The Luxury of Daydreams
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The Luxury of Daydreams
Published:
7/8/2011
Format:
Perfect Bound Softcover(B/W)
Pages:
144
Size:
6x9
ISBN:
978-1-44971-948-7
Print Type:
B/W

In her debut book, Indiana writer Amy McVay Abbott offers thirty insightful and humorous essays about life transitions. In 2009, Abbott lost her job shortly after her only child left for college. Her mother was diagnosed with multi-infarct dementia, and what seemed logical for Abbott was to start writing it all down.

Through humor, Abbott weaves together past and present with future hopes and dreams after turning fifty. Mothers, daughters, aunts,and nieces will enjoy this spiritual and comedic journey.

Abbott also writes a bi-weekly newspaper column — The Raven Lunatic — for several Indiana newspapers. Visit her online at http://poetryfan.blogspot.com or contact her at amymcvayabbott@gmail.com.

B – I – N – G – Zero !!!

Chapter 16

I have math dyslexia. Numbers just do me in. When God formed the two sides of my brain, He decreed that one side be ninetyfive percent poetry, words, talking, Joni Mitchell, more poetry, more words, and more talking.

The five percent of my brain representing spatial reasoning allows me to dial a telephone and add one-digit numbers. I struggle with using a calculator, and I did not fare so well in freshmen Algebra class.

Despite my lopsided hemispheres, today I called my first bingo game at a senior citizens center. This requires that I read and use numbers.

I arrived early with my prizes and already sixty people sat waiting for me. The game room temperature was a balmy 108 degrees. Most of the guests wore sweaters. This environment is incompatible with hot flashes and sweaty nervousness about reading and remembering numbers in public.

On the prize table, I put out the prizes I purchased at the neighborhood dollar store. I refer to the prizes as WPC—worthless plastic crap. These delightful parting gifts included hand lotion, sugarless candy, nail clippers, dishtowels, storage bins, a flashlight, a Groucho mask, a toothbrush, combs, a screwdriver, bunion pads, a birdfeeder, bunny ears, gum, and other eclectic WPC. This batch of prizes was of the absolute highest quality, all for less than one dollar. Imagine!

Did I mention the Groucho mask and bunny ears? My theory was these festive items might add a laugh and some fun. I was wrong.

At promptly two p.m., the facility manager was still talking with me, and the serious eyes of the players shot daggers at both of us. These folks were ready to go. B I N G O!!!!

The little white numbered balls rest in a gold apparatus, resembling a wire birdcage. The caller spins the gizmo, and six or seven white balls drop down into an open chute. The caller reads the number and fits the used ball on a huge white grid with all the numbers and letters on it. This is an easy task for those folks who are not numerically challenged.

Think of it like this: some of us are good at math and science. People with those attributes are called “doctors” or “engineers.” When these individuals view a group of numbers on a page, they see the theory of relativity, a chemical chain, or perhaps nuclear fission.

Others possess excellent skills in talking and writing. These individuals are called “sales reps” or “unemployed.”

Those of us in the second group are fond of saying, “Which of

Leonardo da Vinci’s skills would you eliminate, the math/science or the arts?”

This philosophical paradox makes for an interesting and provocative cocktail party discussion, or something to ask the person ahead of you in the unemployment line.

When I see numbers on a page, I think of a Jackson Pollock painting.

They look like scattered drips of paint that collectively have no meaning to me.

I blame this on President John F. Kennedy. I struggle with calling Bingo well because of “new math.” President Kennedy wanted young people to study math and science “so we can put a man on the moon by the end of this century.”

That darn American “Sputnik moment” really messed me up. I started first grade with old math, and by the middle of second grade, “new math” burned past me to a galaxy, far, far away.

Forty-something years later, add to that the problem of poor vision corrected with bifocals. Did I mention my two cataract surgeries?

I spun the machine and looked through the top of my glasses to read the number.

“B, fourteen. B, fourteen.”

I liked how my voice sounded through the sound system. A little like Joni Mitchell and a lot like Broderick Crawford.

Next ball.

“N, forty-one. That’s N, four-one.

“N, thirty-eight. N, three-eight.”

“You’re saying them too fast, honey,” shouted Alma from the front table. “Slow down.”

I felt I was crawling along, but Alma straightened me out. I used my bifocal to read the number and switched to regular lenses to see the cutout grid for the ball. The back and forth made me nervous and somewhat dizzy. And, I have to sound out the numbers phonetically in my head. “Zero, sixty-eight.”

Madeline, in the back row, quickly corrected me. “It’s Ohhhh, not zero.”

I felt that she wanted to add, “you ding-a-ling, what rock did you crawl out from under?”

Seven balls filled the chute. Then, I spun again. If I did not have the right touch on the wire cage, too many balls came out. I spun the cage too fast and four balls fell and bounced on the floor. I chased after them.

Everyone laughed as I bent over to pick up the rogue balls.

“I’m winning them over,” I thought, assuming their laughter was friendly. They were actually laughing at the sight of my behind. Then,

I said, “Sorry, folks, I have the first-time jitters.”

“Move on with it,” said a man in the back wearing a WWII hat.

“What branch of service were you in?” I asked. “God bless you for your service to our country.”

He said, “Battle of the Bulge.”

“Let’s give him a hand,” I asked the group to applaud this old soldier.

No one applauded. The man said, “Now can you just move on?”

As the games progressed, my calling skills improved. I did not drop any more balls, but I did have trouble remembering if it was game one or game two. This is easily explained. As a post-menopausal woman, I have less estrogen in my body than the old soldier from the Battle of the Bulge. This causes inability to remember which part of the game we’re in. Was it time to clear the board? Did we just clear it? Did I unplug the toaster this morning?

I made a joke out of it. “I’m having trouble remembering which game we are on. This is why no one wants me to play cards with them;

I’m easily distracted.”

“Cut out the jokes, and move on, girlie-girl,” said the man in the WWII hat.

He was my favorite.

Each winner stepped up to the prize table after I verified the win and took a prize. The Groucho mask and the bunny ears may as well have been covered with bubonic plague germs. They did not move off the prize table.

“How about some bunny ears for the grandchildren?” I said, as two winners “bingo-ed” at the same time. Lurlene, who used a walker and sported shiny pink hair, said, “My grandchildren have their own grandchildren,” and took some dental floss.

This has not been the greatest day of my life for a number of reasons.

All day there’s been a cold, dousing rain. I just want to finish this endless hell of a game day and go home.

Unfortunately, we’ve only completed four games, but it feels like

I’ve been here since seven o’clock this morning. I know we were at game eight because I counted the prizes. I bought twenty-five. I can leave when five remain.

Wait—there is the Grand Prize, a ten-dollar card to Wally World.

Almost finished. I am spinning the birdcage apparatus and I hear Alma and her friends talking about me. They think they are whispering, but they are less than ten feet away from me and I can hear every word.

“She isn’t funny. Why does she keep telling those jokes?”

I want to scream, Ladies, I can hear every word you are saying, but instead I say, “I, nineteen, I, nineteen.”

Amy McVay Abbott lost her Fortune 100 corporate job within a few months of her only child leaving for college. After a thirty-year career and eighteen years of mothering, she was at a loss, with no job and her child a thousand miles away.

Abbott always loved writing, despite leaving her original career in journalism for health care sales and marketing. She jumped in to writing and reporting again, becoming the world’s oldest cub reporter. She has become a familiar local presence in area newspapers and magazines. Her column, The Raven Lunatic, runs in several Indiana daily newspapers, and she frequently writes at curated online sites.

Once she started writing, she couldn’t stop. The Luxury of Daydreams is part-memoir, part-comedy, and part-inspiration for women of a certain age who find themselves in transition.

Now a long-time resident of Warrick County, Indiana, Abbott grew up in Whitley County, Indiana. She is a proud graduate of the School of Journalism at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana.

Many of her essays reflect her pride in the people and land of the Hoosier state. She and her husband, Randy, have one son. She enjoys traveling, reading nonfiction and history, attending theatrical productions, and photographing buildings and nature.

The Luxury of Daydreams is a small book that packs a tremendous punch. It is a book of brilliantly written essays about life woven together to create something unforgettable. Amy McVay Abbott has the enviable quality of engaging her readers from the very first page. One chapter had me reaching for the tissues, the very next one had me laughing out loud. She manages to relate stories in a voice that is so comfortable and easy to listen to, you forget you are not sitting at her kitchen table.

I tried to read this book slowly, so that the last chapter wouldn't come too quickly. But I could not put it down, and ended up reading it again. It is that good.
Joan Haskins 
I lost sleep reading The Luxury of Daydreams. I do most of my recreational reading at night, in bed, to supplant whatever frets and fusses of the day might be lingering to obstruct an easy slide into raveled sleeve of care-knitting sleep. My readings also occasionally inspire my subconscious mind with ideas for pillow dreams. The Luxury of Daydreams did the latter, sparking, and mingling with mine, memories of Christmas mornings, personal embarrassments, family gatherings, sibling wars, old friends, loss, dreams within dreams, small town magic and a moment that stole the joy from Three Dog Night in a mostly friendlier time less complicated and politically portentous, it seemed, than the present.



Perhaps Amy's stories resonated so deeply within me because I grew up in a small Midwestern town, too, and so many of the people and experiences she describes could, and do, reside in my memory, albeit with different names. I have only two bones to pick with Amy as I read her spellbinding stories, hoping they would ease me into my own dreamland. First, her writing is so artful and fascinating I had a tough time returning the book to my nightstand and putting out the light. Second, hackles pricked up on my neck at her mention of her hometown as "America's best small town," because my hometown is the best - or at least it was back then. I was tempted to snarl and hurl her book across the bedroom, but then it occurred to me that in our memories the towns in which Amy and I grew up - hers in Indiana, mine in Wisconsin - were virtually the same. If you wish to read the most revealing and comprehensive story in this collection first, I suggest "Letter to my Seventeen-Year-Old Self." Read this before the others, this flash review of her coming-of-age through the eyes of her older, wiser accomplished self and you will catch an indelible glimpse of Amy as a fun-loving sister, a mischievous daughter and a warm, generous, happy-hearted friend.
Mathew Paust 
I loved this book! Warm, witty, and remarkably honest! It examines situations that many of us over 50 go through... with our children, our parents, in our relationships, and in our memories. Loved it!!
Terry 
The Luxury of Daydreams, the debut novel by Amy McVay Abbott, is a luxury of riches. Her humor reminds me of the eminently talented Erma Bombeck and her homespun warmth evokes a time and place we yearn to visit again and again. Ms. Abbott's novel is both a luxury and an everyday kind of comfort. I recommend you partake!
Rita Bourland 
It doesn't matter where you grew up -- among the farms of Indiana or the skyscrapers of Chicago -- you'll relate to author Amy Abbbot's lovely rememberances and personal learnings from past and present generations in "The Luxury of Daydreams." She warmly embraces the stoic, hardy, devoted and offbeat people who make up her personal and family history. It's as if you are standing over her as she sorts through treasured bits and pieces in a long-forgotten attic trunk. She gently unwraps each memory and family tale, turns it over in her hands, considers its influence on her life and proceeds with an enjoyable and tender telling about each.
MD Walters 
A colorful journey back in time with a descriptive writer...you won't be disappointed!
Jane Kennedy 
I read this book in one sitting and was so captivated I returned several more times just to take in my favorite vignettes and savor them. Ms. Abbot writes for all of us, her stories are ours even if the details may vary slightly from person to person.

However, because she writes from the deep eloquence of her wise heart, we will all find ourselves in there somewhere and nod in recognition as she takes us through the ordinarily extraordinary tour of her most precious recollections and quietest thoughts. This book is a beautiful, gentle and often humorous, midlife reflection of a woman whose life that may well be half done but whose exuberance and insight leave me wanting more and hoping that, at least insofar as her writing is concerned, she has only just begun.
Susan Creamer Joy 
I thoroughly enjoyed reading The Luxury of Daydreams. Amy's writing style is humorous and sincere, beautifully phrased and entertaining. It will certainly be most enjoyed by people more familiar with the Midwest and mid-life situations than I, but all the same, Amy tells many wonderful stories that can be appreciated by people in most any location or stage of life. As someone who is not too far away from that age, I especially appreciated her “Letter to My Seventeen-Year-Old Self.”
Carolyn Capern 
I absolutely loved this book. I too grew up in a small town and could easily relate to the situations that only happen in a small town. The humor was wonderful. I couldn't put it down.
JaLeen Bultman-Deardurff 
A good author brings you into the moment. Amy McVay Abbott does this with texture, style, humor, heart.



Reading "The Luxury of Daydreams", I can smell the surf of a Florida beach, and heaven help me, dairy cow patties. I strain to hear the sound of a young man’s car pulling into the driveway, a mother yelling, “Sheppie, Sheppie, Sheppie Doodle Doo, time for dinner,” the chatter of race talkers at a family gathering, the explosions of a July Fourth long ago, and of one not so long ago.



I can taste butter-cream icing, soft serve ice cream, root beer floats, and even a TaB float! I see a Christmas tree with decorations dangling about lying precariously in a dark ditch, and the contrasting faces of two young men sharing a ride to Burkies Drive In – one with a somber look of confusion at frivolity and the other with the gleam of an imp in his eye.



I think with only the slightest nudge I can actually feel keys on my finger tips – an old Royal portable, if I’m not mistaken. And plastic ones attached to a maple spinet piano.



Ms. Abbott's characters are not caricatures. They are breathing flesh and blood, and they have embedded themselves into my very soul. Women and men long gone from sight are reborn again and again in the author’s masterful telling of their tales.

Kit 
I enjoyed the essays in The Luxury of Daydreams for several reasons. While reading her words, it felt like the author, Amy McVay Abbot, was sitting with me sharing a cup of coffee along with her stories. I felt an immediate comraderie with her words, her wit, and her wisdom. Amy is able to capture a genuine believable voice. Due to my crazy life with work and family, I enjoy reading shorter essays; I don't get lost in complicated plot lines. I can relax and escape for a few moments at a time. Although I currently live in Wyoming, I grew up in Indiana. Amy's essays brought back memories of living in the midwest - with solid values, an enduring love of family, and a delightful sense of humor. I recommend The Luxury of Daydreams for anyone who wants to experience life through the eyes of a talented, kind, and caring woman.
Sue Fahlsing 
I thoroughly enjoyed Amy McVay Abbott’s first book, The Luxury of Daydreams. From the chapter on the birth of her child through her embarrassing adventure as an unprepared Bingo caller to the embarrassing tale of a father who remembers all your mistakes, it’s a delightful take on the ups and downs of life.



What I didn’t expect was how much her book made me think. Her book is a series of reminiscences about growing up and living in the heart of the Heartland in Indiana, and it had me contemplating my own upbringing in the New York suburbs, and realizing how much we’ve lost in the recent decades. I wish we had more Amy McVay Abbotts in our world, but I also wish we had more of her world in our world.

Richard Brown 
Ms. Abbott is far from "vanilla" in experiencing life on this earth. The fact that she can see the positive and write with "tongue in cheek" is both refreshing and comforting. You will like every story and identify with most.....
Carla Mitchell 
Amy Abbott has hit the mark with this remarkably comforting book. With her story telling abilities, she is able to give us all a glimpse of her life while reminding us of our own ups and downs. As she takes us through her essays, we are touched by the simplicity of how easily we flow into her world. By the time you are half way through her stories, you feel as if you have just made a wonderful new friend.



This is the type of book that will be gathering no dust on the bookshelf - rather - it will take a prominent position on the nightstand where I can pick it up at any time and snuggle in with my new friend.
Lisa Garrett 
The Luxury of Daydreams reveals the far too uncommon grace of common sense and wisdom born of faith, experience, and a true Midwestern sensibility. Spending time with the author and her world through these beautifully crafted short essays is akin to nestling up with your best friend or favorite aunt as she reveals her life and her truth. Through this book of remembrances and personal reflections, Amy Abbott takes us home again right to the center of ourselves. Her tales provide a path strewn with laughter, tears and inspiration...and provides the reader with a journey well worth taking. The Luxury of Daydreams is guaranteed to leave you better than it found you and make you wish that Abbott lived next door.
rebecca ann pelley 
On one hand Amy McVay Abbott beckons the reader to pull up a chair and listen as a masterful storyteller shares captivating tales about the twists, turns and adventures in her own life. On the other hand, the author draws you into the story of your own life as her reflections, insights and lessons stir up your own memories of family, struggles, joys, friendships, doubts and faith. Either way, you win.
Jeanne Burger 
 
 


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