Robert Wood and Big Brothers

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As I sprawled on the couch watching Championship Wrestling from Florida one Saturday morning, I looked at the painting that hung in the family room during a commercial. It had always intrigued me.

It was an untitled mid-century Robert Wood oil painting depicting a wild storm-tossed rocky beach. Mom and Pop had gotten it for a wedding present. To my 12 year-old mind, it could have been anywhere.

Mom came into the adjacent kitchen and saw me looking at it. She put some water into the kettle and put it on the stove.

“Isn’t it beautiful?” she asked. “After the war, your Dad was stationed in California. It always reminds me of that coast.” I could see her drifting off to those long-ago years, a perspective it took me half a lifetime to develop.

The kettle began to whistle. Before she turned, she looked at me. It was a moment. “I’d like you to have it someday,” she said.

Someday. That was too much for me to grasp. I turned back in time to see Dusty Rhodes applying his signature move…the Bionic Elbow…to his hapless opponent.

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Ten years later on another Saturday morning, I was at a flea market at the University of Florida. I thumbed through castoffs by graduating seniors: textbooks, albums, tapestries. I noticed a framed painting.

Another Robert Wood, this one a landscape. It looked to me like something reminiscent of a homecoming; a weary traveler returning to a place of a childhood bliss after years of struggle and a well-stamped passport.

It hung in my dorm room; then for the next 5-6 years in a variety of apartments; and finally, our first house.

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When IBM closed the Boca plant in 1995, my brother Doug and I had to take transfers…him to Austin, me to Raleigh. Mom and Pop tearfully waved goodbye twice within the space of a month as their kids and grandkids moved far away. Goodbye to cookouts, swimming and coloring…just the two of them rolling around our old house.

To keep them in the loop, I’d send batches of photos with comments written on the back. Shortly before Mom’s birthday in 2010, such a batch arrived along with a card. Doug and I also went halves on some flowers. My mom…according to my dad…looked at each picture, read the back, and commented…she was never in a rush for such things. She read her cards and got a little tearful. They watched some TV, then turned out the light. Just another night.

Only it wasn’t. The next morning, my dad couldn’t wake her. He called 911 and she was rushed to Boca Hospital. Massive stroke, nothing we can do, so sorry.

Pop said don’t come yet; let’s wait to see what happens. Five days later, they held the phone up to her ear in her hospital bed as she lay comatose. Didn’t know if she could hear me—they say that hearing is the last sense to go—but I told her I loved her, she’d been an awesome mom, if she had to go, I understood.

Twenty minutes later, I got a call….she had stepped into eternity, into the loving arms of Jesus.

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In the days following, Pop, Doug and I began the dreary business of going through her stuff. By this time, Doug had moved back to Boca and Mom and Pop were living in a retirement place with much less room. We found the Robert Wood seascape painting in their storage locker.

Doug and I began arguing over it. I told him about the long-ago conversation between Mom and I and he scoffed. 

“She told me she wanted me to have it,” he said. Pop was too distraught to referee.

“Look,” I said. “What do you need it for? You can walk to the beach.”

But it was more than just the painting. Both of us wanted to keep a little piece of Mom alive. The arguing became bitter, angry. I decided to let it drop; it wasn’t worth losing my only brother over.

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Back home in North Carolina, the other Robert Wood hung at the top of the stairs. It always seemed lost; without its sister painting, it was a bookend without a mate.

I didn’t dwell on it, but it bugged me from time to time. Oh well.

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In mid December 2012, a large package arrived from Florida. It came with a Christmas card and it said don’t open the box until Christmas.

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That Christmas, after all the presents had been opened, the kids were playing with their new toys and It’s a Wonderful Life was playing, I thought it was time.

I went out to the garage and opened the box. I pulled out something big, but not heavy. I unwrapped it: The Robert Wood seascape. I turned it over and things got a little blurry as I read what my brother had written on the back.

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Both Mom and Pop are long gone now but the Robert Wood seascape hangs in my family room. On cold winter nights, I look at it and my mind drifts back to a better era; my boyhood and days and nights of the four of us in the Boca house.

And of a brother who wanted me to have a homecoming.

© My little corner of the world 2026 | All rights reserved

Images by author and Meta AI

71 comments

  1. what a beautiful story ! Having siblings will always lead to some kind of rivalry big or small. What a lovely sentiment your brother added to the back of the picture. I am sure it was tough for him to give up but he knew what was important to you and your relationship !

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you! You are so right about the sibling rivalry… And I was very touched by what my brother wrote. We had great parents and we both miss them. Thanks again for reading and the nice comment 😎

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  2. SOBBING!! This is so beautiful! Here’s hoping the warmth and waves that are in that painting always bring you memories of your family for the rest of your lifetime (and beyond). I love this story so very much.

    BTW is your family part Norwegian? I saw the reference to the Norway coast. Forgive me if we’ve discussed this already! ❤️

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Karen, thank you… I’m touched that you enjoyed it so much. Yes, my dad is Norwegian… His parents are from Stavanger, Norway. I visited the family over there a few times… Beautiful country.

      Thanks again for reading and a wonderful comment… Much appreciated 😎

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Oh this is fantastic. I love the pictures too! What a wonderful family story. Thank you so much for sharing this with me. I’m sure I would have found this in your blog but I’m thrilled to read it now. 🇳🇴🇳🇴🇳🇴

        I’ve never been but my parents and sister have been a few times. My Grandparents also travelled back quite a few times with their siblings and spouses in the 70s.

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  3. How beautiful that you both had this impression of the painting as conveying your mom.. time she spent gazing and reliving moments. Your parents did well that both you and your brother love and care for each other so deeply as this story suggests.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks, Stephanie! I’m glad you enjoyed it. We genuinely had a great life growing up… R
      meal time conversation, laughing, tons of inside jokes. I was blessed to have them as my parents, and Doug as my brother. I think it was very tough for him to give that painting up, but he did… And I deeply appreciated it.

      Thanks again for reading and the wonderful comment.! 😎

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  4. Those are the kind of Norman Rockwell memories I would’ve loved to have. I had a chaotic, deeply traumatic childhood. Hold onto these stories bc these are the ones that will be shared forever. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m so sorry 😢 I hope you’re able to find some joy somewhere in your life when those memories come calling in the wee hours. I indeed was blessed and I’ve tried to pay it forward with my kids and life in general.

      Thanks so much for reading and the kind words. Sending hugs 🙏❤️

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  5. Oh, wow! I’m in tears. Such a beautiful, if at points painful, memory. And it speaks volumes about your family, and your relationship with your brother. Thank you for sharing.

    It also made me look at the artwork in our house that came from my parents. Things got really bad with my mother at the end-she went off the deep end when my dad died-and my brother and I basically let the hospice thrift store clean out her apartment. There are a couple things I wish now that I’d saved, but each of the three paintings I have from them has a story behind it. It’s not the sort of thing that I normally write, but maybe one day.

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    1. Lynn, thanks so much for reading and the kind words…I’m so glad you enjoyed it.

      It was tough when my Mom went. She was the only civilizing force in our fam and without her gentle but persuasive hand, the three of us floundered. Something in Pop died with Mom and he lived in this twilight existence for three years. He tried to keep up with the grandkids and us, but his smile was always fainter than the glory years. I have a few tools and special things of his that I treasure but the painting is the best. I’m glad you have paintings, too…would love to read about them one day ❤️😎

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  6. Very touching and heartfelt, Darryl. I especially tuned in to you giving your Mom permission to pass. I worked in palliative care (same as hospice in USA) for a portion of my nursing career and required special training for that. One of the things we were trained to do was to give people permission to pass, in the event that there was no family available to do that necessary task. I can’t count the number of times people left this earth shortly after permission was given.

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    1. Oh man, Terry, I don’t know how you survived that… I’d be a wreck. We held out hope for several days but when it was clear that nothing could be done, I said the only things I could think of. I’m sure it was Spirit inspired.

      Bless you for being there at the end when your patients had no one else… you provided more comfort than you’ll ever know in this life 🙏❤️

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    1. Aww! I’m sorry, my friend…. This one sorta wrote itself… the daily prompt was is my mind and as I climbed the stairs this am with my morning coffee, the woodsie Robert Wood painting sorta said “Psst! Hey! How about me?” 😎

      I was really touched by Doug’s very cool move. We’ve had a lot of fun together over the years and he’s taught me much. I’m a lucky guy 😎🙏❤️

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      1. No apology required, Darryl. The most beautiful things often bring out mixed emotions. It’s also often the history attached our belongings that gives them value. Thanks for sharing something so personal. 💕

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  7. Hello dear friend 🤍
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      1. Thank you so much for your understanding and kind words. 🤍
        Yes, losing a beloved dog or cat is truly gut-wrenching. They are not “just animals” — they are family, companions, and a part of our hearts. The pain is very real, but I try to turn that pain into motivation to help other animals who still need love and protection. 🐾💔
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        Liked by 1 person

    1. Sarmistha, you’re so right! At the time, we don’t even realize how big or small they are… But years later, everything becomes so apparent.

      Thanks so much for reading and the nice comment… Much appreciated 😎

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    1. Some of your comments are so close to my own thoughts, it’s startling. The woodsie one… I have thought that very thing. Can almost smell the woods and wonder what’s in those old buildings.. 😂

      Thanks so much for reading, and the really interesting comment… Much appreciated! 😎

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  8. This left me teary. What a beautiful story. I’m sorry you couldn’t be with your mom in person but I’m glad you spoke to her. I, too, am counting on the “theory” that the hearing goes last. I have some bitterness that both my siblings were able to speak to my father. When it was my turn, his lung collapsed. He was quickly moved to another hospital where his second lung collapsed. I was angry and hurt that I didn’t get to talk “with” him, only “at” him. My siblings knew where they stood with him. But my dad and I had much we needed to get out. We never got the chance. When we met back in Florida when Dad was to be taken off life support, my sister asked me what I wanted of Dad’s. I told her that he and I had a discussion several years ago that the only thing I wanted was his old wooden rocking chair that once belonged to his dad. And he agreed. My sister said, “Well, you’re going to have to come to NC to get it. He brought it up to me.” Then she said, “Actually, you can’t have it because it’s the only chair I can sit in.” My heart was pained. It still is. It was the only thing I wanted. Using your words…“oh, well.”

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Andi, I’m so sad to hear that. Pretty thoughtless on the part of your siblings, knowing how important it was to you to speak with him. They probably thought he’d be OK for a several more hours before he might have needed a procedure or something…and there would have “plenty of time” for you to talk. 😢

      While those actions might have been just indifference or thoughtlessness, don’t know what to make of that chair story. Sounds like she was deliberately trying to be cruel and vindictive. Hope there’s been some healing there.

      Re: hearing… I have a few friends in the medical field, and they assure me it’s legit. They’ve been there many times at the very end, and the patient is comatose, but apparently waiting to hear from a final family member. It can either be in person…or, they’ve noted…many times on the phone. That’s exactly what happened to me. It was like my mom couldn’t leave until she had heard my voice one more time. My dad and brother left as soon as I hung up… They got to their car… They were on their way back to Pop’s retirement place when the hospital called them. By the time they called me, it was about 10 minutes later… So it was only 1-2 minutes after I spoke that she passed. So I have no doubt that your dad heard you and received your message.

      Hope this helps, my friend ❤️🙏😎

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I don’t mean to continually make you sad with the things I write. I guess I can relate with you on so many levels. Thank you for your kind words and meaningful comments. I so appreciate everything you write. Keep writing and I will keep reading. Have a wonderful new week, my blogging friend. 💕

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  9. I don’t mean to just rave, but I don’t know how you do it. The way you find the threads for your stories, and how you work in the details (a 12 year old Darryl watching Dusty Rhodes) to a bigger point; I know I’m going to get pulled along every time.

    As someone that can be quite sentimental about the items that were once those of my loved ones, I can relate to how you must feel about the painting. What a wonderful story and gift! I really enjoyed it!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Scott, wow, that is one of the nicest compliments I’ve ever gotten. Thank you! I’m really glad you find my stories so enjoyable, they’re a lot of fun to write and it’s cathartic, writing about stuff that I remember and miss. Dusty Rhodes, lol 😂

      Thanks again for reading in the super kind words… Have a great weekend, my friend! 😎

      Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks, Lisa! I thought it was very cool as well… He still had our dad down in Florida and he realized how much I missed our mom.

      Thanks so much for reading and the nice comment… Much appreciated 😎

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  10. Beautiful story about love, grief, conflict, forgiveness, eternity–you’ve got it all in this one story! Wow! What I want to know–is how an engineer can write like this! LOL Obviously–you are fearfully and wonderfully made, Darryl! 🙂 God bless you and yours!

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    1. Katie…thank you… not only for reading but also for the very kind remarks. I dunno, it is a bit odd for a left-brain engineer to enjoy writing, but I suppose it’s all the hours I spent lost in books as a kid. The words just come and as you say, it’s a gift from God. I’m so happy to be part of this very cool community of creative people who continually support and encourage one another. 😎🙏

      Thanks again for reading and the wonderful comment… much appreciated!

      Liked by 1 person

    1. Dawn, thanks…I agree. I was touched and for 13 years now, I think of him…and my mom… every time I see it. Thanks for reading and the comment 😎🙏

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    1. Linda, thanks so much for reading and the thoughtful comment. I suppose it’s both better as well as different… but viewed through the carefree lens of childhood and young adulthood, better. Times were slower then, the world seemed more benign, the future beckoned. And where I grew up… magical. Blasting through the bean fields in the morning on dirt bikes, and diving for reef fish for our aquariums in the afternoon. Doesn’t get much better than that 😎

      Thanks again for the kind words and encouragement…much appreciated! 😊

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    1. Thanks, Hazel! Yes, agree…both a good brother and a beautiful painting that reminds me of our family years ago. Very cool on big bro’s part 😎 Thanks for reading and the nice comment! 🙏❤️

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