Wednesday, January 22, 2025

Tater and the Item Patrol

Posted by Troy Eckhardt on March 28, 2017

It was the first week of spring in Central Florida. While others in far-off regions of the country were enjoying March’s transition from lion to lamb, Floridians were trudging through 85-degree mugginess and dreaming about next year’s three-week winter.

As Tater made his way across the sun-soaked asphalt of the Wal-Mart parking lot, he thought of his mother, who had sent him on this errand. Almost seventeen years old, Tater, whose real name was Japheth, had been recently thrust from complete non-driver to part-time professional chauffeur and grocery-getter. Thoughts of Mom had become bittersweet lately. Her happy disposition and quick wit had recently been slightly marred by the tumor discovered growing in her left temporal lobe. Mom didn’t like to drive as much as she used to. Tater bleakly wondered how much longer she would be able to write out the grocery lists he frequently carried to the store.

“Dad seems so optimistic about her prognosis,” the voice in his head whispered, “but without knowing if she has a few months or several years to live, it’s hard to know when it’s ok to pretend everything’s normal again.”

Stepping through the entryway into the vestibule between the Hell of a sweltering springtime and the Hell of a seething cauldron of idiot consumers, Tater welcomed the blast of air conditioning. He decided that he’d rather face the masses for as long as he was able than spend one more minute being crushed by the humid inferno outside.

“Her speech may have slowed a bit, but she’s as organized as ever,” he thought to himself as he noticed that items on the list Mom had written were grouped according to their locations in the store. “Let’s start at the back. First stop: The dairy section for cheese sticks and milk.”

Almost finished with his course through the labyrinth, Tater rounded the corner toward the front of Wal-Mart. He pushed past a snot-nosed child hanging half-way out of a cart and a dark-skinned immigrant woman wearing bright, unusual clothing, then grabbed the blueberries and romaine and headed for the check-out lanes.

“Too full; too full; too full; oh, Lord, no way!” Rejecting every prospect, he moved toward the speedy lanes, which were slightly less jammed, while he took inventory of the items in the cart. Eighteen. Good enough for the twenty-or-fewer line.

Staring at the ten-year-old tagging behind the woman ahead of him in line, Tater tried not to be too disturbed as the boy ate the bountiful harvest he’d just plucked from his nose. A barely audible sigh was voiced behind him in line.

Assuming the noise was the private, pitiful complaint of a woman who had either just witnessed the nauseating feast Booger Boy was enjoying, or who was dreading the walk through the heat to a car-turned-oven, Tater thought again of Mom. He loved her and agonized over what she might have to go through. Dad spoke of an eternity with God and an order and purpose to all things under His sun, but Tater wasn’t always fully comforted by his father’s faith. He knew Mom struggled with it, too.

SIGH. Louder this time. Almost ignorable, but not quite. By the third time the sound reached his ears, Tater knew that the sigh was not private after all, but meant for him. He turned to face her.

“Can I help you?”

Skin cracked and worn like the leather seats in Dad’s Suburban, eyes like tarnished pennies, and pursed lips used to two packs a day met his gaze. “You have more than twenty items,” she croaked.

“No, I don’t.”

“Yes, you do.”

“I have eighteen.”

“No, you don’t.”

“Look, I counted, ok? I have eighteen items. I could get two more.”

“You have more than twenty.”

Tater’s neck burned hotter than the pavement outside as he reached for a two-pack of Reese’s cups and a bag of M&Ms; Mom and Dad’s favorites. As he pitched them into his cart, he smiled at the woman and said, “Now I have twenty. Jesus loves you. Have a great day.”

Suddenly, life didn’t seem so bad.

Love is Love

Posted by Troy Eckhardt on June 7, 2014

Empty Tomb

After a Facebook friend posted this image, a lively debate ensued. One woman asked two questions which I felt compelled to answer: “What is love?” and “So it’s conditional?”

The following are my responses:

“What is love?”

Jesus said, “Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.” From this we can deduce that love is the extent to which a person is willing to sacrifice for the benefit of another.

WAIT! There is more to read… read on »

Practicing Homosexuals as Leaders in the Boy Scouts of America.

Posted by Troy Eckhardt on May 31, 2012

Scout Sign

Another case has arisen in which an adult homosexual has been removed from a leadership position in the BSA. As I watch the videos of the woman protesting and sincerely crying in sorrow and frustration, I am greatly moved. I can see her anguish and, as Bill Clinton once declared, I feel her pain. I know intimately what loss is. After my young son died in early 2011, I became even more acutely aware of pain and grief than I had ever been before – and I wasn’t exactly calloused before the experience. I almost want to hug and comfort the poor woman. WAIT! There is more to read… read on »

Sprocket

Posted by Troy Eckhardt on February 13, 2012

Sprocket

Once upon at time there was a tiny little sprocket in the pocket of a beautiful young woman. As time went on, the pocket grew, as did the sprocket within the pocket. Nine long months passed while the sprocket secretly grew. WAIT! There is more to read… read on »

Weeble

Posted by Troy Eckhardt on September 7, 2011

Weeble's Second Birthday

Readers, in case you did not know already, short of two hours after my last post my family experienced a tragedy far beyond my former definition of the word. Our two-and-three-quarter-year-son Elijah Stasche Eckhardt died in a drowning accident on February 26, 2011 just before 5:00 PM.

It has now been six months since that day, and life is going on. I choose to remember that we’re moving ahead not without him, but toward him. Some day soon we will all be together again at the feet of Jesus in the throne room of Heaven. I think perhaps Weeble’s might be the first face I see after entering the gates, and I hope he is the one who takes me to meet my Savior face-to-face.

Weeble has his own web site at www.weeblemuffin.com

2003 Chrysler Town & Country LX Minivan For Sale

Posted by Troy Eckhardt on April 2, 2010

2003 Chrysler Town & Country LX Minivan

My 2003 Chrysler Town & Country LX minivan is for sale. Would you like to see the particulars? Look here.

Tater’s Broken Wrist

Posted by Troy Eckhardt on March 3, 2010

On March 1st, 2010, Japheth, while working on a physical fitness exercise at the cub scout meeting, had a small accident.

Poor Tater.  He looks so glum while telling his cousin about the incident.

Poor Tater. He looks so glum while telling his cousin about the incident.

WAIT! There is more to read… read on »

Katie Jane Elizabeth Eckhardt

Posted by Troy Eckhardt on February 14, 2010

On February 12th, 2010, My wife Jennifer and I went to the Obstetrician’s office for what had become almost routine for us: a non-stress test. Because of my wife’s “advanced age” and her gestational diabetes, we regularly saw a maternal-fetal spacialist and monitored the baby’s heartrate and movements.

Mommy all ready for her surgery.

Mommy all ready for her surgery.

WAIT! There is more to read… read on »

Banjo

Posted by Troy Eckhardt on April 12, 2008

Praying DogOur dog Banjo was born on June 9, 1994 in southeastern Tennessee. My wife Jennifer and I met her in an animal shelter on 441 between Gatlinburg and Pigeon Forge. The meeting took place on July 30, 1994 on the seventh day of our honeymoon.

Banjo was a frisky puppy. Of the two females in the litter, we chose her because she was the more playful. She had a beautiful black coat, and a bit of black on her tongue. Although she looks like a shaggy black lab, she must have some chow in her. Not much, though, because she has none of the lousy chow disposition.

We had to sneak her into the honeymoon chalet on the last night of our stay, because the shelter was not open on the day we left Gatlinburg. We kept her in a box, so no harm was done. She had a bit of diarrhea, which became a deluge of feces on the trip home, during which we must have stopped fifty times for puppy potty breaks. WAIT! There is more to read… read on »