
Occurrences is a reflective book. What made you want to write it?
βWhen my daughter Julia was four or five years old,β Schweid says, βshe had a hard time going to sleep at night so I started to tell her stories that came out of my imagination. Every night I came up with a different story. Now that sheβs 13, about two years ago she mentioned that she would love to have me write down those stories so that she could tell them to her kids. So I started to write [things] down and finally I decided to do the book on the fairy tales that I told her.
βAlso, I incorporated some of the other stories that Iβve experienced in my life. Being a good listener, I can sit in an airport or in a restaurant, seemingly minding my own business, but my ears pick up all these things that go on around me. A few days later I start to wonder if it really was that way or what the real truth was in that particular scenario.β Whatever the veracity of it, Schweid continues, βI write it down. Some of the stories in the book are based on these kinds of things.β
Several of the pieces were published in the Daily Breeze, and these included at least two tales about pet dogs that grew up, were faithful companions, and eventually passed away. βAlthough people write a lot of stories about dogs,β Schweid says, βI got a lot of letters.β At least one person who wrote in suggested that he compile his stories into a book. In the time since itβs been published there have been people who have suggested a follow-up.
Schweid is considering that option. βIβve got hundreds of things that Iβve written already, and theyβre in the same vein of listening, watching, and giving my own perspective of whatβs happening.β While the author does acknowledge that heβs not a sophisticated writer, many of the brief sketches easily engage our attention. However, the last 15 pages of the book β Schweid says that everything he submitted was handwritten β are rife with uncorrected errors, and I mention this, as I did to the author himself, because it initially kept me from reading the book at all. For example, ββ¦suddenly,out of nowhere ,a wild herd of horses came galloping unto the school ground freightening everuone,except of coursr our brave little girl,who just jumped on the leader horse and galloped around the school at full speed with the herd not far behing.β Pretty careless stuff; and Iβd be remiss not to point it out.
That said, the response in general has been warm and Schweid has been getting royalty checks: βI contribute ten percent of everything I get from the book to the Disabled American Vets, of which I am a member, although I was never disabled, except maybe some hangovers.β He pauses. β5:15 Club in Anchorage, Alaska.β
Rock and roll fantasy
In Alaska, Schweid was on the ski patrol for the U.S. Army, and indirectly this was what brought him to Hermosa Beach in the 1960s.
βI met a lot of people that came to ski, and some of them were stewardesses. Towards the end I hooked up with one and she lived in Hermosa, and I came to visit her. I stayed, and she left.β
Schweid landed a job with Wallachβs Music City β a fairly prominent chain at the time that not only sold records but also sheet music and musical equipment β and eventually managed all seven area stores, including the one at Sunset and Vine in Hollywood: βI sold Marshall amps to Jimi Hendrix and a Gibson E.S.35 to George Harrison.β After the stores folded, Schweid opened his own music store on the corner of Hawthorne and Artesia, across from the Galleria. He had a lot of contacts in the music industry and was successful with his business.
βBut not successful enough,β he says, βbecause the guy next door put a bomb in his bagel shop and blew up the whole center.β Trying to exit by way of the alley, the store owner was stopped by a policeman whoβd heard the explosion, who then arrested him because he could smell gas on his hands.
βHe got convicted,β Schweid says, βand for all I know heβs still in jail. The Torrance Police Department had a rock and roll band, and theyβd go out to all the schools and do the drug thing, D.A.R.E. (Drug Abuse Resistance Education). I supplied them with their PAs, amps, and everything. I donβt know what happened to this guy when they brought him down to the station, but it wasnβt good.β
What also wasnβt good was the fact that Schweidβs music store was underinsured, and he was out of business.
Schweid had also been an active ingredient in the South Bay live music scene.
βI started a band that was called Operation Soul.β They performed in clubs (The Players, The Blue Book, etc.) in Manhattan Beach, plus various fraternity and sorority parties. βWe did this recordβ β he shows me the 45 rpm they cut β βwhich never did much, but it was a record.β Even so, βwe made a lot of money playing those clubs.β One of Schweidβs friends, Jim Mazza, who ran the record department in the Torrance branch of Wallachβs Music City, became a salesman with Capitol Records and eventually its president. Sometimes heβd show up with important people when Schweidβs band performed: βThat kind of made the club owners happy.β
Easing conflict, doing good
Schweid was living in Manhattan Beach, near Third and The Strand, which was where the band was rehearsing. One day, the wife of a friend whoβd just gotten herself a real estate license, called him up and asked if he wanted to buy a house. Since heβd been honorably discharged from the army, she explained that it could be purchased on his G.I bill. Okay, he told her; Iβll buy it, even though he hadnβt even seen the property.
The papers were finalized, but at the time Schweid didnβt even have the necessary couple of hundred dollars for the closing costs. He had to borrow it from friends. βWhat I did acquire,β he says, βis a triplex about a block and a half from the beach. I live upstairs and I rent out the two units downstairs, but itβs an old building and it takes a lot of work. Between being a landlord, a dad, a mediator, and somewhat of a half-assed writer, my time is filled.β
A mediator? For the past 20 years or so Schweid has worked with former councilman Lance Widman and others as part of a conflict resolution team at the South Bay Center in Hermosa Beach that attempts to resolve disputes β between neighbors, tenants and landlords, spouses and other family members, and so on. Initially, there might be nothing but hostility. βTwo, three hours later, after all is said and done, everything is exposed and theyβve had a chance to talk to me in the office and then talk to each other; theyβll be tissue on the table; theyβre crying, theyβre hugging, and they go home, happy campers. This is an accomplishment to me.β
The biggest hurdle is the one that involves alcohol, drugs, or mental illness. Even so, the non-profit South Bay Center claims that 90 percent of the disputes it handles end successfully. βMost people really desire a resolution,β Schweid says. βThe other option is to go to court,β and that requires money and lawyers, time and effort, but with no guarantees of winning or losing. βWe bat the ball back and forth, for whatever it takes, and when we do come to an agreement we write it up. Itβs legal in a court of law.β
With all of these experiences behind you, are you optimistic about this coming year?
βAbsolutely,β Schweid replies. βMore good is happening in the world than bad, although we tend to focus on the bad because it stands out. Thatβs my take on life: focus on all the good stuff that weβve got going. A random act of kindness is probably as spiritual as any religion there is. What culture would disagree with it?β
Mike Schweidβs book, Occurrences, is available at Amazon.com.



