Thursday, May 24, 2007

aquarius bendable humorist healer friend

Wynn's death came as such a surprise and shock to me, and I'm still thinking of him constantly. I guess I learned much later than most people, because Wynn and I had largely been out of touch in the past couple of years, with just an email here and there or a cup of coffee when I was in Houston. Recently, though, I'd really been wanting to see him, to catch up and share with him, and in my efforts to track him down I learned of his passing.

I had wanted to tell him of my experiences living at a Buddhist monastery, and how I had met my boyfriend the monk there. I had wanted to show him my poetry, and to tell him of my plans for the future, to learn of his plans for the future which seemed so bright back when we talked more frequently. I also wanted to show him a photo I took of an apartment complex in Austin, with a sign reading "Wynn Wood." I knew he would appreciate the humor in that.

My friendship with Wynn was amazing. We met six years ago when I was a vulnerable 16-year-old, while he was guest-teaching in my English class at Bellaire High School. He liked my essay on Existentialism, and he began to take me along to Jade Buddha temple with him. After the Dharma talk, or whatever it was we used to attend, we sometimes fetched bubble tea or vegetarian lunch or went adventuring in the crazy Hong Kong mall. He once convinced me to buy bulk incense because it was such a bargain, and I still have about 100 sticks of that incense.

Our adventures were pretty fun, because he acted just as young and insanely as me, willing to try and experience everything, and to laugh uncontrollably in public. When I would call him on the phone, he would always answer and say, "Oh Hi! you crazy girl!" After my first break up, I became very depressed for about a year, and spending time with Wynn provided relief and positive attention from a caring adult. We didn't just goof off; we had serious talks and he once told me that I would be a lot happier once I overcame the effects of teenage drama. But we did goof off a lot, and talk about boys, and our families and cats and Dr. Seuss. Sometimes he gave me insights and hints about his greater life philosophy. Sometimes I invited him along to hang out with my peers. Often they had know idea what to make of my gregarious friend.

When Wynn decided to become a Nurse, I was amazed by his decision. I admired him so much. I'm glad that I told him that before he died; I wrote him an email a couple of years ago telling him how much I look up to him.

Wynn introduced me to many things. He introduced me to Existentialism, to Buddhism in practice, to Buddhist mindfulness practice for driving. He introduced me to Johannes, the Austrian, Wynn's dear friend who I dated for about a week before he had to move back to Austria. He once tried to teach me how to bowl; it was unsuccessful. He introduced me to "Joe Versus the Volcano," which he swore was existential and to this day is one of my favorite movies.

I miss Wynn. I think of him often. I always quote Wynn when someone gives me directions and tells me to "go straight." Wynn was once driving me home and I told him to "go straight," and he said, "this car does not go straight! it only goes forward!"

I want so badly to see him again, to go on an adventure though Houston together with our Slug companion at our side, or simply to talk at Diedrich's for hours, to cuddle on his couch or hear his laughter, his calling me "crazy girl."

Wynn, the aquarius, the amazing bendable boy, the humorist and healer, my dear, dear friend.

Michael Elizabeth Zimmerman

Thursday, March 01, 2007

A Year

Well, it's hard to believe it's been over a year now. I keep driving by while I'm in the neighborhood looking to stop by and say hello. I google Wynn's name here and there just to read a few things and try to pickup a few more pieces of his mysterious self. I knew Wynn for about 8 years. Wynn was very special to me. While some people did not understand him, I was always intrigued by his personality. Wynn showed me and taught me many things. The person I am today has been a result of his influence. He taught me to open up and to experience the world without fear. As I make a few puns here and there I always will remember the crazy hours we would spend talking and making puns.

Nathan LeBlanc

Thursday, September 28, 2006

Trek Paradise

Monday, August 21, 2006

A Great Man

Dear Wynn’s family and friends:
It has taken me a long time to commit to what I would say here. Words seem so inadequate. I know Wynn (present tense intended), because he was my neighbor for the couple of years that I lived in the building behind his. I moved away about a year and a half ago. Both buildings are owned by N.D. (that’s nothin doin he says when he introduces himself) Anderson, the amazing 95 or 96 year old landlord that Wynn and I loved to visit with. Wynn took good care of, the ailing, Mrs. Anderson, among everything else that he had going on…..but, I digress.

“A ha, ha, ha, that is crazy man!” I typically heard Wynn say. When I think of Wynn, often, one of the first things that I think about is his strong, bold, intense laugh. Really, few people are at ease to laugh like that. So many people are pent up. Not Wynn Martin. When I think of Wynn, I think of perhaps one of the strongest individuals that I have ever met. It takes strength to be positive in all kinds of situations. There is pretend strength, of the “I will find someone to take care of that type”. There is the dumb, pretend strength that gets people in over their heads. (Sound like another W?) Wynn was neither of these. He was, of the rare, understands totally, sees the risks, feels the fear, sees the solution and pushes forward type. His laugh told me that.… his laugh told me that. His actions told me that. His extraordinary, ever present, kindness told me that.

Apparently, he seemed kooky to some; but to me, his kookiness was a response to the craziness of the world that we all live in. I think he saw unfairness, selfishness, fear and greed, but did not process it the way many of us do. It did not cause him to look inward in any way. He never waisted thought on what was wrong and impossible to affect. He focused directly on what he could affect. He reacted to the world by being extraordinarily fair, more giving, bolder and more altruistic. He was, perhaps more than anyone that I have known, and certainly with respect to the most important things in life, a man of action. He was a deeply spiritual man who worshipped in his own way. No doubt, he is living well in the world beyond and his spirit lingers here.

Wynn encouraged me to return to school. He returned to school, to become a nurse, a few months after I met him. I begin studying next week for a First Professional Master’s Degree at The University of Texas School of Architecture. Wynn's spirit is with me now as I begin this journey. He was a very, very good man. Thank you to his parents, Scott and other family for the wonderful Reggae and Vegetarian Indian Cuisine fun filled party in his honor. Wynn's life made a difference for the better and will continue to do so through all of the friends and family whose life he enhanced.

Roman J.A. McAllen

Sunday, July 09, 2006

Wynn and the world

First and foremost, my condolences to Wynn's family, as well as my
deep gratitude for this website. Reading through the stories and
names here brings back quite a few memories. I am now looking through
all my old email and wish I had saved more of the ones from Wynn.
Make that all of them.

Some of the more hilarious ones have been shared by others here. Nor
can I add much more about Wynn beyond what has already been said --
especially, in places, by Wynn himself. All those who knew him, know
how completely crazy he could be. As insane as the only sane man in a
world full of utter lunacy. We are all better people for having known
him.

Wynn thought about things. Everything. Continuously. And so
conversations with him could go anywhere, everywhere. An email from
him was a tricky thing: it could be so funny that my innards would
ache as I tried in vain not to laugh, with coworkers nearby giving me
odd looks. Or it could be so deep as to challenge me to think more
about the world around me, and my attitudes towards it. Such an email
could take an hour to read and hours more to reply.

More importantly than just thinking about it, Wynn deeply felt for
the world around him, and strived to do things to help. And so
empathy and tolerance are two things I hope to remember him by.

Kevin Hoke
Will Rice '93

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

On Wynn Martin

I was fortunate to know Wynn Martin, although I would be the first to admit that I probably did not appreciate him as much as I should have.  Though the Rice Sentinel (of which I was co-founder and editor for two years) was run by people with a more-or-less "conservative" perspective, that made little difference.  Indeed, I think Wynn was attracted by the maverick nature of the Sentinel.  What prevented me from appreciating Wynn the way I should have was, without a doubt, my own neurotic perfectionism.  Wynn had volunteered to do page layout for us.  I don't think he knew what he was getting into, since I wound up changing everything if a headline happened to be one point too close or too far from the text.

The moral of the story: Wynn was in the wrong job.  How obtuse I was not to recognize this!  We should have encouraged a free spirit like Wynn to write more pieces in the style of the beloved Dr. Seuss essay, which I still like to read about once a year.  Without a doubt, Wynn brought a sense of lightness, and much idiosyncratic humor, to the Sentinel.  Fifteen years later, surrounded by mostly humorless academics, I've learned not to take these things for granted.  I recall some good times at Wynn's apartment.  They usually revolved around computer geekage and Yes music, two things that we had in common.

I am sad to have learned of Wynn's passing.  God bless Wynn and his family.

Robert C. Miner
Hanszen College, class of 1993
email: Robert_Miner@baylor.edu

Thursday, June 08, 2006

Poem

Looks like the postings are trickling down.  I wanted to add something though.  I came across this poem and wanted to share it.  It’s by Chaim Stern.

 

It is a fearful thing

to love

 

A fearful thing

to love,

hope, dream:  to be –

 

to be

and oh! to lose.

 

A thing for fools, this,

and

a holy thing,

a holy thing

to love.

 

For

your life has lived in me,

your laugh once lifted me,

your word was gift to me.

 

To remember this

brings a painful joy.

 

‘Tis a human thing, love,

a holy thing,

to love

what death has touched.

 

 

I pray that Wynn’s family and all of us will be comforted speedily and in our day.

 

Renee Waghalter

 

Monday, April 10, 2006

Memories of Wynn's amazing story-telling abilities

What can I say? Chris McKenzie, Wynn's old off-campus roommate, emailed me to tell me about Wynn's passing. Hard to believe that so much vitality and spontaneity and humor and wit is gone. But I guess since Wynn is unforgettable, he will live on in everyone who ever had the pleasure of meeting him.
I've been trying to sort through my memories, since it all seems to long ago and far away. I was just thinking about Wynn last week, and wondering how he was. Figured he was still driving that huge rust-colored Cadillac pimpmobile (with the 8-track stereo) around town, and winking at (and waving a leg at) all the cute young men.
See, back in the Rice U. days, I had a major crush on Wynn, and used to spend a lot of time hanging out with him. I think he was sorting out his feelings on the subject of his sexual preference at the time, or at least getting used to being more open about it. I wish I had access to all the great emails on ruf and owlnet from back then... Later I dated his roommate for a bit. Saw a lot of Wynn, and constant examples of his amazing double-jointed prowess. Together, we tried to run Beavis and Butthead as homecoming queen and king, respectively... I drew posters of Beavis in his tiara and Butthead in his Elvis outfit... and painted huge closeups of their faces to hang... must have been over 6-feet tall! Painted crouching on the floor of their house. We would discuss who would get to play Beavis and Butthead if we got to go to the Rose Bowl (or whatever it was called, we hated football). But a secretary and a cat won, instead.
One of the stories I remember, was one he told about performing Shakespeare, with one of the former Hanszen masters (and a prof), to be unnamed. During rehearsal, one of the female actors was not "being aggressive enough" in her attraction to another character - the prof took on the role of the character that she was playing against, and when she wasn't being flirty enough, this prof yelled, "Grab My Ass!!!" Maybe more than once. Anyway, Wynn did an amazing impression, it sounded exactly like him. I later found a hysterical photo of this prof from the 70s, and put it in a card I painted for Wynn, with the interior message reading "Grab My Ass," right above this prof's photo. I wish I could tell the story like Wynn did, with the uncanny mimicry and the physical acting out of all the characters. It's just not the same. We were crying with laughter. (I've enclosed a picture of the front of the card, with Calvin playing the part of Wynn, a fitting comparison.)
I kept up with Wynn later after I graduated, since I was working in the medical center... Last time I saw him, I remember playfully nudging him and reminding him (perhaps admonishing him) to make sure these cute boys he got interested in were at least 18!!! He always had the heart of a kid, and people his age rarely had his playful nature. I wish I had kept up with him after I moved back to California in '97... He's one of people I will always remember. Too big for this one small planet to handle.
Paula K. Wirth
www.inkvision.com
paulawirth@gmail.com

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Life so far - in Wynn's own words

I thought I might share a particularly good email Wynn sent to high school friend Noel Taylor in March of 2000. Wynn and Noel hadn't spoken in 13 years so Wynn wanted to catch her up on how his life was going. - Scott Martin
______________

Date: Mon, 6 Mar 2000 01:58:30 -0600
From: Wynn Martin [wynn@zenx.net]
To: Noel_Taylor [nttaylor@enteract.com]
Subject: Life so far

Hi, Noel. :)

It's neat to finally be writing. Gosh, the thought of it all is fairly daunting... to try to offer a meaningful snapshot of thirteen years; it HAS been that long, though it's difficult somehow to imagine how.

You can't really be surprised that I still remember you, or the six-word lesson you offered that fixed my two-year-old driving problem. *smile* I think I only really knew you reasonably well for one year at Bellaire, but you were nevertheless one of the most meaningful friends I had; the other was my girlfriend, such as that was: Renee James.

I liked high school, and part of the reason I enjoyed the adventure was my weird popularity, of course. I was something of a mascot to the class ahead of me, because I'd originally intended to graduate in three years, and often took courses with the class of '86. Similarly, my own '87 peers treated me differently for the same reason. And I was certainly NOT popular in the POPULAR sense of being popular-- I dressed funny, I was no stud, I didn't listen to the right music... but I made people laugh on the bus, and gave wickedly daring presentations for class, and had lots of friends. The best kind, too, of course: the sort who hung out in the TPP shack.

But being generally liked and having lots of friends everywhere isn't the same as having a BEST friend, or even very MEANINGFUL friends. Even befriending the best people doesn't mean that you share the best relationships. I mostly played a role of some kind for every environment in high school... usually entertainer, or mascot-to-the-class-ahead. That WAS a real part of who I was; those roles helped define me. So, they weren't insincere. But, few people saw more of me than that, mostly because I didn't have someone with whom to share more.

There were two friends of mine at Bellaire with whom I felt a deeper empathy, because we were just a lot alike. You were one of those, and Renee was the other. Ironically, it's because Renee and I had an "officially recognized dating relationship" that we weren't as absolutely comfortable with one another as we might have been; instead, we were concerned about what it meant that each of us was of the other sex, and we were "dating," or goodness knows what. Those questions, roles, responsibilities got in the way of what really was the best foundation for our mutual interest in one another: we were a lot alike. We still are, in fact.

But a difference between you and Renee for me was that over time, I became completely comfortable with you, and that wasn't true with Renee. I felt the same kind of closeness and desire to share myself meaningfully, but it was easier with someone who wasn't supposed to be my girlfriend.

I remember, in particular, a few really good experiences shared at your house... when we watched "The Wall," for instance, and talked meaningfully about it, about childhood fears, about the awkwardness of relationships with our parents. And then, a year later, the single driving lesson was meaningfully important to me. I had been really intimidated by driving, probably because I'd been hit by a 16yo driver when I was a child-- the source of my leg injury. And then I'd had the added challenge of trying to learn the manual transmission from my father in what was clearly, to him, an opportunity for father/son bonding that he needed and wanted badly... desperately. It was tragic, when that had failed so awfully. I'd actually snapped the clutch cable, and was humiliated to the point of DAMAGE that we had to be picked up by Mom to get home. So, ask a friend for help later was a really humbling experience, and an expression of my trust in you. I didn't have those thoughts consciously at the time, but that's what was going on underneath.

So no, of course I've never forgotten. And I've thought of you many times, when I've driven someone else's car, or during the brief, fantastic summer that I owned an RX-7 (oh MAN that was fun!). And just from time to time when I've looked back at my high school experience, and thought about my friends. Usually, a bunch of other names spring to mind right away, because other friends were either friends for a longer time, or seemed somehow more compelling in their interest to me-- Jon Polsky, for instance, just absolutely fascinated me. I did many more "fun," crazy things with Renee, or with Sammy Buck, than you and I did. But though things were pretty low-key, your friendship was nevertheless among the most meaningful. I don't think I ever connected with Sammy or Jon the way you and I did a few times, when we talked and were, I think, once moved to tears. Renee and I did, but again, there was that awkwardness. You and Renee were also the only people with whom I shared exactly the right sort of silly appreciation for Dr. Who. *laugh!* Arthur Nunes was an absolute, geeky Whovian. You, Renee and I, though, were just one step removed from that extreme; fans, to be sure, with lots of stupidly expensive Who books and stuff, but removed enough to laugh at ourselves and the absurdity of it at the same time. Arthur, I think, was lost.

Curiously, I've also found Arthur again in the last few years-- we happened to meet in the most outrageously unlikely fashion, when we both entered an intersection at the same time when he was back in Houston one weekend. Arthur is so utterly out of it that he couldn't figure out how to get around or get out of my way, and we ended up staring at each other, both stopped in the middle of the intersection, until we suddenly RECOGNIZED one another. It was profoundly surreal. Of all my friends from Bellaire, only Arthur has actually surprised me by eventually having lost his virginity. ;-)

*laugh* It's funny that you wrote about the "overall" issue, and word play, before asking about my time at Rice. I'd been admitted, officially, as a prospective electrical engineer, though I spent my freshman year really working toward a computer science degree. But all kinds of important things happened that year to make me reevaluate, and it worked out in my favor, though it was difficult at the time, of course.

First, both calculus and chemistry spanked me pretty well at Rice, after years of cruising effortlessly through math and sciences in every school or testing experience I'd ever had. I still found physics intuitive at Rice, but chemistry was like a magic show. And while first semester calculus was no problem at all, the second semester might have been in Sanskrit. I took a D- as a mercy grade.

That rattled me pretty well, but it was my summer job in a computing environment that did me in. My own job was actually pretty cool, for a starting summer job. I was promoted after a week to a sysop for the geoseismic firm's computer, an already-aging DEC VAX 8650. I was well-paid by standards for summer jobs at the time, and it was a swank position. No programming, but the programmers were at my mercy for allocation of cycles and such. *grin* It was pretty geeky.

And I had a fair amount of fun, at the controls. But I also had a good view of the programming scene, and it was a wake-up call. These people were not creative, nor allowed any creative room or self expression. They seemed less like programmers, in my mind, than mere coders. They translated someone else's flow chart into FORTRAN, or DEC assembly. And they did it from dawn until 10pm, and on weekends, and Independence Day. It was grim.

At the end of the summer, with a sense of impending dread as the new semester approached, I searched for a new major. Something not computer. Something... easy. I just prayed I could find something I could DO, something with which I could get away, and take a degree to show for my time, and my parents' money.

I settled on English. It was, in my mind, a cop-out. I was embarrassed. I chose it because it would be easy for me, and because it was actually kind of FUN for me to read, and write papers. I liked literature, and I really enjoyed writing, breaking the rules, stirring up some trouble and controversy.

...Of course, those are the best reasons to have chosen that path; I just didn't recognize thosevalues at the time. I was actually ashamed, to have chosen something because it would be easy and even fun for me. Even years later, I thought I had made the right decision for the wrong reasons. It was years later still that I realized, in retrospect, that I had accidentally made the right decision for the best reasons possible.

I did promise to write you a novel tonight, didn't I. *grin* :)

My little black cat, Jenny, is curled up in the chair beside me, in front of our PC. I'm sitting at the Mac, from which I still prefer to do my writing, and creative work. To this day, that cat is the only pussy I've ever had. *laugh!* More on sex later, since thank goodness the story isn't as bleak as all that. :)

English and I got along infamously at Rice. Profs and I loved and punished one another, and I think we changed each others' lives. When I cared, and was inspired, my reading and writing were passionate beyond compare, and I was unconcerned with expectations, tradition, "requirements," or boundaries. Fortunately, this was true for only perhaps a third of my work; any more might literally have killed me. For that third, though, I got an A+ or an F or D-, or the instructor would be unable to assign a grade. At the end of my senior or fifth year, I remember being called to Dr. Wallingford's office regarding my final paper. Kit Wallingford and I literally cried; we didn't know what to do with me. She called my work brilliant, defiant, irrelevant to her class... what were we to do? Well, we were already doing it, of course: crying... talking... laughing; we did laugh. There were more tears than laughs that afternoon, but it was a great demonstration of our passion, our learning, and the relevance of reading, writing, and poetry in our lives and experience as living beings.

One of the great things to happen during college was to grow closer to my brother by living farther apart. Scott had always been expected, unfairly, to be like his brother. I was the "good kid," of course: good grades, better test scores, often the teacher's pet, literally an alter boy at church. Scott came home in police cars.

We'd grown up on awful terms, and had never been friends. We didn't play together, talk, or even coexist. We fought, or avoided one another. We actively disliked one another, for our entire childhood. Scott was compared with me, and the comparison seemed unfavorable... so I was resented. And I saw in him a nasty, spiteful, unsuccessful troublemaker, whose trouble was often made to bring down my pedestal, whenever he got a chance to take a swipe at me. I was a terrible older brother, and he was a difficult, troubled kid.

But with Wynn out of the house as Scott started high school, I wasn't such a threat any more, and our parents efforts were focused exclusively on Scott. Unfortunately, all their attention to his academic trouble reinforced his esteem problems, by demonstrating their lack of faith in his natural ability.

Of course, Scott is not like me. He has his own skills, talents, and powerfully unique assets. He just needed a chance to discover them, and then express them. So, after he almost failed his freshman year at Bellaire-- your junior year, perhaps?-- our parents moved him to a private school. And amazingly, they listened when I suggested that they give him a REAL chance to start over, by getting out of his face, his work, his friends. And they did. They offered him, for the first time, their trust... and he did well with it.

He didn't and still doesn't offer a lot of proactive communication regarding developments in his life, but he quietly did his work well, got good grades, and developed a commendable skill in photography. Today, in fact, he has his own digital imaging company, in San Antonio.

But while I was at Rice, our relationship changed dramatically. For the first time, I was not the enemy. And Scott was not mean to me. And, we had something in common, in a way: parental escape.I was kind of glad to be in a new place, doing my own thing, and this seemed a little like Scott's new space and opportunity to reinvent himself. He knew I was appreciating my new freedom, and wanted that. Although things were different for him at home, there was still tremendous tension between Scott and our parents, particularly our mother, with whom his relationship is still challenged.

One evening, something truly amazing happened. It was the last day of classes of my junior year at Rice, and still the second semester of Scott's junior year of high school. My best friend and I decided to celebrate the end of classes by having a low-key, wine-and-cheese event for ourselves in my room that evening. I'd just turned 21, and although I'd been the laughingstock of Rice University for most of three years because I was The Guy Who Does Not Drink, I was getting over my irrational fear, and looking for constructive opportunities to enjoy a drink in a nice setting with a good friend. Tom was the right friend, and the end of classes seemed the right occasion. We didn't know anything about wine, and bought a nasty gallon jug of Gallo chablis, honestly thinking it would last us the entire summer; we'd found an off-campus apartment to share for the summer and the next school year.

It wasn't an evening about drinking; it was an evening of friendship and celebration. We bought some French bread and several cheeses to have with our wine, and we enjoyed it. We enjoyed it so much that between just the pair of us, we finished the wine. A gallon of it. In about 90 minutes, honestly without ever really being very aware that we'd done anything of the sort. We each drank half a gallon of wine in a sitting. You can imagine the disastrous sickness of it all later that night.

But before we'd hit the bottom of the jug, the door flew open, and there was Wynn's brother Scott, screaming and crying and in absolute fury and distress as he ranted desperately for maybe a minute about some horrible fight he'd just had with Mom and she's being a bitch and I got an F on a test because blah blah Mom bitch bitch freaking out stole her car and drove here because I didn't know where else to go and can I stay here tonight? *pant, cry, wheeze* Tom and I were stunned. We were sitting on the couch and had been laughing like drunken fools when the door burst open, and we were frozen in time when Scott delivered this raving, panicked rant for a moment. Suddenly, as he wiped his nose, still standing in the doorway, Scott really looked at us for the first time, and suddenly looked powerfully confused. What th...?

"Wait a minute..." he said, with a look of discovery slowly erasing the pain and tears, even as a weird smile began to emerge involuntarily. "...You're DRUNK!"

Well, after a moment's fear had passed, Tom and I suddenly cracked up and laughed and laughed, and offered Scott some wine (which he declined, before crawling into the safety of my bed for the night), and Scott is my best friend in the world today. I am delighted that he got engaged this month, and I spent the evening tonight with his fiance, Jenny (not named for my cat), whom I love dearly.

My senior year at Rice was a particularly challenging and perhaps terrible time of my life. It was both wonderful and awful to live with Tom Saberhagen, youngest son of sci-fi classic author Fred Saberhagen, who is an amazing man, by the way. Tom and I were amazingly close, and he was the best, best friend I've ever had. He is philosophically and intellectually more stimulating than anyone else I have ever met, let alone known, and we often stayed up all night, staring at the ceiling together from the two couches upon which we slept in our sparsely decorated apartment. We'd talk and debate and argue and wonder and laugh and cry and think and pause... and the sun would come up, and we've have classes to attend, and we'd have had no sleep... The practical things in life seemed so mundane, so small, relative to the Whole of everything. We searched a lot for meaning, or new perspective. Tom has the most incredible gift for perspective; he sees things in ways I had literally never imagined. He's so open minded that he's actually distracted by all the ways in which he perceives things all the time; it's often difficult for him to make decisions and settle upon one perspective for practical benefit.

We shared tremendous trust, mutual respect, love, intimacy of a sort that few people probably ever experience, I think. I don't mean physically-- it frustrates me that people use "intimacy" as a synonym for sex. I mean instead that we were meaningfully close friends, whose sharing went beyond the clothes we treated as community property, and was extended to all our consciousness. We worked very hard to try to share with each other our new discoveries, perspectives, philosophies, all the time. It was very difficult on us, and immensely rewarding.

Ultimately, the trouble grew greater than the reward, unfortunately. We both grew that year to live so exclusively in the mind that we had practical trouble with responsibilities to academics and such. And, something remarkable and dangerous happened: we grew to know each other so intimately that each of us could see the truth in the other, even when we lied to ourselves. We saw in each other the defenses that protected us against ourselves, and that was dangerous. And we were all about truth, and seeing reality for what it is, so we challenged each other when we saw these inconsistencies. Those internal things against which our natural defenses protected us were suddenly brought out, and reflected from outside. I challenged Tom regarding his relationship with his father; he'd always been unable to really address that conflict, and had buried it. How could Tom ever match his father's intellect, or writing, or success? He could not, of course-- not at 20, at least, and it would have torn him to pieces if he hadn't built a defense of denial around the problem. It was disastrous of me to push at those walls, and challenge him where his wounds were already to deep for him to address internally, let alone from outside scrutiny and attack.

But even worse for us was the truth he could see inside me that I could not address. We loved one another, and shared that deep appreciation. But I was also in love with Tom. IN LOVE with him... obsessively, painfully, and beyond hope for reciprocation. It was tragic from every perspective, absolutely. The feeling could not be reciprocated from outside; but it also could not be accepted, or even acknowledged, from within. In defense of his sanity, Tom moved one day without notice; I came home to find the place barren, and I was lost. It wasn't just about Tom-- the greater pain was just inside myself, and about myself. To be resuscitated later, and find myself not quite dead despite sincere effort, was the worst experience I will ever have; humiliating and miserable beyond comprehension.

I turned everything off then, for some years, and was just numb. I stopped pondering philosophy, metaphysics, the reality of the world... I just lived. It was better than pain. I even had a lot of fun a lot of the time; it just wasn't meaningful fun, except for the course I taught at Rice on Dr. Seuss after I graduated in '92. I'm something of an authority on Dr. Seuss today. :)

For four years after graduation and a short stint at underpaid university faculty life, I worked as the computer network manager for a small, progressive research group at M.D.Anderson Cancer Center, across the street from Rice. Eleven of us were on the cutting edge of integrating medical conferencing with this newfangled "internet" thing, well before a friend of mine down the street-- Chuck Shotton-- wrote what soon became the world's most popular web server, which evolved into WebStar. These were geekily exciting times, so it was okay to cruise along in emotionally-numb mode for a while, and still find life reasonably stimulating.

Over time, I grew safe and strong enough to began addressing some self-improvement issues. I'd made a bit of a list.

[Dear GOD! I've just taken a two-day break from the email, which so far has happened in just that first, 3-hour stretch; now, I'm pretty overwhelmed by the magnitude of it, but will try to wrap it up.]

I have, by the way, license plates that say "SLUGS."

SO! It was 1995, and I made a list of issues to address in my life. The were mostly simple, but broad ideas. I wanted to listen to people, instead of talking so much; be more humble; be less defensive; more sensitive; wanted to be more relaxed all of the time. I picked one issue at a time, and worked on it until I felt as if I'd made some good progress, and then added another.

I was amazed by how easy it was to successfully change. What was difficult was not the change, but the commitment to change. That amazed me; I'd really believed that behaving differently would be very challenging, and that wasn't the case, once I'd CHOSEN to behave differently.

For instance, there were always small conflicts at work. That's probably normal. But, I was always very defensive, and never easy-going, or willing (able, I thought?) to listen and really consider criticism appropriately. Well, it's not really difficult to DO that-- what's hard is to DECIDE YOU'RE GOING TO. It's too easy to feel like, "I'm RIGHT, so I shouldn't have to put up with this." Or, "I'm WORTH something, my perspective is valuable, so I'm going to fight for my perspective." Driving is a great example. I decided that I was going to be kind to other drivers, even when they were wrong, or stupid, or even mean. REALLY DIFFICULT COMMITMENT. In the instance that a guy cuts you off, it's almost compellingly tempting to grip the wheel tightly, flip the guy off, race around him to show him who's boss... you've been there. But, I discovered that if I just decided not to do that-- difficult decision, but if I mananged THAT-- then I could let it go, break, and wave with a smile, as if to say, "Sure, come on in," instead of, "ASSHOLE CUT ME OFF FUCKING *MORON* GO BACK TO NEW YORK!" Heh heh...

Well, at the end of only several months, I'd made real progress on all of the issues I'd dentified. It was pretty amazing, really. I think it was possibly in part because I was still sort of emotionally numb. Life was fairly flat. Not bad, just not... not much of anything. I wasn't going to settle for that, though, so I decided to make some changes, and prepare myself for moving onward to better things. Hence the list, and the success, I think. I basically made myself a better person in half a year... because I decided to. And that was just about all there was to it.

Bolstered by the confidence that came with that success, and the cheerful faces of delighted friends and family who noticed the change, I was finally ready to address the last, lingering thing on that list. I hadn't really enumerated it or spelled it out for myself even then, because it was repressed, of course-- a clinically psychotic repression, I'm certain.

But, of course, I was a Big Gay Homosexual, to quote the kids on Southpark. "Whoa! Your dog's a big gay homosexual!" "Is not!" Heh heh... is, too!

*sigh* I joke about it now, and it's actually sort of disappointing, in a way, to have lost most of the passion now for the original story, and the whole coming-out experience. It was really hard, and I could write an email this length about just that year, and just the coming-out experience. I'll try to give you just the Cliff's Notes version:

I honestly didn't figure it out and put a name on it until I was 25. Tom understood it when I was a senior at Rice, and somehow at that point I KNEW, but I managed for the first time to actively repress it. Before then, I didn't even understand.

And even then, I didn't quite get it that I was gay, and that gay people are really just people who are... gay. Honestly, even at 20 years old, I was an absolute victim of stereotyping, and felt like gay people were all limp-wristed, moustache-bearing, middle-aged, effeminate hairdressers. Whereas now I know they're also flight attendants. *grin!* But sincerely, I had never identified myself that "those people," so it honestly never even OCCURED to me, I think, that I might be GAY. I was aware, even in high school, that I was a lot more turned on by guys than girls, but then I thought I just hadn't grown into a mature attraction for women yet... and later, I just thought there was something wrong with my sexual orientation. Never connected that with being gay, somehow.

And when it finally dawned on my that, in fact, I was pretty EXCLUSIVELY attracted to guys--sexually, romantically, in fantasy, you name it-- I was horrified. I didn't want to be associated with those GAY people; I don't cross-dress, hair-dress, call my friends "girl." I really thought that I must be unique. I wasn't gay, I was just a NORMAL guy who was, incidentally, sexually attracted to guys.

The birth of widespread email and internet access had a lot to do with my coming out, and coming to understanding. Before I came out to any friends, when I was finally ready to begin addressing the issue for mySELF, I did some reading, and found a usenet discussion group. There, I befriended a like-minded Canadian graduated student, Anthony, who was in just about exactly the same position. Plus, he was smart, funny, and we just hit it off very well. He's a wonderful friend to me today, half a decade later-- Dr. Majanlahti, now living in Rome.

After some months' sharing with Ant, and reading about others or catching a book at the library for some background and such, I felt ready to tell a friend in Houston. I was terrified, and I think John thought I was going to tell him I'd killed someone or something. I sincerely expected him to be horrified, or to think I was in love with him (which was not the case), or that he'd just feel betrayed or something. Instead, he was pretty excited about this new awakening for me, and injected a lot of humor in the whole experience, even the evening I told him. "Well, HELL! We've got to get you the right PORN for the first time in your life, for crying out loud!" *grin!* A blessing I know I can never fully repay.

Hmm; I've gotten slightly out of chronological order, I think. Before telling my friend (housemate, actually, a med student) in Houston, I had written a terrified, extremely emotional email to my best non-Tom friend from Rice, Kevin Hoke, who had recently moved to Caltech for his Ph.D. in chemistry (he's been working on it for seven years, and likes it to much to actually finish). I wrote Kevin twelve pages of email, and it was gut-wrenching; full of apology, terror, pleading for understanding-- it was awful. Kevin, who is something of an emotionless Vulcan, was a little put off by the extremity of my terror and emotional need, but was reliably stable in his logic, balance, and friendship. He said it didn't matter, of course, that our friendship was really about other things. He reprimanded me, though, for the really challenging email, and recommended that I calm down, and not make it such an ordeal for the next victim I'd tell.

That was my brother, Scott, to whom I sent merely THREE pages of gut-wrenching, horrible, terrified, tearful and apologetic email. But, that was still something of an improvement.

At this point, Scott was in school at Evergreen State in Olympia, Washington; more like a sort of hippie camp than a college, but it fit Scott very well. I think he majored in Weed & Love. Scott's reply was pretty simple, and I remember it almost verbatim. He wrote, "Yeah, kinda figures. ...Hey, my Macintosh came in today!"

When I explained that it was, in fact, a big deal to me-- he'd gone on to say that all of his friends were gay or at least pot farmers-- he was very supportive and understanding, and was a tremendous help to me.

Then, I told John in Houston, and finally felt a lot more comfortable.

After a few months, though, very little practical good seemed to have come from those coming-out experiences, except for the marked improvement in my appreciation for porn. It dawned on my slowly that, Hmm, maybe I need to meet other GAY people.

Again, this was a surprising revelation for me, and I had to work to accept the idea. For the first half year of my dealing with my own homosexuality, it hadn't really occurred to me yet that I might one day be HAPPY with another GUY. I'd basically thought of it as a process of just admitting a terrible problem or shortcoming-- a tragic truth to accept, that I would NEVER love Renee James or any other woman the way I'd always wanted to. Suddenly, this new idea was pretty overwhelming: whoa. I might actually enjoy the company of another guy. Dear god! I could have a BOYFRIEND!

It was still, sincerely, a fairly yucky idea to me. I knew I couldn't have a GAY boyfriend-- but maybe, MAYBE there was someone else out there like ME, or like Anthony, and I could spend a lot of time with him, and we'd really like that. Hmm. Revolutionary, this thought.

So, eventually, I called the one friend of mine whom I was fairly certain might be gay, since I'd been over to his house every Saturday for a year to watch Twin Peaks and Star Trek:TNG with all his half-naked, effeminate friends, who were all male and used to tickle each other on the couch a lot. Don was, in fact, a Big Gay Homosexual. Whoa! I was right.

Don introduced me to a group of friends who share dinner on Thursday and Sunday nights. The group is really just a group of friends, who've been introduced through other friends in the group... it's mostly gay, but not entirely; mostly Rice grads or their spouses or exes, but not entirely. All good people. It seemed a good place to perhaps meet some good people who might also happen to be gay.

Um, THAT worked! At my second dinner, I made eye contact with a handsome young lad who was drawn to me when I stepped through the door. Well, I'm sure this had happened before, but I'd have freaked out and then forgotten it, of course. THIS time, in this new context, I was still scared utterly shitless, but for the first time, I allowed myself to look back, and noticed that I felt amazingly, stunningly good to be so flattered. ...Plus, hey: this guy was pretty cute himself. And we had mutual friends, and he came with good references, and was at UH, and he listens to great music, and for the first time in my entire life, I not only looked DELIBERATELY at another, handsome guy, but I actually ENJOYED it. I did still feel a bit guilty, I was certainly very afraid, but I was really wrapped up in the EXCITEMENT of it, which was new and compelling.

It was SO new and compelling that I didn't know how to interpret it, of course, and didn't do a very good job. Marcus is friendly, handsome, kind... and utterly boring, and not very bright. But I'd never been the willing object of someone's flattery like this before, and was also overwhelmed that the attention should come from a truly cute fellow, so I was just completely lost in it all. We spent every waking moment together for a week, and I was giddy with the excitement of it. Eventually, of course, we ripped each others' clothes off and I had my first, limited sexual experience with another person (I'd certainly been practicing a lot on my own, of course), and then didn't hear from him again for four days. It was the world's most absolutely classic, textbook sort of case, except that Marcus wasn't a jerk, he was just really, really simple. He hadn't been after getting into my pants, but once that happened, the mystery was mostly over, and suddenly I felt really, really dumb. I didn't punish myself for it; I allowed myself some credit for having had no experience before, and was understandably naive. But, I made a point of learning from the experience.

I was blessed to meet Ryan Wyatt at dinner shortly thereafter, and that was really something of a miracle. There was a lot of coincidence involved in my running into him again later in the world on my way to work one morning, remembering his email address (in part because he was Ph.D. student at Rice in astronomy at the time), and getting in touch with him again, but it worked out in our favor. Ryan was the manager of the planetarium at the museum of natural science, but just a year my senior, and though he wasn't as cute as Marcus, he was reasonably handsome, and extremely stimulating intellectually. Ryan eventually became my first boyfriend, and was-- in some ways-- the best match I've every had in that capacity. It's too bad I wasn't better prepared yet for a relationship-- didn't yet understand the patience required, the compromise, the forgiveness for past mistakes... I'd never had a boyfriend before. But, we were a good match, and had a lot of fun. Friends rolled their eyes in mock dismay when we showed up together at parties, out-punning our best competition together as an unstoppable team. We won the pumpkin-carving contest together at Halloween, and there wasn't another couple among the dinner group that dared sit across a smart board game from us. *grin!* Plus, he was sweet, and I swooned in absolute delight when we finally kissed, after almost a month. He had the patience and thoughtfulness to take things at my pace, as I grew and learned.

Later, I dated a Brian, James, Greg, and another Ryan. Brian dated the first Ryan for a while. This stuff is pretty challenging, of course, but all of us have not only survived it all, but grown to be meaningful, loving friends, except for the second Ryan, with whom the relationship was too short to grow into something very meaningful. Anyway, the others are among my best friends in the world. Greg just moved into a place literally around the corner from mine, so we visit a lot... and Brian programs for my company today, on a contract basis.

I left M.D.Anderson and joined a startup consulting company. There were just two partners, and I was their first employee. Entech grew to be widely loved and praised, and within three years had 30 employees and was the best-ranked internet service provider in Houston for businesses; we were mostly a consulting firm, but offered internet service provision and connectivity for business clients-- digital only, dedicated, no dial-up. It was pretty neat. Entech was sold in early '99, and in late '99 the parent company was purchased again by a national internet service provider, for the ISP clients and infrastructure. They got rid of consulting, and offered a modest severance package. The two guys for whom I'd begun working three years earlier made about seven million dollars. Each.

I started a new firm with a tremendously neat business partner, Michael, and today we have a consulting/support company, Techzentric. We're only a few months old, don't have a web site yet (though we take web design projects for our consulting/support clients), and have only a little more work than Michael and I can do ourselves, but we're growing. We contract the overflow work out right now. Most of my clients from the past few years have followed me, and love the new company, which is focused on people, rather than technology. I don't care at all about computers-- I care about people, and Michael's philosophy is the same. Techzentric does a lot of community service, and offers support for non-profit healthcare organizations; AIDS Foundation Houston is one of our largest clients, and we offer them inexpensive support for which we don't really make much money. ...But that's okay, because we bill corporate clients $115/hr, and keep getting referred to their friends and other companies for more work.

At about the same time I began my coming-out process, I was also a pretty avid cyclist. I was bicycling about 20 miles each day, and 30 miles a day on weekends. I was in the best shape of my life... and hey, I had a great ass. *grin!* It was pretty cool. But, my right leg was a problem. The knee didn't work very well, and was uncomfortable. Worse, I had a leg length discrepancy of about two and a half inches, which is pretty morbid.

I talked with orthopedists, did a lot of reading, and eventually began an Ilizarov reconstruction of my right femur. This is one of those awful deals with the external frame, pins through the limb, little twisty things to turn each day to stretch and direct new bone growth... you've seen this on TV, or if you watched Gattica last year (mmmm, Ethan Hawk; yum). That meant several more procedures, on top of the seven I'd already endured. I had lots of complications, and even broke a few of the pins-- once in dramatic fashion-- and ended up having a total of 19 operations, ten of them in the last six years. But finally, I have legs of equal length. I've been off my bike almost ever since, but am looking forward again to riding this summer, albeit with less enthusiasm than I had years ago. I'll just be riding for fun and health this year.

Right after that first procedure, to fracture the femur and install the Ilizarov frame, I was really tortured for several weeks. I could not sleep at all, was in constant pain, couldn't take a bath (shower was okay, but awkward, and required an hour-long disinfection process afterwards, to purge all my 30 open wounds at each pin site).

One particularly awful night, about three days after returning to work a week after the procedure, I got literally no sleep at all. I couldn't lie down, so I spent the night in a chair or on my couch, though the transition between them was painful. Never fell asleep, and as the sky began to fill with color before dawn, signaling my last hour before having to prepare for a full day of work at the hospital on zero sleep, I just cried in dismay. I was furious, with myself, the hospital, the world, and I didn't know how I would get through it. I felt horrible, and helpless.

Well, I sent my brother an email that morning, and he surprised me by returning a story-- the first time he'd EVER shared a story with me. He wrote about the guy from whom Scott bought his homebrew supplies-- a Vietnam War vet, who'd sustained a spinal injury in combat. Apparently, the guy had nerve damage, and felt phantom pain that couldn't be medically addressed very well-- there was no REAL damage to the legs that seemed full of pain, and medication was either ineffective, or not endurable in itself; you cannot go about life on narcotics all the time. So, the guy eventually exhausted western medicine's options, and began searching the world for any other solution, in his pain and desperation.

He visited shamanic healers, acupuncture centers in the east, Caribbean witchcraft freaks, and nothing worked for him. Eventually, he happened across a Buddhist monk, who listened to his story and said something like, "You have probably looked into this condition more thoroughly than anyone else alive; perhaps there is no cure for your pain. But, you might be able to learn to separate your suffering from that pain." ...Amazed, the guy chose to stay with the monk and learn; it was the first time anyone had suggested something completely new, this idea that what he really wanted was to escape his suffering, rather than the pain causing it.

Well, I, too, was intrigued by the story-- Scott reports that the homebrew guy says he still has the pain, but is "at peace with it" today, and very happy. I was interested in learning to disassociate my own pain and suffering, of course, but I was a lot more intrigued simply by this profound difference of perspective, and simple wisdom. So, I began looking for a teacher from whom I might learn more about the world like this.

I eventually found a very liberal, Chinese Buddhist temple on the west side of town, with a young monk, Venerable Hung-I (sounds like hung-YEE), who talks in English every other week to a small discussion group. I still go and listen to him, and feel like a learn a lot from this beautiful person. You know that image we have of the beautiful, impossibly wise guru or monk living on a mountain somewhere, who smiles with his simple understanding of the world and offers advice that is so simple, we are in awe of the wisdom, the person, the world...? Hung-I is just like that. He's just a simple, beautiful person, and I'm blessed to know him.

Last year was a particularly rich, exciting year for me. At the start of 1999, I flew to Baltimore to help drive Renee back to Houston with a van full of her things, her two cats, and her year-old son, Sean. Renee's second husband, the father of her only child, had grown physically abusive, which just... my feelings about it are overwhelming.

After we got to Rice together, Renee and I stopped dating, and by our second semester were no longer really in touch at all. We made a point of getting a meal together in the spring to talk and sort of say good-bye, and I'm glad we did that. Afterwards, there was literally no communication between us for seven years.

When we found each other again, living in different cities, we had a lot of catching up to do, but something amazing happened. We felt at ease with one another right away. Renee and I really had been wonderful friends in high school, and knew one another well. We're very much alike. And after several years apart, we had learned a lot, and were able to resume our friendship, but atop a new foundation of trust, and understanding... understanding, this time, of ourselves.

So, when things didn't go well with her second husband-- yeah, it's amazing that she's been married TWICE now, and has a son, Sean-- it was wonderful how much we could trust and love one another, and talk. When Chris grew violent, flew up there and we just got the heck out. It was a beautiful, wintery journey across the country, and I was delighted that we were together. And even happier to have her back to Houston.

Bellaire BEGGED Renee to take Dr. Beam's job, and days later, she became the new IB Physics teacher at Bellaire.

John E. Beam, by the way, is still mostly as you'd remember him, though it's kind of fun that he now regards us as friends, rather than students, and it's interesting to see him offer political opinions and such that he would once not have shared with us-- school politics, teacher rumors, job frustration, things like that. He's retired now, of course, but he and I were in touch before his retirement.

Renee's students so loved her that they invited her to their prom. Renee was overwhelmed at the invitation, and after some thought, told her students that she would go, if her former boyfriend would take her again to the Bellaire prom.

I don't know that you can imagine how that opportunity filled my heart. I'd wrecked prom for us, in 1987-- I did everything wrong. I didn't open doors for her; I didn't rent a car; Mom's crappy, Chevy Citation literally BROKE that night on my way to get Renee, so we were late. And, of course, her date turned out to be GAY, so that's got to kind of suck. But mostly, we didn't have fun because we were dumb, and naive. Like all kids going to prom. There was nothing "real" about that night, about our clothes, our food, the environment... we were playing roles we didn't understand, and somehow excepted under those circumstances to have the most meaningful night of our lives. How foolish, and probably normal.

I was delighted-- beyond that, I was... OVERWHELMED, with appreciation and excitement and gratitude, to have a chance to make it all up to Renee, to go and have a GOOD time at prom, and to know what it's really all about: celebrating one another.

We were picked up this time in a 1928 Oakland Essex; an absolutely amazing find, pulled off almost miraculously just two days before the event. I simply lucked into finding the limo, and was spectacularly fortunate that it was available that evening. I plunked down a bit less than half a grand for the privilege.

Renee looked smashing-- simple, elegant-- in her straight, sleeveless, black velvet dress. A refreshing change from the horrible, poofy fairy-tale dress she and all the girls wore in 1987. She looked, that Friday, like a lady. The wrist corsage (spelling?! Dear God, I've no idea) I selected with the florist-- simply two, deep plum orchids, and nothing else, bound with a strip of black velvet-- complimented her perfectly.

Renee was absolutely delighted when I arrived in the classic limo, and I could not have been more full of pride and joy upon seeing her. Driver Charles helped us into the car, and as he took his own seat in the front, I turned on the CD player. Renee lit up as Steve Winwood's "Higher Love" filled the classic car, and we positively beamed with delight. All the tunes we enjoyed in 1987, while driving about town in Renee's mother's futuristically cool Ford Taurus, filled the limo again as we drove first to dinner, and later to prom, and finally back to my new home. Renee particularly loved Paul Simon's "You Can Call Me Al." The Joshua Tree delighted us equally.

Dinner could not have been more fun. We returned to Hunan, in the Saks Center, where we'd eaten twelve years earlier. This time, of course, we were not intimidated, and instead laughed and really enjoyed the realization that our wait staff was more intimidated than WE were-- a far cry from our experience the first time. We asked them to do something they couldn't deal with, and Renee and I just laughed at the absurdity of it all. Per Renee's brilliant suggestion, I requested that the kitchen simply fill our table with food all night, in tremendous variety and small servings, to give us a broad sampling of appetizers, soups, snacks, salads, entrees, and sweets, some of them vegetarian, please. The Host visited us to clarify our request for the confused waiters who'd tried to understand which specific items we wanted to order. And, the Host wasn't any more clear than they were, finally insisting a little anxiously that we just order whatever we wanted, please. *shrug!* Well, we laughed and said fine, just bring us a #43 and a #29, please. That worked. And, we didn't enjoy the experience any less. Perhaps because we shared a cocktail. And a bottle of wine. (Vichon, 1996-- we really liked it.) And, two coffee drinks. None of which we finished, of course, and we managed to leave with the most absolutely perfect buzz. It could not have been more perfect. Such is the nature of perfection.

Little Sean met us at prom in his own, tiny suit, and was the hit of the event, of course. Renee, Sean and I should have new prom pictures now; I think we were the only couple with a baby. We endured prom just long enough to take pictures, dance inappropriately to some really bad rap, and make a show of getting in and out of our swank ride. Even our driver, who looked as if he'd already spent a lifetime chauffeuring Ms. Daisy, was a charming spectacle. Other limos' windows came down as their occupants leaned out to inspect our own, and Renee and I were reduced to laughter and tears when one prom-goer was overheard berating her date for failing to "get one a'them for HER!"

On the ride back to my place, I did finally give Renee that kiss I'd been swooning over, and she said almost tearfully that it might be a fine thing to have a gay boyfriend. We returned to my place, rented "Empire of the Sun," and watched it together from my couch, touching warmly and sharing junk food until three in the morning. It was, in almost every way, as perfect an evening as a person might dream. I wish I could adequately convey the night's initmacy and emotion. ... I am still in awe of it.

In March last year, I went to Costa Rica with my father for some meaningful time together and great adventure. Rather than visiting the beautiful Pacific coast beaches and tourist attractions at the live volcanos and such, we spent our time in the jungle and rain forest, mostly on foot with a grizzled old guide who hacked a path for us with his machete. We saw tiny, deadly, poisonous red tree frogs, deadly, poisonous snakes, fungus-covered sloths, iguanas, cayman, toucans, three kinds of monkeys, gorgeously tanned Costa Rican 18-year-old guys who looked good enough to lick, and those lizards that run across the water. But mostly, it was some time for father and son to share, in a way we never had before.

We returned feeling refreshed, and more alive than before. I think we often tend to think of vacations as an escape, and then feel worse than before we left upon returning to work, concrete, and routine. I returned feeling not just refreshed, but excited to be alive, and part of a living world. I pay more attention now to all the living things around me, and our living Earth. I appreciate my Dad a little more, and the time we have together, and it reminds me to appreciate ALL the people around me, and those who are somewhere else, or gone away.

In August, Scott and I bought the most tremendously neat, crazy, absurd and wonderful gift for everyone's birthday-- Mom, Dad, Granny, and Scott's fiance Jenny have birthdays within a ten-day period in August. Scott and Jenny drove in from San Antonio, Mom, Dad and I arrived from Houston, and everyone converged on Granny's house in Austin for the birthday gift announcement. We'd worked up a lot of mystique and excitement about the whole thing, but the others were still caught off-guard and a little overwhelmed when they opened an envelope to find... reservations to jump out of an airplane 23 hours later.

Mom, Jenny and Granny declined, but my former boyfriend Brian drove in from Houston the next morning to meet us, and he, Scott, Dad and I went skydiving from San Marcus.

It was stunning. I could not believe I was sitting on the edge of an open door on a tiny airplane (which needed paint) at 11,000 feet over patches of fields, and suddenly was hurled out, spun over and over, and found myself freezing in 120mph rushing air as I PLUMMETED toward the ground with a stranger strapped to my back. I was SO fucking SCARED! My freaky jumpmaster spun us one way and then the other, zigged and zagged after the 'chute opened, made us DIVE to catch up with the pair who'd jumped BEFORE us, and then-- amazingly-- somehow landed us in a 20-foot circle, such that we raced toward the gravel, and then... hung, and stepped to the ground, like walking off a yacht. I turned around to watch Brian Welch land right behind us. My father jumped out of an airplane on his 61st birthday.

It blew me away.

*sigh* Amazingly, that's going to end my story of the past 13 years. Life has been incredibly rich and wonderful, and it's great to get to share with you at least these thoughts and memories.

It's neat to hear that you're doing exciting things, too, particularly singing. You probably remember that I'd once sung with the Houston Boychoir, when it was still Singing Boys of Houston. I miss my voice terribly, and the loss used to be horribly painful for me. I can remember a time in high school when I went to bed having that "three wishes" fantasy... I think everyone must do that some time; imagine how you would spend three wishes? Like the Lottery Fantasy, I think. :) Anyway, I could only come up with two. I wished I could fall in love with Renee, and want her sexually; and I wished I could sing again. I remember heaving with tears running silently off my cheeks that night, as I cried and cried.

Today, these memories all make me smile... not because they weren't painful times, but because I am so amazingly in love with life today, and happy, and these things just remind me of all that I have, and how rich our experiences are.

Peace,
warmly,
wynn

Wynn with Browne Sisters

wynn with Browne Sisters
Wynn is seen here with the Browne sisters at the Jenny and Scott's wedding rehearsal dinner.  His zest for life in that great smile-his concern for others in that big heart!  He will be missed by so many and never forgotten.  We feel very fortunate to have know him, if only for a short time. 

With much love, Tom and Lynda Browne and family

Friday, March 17, 2006

My Rockstar

The first time I met Wynn was at his apartment when my boyfriend was thinking about becoming his next roommate. He played a Sinead O'Connor song for us. He was so proud. It was called "The Phoenix Will Rise." He was convinced that she was really singing, "The Phoenix! Will Rice!" I didn't try to dissuade him. He closed his eyes and swayed with the music. And that is how I picture him still. Rocking out with the angels.

Lizzie Taishoff-Sweigart
Wiess College '01

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

These are the People in Your Neighborhood

Yes, in your neighborhood, in your neighborhood.

Change...that's what Wynn inspired in me.

I came to Rice in 1995 closed, scared, quiet, alone.

Wynn had had his time there, but he had not dismissed the great institution...certainly not his neighborhood of Will Rice College.

He found me and Vicki through Chris, a journalism friend of his who was one of those revered Seniors with a SINGLE. Chris and Wynn thought differently, talked differently, viewed life differently than anyone I had ever met before.

I remember Wynn for the way he welcomed me into life. He was living life, and I was new, and I was allowed in. No, I wasn't allowed in. I take that back. Wynn, grabbed me by the hands and screamed, "JUMP!" I had no choice when I met him, but to join him in seeing in an adventurous way.

Once I had met Wynn, I couldn't be scared any more. I couldn't be alone any more. I couldn't be quiet any more. I couldn't be closed any more. When Wynn has touched your life, you answer his questions with vehemence, fervor, vitality, joy. You are a part of his story.

When I came to Rice, I was still a part of my small home town. I was ready to run back there and hide. Meeting Wynn changed that. Meeting Wynn made me ready to run forward and proclaim a new identity, as he had done his whole life. He showed me that there was a me in me.

Wynn, can you see me now? Can you hear me?

I will always love you.

Jonna Beck
Will Rice College
Rice University
BA English '99

Wynn Martin

I just found out about the passing of Wynn Martin about 30 minutes ago. Although I hadn't seen Wynn in over a decade I was stunned and saddened by the news of his death. Like everyone else who knew him for either long or short time I was left touched by his energy, eccentricity, and his sense of humor... boy, what a sense of humor!
 
I first met Wynn in 1992 when I was an impressionable college sophomore and he had already graduated. Like most fun college stories, the one I have to share revolves around drinking.
 
Wynn, my best friend Alan, and I had been drinking our favorite concoction of Everclear and Grape Bloudini Kool-Aid and had reached quite a state of nirvana. We decided we were hungry and decided to go to IHOP. We were drunk, but we were still good Rice boys, so we walked instead of driving, of course.
 
We were sauntering down Morningside when suddenly we saw these lights flashing behind us. Uh-oh. The Cops. The Fuzz. The Boys in Blue. We were busted for sure. I saw my future evaporating before my eyes as potential employer saw "Public Intoxication" on my background checks.
 
Luckily it was HPD and not one of the tightly-wound boys from the West U Police Department. He pulled up beside us and asked us where we were going. Wynn was the one who spoke to the policeman and remarkably, despite Wynn's goofy grin remarkably the cop seemed to like us and offered us a ride to IHOP!
 
The three of us piled into the back of his cruiser, although I had a slightly paranoid fear that maybe he was going to take us to the drunk tank and this was his way of tackling three guys at once, granted we were manly-Rice-men. On the way he started hitting us up for advice for how to get his son into Rice. The only time we were almost busted is when we pulled up to IHOP and I tried to open the door and mumbled, "There are no door handles back here!" No much was said but I think Wynn hit me. Ha ha ha.
 
On the way back from IHOP we actually got ANOTHER ride from ANOTHER HPD officer back to Rice.
 
It was a bizarre night, but quite fun. Stuff like that always seemed to happen when we were around Wynn.
 
Why is it that the only time you think about connecting with old friends happens when a tragedy like this one strikes? I'm going to miss Wynn.

Asad S. Jafari
Hanszen '96
Mobile: 713.907.3557
E-mail: a_s_jafari@yahoo.com

Sunday, March 12, 2006

So I first met Wynn at an associates dinner when my parents become
masters at Will Rice College. I was fortunate enough to get to know
when, at least as a regular acquaintance , through our random chance
meetings at various Will Rice functions.

One in particular stands out. As I am much younger than I am guessing
most anyone who writes in this is, I will point out that I was only a
little Freshman in High school when this story took place. I love
theatre, and as such I feel that a good date could very easily
involve taking my date to a good opera or play or musical. As such, I
decided to take a date of mine to the associates performance of the
RLOS production of "The Mikado." It was an absolutely delightful
show. My date not having anything to do while she waited for her
parents (who happen to be Will Rice grads) to pick her up,
accompanied me to the associates gathering after the show at my
house. We proceeded to sit down and have what could be described as
quite possibly the most awkward conversation for a young high school
couple to have.

Wynn began to discuss things of a sexual nature almost completely
unknown to a set of young freshman at a noticeably christian high
school. Fellatio. I have no idea where it came from. But my date
left that night scared out of her wits.

I must say that the best thing about Wynn... it is valued above all
else is that he had no filter on his mouth, he said exactly what he
wanted to... when he wanted to. It was great.

God bless Wynn,

Matt Sawyer
Masters Brat from 97-02
Rice University Class of 2009

Sunday, March 05, 2006

Wynn Martin was in my freshman orientation group at Will Rice College during August 1987. This was a sort of orientation week “small group” within one of Rice’s residential colleges (for those unfamiliar with Rice “O-Week”), so you might call Wynn part of my very first introduction to Rice. He made an immediate (positive) impression.

One of our first activities was to go to the house of a professor (in our case, from the physics department) for some sort of small group social event. Wynn made a number of jokes and clever remarks that day, and it made enough of an impression that I remember thinking at the time how much I was going to enjoy college if everyone had such a creative and playful mind. Few people were as creative or playful as Wynn, and so Wynn fell into the pantheon of a few select people who I thought made college much more colorful.

Funny little funny things that Winn would do stuck with me to this day and are part of a fond amalgam of memories from those days. I think everyone has mentioned his gravity defying leg, but at least in college he had a rubber slug (as in, the slimy cousin to a snail) that accompanied him everywhere in his shirt pocket, and he would find any excuse to pull it out on a moment’s notice.

When Winn was in charge of dinner announcements one year at Will Rice College, night after night he would announce that “sh*t on a stick was on the menu, lifting up a stick with a sign on it to that effect. Someone with a weak stomach eventually asked him to switch the menu description, but that was the sort of dinner announcement that Winn part of what I think about when I think about Rice.

Notwithstanding the potty jokes, he had a gentle sort of humor in that he did not wound or jab. The sort of gentle humor that seemed to make fun of himself, if anyone, but no one else.

I wrote for, and eventually helped run, a college publication called The Rice Sentinel that offered opinion pieces (usually more conservative in perspective), as well as satire and some humorous articles or features.

Winn did a piece for the publication that applied literary deconstructionism to Green Eggs & Ham, with the tone, technique, and vocabulary of what was then in vogue in academia circa the early 90’s. It was one of the funnier efforts in any of Sentinel issues.

But the humor in that particular article, though by definition illustrating the ad absurdum lengths that literary theory can take if unchecked, did not bite or sting but simply took joy in being silly. It took me years to understand the difference between humor that wounds and humor that heals, but it seemed that Winn always knew that humor should ease pain rather than cause it.

It is evident from the many comments to this web page that Winn healed pain in many people, and brought some joy to the world.

God bless you, Wynn.

--John (“Biff”) Clay
clay@bplaw.com

Saturday, March 04, 2006

How the Wynnch Stole Our Hearts

The Wynnch left quite suddenly, surprising the lot of us.
Now please don’t ask why. It should be quite obvious.
It could be that his head wasn’t screwed on quite right.
It could be perhaps that his friends were a fright.
But I think that the most likely reason he did
May have been that his heart was ten sizes too big.


Wynn AND Dr. Seuss are no doubt rolling their ethereal eyes at this
travesty of verse. My apologies. But the basic idea's there, especially
that his head wasn't screwed on quite right. I can only hope to have as
great a capacity to love all creatures as he had. His love and life
showed me, among other things, how much my heart still needs to grow: At
least three sizes.

-Renee James (not to be confused with that OTHER UNaccented
Renee he hung around with, but the one with the PROPER French
diacritical mark that I am totally unable to reproduce on my
e-mailer)

Friday, March 03, 2006

burned hot

While the news of Wynn's death
is surprising, it isn't. I don't mean this in either a negative or
positive way - there are some people who seem like they just might
not last until a ripe old age. Wynn was one of them, to me. I figure
that a person only gets a finite amount of energy in a lifetime, a
body can only take a certain amount of abuse, physical and
psychological, those synapses can only fire so many times before they
wear out...all this to say that Wynn seemed to burn pretty hot and
pretty fast. The fact that his body just gave out on him, if indeed
that is what it was, doesn't seem odd, somehow.

Leah Coolidge

Thursday, March 02, 2006

(Trying to) Make the Most of it

As soon as I sent my post, I remembered something else
I wanted to share.

Here's an email exchange that is currently helping me.
(I did edit it for length...) I had emailed Wynn on
Aug 14 to see if he had returned from his volunteer
work in Mexico.

He wrote back on Aug 15:
----------------------------------------------------
Hi! *hug*

Well, you know me, always having some kind of crazy
adventure, so I was flown back from Mexico a little
early for emergency hospitalization at Ben Taub, and
told I had four to ten days to live unless my liver
miraculously regenerated. It did,and I feel great and
am enjoying my last few days before the new semester.
Dunno why I had hepatitis; it was non-infectious, so
apparently caused by a poison or allergic reaction, or
an autoimmune disfunction. *shrug*
I'm fine again.

You're one of those friends who is always welcome to
leave a message. :)

We're on the cusp of working out our various holiday
plans, and it looks as if we Houston Martins will
share Thanksgiving with Scott & Jenny (and Lyda!) at
their house near the Alamo.

Those three will spend Christmas with Jenny's family.
I quite enjoy and admire Jenny, and love her
family--her brother and sister, and her brother's
wife, are really fun and feel to me like cousins,or
something. :) I've never had cousins, so I'm
possibly projecting.

And rambling. *grin*

Loquaciously,
wynn

---------------------------------------

I wrote back, also on Aug 15:
---------------------------------------
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOKAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY,

You are so kidding me! As we Yidn* say, you needed a
medical crisis like I need a hole in the head. I am
so sorry that happened to you! It sounds beyond
traumatic. I wish I had known; we would have tried to
be some help to you and your family--running errands,
whatever you wanted. I will be full of healing,
positive thoughts going your direction (a la Sammy).

I really really wanna hear your (non-recorded) voice,
so if you feel like calling, please feel free.

No pressure, just options.

We really love you, Wynn, and hope you are making a
full and speedy recovery and that NOTHING BAD EVER
HAPPENS AGAIN. But if it does, please remember that we
are here for you and your family.

Well, enough mushy mushy.

Take care, and let us know when you are up to seeing
us.

Sweetly (oy, I got a cavity),
Renee

*Yidn=Yiddish word for "da Jews" affectionate, but not
usually a term used by, ahem, those who are not, let
us say, a "member of the tribe"
-----------------------------------------------
He wrote back, and this is the important bit:
-----------------------------------------------
*chuckle* Really, the whole
emergency-flight-from-Mexico, hospitalization and
expectation of death was not such a big deal, to me;
you just have what you have, and can choose to freak
out or just to make the most of it, you know? It was
a remarkably calm deal for me, and I needed almost
nothing from anyone else, in fact... it was rather
nice to just lie there at Ben Taub for a couple of
days, without visitors freaking out. Mom & Dad were
conveniently in Australia where I couldn't reach them
anyway, and I thought that was just as well.

Anyway, it's totally behind us and truly just not a
big deal in retrospect; an inconsequential blip in
history.

One life to liver (heehee),
wynn
---------------------------------------------------
"[The]expectation of death was not such a big deal,
to me; you just have what you have, and can choose to
freak out or just to make the most of it, you know?"

I'll try to remember that wisdom. Wow, is it hard.

Renee Waghalter (again)

Wynn as Mama Cat

I've been trying to decide what to post here for some
days. I have so many funny stories in my head, but I
needed something that just said it all in one
anecdote. I think I have it.

Wynn is -- bar none -- *the* most hilarious person I
have ever known, or even known of. And I am fortunate
to know a whole lot of hilarious people.

What made him so much more than a comedian was his
incredible and pure love for other creatures, and not
just human beings. Wynn saw the "image of Gd", if you
will, the sacredness and specialness in each person
and each creature he encountered and showed them all
profound respect and love. I felt , and I imagine
others felt similarly, that I could always be exactly
myself with Wynn and he would always be accepting.

Here's the story Wynn related to me as I remember it
(if I have anything incorrect, please let me know).
***************************************************
Wynn's cat, Jenny, is a real 'fraidy cat. When she
first came to live with him, she was very wary of him.
He of course loved her so much, but was not making
much headway toward winning her trust. He hit upon a
plan. When he came home from work every day, he would
spend some time cleaning her. With his tongue. Like
a mother cat. He licked her fur for days until
finally she began to accept and trust him.
****************************************************
To me, this story says it all (well, maybe almost
all), because it is witness to a combination of his
creativity, caring, love, respect, original thinking,
ability to see things from others' points of view,
sacrifice for others, and of course -- who else but
Wynn would even think of, let alone actually try,
licking their cat with their own tongue??? Kooky
doesn't do him justice. Eccentric, unique, a real
original? How about: A gift to the world. That says
it to me. I feel so blessed to have had Wynn in my
life for over 20 years, and to have gotten much closer
in the past 2.5 years since my husband and I moved
back to Houston. I was starting to feel sorry for
myself because Wynn was planning to move to Honolulu,
and I was going to miss him so much. I'll take the
Honolulu plan now, if anyone is listening.

Wynn, your love for others has broken free from the
confines of your body and mind, and we all feel it
raining down on us. Thank you, Wynn.

Renee Waghalter

Posting for Wynn Martin webpage

I thought of something yesterday that I think Wynn would have been happy to
have somebody say at his funeral. I think it would have cracked him up.

"Well - it looks like we're in a no-Wynn situation."

I knew Wynn for years at Rice, and kept in touch since we graduated-I have
one thing I want to post, which to me epitomizes the sorts of emails I would
get from him, and the personality of his that was always on display at Rice.
I will always remember him as a manic, unstoppable comedian, one of the most
creative and energetic people I have known. He was a kooky force of nature.

Here is the email exchange: it starts out with me emailing him and a few
other Houstonians (including Jen Cooper, a friend of ours from Rice
University who had known Wynn in high school too) to alert them of the
upcoming display of the Colossal Colon (basically a gigantic model of the
human digestive system that onlookers could crawl through, for their
edification. I believe it even featured hemorrhoids at the end). Wynn
started coming back at me with puns involving digestive organs, and I
decided to try to stay with him - but it was no contest. Emails shown
below.

Jeff Korte

At 04:27 PM 4/29/2003 -0500, Korte, Jeffrey E wrote:
>http://www.preventcancer.org/colossalcolon/Tour/houston.htm
>
>Dear Houstonians:
>
>I recommend you go see the Colossal Colon! I read about it in Dave Barry,
>and it is coming to Houston next week.
>Jeff

(Wynn writes)
Well, hell, I'm game. Jen, if you'll go with me, we can be the Dynamic
Duodenum, eh?

wynn

(Jeff writes)
heh heh -- nice one.

(Jen has not responded -- Wynn writes:)
I thought so, but apparently Jen hasn't got the guts. ;-)

(Jeff writes)
Har har! Maybe she'll be colon you soon. Well, if people won't visit the
Colossal Colon, the Colon will have to go out and "seek 'em".

(Wynn writes)
O! O, stop! You're makin' me ileum!

(Jeff writes)
God, you're good! I think you got me beat. Well, if you can't beat 'em --
jejunum.

(Wynn writes)
Man, I can barely keep up with all the wordplay anal the puns. At first
they were great, butt then you rectum. Now they really sphincter.

*giggle!* ;-)

(Jeff writes)
Urine over your head with these jokes. But you bolus over with your kitchen
pantry attack and some attic action. Peristalsis joking around will result
in something beneficial; unfortunately, I suspect instead it may be leading
us into a gorge.

(Wynn writes)
You've got to be kidney me; just when it was semen impossible, your puns
went from bladder to worse. I don't mean to sound teste, though; you've
convinced me to make several visits to the Colossal Colon, so I'll be
gastrin up my car for the tripsin about a week's chyme.

I rule.

(Jeff writes)
You certainly provide cervix with a smile -- but uterus apart with the
painful gags. I was going to pull open a tube of my breast champagne to
celebrate my victory, but it is clitorus that we need to work even harder to
respond to this latest introitus in the Pudendum Contest. Ovary convenient
that you branched out into other organ systems!

(Wynn writes, and wins)
We may have a vas deferens of opinion if you think I think this is ova
because you keep egging me, because in fact you'll only spermy on. If I
have to prostate my case again, you'll ask, "Did he? Must he?" And I'll
have to answer, "Yepididymis."

As an added boner, here is an actual answer I submitted for my homework last
month:

24. How may kidney function be evaluated?

I think Barry White moaned it best in his starkly sexy classic, You Know
Urine My Heart:

Awwwww yeah, Baby; come over here and let Barry evaluate your kidney
function.
It'll be fun when I measure your BUN. Awww, yeeeeeeaaaaah.
That's justa Blood Urea Nitrogen, but don't you worry your pretty head about
that.
Whoa, girl! You got you some huge BUNs, bitch!
What'd you do, donate both kidneys or somethin'?
Your nitrogen's higher than Marion Barry, and that's not even the right
Barry, girl.
You some kinda plasma disasta.
Hey, don't look at Barry like it's my fault your kidneys ain't workin'.
Look, if you gonna get all pissy, go in this sterile container,
An' I'll just run a plasma clearance on that malt liquor you jus guzzled.
Good LORD, girl, that's enough! Who you think you are, Urethra Franklin?!
Damn, woman, this piss is flammable!
Well, your plasma clearance for booze look good.
I ain't even gonna ask why you got glucose, microbes, and protein in here,
And red blood cells Too Numerous Too Count;
Wait, you ARE Urethra Franklin!
R-B-Cs T-N-T-C, find out what it means to me!
Oh, sock it to me sock it to me sock it to me sock it to me, YEOW!
...You don't get it, do you.
Well, Barry don't want to get it, either.
Whatever it is, it look like you already got it from the LAST guy you went
out with.
This is what I call my period of ejection. So long, Baby. Awww, yeaaaaah.

River Oaks Elementary School

As I glanced through the Houston Chronicle, I sometimes decide to breeze through obituaries, you know…just in case…Hoping to never see a name or picture of anyone that I know.  Then, I saw Wynn’s picture.
 
Wynn and I went to River Oaks Elementary School together and lost touch, as most of us do, after that illustrious elementary school experience.  I myself, being 37 years old, cannot fathom that he is gone at such a young age.  Even in elementary school, I remember Wynn for that quick wit, soft-spoken heart, and being an overall really nice person, smart kid.
 
I do distinctly remember that I knew that I would never forget a guy named Wynn, because being bused to River Oaks from a not so good neighborhood, he was the only “Wynn” that I had ever known.  Who would have guess that when I saw that name in the Houston Chronicle, it would bring back vivid memories of River Oaks.  Even as elementary school kids, I never remember anyone making fun of Wynn because of his leg, because he was just one of “us”.
 
To the family – May the memories of Wynn always bring you joy and comfort.  In times of grief, say a small prayer to yourself that Wynn is in a better place and laugh about some good times.
 
God Bless You!
 
Michael G. Jennings
michael.jennings@whirlwindsteel.com

Wynn, of course

To Wynn's Family,
 
I am so sorry to hear about Wynn and my thoughts and prayers go out to each of you.
This week, I was catching up on the Sunday's Chronicle (which I hardly ever buy--just read it online) and flipping through the City/State section, and was halted in my tracks by Wynn's picture smack in the center of the page. I did a double take, I was so surprised. He was only 37. But he was a Star.
 
I only knew him through my place of work. During his IT consulting days, he came to our office and helped us through the arduous tasks of updating our computer system. I was always so glad to see him, it was a real treat. Just the thought of him coming in brightened up my day, eagerly anticipating what would be the latest with Wynn--what's new with him now -- never the same old, same old with Wynn.
 
He was so engaging and interesting and happy and fun. He kept me smiling as I would try to learn a little of the computer stuff from him, but most of the time we talked about many other things. You know, life stuff -- and laughed a lot. The last I remember with him, around the "turn of the century," Wynn and his Dad were planning a trip together to Costa Rica (right country?). It sounded like it was to be a really special time for them, and I'm hoping that it was. I could tell his family was very special to him.
 
Wow - that he went on to become an RN is so awesome; but he was a gentle person, and I can see how that gift would be used in his caring and compassion as a nurse.  
 
I have been very moved by all the memories shared by Wynn's family and friends on the web site. What a special guy - he really was a Star. I would like to thank each person for helping me to know him all the more. God bless you and him.
 
In peace and gratitude,
Nancy Lewis

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

Does anyone know about the missing piece to this story?

Help - Does anyone know about the missing piece to this story?
What did Julia Child say on her television show that so impressed Wynn he bonded with her right then and there?

Here is the part of Wynn's great adventure that I do know:

Wynn was cruising around in whatever passed as his car his last year or two at Rice when he heard a radio announcement that Julia Child was conducting a book signing at a local book shop. Being Wynn he redirected his car and went to see her. He arrived to find a very long line of folks, all carrying at least one of her cookbooks for her to sign. Undaunted by his own empty hands he got in line only to have the bookstore goons (Wynn's exact word) told him he could not stand in line with no book for her to sign.

Sigh, he had no money to buy one of her cook books so he left but reaching his car he remembered he did have with him Dr. Zeuss's Green Eggs And Ham. So, armed now with a book he rejoined the line. The goons reappeared and protested that he did not have Julia's new cook book. But he protested, he did have a cook book of sorts, a breakfast cook book in fact, about ham and eggs. No, no, not right they argued. But Wynn would not budge argued back quite seriously with some indignation. The goons were puzzled and not truly prepared for a tussle so consulted with the book store owner who opted not to make a bigger scene out of this silly incident and let Wynn just be.

Happy to be over this hurdle Wynn turned to his now fellow folks in line and started to discuss his admiration for Julia. What he met was incredulous returned glances mostly and very few comments. Most all these folks seemed to Wynn to be just about collecting another famous autograph to add to their collection. I few even went on to tell him about all the other autograph books they owned, in mint condition (of course, Wynn would say later in his retelling, "Not even READ even!"
At last Wynn got to his turn in front of Julia and set his book of Green Eggs and Ham before her.

"What's this?" she asked. "This is not my book."

"No," explained Wynn. "You see, I am just a college student and just can not afford to buy one of your book and most certainly could not afford to cook all the wonderful things in it." He then went on to explain how he had first seen her doing her live cooking show, before they were taped. She got finished but obviously got a frantic signal from the camera crew that they still has some three or four more minutes to fill and to stretch it out. So she did. What I have forgotten was what was it she did extemporaneously which so amused and impressed Wynn? I do know that Julia was impressed enough to tell Wynn to come around the table and sit down next to her and they visited while she mechanically signed the books presented to her. One of the things Wynn learned was Julia loved Cadillacs and thought they were just the finest ride around. Hmmm, I wonder if this is has anything to do with why Wynn later purchased his vintage Cadillacs? Does anyone know?

The end of this story came with Wynn and Julia happily chatting and laughing some while after the books signing was completed. Eventually Julia organizers insisted she get on to the next event on her calendar and hustled her off. But... not before she sighed Wynn's copy of Green Eggs and Ham. It is this signed copy that Wynn insisted in his email directive be given to Lyda Rose, his brother Scott and wife Jenny's daughter.

If you have any insight, please click the comments button below this post, and tell us what you know.

Jme Guehring
jmeguehring@yahoo.com

May All Your Days Be New Beginnings


I guess it was on the trip Wynn made to New York with his brother and
sister-in-law during the summer of 2001. I had moved to Manhattan
some months before, and for whatever reason (I was traveling or just
returning from a trip or something), I didn't connect with Wynn while
he was in the City. When I got back to my office, there was a
package waiting for me, addressed to "Ryan Wyatt, Science
Visualizer," from "T., Heaven."

My pet ferret, Terpsichore, had died earlier in the year at the ripe
old age of eight. Wynn and Terp always got along well, and much
speculation surrounded the ferret's thoughts, which Wynn and I
imagined as an incessant interior monologue. So I immediately
understood when I opened the package to find a journal (the Alfred
Souza quote, "happiness is a journey, not a destination," on the
cover) inscribed, "To Ryan, from Terpsichore." Each page is labeled
"Day 1," because, as explained early on, "Every day here is a new
beginning." Various entries describe finding socks, meeting Miles
Davis, not worrying about fleas, and finally having the chance to
taste coffee.

The last entry of any appreciable length reads:

"If I wrote of each new day forever, these words would only begin
each day to express the infinite things we've already shared fully.
So, I will pause to share these few words with you today, that they
might bring you joy today, and each new day. May all your days be
new beginnings.

"Thank you for my life.

"Love, Terpsichore"

As far as words to remember Wynn by, I guess those work for me. From
the mouths of weasels...

Ryan Wyatt
New York, New York

Wynn on Billy Collins

The following is an email I received from Wynn in November 2001 after we both heard the poet laureate Billy Collins read a few of his poems at the Alley Theatre. Wynn surely could have given Billy a run for his money...
__________
From: wynn <wynn@zenx.net>
Subject: Billy Collins

Yes, Billy was a hoot. Did I send you this poem I wrote a few weeks ago? Poetic sister-in-law Jenny Browne took me to hear Billy, and said, "That sounds like the clever sort of thing YOU would write." Never has cleverness been so much a liability. ;-) Anyway, sure enough, I was able to crank out a Billy Collins piece almost effortlessly, when I was stricken with a good concept for the work a day later:

ALL YOU'VE GOT
for Billy Collins

Sometimes laughter is all you've got.
When he or she leaves, or the leaves fall,
or fall turns to white winter...
perhaps laughter will be your company,
your warmth, your color.
And that is all you'll have.

When laughter is all you've got,
maybe you should also get a job.
That's going to help you cope
when you eventually get an appetite.
And, while you're at it,
you should probably get a body
for that job interview.
Because there's nothing
those interviewers find more disconcerting
than disembodied laughter.

-wynn
__________

Whenever I saw an email from Wynn in my mailbox I felt like pouring a cup of tea and putting my feet up and he never let me down. He managed the visuals quite nicely in his emails...*grin*, *shrug*, and the ever-present *smile* : ) Honest, positive, intelligent, uplifting, kooky all come to mind when I think of dear Wynn.

He would have made the perfect nurse...intelligent and compassionate...a rare breed...a fine human-being and a mighty spirit. Our Wynn...we wish you peace.

With Love,
Marie Wright

Bumper Stickers and an Embarrassed Wynn

wynn with leg in air

Here, in this picture I took when we were in high school, Wynn shows off his famous leg in the TPP shack. The TPP, short for "Three Penny Press," was Bellaire's newspaper, which Wynn copy-edited and I associate-edited our senior year. The shack was this wonderful temporary building that housed, among other things, an old printing press named Bertha, a ratty couch, a group wayward over-achieving youth like us, lockers that no one used (because they were so gross), a Kraft American Cheese single pinned to the bulletin board (that somehow was NOT gross), a storehouse of all the books read by IB English students, and a passel of "No Thanks I'm Driving" bumper stickers.

Those stickers provided Wynn and me with hours of inappropriate fun. We cut up the letters and rearranged them to create such custom messages (which I then affixed on my car) such as: "No, I'm not Tom Hanks," or "No thanks. I'm Sondheim."

Flash forward about fourteen years. Wynn and I had reconnected for a few years and arranged a dinner to reconnect Renée James with me. We met at Pico's. He told me he had a present for me. Wynn and I had coincidentally came out around the same time and when we reconnected, we recounted how many of our friends in high school had come out (and which objects of our affection were sadly not gay). So the gift: he pulls out a sticker he had crafted from those famous bumper stickers. He had saved some over the years and gave me a custom-made sticker that read: "No t*ts, baby, I'm a man's man." As fate would have it, I found the scrapbook containing the sticker a few days before Wynn died.

During one of my visits to Houston, Wynn and I decided we would go back to Bellaire. Like Wynn, I also look young. We thought we would go to Ms. Quaite's junior-year English class and see how long it would take for her to recognize us. During her class, she had to leave for a few minutes. Wynn took that opportunity to leap to the front of the class and teach Waiting for Godot in Ms. Quaite's absence. And in the following years, he often visited her classes to offer other pearls of knowledge.

Wynn had a way of making a home wherever he went. The TPP shack was ours - Renée's, Wynn, mine. I know he made a home at Rice and, in a larger sense, Houston. Whenever I have returned home in the last eight or so years, I always had adventures with Wynn - especially with food - and in a Fast and Furious ride down Allen Parkway in the Miata. The last time I saw Wynn was at Café Europa. He was like Norm in Cheers - everyone knew him, and gave him free coffee.

His visit to New York in 2001 was a turning point for me - he came about six months after my Mom had died, and his visit marked the first time that year I really got out and enjoyed life to the fullest - I was with Wynn, after all. He showed me the Cathedral of St. John the Divine which, despite being only 12 blocks from me, I had not explored. We went to the Broadway revival of Rocky Horror Show with my writing partner and my cousin. My cousin's shouting at the stage actually embarrassed Wynn. Yes, I had the privelege of seeing Wynn's eyes spring to amazement as if to say "He said WHAT?!"

I have a character in my musical whom I based on Wynn. Before Wynn came in town, my writing partner and I were working on a song for that character. We were stumped. After spending time with Wynn, we broke through and wrote the song a lot of audiences consider to be the funniest in the show.

About a month after that trip, Wynn was the first to email me the morning of September 11. He was such a healing force. When he decided to become a nurse, it was a natural progression - his humor and love, at their essence, were about healing.

Wynn, it is hard to believe you are gone. But part of the reason is that you were hard to believe in life - but wow, what a rich experience it is to believe in you and have you believe in all of us. You did not care if anyone thought any less of you for being who you were - and in return, we all think the highest of you.

I know you're making a new home right now - and everyone is getting to know you up there. Ted Geisel is laughing at your poems; Julia Child and you are cavorting in Heaven's Kitchen. And back down here on earth, we will strive to follow your legacy: to live life to the fullest, to be creative and design and live the life we want.

Sammy Buck

Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Scott's memorial thoughts

Wynn was well known for his humor, wit, youthful and sometimes excessive enthusiasm. Wynn was unique - I can quite honestly say I never met anyone who reminds me of him. He liked to stick out. Wynn was faithful - he snuggled with his Paddington bear every night of his life. Not many kids at Rice University brought their teddy bears but Wynn wasn't going to let conventional thinking stop him.

I have a VW camper bus and have traveled a lot in it. Wynn always wanted more opportunities to travel. In the summer of 2001 I emailed him that my wife and I would be driving up to Maine and would be gone for a month. In typical Wynn fashion I received an exuberant email back that, yes, he would love to come along, would like to see some things along the way especially New York which he hadn't been to. Before I could reply about five minutes later I got another email from him indicating that he had already secured airfare for his return trip from New York. We took our time and saw many things along the way. After spending a week in the VW we were ready to dump him off at the corner of 57th and Lexington, Paddington under one arm, pillow and bag under the other. But by the time we got to Maine we were missing him a little.

Before my daughter was born Wynn talked on and on about wanting to spend lots of time babysitting and came up with all these things they might do together and nicknames they could call each other. Honestly all of this made us nervous. But when Lyda Rose was born Wynn was just great with her - they were like two little goofy kids that really understood each other. He was quite proud of his new title as "Crazy Uncle Wynn" and we felt badly for even doubting his ability in that role.

Wynn survived many struggles in his life. Wynn was hit by a car at age 7. He had 20 something operations on his leg and spent a lot of his childhood on crutches. But Wynn turned his disability into asset. He had unusual movement in that one leg and could raise it in class like most people would raise their arm. Anything to get attention. He also talked about his leg and experiences so much that it broke people's boundaries with dealing with disabilities and he made his schoolmates genuinely interested. In the early 90's he come out to me via email before coming out to everyone else which is pretty high on my list as one of the most difficult things anyone could do. Wynn constantly struggled with money. He always wanted to do was in his heart was into and that wasn't always compatible with a job. Some people have buttons that say "I survived Mary Gras, or Rush Week" but Wynn had a "I survived damn near everything" button which he had earned.

But three years ago Wynn had an epiphany. Wynn told me about all the terrible nurses he had put up with in his many times in hospitals. One time a nurse talked back to him and wouldn't help him in a timely fashion. When he called 911 the operator was surprised to hear that he was calling from a hospital bed but the paramedics did make it faster than the nurse did and he made his statement. Wynn told me about one nurse that really went out of her way to help him and it made his whole experience in the hospital great. It occurred to him that nurses were much more powerful than doctors or anyone else in the hospital when it came to providing a good experience to the patient in a difficult time. So Wynn launched headfirst into a 3 year nursing program and graduated magna cum laude two months ago. He completed his exam and officially became a registered nurse a just few weeks ago. His stated Career Goal on his resume read "to bring my experience as a patient to bear on the nursing profession, in order to bring uncompromising compassion and humanity to every patient's experience, through research, communication, political action, and direct patient care." Because of his extraverted nature and experience as a patient we all thought he would be a fantastic nurse. It seemed he had found his calling.

For those of you who don't know, Wynn's death appears, at this point, to be an odd, accidental one. Wynn had lots of plans. Wynn was on the cusp of a brand new chapter in his life that would have really been good and I'm sorry I won't be able to share that with him.

I am damn proud of my big brother and I'm not sure what I'll do without him.

Scott Martin

Wynn helped me when I was homeless, penniless and starving, and he also rescued 50,000 orphans from a burning building

Well, I wasn't penniless, actually, I had quite a few pennies - 8,302 of them, to be precise, which I had been collecting since I was 13 and which were now going to pay for me to go back to school and live for the next year. So Wynn and Kimber and Penn, Marjie and Gary and Suzanne and Laurie and Don and Elizabeth, Eric, Jenn, Mary, Alex, Don, and all the others gave me money for school, and places to stay, and they were my family when I didn't have any of those things.


-Alexis Turner

celebrating wynn

Wynn –
 
This dying thing is absolutely outrageous! 
 
I have to admit that I now see you now in my minds eye, shrouded in mist, slowly doing that crazy leg waving routine you used to do before being put in that dreaded Ilizarov device.  You’re smiling and waving.  Smiling and waving.  Gradually, the mist swells and all that’s left is the wonderful happy feeling I used to get exchanging horrifically twisted emails with you.  The gourmet lunches.  The speakers.  All the nice things you did for me when I moved into Texas as a friendless, hapless geek.
 
Knowing a person of such uniqueness and value was a true blessing…
 
Thank you and I’ll never forget you.  N E V E R.
 
Ed Draper

A DAMN FINE WAFFLE

Picture, if you will, a Waffle House in rural North Carolina. Or maybe it
was South Carolina. Maybe even Georgia.

Picture a blue mini-van filled to the brim with various possessions,
toting a large UHaul trailer, also filled to the brim, pulling into the
parking lot.

Picture Wynn, who, with another friend, has graciously offered to help me
move from a terrible situation in Annapolis, Maryland, back to Houston,
Texas. He took off three days to fly to Maryland, help me pack, and help
haul all my things (+ 2 cats) back home. This was all in January, 1999,
after I'd known him some 15 years throughout high school, college, and
other life-changing eras.

Picture the trio entering the Waffle House. It wasn't breakfast time, but
we were pretty hungry, and this was pretty much the only place around.

Imagine, for whatever surreal reason, the sounds of Wagner coming from the
typically Muzak ceiling speakers. We're talking epic music, "Ride of the
Valkyries" kind of music. Totally NOT Waffle House music.

Picture the trio sidling up to the counter, sitting on the round, twirly
stools. We perused the menu. Wynn decides on a Belgian waffle with
pecans. And whipped cream. I have no idea what I got.

The waffle arrives. In typically Wynn fashion, he truly relishes every
morsel of the waffle. "Mmmm, mmm..." he utters while chewing and nodding
his head. "This is a damn fine waffle." A few more 'yummy sounds' come
from him. "Yep, a damn fine waffle."

Picture Wynn as he suddenly snaps to the incongruous selection of music
playing over the speakers. It's sweeping. It's epic.

It calls to him.

Wynn is transformed into a narrator of some amazing saga. "AND THEY WENT
INTO THE WAFFLE HOUSE!"

<insert Wagnerian music here>

He makes grand gestures. "THEY ORDERED A WAFFLE. BUT THIS WAS NO
ORDINARY WAFFLE. IT WAS A DAMN FINE WAFFLE!"

<unbelievably "not-rural-America-Waffle-House" music keeps playing>

He continues with his soliloquy. Every few sentences is something about a
DAMN FINE WAFFLE.

Other patrons are beginning to get a little nervous. Wynn presses on, all
the while consuming his damn fine waffle and waxing eloquent about it.

The harried waitress glares at us.

She finally works up the courage to come over to us.

"Um...you're making some of the other customers kind of upset. Could you
perhaps leave?"

The trio exchange embarrassed glances. And laugh uncontrollably as they
pay and leave.

You see, the Waffle House is where drunk people go to sober up, hanging
over the chairs. It's where college students go in the middle of the
night because they have no other place to go. THEY don't get kicked out.

But Wynn did. He might very well be the only person in history to have
discovered the etiquette limits of a Waffle House.

Admittedly, it really was a DAMN FINE WAFFLE.

I'm still trying to process the words that I heard when Wynn's and my high
school friend Sammy Buck called me last Wednesday to tell me about Wynn.
22 years of friendship just doesn't seem like enough. Two Bellaire High
School proms (1987 and 1999), a trip to San Francisco to see Emo Philips
(bizarre in a way that makes Wynn seem normal) and Camel (progressive rock
band), countless e-mails, phone conversations, 'dates.' Watching Dr. Who
and Monty Python every single Saturday night of our senior year in high
school (except when those damned PBS fundraisers were happening!).
Spending untold hours during the spring of 1999 when I moved back to
Houston and he was trying to help me out emotionally and
financially...going to dinner, movies, concerts, playing with my son, Sean
(now 8). Enjoying damn fine waffles.

It's not enough. Even when I thought I'd had enough of him (which was
often), it really wasn't, because I always came back for more. I'll miss
you, Wynn. Sean'll miss you, too. He steps around the slugs on his
school sidewalk, just like you'd do, and relishes being different. We'll
see you again, I'm sure. Save a waffle for me.

-C. Renee James, Bellaire HS '87, Rice '91

Why Wynn got an A in anatomy

My family grew up with the Martins. My parents are Wynn and Scott’s godparents, as Perry and Sherry are to me and my brother. However, I never really got to know Wynn until 2001 when I moved into an apartment one block over from his. Eating Mexican food at Pico’s while telling offensive yet hysterical butt jokes and poop stories was a favorite pastimes of ours. I remember the time he got 2 tickets and took me to the Vagina Monologues when it came to the Alley – that was an experience.  One of the many things I loved about Wynn was the hilarious e-mails he was famous for sending.  Below is one of the best I ever received, sent March 27, 2003:

________
Okay, here's the essay I wrote out by hand on my Tuesday exam in anatomy.  Yes, I wrote this out in class off the top of my head, and yeah, my hand was cramped for a day.

Q: You have just eaten a Big Mac.  Discuss the path that it will take through the digestive system to include all of the physiological processes that occur along the way.  (25 pts).

A: “So You Ate a Big Mac, eh Mr. Vegetarian?”

You have just eaten a Big Mac.  You are a terrible, terrible vegetarian, and you will pay for your mistake.

The trouble all began with the cephalic stage of gastic digestion, when you smelled a Big Mac and those fries.  You walked into a McDonalds—not to buy a Big Mac, of course; you just got off your ass, turned off the TV, got in your car and drove to McDonalds because you love their salad.  YEAH.  But when you GOT there, and smelled them frying beef patties, you couldn’t help yourself.  And that’s not YOUR fault; your brain just turned on the cephalic stage of gastric digestion.  You didn’t INTEND to start salivating; it just HAPPENED.  So then, hell: you hat to put a burger in it.

And, heh, it was good.  You got so worked up that you started masticating, right there in front of God and the world.  Anyone could have seen you, and you looked guiltily around as you shoved it into your mucin-lubricated oral cavity.  Inside, salivary amylase began to break down complex carbohydrates in the sesame-seed bun, and you gnawed the dead flesh of a once-living bovine, one of God’s beautiful creatures, into a stinking bolus of mashed-up, undigested sin.  You began the voluntary phase of swallowing.  Voluntary, because you didn’t HAVE to swallow it, but you did.  You did.  You DID.

Next, your pharynx went up, your soft palate went up, and the beef went down.  Down, down past your epiglottis, which got in the way to steer that steer not down your trachea but into your esophagus.  Down, propelled downward by peristalsis, down toward your stomach, down, down, toward Hell.

That Big Mac landed in your stomach, distending it with your gluttonous excess, until the gastric phase of gastric phase of gastric digestion began.  “How redundant,” you thought, “gastric phase of gastric digestion,”as you tried to push from your mind the images of singing Blue Bell cows, the selfless bovine ladies who all believe Brenham is Heaven.

Gastrin stimulates secretion of hydrochloric acid, which kills bacteria left on your burger by the unwashed hands of a 42-year-old man who earns minimum wage turning Blue Bell cows into burgers each day at McDonalds.  Intrinsic factor, also secreted in the stomach, searches your Big Mac in vain for vitamin B12 to protect, any B12.  Pepsinogen, from your chief cells, is turned by HCl into pepsin, and begins work on the protein—protein that was once… a singing cow.

Your stomach churned, spurred on by gastrin and by guilt, to mix and churn your food, until finally your pyloric sphincter, disgusted by this insurrection, surrendered your acidic chime to the duodenum.  Now, there would be no turning back.

The acidic pH of your nasty, nasty chime, somewhere around 2, triggered your offended duodenum to secrete secretin.  “How redundant,” your mind began; shut up, carnivore!  YOU did this.  Secretin shut your gastric processes down, and stimulated secretion of pancreatic bicarbonates, which helped neutralize the evil low pH inside your duodenum.  Cholecystokinin, stimulated by the stunning quantities of lipids and fatty acids in your newly murderous diet, in turn called upon the pancreas, desperate for secretion of its enzymes, and forced contraction of the gallbladder.  Festering, putrid bile oozed and squirted forth to emulsify the fat.

At the brush border of the cells of your suffering duodenum, interokinase cleaved pancreatic trypsinogen into activated trypsin, which in turn, reluctantly, activated chymotrypsin from chymotrypsinogen, and activated other pancreatic enzymes.  Through the duodenum and into the jejunum, peptidases broke down proteins, lipases broke down fats; pancreatic amylase broke carbohydrates down to disaccharides, and various enzymes—lactase, maltase, sucrase—struggled to reduce those to simple monosaccharides.  Your system, whether because it could not emulsify so much fat, or find long-unused lactase to attach the “cheese,” didn't finish with the fats, and let you know it.

 You knew the moment all that chime turned for the jejunum, and again as it rounded a turn to the ileum.  You could feel, and hear, EVERY TURN IT MADE.  This… would not be good.

 The water in your meal was mostly absorbed in there, by osmosis.  What few vitamins and minerals could be found between the fats and lips and hooves of Blue Bell cows were snatched up by diffusion, while monosaccharides were actively transported into the epithelial cells of your small intestine.  Those nutrients were drawn, along with amino acids, into the hepatic portal system and shipped off to your liver, which struggled to pretend they might have come from hummus, or dolmades, as it synthesized fresh glucose and other compounds from the sinful, tainted crap you'd eaten.

 The fats didn't have it so good.  Your overwhelmed, vegetarian system fought to break them down, fought to reassemble trigycerides inside your cells, fought to find co-transport proteins with which to bind them, that they might be shoved to your lacteals and whisked away with lymph, to be dumped elsewhere, far away, in some distant, left, subclavian vein, someone else’s problem then, no longer in your gut.

 Fought, and failed.  Sure, many of those fats were whisked away, but no small few escaped, sliding, writhing down your ileum, propelled by peristalsis, driven on by DESIRE, the burning, evil desire to make you shit like you had never shat before.

 What little vitamin A, D, E and K might have been in that Happy Meal was still bound to that fat, and would soon be leaving the building.  Mass movements, accompanied by sounds that might have been the final movement of some fetid symphony of insidious intent, propelled the slimy, fatty feces fatefully forward, building in the rectum, building, BUILDING, as a reflex from the unholy sacral region spurred on wave after contracting wave, relaxing your internal anal sphincter as you raced toward home, sending spasms through your colon as you ran red lights and slammed into the trash cans in your driveway, pumping almost liquid UnHappy Meal to the borders of your straining, clenched, external anal sphincter, until you finally lost your conscious control thereof, eleven feet shy of your first-floor bathroom.  It would be the last Big Mac you ever saw.
________

Wynn, I will miss the way you would make me scream with laughter.  You were a true friend.

Sarah Morin

Wynn the tutor

I had the pleasure of growing up with Wynn and Scott since birth. Wynn’s parents, Sherry and Perry, are my godparents just as my parents, Milton and Elizabeth, are Wynn and Scott’s godparents. I have many fond memories of Christmas celebrations and slumber parties with Wynn and Scott as a child. I remember the day Sherry and Perry bought Wynn the first Apple computer produced. The rest of my childhood memories of Wynn are of him working on the computer.

During Wynn’s celebration party last night, the comments of one of his neighbors struck a chord with me. Wynn’s neighbor said that the most meaningful comment Wynn said to him was “I have faith in you.”

That comment stirs a memory when I was about the same age as Wynn’s neighbor. I was a senior in high school taking a physics class. The final exam was right around the corner and there were a few theories that I had a hard time wrapping my brain around. Since I’m not a science type of guy, I called Rice University knowing that I would find plenty of smart science students who could tutor me. The first tutor was a disaster – very arrogant and bored with my questions. The second tutor was very nice, but essentially completed all of my homework for me without fully explaining the reasons for the answers. I needed larger questions answered and was resolved to accept the fact that those questions wouldn’t be answered before the exam.

Then, my Mom suggested that I call Wynn, who was also a student at Rice. I called Wynn and he was more than happy to come over and assist me. The next day Wynn arrived and after spending some time catching up with my parents, we sat down at my desk. I’ll never forget that tutor session. Wynn said, “So, how can I help you?” I told him the theories that I was struggling to understand and he warmly listened with a smile on his face. He then continued to ask me more questions regarding what I thought about the perspective of certain physicists and how did I think they came to certain conclusions.

Unlike the other tutors, Wynn continued to ask what I thought, instead of telling me the answer. He stretched my mind farther than anyone had at that time in my life. And while we were discussing various theories, I remember light bulbs going off in my head. Throughout our discussion, Wynn was brilliantly guiding me to ask questions in which I came to my own conclusions. That leaning process was a very powerful experience for me.

Throughout the two hours we talked, Wynn never picked up a pencil and we never opened a book. In fact, I never wrote down a single word or number. Instead we just talked and talked and talked. Wynn’s last comment is what still sticks with me today. At the end of our conversation, Wynn slapped me on the back and said, “Man, you know this stuff. You’ll do fine.” That comment gave me so much confidence. If Wynn Martin had faith in me, then I would do fine. A few days later I took the physics test and made an ‘A’, thanks to Wynn’s insight.

Ten years passed before I saw Wynn again at my wedding. I saw him again at Scott’s wedding and ran into him a couple of times in Houston the past year.

I’ll always remember Wynn as a unique and hilarious man who added so much love to the world.

Thank you, Wynn.

- Tom Morin

Strawberries

I first met Wynn Martin ten years ago this month, as part of a spectacular Valentine's Day surprise for a mutual friend. While we rarely saw each other, we stayed in contact for most of the past decade.

Wynn visited me in Los Angeles in the spring of 1998. Today I cannot remember the reason for his visit, but that doesn't matter - it felt like he was there to see me. He flew in early that morning, and I picked him up and deposited him at my apartment before heading off to work.

I came home to the overpowering smell of fresh fruit. "I can't believe the strawberries you have!" a voice exclaimed. Wynn had somehow found a local farmer's market and, in his first true exposure to in-season California produce, had picked up an entire flat of strawberries.

"Wynn, do you have any idea how much this is? Strawberries last thirty-six, maybe forty-eight hours! There's no way we can use this!" I pleaded.

He was unperturbed, so we trotted off to Ralph's to buy rum and pie crusts. I spent the evening making daiquiris and pies, desperately working through the mountain of strawberries as we gradually became tipsy.

I cannot remember what we ate for dinner, nor what movie we watched as we drank our fresh daiquiris. Still, I clearly remember sitting close together on my living room floor, after the movie had ended, and talking about pain. I had a unique and complicated history with migraine headaches, and had also recently recovered from an unrelated surgery, and I was talking about the various efficacies of the painkillers I had been prescribed. Wynn knew them all, but responded with a different position - he used none of them.

I asked him how that was possible, after eighteen surgeries, and he went into a long discussion about his relationship with pain. He lived every day in what I would call physical agony, and he eloquently described the role of that sensation in his life. But, somehow, he didn't suffer. He said that the pain told him he was alive, told him his body was whole and healthy, that it was sending him the messages it was meant to send him.

I thought at that moment that he must have been the strongest person I had ever met, in order to live through that kind of physical pain. I haven't met anyone since that would make me change my mind. We slept next to each other that night, sharing comfort and warmth, and that surgically repaired leg wrapped around my body, keeping me close.

After a long hiatus, Wynn and I resumed contact a couple of months ago. I celebrated when he finished his nursing degree; he put the "dic" in "valedictorian," he gleefully boasted. I look at my inbox and feel one e-mail short, wishing I could summarize what our brief and intense interactions meant to me. He'd tell me not to worry, though. This pain is simply my body telling me that I'm alive.

Jeremy Brown

Monday, February 27, 2006

My memories of Wynn

Though Wynn and I were friends for years, we only rarely got to see
each other in person. Being in college, then a new graduate, then a
grad student has meant that my life has been pretty nomadic for the
past few years. All through it, though, Wynn and I have managed to
keep in touch via the internet, where we talked for the first and the
last time.

But even though our friendship grew over these long distances, some
of my favorite memories of Wynn are from the times when we got to see
each other face to face. There was the day that we hiked up Enchanted
Rock twice – the first time for the hike, the second because we
realized we would be able to see the sun set; monopolizing the sofa
at Kevin's birthday party; hiking around the dam in San Marcos. And
one day last summer, we arranged to meet near Austin to go sailing
with his dad. I got up ridiculously early and set off from my
parents' place before the sun was even up. Arriving, I was greeted
with breakfast and, soon after, the three of us headed to the lake.
Since I hadn't been sailing before, I was a little nervous but soon
found that there was no cause for worry: there wasn't but the tiniest
puff of wind the entire time we were out on the lake. All the same,
it was a great afternoon made fun by our conversation.

Another story typifies a different aspect of our friendship for me.
Facing the end of my first semester of graduate school, I had a panic
attack on campus this last December that resulted in my missing both
a class and a presentation I'd been scheduled to give. When I started
towards home, I sorely needed somebody to talk to and called Wynn. At
first he thought I was just being social, calling as I sometimes did
on my way home from the grocery store, but once I relayed to him what
had just happened, he told me a story from his own university days.
He was in a class with a title something like "Literature and
Urbanism." And, though the readings were engaging, a major project of
the class had given him a bit of trouble. The class was supposed to
pick a street, and then write about it. Instead of picking a major,
happening, typically "interesting" street like his classmates were
doing, Wynn chose the most boring street that he could find,
challenging himself to find something interesting about it. What he
found was that it was boring because it was in a sort of "no man's
land" between a wealthy area and a much less privileged one. Further
distancing himself from his classmates' take on the assignment, Wynn
wrote his report in a more experimental, narrative form. Having taken
so many liberties with the assignment, he was obviously a little
nervous about turning it in. But not only did he receive an excellent
grade from the professor, Wynn told me that when he ran into that
same prof a couple years ago, the prof told him that his paper on
that "boring" little street was still being used as an example of
that project. I could hear how proud he was of that fact.

That's a good example of who Wynn was to me. He always did his best
in whatever he took on, and he was always there rooting for me in his
quirky way. And even though he used to kid me about being bad with
expressing my emotions, I know I can say that I love and miss the
friend I had in Wynn.

Nathaniel Hendrix
dymaxion@gmail.com

Samosas at Starbucks

I met Wynn at HCC in the summer of 2004. We were plowing through the
hot summer trying to complete our Government II class. Our instructor,
a lovely woman whose name escapes me, adored Wynn and brought him
special treats from her home in Grenada. Wynn always had bawdy jokes
about Granadian chocolate balls to offer. The straight boys were always
so freaked out by the chocolate balls comments, which made class such
grand fun!

We met again at Texas Woman's University, he was a semester ahead of
me. He was always so modest about his performance in school. This guy
did not put out an ounce of arrogance.

After some difficulties during my second semester at TWU, I was given
the opportunity to have a tutor - Wynn! We met for our first and only
tutoring session at his favorite Starbucks on Shepherd & Harold. He
came bearing gifts of Samosas and I just about lost my mind. I love the
Samosas. We talked for about 4 hours, leaving the class content behind
at about hour one. Wynn was such a blast! What I took away from that
tutoring session was to remember to relax and laugh and everything
would be OK.

And it was...and it will be again.

We all expected to so many great things in Nursing come from Wynn
Martin. He was so generous with his knowledge and humanity.

I will never forget Wynn.

My heart goes out to Mother, Father and Brother. He spoke fondly of all
of you while we ate Samosas.

Warmly,

Carol Haaga

"Massive Scrotum" and "Ass Daemon" stories in Wynn's own words

These are some emails from Wynn that are so funny
that we had to share them. They made us feel
better. They are a little PG-13 at times.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Thu, 14 Aug 2003 10:00:52 -0500
To: Frank Garcia <frank@techzentric.com>
From: wynn <wynn@zenx.net>
Subject: My MASSIVE SCROTUM

I had a life-threatening reaction to a tetanus
booster when I was 13; it was amazing. Ten
minutes after the shot, my arm was incredibly
sore, with a big knot of contracted muscle near
the injection site. I told my mother as she was
paying the doctor for having just nearly killed
me, and she scolded me, saying I'd never
complained about shots before. I, the dying
13yo, believed this fact should have worked in my
favor, perhaps suggesting that this experience
was genuinely different from all the other shots
I'd had (and there had been many, as I'd had some
six orthopedic procedures already).

So, off I went next to my tutor, where Mom
dropped me off for 90 minutes, and I was just a
groggy mess-- couldn't study or work at all. The
tutor wrote me off. I went home, complained of
feeling bad, my arm hurt, etc., and Mom,
disgusted with my whining, "allowed" me to go to
bed without supper. I was quite content to do that.

I woke the next morning with a fever and a
scrotum the size of a grapefruit. Mind you, at
13, I weighed 89 pounds and the Puberty Fairy
didn't even have me on her list of dudes to so
much as check on for the remainder of the season,
so at least I could still show Mom exactly what
was wrong without COMPLETELY dying of
shame. However, whereas all my gonadal goodness
is supersized TODAY, of course, a
grapefruit-sized scrotum (and I'm not
exaggerating there) was shocking at the time, and
I swear to God I thought it might burst. It was
taught and shiny and translucent, and your
scrotum just should not be like that.

I lay there in bed, and in silent terror, until
Mom yelled that I was going to be late to
school. I yelled back, feebly and with a tremor
in my voice, "I... I don't think I'm GOING to
school, today..." and finally Mom stepped in my
room to see what the big deal was. The deal was
big, let me tell ya. Since I hadn't any way to
tactfully convey the magnitude and nature of my
problem, in my 13yo modesty and befevered mind, I
just whipped off the covers to show Mom that, in
fact, my nuts were about to burst, and I wouldn't
be going to school. I was so scared. I was sure
they were going to have to lance my scrotum. Drain it... oh. my. god. >faint<

Mom was impressed, and promptly phoned the doctor
while I put a robe on. It had to be a robe,
because there was no possible way to don
underwear, much less pants, so I waddled to the
car with my feet spread two feet apart and went
back to the doctor wearing nothing but the fluffy
green bathrobe my grandmother had made me for
Christmas. "Have a seat," the receptionist
gestured as we signed in. "Heh," I whimpered, as
chose a corner in which to stand, legs apart,
with my feverish head leaned forward against the wall.

"WOW!" cried Dr. Ting, with that wide-eyed glow
doctors get whenever they know they're going to
have the April Case of the Month.

"You did this to me," I died.

"Just a second; I've got to get my camera," he
said with excitement as he skipped up the hall a
jaunt. I was sure he was kidding, until he came
back with a weathered Minolta and turned the
examination lights toward my glistening man-sac.

"Oh my GOD," I squealed from beyond the grave,
still dead from my death of moments earlier, "You've got to DOCUMENT IT?"

"Oh, no," Dr. Ting chuckled as he took another
picture, "It's just, when am I ever going to see
THAT again? Oh my god this is funny." He was
wiping away tears, and my mother had to leave the
room she was laughing so hard. Dr. Ting left
with his camera, and I heard the nurse and
receptionist burst into laughter. The doctor
came back, looking solemnly composed. "Well," he
said flatly, as if he'd just consulted with the
rest of the Vulcan medical council, "someone's having Benedryl for breakfast."
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Date: Fri, 24 Aug 2001 13:35:09 -0500
To: Frank Garcia <frank@techzentric.com>
From: "<< w y n n >>" <wynn@zenx.net>
Subject: The hilarious sagas of my butt.

This is mail that I sent to my Dad earlier this
week, and I thought it might crack you and Aubrey up:

I've had this crappy condition (yes, pun
intended) for about eleven days. At first, I
thought I just had diarrhea, but after three days
without any improvement, I began to realize some things:

1) It's not getting better.
2) I don't really have an explosive problem, or
even a very messy problem. I won't elaborate,
but there's some weirdness in this regard. Diarrhea is usually worse.
3) The cat now tries to poo when I do. What a weirdo.
4) I have to go suddenly and often, like every 40
minutes (and even during the night), but:
5) when I go, I can't go very much. Suddenly, a
little, and then I can't go any more.
6) I feel sick when I go, and:
7) I feel like I need to go more, but can't.
8) The bathroom could use some new paint.

And now, I have a very, very slight fever, of
just half a degree. Statistically not even a
fever, but it means that I feel a little out of
it. And when I begin to feel a little out of it,
I start rambling and telling people all sorts of
things that probably no one really wants to know about my butt.

Soooo, I called the doctor's office Monday
morning to make an appointment, and the horrible,
evil woman who answered the phone shared this hellish conversation with me:

Wynn: "Help! I need to see Dr. Rakel right
away! I've stopped eating! Please save my butt!"

PhoneWench: "Look, Dr. Rakel has RETIRED. You need to get another doctor."

Oh, no! I have no doctor! "Has one of the others taken over his patients?"

"No. You need to choose another doctor, and then
make an appointment. Call me back."

"Look, lady: please just sign me up with the
first doctor who can see me. My back is against
the wall, and my butt is about to unleash a
torrential fury that the world and that wall will regret forever."

"Sir, go to the website and choose another doctor, and CALL ME BACK."

What a bitch! That's just what I don't need:
ANOTHER pain in the
ass! Arrrrr! Okay. Okay. So, I go to the web
site (http://www.baylorfamilymedicine.org) and
spank me if I'm wrong, but there's not one word
there about each of the doctors. Ms. Helpfulness
swore to me that I could read doctors'
biographies on line and select a new doctor, but
there's not a thing about them! Their names
aren't even listed! What the hell!

So, I had to call WhatsHerJoy back this morning
to beg to be seen by the next doctor, resident,
med student, nurse, veterinarian, mechanical
engineer or high-school drop-out who can look up
my butt with a flashlight to tell me what the
hell is the problem. ARRRRR!!! Happily, I now
have an appointment to be seen by Dr.
Echolds-Elliot, whom I saw once before, when Dr.
Rakel wasn't available after my most recent
kidney stones ER visit. She seems pretty cool.

I really did stop eating yesterday, and haven't
had anything but liquids in 18 hours, because
it's just too unfortunate when I do try to go to
the bathroom. I can't deal with it any more. I
swear that if they don't fix the problem
tomorrow, I'm going to make a meal of Skittles as suppositories.

Perhaps there's an entire, quiet market for snack
and meal suppositories. M&M/Ass: "Melts in your
mouth, not in your hands... and, now that we
think about it, melts pretty well in your ass!"

McDonalds:
"Would you like that Breakfast-on-a-Bun for here? Or to go... up your ASS?!"

Tonight's Top Ten List-- FOODS NOT TO PUT UP YOUR ASS:

10) Melons.
9) Mounds Bars.
8) How far would you go for a Klondike Bar? Really! THAT far?!
7) Christmas trees (technically not a food).
6) not going anywhere with the joke
5) have no content
4) stalling to get to number one
3) oh what the hell,
1) The #1 food not to put up your ass: POP ROCKS.

Or Sugar Daddies. But whatever. If I don't
survive, and you have to write my biography, I
want you to call this chapter "Revenge of the
Turds," but only because "The Wind Done Gone" has already been taken this year.

Excerpts from Star Trek LXIX: The Wrath of Constipation:

"Captain's Log, Stardate 331-0892b: ...The captain HAS no log today."

Kirk: "CONNNNNNNNNNNNN! ...stipation!"
Spock, with raised eyebrow: "You sound quite... irregular... Captain."
Scotty: "Ya cannut push 'er any 'arder, Captain!"
Uhura: "There's something coming through for you
now, Captain. ...No, wait; it's not coming
through after all. Wait... yes it is! Here it
comes now. ...Hmm, no; I thought I had it, but
it's not coming through. It's as if we're being jammed!"
Khan: "Seti-alpha-five... THIS is Seti-alpha-five!"

(whatever.)

Okay. That's all I can handle right now. Back to work.

rrr mmph aaarrg! mbrrmbrrumph,
wynn
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Date: Sun, 26 Aug 2001 16:31:19 -0500
To: Scott Martin <scott@on-sight.com>
From: "<< w y n n >>" <wynn@zenx.net>
Subject: Transmogrification
Cc: Frank Garcia <frank@techzentric.com>

My friend Ed Draper from M. D. Anderson (now at
Microsoft) sent me this explanation:

Any fool knows that what you are faced with is a
simple matter of fecal transmogrification.

Are you not aware of the famous fecalist Klus
Gerbert von Strassengruber’s groundbreaking work on fecal transmogrification?

To refresh you memory: In the early 1620s, the
prolific alchemist von Strassengruber, who was
then working in the employ of the King of Spain,
was desperately seeking a way to transmute lead
into gold. However, his greatest challenge lay in
the simple fact that he was unable to overcome
the gastrointestinal havoc that was being wrought
upon his body by the notorious Barcelonan water supply.

Nearly at the end of his rope, he decided to
attempt a desperate measure ­ to transmute liquid
feces into Portuguese sangria. His method was both bold and controversial:

Step 1: Administration of sawdust

From his diary: “The problem was
straightforward. My anus was confounded. It had
simply lost touch with the third of the three
states of matter. You see, as turds are produced,
they coalesce from their initially gaseous state
into liquid, and then onto their final, solid
state. My hindquarter had simply “forgotten” how
this was accomplished. My suspicion is that the
devil was somehow involved in this tragedy. My
first step in the resolution of this problem was
obvious - the introduction of mass into my
sphincter. This was to “remind” my brown-eyed
friend of this vital final stage. This task was
accomplished via the introduction of common
sawdust administered via ramrod at the gracious
assistance of my chambermaid, Mme. Nina Garcia-Diego-Ramirez.”

Step 2: The Spicing

Again, from his diary, “After loading “Captain
Stinky” up with mass, the next step was my
greatest creative challenge: the “spicing” of the
mixture. The final combination of cinnamon,
frankincense, habanero, and ground pork rind,
administered in equal proportions of 1 teaspoon
each, mixed together during winter equinox at
7:00 AM, was obtained only after vigorous experimentation.”

Step 3: Fueling

He continues, “Once the foundation components
were in place, all that was needed was the
introduction of energy. The abundance supply and
relative lack of expense of common kerosene led
to my final selection of that flammable as the fuel of my deliverance.”

Step 4: Ignition

Strassengruber summarizes: “Fueled for
liberation, my ass burned like hot lava. Again, I
relied upon my trusted associate Nina
Garcia-Diego-Ramirez and her burning candle of
righteousness to deliver me from Satan’s grasp."

The rest is history.

In the event that you are unaware, the above was
scientifically verified by the 1977 film
“Chariots of the Gods” where producer Erich Von
Daniken discovered the mummified remains of 27
early Spanish conquistadors discovered near the
ancient Incan city of Tenoch Tietlan with signs
of sawdust still present in their rectums and
with early Incan tacos still present in their stomachs.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Date: Wed, 29 May 2002 19:05:01 -0500
To: Frank Garcia <frank@techzentric.com>
From: wynn <wynn@zenx.net>
Subject: update on my ass

Hey, Frank! I just thought I would update you on
the perils of my ass, since it's been a while,
and things are heating up again. There's nothing
like ass-sickness to bring out the humor in us,
of course, so here's the latest:

The devils up my butt are returning to
power. I've never been right-- the doctor last
year just ruled out Crohn's Disease without ever
doing any kind of lower-GI study. He treated me
for symptoms with cholesteramine, I got enough
better that I could eat again, and he was never
interested in following up. But, I've never been
normal, and I'll just spare you the funky symptoms.

Well, things have gotten worse in the past couple
of weeks, and starting last Friday, I've had such
audible churning that I am embarrassed to sit in
a quiet room with friends or clients or
whatever. I've also had other, less pleasant,
more serious symptoms, about which you just DON'T
WANT TO KNOW. Point is that things have gone
from tolerably not-normal to bad enough that I
have to go back to the (unmotivated) doctor, who
really needs to do more diagnostic work this time
and get <ahem> to the bottom of things.

Meanwhile, I've determined that the churning,
squeaking, gurgling noises are caused by the
Ass-Daemons who colon-ized my system last
September, hosting their annual Butt-Devil
Cricket Finals. These little critters aren't
actually evil, so much as naughty-- well,
devilish. You can hear their evil, funny little
laughs as they knock stuff back and forth between
their respective teams, all really playing
together more than against one another, for the
purpose of just stirring things up in their
host. What's more, instead of traditional
cricket widgets, they play with pitchforks. I've
enclosed a picture of one of the little guys to
give you an idea, though this one hasn't a fork.

Anyway, that's what's up, and-- more
particularly-- what's up my butt. I'll try to
get an appointment with the butt doctor some time
soon and see if he can exorcise the daemons.

Peace,
wynn
ass daemon


------------------------from Franka nd Aubrey Garcia

Green Eggs and Wynn

I am certain that I heard Green Eggs and Ham more during college than I ever did as a child, thanks to Wynn.  So I feel it appropriate that my tribute to Wynn should be a posting of what must have been one of his favorite Dr. Seuss stories.

GREEN EGGS AND HAM
By Dr. Seuss

I am Sam
I am Sam
Sam I am

That Sam-I-am!
Than Sam-I-am!
I do not like that Sam-I-am!

Do you like green eggs and ham?

I do not like them, Sam-I-am.
I do not like green eggs and ham.

Would you like them here or there?

I would not like them here or there.
I would not like them anywhere.
I do not like green eggs and ham.
I do not like them, Sam-I-am.

Would you like them in a house?
Would you like them with a mouse?

I do not like them in a house.
I do not like them with a mouse.
I do not like them here or there.
I do not like them anywhere.
I do not like green eggs and ham.
I do not like them, Sam-I-am.

Would you eat them in a box?
Would you eat them with a fox?

Not in a box.
Not with a fox.
Not in a house.
Not with a mouse.
I would not eat them here or there.
I would not eat them anywhere.
I would not eat green eggs and ham.
I do not like them, Sam-I-am.

Would you? Could you?
In a car?
Eat them! Eat them!
Here they are.

I would not, could not, in a car.

You may like them.
You will see.
You may like them in a tree!

I would not, could not in a tree.
Not in a car! You let me be.

I do not like them in a box.
I do not like them with a fox.
I do not like them in a house.
I do not like them with a mouse.
I do not like them here or there.
I do not like them anywhere.
I do not like green eggs and ham.
I do not like them, Sam-I-am.

A train! A train!
A train! A train!
Could you, would you, on a train?

Not on a train! Not in a tree!
Not in a car! Sam! Let me be!

I would not, could not, in a box.
I could not, would not, with a fox.
I will not eat them with a mouse.
I will not eat them in a house.
I will not eat them here or there.
I will not eat them anywhere.
I do not eat green eggs and ham.
I do not like them, Sam-I-am.

Say! In the dark?
Here in the dark!
Would you, could you, in the dark?

I would not, could not, in the dark.

Would you, could you, in the rain?

I would not, could not, in the rain.
Not in the dark. Not on a train.
Not in a car. Not in a tree.
I do not like them, Sam, you see.
Not in a house. Not in a box.
Not with a mouse. Not with a fox.
I will not eat them here or there.
I do not like them anywhere!

You do not like green eggs and ham?

I do not like them, Sam-I-am.

Could you, would you, with a goat?

I would not, could not, with a goat!

Would you, could you, on a boat?

I could not, would not, on a boat.
I will not, will not, with a goat.
I will not eat them in the rain.
I will not eat them on a train.
Not in the dark! Not in a tree!
Not in a car! You let me be!
I do not like them in a box.
I do not like them with a fox.
I will not eat them in a house.
I do not like them with a mouse.
I do not like them here or there.
I do not like them ANYWHERE!

I do not like green eggs and ham!

I do not like them, Sam-I-am.

You do not like them. So you say.
Try them! Try them! And you may.
Try them and you may, I say.

Sam! If you will let me be,
I will try them. You will see.

Say! I like green eggs and ham!
I do! I like them, Sam-I-am!
And I would eat them in a boat.
And I would eat them with a goat...

And I will eat them in the rain.
And in the dark. And on a train.
And in a car. And in a tree.
They are so good, so good, you see!

So I will eat them in a box.
And I will eat them with a fox.
And I will eat them in a house.
And I will eat them with a mouse.
And I will eat them here and there.
Say! I will eat them ANYWHERE!

I do so like green eggs and ham!
Thank you! Thank you, Sam-I-am!

Thank you, Wynn, for sharing your wit and your fantastically unique presence with us.  (I wonder if he ever completed his “the world is an enchilada” theory of the cosmos??).  The world of rubber slugs has lost a true friend.  J

Richard Johnson

Will Rice College

Thanks for the memories

I had the good fortune of being one of Wynn's classmates at Bellaire.  Although I lost touch with him after graduation, I never forgot his quirky sense of humor that made those high school years so much fun.  I'm glad to see from these posts that over the years he continued to raise the art of making others laugh to all new heights.  The last time I saw Wynn was several years ago, when he and another Bellaire friend made a pilgrimage all the way out here to the "Left Coast" to see Emo Philips.  Now that is dedication, and that was Wynn.
 
-Margaret Wu

Remembering Wynn

I'd like to share some of my memories of Wynn---someone the world will definitely miss.
 
I have known Wynn since I was a freshman at Will Rice College, and from the first I knew he was different. In a place where geekiness was abounding, Wynn took the cake, with his nametag, the tape drive ring he wore as an anklet, and his constant punning. Even when he got to be a bit much, he was an inspiration to anyone who wanted to be different and proud of it.
 
I didn't keep in touch very well with Wynn after graduation, but from 1997 to 2000 I was fortunate enough to be back at Rice, and very soon I bumped into Wynn. We ended up spending a lot of time together during those three years. At first I thought that Wynn was the same amusing, nontraditional character I remembered from Will Rice, but I quickly learned that he had really grown, and had deepened.  He was still a punster---I never even tried to keep up with him in a pun war---and his love of Dr. Seuss and of slugs had certainly not diminished.  But there was a lot more.
 
One thing I saw in him really impressed me: he strove to make all of his encounters as meaningful and genuine as possible. I can't imagine how many store clerks, bank tellers, or passersby he enriched just by really engaging them as people, something that most people rarely do. Sometimes I felt that he did this just to get attention---and yes, that was part of it. But he really did connect to people, and there must have been dozens of times when I was with him that he left somebody scratching his head and saying "well, that was a fun person, and that brightened my day."
 
That engaging part of Wynn's personality fit very well with his interest in Buddhism, which was another thing that deepened and enriched him, and which was surprising to me. I was fortunate enough to join him for one service and discussion at the temple, which showed me a little bit of what Wynn got out of that part of his life.  Wynn's desire to connect with people also made me sure that he would be a good nurse, even though I hadn't been in close touch with him while he was completing that program.
 
I was also fortunate to be someone who could celebrate and appreciate Wynn's sexuality. In the years between our undergraduate days and my return to Houston I had gotten to know and embrace the gay community, a community I still am active with as a straight ally. I felt that coming out and understanding his sexual identity had helped Wynn tremendously and made him a more whole person.  The defensiveness that I had seen in his personality was gone, replaced by more openness, and more happiness. Some of my most fond memories of Wynn are of hanging out on Westheimer, and being part of the community there. I could also see Wynn learning some of the hard, maturing facts of relationships, as well as the joy, and both aspects contributed to his growth.
 
I don't know if it's that the news hasn't really sunk in, but I cannot feel sad right now thinking about Wynn, and I hope I never really do. I remember happy memories of a fundamentally happy person, someone who I'm sure wouldn't want me to feel sad now. I probably will feel sad as the reality sinks in, or as we approach a reunion, or when I visit Houston and think that I won't be able to see him and catch up; but I know that in feeling sad I won't be acting in the spirit of Wynn.
 
David Metzler
 

Loss of Wynn

Perry and Sherry:  I am unable to tell you the thoughts that have run through my mind when I learned that you had lost a son.  I did not know Wynn--why I don't know--I thought I had spent a reasonable part of my life at St. Mark's, but no.  Well, after Joan died in 2002 I thought my life had ended, but I survived--somehow.  52 1/2 years of married life cannot be erased by a terrible occurence.  And I hope the same is true for you--Wynn is gone but certainly not forgotten.  He occupied such a welcome place in so many minds of so many people.  I have two adult sons about whom I am so very proud.  And grandchildren numerous.  Also I have (for the present at least) another St. Mark's church, this one in Cleveland, TX.  We are terribly small but survive somehow.  And without a priest, who presently lives in that wonderful place in Baytown--going down with Alzheimers.  Joan was a victim of Parkinson's. EVERYBODY'S GOT SOMETHING!    So, again, my great sympathy for losing Wynn.  As a very wise parishioner here at St. Mark's told me just the other day when I confessed some overwhelming sadness with "things"--just remember the good times and the good photos, mementos, and you'll be all right.  Hope so. Hang in there!
 
Joe F. Power, 141 South Fairway Loop, Coldsrping, TX 77331.  jjpower@eastex.net   

A smile for Wynn

Wynn was one of the most charismatic people I have ever met. I didn't know him well-- we only met a few times, but when I spotted him at Kraftsmen bakery on Montrose our quick hello turned into a conversation full of raucous laughter that went on for well over an hour. His joie de vivre was contagious.

I can only imagine all the smiles he left behind, I knew him so little and he touched my life with beautiful light.

-Lindsey Ricker

Wynn

Wynn was my next door neighbor for the past two years and he never failed to keep me on my toes. I remember one night some friends and I had just come in from dinner and were sitting in my lving room, when, suddenly, the door flew open and in strolled Wynn, talking as he made his entrance ... "Who want's to go to Amy's for some ice cream?" We were taken aback for a second by the sheer unexpectedness and randomness of what had just happened. We all started to laugh and Wynn laughed, too. We respectfully declined the ice cream, as we were all about to explode from dinner. Wynn stayed and we chatted for a bit until everyone finally dispersed to their own homes. Wynn was always so willing to help me if I needed anything. The last time I talked to him was when he called me a few weeks ago, right after I had moved to NYC. I had asked him to keep an eye out for a check I was expecting. He called me just to say ... "Nothing yet ... but I'll let you know as soon as it does get here." Now, that's a truly good neighbor. He will be missed. Goodbye Wynn. Peace.
 
-Doug Thompson

Slugs! Scrotum!

You can't miss a person, I've found, whom you carry around with you. I
haven't really seen Wynn since I graduated from Rice, but he's still with me
in the very best kind of way, and I'm sure he always will be there, lurking
in the corners of my heart and mind.

Wynn was a bright spot even in the decay of Houston grunge like IHOP. It
wasn't our waitress's fault that she was named "Twyla" and given a booth of 6
or 7 of us all-night revelers at the end of a very long shift... "Miss,
miss!" Waggling one topsider by his ear, Wynn flagged her down for more
blueberry syrup or some such. (His foot was still in the topsider of course,
you've all seen this trick, right?) Twyla looked like she needed some
weirdness in her life but she might have been too tired to seize the gift
that morning; she remained very grumpy.

Like you, I was happy to be on the recieving end of love like that. Wynn was
my secret Santa one year at Will Rice. I got things sluggy and the tiniest
bottle of tabasco sauce ever. He thus set a standard for thoughtfulness and
humor and giving that I would strive to achieve.

Wandering down the hall one year at Halloween, Wynn was the most fully-dressed
party-goer for the annual Night of Decadence party at Rice, clothed from neck
to knees as a naked giant hariy scrotum. (That's right--clothed as naked.
Burlap sacking tied strategically here and there with black yarn, in case
you're wondering, concealing two large beach balls.) Tim and I giggled over
it for days afterward.

Then we graduated and left Texas a thousand miles behind. We saw Wynn last
over eight years ago, when I was pregnant with our first kid. He told us he
was gay, and regaled us with his coming out story. Like many of Wynn's
stories, he had it polished into a great comic epic and we laughed like
hyenas.

Around a year later I gave as best a rendition of Wynn's coming out I could
for my dad, when he finally came out of the closet. Dad was clinically
depressed and suicidal while I was a teenager, and had had shock therapy when
he failed to respond to drugs. Coming out at 63 was the end of a life-long
battle, one he had fought hard and survived with his own brand of humor. I
offered Wynn's story, a favorite Allison Bechdel, and coat hangers. Dad
enjoyed Wynn's story and Allison's fine work, but as for the coat hangers, my
own original contribution... What for? Dad wanted to know. Because I wasn't
quite as good as Wynn at these things, I had to kill the joke with
explanation (they were for all the extra space in his closet, don't you
know.)

It was fun to have had our lives twine around with his for those short years
at Rice. He gave much to us that we could not reciprocate directly. We pay
that debt off in the only way we can, to others that we meet who appreciate a
word of support or a funny story to get through. So go ahead: imagine a
middle-age lady who hasn't shaved since August, wearing only her old
underpants and a pair of half-length white althletic socks, swinging through
the kitchen of a 1950's ranch house and snatching away the salt shaker in the
very nick of time, then leaping up on the bed, legs planted shoulder-width
and arms akimbo, shouting "Slugs, never fear! Wonder Woman is here!!" and
know that Wynn has been saluted for a life of love and joy.

ieva swanson, '92, and love also from Tim Holy, '91

When Wynn was unable to attend one of my gatherings...

...he sent me this email in his place.

(This blog leads me to imagine a posthumous volume of "the artist's"
unpublished work.)

I haven't yet felt the fact of it (I'm not ready to), but I know I'm
going to miss him.

Angelique

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: wynn <wynn@zenx.net>
Date: Aug 23, 2004 11:00 PM
Subject: Re: Important: notes on Aug 21st party

I'm sorry I couldn't make it to the recent party... but, a moment's
reflection on party experiences set me on a poetic journey, and of the
finest sort: the kind that relays a universal experience, to which
everyone can relate. Often, my poetry is merely trite, and selfishly
personal. I have titled this evening's superior composition:

I AM A GREAT POET

It's not my fault;
how could it be?
I want to stay,
but have to pee.

[Well, that is not precisely true.]
[I'm saying pee, but thinking poo.]

What's that you say?
You've got a john?
Heh, no way!
Don't put me on.

Thank you, no,
someone might need it.
I'd hate for them to find I'd peed it.

It's far too kind
that you insist
I use your john
until I've pissed.

[You cannot know I'm pissed right now]
[that I'm about to crap a cow.]

Yes! Of course I'm having fun!
I'll just be off, to Number One.
I'll come right back! I love your party!
[But can't admit I'm feeling farty.]

[Maybe if your tunes were louder!]
[Maybe had I not had chowder!]
[Maybe if your bathroom door]
[weren't half an inch above the floor!]

[Perhaps if I weren't certain of the almost-certain danger]
[of your shower's secret power as a tiled echo-chamber!]

I swear I've had a blast tonight,
so please don't have a fit,
or ever think I just went home
and didn't give a shit.

Wynn

As I try to contemplate the unimaginable loss of Wynn to the Martin family, a fond mental picture runs through my mind.  It is the Fourth of July, celebrated with good friends, many years ago.  All our young boys are jumping into the swimming pool, laughing and splashing together, without a care in the world.  Although we rarely saw Wynn after those long-ago gatherings, I felt that we watched him from afar through the loving eyes of our dear friends, Sherry and Perry.  I cannot fathom the loss this family must feel!  I do know, however, that Wynn's dynamic spirit and great love will always reside in their hearts.  We will miss his presence in their lives.
 
Donna and Tom Hillin

Wynn

Wynn was an IT tech for Hunter McMain, a company that designs all our company's publications. I would see him in their office every so often over the past few years, and was always struck at how much of an upbeat and lively character he was—and I mean "character" in the best sense of the word. In fact, I just saw him there not even a month ago where he was lavishly extolling the virtues of the new iMAC computer and demonstrating its capabilities. And when I do get one, there will always be a little part of Wynn in the boot-up process...

Bob Ruggiero
pubs@quilts.com

Wynn Martin

I began my teaching career at Bellaire High School. Little did I know that I would be touched by so many truly incredible students. We formed a bond that to this day still survives. The drama kids and I had a "family" complete with all of the idiosyncrasies that you find in a real family. We were focused, hard-working and committed to our love of theatre and to each other. Among our cast of characters was Wynn. He was intelligent, insightful and humorous. He was witty, irritating and endearing. He never knew when to stop. He always treasured us. He was giving and kind and bitingly sarcastic. He was one of us. He made us complete. He was like a son and a brother and that crazy cousin that stays in your room during holidays. We loved him for all of his gifts and talents and for his crazy sense of humor that often times we didn't get. Without him we would not have been whole.

When we did As You Like It Wynn played himself. He played the character of the fool who was the only on who understood the truth. Little did we know at the time that his life would be cut short before he completed his seven ages.

All the world’s a stage, And all the men and women merely players:  They have their exits and their entrances; And one man in his time plays many parts, His acts being seven ages. At first the infant, Mewling and puking in the nurse’s arms. And then the whining school-boy, with his satchel, And shining morning face, creeping like snail Unwillingly to school. And then the lover, Sighing like furnace, with a woeful ballad Made to his mistress’ eyebrow. Then a soldier, Full of strange oaths, and bearded like the pard, Jealous in honour, sudden and quick in quarrel, Seeking the bubble reputation Even in the cannon’s mouth. And then the justice, In fair round belly with good capon lin’d, With eyes severe, and beard of formal cut, Full of wise saws and modern instances; And so he plays his part. The sixth age shifts Into the lean and slipper’d pantaloon, With spectacles on nose and pouch on side, His youthful hose well sav’d, a world too wide 1 For his shrunk shank; and his big manly voice, Turning again toward childish treble, pipes And whistles in his sound. Last scene of all, That ends this strange eventful history, Is second childishness and mere oblivion, Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.

As You Like It II vii

Recently my husband Loren and I had the privilege of having lunch with Kate, Sammy and Wynn and although it had been almost 20 years it seemed as if no time had passed at all. He made us laugh and cry.

We will miss you Wynn.

Love MAV

Wynn

I have enjoyed reading all these postings because I haven't seen Wynn since he was a teenager. I'm not surprised that he turned out to be the kind of adult he obviously was. I remember him as intelligent, kind, polite, articulate, and many more adjectives. What I remember most is the night he and Stephanie (my daughter) first served as acolytes. They seemed so young and vulnerable but they did a wonderful job. And they became two of the best acolytes in St Mark's corps. I know he will be greatly missed.

Ana O. (Veal) Davis

On My Watch

by Wynn Martin, from the Jade Buddah newsletter, January/Februrary 2002.

Rather than merely accept my shortcomings, I am committed to doing
something about them. To that end, I decided a few months ago that I
needed to impose more discipline upon my schedule, and improve my
productivity at work and in my personal pursuits. One of the ways
that I’ve done that is to begin exercising regularly; I signed up for
a karate class, to build my strength and fitness. I carefully chose a
school that does not practice fighting or engage in any competition,
and instead focuses on physical and mental well-being. It is almost
like an aerobics class, except that the development of new skills
with practice lends a sense of ongoing accomplishment to the
participants. I feel motivated to attend each class, and to commit
myself constructively to practice.

One night I met a friend after karate to join him for a musical
performance. I was surprised to discover, at the show, that I had not
put on my wristwatch after showering. Normally, as I leave my home, I
check several things routinely: my watch, keys, wallet, cell phone
(during the day), and my Rice ring. I feel a bit naked, if any one of
those things is missing. I check again whenever I get out of my car,
particularly to be sure I have my keys before locking the doors. So,
I was surprised to find that I’d somehow left without my watch I
finally decided I must have left it at karate practice.

Until about five years ago, I had worn cheap, digital watches, and
was not concerned with their appearance as much as their function.
Then, my mother bought me a very nice, rather expensive watch. Mom
suggested that I wear it on special occasions. I thought about it,
and told her later that wearing the watch would remind me that every
day is special. So, that watch became a beautiful part of my life.
Each time I put it on, or whenever someone had something nice to say
about it, I thought of my mother, and remembered to find the beauty
inherent in the moment, in every day.

And suddenly, it was gone. I waited patiently for two days, with the
expectation that I would find it again at my next lesson. I would be
inconvenienced for two days, but the real challenge would be to avoid
suffering from attachment to this coveted, physical object.

My watch was not in the office on Thursday, and for the first time, a
small feeling of deep loss threatened to encroach upon my spirit,
where hope and confidence had prevailed for two days. With that loss
could come humility, embarrassment, and a feeling of having
disappointed my mother, and myself. But I saw that risk, and I chose
to embrace a lesson, rather than that suffering.

One of the basic concepts at the foundation of Buddhism is the idea
that we can liberate ourselves from suffering, by applying
mindfulness, and embracing constructive thought and action. I try to
live every day in this spirit of the dharma. Sometimes, we feel like
we need lessons, teachers, and tools to help us on this journey, but
I like to look back and recall that the enlightenment at the
foundation of our faith came about just by sitting beneath a tree,
and thinking. We need only have an open mind, a pure heart, and our
determination.

So, I chose not to suffer over the loss of that object, and instead
let it go on being a tool of mindfulness. It was a lapse of
mindfulness that let me misplace it, so that would be my first
lesson, and a reminder to me. Each time I leave my home or lock my
car, I still touch my wrist reflexively, to confirm that the watch is
there... and it is not. But rather than wince in embarrassment, I
smile. I am reminded to be mindful. I am also reminded that the day
is special, and that I should look around me to find the beauty in
the day. I am reminded not to let attachment, or suffering, prevail
on my watch.

I found the wristwatch today, just an hour ago, in my laundry, and it
almost made me laugh. Curiously, I was almost sorry to see it again,
because this week without it has been so constructive for me. I
decided I could not let the experience be diluted by my rediscovery
of this simple object, and needed to share it with my sangha, and my
family. Some of these lessons are simple... to be mindful, and to
avoid attachment, for instance. But the most important lesson here, I
think, is even more fundamental than those: liberation from suffering
is possible, and is merely up to us. If it can be discovered beneath
a tree, it can be found in our daily lives, too... by appreciating
the beauty inherent in every day, and even by remembering what we
have lost, with a smile.

Remember 1982?

Ah, the simple pleasures... Got this email from Wynn back in 1996:

Chuck! I bought a DIG DUG! ***YES!!!*** I own a free-standing, full-sized, coin-operated Dig Dug! It is TOO COOL! It lives in the computer room! I can get to level 7! I suck! I love it! YES! I own a DIG DUG!!! I can die a happy man now!

WHOO-HOO!!!

You must come over and check it out!

Wheeee!,
Joy,
wynn

Caring for People

About ten years ago a small consulting firm in Houston had more work
than they knew how to handle. So advertisements were placed in
various places online and one of the responses was from Wynn Martin.
It was, as I recall, the most genuine-sounding of the inquiries and
we scheduled an interview.

Wynn arrived for the interview, took one look around the place, and
seemingly decided that we were decent people and that he would like
to assist us with our problem of too much work. There had been a
number of other interviews but none of them could match the qualities
that Wynn brought. We made an offer and he graciously accepted.

For the next few years, Wynn helped people deal with computers and
their problems for Entech's consulting practice. He excelled at
this. One reason for his distinction was that he truly cared about
the results and strove to ensure the clients were happy. After
Entech merged with another company and its focus changed, Wynn set
out on his own to continue helping people. His energy and interest
in helping others with complex systems and situations eventually led
to helping them with their most serious health issues. Wynn's quest
to become an RN seems to be a logical extension of what Wynn liked --
helping people solve problems and both feel better and feel better
about themselves. No problem too big or too small.

Then there was this silly yellow ring. Made of plastic, it was from
an old mainframe tape and it was used to write-protect the tape. The
tapes looked like this:

http://www.columbia.edu/acis/history/media.html

If the ring was removed from the tape, the computer wouldn't write on
it, like the little plastic tab you move or break on a video or audio
tape to keep it from being erased.

For years, Wynn constantly wore this ring around his ankle. He
reminded everyone that he would be happy to listen and respond (and
learn) as long as the ring was there. Occasionally, he would take
the ring off his ankle, hold it up, grin, and say he was "no longer
retaining information - please stop speaking".

His sense of humor was ever-present, even in the most dire of
circumstance and he will be missed by a great many people.

Mark Williams

Sunday, February 26, 2006

Wynn!

Wynn was one of my closest friends. I have so many memories of my dear friend I dont know which to share. Wynn was just an amazing friend, I will always have a special place in my heart for him, and will always feel his absence in my life. Wynn, I love you man.

Dave Brooks

Wynn, The One and Only

I had heard a lot about Wynn, before I met him for the first time, but nothing could have prepared me for the actual person.  We were at Scott and Jenny's house on the morning of Scott's "bachelor party", awaiting Wynn's arrival, for it was he who had planned the event. He was late (as usual?), and when he arrived his hair wasn't combed, and he was moving at full speed, and talking just as fast.  It turned out he had planned this absolutely fantastic day-long range of events, adventures, and scavenger hunt, all rolled into one, and it was beautifully organized.  One could not help but be impressed by his intelligence, imagination, creativity, enthusiasm and devotion to his brother. 
We have since gotten to know Wynn much better,and seen him in a variety of lights, and we were proud to have him as a member of  our Family.  My brother Jack and I reminisced about him today.   He was truly one of a kind and will be sorely missed. 
Tom (and Lynda) Browne

Qualities

When I think of the finest qualities in people, kindness, compassion
and empathy top my list. Honesty, sincerity and enthusiasm belong
there as well. Wynn was all these and more. His intelligence, wit and
infectious laugh were bonuses. His excellent mind was a gift - the
other qualities were earned.

He had many options because of his skills and aptitudes. It is
telling that he finally had channeled them into a career of care
giving. It was his nature. He was a people person.

There are those people who make our lives somehow more. Wynn was one
of those too. His new career would have extended his radius
enormously. I am enriched and grateful because he touched my life.

g a r y f a y e

Wynn Forever

Wynn Forever

My mom said Wynn and I were kindred spirits, and I'd like to think
that's true. He was the most amazing, crazy, and fabulous guy I ever
knew. He used to come and work on our computers at home and at my
mom's office. We always used to talk about pop culture. I even
remember us discussing Orlando Bloom's attractiveness at one point!
He also came to my mom's book signing and I remember him telling me
about his fallopian tube and "naughty leprechaun" halloween
costumes. I know that I was extremely lucky to know him.

Rebecca Bernstein.

Thoughts on Wynndom

I think we all knew we were in for someone unusual when we met Wynn.  I remember Wynn's freshman year at Rice.  During O-week events, new students wear name tags...nothing unusual there.  Wynn, however, never chose to blend in.  Wynn wore his name tag the entire freshman year, every day.  Goofy, incredibly smart, and way outside the box, he will be missed.
 
Roswitha Firth

Boy - you're gonna make me rich!!!

Some things I remember about Wynn -

Wynn and I worked in the computer dept. at the Rice Campus Store. He was
fanatical about audio and kept telling me about these amazing speakers he
had in his dorm. Finally one day I asked to hear them, so we walked over
to his dorm room. These speakers were not just big, they were HUGE. The
room was basically a place to sit and worship these speakers. It was the
Rothko chapel and the speakers were the Rothkos. You should have seen the
grin on Wynn's face when he cranked up "Mars: The Bringer of War" from
Holst's The Planets.

During the 1990's Wynn worked with me at M. D. Anderson Cancer Center
providing support for computer applications we developed. Wynn was the
best support person I have ever encountered - unfailingly courteous,
extremely knowledgeable and always fun to talk with. During this period,
Wynn bought a huge gold Cadillac. Not a practical choice, but practical
wasn't a big part of Wynn's personality. He told me a story about going to
a filling station to fuel this huge beast of a car. He was chatting with
the proprietor (of course) as the meter on the pump turned...and
turned...and turned. Finally, the proprietor looked at him and said, "Sh.t
son - you're gonna make me rich!!!"

Wynn's courage and positive attitude during his long ordeal with a
bone-lengthening procedure that he underwent to try to mend the leg that
was injured when he was young.

Wynn's sense of fun and his genuine love for people. He was one of a kind.

Wynn

Scott, I still cannot believe this and I am grateful for the site to be able to share with others. Wynn was one of the dearest and funniest and MOST UNUSUAL people I have ever known! He was a delight in class, always something to say and usually funny - impossible to get mad at him! I have several stories I am very fond of. I teach Pharmacology and he always had something to add, but this particular day I was talking about patients' rights and autonomy and the nurse's role as patient advocate. Wynn had just started his first clinical experience and soon was in a room with the patient, her family, physcian and other nurse. Apparently, they were talking "around" the patient and not including her in the decision-making process. Wynn spoke up (a first semester student nurse!) that he thought they should ask the patient what she wanted, this was what they had been taught in class!

The next day I got a very long email from Wynn (he LOVED long emails!) asking if I thought he had done the right thing, and what is the appropriate behavior when you are being yelled at by a physician? "Who do you think you are???" were some of the words he recalled! I didn't know whether to laugh or cry, but I did know how proud I was of him. It also reminded me that on occasion, people listen to what I say and take it to heart, and that's exactly what he did. We talked about other strategies for the next time which might avoid confrontation in front of the patient and family and hopefully would avoid the yelling part, but I don't think he really cared, as long as he was there for the patient! He was a wonderful nurse! One thing that makes me so sad is that the world will miss out on that. He would have been so important to our profession, he's the kind of person who would leave us much better than he found us.

My second favorite Wynn story is again, a long email! I received this from him while he was in Mexico last summer with Ruth Grubesic and a group of students. It was long and funny and hysterical about his trying to speak Spanish and do assessments. My favorite line was that the word for pineapple and penis were very close and he kept mixing them up leading to some very interesting situations! Only Wynn!

To all those who knew him and loved him and especially to his parents and brother and his family - his loss will be felt forever. He was a special person, I am glad I had the chance to know him and will keep his memory alive forever. You are all in my prayers during this painful and difficult time.
Brenda Haile
TWU

Wynn

I met Wynn only twice, but that was enough to etch a very fond memory. He
helped me with some computer problems, once at my office, and once at home.
He was a fun and unique spirit...vivacious and engaging.

He was wiggling his leg back and forth (as people often do) while working on
my computer and I asked "why do people fidget like that?". Wynn looked up
and without batting an eye said "because we don't have tails to wag".

I still use that line (as if it were my own, I'm embarrassed to say!).

He was special.

Trish Cramblet

fallopian tube story

One year, Wynn Martin came to our Halloween party dressed as a fallopian
tube.

a fallopian tube.

A pink fabric tube like a miniskirt gone horribly wrong, covered his whole
body, only his face was exposed. He could only walk by shuffling his feet.
a big white fluffy pillow on his head served as an ovary. He had no arm
holes, and when asked he would say (incredulously)"how many fallopian
tubes do you know with arms?"

Wynn suffered for his art- the whole party he could not eat or drink
except when someone fed him. I'm not sure how he managed to go to the
bathroom with his arms pinned to his sides, I did not ask.

Wynn stayed in character all evening. Just developing a "character" for a
fallopian tube is difficult enough. He would answer any questions
directed to him as a depressed fallopian tube. Think Marvin the robot as
a reproductive organ:

"What do you do?"
"I'm in the egg delivery business".
"How have you been?"
"Same old me. Sperm rushes one way, eggs rush the other."

Every half hour, he was he would start convulsing and shaking. He would
shimmy his whole body down to his foot, where he would drop...a hard
boiled egg.

"I hate it when that happens."

I've had the honor and pleasure of knowing many bright and creative people
in my life. Many of them might consider making a costume resembling a
reproductive organ. A few of those might actually do it. A few or those
might take the time to reason out the character of a fallopian tube, is it
happy or sad?

I only knew one who puzzled out a way to be a functional, yet depressed,
reproductive organ.

Aaron Herrick
February 24th 2006

Saturday, February 25, 2006

Riding with Wynn in his new Miata

Click the image below to watch a short movie

wynn

something to be remembered by

Click the image below to watch a short movie

wynn

the official obituary

Walter Wynn Martin died February 20, 2006 at the age of 37. Though short, his life was filled with many accomplishments from an early age. During his years at Bellaire High School, he was a medal-winning debater, a member of the National Honor Society, contributing editor for the Three Penny Press and a National Merit finalist. He continued his writing for the Thresher during his years at Rice University where he graduated with a degree in English in 1991. After graduation, his admiration for, and expertise in the life of Theodor Geisel (aka Dr. Suess) resulted in Wynn's teaching the first ever college level course on Dr. Suess at Rice.

He was hit by a car at age 7 permanently injuring his leg, which rendered him unable to participate in sports, dancing or many physical activities. In spite of this, his strong spirit persevered and he made it his mission to help others with in need. This led to his pursuit of nursing as a career. Wynn graduated from TWU's nursing program Magna Cum Laude in December 2005. In January 2006 he successfully completed the nursing state board exam to became a registered nurse. Wynn was excited about his new career and we all felt that he would be a fantastic nurse as helping people gave him his greatest enjoyment.

His brother Scott, sister-in-law Jenny, niece Lyda, mother Sherry, father Perry will hold in their hearts his joyful, kooky spirit and remain committed to his values and purpose. Per Wynn's wishes and in lieu of flowers, gifts can be made in his memory to the Will Rice College General Support Fund at the Rice University Development Office, 6100 Main 77030.

A memorial service will be held at St. Mark's Episcopal Church, 3816 Bellaire Blvd, Monday the 27th at 5pm. As per Wynn's wishes, a celebration of life party will be held at the Will Rice Commons at 6:30pm. Friends are encouraged to visit http://www.on-sight.com/wynn and post stories, memories, photos and movies about Wynn.

Welcome Everyone!

Please share your stories here by sending an email to (scott at on-sight dot com) with "Wynn" in the subject field and I will post them here.

Thanks! - Scott Martin