Tag Archives: Kevin

14/365: Crystal Prison

We’d just picked the kids up from the sitter’s house this afternoon.

“This is not the way to home,” Atticus warned us, as Kevin turned the car west, down a state road that would wind a bit through the woods.

“We’re going a different way home,” we said.

As we came upon the still-iced-over pond, I asked Kevin to stop the car for a minute, so I could take some pictures from the open window. The boys both gaped over the frozen pond.

“Is the water stuck, Mommy?” Atticus wanted to know. “Aww.”

Kevin explained how water is more likely to freeze in a pond than a river because it’s not moving as much.

Then, he asked Lucas if he would walk out on the ice.

Lucas said he’d walk out on the edge first to see if it would hold him, and then move out to the center if it did.

“That wouldn’t be a good idea,” Kevin said.

I explained that we can’t be sure from one solid area that the rest is necessarily solid, as well. Just because you step once or twice or ten times without crashing through to the freezing water beneath doesn’t mean your very next step won’t buckle under your weight.

(This is especially true around here in southern Virginia. My dad has old tin-type photographs of early 19th-century people skating on the rivers around here, but it’s not a normal wintertime activity. I don’t think I know anyone who’s ice-skated outside a rink, actually.)

We talked about what would happen if you were to fall in, too, how the thick ice that held your weight would become your crystal prison from underneath, fighting for air and muscle-shocked, searching for the hole that granted you access to the frigid water. What an awful feeling that must be!

And we talked about George Bailey and his friends sledding onto the frozen pond in It’s a Wonderful Life and how his brother would have drowned if not for George, who ended up with a deaf ear. (They both want to watch the movie now. Yay!)

So Kevin hammered in the lesson (“So don’t ever walk across the water”), to which I threw in a clause (“Unless Jesus tells you to walk across the water”), which he cautioned against (“You better make sure it’s Jesus”).

And then we were off to the house from the back way, through our favorite tunnel and on down the highway.

12/365: A Penny Saved

This afternoon, Kevin found a wheat penny in his little change thingy. It was from 1918, two years before his Grandpa was born. World War I was ending, and Daylight Savings Time was instituted.

It prompted me to go check the coin collections I’ve been working on for years and years but haven’t touched in quite some time. And it prompted Kevin to find the jar of wheat pennies his dad gave him a long time ago that we’ve always meant to sort through.

I have two Lincoln Cent collections: 1941 to 1974 and 1975 to 2000, both in Whitman-brand folders. I think I got the first one for Christmas way back when, and I must have gotten the latter in 2000 because the same era folders now are for 1974 to 2002.

The coins I still need to complete my first collection, the ’41 to ’75 one:

  • 1941-S
  • 1945-D
  • 1945-S
  • 1946-S
  • 1947-S
  • 1948-S
  • 1949-S
  • 1952-S
  • 1953-S
  • 1954
  • 1955-S
  • 1959
  • 1968-S
  • 1969-S
  • 1970-S
  • 1971-S
  • 1972-S
  • 1973-S
  • 1974-S

The “S” stands for San Francisco; the “D” stands for Detroit. These signify the particular mint that produced the coin. Years with no additional letter, in this era at least, were minted in Philadelphia. It makes sense that I would have more trouble finding San Franciso coins than Denver or Philadelphia coins since I’m in Virginia.

In addition to that 1918 wheat penny, we have some other pennies that don’t fit in my folders, some I’ve had and others I found sorting through the jar’s contents. I need the 1909-1940 folder for these, but it appears to be sold out at the company’s site.

  • 1919
  • 1929
  • 1930
  • 1935
  • 1935-D
  • 1936 (x2)
  • 1936-D
  • 1939
  • 1940 (x4)

There’s been a lot of talk about discontinuing the printing of pennies in recent years. According to a 2006 USA Today editorial by Wake Forest Economics professor Robert Whaples, it costs almost 1-1/2 cents to produce one penny.

Whether that’s the case or not, I’m holding onto my penny collection.

I took one more shot, of my signature on the earlier of the two Whitman folders because it shows (to me and people who know me well IRL) how long ago I must have gotten it.

It was definitely before 8th grade, I know regardless of the handwriting, because that was the year I decided my name would be “Jo.” I filled out all of my paperwork with an “A” for my middle initial, and I introduced myself that way to everyone new at junior high.

Thanksgiving Music, part 2

Here’s the second clip of Kevin and Ryland’s bluegrass jam the other night: “Dig a Hole,” “Salty Dog Blues,” “Ballad of Jed Clampett,” and “Can I Sleep in Your Barn Tonight, Mister.” My brother Bobby’s behind the video recorder, and his wife Kim’s dad, Bruce Wiles, is the off-screen singer on that last song.

My husband, the hero :)

Letter from lady about Kevin fixing her tire

The Piedmont Shopper letter from the lady whose tire Kevin changed. 🙂

About a month or so ago, Kevin dropped me off at school like he normally does on the mornings he doesn’t work (so we can spend just a few more minutes together…aww…), and before he got down Central Blvd. a bit, he’d passed a minivan with a Sacred Heart School (our church’s school) sticker on it and a lady sitting by herself inside it.

He couldn’t just let that lady sit there, he said, and no one else was stopping. So he made his way around a few cloverleafs and pulled in behind her. The tire was busted, so he offered to change it and wouldn’t accept any money for doing so. His good deed for the day…

Well, he hadn’t gone a fraction of a mile before he noticed another vehicle stopped on the other side of the street, its tire blown, as well. An older lady was in this one, and nobody was stopping. Well, what do you think he did? Yep, he pulled around again and changed her tire too!

He told me later (when he called to let me know what had happened, so I wouldn’t worry in case anyone told me they’d seen our van on the side of the road…aww…) that he thought he might have to get mean with this lady because she didn’t want to take “no” for an answer in the giving-him-money-for-his-time-and-all department. But she finally did. And, on a side note that proves the title of this post even further, Kevin asked me not to tell anyone about this when he called. He said he didn’t do it for the fame. I, of course, told him I couldn’t agree to that. 😉

Okay, so flash forward a few weeks. Donna, a science teacher at my school posted on my Facebook wall, wanting to know if my husband was the one the lady had written the letter about. I had no idea what this was about, so Donna posted a link to the local Piedmont Shopper and told me what page to look on. There it was: A Kind Deed. 🙂

Here’s the text, in case for some reason you can’t read the image:

A Kind Deed

Recently, as I was returning home, a tire blew out just as I was leaving Riverside Drive and entering 86 S. I sat there for 10-15 minutes attempting to reach someone (by phone) to assist me. Many cars just zoomed past me.

Then a nice young man stopped and asked if he could help me. He changed the tire and absolutely refused to accept any money stating that he would not be a Christian if he had passed me by knowing that he could help.

Thank you, Kevin Hawke [sp fix], for your kind deed. There should be more like you.

Bobbi Renn

Thank you, Mrs. Renn, for taking the time to share this story with everyone who reads it. I pray that it will inspire others to spread kindness wherever and whenever they can. 🙂