After doing the "marble thing" a couple more times and throwing up in both instances, my dad realized that his speech-improvement-method wasn't working out so good for me. He didn't like the smell of vomit on his dress-shoes. And Kurt never did figure out why his baggie of precious marbles smelled like barf.
It's November 1970 and my first season of water polo had come to an end at Saint Monica's. I had to change in and out of my speedos under my tee-shirt to hide the fact that I was still waiting for stupid puberty to finally have its way. Mom or Dad―I don't know whose genetic predisposition I inherited for being a late bloomer, but it was definitely a curse.
I began building new friends on the Water polo team with Loui Coda,
Kevin McCaffery,
and that genius nerd from Topanga who was in my advanced math class a year earlier―James Moore.


Invites were a free-for-all which drove my mom crazy.
Mom always hoped we could do something "normal" for once. She gave us the "Why-couldn't-we-be-more-like-the-Lennons" speech so many times that most of us could repeat it word for word―sometimes a Dahlin sibling would even lip the words in perfect sync behind her back.
She so desperately wanted us to open presents one at a time like the Lennons while the onlookers gave a nod of appreciation and soft golf-clap before the next gift was opened but had giving up on that, knowing that our Christmases were doomed to look more like a free-for-all of sharks on a whale carcass as we came home from midnight mass―jumped into the pile and began shredding them to the bone faster than a plague of locust.
BUT at Thanksgiving, she still had one goal which was to control the mayhem by attempting to control the the number of people.
Dad and Mom
Nana
Tony and Patti
Karl and Laura
Bob
Pinky
Kris and Vicky
Kurt and Irma
Erick and another Vicky
Mary
Mark
Karin
Gigi
Bruce
Susie
John Masson
Tom Wetlz
Nick Pappas (a Republican hippy - Go Figure- no one in Venice is Republican)...
Nick Pappas (a Republican hippy - Go Figure- no one in Venice is Republican)...
...and the several seasonal stragglers who were bound to show up.
26 was the absolute maximum number of mouths mom was planning to feed this year. Dad thought that 26 was only a suggestion, since mom didn't invoke the "under-pain-of-mortal-sin" clause. He proceeded to open his mouth by inviting everyone he came in contact with two days prior to Thanksgiving meal.

He invited the homeless stalker in our neighborhood―Jim Andel. He invited his lonely hermit-friend Roy Spengemen, Jack Underwood got an invite along with the spooky dude in the black "Quaker" hat, who we called, "The Quaker" (pictured below with hands in the air).
The Alligator was safely locked away up stairs and behaving like a Good Dinosaur.
Walter Daniels would eat at home and come by―Nick Pappas was sure to show up and Terry Walker who would eat at the Lennons was sure to show up for the fun-filled food-feeding frenzy.
The Dahlins at Thanksgiving was the greatest show on earth.
It meant an occasional food fight...laughter, lots of fun and nobody wanted to be left out. I wondered what a normal thanksgiving looked like at the Coda mansion in Brentwood at the Arnold's who lived behind us or at James Moore's house who lived at the top of Topanga―those poor people.
Happy Thanksgiving... to the 55, 630 people from 92 countries who have checked in and visited this blog!

Picture credit - Poster
for an 1879 production on Broadway, featuring Stuart Robson and William Crane https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Comedy_of_Errors