Death Trauma Brutal 2023

Last Thursday a close friend and mentor of mine died.

2023 was a brutal year; in one two day period I lost three friends: Betsy, Jane, and Jan. All four of the above were the real living breathing kind of friends I’d known for years who lived within minutes of me.

Recently, there were also Jerry and Albert, and very local to my inner circle at the time, Jean, even though I never really got to know her.

More recently, Blacktop Jim (that’s my designation: I don’t think anybody else called him that).

I was still mourning my Dad’s death in 2022 when all that happened.

But this last one, my friend Tony……

He and I had our shot at being funny guys at the bar, a little window of opportunity that only lasted a couple of years, but we didn’t connect that way. We connected in the way that comes AFTER that, if you’re among the lucky. I am pretty sure that there was a time that Tony could have watched me work while I was handling Elaine’s weekly food order, and since I do not exactly recall any particular instances, if Tony was in there, he was drinking (and I say that with great respect and love). However, if I was wearing that necktie, I was not drinking, so in the end we never “tied one on” together because I did my Master’s Degree drinking in Storm Lake (and later my Ph.D. in Okoboji) and Tony did his in Royal, Linn Grove, Peterson, and originally Emmetsburg.

He got a head start on the quitting thing. Like by almost twenty years. As it turns out, an incredibly valuable twenty years. I picked his brain liberally and greedily. People got us confused sometimes, which we both thought was weird and funny because WE could tell us apart, but the confused people were seeing haircuts and facial hair and nothing else. That’s how we size people up.

Tony and I intersected when I adopted the quitting thing, and we bonded. He helped me with a lot of stuff. We saw each other often. We had a telephone thing. But it got more interesting than that-it turns out our bond was portable. I eventually moved to Storm Lake and it didn’t make any difference. Because he lived between the two county seat towns, he spent as much time in Storm Lake as he did in Royal anyway.

So that worked and then Death Trauma happened in 2018-19 and I moved again to Spencer, my home town of 50 years ago. Didn’t matter-there was Tony. In fact, being a carpenter, he did a lot of stuff at Menards, but it didn’t stop there. At one time, while he was doing some remodeling for his daughter and her husband, he lived across the street. We’d meet out in the driveway and smoke and I’d play with Kona. I miss Kona. I think passers-by and lookie-Lou’s may have seen us standing out there and wondered how the hippies happened to have taken over that part of the neighborhood. We didn’t look very homogenous with our surroundings,

Tony’s Mom wound up in a Spencer nursing home. He was very devoted, and on his frequent trips to town to see Ma, he’d bang on my door and we’d smoke and talk about things.

He was there, doing that, when my Dad died.

There was no point in us talking about lots of things because we agreed on lots of things anyway and we’d both be the choir in those conversations. We did, however, almost always, talk about being sober.

We’d both had plenty of opportunities to NOT be sober-the standard ones: being broke, divorced, badly in need of a shave and a haircut, that stuff, but we talked about stuff that old-timers had taught him before I even got started quitting. God help me to remember those stories.

This past week, we had one hell of a time, mostly unsuccessful. We both felt crummy, I was pretty sure I had to be contagious, and we were getting pretty close to failing a particular Plan B (which did fail), and there was something wrong with my phone for a little while. Whatever I had made it most comfortable if I called from my bed, and I’ll bet dollars to donuts he was sitting in his chair. So, we went over what’s-next, and I knew his kids were going to visit him the next day and that had to be a good thing.

I had been worried. I know I mentioned that to various people. Tony had been missing stuff lately that he didn’t miss. But I knew that his family would make him go to a doctor. I could relax and quit nagging. The only thing was: he thwarted that opportunity by dying before they got there.

I want to tell myself I could have done something sooner, I could have done something more. I could tell in our last conversation, just like in every other last conversation that I’ve ever had, that we were running out of things to say, and there WERE no more things to do.

I’m not the only guy who can talk like this about Tony like this; there are literally hundreds of guys who can say these things. You know those little pamphlets you get at funerals about the deceased? I have it first hand that Tony saved hundreds of those. He showed up.

We try to talk about “loss” when these things happen. I did not lose anything-I cemented over forty years of spiritual experience into the bag that I carry.

And Tony, you did not graduate.







Ryne Doughty & Luke Fox 12/10/23 Byron’s Bar

Hear Set One Here:
Hear Set Two Here:
Hear Set Three Here:

Posters by Dave Hearn, Melissa Ryan, and Jim Hirschberg, Photos by Ashlee Cooper.

rainy day rain drop
recording by RDM







Vintage White Yellow Rose Gold Filled 13.5″ Pocket Watch Fob Chain, L Mfg. Co.

tricolor chain
tricolor chain
Realized $39.00 12/18/23







Chad Elliott, Weary Ramblers, Guests 12/3/23 Byron’s Bar, Pomeroy, IA

photo by Byron Stuart
photo by Byron Stuart
photo by Ree Irwin
photo by Ree Irwin

So a funny thing happened the other night. Byron had to cancel a show due to the performers backing out very late and he thought he didn’t have enough time to line up another act, and he posted that on Facebook.

Chad Elliott, who has recently moved to within striking distance of Pomeroy, replied, aw darn it, I was going to attend that show since I would be in town to deliver a painting. I was packing my bag, ready to walk out the door, and flashes of brilliant white light and loud classical symphony exploded around me.

Um, duh.

It took just a few minutes of classic social media exchange on Facebook and everybody put it together and there would be a show after all.

Super hardcore trooper Marie Farrell, who occasionally scares me 🙂 managed to coax her musician friend Walt Peterson into coming and he brought a case of harmonicas. This was promising to be a “different” kind of spontaneous night that can only happen in magical places.

Chad got started solo and unless he’d just written a bunch of new songs (inevitable) or wrote one as he played it on stage, I didn’t need to take a lot of notes, so I ducked into the back room where I can indulge in my dirty little tobacco habit. There was Kathryn. She has to travel farther than Chad, and was waiting for the right time to join him. Nobody knew she was there yet. Fun when that happens.

Except for the part where I had my input set for mp3 rather than wav (a reason for using two recorders) (and I think I got by with it anyway), the night proceeded to have its way with all of us.

Chad and Kathryn both took advantage of the situation by road testing some new stuff. And making a few mistakes. Human. Real. Priceless.

Without succumbing to the urge to review, here’s the night in three sets. Kathryn joins in set 2, Walt joins in set 2, and Walt and Marie join in set 3. This is the “raw” version, the edited version will eventually appear at Archive.org.

Hear Set One Here:

Hear Set Two Here:

Hear Set Three Here:

To access all of our Elliott recordings (so far, they’re not all up yet), click here:

rainy day rain drop
recording by RDM







Vintage Gold Filled Double Albert Watch Chain, Half Sovereign Token Fob

double albert
double albert

Vintage yellow gold filled double Albert style pocket watch chain with T-bar and a British Half Sovereign token fob. Measures 15.5″ long from dog clasp to spring ring. The coin token reads “Victoria Queen of Great Britain” on front and back reads The Prince Of Wales Model Half Sovern.” Total weigh 9.5 grams.

Realized $46.00 12/11/23







Vintage Chunky Silver 12″ Pocket Watch Fob Chain, Large Spring Bolt Ring

chunky chain
chunky chain

Vintage chunky, heavy silver 12″ long pocket watch fob chain with a large 23mm spring bolt ring. Curb links graduate in size from 9mm at the end to 12mm at the bolt ring. Clasps work fine, all in nice condition, weighs a hefty 53.9 grams.