Saturday was perhaps one of the most bizarre, up and down days of my entire life.
I knew that it was going to be a crazy day, but not like it turned out to be.
At 9 a.m., my son had his scheduled telephone meeting with his doctor.
He has been "seeing" this particular doctor for the last 10 or 15 years, and this physician--an older man who has been practicing for decades--really helped my son with his mental difficulties,
We knew the day was coming that he would retire--the doctor is around 90, at my own estimation--but he told us, in very sullen tones that I could barely here--that with his own health woes, he would be retiring, effective immediately.
So with that, I had to start to look around for another doctor, on a Saturday morning.
I called our insurance provider, they gave me a list of doctors, and I began to call them, with the full knowledge that it was a Saturday, and none would be available.
It is hard enough finding a doctor, but finding a doctor under this specialty is even more difficult.
So I left a few messages, and it was time to take my son to his bowling league.
It was the first time I was present to see him bowl in a few weeks, and I have to tell you, it felt pretty good to be there--
Until I got inundated with phone calls, including from my son's retiring doctor, a relative, and from the office of one of the doctors that I had called earlier.
If you have ever been in a bowling alley, you know just how noisy it is, and I had to take the calls in the men's bathroom, which I have to tell you, was just as noisy as being on the lanes.
The call from the doctor's office was the most important of these calls--which came in rapid succession, one after the other--and I told the caller that I would contact them at about 2 pm., because I obviously could not talk to them at that point.
My son bowled, he bowled pretty well, as did his team, which regained its first-place standing, and the bowling finished early, as the other team had only one member present.
It was Record Store Day, so I figured that since we finished early, I could go to my local record store, with my son, and see what they had available.
So we trekked over there, spent about five minutes in the store, I made my purchases, and we left.
We went home, and I turned on the Yankees game, hoping for a relaxing afternoon--
But with the knowledge that I had to speak to the doctor's office that called me when we were in the bowling alley.
In the meantime, did I tell you that one of my record racks buckled the other day, dumping thousands of LPs all over the place?
Yes, it did just that, and we hired a handyman we have used in the past to fix it.
He came over in the middle of the afternoon, and did part of the job, with more to come.
So while he was doing his thing, I made my call to the doctor's office, they got back to me, and after about 90 minutes on the phone, we secured a first meeting between this doctor and my son, a telephone meeting in June, which was the best we could do.
So the game is on, with the sound turned off, the handyman is doing his thing, and I am talking with the doctor's office, where I was so involved that I had no idea what was even happening during the game, which the Yankees won, 13-4.
They hit three home runs in one inning, and I was so involved that I had no idea what was going on during that inning.
Finally, at about 4:30 p.m., with that concert I told you about last week coming up, my family and I decided to do something that we hadn't done in months, which was to actually eat out at a local restaurant.
We did that--I thought the meal was pretty good--and before you knew it, it was time to go to Westbury Music Fair to see Tommy James perform.
We arrived at the venue a little early, so we sat in the car for about a half hour, and then we finally went on line, saw friends who were also seeing the show, and planned to chill out for the next two hours or so.
Tommy James remains an excellent performer 40 years after his last hit.
We have seen him countless times over the years, and his show is pretty much both wonderful and predictable at the exact same time, never wavering very much from formula--play the hits, do some banter, and talk about his book about his time at mob-run Roulette Records being made into a movie.
This time, he didn't stray too much from this formula, slowing down the arrangements on his songs a bit, but the one revelation that came out of the whole 90-minutes-or-so concert was that this movie that he has been talking about for ages is now supposedly going to be a multi-part series on one of the streaming channels.
This was originally a Martin Scorcese project, but it has been up and down over the years, and now, it apparently is on again.
So the concert ended, and we drove home--
Ready to watch Wrestlemania with my son.
The problem was one we have had for months, that we cannot get the pay per view, even though we have paid for the service on ESPN through our Verizon subscription.
So for the umpteenth time, I called Verizon about this, and for the umpteenth time, the situation had not yet been resolved.
The problem was that I used my phone so much on Saturday that I didn't realize how much power it had left--very little--and I was disconnected from Verizon because the phone had no juice left.
Since my son and I were already up, and sleep was not in the offing right then, I decided to help him fully download a video game he had purchased, and which he had partially downloaded a couple of days ago.
It literally said that we had 19 minutes to go for the full download, which turned out to be the slowest 19 minutes on record--maybe like 40 minutes--and then, before you could play the game, you had to register at a site online before doing anything.
Finally, as frustrated as all hell with just about everything that happened on Saturday, we were able to go to sleep, probably around 12:30 a.m. or so, and when I woke up on Sunday at 7 a.m., I was just as frustrated as I was when I went to sleep.
The funny thing is that through it all, my stamina level was much better--
Not up to the level it normally is, but much better.
Waking up on Sunday morning, I felt a lot of get up and go, but through the morning, the level dropped a bit as the morning turned to the afternoon.
And yes, my son woke up a little early, and we called Verizon again about this problem we are having.
It was supposedly fixed, we were able to watch Wrestlemania after my son got home from work, but with one glitch--
The screen kept freezing, and needed to be constantly reset.
You can't have everything, I guess.
So Saturday was a strange mess, Sunday was time to relax... sort of.
I truly think that God is testing me through this entire business that I am going through, but honestly, I just wish that the test was over, and that I passed the audition, once and for all.





