Seeing a nostalgic event can be missed in the blink of an eye. I happened to look out my front window years ago one Halloween late afternoon, just as eight-year-old Duion came running down our front yard hill with a pillowcase of candy he had collected. He rushed into his room, dumped it out, and left again to collect more treats. Had I not been looking out that front window I would have missed a memory that has stayed with me for decades.

     A second Kodak moment came when I was walking down the steps to my art studio area. Duion sat at a table where he had taken apart an electronic item and was intent on looking at a part he was holding in his hand. I wrote about that moment in his senior letter, telling him I was thankful he knew how to put things back together after he had taken them apart.

     A D.J. Moment came when he rushed in the front door and headed for the basement steps. He was carrying a recorder that he had won on a bet. I asked him what bet and he told me a fellow didn’t believe cow manure didn’t smell when it was dry.