Possumblog

Not in the clamor of the crowded street, not in the shouts and plaudits of the throng, but in ourselves, are triumph and defeat.--Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

REDIRECT ALERT! (Scroll down past this mess if you're trying to read an archived post. Thanks. No, really, thanks.)

Due to my inability to control my temper and complacently accept continued silliness with not-quite-as-reliable-as-it-ought-to-be Blogger/Blogspot, your beloved Possumblog will now waddle across the Information Dirt Road and park its prehensile tail at http://possumblog.mu.nu.

This site will remain in place as a backup in case Munuvia gets hit by a bus or something, but I don't think they have as much trouble with this as some places do. ::cough::blogspot::cough:: So click here and adjust your links. I apologize for the inconvenience, but it's one of those things.


Friday, June 27, 2003

Hi! At us?

Almost through with putting this stuff to bed—still have my drawing to do—once more dithering around with the old Kress building I wrote about a while back. (You'll have to scroll down to the post for Thursday.) One of the various Banes of My Existence just came by asking if I had done it yet. “Yep—all I have left to do is to start working on it.” Bad person.

Anyway, I am technically still on my pre-vacation blogging hiatus, so as with all the other poo this week, today’s installment will be mercifully short.

COMMENTS Oooo—you people like your comments! Thanks to everyone who has written in. Some of you have expressed concern that Chet the E-Mail Boy will be upset, but remember he doesn’t read this and doesn’t know anything about the new feature, so he should be just fine. Unless someone tells him.

VACATION As some of you will no doubt notice, Glenn Reynolds and I are both going to be away.

At the same time.

It’s not what you think. Honest.

In actuality, although I may have given some of you the impression that I will be away near a beach somewhere, I will actually be at my house, guarding my precious possessions while cleaning and test firing various specimens from my arsenal. So nobody needs to come and try to steal nothing. ‘Cause I’ll be there. Just a shootin’ and actin’ like a raving lunatic. So stay away from the house. (Actually, I’m sort of afraid a burglar might hurt himself on all the avalanche of toys strewn all over the house, and a civil action by an aggrieved trespasser is the last thing I need while on vacation.) I’m not too worried, really—the elderly lady next door is very suspicious of strangers, especially when she’s got a batch of meth cooking up.

One kind reader, noting my girlophilic tendencies, asked if I would be able to keep my eyeballs from doing cartoonish bug-outs in the coming days in a bikini-rich environment. Well, yes, I like looking at non-males, but everyone should remember that my idea of an ideal vacation is being allowed to sit quietly in a comfy chair in a small, air-conditioned room with the teevee locked on the History Channel. I figure I will have one of these ideal vacations no earlier than about fifteen years hence (assuming the kids have moved away and leave me with a teevee). And that I don’t have to give Reba the remote.

As it is, I will go to bed around midnight tonight, get up at dawn, drive for many, many hours with people whose kidneys are the size of watermelons and whose bladders are the size of teaspoons, stopping along the way to look at large peaches and insane asylums and being cajoled to purchase charming, yet highly useless souvenirs.

Upon arrival, there will be enough materiel to equip a large army to unload and tote. Being that I am the only dad in the van, the unloading and toting will be on my action item list. Midway through unloading, I will be assaulted by tiny children who somehow managed to get on swimsuits, who will want to go get in the pool. I will protest, saying that if I had a little help, I could get the remainder of their ingots of lead hauled upstairs, after which we could all enjoy a swim; which, being a use of logic, will bring about a collective blank look.

Later there will be a trip to the store to get groceries, and later still trips to EVERY SINGLE beach shop within approximately fifty miles in order to purchase the finest in rubber sharks and colorful beach-themed doo-dads. There will be much swimming and the attendant necessity to haul my graceless large body from the cool water to make several trips to escort tiny-bladdered swimmers to the bathroom. And then there will be sand, grinding its brilliant whiteness into unreachable crevices which are not supposed to contain sand. And there will be the inevitable trip back. I am praying that this year will not see the need to creep all the way from Prattville to Birmingham as happened last year. (As with the link up at the tip, this is an Old Blogger post--you'll have to scroll all the way to the bottom. That is, if it actually lets you get there.)

Anyway, no matter what happens, it’s bound to be better than sitting here! So, all of you have a good time while I vacate—keep an eye on Chet for me—he’s already gone through half a box of his corn flakes. I told him he’s not getting any more, but you know how he is.

See you all after while!


Thursday, June 26, 2003

Well, now

The fellow from the dealership picked me up right on time, so I was able to get to the shop with time to spare. And since I'm away from work, what better way to use spare time than to run by the Trussville library and do a little blogging! I have a whole 45 minutes or so, which I have used to play with my BRAND NEW COMMENTS FEATURE and answer e-mail and look at the statuesque young lady across the partition from me who's wearing only a tank top, shorts, and a pony tail. Man, I gotta come to the library more often!

As for the Oddity, in good shape now, all of its vital essences refreshed, its rolly things swapped back and forth, and...and JIMMIED WITH by the techs. HOW FLIPPIN' HARD IS IT guys to just fix the derned car and not feel you have to scramble the radio presets and screw around with the climate control. IT HAS AUTOMATIC CLIMATE CONTROL--you DO NOT HAVE TO MESS WITH IT! Further, you really don't have to turn the volume up so loud on the radio. Especially since I left it off on purpose as an apparently much-too-subtle hint to leave it alone. Oooh--she's leaving now. Wow, what an armload of books.

It is nice, though, that they have a shuttle service. I didn't quite know how we were going to handle all the trips today--little kids to daycare, wife to work, me to work, me to dentist, wife to daycare to pick up kids, wife to home to pick up Oldest, wife and me to soccer park for Middle Girl's soccer camp, wife and remainder of kids to high school for Oldest's band camp, me to home with Middle Girl in time to go to bed. It's been a busy, BUSY week. Bec's soccer camp and Ashley's band camp run all week for an hour or three each night. Tuesday was even longer when I couldn't get the Plymouth to crank. Seems I drove it completely dry of fuel just as I pulled into the parking space, so I had to bum a cell phone...Good Grief!! Must be Supermodel Day at the library!...and call Reba at 9 p.m. to bring me the can of lawn mower gas, which contained only enough to tease the engine, thus requiring a trip with all of us to the gas station and back with a full can, which DID work, but then I had to go actually fill the thing up. Lesson learned. At least for a little while.

Design review meeting yesterday, then furious typing of minutes, then church last night, and then in late again, and then the deal with the vehicles today, and you know what? I think I'm going to enjoy being on vacation.

Reader Jim Smith from the entirely made up place called East Carolina says he wants me to write something about food since he's started the Atkins diet. I told him I would do it tomorrow, but since I have some spare time, here goes. Next week there will be luscious shrimp po-boys from the Original Oyster House, and crab cakes, and Greek style snapper, and grilled mahi, and crab claws, and piles of fried oysters and that's just for breakfast the first day. And what would a trip to the Gulf Coast be without a nice slow-roasted manatee! Mmmm. Save me a flipper!

Anyway, it's getting time to go to get my tooth refilled, so I'll return to my hiatus which will last on into tomorrow. Still have some notes to finish up, and a drawing to get done before I go on real vacation.

Mmmm.

Crabs.



Despite the fact that I am on hiatus, and that I will have to leave in just a bit to ride back to Roebuck and go pick up the Odyssey which is having its 30,000 mile cannon-shot-to-the-wallet, and afterwards I will be going back to the dentist for her to fix the broken filling in my upper left toothal region (which will also require the deft removal of more non-existent money from my wallet), I felt compelled to drop what I was doing as I feverishly try to get all my crap done here at work and take up the advice of the crowd of you who keep wanting me to add comments.

I have resisted doing this for many, MANY months--I have an aversion to anything else which requires me to keep tabs on something, as well as an oft-repeated disdane for comment section trolls, and those darned kids and their loud stereos and their baseball caps turned around backwards, and that moronic loud fat..er, ahem...sorry.

Also, as any of you who correspond via e-mail with me on a regular basis know, I tend to get rather wordy and long-winded and never can quite get the hang of letting go of a topic and always think that I have to reply numerous times until you all get tired of it and wonder why you wrote in the first place, which makes me think that if there's a comment, that I'll be compelled to say some sort of clever thing back until the whole deal gets messed up with my yammering.

Yammering I try especially hard to confine to the blog, because it's hard to come up with extra yammer material.

But.

All the cool kids are doing it. Yes, I know all the cool kids also have their own domains and something other than Blogger (Now With Less Crappiness!), but Comments is cheap to the point of being free. So, with no small amount of trepidation, I signed Possumblog up with HaloScan to let each and every three of you have at it and comment to your hearts' content.

A few rules--

1) Don't flame other folks. You got something to say to someone you don't like, take it up with them outside.

2) Don't use language any more vulgar than I use.

3) Don't be a troll. Despite being seemingly ignorance of computery things, well...trust me, just don't be a troll. You're life is unpleasant enough as it is.

4) I still have e-mail, and if Chet the E-Mail Boy feels he is being shunted aside, John Henry-like, for any of that newfangled fancy stuff, he will become despondent and stop taking his medicine and start wandering off again.

5) Ahhh, let's see...OH! Nah, I covered that...

6) Don't go all the way back to the start of this smoldering trash heap and leave a comment. Anything past about a week that you have a comment about should be routed to Chet.

Oh well, can't think of anything else right now.

If you have a comment, feel free to leave it--I'm returning to my hiatus so I can finish all this stack of stuff in front of me.


Wednesday, June 25, 2003

The New York Tartan

Thank you, Scotland! Rrrowwwl!

(By the way, Tartan Day is April 6)

(Also by the way, Alex Celini not only has a website, but an honors degree in psychology from the University of Stirling, as well.)

(And another by the way sort of thing, the flag of Alabama is a crimson Cross of Saint Andrew on a field of white.)



What the world has been crying out for--Google Introduces New Program to Sell Online Ads

'Cause you know, I really would like to see more adds for the TINY WIRELESS X-10 CAM!! WITH NINJA MOUNT!! SEE 4X AS MUCH!!





H.D. Miller at Travelling Shoes uncovers the shocking secret life of recently captured terrorist Khalid Shaikh Mohammed!!

(Wow, I bet those 72 virgins are in a swoon over this!)



So, where was I?

Oh, yeah! Boring you with the details—here goes: Friday, first night of soccer tournament. Jonathan played first, then Rebecca, and thankfully both were on the same field so we didn’t have to move. The fields were all soggy and slick and we weren’t on the regular field but over on the outfield of one of the baseball fields, which meant keeping Catherine out of the infield base track (a sea of sticky wet clay) was nearly impossible. Especially since the forty-eleven trips to the Porta-Lets required walking right past all that rich gooey gumbo.

And it was cold. Windy, cold, and no blankets or coffee or raging fires. And the kids lost both their games. Bah. Better luck tomorrow, when they will have had some rest and it will be warmer. Off for some late supper from Sonic, then to the house.

Got home, and was informed by Mrs. Oglesby that the kids had horse lessons on Saturday. “But,…what?” I said. “Remember? Amy’s mom? Told me that they had called her and the lessons were going to be rescheduled for 9 to 11 tomorrow, and that they can go and not miss their games?”

Well, quite frankly, my dear lady, I remember NO such thing and I dare you to come up with one single shred of evidence that you in fact EVER told me such a wild… “Tomorrow morning—9 to 11. Okay.” ::sigh:: I really have no recollection of anyone ever telling me, but why fight it? Got them to go wash the red mud off, then they were shoved into bed, while their seabags were repacked for the festivities of the morrow.

Woke up Saturday, showered, brushed my teeth, scrubbed all the little hairs off my face and got the kids up and into something horse-ish. Man, I really DID not want to go do this. Figured out the rendezvous time and place with Reba—she and Catherine would meet us at the soccer park with lunch at game time—and it was off to Camp Coleman. But only after having to pry Little Boy off of the TV. “Do we have to go [sniff-sniff, whine]?” Mom and I both—“YES! It’s paid for, and you’re going!” Great minds think alike. He shuffled on downstairs, “But I won’t know what happens to Yu-Gi-Oh!” “He goes on to a life of small bit parts in B-movies and winds up getting arrested for shoplifting—NOW COME ON!!” I did manage to check the news before we left and figured out that it was going to be warmer today.

Somebody was wrong. Again, cold, damp, drizzle, windy, muddy. What a crappy day to be outside for six hours. They got on their horses and went on a trail ride and I got back in the van and turned on the heater and read the copy of Military History I’ve been trying to read for two weeks now. Good article about a Ukrainian kulak conscripted into the Red Army and shipped to fight the Finns during the Winter War (suddenly, I didn’t feel quite so cold anymore), along with one about John Balliol.

They finally got back and then it was back to the park where they all changed clothes in the parking lot. (Well, more precisely, they were in the van behind tinted glass in the parking lot.) Got their junk and the lawn chairs and headed off to the field, which after a day and a half of play looked a lot like a feed lot. And it was slick. Lots of micaceous silty organic material—the grounds folks had straw down all around the perimeter of the fields (which are mostly good red Alabama clay) and were furiously sanding the muckiest parts inside the fields, but it was an ongoing and only partly successful battle. The kids thought it was fun, though.

I sat down and Rebecca and Jonathan went out and kicked the ball around a bit and Ashley sat in the other chair bitterly complaining under her breath about having to come to the stupid soccer park when she could be rassa-mumble—humph!grumble. I ignored her. Which was made much easier when someone came up whom I could make fun of. The other team was from Hoover, which is one of Birmingham’s wealthy southern suburbs, and one which is home to at least one guy who missed the plane to Hollywood several years ago. Gigantically muscled man, mid to late 40s comes walking across the field—tight black windsuit, hair slicked back, talking loudly into a cell phone held awkwardly to his ear in that weird muscle-bound sort of way—gets closer and I see that he not only has used the whole can of hair gel, but has the stylish, late-90s Steven Seagal short high ponytail back there, AND a lovely row of very masculine ear piercings. Wow. VERY 20th Century.

Trussville, meet Joey Buttafuoco. Joey, Trussville.

What made it funny to me was that I didn’t know they were from Hoover until later on in the game, when I tapped on his rock-hard bicep and asked “Hey, are y’all from Moody?” Moody is a small town east of us that’s mostly rural and DEFINITELY not Hoover. He was momentarily taken aback, as if he wasn’t quite able to process how I could make such a mistake, then grunted out “No, Hoover.” Thanks, chief.

Reba got there a bit before the game started and glanced over at our nice visitor and smirked and rolled her eyes. “Now, Reba, you be nice…” I said. She hid behind her hand and mouthed out, “Needs more grease.” I laughed quietly, mainly because I didn’t want to get the guy mad at ME—he had on his own little pair of soccer cleats and all I had on were some slick Rockport boat shoes. Even if he was too pumped up to move quickly, he would have had the traction advantage. (And the attitude advantage.) ((Of course, that tends to be negated by being surrounded by heavily armed rednecks. ))

Anyway, she had Catherine following along dressed completely in her uniform from the fall—bright yellow shirt and little tiny black shorts and black knee socks. “Catherine, why are you dressed like that?” Which I thought was a pretty good question, considering that it was cold and damp and windy and SHE WASN’T PLAYING today. “'Cause, Daddy, I wanted to wear it!” Oh. Well that explains it.

SO, we ate our lunch and then it was time for Jonathan’s game, which went ever so badly. Part of their problem is having next to no practice time, and it really showed. Jonathan got to play a tiny bit and ran in several different directions and I believe he even kicked the ball a couple of times. He had a great time, even if they did lose. As spectators, we had no fun at all—Catherine wiffled and plundered and chattered and wiggled and complained about being cold (imagine!) and went to the restroom constantly, which didn’t do much for being able to see the game.

Rebecca’s game was next, and although she did very well individually, the girls were much too passive—kick, watch it go to the other team, watch them run by and score. Not pretty.

Then, to home and it was time to wash all the muddy uniforms and the rest of the laundry and give the kids another sound scrubbing and get ready for church on Sunday. One bright spot was getting to fold clothes while watching To Kill a Mockingbird which I got on DVD a few weeks back.

What an incredible story, both written and on film. No matter how many times I read it or see it, it still has the same effect—beside the obvious melancholy, it also provokes a profound (but entirely friendly) envy of Miss Lee. I have received several compliments on my writing since starting this journal, and I am very grateful for having received them—but whatever cleverness comes out is simply from overhearing the conversation at the “big people’s” table at the family reunion. An excellent site devoted to Miss Lee can be found here; it includes a wealth of material, including a wonderful 1983 essay on Albert James Pickett, who wrote the first comprehensive history of Alabama back in 1851—
[…] Pickett's narrative of the sufferings, struggles, and massacres of the early colonists, the gradual opening of the region to commerce, the various wars and alliances of the three greedy powers--Britain, France, Spain--is one of fascinating detail. We follow the fortunes of the Sieur de Bienville, who must have been appointed governor of the French colony by mistake, because he was a decent, incorruptible and, on the whole, benevolent man. Along the way we meet the English General James Oglethorpe and his philanthropical experiment in Georgia, and incidentally get a glimpse of John and Charles Wesley. We meet schemers, rogues, and vagabonds; scores of minor characters come alive on the pages--one elegant lady on the razzle in the wilderness, claiming to be the Tsar of Russia's sister-in-law; the valiant Beaudrot, for whom many Southerners are named, but don't know exactly why; the Jewish trader Abram Mordecai, who spent fifty years in the wilderness and had his ear cut off for amorous dalliance with a married squaw. […]
Good stuff.

Onward, however, to the rest of my story—Sunday, get ‘em up, get ‘em dressed, get ‘em fed, get ‘em in the van, get ‘em there. Whew. Luckily, my 8th grade teacher showed up and so I got a reprieve, although my children did their best to embarrass their poor father after class.

As I mentioned Friday, it’s my month to do announcements, and before we start worship services, all the men who are leading prayers or songs or serving Communion gather in one of the classrooms to go over their tasks and talk football, while I desperately scribble down all the stuff written on bits and pieces of paper about who’s sick and which groups are meeting. During this time, we generally close the doors to cut down on distractions, but Jonathan was being pursued relentlessly by his little sister, who wanted to give him a kiss, which absolutely required him to come find ME. “Go on, son, I’ve got things to do.” “BUT SHE’S CHASING ME!!” “Go.” Five minutes later, they BOTH come back in and start doing laps around the table. “Where’s you mother, kids?” “She’s in her classroom getting’ stuff together.” “Why don’t you go find her?” “Because CATHERINE IS TRYING TO KISS ME!” “Go.” They went our and one of the older fellows said, “Kids are definitely for young people.” Amen, brother.

After church, it was back to the park for the final game. Jonathan missed his since it would have been started right about the time Catherine was trying to kiss him, but we were able to get there in time for Rebecca’s game (which was helped by her changing in the van as we drove to the park.)

We schlepped the lawn chairs back down to the field and found out that it was even colder than it had been Saturday with a chilly wet wind blowing about a hundred miles an hour [Cue: John Facenda intoning “the frozen tundra…”] (Of course, Lambeau Field sounds better than Trussville Soccer Park, but hey) and after about five minutes I told Reba to get herself and the other kids back in the van and wait it out or they would all be sick. Back up the hill with chairs and children, then I got a cup of coffee and went back down. At least this time I stood over on the player side, which had a screen of trees to act as a windbreak. And this time the girls played like they had back in the fall, with the added bonus of actually having some offense to match their defense, including one particular right midfielder, Number 17 Rebecca Oglesby, who just happened to be in the right place at the right time to shank a rebound into the goal! She was so very proud—she has come so close so many times, but that was her first goal in a game. She gave a little yip, and then was all back to business. They scored one more time in the second half, and the other team only got past midfield about three times.

Out to Big Dragon for a victory lunch, then home for a victory bath, then back up to the church building for some more meetings. After mine got finished I found the three older kids outside the door—“Where’s Mom and Catherine?” They just looked at me—“You mean, she wet her pants?” Nodding of heads. ::sigh:: I rounded them up and we went in and sat down in the auditorium and Mom and Princess Tinkle finally got there after the first prayer, and Catherine was a picture of a satisfied Wal-Mart customer. Reba wound up getting her a pair of jeans and a tee-shirt, since her dress was wet, and a pair of socks, since her panty hose were wet, and underwear since her underwear was wet, and a new pair of sneakers since all she had with her were patent leather Mary Janes and her other sneakers at home had been destroyed by constant playground abuse, and a new little zip up jacket since she would just not looked as cute without it. That was one expensive accident.

Finish and grabbed a bite to eat at Ruby Tuesday, which was very busy for some reason, and which caused us to not be able to have Jennifer the Perfect Waitress. BUT, it seemed not to matter to Cat, who proudly showed off her new ensemble to anyone who cared to look. “It has a girl and a kitty cat and I got it at Wal-Mart and I got some new light up shoes that light up when you run, see?, and the shirt Mama said I could wear again if I didn’t get nothing on it and….” On and on. She was wound tighter than a jack in the box. At some point in there, we got our food and I glanced over and she had sprawled herself at an uncomfortable angle across the bench—semi-sideways, head back, back arched, legs straight down, hands clutching table—she looked so ridiculous. “Catherine! What are you doing?” In tones of equal parts consternation and exasperation she loudly said, “I’m FARTING, Daddy!” Should have known better than ask. I’m just glad she waited till after church.

Supper and ritualized gas-passing complete, it was off to home then to bed, then to here.

So there you go.



You know...

I AM on hiatus and all until about July 7, but I just HAD to tell you that I had a wonderful lunch of kung pao chicken and hot and sour soup. And tonight? I'm probably going to eat some more chickenses, or maybe part of a cow. I like meat, you know.

Hmm?

Why am I coming out of my self-imposed exile to talk about my consumption of the cooked flesh of other sentient beings?

Because it just so happens that my good friends with PeTA have staged a massive demonstration in the park right below my window. Two big displays of their obnoxiously insipid 'Eating Meat Makes You Hitler' blither, and four whole people standing about, handing out flyers to the trickling stream of disinterested noonday park walkers.

O the humanity! How many innocent trees had to give their lives in order for these vacant-eyed poltroons to have the paper required to fill up countless trashbaskets! PAPER IS MURDER!

There's a couple of reporters down there now. A scooter cop is also talking to them, probably because they set up their two large, square, display frameworks right there on public property in the way of decent people who are not being allowed to fully enjoy their right to travel unimpeded by the Temperance Society.

Of course, the display frames are made of metal--metal extracted from ore...ORE GOUGED FROM THE BOWELS OF DEAR MOTHER EARTH! Rapists! How dare they use metal poles!! They also have big plastic banners hung from them--plastic, made from OIIIIIILLLLL, SUCKED FROM THE HEAVING TEATS OF MOTHER EARTH by various brigands from Haliburton and Exxon! THEY ARE OPPRESSORS!! Helping to fuel our country's vicious thirst for imported oil stolen from poor, ignorant peoples, right there with old Dick Cheney and George Bush! Shocking!

'Nother cop car just showed up, along with a couple of scooters and a couple of the security guys that ride around downtown on their bikes. Sorta late--the Vile Oppressors were set up over thirty minutes ago. I guess it takes a while for the word to get around.

I also notice that the Earnest, Yet Congenitally Stupid contingent now seem to be getting a citiation from the bike cop. Much to the surprise of no one. Which is exactly how many folks, other than the Petards and the media and the cops, are standing around. Wait, there is one big guy out there who appears to be trying to engage in some sort of discourse.

Poor big guy.

I'll tell him like I tell my kids, "Don't talk to crazy people. Ever."

The other scooter cop is back, along with the other cruiser, and a gray municipal car, containing, I assume, some minor functionary sent to tell them to get their crap outta the public right-of-way. Cops standing around being interviewed by someone from the local NBC station. Newspaper Guy sitting down on the steps. It's hot.

Hour later now from when the cops first showed up. Whole area still packed with no one. You know, it would be cool if Nikki Preede showed up! I'd buy a bag of pork rinds and run out there and share 'em with her on live TV if she was downstairs! Oh well. Maybe another time.

One cruiser gone, both scooters have scooted. Just one lone peace officer holding back the tide of anger. Newspaper Guy stood up and walked around some more. He's already talked to all four of the Prohibitionists, which I'm sure was the highlight of his journalistic career.

HOOCHIMAMA!! A really hot chick just walked over from the Courthouse--petite, blonde hair, yellow tee shirt, jeans--YOW! Thus proving that this entire movement is populated by cybernetic mutants, the guy talking to her was unable to parlay the images of sad-eyed moo-cows into an exchange of vital information.

Figures.

Although part of it could be that he's a doof in baggy khakis and Keds.

I will say this for them--they do a great job of displacing the panhandlers and bums. There's not a single one in sight. Ooooh, wait. There is one creepy-looking old bald-headed dude in a blue-jean jacket with a backpack. Ahh, nope. I think he's just an old hippy who, along with Roger Daltrey, did not fulfill his desire to die before he got old, and now has to live with the constant mistrust of others of his generation who are now well past thirty. He's sitting down now, too. Ewww--he crosses his legs like a girl.

All the cops have gone now. I guess they just decided to give them a ticket and leave. Oh well.

I think I'll go back to work now and resume my hiatus.

Hmm...maybe a nice big Sonic burger tonight.


Tuesday, June 24, 2003

I’m still on hiatus. Really.

BUT, when news of earth-shattering scale comes across the wires, ACTION MUST BE TAKEN!

THUS it is that while I was busily toiling away here in the salt mine (which is what we call a nice, air-conditioned office space where you have your own office and door and window) that I took a mere moment’s respite to refresh myself by seeing if anyone is still reading this crap since I said I was going on hiatus. Which I am still on, by the way.

Lo! (and, of course, what would Lo be without Behold) I noted in the referrer logs an unfamiliar visitor traipsing through the yard over by the gravel pile. I quickly hid to see who this might be, and after a bit of investigation found that is was not a revenuer or someone selling Kirby vacuum cleaners, but rather a fellow Alabama blogger who had been so kind as to include Possumblog upon her list of links.

As I am always on the lookout for new suckers erudite and sophisticated members for the Yellowhammer League of Authors, Poets, and Machine Operators, I summoned Chet the E-Mail Boy from his chambers in the basement and had him take down a quick note to this young lady, who has the very odd name of “Terry”. With his mottled and withered finger upon the telegraph key, Chet quickly tapped out a message of greeting, which was quickly responded to, which was in turn given a reply, which again prompted a response, that brought with it a response which absolutely demanded a response, which led to the need for some Absorbine Veterinary Liniment for Chet’s index finger. Properly soothed and anointed, Chet was able to finish his transmission of the Rules for Inclusion in the Mighty and Powerful Axis of Weevil. I must confess that in my desire to add yet more members, I told Miss Terry that we have a no-hazing policy. Oh well, what she don’t know, eh?

Anyway, she took the list and began the arduous process of filling out the application and sent the following:
Okay -- no problems with requirements 1 through 8 and 10. I was three years old when my family moved here in 1959. There is no better place to live on earth (well, maybe in a mansion in Hawaii).
Now THAT, my friends, is someone who LOVES Alabama! And Hawaii! And mansions! Anyway…
As for #11, my husband could do that. He's the trivia king around here.
Hmm. We’ve never had anyone want to cheat before…that takes some real “want to”! The Rules Committee states they are indeed impressed with this bit of inventiveness. But you still only get one Gift Pack. Onwards—
I don't own a pickup, but I have a car with over 150,000 miles.
As with all of our pickup-truck-challenged members, we make the same suggestions as in the past—get yourself a good Sawzall from the tool rental place and start whittling away everything from your car that doesn’t look like a pickup truck. After only a few short hours, you can make a dandy El Camino/Ranchero-esque vehicle that will look right at home at the country club or parked outside the county jail.
It doesn't belch gas too much.
Are we talking about the hubby again or something else?
I want a pickup. My husband has to borrow one to get the horse manure from a location near the arsenal into our garden every winter. We are getting tired of borrowing.
Well, if you got your own horse, you wouldn’t have to borrow a truck OR manure, but I guess that’s one of those personal choice sorts of things. (And who knew we still have horses in our arsenal!?)
I am learning about #9 right now, Googling as I type.

... glad to hear about the no-hazing policy. It is hazy enough around
Huntsville as it is.
Oooo. I sorta thought she might forget about the hazing thing. Oh well—she’ll figure it out after a while.

ANYWAY, and all that, by the great power vested in me by a small card I carry in my wallet, it is with great pride that I take leave of my hiatusness to bestow and endow Terry Matson of BamaBlog with all of the rights and benefits of membership within the Cotton State Cat Fanciers and Pistol Club, otherwise know throughout the universe as the Axis of Weevil.

As with all new members, Miss Terry will shortly be receiving the World Famous Axis of Weevil Gift Pack, containing a slab of Dreamland ribs, a gallon jug of Milo's sweet tea; a G-Lox Wedgee gun rack from Mark's Outdoor Sports for her fancy new pickup-that-was-a-car, a package of Bubba's Beef Jerky (according to Dr. Weevil, this is homemade and is available only at the gas station at the end of Highway 82 in Bibb County); a three piece, 24 ounce box of Priester's Pecan Logs; a box of Jim Dandy grits; a 16 ounce bottle of Dale's Steak Sauce; AND a six pack of Buffalo Rock Ginger Ale. As an added bonus, you will receive a package of twelve greeting cards designed by our very own Jimmy from next door, whose “condition” has abated sufficiently to allow him to expand his rock-painting business to include handcrafted stationery. He asks only that you ignore the letterhead on the reverse side, as the paper was given to him by the insurance company when they changed names.

SO THEN, all of you run over to BamaBlog and say hello!

I would do it, but I’m on hiatus from blogging until after July 4.

Really.


Monday, June 23, 2003

Alrighty now! Well, as you all recall from the thrilling cliffhanger Friday, I WENT TO A MEETING! ::jarring orchestra chord::

What a fun and interesting time—we had sodas, and real GOLDFISH® CRACKERS from the good folks at Pepperidge Farm, Incorporated. (Be sure and check out their new Puff Pastry recipes—especially the one for Spicy Beef and Broccoli Windmills—which looks like an appetizing combination of offal on cardboard.) And hold your horsies—not only were there Goldfish® (some of which had been used as industrial desiccants), but they were swimming in a sea of MIXED NUTS! Yummy! You know, when you go to a fancy pants meeting, nothing says class like a can of Diet Coke and a Styrofoam cup full of stale salted snacks.

To make it even better, there was PowerPoint™! Wheeeee!!

Are we not at a stage in our computer literacy to where folks can at least change SOMETHING on the crappy 1997 templates which everyone has already seen about a billion times? If you’re intent on touting yourself as a hip, knowledgeable sort of designer—can’t you make sure your font usage is kinda consistent? Can you make sure all the words fit on the screen and don’t get cut off? You can’t? Okay, then let’s start the meeting.

If I was playing the Meeting Drinking Game, I believe I would have been sloshed in about ten minutes. What kept it interesting is that I decided I had better write the crap down so I could inflict it on each of you—no, you haven’t done anything to me. I’m just a mean, cruel, old man.

SO NOW—let’s begin…the first presenter got up and either didn’t say anything noteworthy or I was asleep, but the next person was fully cranked up. She opened up by dropping some “gold nuggets” on us, which is supposed to describe the stuff they do well. Thanks! Then there was some sort of thing about “earned level of experience”...I have no idea what that’s supposed to mean, but WHO CARES!! There was a rough patch soon enough, though—the dangerous game of sports metaphors. “We want to be able to, um, hit the ground. Ah, to hit the ball, and run with it.” Darned strange game, if you ask me. Perhaps as a nod to the nodding ones, she talked about wanting to “take the pulse of the audience”. Please, don’t take my pulse. JUST HIT ME IN THE HEAD WITH A MALLET! Wrapping it all up, she wanted to say that she was interested in “building a vision”. Much like working with Tinker Toys, I would suspect.

She tagged her partner who jumped into the ring swinging the metal folding chair of: “making synergies to create high energies”. Having thus clobbered us with this stunning show of gobbledygook, another jumped in and started piling-on: “have a synergy happening,” “the world has turned, and the tide has changed,” and “build a diverse, inclusive community.”

You ever watch a cockroach when you spray him good with Raid, and he flops over and wiggles and his little legs twitch? That was me.

But not to be outdone, it was wrapped up with another team member “committed to producing outcomes” and who wanted to “have some measurable benchmarks” so we could see some “tangible benefits on the ground”. Did you hear that? “Tangible benefits on the ground.” I write that down twice, because it is apparently so important in the scheme of things that the speaker said it twice.

Did I mention we had tiny yellow crackers and peanuts and Coca Cola? They created a very diverse synergy in my lower intestine, causing me to have a positive output.

I sneaked out a few minutes early and walked back up to my office—beautiful afternoon, and for once it wasn’t raining. Got back, checked my mail and hit the Weekend button. Got home, went outside to check on the vast acreage that makes up the Possumrosa, and found that the new experience of dry weather with sunshine was just the thing to crank up the dastardly Japanese beetle population again. ::sigh:: I figured that they would be back—the last time I sprayed the trees, it rained the day afterwards. They were all bunched up in the top of Cat’s cherry tree in disgusting wriggling wads that will be sure to show up in a nightmare sometime later when I least expect it.

Back inside, change clothes, get out the hose and the sprayer and the Concentrated Liquid Death and go to work. They seemed to enjoy the flavor very much, until they started dropping off. Looks like you boys got some bad fugu, eh?!

The rest of the afternoon was blessedly uneventful, aside from the extraction the other loose Little Girl tooth. It was way loose, so I just reached in her mouth and yanked it out after supper. “Thankth, Daddy!” You’re welcome, Spridget. Into the tooth pillow to wait on the tooth fairy, who after everyone was asleep was also very sleepy, but who still remembered to stumble into the bedroom and dodge the multitude of tiny toys strewn about the floor and exchange some money (that she got out of MY billfold ) for it. Then the tooth fairy collapsed into bed with Miss Reba and snored loudly until the morrow.

For one glorious Saturday morning, the kids did not come barging into our room to tattle or to use our bathroom, they did not fight with each other over a sock, they did not turn on every television in the house, they did not engage in bouts of loud, squealing, maniacal laughter. Just nice and quiet—absolute heaven. I actually got to be awakened by warm sunshine. That don’t happen much around my house. Finally got up and started moving around as Reba fixed us some breakfast, ate and then got outside to get the yard back into order.

All that rain we had certainly made the grass grow longer, although it hasn’t really made it any greener. All the weeds and stringy grass had gotten to be a big mess around the trees and planter beds and stuff, so I got out ol’ Mr. Two Stroke—haven’t used it since last year, yet it cranked right up. Which did my heart glad—nothing says Manly Outdoor Activities like a loud, oily, temperamental, snarling two-stroke piece of dangerous whirling machinery. Much like my underwear, the weed trimmer is disgusting enough that no one else wants to mess with it, so I get to keep it and call it my very own without fear that it will be used as wall décor or as a background for puffy glitter painting. I believe I am not the only one who thinks like this—witness the existence of dirt bikes and chain saws and old Saabs.

Got everything chewed to bits in short order (I got me one of them Grass Gator blades, you know) and covered myself with a fine coating of plant fibers, then got behind the mower.

I still sincerely believe if the leaders of the world were each given a lawnmower and a couple of hours of pushing time behind it each week that most of the world’s problems could be solved. The heat and drone and snootful of unburnt hydrocarbons and occasional bed of fire ants really help to focus your mind. Especially like when you’re being very careful not to cut down stuff that’s not supposed to be cut down. ‘Cause that would be bad.

Finished up and took a quick bath and ferried Boy to his friend’s house for a birthday party, which we had neglected to RSVP until about the middle of the swath through the backyard, which meant that the ferry ride to said friend’s house had to make a port call at Target to select an appropriate gift. I like Target—it seems to attract better looking cashiers and shoppers, but they don’t sell ammo, which frankly seems like a natural item. But it was convenient, and it had the Mattel Deluxe Exodia Monster, with Unique Battle Features, Lights and Sounds, which is somehow able to be distinguished from a host of other plastic crap only by nine year old boys.

On then to the checkout, then to the party where profuse apologies were made for being so inconsiderate and not calling earlier (which I blamed on everyone else), then back to the house for a bit to get ready for my teachers meeting at church—stuff to type and print, but I assure you none of it contained the words synergy or empower or Exodia. Got that finished, then turned around with the girls and ran and got Boy from his party and dropped them all off at Reba’s mom and dad’s house so we could go to the meeting and not have to show what bad parents we are by not being able to control our belligerent children. Having dumped my offspring, I swung back by our house to pick up Reba, who had stayed behind to get a shower and recover from a giant bout of malaise that struck sometime between the time I first cranked the lawnmower and the moment I got through cutting the grass. On to the meeting, at which approximately 8 out of 26 folks scheduled to teach showed up, two of them being Reba and me. ::sigh::

Finished up, and then it was on to our weekly trip to Wal-Mart, where we purchased many wondrous items such as shirts and greeting cards and a tiny plant and eight solar-powered walkway lights and the new Harry Potter and the Exercise in Successful Marketing and a some printer paper. Thus fully stocked with much needed items, back to in-laws to get the kids, then back to the house to install my eight solar-powered walkway lights and then eat supper and then go to bed and then once more snore loudly and then wake up and watch all the early Sunday morning home improvement shows.

Got up, got a shower, got the kids up and got them to get dressed, whipped up a nourishing and fanciful breakfast consisting of bowls of cereal, then stuffed everyone into the van and headed out for church. Another beautiful day—sky blue sky, air so clear that everything was as sharply focused as one of those laser printed photos where you can see every single leaf. Fantastic day. Good classes, good sermon, good lunch at the Chinese place, then back home where we did stuff, then back again for evening worship, then home for some homemade hamburgers, then time to pull YET ANOTHER TOOTH, this time out of Middle Girl’s head, then put the kids in bed then send the tooth fairy in once more after they finally went to sleep THREE FLIPPIN’ HOURS LATER. I don’t know what it was, but Cat and Rebecca both would not go to sleep. Too much fun or something, I don’t know. But they finally went away to Happy Sweet Fun Slumberland, and that fairy chick stole more money out of my wallet and stuffed it into the pillow pouch and then it was time to go to bed and snore some more.

And then to get up and come here. Whee.

I have too much garbage to get done this week—Cat gets to go back for her ear checkup, I have my normal exercise in bloated bureaucracy, then I have to go back to the dentist, and then I’ll be off next week—SO, this old pile of crap is going to take a hiatus until after Independence Day. Too much life in the way of productive blogging—I will be keeping up with e-mail, though, so if you have any comments be sure to share them.

All of you have a good holiday, and I’ll see you again after a sufficient period of recovery after being confined with four young children and their mama.



Well, now--what a wonderful weekend that was! You'll hear all about it later, because right now I have to figure out what went on then sanitize it so as not to embarrass myself too much. See you in a bit!


Friday, June 20, 2003

Oooo--work.

Just been informed by one of my betters that I will be attending a meeting this afternoon in which others of my betters who work in the private sector will be interviewed by still more others of my betters who work here. My attendance is required because...because...because it just is. No use having a meeting if no one shows up, now is it?!

Long, boring, full of fluffery. 'Give me a contract because I say all the proper buzzwords.' I say give it to the ones who have the guts to say they want the job strictly for the money. Or, maybe we could just give each project team a sack full of switchblades and let 'em figure out a winner on their own. (Of course, given my position on the totem pole, I would probably get stuck with cleaning up the floor and walls, so that might not be the best idea.)

So, then, today's funandgames ends now and jobly stuff begins in earnest. Thankfully, the weekend beckons (hi there, Weekend!) and promises to be full of sizzling hot suburban action--mowing, kid hauling, laundering, shampooing--all those gerunds...and more!

All of you have a good weekend, and I'll see you Monday.



The Intersect of Technology and Waterproofing

As you all know, this is probably the best place on the Internet to find out information about: 2003 e mail of caulking materials in japan.

What's odd, given the fine reputation of this site, is that Possumblog was the 58th returned result!

Obviously, someone out there really needs to know something about this subject, seeing as how they were willing to wade through 57 other results before deciding something called Possumblog might be of use to them.

So as not to disappoint, a brief bit of information for our querist is that it is no longer legal to e-mail caulking materials in Japan. After some initial success in small-scale tests in Kagoshima and Okayama, it was found that after the caulking material had fully cured, it made it impossible to transmit anything else over the e-mail, such as ready-to-drink teas or juices and tractor parts.

The Research Department hopes this helps.



Unsolicited Testimonial!

Seeing as how my $40,000,000 Nike shoe endorsement contract has still not come through, I guess I might set my sights a bit lower. I might be able to get a bucket of bird seed out of this, but I am ready to say that I think I have found the best bird feeder out there.

I went out yesterday when I got home and emptied out the remainder of the seed from the three I purchased recently, and despite the near-daily deluges, every single one was dry inside. AND DESPITE a voracious squirrel and dove population, they have successfully withstood their assaults and provided a variety of tiny little wing-ed friends with tasty victuals.

The feeders in question are made by Heath Manufacturing up in Coopersville, Michigan, and the one to get is the Mixed Seed Feeder Combo.

This one is more expensive than their other ones, because it comes with a neato plastic scoop with a filler spout running through the handle and with metal perches and a metal cap and a feeder tray.

NOW then--the feeder tray is a no-no, unless you're just TRYING to give a place for squirrels to hang on and pigeons to wallow in, so don't put it on. The other tube feeders they sell, without the scoop and tray, have plastic or wood perches, which again are no-no. Wood rots, and both wood and plastic are very susceptible to being pecked away to flinders. You need metal. But, since you only get metal perches when you buy the Combo package, what this means is if you wind up buying more than one feeder, you wind up with extra scoops and trays that you don't need.

Luckily, these make charming gifts for people you don't like that much.

These feeders have done very well--they are reasonably water resistant, and what water does get in either drains or evaporates quickly enough that the seed doesn't sprout. They are slick and round, which make it hard on the fuzztailed tree rats to get a foothold. The perches are short enough, too, to make it hard for them to get their corpulent little bodies over to the spout to feed on them, as well as being too small for larger birds like doves and buzzards to alight on them.

I give it the Possumblog Lackadaisical Housekeeping Seal of Approval!

(Note to the good folks at Heath--I will be glad to serve as your celebrity spokesmarsupial. Again, just a bucket of seed or two in compensations will be just fine. Maybe some money, too. But not more than maybe six or seven mil. Unless you're feeling generous.)



As if...

...I didn't have enough fun being a mindless bureaucratic automaton, I am now taking it out on my neighbors! I got appointed to our little town's Board of Zoning Adjustment, and last night was my first meeting. I'm a supernumerary member, but since there were only three of the regular members there, I got to vote.

Luckily, nothing too complicated, and the meeting was over in about thirty minutes or so, after which I got to jabber with one of the guys on the board who has a whole collection of oddball old cars he keeps parked behind his business. I have driven around there several times, just to peak at them, so it was nice to finally meet the guy. Odd little collection--mostly stuff from the mid-'60s--he bought a bunch of them to celebrate the opening of his business 40 years ago, and the rest just have some sentimental value for him. Couple of '54 Plymouth sedans (they look a bit like this one), an International Harvester Metro Mite (which looks NOTHING like this one), a '65 Impala convertible, a '64 or '65 Galaxie 500, a '54 Ford Victoria (cool, daddy-o!--in great shape, looks like this one except in bright yellow and black top), a '65 Catalina four door hardtop (that I have always like, but he said he just sold it. Oh well, it didn't have air, anyway), and a really cool 1955 Studebaker Speedster, the progenitor of the snappy Hawk models. This is probably the coolest of the bunch--here's an ad from way back when--"lightning on wheels! Styled for action! Powered for thrills!" (with nary a disclaimer from the lawyers), and here's a picture of one similar to his, and here's something from a guy with WAY too much time on his hands. (Not that there's anything wrong with that.)

Anyway, he's an interesting fellow.


Thursday, June 19, 2003

Hmph! It's almost 5, and yet another gigantic thunderstorm has just billowed up and sits over to the east all full of thunder and lightning and gigantic killer raindrops, repeating a pattern begun three days ago. ::sigh::

Oh well. Nothing keeps you awake on the ride home like sudden hydroplaning. Which is a shame, cause I would sure like a nap.



McDonald's curbs antibiotic use in meat

Oh GREAT! There goes the REST of the flavor!



Tendency to be shy may be inherited

Well, if it's inherited, I would think that the person passing it on wouldn't be THAT shy, if you know what I mean...



Is that a spear tip in your hand, or are you just happy to see me?

Vulcan gets his arm back on--looks like they just got finished as I post this, as the crane is still hooked up to the arm.

(A reminder--this webcam works very much betterer in the daylight hours. If you happening to be visiting Possumblog between about 8 p.m. and 6 a.m. Central Standard Time and click on it, it's just going to look about like a picture taken from inside a bottle of India ink.)



Dadgummit, nobody ever tells me NOTHIN'!

Just doing a quick stroll among my links up there, and find out that Gregory Hlatky has gone and moved A Dog's Life out of the cesspit of Blog*Spurt to its own domain, and he's started using that neato Moveable Type stuff all the cool kids are talking about!

Good looking site, Greg, and all of you will be grateful to know that HIS Possum is much prettier than me.



Adventures in Headline Writing: Harry Potter Author Suing Mad

Of course, there is only one suitable response.



The Pride of Vidalia

Having suffered the indignities of rough-handed brutes who poked around in her interior spaces, Miss Janis wishes for some coffee. And Fabio with coffee.

Having none to offer of either, I beg forgiveness, but do send my wishes for a speedy recovery.


Fabio? Fabio!?



Weevilly Realignment!

A head's up, there Kris--Lorna in Personnel gets all upset when you don't fill out a change of address card! Kris Vilamma takes Kathy Kinsey up on her offer of cheap hosting and moves The World Around You to a NEW place called http://theworldaroundyou.com/.

(Wow--I wonder how he got all that money--$4 a month! Must be dipping into the Coke money or something...)



Just a thought, but really now, should anyone named Ned Ludd "Orrin" be in charge of anything?

I'm being mean, of course. Actually, his ideas have some merit...who wouldn't like it when their car exploded after going over the speed limit (after two proper warnings, obviously), or maybe having the Xerox machine do the old Mission: Impossible smoking-tape-recorder number when you make that third copy of an article in Time, or maybe the little clothes tag that shoots die out when you leave the store can just blow up. See?! Is that so wrong?

Now then...you guys at the RIAA! Where's my check!?

'Orrin.' 'Orrin'! Sheesh.



Wow. Looks like I am going to have to get TiVo--Gore considers starting cable network
The Associated Press
6/19/2003, 10:03 a.m. CT

NEW YORK (AP) -- Former Vice President Al Gore, once a newspaper reporter, may be getting back into the media business.

Gore has been meeting with potential investors interested in creating a cable television network, Time magazine's online edition reported Wednesday.
230 channels and STILL nothing on. O for the days when there were only three channels, and a remote control was handing your kid a pair of pliers to turn the dial.
There's been a lot of talk in Democratic circles about launching a media enterprise to counter dominant GOP voices. Political talk radio is dominated by conservative voices and Fox News Channel, the top-rated cable news outlet, is also very popular among conservatives. [...]
Good grief, can't these filthy liberals just watch porn?!
A television executive who has had discussions with Gore said the idea is in its "embryonic" stages.
Well, let's hope someone exercises their "right to choose."
But it's not a liberal version of a cable news network, said Steve Rosenbaum, head of the New York-based documentary producers Camera Planet.
Uh-huh.
Gore was a fan of "Unfiltered," a series Camera Planet produced for MTV that put cameras in the hands of viewers. The idea of empowering viewers is "philosophically appealing" to backers of a new network, Rosenbaum said.
Poor MTV. I remember when it was cool.

Oh well. Good way to suck up some cash from well-meaning folks, I suppose--the very fact that the backers find the idea of empowering [aak!] viewers to be "philosophically appealing" [spttth!] means that loud hammering you hear is a couple of guys putting the nails in the coffin. (Sure wish they could have worked "synergistic" and "holistic" in there, too.)
"The only thing I'm confident of is that it will look like nothing you've ever seen on television, which is part of the excitement of it," Rosenbaum said. [...]
Wow. Nothing like having confidence, eh?

Anyway, I've said it before, I'll say it again--if you want to see something exciting and like nothing else you've seen on television, I've got the first 26 episodes of PossumblogTV already written. Call me--we'll talk.



I like the statue of Vulcan and all, but I like this one better.

Thanks, France!



Really, now...

...going for your regular teeth cleaning at the dentist is not that bad. There are worse things...like, maybe you're walking down the street and are suddenly and vigorously assaulted with a hedge trimmer wielded by a lowland gorilla in a fit of catamitic fury. That would probably be worse.

It wouldn't be quite so bad except for that little scrapey deal that manages to find EVERY. SINGLE. sensitive spot and whose main use is to make holes in your gums. Ouch. (You know, it's probably not merely a coincidence that Don Herbert came up with the name "gom-jabbar". He probably had a very bad experience with a hygenist and her gum jabber.)

Anyway, aside from a broken filling, I was in good shape, and Cat was in even better shape. Still has a wiggly lower front tooth that she refuses to let anyone pull, but aside from that she has a mouth like a piranha. They did her work first while I waited in the room next door, which meant that she was on the loose as I was upside down in the chair. I opened my eyes once to see my hygenist to one side, and the manically grinning visage of my child inches from my face right above my eyebrows..."OOOohhh, what's THAT!?!" Blah, blah, blah BLOOD blah blah fillings blah. "Does he need MORE HOLES!?" No, dear, Daddy doesn't need more holes. She continued to pester the hygenist, who actually encouraged such behavior, and even got Cat to hand her the Mr. Sucky device and long pieces of razor wire floss. I believe my child actually enjoyed having Daddy indisposed while she contributed to his discomfort! Hard to imagine.

By the time we got out, the next round of flooding had started. Tuesday afternoon at 5 on the nose, it came a deluge that lasted for several hours, and reflooded all the low areas around Pinchgut Creek again--not quite so bad as before, but bad enough when you own a business down there and still haven't finished cleaning up from the last time. Then, like clockwork yesterday, it all started up again. Both times, huge downpours that go on and on. It finally gave up around 7 last night.

Makes for interesting visitors, though. Got back from church last night and Reba told me that she had seen a frog out on the back porch sometime earlier, so she went out there and sure enough, he was up in one of Jonathan's pots of tomato plants. He hopped off into the hosta beside the kitchen window, probably to go find Mrs. Frog and fill up the planter bed with a billion peeping offspring. Hard to believe something so small can be so loud, but then I look at my kids...

I came out after her and looked around a bit--it was dark, but I was able to make out the outline of Kelly the Bunny out by the bird feeder. She's gotten to be a regular--I called Catherine to come down and take a look.

"Kelly's my FRIEND, Daddy!" Shhh. We stood there and watched and would take a step or two after a moment. Finally got to about 15 feet away before Kelly the Bunny turned and sort of half-hopped into the darkness over by the swing set--"Time to tell Kelly night-night, sugar." Which someone did not want to do at all. But she finally did, although only after being assured that Kelly would come back and visit and tell her all about her little rabbity house and her shoes and her toothbrush and her bird friends and Mr. Crow and Mr. Frog.

Should be interesting.

Anyway, I have more workly crap to get done this morning to make up for being out yesterday, so I will see you all in a bit.


Wednesday, June 18, 2003

EEK!

Forgot I have a dentist appointment in an hour! And I have to take Tiny Girl with me! See you all tomorrow!





What was Kim talking about?
Between Kelley's Athens flashbacks, Possumblog's shots of the rebuilding of the ass of Vulcan [the Birmingham statue that scared the beejeepers out of me as a kid (see that torch, boy? It's RED. That means somebody got slaughtered on the highway tonight, so sit down, let me drive, and shut your pie hole!)] ...
Ahh, the torch. Well, you see, it wasn't always a torch he was holding. Back when he was first built, he was holding aloft a spear point that he had just hammered out for Zeus or Mars or somebody. But then...
[...] The famous red and green torch Vulcan held from 1946 until 1999 is set to become a part of the statue's past, not his future.

The neon lights were added by the Birmingham Jaycees to give the statue an added purpose. A green torch meant no one had died in the Birmingham area in the past 24 hours in a traffic accident. A red torch signified a death.

The torch was actually a cone-shaped sheet of metal with 16 long neon bulbs that alternated red and green. A switch in the guard tower chose the color each night.

The torch apparatus covered a replacement spear point that was downright dainty in comparison to the original sculptor Giuseppe Moretti put in Vulcan's hand for the St. Louis World's Fair in 1904.

The replacement spear was made sometime in the late 1930s for Vulcan to hold when he was originally placed on the pedestal atop Red Mountain.

Historical and artistic purists have bemoaned the torch and even the wimpy spear, arguing it made Vulcan something not intended by its creator. [...]
Yep, the "electric popsicle". Of course, poor Vulcan has suffered such indignities all along--when he was finally brought back from St. Louie, they put him out at the State Fairgrounds, where his spear-holding arm was put on upside down, and where he was used to hawk Heinz pickles and Liberty overalls (a pair of which were painted on him), until he was rescued and perched up on Red Mountain.

And now, they have gotten his big old head back on! Only his spear arm remains to be placed, and he'll be alright again. They still have to finish the park and visitor center, but it's good to be able to look up and see him whole again.



Oh, you!

You thought Francesca Watson and I were SOOOO silly for coming up with the Jessica Rabbit petition deal way back when...well, bucko, look what Mr. Bleaty came up with this a.m.:
Aaannnd . . . I cracked open the Special Extended Nineteen-disc DVD of “Who Framed Roger Rabbit.” Didn’t watch the movie; I’m not sure I want to. Someday when Gnat can understand it, perhaps. I bought it for the “Roger Rabbit” shorts, which I’d never seen. I watched one. It was exhausting. It set my teeth on edge from the start, and it was mostly bad until the end. Like the movie, it was loud beyond belief and pointlessly frenetic; it JUST - KEPT - HITTING - YOU - ON - THE - HEAD with a FRYING - PAN until you gave in and said ha, ha already. As much as I enjoyed Bob Hoskins (the thinking man’s Phil Collins!) and Jessica Rabbit (jeezum crow, how many 13 year old boys spontaneously exploded in a shower of shameful meat when she did that song? ), the film is a great disappointment. The fault lies with Roger Rabbit. He’s incredibly annoying. Whenever he’s on screen it’s like you’re flossing with an emery board.

Would it be better as a CGI feature? Maybe so. Maybe the toons really needed to be three-dimensional for the idea to work.
As we've always known, Jessica needs her own, SOLO, 3-D extravaganza. Dump the Rabbit, toots.



This just in from CNN--Coalition captures Gen. Abid Hamid Mahmud al-Tikriti, Saddam Hussein's personal secretary and number four on list of most wanted Iraqis, Pentagon sources say.

Man, I would hate to be Saddam's secretary--always with the leering and the looking down your uniform and groping your butt.



You know, this world need more goose-stepping Chinese girls.



Extending Alabama’s Cultural Hegemony, One Blog at a Time

The infestation continues! They’re coming out of the woodwork like, like…bugs that come out of woodwork! Your organophosphate-based pesticides such as Malathion are NO MATCH FOR US!!! BWWWahahahaHHAHAHHAHAHA!

Ahem. Pardon me.

Anyway, yesterday a nice young fellow came to the front door and rang the buzzer here at the spacious and palatial Axis of Weevil World Headquarters. Thinking he was one of those college kids selling magazines, I at first was merely going to turn the garden hose on him and run him off, but fortunately I had the restraint to first find out his business, and I’m glad I did! It seems he had walked all the way from Prattville, Alabama (site of one of my fondest recollections—late night, on the road, Waffle House, coffee, a chatty young waitress…but I digress) to apply for membership in the Cotton State Journal Club!

I invited him in and sent him to the interrogation room (which is usually where we store the mop) and asked him if he was sure he knew what he was asking—after all, some do not fully appreciate Groucho Marx's suspicion of not wanting to be a member of club that would have him as a member. He assured me that he was eager to join, despite the expected jeers and taunts of lesser souls, so I slid an application and a pencil under the door--
The primary qualifications are these:

1) Born in, or now live in, or once lived in, or would like to live in, Alabama


Born in? No
Now live in? Yes
once lived in? More than once
would like to live in? Get back to me after September 9th

2) Not ashamed to admit to #1

I confess

3) Staunchly anti-idiotarian, or can at least pretend pretty good

I'm an expert pretender
Which, of course, calls for an obligatory link to musical lyrics.
4) Functionally literate

What is the precise definition of functionally?
You must be able to know what the definition of “is” is.
5) Don't type in ALL CAPS or all e.e. cummings case or MiXeD.

i DON'T kNoW wHaT yOu'RE TALKING ABOUT
DON’T GET CUTE, FUNNY BOY!!
6) Update your blog more than once a month

I pledge to update every day I can get to a computer

7) Willing to be made fun of

Just ask my family, friends and co-workers, happens all the time

8) Willing to make fun of yourself

Just read my blog, happens all the time

9) Have a framed picture of John Moses Browning

http://www.m1911.org/images/jmbrown.jpg

Can I hang it upside down?
Hmm. This was very, VERY troubling…does this guy have something against Mormons? Inventors? Machinists? Gu…no, silly me, he can’t have something against guns—they’re just inanimate objects, after all. Then I figured it out!! Clever Kristopher—he’s obviously well aware of one of the subtle genius of Browning as witnessed in the M-1911 feed system.

As you all know, the 1911 uses a “controlled round feed”, i.e. the cartridge is at all times secured within the action—by the feed lips of the magazine, by the breechface and the extractor, or by the chamber. At no time is the cartridge allowed to “float”, or have to transverse any length of the distance between the magazine and the chamber, in which the cartridge is not firmly held. Some semiauto designs require that the cartridge jump a short distance to the feed ramp while not fully in contact with the extractor, which can lead to jamming if the pistol is jostled during the feed cycle, or if it is held any position other than right-side-up and level. The Browning controlled round feed cycle as found in the M-1911 and variants, however, allows the pistol to be held in any position during the firing and cycling sequence, EVEN UPSIDE DOWN, and continue to function normally. This can be very useful in military situations in which a soldier is not able to get into a standard stance, or when filming various John Woo action movies.

SO, as a fitting and clever homage to the genius of John Moses Browning, the picture may be installed as proposed.
10) Personal library must contain more books than you will ever read

Check...have four backed up on my nightstand at the moment and gave up on John Adams a month back.

11) Must be able to recite Monty Python and the Holy Grail and give an episode synopsis of all Andy Griffith shows from memory

My life story can be told using the dialogue from Holy Grail (you can draw your own conclusions) I've got Holy Grail covered, but I'll have to brush up on Andy.
Well, can’t we all. I recommend that you purchase the entire show on video in order to assist in this effort. They are available in the World Headquarters Gift Shop, and right now they are running a special where you can get an autographed rock from Howard Morris which was actually used in filming one of the various Earnest T. Bass episodes. These come in a lovely collector-quality Zip-Lock plastic bag and are accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity printed using a genuine laser printer.
12) Your pickup truck must be in good working order--use of ether to get it started is not recommended, but will be allowed on a case-by-case basis

No pickup yet, but I've been living here long enough to have a hankerin' for a big diesel
Well, who doesn’t have a hankering for a nice F-350 with a Power Stroke! And they don’t need a can of ether, either!

Well, looking over the application, it’s obvious that Kristopher is rather hopelessly well-qualified for admission, and since he did not attend the University of Alabama, I get to claim him as a fellow Auburn fan! (Not that Purdue is bad or anything—they do have cheerleaders, after all)

SO THEN BE IT ORDAINED, by the power vested in my by Kelly the Bunny, who just last night was seen hopping through my backyard, that one Kristopher Vilamaa is hereby inducted into the powerful and mighty Alabama Society of Theater Arts and Carburetor Repair, otherwise known to the world as the Axis of Weevil, with all of the misery and woe descending thereto.

Welcome to the krewe, Kris, and as with all new members, you will shortly be receiving the World Famous Axis of Weevil Gift Pack, containing a slab of Dreamland ribs, a gallon jug of Milo's sweet tea; a G-Lox Wedgee gun rack from Mark's Outdoor Sports for your soon-to-be-delivered pickup truck, a package of Bubba's Beef Jerky (according to Dr. Weevil, this is homemade and is available only at the gas station at the end of Highway 82 in Bibb County); a three piece, 24 ounce box of Priester's Pecan Logs; a box of Jim Dandy grits; a 16 ounce bottle of Dale's Steak Sauce; AND a six pack of Buffalo Rock Ginger Ale. AND THAT’S NOT ALL—Just this morning we received a valuable package of coupons in the mail which are worth over $15!! You are welcome to ALL OF THEM! (Except for the one for free starch at Dale’s Laundry—that one’s mine And the one for the free cuticle trim at Kim’s Nail House.)

So, everyone go be nice and say hey!


Tuesday, June 17, 2003

Just got this from Lawyer Friend Jeff (not the same guy as My Friend Jeff™, who is an architect like me). I realize since it came from the magical e-mail box, it's probably been around the world several times, but it's the first time I'VE seen it, so I'll plop it out there:
JESUS AND THE REDNECK

An Irishman in a wheel chair entered a restaurant one afternoon and asked the waitress for a cup of coffee. The Irishman looked across the restaurant and asked, "Is that Jesus sitting over there?" The waitress nodded "yes," so the Irishman told her to give Jesus a cup of coffee on him.

The next patron to come in was an Englishman with a hunched back. He shuffled over to a booth, painfully sat down, and asked the waitress for a cup of hot tea. He also glanced across the restaurant and asked, "Is that Jesus over there?" The waitress nodded, so the Englishman said to give Jesus a cup of hot tea and add it to his bill.

The third patron to come into the restaurant was a redneck on crutches. He hobbled over to a booth, sat down and hollered, "Hey there sweet thang, how's about gettin' me a cold glass of Coke!" He, too, looked across the restaurant and asked, "Is that God's boy over yonder?" The waitress nodded, so the redneck said to give Jesus a cold glass of Coke and put it on his check.

As Jesus got up to leave, he passed by the Irishman, touched him and said, "For your kindness, you are healed." The Irishman felt the strength coming back into his legs, got up, and danced a jig out the door.

Jesus then passed by the Englishman, touched him and said, "For your kindness, you are healed." The Englishman felt his back straightening up, and he raised up his hands, praised the Lord and did a series of backflips out the door.

Then Jesus walked towards the redneck. The redneck jumped up and yelled, "DON'T TOUCH ME.....I'M DRAWIN' DISABILITY!!"



Government Troops Suffer Over 1000 Casualties Battling Armed Militants

From the Library of Congress:
On June 17, 1775, American troops displayed their mettle in the Battle of Bunker Hill during the siege of Boston, inflicting casualties on nearly half of the British troops dispatched to secure Breed's Hill (the actual site of the battle).

More than 15,000 colonial troops defended Boston at Breed's Hill, Bunker Hill, and Dorchester Heights following the battles of Lexington and Concord. African-American soldiers comprised approximately one-third of the rebel troops.

Five thousand British troops under the command of General Gage stormed Breed's Hill, where colonial soldiers were encamped. In their fourth charge up the hillside, the British took the hill from the rebels, who had run out of ammunition. The last rebels left on the hill evaded capture by the British, thanks to the heroic efforts of Peter Salem, an African-American soldier who mortally wounded the British commanding officer who led the last charge.

After suffering 1,000 casualties during their charges on Breed's Hill, the British discontinued their assaults on rebel strongholds in Boston. When George Washington assumed command of colonial forces two weeks later, he garnered ammunition for Boston troops and secured Dorchester Heights and Bunker Hill.
I'm sure crazy ol' GR III looks on the firearms laws of the Commonwealth with awe now, wishing he had instituted the same thing when he had the chance.



Why, this is just surreal: Four correction officials charged with stealing Dali sketch from jail
By AMY WESTFELDT
The Associated Press
6/17/03 3:06 PM

NEW YORK (AP) -- Four Rikers Island jail officials were charged Tuesday with stealing a Salvador Dali sketch from a locked display case during a fire drill.

The men, two assistant deputy wardens and two corrections officers, were charged with grand larceny and could get up to 15 years in prison.

The untitled work, depicting the crucifixion in ink and pencil, was removed from the lobby of the city jail and replaced with a copy during an unscheduled fire drill staged by the defendants at midnight on March 1, authorities said.

A 1985 appraisal concluded it was worth at least $175,000, a corrections official has said, but an art expert told The New York Times in 2001 that it was worth at least three times that.

Dali gave the sketch to the jail in 1965 after canceling a visit. At the bottom of the drawing is a message from Dali, who was never known for correct spelling: "For the inmates dinning room on Rikers Island. Dali."

The sketch was displayed in the jail's dining room for 16 years before being moved to the lobby, where only officers and visitors are allowed.

"Who knew that it might have been safer left in the cafeteria?" said Rose Gill Hearn, commissioner of the city Department of Investigation.
Wow...Riker's gets all the cool artwork.



Now Taking Bets...

...on just exactly how long it will be before someone panics and mangles this story: Dow Corning purchases Alabama silicon metal company, and substitutes "silicone" for "silicon".




Okay--Blogger's working alright again now, so we'll go back to the new tagline: "New Blogger--Now 26% Less Crappy!"



Quite possibly the longest reach EVER in an effort to make a cutesy headline:

A Hamas divided?

Wow. What would professional journalism do without editors.



Well, now--just when I thought Blogger had cleaned up its act, I just tried to post the entry below and it won't let me! I am just one small finger slip away from bringing out the old "It's Free and it Shows!" tag...



Report: Terror System Flags David Nelsons

I'm just thankful Ozzie and Harriet and Ricky aren't around to see this.

How could this be?! O tempore! O mores!



Hmph! It’s about 8:30, and my Internet connection is down at the moment (what on earth did people do to waste time before!?), so to occupy a moment or two, how about another slice of the 1901 edition of Everybody’s Writing-Desk Book!

Last week, we had a paragraph about the characteristics of poetry—today’s episode is a continuation of that topic entitled:
Poetry earlier than Prose.—Poetry, it has also to be remembered, is a culture of earlier date than prose; and while Elizabethan poetry represents a comparatively advanced, Elizabethan prose represents a comparatively rudimentary, development. Prose, again, which is the language more of the average mood and addressed more to the average sense, is so much more subject to time and place, and therefore reflects so much more than poetry the general literary culture of the period wherein it is written.

Poetry and Prose of the Elizabethan Writers.—The Elizabethan poets who write poetry transcending criticism write also noble and majestic prose. Yet are their sentences in prose far from being so clear and perfect of construction as are their sentences in poetry. Their prose sentences, compared with those of the best writers of our day, are in general very long, and the modern reader is often nearly (sometimes altogether) out of breath before arriving at the end of one. The sentences of Milton’s poetry, too, are indeed generally of an ample size, but also, as a rule, of the most symmetrical construction; nor is the cultivated reader ever at a loss to comprehend the mutual harmony (in sense as in sound) of their component parts. The most formidable names (as those of the heathen gods) are subdued into sweet consonance in sound and sense with all the richly musical context. The sentences of Milton’s prose, on the other hand, always masculine indeed, are yet often so long-winded and involved as to fatigue all but the most robust readers. There are, however, two English prose works of the seventeenth century remarkable, in relation not merely to their immediate time but to any time, for their sweetness and simplicity of literary constitution—the English Bible and the Pilgrim’s Progress.

The English Bible, though, stands as the last of a long series of English renderings, each successive rendering a successive winnowing of the huskier parts and closer union of the more essential. The Pilgrim’s Progress, too, was really conceived with the vividness of a dream, and so is a poem or organic whole.
Of course, by the English Bible, the authors mean the King James version of 1611—for those of you who grew up with it, it’s hard to quibble with their commentary on it.

Like all translations, it does have a few drawbacks, but it would be hard to come up with a single work with more influence upon modern English, or upon Western society, than this one. For anyone who is not literate in works written before the twentieth century, it can be difficult to read, but that is really more of a function of the original text than the translation, which has stood the passage of three hundred years quite well. Even newer translations such as the American Standard Version of 1901 owe much to the language and cadence of the 1611 translation, although it does provide a more accurate rendering of the Greek New Testament books. The New American Standard (an update of the 1901 version) benefits from the usage of various copies of texts discovered in the twentieth century, most notably parts of the Dead Sea texts, as well as being intricately footnoted and set so that quotations of Old Testament works within the New are more distinct. As an overall translation, the NAS leaves a bit to be desired. Attempts to accurately translate distances and measures into recognizable modern values (particularly noticeable in the New Testament portion) tends to strip the symbolic portions of the original of their intended meaning. There are several instances of this throughout, but one of the more noticeable is in the Book of Revelation, where John describes his vision of the New Jerusalem as it is being measured—in the original text it is measured out as 12,000 stadia in length, width, and height. While there are some who take this literally and have tried to work out exactly how big everybody’s apartment is going to be (and if they will have any space for a roommate to share rent) it works much better as a symbolic measure—12 being a number to indicate perfection, then multiplied a thousandfold and applied to a perfect cubic shape. The New American Standard translates the distance simply as “fifteen hundred miles”, which while accurate literally, is way off symbolically.

Another problem with any translation is again not so much the translation, as it is the original text. And people being what they are, and there being lots of money to be wrung from folks who would rather the original were not quite so full of the Mean Old Angry God, the number of new translations and transliterations and paraphrasings and boy-I-wish-it-said-this-instead versions has skyrocketed in the past thirty years or so, and increasingly they have replaced God the Father with Papa Smurf (and lots of flowers and kittens). For the most part, the devotion and rigor of their efforts is expended less toward making sure it’s an accurate rendering of the original texts than to insuring nobody gets their feelings hurt.

Well, whatever. But, if you really want to study, get yourself a Bible that is a real translation, and get yourself a couple of good Hebrew-English and Greek-English lexicons, too. Even if you’re a ragin’ atheist, it really won’t hurt you, if for no other reason than to get a little cultural depth—if you read any mid- to late-eighteenth century works by our Founders, it’s hard to deny the influence of the language and thoughts of the King James Bible upon their minds (whether for good or bad), and likewise upon the history of America.

9:30 A.M.—Internet STILL Down

Figures. Just get Blogger to where it actually works, and now I can’t use it!

10:40 A.M.—Still down

Wow—hard to believe how much you come to rely on something to feed the obsessive side of your personality until it’s SNATCHED away from you without notice. Usually, I will type furiously or run around here being a good regulatory agent, then sit for a minute or two and see what all’s going on in the world, then try to decide whether or not the vasty ocean of Possumblog readers would want to hear my comment on any certain event or topic I have found, then decide to completely ignore the boisterous cries to ‘shut up’ and go on to post something completely without merit. Then go back to regulating again.

But without my hosepipe to the outside world, I’m stuck here with no way of seeing live pictures of the guys putting Vulcan’s head on, or of finding out what's the deal with anteaters, or reading the Bleat, or answering e-mails, or looking for pictures of my home entertainment center.

Oh well. There’s always work. And Solitaire. OOOH! OOOH! It’s working again!! HOORAY!! (Better get this mess posted before it breaks again!)


Monday, June 16, 2003

Proud Papa Alert!

Sorry, but I just remembered (look, three days ago was a LONG time!) that we got the call from Middle Girl's soccer coach--she has been invited to move up from the Recreational league to the Competitive league and be on the 'Premier' team. She is very excited, and I am trying to figure out how we're going to work this now that travel is no longer just across the county, but across the whole danged state!

She's a good girl, though, so I assume we'll find a way to figure it all out in due time.



What did you have planned for today?

This was said early Saturday morning after my hopes for being allowed to quietly sleep away the entire day were dashed by the intrusive noise of my progeny, each of whom decided to wake up extra early and begin their weekend chore of watching loud cartoon shows and recreating various movie scenes of violent fisticuffs and emotional melodrama.

“Welllll, MAYbe we coullllld…”

“The kids are awake and the door’s open.”

“I could close the door…”

“The kids are awake.”

“I could give them the keys to the van and let ‘em drive around for a while…”

“No.”

“You’re pretty!”

“No.”

Wow, the world’s most effective oral contraceptive.

Sensing that this avenue of Father’s Day gift getting was going nowhere, I did the next best thing—“What do YOU have planned for today?”

“I was thinking about going SHOPPING!”

As I mentioned Thursday, Father’s Day gifts at my house tend to be skewed greatly toward the GIVER’S tastes—witnessed by the fact that I really didn’t want to go shopping, yet that was exactly what I was going to be allowed to do. Yippee. In all truthfulness, I am one of the few guys I know who actually likes to go shopping—provided it is sans enfants. I could stand around with Reba looking at bras and panties and twee doodads all day long, but once the kids are invited along, all bets are off. Shopping becomes an exercise in Not Having A Bursted Aorta.

As I’ve mentioned, when you have more than two children, defense switches from man-to-man to zone, which is bad enough, but when your other teammate is heavily distracted by the search for the mythical pair of pants that’s cute and fits and doesn’t make her butt look big and is on sale, you wind up with something akin to it being 3rd and long, back on your own goal line, and the other team is blitzing AND your receivers are out of position. Your only options if you take the snap are to throw it away long downfield and figure it like a punt if they intercept, or do a short dump across the middle and get a yard or two of cushion so you have room to punt. In other words, sit in the car with the kids.

BUT, since this was ostensibly a search for Terrygifts, it might not be so bad. We decided to go ahead and do our usual Saturday evening routine that morning, just in case we got back late, so we shoved the kids into the wringer and switched it on HIGH for a while, then tumbled them dry on LOW until they were nice and shiny, then I got my shower, and we were ready to hit the door. As part of my special Dad Day activities, I had thought we could go to Cracker Barrel for breakfast, and now that it was NOON I was certainly hungry enough.

I like Cracker Barrel, except for the part of it that’s within reach of curious children, and the part of it that makes the wait for a seat and food measurable with a calendar. But it was breakfast, you know, and they do breakfast more breakfasty than any other purveyor of food and frilly pseudo-antiques within at least a mile or two of our house.

Got there and got the old ticker working overtime trying to -- “NO, put it down,” -- keep all the -- “Put that up, too, and DON’T get another one back out,” -- kids under control and -- “We’re NOT getting another stuffed animal!” -- maintain some semblance of -- “Where’d Catherine go?! COME HERE!” -- order in my life. ::sigh:: Finally got our table and the food came out in a relatively short time—only about thirty or forty people who arrived after us got theirs before us. Settle up, then it was time to go on to the store.

The stated purpose of the trip to the store was to find Daddy a Pair of Shoes. Being that I am thoroughly a creature of sedate and unchanging tastes in clothing and shoes, I only wear one kind of dress shoe. Wingtips, lace up, black or cordovan. That’s it. This has been difficult of late because these are about as trendy as buggy whips and spats, and all non-benchmade shoes-that-are-relatively-nice-and-I-can-afford are ugly as Herman Munster shoes. Big, ugly things with thick toes and soles that look their best only when the wearer has the name "Lester" embroidered on his uniform pocket right underneath the little wrench logo. There are some wingtips out there, but they are either obscenely expensive or insanely cheap. Guess what I’m wearing right now.

Yep. Crazy cheap shoes.

Finally had to let go of my last pair of good black shoes after about the sixth resoling. Couldn’t find a nice pair of replacement wingtip Florsheims anywhere. All of them were either big, ugly, or both. Or, loafers. With kilts. And tassels. (As if… ) So, I was forced to do something I have always told Boy not to do, which is to buy cheapo shoes. The pair I have has a RUBBER sole PERMANENTLY ATTACHED to the upper, which is not made out of real, live dead cows, but some sort of manmade dead cows that just don’t quite seem real. BUT, Reba found a sale paper the other day that said our local McRae’s store had honest-to-goodness Florsheim wingtips. They aren’t truly expensive shoes since they are made with the benefit of foreign child labor (not really…I don’t think) but they do have the slightly upscale benefit of being lovingly made with real bovine tops, and the soles and heels can be replaced several times.

So, off to McRae’s.

Go to Men’s Shoes, which is packed with customers. Well, maybe half a dozen. But, it was decidedly LESS packed with helpful sales staff, so things took a while. Luckily, there were my shoes, though! Hooray!

“Do you have this in a 10E?”

“Hmm, nah. Just have the loafer, or the one with the smooth toe.”

Grr. Loafers! Cap Toes!! Arrgh. You people are making it very difficult to be an old fart.

“Do you have it in a 9 1/2?”

“Mmm-hm.”

She disappeared into “The Back” and after a suitable period of chatting or eating a snack or whatever, brought back out a box. Unstuffed the right shoe, slid it on, stepped down, experienced the joys of Chinese foot binding. “You don’t have ANYthing back there in a wingtip?”

“Nah.”

::sigh:: Well, maybe I could get a couple of dress shirts. I like dress shirts that are 100% cotton, because, believe it or not, they don’t shrink up in the collar and cuffs. The ones that are mixed cotton and poly wind up looking like doll clothes after just a few launderings. Everything they had was 60/40 cotton/poly. “Y’all don’t have ANY 100% cotton dress shirts?”

“Nah.”

“Well, let’s go look at dresses!” This was said with bright enthusiasm, which means that I am not the one who said it.

M’kay. Over to Women’s, and my offensive line gets buried under the blitz—“ALRIGHT—you, you, you and you—let’s go.”

Off to Cargatory.

“Can we…”

NO!

“Dad…”

NO!

“Does it…”

NO!

“BUT I HAVE TO GO TO THE WESTWOOOOOOooooom!”

::Ralph Kramden slow burn::

Repeat at stores across the metro area.

Return home, and my Father’s Day gifts consist of six dresses, several small cute bracelets and a pretty set of earrings that match the trim on one dress PERFECTLY, and then there are three pairs of shorts that will only fit me if I am a child size 8, and two shirts, a yellow little girl sundress, and a special pair of pants that came with a PAIR OF PLASTIC SANDALS!! Ooooooh! PRETTY!!

As I said Thursday, I have only two things that belong to me…

Luckily, I did get six cards (four from the kids and two from the wife) and a series of hugs and kisses, and in a further bright spot, the kids were able to get into bed without the bother of a full hair-washing and nail-clipping.

Sunday was not quite so hectic—except for the necessity of having to iron one pretty little girl dress and one new wife dress in order for us not to a) go to church looking as though the clothes had been carelessly laid upon various horizontal pieces of furniture, and b) be late for church. Wouldn’t have been so bad except for having to do both dresses twice. And we had to leave RIGHT THEN.

Did my stand-in duty with the 5th and 6th graders, worshipped, fought sleep, went and had lunch with Ashley’s grandparents, went and visited with Reba’s mom and dad, went to the house to get something, went back to church to have a meeting about Vacation Bible School (I get to be Saul one night!), evening sermon, supper, home, finally get to stretch out and read the newspaper, sleep about five hours, then come here!

For some reason, I feel a bit tired.



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