reminders of him that catch us unawares, and they, too, can be everywhere.

Last Friday we went to Walmart to get my glasses frames replaced after they broke. While I was standing in the optical department waiting, I was looking around at the display of frames and my eye caught a display of high tech, high fashion, expensive sports lenses of the type Leif might have gravitated to and I unexpectedly felt tears come to my eyes.

Even recounting this brings tears to my eyes. Why? I was never there in that store with him. This particular store was built after he died. It was just the remembrance of how he favored "cool" glasses, whether regular daily wear ones, sunglasses, or the kind of sport glasses he wore when riding his motorcycle.

From there we drove in to Tampa, and on the way, we were passed by a motorcyclist going like a house afire. Because Leif rode motorcycles and had accidents, I feel protective of cyclists, but I am also horrified at those that ride like he did, like a demon. There was the second reminder.

As we took the expressway exit off I745, Peter W. was remarking that something had suddenly made him feel sad, that he always thought of Leif when we were driving to Tampa and he couldn't believe it had been almost four years since he died, and I said, "If feels like we should just be able to drive to his apartment and see him." Yes, it still does, and it still feels like a knife in the heart when I realize I can't, that he isn't there and he never will be.

We saw some "cool" cars on the way and remarked how much Leif would have liked them.

When we got to the BX (base exchange, a department store for you non-military types), I saw someone that could have been his brother . . . tall, shaved head, goatee and mustache, about thirty-five, and wearing jeans and designer glasses. This man was probably three inches taller than Leif, but even at that, I had to look again to be sure it wasn't him.

We went into the ITT (Information Tours and Travel) office and they were advertising tickets for concerts by Van Halen and Rammstein. Leif would have loved to go to both of those, though they would have been out of his price range with tickets well over $100 each.

At home I read an article about the Mars opposition (positioning of the planet Mars) and an observatory program about it he would have liked.

By now, on Monday, I'm probably forgetting more things that occurred on Friday to remind us of Leif and make us bounce from everyday routine to sadness to reminiscing to sadness to just being busy. There are so many things we associate with him and always will.

The photo above was taken in Germany in the fall of 1977 when Leif was two-and-a-half years old. My little rascal. I miss him so!

Friday, January 9, 2009

Leif & his Garretson grandparents - Monterey, California - May 1991 - Age 16


We left Colorado Springs and the Air Force Academy after Peter A's graduation and flew to California to visit Peter W's parents, Ralph and Ellen Garretson. Leif was the tallest member of our entire family, from the time he was only 13 and shot up to 6 feet 1 inch. Here he towers over his grandmother and is taller than his grandfather.

Leif didn't get to see as much of his Garretson grandparents as he did of Jerri's mother. They lived in California and Ellen only came to visit us a couple of times during Leif's childhood, once when he was born, and then when he was in about third grade. Ralph wasn't with her. However, once we moved back to the USA from Japan, we went to visit them at least once a year in California and Leif flew along with us until he was on his own.

Ralph took Leif golfing on this trip and they enjoyed each other's company. His "bequest" to Leif was a thick envelope of uncirculated foreign stamps about Mars. Ralph said that if life was discovered on Mars, they would be worth a lot of money. I don't know if that will be true, but I still have that envelope and who should it belong to now?

Ralph died in September 2001 and Ellen died in September 2002. Ralph served as an infantry sergeant in World War II, the Korean War, and had two tours in Vietnam during the Vietnam war. He met Ellen in Germany and brought her to the USA in 1952.