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Jory and his multi-part toys |
That only worked for a short
time. One night we were awakened by noises in the darkness of
night. They seemed to be coming from the family room and we suspected an
intruder was in the house. Stealthily, Sam crept out of our bedroom,
passed the boys’ closed bedroom doors, and down the hall. Flashlight in
hand, he pushed the button to spotlight and startle the intruder. There
was 18 month old Jory, holding an orange in one hand and a paring knife from
the dishwasher in the other.
“Stop!” Sam shouted as he lunged for
the knife. “Why aren’t you in bed and how did you get out of the crib?”
Jory just smiled and clutched the
orange to his chest. I had joined the midnight party in the kitchen,
swung Jory and his orange onto my hip, and carried him back to his crib.
Even though he couldn’t talk yet, he seemed quite proud of himself.
“How did you get out of your crib?” I
whispered. Jory looked up at us with his cherubic smile, and proceeded to
show us how he stood by the sidebars, lifted his right foot onto the railing,
used his hands to pull himself on top of the side rail, and let himself fall
onto the carpet below. Accomplished, he stood up and grinned proudly at
us. We were flabbergasted and admonished him to stay in bed and go back
to sleep.
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Jory and Darren |
When a new baby was expected into the
family, we decided that Darren and Jory would share a room. Sam built a
magnificent bunk bed unit that had a bottom bed for Jory and a top bed for
Darren. Darren was 5 years older and was always the kid who put away his
toys, kept his books in perfect order, and followed the rules. Jory was
exactly the opposite: toys that weren’t Jory-proof were disassembled,
books were strewn in every direction, and piles of stuff accumulated in every
vacant space. Darren decided that he would rather share a room with the
new baby.
“Great!” exclaimed 4 year old Jory, “You’ll be a
great help to Mommy and Daddy. When the baby cries in the middle of the
night, you’ll be right there to change the diaper and take care of it.”
Darren hadn’t thought of that and decided to stay sharing the room with Jory.
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Jory had his own Railroad Conductor's Uniform |
As Darren was becoming a teenager, he
constantly complained that Jory’s
space was always a mess, so we separated the boys into rooms of their
own. This gave Jory even more room to stockpile treasures, stash candy
wrappers, and stuff items into the closet. Jory’s jackets and shoes were
strewn on furniture and floors across the house. At first, I gathered
renegade items and collected them in a giant bag destined for donation.
When Jory tried to find his favorites, he invaded the Goodwill bag, sneaking
out his clothing and slipping off to school before I could catch him. My
efforts didn’t work in helping him feel the need to be organized.
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Jory's room after he returned from Israel |
The longest time that Jory’s room was
somewhat clean was the summer that he went to Israel on a study abroad program.
I’d walk by his bedroom and smile to myself that I had finally managed to
approach one goal with him. Of course, that all changed when he arrived
home with even more precious junk to invade our house.
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Jory's Music Portfolio for CalArts |
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LA Times Article on Jory writing music on a computer |
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Jory after earthquake |
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Chivo Colorado |
In advance, I felt sorry for Jory’s
future roommates. His first roommate, a guy 4 years older than Jory’s 18
years, was from Tuscaloosa, Alabama, had never been away from home, and arrived
with a small duffel bag containing a couple of changes of clothing, a
toothbrush, and a bottle of whiskey. Their cohabitation lasted only a few
months until the night of the giant Northridge Earthquake, which was actually
centered beneath CalArts. Tuscaloosa ran out of the dorms with his
current bottle of whiskey, refused to re-enter the building, and evacuated to
Alabama at the first opportunity. His next roommate met his match with
Jory. Rob was studying pyrotechnics and their apartment was equally
filled with boxes of explosives and electronics. Neither of them minded
the other’s messes. I conceded failure at trying to get Jory to be neat,
tidy, and organized.
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Living room storage depository |
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Jory's hand-me-down dresser |
It was into this room that Jory brought an unsuspecting Japanese salesman who came to demonstrate a Laser LP Record Player. Always fascinated with record players, Jory had read about this one and curiously contacted the manufacturer in Japan.
“May I presume to inquire about you
name?” questioned a Japanese businessman, carefully selecting his words in
English.
“Jory Prum,” he replied.
“May I presume to inquire about
profession?” he prodded.
“I’m a sound designer.”
“You employed?” came a timid
question, after a long pause to find the correct wording.
“Yes, I work for LucasArts.”
“Is that company of Mr. George Lucas?”
“Yes,” replied Jory.
“Oh, Mr. Plum, would possible be to
bring LP Record Player to demonstrate to you?”
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Jory's truck |
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Somewhere there's a bed under everything |
The Laser LP Record Player was cool,
as was its $10,000 price tag.
“Is it possible to leave the machine
with me for a few days so that I can try it out?” inquired Jory.
“Oh, no no no! It must stay
with me. It is only one in world. It is only prototype in world.”
Jory drove the bewildered salesman
back to San Francisco and thanked him for coming. The salesman expressed
his regret that Mr. George Lucas was unable to attend.
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Jory's media wall |
A year and a half later, Jory met and became engaged to Julie, an awesome artist. She owned a condo and invited Jory to move in with her and her son. With all of his collections and equipment, Jory seemed motivated to find a means of organizing his stuff, so as to not inconvenience his new, pop-up family. He started with boxes of CDs, DVDs, and Video Taped Movies. Along the living room wall, he built narrow shelving and filled the wall with media. It actually looked pretty cool. Behind the wall, was a long, narrow closet space that he converted into double workstations for Julie and himself. His first attempts at organizing his collections were successful. We were pleasantly surprised.
At a barbecue celebration at Jory and
Julie’s, a couple of years later, we met many of their friends. Fairfax
is a community that encourages creativity and artistic expression, so most of
them were artists, musicians, film makers, designers, photographers, etc.
All were outgoing and friendly, reaching out to meet and include us in their
circles.
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Noah |
“Really?” I carefully replied.
“How many Jories do you have in town?”
“Just one,” he answered.
“Well, our Jory was never known to be
organized. Are you sure?” I asked.
“You don’t understand; many of us
were raised in communes by Hippy parents, who didn’t teach us about those
things. We need someone like Jory to help us and he’s great at it.
In fact, everyone calls him the honorary Mayor of Fairfax and the town
psychiatrist. He helps everyone and he’s helped me a lot. I design
cars and I’ll soon be leaving for Germany to work for BMW. Jory said
we’ll keep in touch over the computer.”
I couldn’t believe my ears! I
shared this revelation with Sam and we both had a good laugh.
Sheri and Rob bought the tools for the studio build out |
“I’m going to record music and foley for films,” he replied.
“Who will be your customers?”
“Ahhh......musicians and
filmmakers. There are lots of those in Fairfax and they all know me and
will come.”
“This will be a legal business loan,”
explained Dad, “with specific requirements, including a contract, a business
plan, a repayment schedule, insurance policies for the studio and it’s
contents. You will have to buy a security system for protection of your
equipment and health insurance for yourself. You will have to keep
accurate records of all expenses, income, and debt. You will have to pay
your bills on time and stop sliding with partial payments to credit cards,”
added Dad.
For years, we were aware of Jory’s
unique system for paying bills. When a bill arrived in the mail, he filed
it unopened in the driver’s side door pocket of his truck. When the
pocket overflowed, he extracted the envelopes and wrote checks to pay them off.
Late fees and penalties were rationalized and tolerated as unfortunate
evils. Somewhere along the line, he came to erroneously believe that
minimum payments on credit cards were ok because the 18% interest fees would be
eventually subtracted from income taxes. With this business loan, he
would be required to keep accurate and up to date business records, as well as
on time payments for expenses, with no tolerance of late fees or interest
expenses. It would be a complete shift in responsibility that Jory would
have to accept and comply with.
“I’m ready to be a business owner, so
ok!” replied Jory with conviction.
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Dad and Jory writing business plans and loan contract. |
Dad needed to find a Jory-friendly
way to handle the business side of the studio, so he introduced Jory to QuickBooks, a computer software that would help keep his business records running
smoothly and accurately. Jory loved everything techie, so QuickBooks was
readily adopted as Jory’s accounting system. Later on, Jory found a phone
app that simplified bookkeeping by taking a photo scan of each receipt or bill,
and then processing it via his phone into the proper category on Quick Books.

As he went along, Jory had everything
scanned and automatically entered into QuickBooks on a daily basis. With
a tap of a computer key, Jory and Dad were able to sync the data into TurboTax
and complete Jory’s taxes in one sitting or online chat. We could begin
to see that Jory was finally finding modes of organization that fit his needs
and lifestyle. As he entered his 30’s, the maturity that we had been
longing for, was finally catching up with his age.
Jory (2003)
I make piles. I am well-organized, but not the tidiest person around. Things tend to pile up and appear cluttered to others. However, I know "exactly" where everything is.
Sam Rogers
Bobi Hirschbein
Wonderful read...
Paul Stevens
I really love this episode. So interesting, well written, informative, inspirational.
This one was lots of fun to read and remember.
Otis Ryder
Lovely story.
Rayleen Williams
:):) Everyone has their own view of what it means to be organized.
Rita Blumstein
I am always amazed at how you remember all the details and are so articulate.
Judy Sowell
COMMENTS:
Click on Jorysmother@gmail.com to send comments.
Jory (2003)
I make piles. I am well-organized, but not the tidiest person around. Things tend to pile up and appear cluttered to others. However, I know "exactly" where everything is.
Sam Rogers
So true! I once sublet Jory’s place for a few weeks while he was traveling and I was just brining my Australian girlfriend to the US for the first time. I mistakenly thought he might know to, y’know, clean the place. Allegedly he had...but that may have just meant doing laundry, I’m not sure.
It was fine and fortunately Nicolle didn’t care much, she came to love Jory too. Sometime later he recorded & mixed our first EP in his studio. A few years later (after we had separated) and Jory was heading to Australia, I was happy that she hosted him and introduced him to many of her friends in Sydney.
Oh, and I remember making Jory retell that Laser LP story over and over again and laughing hysterically every time.
Laughing at it again now. Thanks!
Bobi Hirschbein
Wonderful read...
Paul Stevens
I really love this episode. So interesting, well written, informative, inspirational.
Marilyn Moidel
Yet another wonderful story about Jory. ..and this one is funny to boot.
Linda Birtler This one was lots of fun to read and remember.
Otis Ryder
Lovely story.
Rayleen Williams
:):) Everyone has their own view of what it means to be organized.
Rita Blumstein
I am always amazed at how you remember all the details and are so articulate.
Judy Sowell
I just finished your latest story about Jory. I loved his many ideas, especially when he was small enough to get out of his crib; find an orange and a sharp knife (I agree that was dangerous) to peel it with, and putting the silverware from the dishwasher into the refrigerator. I am sure it wasn’t funny then, not having the silverware to use; but it is funny now. I loved the way you tell of your and Sam’s efforts to get him organized. What a great story.
Veronica Noguer
Thank you again for a wonderful story of Jory. Had to smile at your efforts to corral Jory's free spirit which evidently began very very early in his life. Great writing.
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