Thursday, May 27, 2010

I'M A LITTLE BIT COUNTRY; I'M A LITTLE BIT RIMBAUD

Down at the honky, honky tonk,
I’m a-cryin’ in my beer.
I’m a-lookin’ up and down the bar, but you just aint nowhere.

Comme je descendais des Fleuves impassibles,
Je ne me sentis plus guidé par les haleurs :
Des Peaux-Rouges criards les avaient pris pour cibles
Les ayant cloués nus aux poteaux de couleurs.

à la Tonk, Tonk, Tonk
à la Honky, Tonky Tonk!

“I’m a down home boy” blares the big and fat, ole juke,
L’échine est un peu rouge, et le tout sent un goût
So I jump into my rusted ’67 Chevy Coupe
Horrible étrangement; on remarque surtout
This lonely cowboy’s flown the chicken coop
Des singularités qu’il faut voir à la loupe…

à la Tonk, Tonk, Tonk
à la Honky, Tonky Tonk!

Puis le col gras et gris, les larges omoplates with a big, fat steak!
Qui saillent; le dos court qui rentre et qui resort, and I aint lyin’;
Puis les rondeurs des reins semblent prendre l’essor, sometimes I just feel like dyin’;
La graisse sous la peau paraît en feuilles plates. The town hussy comes a-callin’, I aint buyin’:
Est-ce en ces nuits sans fonds que tu dors et t'exiles / Million d'oiseaux d'or, ô future Vigueur?  You can’t sing this song, friend, it’s my’in.

à la Tonk, Tonk, Tonk
à la Honky, Tonky Tonk!

L’eau claire; feedom fries, comme le sel des larmes d’enfance,
l’assaut au soleil des blancheurs des corps de femmes freedom fries;
freedom fries la soie, en foule et de lys pur, des oriflammes
sous les freedom murs dont quelque pucelle fries eut la défense;

à la Tonk, Tonk, Tonk
à la Honky, Tonky Tonk!

Croissant and grits!

 d.c. al fine

Sunday, May 23, 2010

THE COMMENT FORUM IS CLOSED OR: “You’re an idiot.” “No, you’re an idiot.” “You were an idiot first.” “You were an idiot before anybody else ever heard of idiots.” “At least I’m a trendsetter, and not a lemming, like you.” “Actually, I’m a trendsetter, and not a lemming like you.” “Ditto.” “Ditto.”

A recent article in the underground broadsheet, Civil- itty, suggests that, so adeptly has the Internet schooled its users in the finer points of intentional infliction of emotional distress, that the practice has become second nature to us now, like breathing out and breathing in. As the noted blogger and raconteur, Pygmalion Puff, put it recently, “I’ve grown accustomed to this farce.”

Hiding behind fake biographies, made-up statistics, and the spurious logic of simpletons crudely disguised as the thoughts of the profound (traits that the astute reader will recognize in a snap as the life force behind the average candidate for elective office), persons who are, in other venues, too timid to articulate with firm conviction a preference for paper or plastic, or to telegraph their recent ascension to the ranks of the self-congratulatory reusable set, assume, on-line, a persona of intellectual invincibility tinged with a condescending loutishness they would not dare display in the flesh. As we now know, anonymity breeds contempt.

In all but the rarest of instances, spelling, syntax, grammar, and cohesive thematic structure are to be sacrificed on the altar of electronic humiliation when it comes time to taking down an author or fellow reader by one or more pegs.  What matters most is tone – the more strident the better.

100 days from now, social scientists of the future, attempting to decipher how various populations of our current era treated one another,  may review the billions of on-line posts, comments, texts, tweets, and talkbacks preserved for posterity and conclude: “Well, it all depends on who you ask.”


Monday, May 17, 2010

Gardening With My Wife

One of the important rules is that when you screw up enough courage to go for a ride with the bank on a house in the suburbs, you must learn how to garden. It is a covenant in the mortgage agreement, and also one of the 613 mitzvot. This is not one of the commandments that can be wriggled out of like, say, not eating shrimp -- except when no one else is looking. No, it must be done, and it must be done right. Otherwise, you will need counseling. Here is how you do it.

First you call Bruno, who has a truck and lots of experienced advisers from down South America way. They know when, where, why, who, and how  to spread fertilizer (the 4 Ws and an H of gardening). They’re also expert at blowing dead leaves around with engines that, in a former life, did yeoman’s work propelling jumbo jets across the Atlantic, but, in their twilight years, still hasten a bone-curdling deafness to everyone within a 3-mile radius as they cheerfully make their rounds.

Remember to call the right Bruno -- not the junior Bruno whose office is behind the thumb tack factory.  The other Bruno spreads a pretty mean manure in his own right, but he is from the wrong side of the tacks, and not the Bruno to whom I have reference. He deliberately uses the Bruno name, partly because it is his name, but also as part of a sinister scheme to cut into the original Bruno’s market share by using a name (his own) which is likely to cause confusion in the marketplace. We were sure confused when we inadvertently called the wrong Bruno and discovered not only that the  Brunos are cousins, but also that they are feuding and  haven’t spoken to each other in 19 years because of a tiff over some winter cabbage.

As good as the original Bruno is at what he does, do not be misled into the supposition that what he does is “gardening” in the strictest sense of the term. Bruno merely lays the groundwork for the actual tilling, which is what you will be doing later. 

Having a Bruno does not mean, as some have suggested cynically, that you will be: “gardening by numbers” or “gardening with training wheels,” or “hiring a professional gardener and taking credit for the results.” Neither will your later noble foray into the sod be any less  authentically unassisted as a result of the handwritten notes squeezed behind the storm door by Bruno (while you are away at work trying to earn enough salad to pay for the home-grown kind) like so many  supplications stuffed into the crevices of  the Western Wall. Bruno’s prayers are more akin to helpful hints: “Planted vinca along driveway. Water for 13 hours straight after 6 -- or it will die. Also, please stay off  backyard = 3 days.  We massaged grass. Needs time to pulsate.” While the messages are not always a model of clarity, the penmanship is first rate.

 The simple truth is that Bruno’s contributions are really just peripheral. Now it is your turn to get your hands dirty and to make the worms farblonjet.
   
 As you undertake this process, one of the other big rules comes to mind.  It is this: there are no unilateral gardening decisions. This is not a rule to be gleaned from one of Bruno’s cryptic messages. This is, rather, one of those maxims that can be learned only with painstaking trial and error -- mostly error. As it is written: “When you live in a house with someone else whose name is on the mortgage, all gardening decisions are to be made only in consultation with the other mortgagor.  P.S., the other mortgagor is not so bound by this rule, and is, thus, free to make unilateral gardening decisions of her own, no matter how whimsical and insane.”
   
Here is an example of this rule in practice:  “The begonia that you planted in front of the statue of the headless Cupid when I wasn’t looking is pathetic and sickly and has some kind of fungus that will kill everything.”

And so, the begonia must be moved to a less ostentatious location, i.e., the barrel marked with an orange label reading “yard waste.”
   
Though it is, indeed, a drastic move, my wife does have a remarkably curative touch. After one of her frequent surveys of the fraction of an acreage we call home (the bank calls it “collateral“), she transfers to a sunny area of the yard dubbed the “Infirmary”  numerous flora debacles -- born of my hammer and tong approach to landscaping, an approach which incorporates an abject inability (I like to think of it as a “refusal”) to read the instructions for planting and care. I don’t need to read the instructions, I assure her; I can just suss things out -- in a kind of “make the desert bloom” mentality.

 The number of patients in the Infirmary, however, is evidence to the contrary, she reminds me. She is right, of course.
   
 During her regular inspections of the grounds, which I lovingly call “the Dead & Dying Report,”  I am often called upon to explain myself.  Why, for example, are all the  peonies scrunched together and barely peeking up above ground level? Didn’t the tag attached to the container specify that the hole be no more than 6 inches deep and that the flowers be placed at least 3 feet apart?  Or: The hedges look like victims of the Texas Chainsaw Massacre, couldn’t you see that you were denuding them? And: “Are you just pretending that the morning glory I spent hours training hasn’t keeled over from utter lack of watering?”
   
 But whereas she tends to see the glass as half empty, I like to maintain an air of childlike optimism and to redirect her attention to something more pleasant. Look!  There’s a chickadee taking the waters in the fountain with a few of his closest friends!

 Don’t try to change the subject, she instructs, as she transports the wounded to the Infirmary where they will be nursed lovingly back to the pink of health. For good measure, she adds: “Do not, under any circumstance, attempt to plant these without supervision,” an admonition I thought, upon hearing for the first dozen times, was just silly talk, but now, with its incessant repetition, am beginning to realize may actually be a serious directive.    

I try to convince her that in all things horticultural, wondrous results can be obtained through the application of positive imagery. Instead of noticing all the vegetation on the verge of giving the thought of ever growing again the old heave-ho, I beseech her to view the garden in a whole new light. I tell her: “Impress all your negative thoughts and emotions about my agricultural abilities with a pen upon a piece of paper. Roll up the piece of paper into a ball. Bang it against the floor and then stomp on it.  Slap it around like a two-bit hood and yell: “If you ever pop into my mind again while I’m discussing my husband’s farming methods, I’ll kill you! Do you hear me!?”

She isn’t paying attention to my lecture on positive affirmations, though.  Instead, she has gone inside the house to take a telephone call  from Bruno.  Some of the men, it turns out, will be around later in the day to remove the protective covering from the roses that had been laid down to protect the new buds from the mid-Spring killing frost that we had earlier in the week, he tells her. That would be the protective covering that I thought was garbage blown over from the neighbor’s yard and had thrown away three days ago without (as is my custom) consulting with my wife before she ever knew it had been installed. At this moment, I hear my name intoned from the kitchen at an operatic decibel.

“What have  you done with the protective covering for the newly-planted roses!?  Did you throw it away, allowing them to freeze to death!?”

“Why, look!” I respond hopefully.  “There’s a cloud in the sky in the shape of a carrot.  Surely this is an omen that presages Edenic bliss for us and the seeds we have sewn.”
   
Speaking of Eden, she considers briefly the possibility of banishment, but settles on some redirecting of her own.
   
This is not to say that all of her unilateral designs sit well with me. I can’t abide asparagus and don’t see why we have to have so much of it in the garden, not to mention the tending, harvesting, and eating of it. Ditto spinach. The aesthetic value of these plants is lost on me. Yet, given the morbidity rate of my crops, I must bite my tongue. It hurts, of course, so I try not to bite it too hard. I don’t really bite my tongue.  That’s just a figure of speech.  What I really do is mutter loudly under my breath, so that she can hear my every word and get my meaning without the slightest trace of ambiguity.

It is incredible to me that with all the rabbits, squirrels, and chipmunks that eat everything I try to grow, not a one of them is partial to spinach or asparagus.  It is depressing to have to eat something that even a squirrel thinks isn't worth the effort.

To reciprocate, I take my wife on my own Dead & Dying Tour.  “I think the spinach and asparagus plants are all dead,” I say, crushing them with my foot when she turns away momentarily.  “Maybe we should rip them out and replace them with something more successful like watermelon and cherries,” I suggest.

“You’re crazy,” she answers. “They’re the healthiest thing growing here.” Then she implores me to please stop stepping on her plants. Nothing escapes her gaze.

My wife is obsessed with things she considers to be invasive species (they look like friendly vines to me, but I am not exactly wont to consult a field guide, or any other authority for that matter).  She can be found most mornings hacking away at the roots with an axe and flinging the pieces onto the grass while I drink my coffee unobtrusively and look the other way, praying that I will not be summoned to assist in the surgery. As she works, I try to pick up a few tips from her streaming monologue. Not only have I misidentified the vine, apparently, but also an impressive collection of weeds for which I have cared with beatific ignorance. I would have continued to do so, it seems, until disabused of the notion that they were ever welcome in our lives.

Ultimately, As a result of my rate of  recidivism, certain furloughs have been revoked and my outdoor responsibilities have come to consist chiefly of hosing down the sidewalk to discourage the dandelions. Until my wife explained it to me, I never would have realized the importance of this task to the magical process of photosynthesis. But deferring to her vastly superior trove of  cultivation knowledge, I hear and I do. Who am I to argue?

Besides, Bruno approves.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Mapquest Diretions for a Cat Named Fatboy Slim


1. Start out in the front yard going EAST toward  the other side of the street. 0.00001 mi Map  |  Avoid

2. Hear something in the backyard,  stop, pause, and turn LEFT under the gate to slink under the hemlock. 0.0009 mi Map  |  Avoid

3. Spot a chipmunk and Turn RIGHT onto a big root behind the cherry tree. 0.00006 mi Map  |  Avoid

4. Keep LEFT at the (plastic) fork in the grass, stop without warning, and roll around in something. 0.0001 mi Map  |  Avoid

5. Keep circling the fork hissing at the dog next door, but not really meaning anything by it. 0.000 mi Map  |  Avoid

6. Pounce on the chipmunk near the fork when he least expects it;  then let him go when the master runs outside in his scivvies, clapping his hands loudly screaming all the while: "drop it!  drop it NOW!" 0.0001 mi Map  |  Avoid

7. Run next door, turn slightly RIGHT, and slither under a car, stopping first to drink from a pool of rainwater in the driveway. For no reason whatsoever, let out an other-worldly moan, repeating loudly and often so as to trigger in even those who have reached Nirvana an uncontrollable desire to strangle you. 0.0002 mi Map  |  Avoid

8. Escape to the other neighbor's yard by galloping to the LEFT when someone throws a shoe out a kitchen window landing just inches from your head. 0.0001 mi Map  |  Avoid

9. Turn RIGHT into the garden and lie down on the strawberries, crushing them with your girth. 0.000 mi Map  |  Avoid

10. Study the bird whining incessantly like a crazed cardinal on the branch above and jump UP onto the fence to get a closer look (thereby giving a squirrel a near-coronary, and encouraging a row of starlings to flutter away in 19 different directions).  It is, in fact,  a cardinal, and he is crazed. 0.0000 mi Map  |  Avoid

11. Dart LEFT back to your house when the automatic lawn sprinkler sprays your paws with a fine mist. 0.0001 mi Map  |  Avoid

12. Your favorite spot on the chair in the sun on the patio is on the RIGHT.
Map  |  Avoid
Favorite Spot on Chair in the Sun on the Patio.
 
Total Travel Estimate:   4 minutes   /   0.00000003 miles   Fuel Cost: Calculate

 

Thursday, May 6, 2010

A TALE OF TWO SETTEES

Q: What advice would you give to someone who wanted to get into the blogging business?

A:  Well, I’d sit both of them down and say, “first thing,  quit your day job. All the rest is commentary.”

Q:    Are you saying there are only 2 people left who don’t have a blog?

A:  Yes, but in the time that it took you to ask that question, it went down to one guy in Liechtenstein.

Q:  You’re exaggerating.  I don’t have a blog.

A:  You’re from Liechtenstein?

Q: What is it with you and Liechtenstein?

A: I just like to say “Liechtenstein.”

Q: Don’t you think it’s infantile to repeat the same thing over and over?  I mean, is that supposed to be funny? Nobody thinks it’s funny.  A child could do that.

A:  Liechtenstein, Liechtenstein, Liechtenstein, Liechtenstein, Liechtenstein, Liechtenstein, Liechtenstein, Perth Amboy, Liechtenstein, Liechtenstein, Liechtenstein, Liechtenstein, Liechtenstein. Could a child do that?  I mean fast-like?

Q:  Seriously. Do you think blogging is just a fad?

A:  Blogging will remain popular until sex robots are perfected.  Then it will taper off somewhat.

Q:  But plenty of people already have other hobbies -- other things to do that compete with blogging, don‘t they?

A:    Like what? Flossing?

Q:    What’s your point?

A: Blogs come and go; flossing is forever.

Q:  Why do you think anyone bothers with your blog?

A:  Well, it’s 3 minutes of respite from the horrible news.

Q:  You mean like the global economic crisis, riots in Greece, abuse scandals in the Catholic Church, giant oil slicks in the Gulf of Mexico, devastating floods in Nashville, deadly earthquakes in Haiti, Chile, and China, the genocide in Darfur, the Lord’s Resistance Army, crazy, dangerous dictators, attempted bombings in Times Square, international sex slavery, the resurgence of neo-fascism, nuclear weapons proliferation, terrorism,  and endless war?

A:  I was talking about Spirit Airlines charging for using the overhead bins.  

Q:   Do you have any favorite writers -- any influences?

A:   Slaphappy Dude.

Q:   What has he written?

A:  Slaphappy Dude #1
      Slaphappy Dude Rules.
      Slaphappy Dude is the Man.
      Slaphappy Dude Rules.
      Sl phap           de     les
      Slaphappy Dude Rules.
     
Q:    He wrote “Slaphappy Dude Rules” three times, plus a possible 4th that was partially obscured?

A:    Yes, but in different places. One was under a bridge.  He’s quite prolific.

Q:    What is it about his work that you like?

A:    Brevity.

Q:  You haven’t mentioned Pincus Ming Mandelbaum gratuitously, yet.

A:   No.  Not yet.

Q:   What exactly do you get out of doing this?  What’s in it for you?

A:   Twenty per cent of the gross and a player to be named later.

Q:    Any plans for the future?

A:   I plan to live in the past.  It’s cheaper and the weather’s fine.

Q:   Is there anything else you’d like to say?

A: Liechtenstein.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

A Day in the Office -- Post-it Notes Edition

 Feed parking meter in 18 minutes!

    Send money to gov’t.

    Get: Eggs, seltzer, cat food, earplugs, ghee.

    PAY PHONE BILL!

    Feed parking meter in 12 minutes.

    Retrieve nice slacks from Goodwill –exchange for crappy.

    Idea for screenplay: Registry of Motor Vehicles -- The Musical

    Borrow someone’s cell phone. Call phone co. to get service restored.

    Feed parking meter in 10 min!

    Garbage night, tonight. Be there or be square.

    New Facebook account password:  iforget123 (all lower case).

    Call phone co. back -- Mr. Smelly.
    1-800-999-9999: Urgent!

    Need alternate Facebook password -- other one taken -- try: iforget12345.

   Gingko Biloba Gingko Biloba Gingko Biloba Why do I keep writing this?

    Feed parking meter in 7 min!

    Addition to shopping list: pocket square (with diagram instructions)

    Call back phone co.  Mr. S-N-e-l-T-y -- not Smelly. Cell phone qual. sux.

    Still need new Facebook password: iforget123456789?

    Re-stock post-its supply. Get ones that don’t fall off after 3 secs. Also get tape to tape up post-its.

   Hunan Kosher Happy Fun Time Eating Place Take-out hotline: 617-Hu-nann

Who is Moishe Chang???

    Put $$$ in bank before 5 pm. to cover phone payment.

    Get $$$ from someplace to put in bank.

    Parking meter in 3 min!

    Don’t get stupid cat food or he won’t eat it.  NO clams!

    Remove dead potted palm from front hall. 2 years is way too long. Bad Feng Shui.

Another shopping addition: watering can.


    Still need new password: iforgetlikeevrybodyelse123456789.  See if it works.

    Return Goodwill voicemail: “You are banned.” Means what? Be cool. Play dumb. Banned over slacks? UNconstitutional! 

  www.interestingwebsitestoviewfromoffice.com


  Parking meter in 1 min. or car will be towed!

 Buy suit. Take to drycleaner to seem normal.

  Pick up drycleaning.

   Phone Payment Confirmation number Per Mr. Snelty:

1324I200004005073993469200000000000000QJW078000ws0

Send “thank you” to ??? for dinner last month. They are a nice couple.  Espec. whatshername.

Return overdue dvd rentals.

Never mind – vid store shut down.

Send complaint to Facebook over password fiasco.  Need working password to do this.

Shower turned off this a.m.?

Gingko Biloba

Municipal tow/impoundment lot number: 617-PAY-YRTX.  Cash only.

Bum a ride home.  Maybe Mr. Snelty  has a car.