Memory of D.R. Goff
©
B.D. Adams
Description: Good Friend
“Someone who sees you for the idiot you are,
but doesn’t care.” BDA
I just “misplaced” one of the best
friends I have ever had due to pancreatic cancer.
D.R. Goff ... what a character. He was
my boss and a good friend! Oh, we had our differences, good and bad. However,
with the differences, we maintained our separate dignities!
This is a letter to him ... hope he’s
getting his mail. Like many others (him included), I never knew how sick he
was.
Dear
DR:
This has been one of the hardest letters I’ve
ever tried to write. I want to put you in a good light, but then I needed to be
honest about my memories of you.
A good friend and a total jerk! I think that
sums it up.
If someone knows you longer than a year, there
will be memories that run the gambit!
Many of my memories began when I moved back
to Columbus from Michigan (after Germany). You invited me to be a small part of
your inner circle; you hired me in 1994 to work at Quicksilver. I was rather
shocked at your invitation! We were never bosom buddies. I mean, we would go to
the same parties or art shows, we were competitors, but the thought of us
working together was rather ... alien. Each of us at opposite ends of the
spectrum ... that’s my analogy.
However, for the most part, it worked! I
think we surprised ourselves ... and a few others. It was never all flowers and
chocolates, but we created what was needed to succeed while you were still in
Ohio, before you went to New Mexico! (And, before my illness)
I truly believed, since we weren’t sleeping
together, we could work together. Honestly, I only knew of a few women that you
slept with.
Not long after I started working with you,
someone (a woman I barely knew) actually asked me if you were good in bed. I
told her she needed to find out for herself because I didn’t know. I think she
thought I was lying.
Did I ever want more than what I got from
you? Nope! I liked us the way we were!
The one time, however, that really showed
your emotional side to me was when Madison died (the Dober-mutt ... like a red
Doberman). I’m sure you remember this.
I hadn’t been with the studio very long, just
some months. Lori, your current girlfriend, had taken Madison for a walk after
they had been playing in the studio. Not raucous play ... just time for him to
go out.
Within moments, Lori ran back to the studio
and said she thought Madison was dead! He had dropped in Bank Street and wouldn’t
get up! Lori cried fitfully! You got hold of Joe to come with you and me in the
van to check out Madison. It seemed this was in slow motion, but things were
actually going fairly fast! Joe helped you to put Madison in the van. You told
him to go back to the studio. We got on our way to the Chittenden Vet. Clinic.
One of the Techs helped you take the poor dog
inside. I was in the waiting area and kept the hope that Madison might have had
a seizure. He would be all right with treatment. Those were my wishes until
they came out to tell me that I could go to our pet to say good-bye. So much
emotional pain when a pet dies. They pronounced him dead. So ... so sad.
Your face was very wet. Your reaction took me
a bit by surprise. I knew you had feelings, but ... well, you really showed
them this time. I hadn’t cried until they came out to get me. I put my arms
around this big, loveable dog and cried like a baby. You still had tears and
sat as a helpless figure in the chair by Madison. I went around the table and
put my arms around your head and held you close. You put your arms around me,
in the same manner. That was the most intimate we had ever been to each other.
We didn’t hug for long ... we just called for the tech. We left Madison at the
Clinic and went back to the studio.
I still cried in the van as you drove. I
tried to man-up, but I am a woman.
When we got back to the studio, Lori was
still there and kept apologizing. I let her know it wasn’t her fault ... it was
Madison’s time. He was 11 or 12 years-old.
I sat at my desk and swallowed my tears. You
had stopped your tears ... arms folded on your chest, leaned against the
dressing room’s doorjamb, and faced my desk.
It was a sad time, but you spoke first. “I
know what my next dog will be.”
Lori and I just awaited your next words. Lori
was still very sad. I just looked at my desktop.
“A poodle ... a black poodle.” You said this
so casually I thought I didn’t hear right! You grinned very widely to me!!
It was like I had been pricked with Nitrous
Oxide. I nearly fell on the floor from laughing so hard!! DR Goff with a ...
POODLE!! These were the best mood changing words you could have ever chosen!
For me, anyway. You laughed as hard as me!
Lori had no clue about our jubilation! She
smiled, but only in reaction to us. Between the two of us, we filled her in
about the “DR Goff Birthdays” of the past ... “The Poodle Roasts!” You even
pulled out an old flyer/invitation to show her.
I assured her that the roasted animal was a
rabbit ... not a dog. However, with you, DR, one might believe almost anything.
Ramone (a black standard poodle) came to live at the studio (never roasted, but much loved) and, a few years
later, we celebrated your last Poodle Roast before you trekked off to New Mexico!
That day with Madison was so emotional! The
full swing from horrible sadness to uncontrolled merriment.
Just knowing you, DR, was in itself, filled
with memories. Save me a place up there.
Sleep well, my friend.
Brandy
I hope those who read
this will read it in the vein it was intended. Did I ever love
DR as a man? No. Did I
love him as a person? Yes ... dearly. Always wanted the best for him
... including now. I truly
hope those Angels treat him with the respect he deserves.
Labels: Emotions, Family, friendship, history, humor, real event
1 Comments:
Hi Brandy. I'm live in Placitas and DR was one of my neighbors and a friend. Like your relationship with DR, we had our similarities and differences, and were never lovers. However, I do miss him for his unique wit and camaraderie we shared.
It's taken me some time to understand why God had to take DR when He did. God knew DR's heart would be irreparably broken to see what has happened to the US of A he so valiantly fought for in Vietnam and believed in until his death. DR stoically withstood his personal disappoints and setbacks, however DR's seeing this country turned into a police state it has become would have hurt him more deeply than anything. The Lord knew that - so He took him. God bless you and your kind reminiscence of my friend, D.R. Goff. -Cynthia Hoffman, YT channel Dagnyatl (that's an "L" at the end, not a "1").
PS: It's due to DR's love of poodles that I own one as well, but he's white, not black. LOL
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