He sat at the
same bar stool he did when he first began drinking at eighteen. The stool was
in the same bar his dad drank in every day after work. Like his dad he was a
painter who although good at it, never really ventured out to become his own
boss. His dad was the same way said it was easier because he didn’t have to
have a license or do book work, all he had to do was show up for work and hed
get a paycheck every Friday. He was about twelve when his dad taught him the
ins and outs of painting houses. Back then you didn’t buy cheap throw away
brushes and other tools needed, nope you washed them out every day and wrapped
them in cloth to be ready for the next day. You wore painter’s coveralls to, so
you didn’t ruin your clothes. They hung on a hook in what was called the mudroom.
This was a small room just inside the back door where boots and coveralls and
anything mom deemed dirty stayed before entering the house. My dad worked hard
and over the years he worked very hard and let everyone know it. Mom always had
a plate for him as dinner time for him was sitting on a bar stool sharing
stories with other men of the crafts. We ate without him but every morning we
all had breakfast together before he went into the mudroom and got dressed for
another day of painting. I don’t really know why I stayed being a painter, I
guess it was mostly because I had no desire to do much of anything else. They
say the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree and I suppose that’s true. I
ordered up another round for my buddies that have been drinking here for as
long as we can remember, same bar, same stool, same jobs and the never-ending
nagging question “could I have done better? “There is one difference between
him and me, I make it home every night for dinner with my family
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