Friday, December 30, 2011

A Grateful Day

I left my iPad on the airplane.

I gathered my bag from the overhead, jostled for my position in the aisle, and walked out of the terminal with my iPad still stuffed in the back pocket of the seat in front of where I sat!

Later that night, I reached into my carry-on bag, where I had carefully kept the device during the entire trip, and my heart dropped through the floor when I realized what I had done! It was about 1:00 in the morning at this point; we didn't arrive until 11PM, and there were long waits at the baggage claim and for the shuttle. I frantically called the 24-hour number for Southwest, and the lady there - who no doubt had fielded many such calls - calmly told me what to do and who to call and urged me to have "positive thoughts" about the outcome.

I did as instructed and called the local baggage office, which was closed, as expected, and left a message about the missing iPad, flight information, my name, etc., and I also called a second number which was the official "lost article" number, and another kind lady took down the same information for the official lost item record in the computer. Then I went to bed and dreamed about missing iPads.

At 7AM the local Southwest Baggage Office called and told me that they had my iPad.

Never. Never, was I so grateful to be wakened by an early phone call! There was great rejoicing, because that which had been lost was found!

It's now later in the morning, all is well in iPad land, and I'm checking email. One message is from the Circulation manager of the American Statesman, stating that they would resume delivery of the newspaper today, as requested. Only problem is, they never stopped delivering the paper while we were gone, as I also requested! After a few days, our neighbor noticed the build-up of papers and began gathering them, but for a while they lay in the yard and loudly declared our absence.

"Boy, am I going to give someone at the paper a piece of my mind!" I said.
"No you're not," my smart wife said. "Today, you are going to be grateful. This is going to be a grateful day."

At this time of year especially, those words really struck home. In fact, I'm going to make that my resolution for the coming year. My only resolution. "Today, I am going to be grateful."
  • So, instead of sending a snarky email to the Statesman Circulation department, I'll politely point out that while I'm grateful that they restarted the paper on time, I would have been even more so if they had stopped it as requested.
  •  And if service at a restaurant is slow, Ill be grateful that I will eventually have something good to eat; that doesn't happen for everyone.
  • Or if the rental car was a fiasco, I'll be grateful that we traveled safely, with no roadside trauma, and I'll send a letter to some VP in the company, pointing out how helpful the counter manager was.
  •  And if those about me upset or disappoint me, I'll be grateful for their love and friendship.
  • And when I really mess up (hard to imagine, isn't it?) I'll be grateful for the opportunity to improve and become better.
  • And when problems and troubles pile up, I'll be grateful for a Father that sustains me far beyond any setback.
  • And I'll strive to recognize daily the goodness and blessings that I receive, and be grateful for them.
So that's my resolution, and I'm grateful for the unfolding of a new year to allow me to practice this gift.

How about you?

    Wednesday, December 28, 2011

    The Dr. said what?

    Okay, I had a little sinus surgery in mid-December. I'll spare you the details, but this was a repeat performance of a similar surgery performed waaay back in 1999. I expected that my recovery would be the same as then. Couple of days rest, then right back into a regular schedule. Somehow it didn't happen that way.

    Our first clue came when I was still in recovery and the Dr. came out to talk to Barb. He said everything had gone fine, and he wanted to see me in his office on Tuesday or Wednesday of next week. 

    Barb said, "Uhh, we are leaving for California on Tuesday."
    The Dr. said, "I think not."
    Barb said, "Then I suppose you don't want him going to Ft Worth on Saturday, either?"
    The Dr. said, "Absolutely not. Have him in my office on Monday."
    Barb said, to a friend, "There's no way I'm telling Bob about this until later."

    But she did, and my response was, "No way I'm missing those trips!" So I went home to recover and bounce back and prove to the Dr. that this was no big deal. It was a big deal. After surgery on Tuesday, I got out for a bit on Thursday and discovered I was, to put it mildly, shaky. I tried again on Friday with only marginally better results. Where was the old vim and vigor? Where was the stamina? Surely I have not grown... old. 

    Friday I cancelled the trip to Ft Worth and fretted a great deal about the trip to California. Airline tickets had been purchased; deposits had been made. Someone else would have to meet Jana and the kids in San Jose. Worry, worry, worry. Saturday I did not move from the recliner. Sunday morning I went to church and that was it. Monday, I went to see the Dr. 

    I debated long and hard about not saying a word to him about the trip, hoping that he would have forgotten about the post-op conversation. But I had read some scary things about flying and sinus surgery, and decided that if I was going, I needed to know what the potential problems were. So after he confirmed that I was healing very nicely, I kind of happened to sort of slip in a little mention of the planned trip.

    "You're going where?"
    "Uh, flying to California tomorrow."
    "Will you be close to a hospital in case you have problems?"
    "Absolutely!"
    "Okay. Promise me you'll take it easy, and I'll see you in 3 months."
    "Yesss!"

    Monday, December 26, 2011

    Monday Meanderings - 12.26.2011

    I'm still awash in the sea of Christmas. I hope that you and yours have been as blessed as we have been. 

    I did surface long enough to note that at about 3pm on December 20th, the 10,000th visit to this blog took place. I don't know who it was, but they use RoadRunner (Time Warner) as a service provider, and they use a Mac. Who would have thought?

    There have been a lot of Meanderings over the last week - so many that I'm going to have to sort it all out before writing about it. 

    So, take a breather, as I must, and we'll get back together later.

    Bob

    Wednesday, December 21, 2011

    The moose story - stories for my grandchildren

    I mentioned my Grandmother Anderson's brother from Canada - the one who brought fermented cranberries to the family dinner - and promised more, so here's the moose story.


    Great Uncle Jess (I mistakenly called him Virgil earlier; though he is named Jessie Virgil, he went by Jess) went with his dad to Canada when he was seventeen years old (he was born in 1896).  Canada was the new frontier at the time, and it suited Uncle Jess just fine. He stayed, living most of his life in primitive areas of British Columbia, became a Canadian citizen and married a young woman from Norway, Mariene Carlsen. Together, they lived in the backwoods, hunting and trapping for food and engaging in the fur business as a livelihood. When civilization encroached, they simply moved further back into the wilderness.

    Years later, on one of their visits to Texas, my brother Jim thoughtfully taped several hours of conversation with the pair, and the stories they told were incredible - the stuff of the wilderness adventure novel, but true. Like the time they were out running their bear traps. One of the traps had a bear and Uncle Jess was busy skinning it, when he said that he heard the snap of a rifle and the next thing he knew a 400 pound bear came crashing down the hillside and rolled right over him. When he freed himself from under the newly-deceased bear and stood up, he found that Mariene had seen the bear up the trail, and just as it charged, shot it with a small caliber rifle and fortunately pierced the bear's heart!

    On another occasion they were moose hunting, but had seen no prey, so stopped to prepare their meal. They had but one rifle with them, and Uncle Jess leaned it against a rock and turned to build a fire. Almost immediately, he heard the gun go off, and he thought, "Oh No! The rifle fell over and when I turn around I'm going to be a widower." What actually happened was Aunt Mariene saw a young bull moose on the trail, picked up the rifle and shot it between the eyes! But I digress.

    The moose story happened right at home. At one point, the couple lived by a navigable river and depended on a boat operated by a mining company up the river for supplies. In return, they provided the company fresh meat. It was late in the season, and bear meat was all that was available, so Uncle Jess was delighted to see a pair of moose swimming across the river to their bank. He shot and killed one, but missed the other. The moose he shot was floating down river, so he jumped in the canoe, chased down the moose, put a rope on it and began towing it back to their dock.

    In the meantime, Mariene, having heard the shots, came down to see what was going on. She saw a moose struggling to get up on the steep bank out of the river; it only had its front hooves and nose on the bank at that point. Thinking that Jess had shot and mortally wounded it, Mariene picked up a hatchet from the nearby wood pile, walked over to the moose and dispatched it with a stroke between the eyes!  When Jess got back with his moose, she asked him what he wanted to do with the other moose. What moose? The other one you shot. I only shot one moose. You mean there was nothing wrong with that moose I just killed with a hatchet?

    And that's the moose story.

    Monday, December 19, 2011

    The Jesus hat

    I have fun wearing my Santa hat during this season. It's always neat to see some little kid's eyes get big when I walk in a store or restaurant. And when I wear it some place I regularly go, like the recording studio, or the dentist's office, there is a lot of comment and joking about being naughty or nice. Occasionally there's even a photo op. The other evening I wore it into Chuy's and an elderly gentleman (all things are relative) came over to the table and thanked me for wearing the hat. He said it brought some joy to the place, and he just liked seeing it.

    But there are some places and circumstances where the hat makes me a little uncomfortable. Like when I pull up to a stop sign wearing the hat and there's a panhandler standing on the corner. Now, it is not my custom to accommodate panhandlers. You may disagree with me on that, but that is my position. So there I sit, and the dude is looking at me, and looking at the hat and I know he's thinking, "You're a phony. You ain't living up to the hat."

    So the other day, after one of these experiences, it occurred to me, "What if - instead of Santa hats - we all wore Jesus hats?" You know, hats that clearly and loudly identify us as followers of Jesus. Hats that proclaim we have chosen a life as a follower, a representative, a servant.

    Where would we be uncomfortable wearing a Jesus hat? Almost everywhere? Who would look at us and say, " Phoney!" Excuse me while I try to slip onto the back row here, where I might be less noticible.

    Join me as I reflect on the reason for the season and ponder my choice of wearing apparel for the coming year.

    Monday Meanderings - 12.19.2011

    Santa came early and brought an iPad. Apple, the original minimalist company, included these instructions - and only these instructions - for using the iPad (the pen is to show you the scale of the information card):


    Now here is the 8 1/2 X 11 sheet of instructions for the cover!


    More than twice the amount of information for attaching and using the cover than for the device itself!

    And now we have the problem that confronts all of us media-savvy, socially-conscious,  cyber families - where to plug in all the charging stations?

    Formula 1 is back on the agenda for Austin. However, in order to fund it, now they are going to set it up as a toll road. All the cars stop at toll booths once a lap and pay a fee.

    I was wearing my Santa hat at the recording studio the other day and one of the regulars came in and said, "Santa, I've been very naughty. But of course you knew that, didn't you?"

    It's been raining off and on for a week now. That's not a bad thing in Texas, mind you, but it reminds us of how fickle we are when it comes to weather. It even makes one think nostalgically of those days of summer. Those 80 days in a row of triple digit summer. Okay, maybe not yet, but I sure would like to see some sunshine.

    Surprisingly, there is now more color in the leaves in this area than we have seen in several years. It seems late in the season for that, especially considering the drought conditions all year. But they are beautiful, unless they have all fallen off - like the leaves in my front yard.


    I'm really hoping for a good breeze to come along and blow these in my neighbor's yard, as usual.

    Friday, December 16, 2011

    You can't pee until you go home.

    I posted some months back about some of the strange things that can occur during a hospital stay. In this case,  my wife was the patient and I was just the observer. This time around, I was the victim patient, and it wasn't a hospital as such, but rather a "surgical center" - one of those places that provide only out-patient services. For the record, I had a bit of sinus work done; it was no big deal and I'm fine, thank you.

    When my ENT doctor set up this procedure, he gave me a packet of information which included a brochure from the Grace L. Furguson Surgical Center and Storm Door Company, and I dutifully read through all the information. One of the first things to catch my eye was a prominent section about Advanced Directives - a fancy term for "do not resuscitate." Since I was to be the resusitee, in this case, I read the section closely. In brief, the surgical center insisted that you bring a copy of the DNR orders, but that you should be aware that they would ignore them and resuscitate you to the extent that they could push you across the street to the real hospital next door where you could happily pass on to your reward! Really?

    Next in the brochure was the requirement that you spend the better part of an hour filling in the online patient history and medical information. It was, to say the least, extensive but doing that online is preferable to trying to juggle one of those little clip boards they give you when you get there. So guess what was the first thing that they had you do when you arrived for check in? "Just these few questions, and review this page....and this one... and..."

    The brochure also proudly proclaimed that the surgical center was a WI-FI  hot spot, but signs everywhere said cell phones were verboten.

    Hospital gowns have long been the butt (pun intended) of many a joke, so I was pleasantly surprised to see that they gave me some pants along with the gown - and this was no flimsy paper gown - it had an inner lining and a cardboard "portal" that allowed them to attach a flexible tube and blow warm air into the liner portion of the gown! How cool warm was that? I wonder what that cost me? Along with the disposable blood pressure cuff?

    Okay, I'm prepped and ready, and off we go - down this corridor and that, turn this way, turn that way, back and cut to get around this corner and here we are at the operating room where the door is apparently too small for the bed I'm on! So I hop out of bed and walk into the OR! I wonder if they drug me out when they were done or had me walk out on my own?

    And you know how when you are dismissed from a regular hospital there's all this waiting around for forms to sign and more waiting around for someone to come get you? Well, there's no waiting around at the Grace L. Furguson Surgical Center and Storm Door Company. I guess they needed the bed. "Sorry, you'll have to do that when you get home. Time to go. Bye."

    That's okay. I was ready to come home anyway.

    Wednesday, December 14, 2011

    Health Day

    Maybe that should read "Mental Health Day."  

    See you on Friday.

    Monday, December 12, 2011

    Monday Meanderings - 12.12.2011

    I wore my Santa hat into the allergist's office the other day - none of the nurses wanted to give me my shot.  "Uh-uh! I'm not sticking Santa Claus. Not me. Go get Dr. Goldstein - it won't matter if he hurts Santa."

    Well, I'm on another round of steroids, and as I mentioned, that's mostly all on the up-side for me. It must have a cumulative effect, or I'm just getting used to how good food tastes when you are on this stuff and the good smells just keep on coming. That, of course, tends to interfere with my new life-style, eating-wise, and I admit that there have been a few days of disappointments on the scales, but I am proud to say that I  reached a milestone this past week - down 20 pounds! Thank you.

    Weight loss is not without its issues. For instance, my pants keep slipping down. I got some new jeans and I needed a new (shorter) belt, so we stopped by a men's store on Friday. I needed to try on a belt, but as soon as I removed the old one, my pants started toward the floor. I grabbed them just in time, thank goodness. It would have been awkward to explain to the clerk why my wife was collapsed on the floor in the middle of the store, laughing her **** off.

    Speaking of tasting good, we were walking through an HEB the other evening and saw a gingerbread house kit. The gingerbread is already baked and cut in the needed shapes, and all the icing and other goodies are included. Barb said, "We could get one of those and put it together. And then we could eat it." I suggested that we might consider just eating it without going to all the trouble of putting it together.

    The question is: was this fraud, practicing medicine without a license, or good customer service?  My doctor sent me for some blood work, but when I handed the lab technician the order, she took one look at the medical code and said, "What? There's no way they will pay for this under that code!" So she called the doctor's office and talked to several people in order to get the right number. But when she put the new number in the computer, it was came back invalid as well. "Okay, I know the number this should be...let's use this one. There you go!"

    The power went off the other evening after some poor soul plowed through a major power line pole over on Cameron Road. We are properly prepared for contingencies like that, though; we got out the battery-powered lantern that gave us enough illumination to get around safely, and then we settled down foe a quiet evening at home. No TV, no stereo, no phone, no distractions. Just Barb and I in the quiet companionship of a time together with no interruptions- she with her Kindle, and me with my iPad. Nice.

    And there is no truth to the rumor that we have not decorated the house for Christmas. See?

    Friday, December 9, 2011

    People are the strangest folks I know

    Okay, here's a confession. It's after midnight and the Blog muse turned in hours ago, but I simply cannot disappoint my faithful readers (neither one of them) so I turn once again to News of the Weird. Somehow that fits the week I've had.

    A New Hampshire woman who brought her mother's ashes to bingo games for good luck is hoping for their return after the urn containing them was stolen. Police say the urn was stolen from Diane Bozzi's van Tuesday morning in Rochester by someone targeting unlocked cars. Bozzi says the urn was in a bag that she was planning to take to her bingo game later in the day. She and her mother loved playing bingo together. Before her mother died in 2002, Bozzi promised her she would take some of her ashes with her to play. Her mother agreed, saying she would bring Bozzi luck. For everybody but Mom, I guess.

    Rhode Island residents have complained for weeks about foul odors wafting from the state's main landfill, so state lawmakers are pledging to investigate and see where their noses lead them. The General Assembly announced Wednesday that a commission that will try to put an end to the rotten-egg smell at the Johnston landfill. The odor has prompted complaints from as far away as Attleboro, Mass., about 14 miles away. The agency that operates the landfill blames recent rains for the smell and has installed vents to trap gasses coming from it. Okay, let's see if I get this straight. The county dump smells bad. Really?

    A Utah bird hunter was shot in the buttocks after his dog stepped on a shotgun laid across the bow of a boat. Box Elder County Sheriff's Deputy Kevin Potter says the 46-year-old Brigham City man was duck hunting with a friend when he climbed out of the boat to move decoys. Potter says the man left his 12-gauge shotgun in the boat and the dog stepped on it, causing it to fire. It wasn't clear whether the safety on the gun was on at the time. Can I take a guess? Potter says the man wasn't seriously injured, in part because he was wearing waders. Just be glad he wasn't out hunting with Vice President Dick Cheney.

    A Georgia man preparing for the Christmas season spent a night in jail after he was arrested for shooting at mistletoe outside a Decatur shopping mall. William E. Robinson, 66, was charged with reckless conduct and discharging a firearm on someone else's property after he opened fire on a tree that held a sprig of the plant, which is commonly used as a Christmas decoration. Robinson said that he was merely following a holiday tradition when he used his double-barrel 12-gauge shotgun to knock the plant out of a tree outside the North DeKalb Mall. "Every year I go somewhere to get some mistletoe to decorate the house," Robinson told the station. "I get some for my friends that can't get mistletoe. The best way to get it is with a shotgun." And how glad we are that he was not in the Mall shopping for an X-Box?

    A 31-year-old Florida man allegedly attempted to shoplift four steaks and a pair of candles by hiding the items in his trousers. Officials arrested Naples resident Dannial Ashley last week after grocery store employees spotted him stuffing the meat and candles -- unlit, of course -- into his pants. When one store worker confronted Ashley, the would-be thief ditched his stolen goods and attempted to escape on foot; an employee reportedly chased down Ashley and convinced him to walk back to the store. Is that a romantic dinner in your pants or are you just happy to see me?

    But the story that wins this weeks Weirdness Award is:

    Zany experiments testing scientific theories in real-world settings have earned the TV show "MythBusters" a devoted following, but a stunt gone awry met with an unhappy audience when an errant cannonball went shooting through a California family's bedroom. Sheriff's deputies are still measuring how, exactly, the cannonball flew from a bomb range in the rolling hills flanking a suburban San Francisco Bay area neighborhood and rocketed into the front door of a home and through its master bedroom before landing in a neighbor's parked minivan.

    Hosts for the Discovery Channel show fired the cannonball Tuesday as they filmed an episode testing whether other types of projectiles shot from a cannon would pick up the same speed and have the same impact as the steel ball. Later, the production team plans to film flying stone cannonballs at a rock quarry in Northern California. Instead of hitting a string of water-filled garbage cans, however, the cannonball passed over the barrels, crashed straight through a protective cinderblock wall and careened off the hill behind it, said Alameda County Sheriff's Department spokesman J.D. Nelson. "It missed the target and took kind of an oddball bounce," Nelson said. "It was almost like skipping a rock on a lake. Instead of burying it into the hill it just went skyward."
     
    So see? Your day is not going so bad after all. 

    Wednesday, December 7, 2011

    The 5 best toys of all time...

    File this under the heading "Blog ideas that I wish I had thought of first." But I didn't, so I'll just do what I always do and blatantly steal  shamelessly borrow  graciously credit Wired Magazine's GeekDad blog and writer Jonathan Liu for condensing the all-time great toy list down to the essential 5. Mr, Liu's take -
    "All five should fit easily within any budget, and are appropriate for a wide age range so you get the most play out of each one. These are time-tested and kid-approved! And as a bonus, these five can be combined for extra-super-happy-fun-time." 
    1. Stick
    Almost, almost, the universal toy, sticks come in all sizes, from slender twigs to oof! can't pick this sucker up! Easily available everywhere, it's almost as if they grow on trees. And with such a wide variety of shapes and sizes, the right stick can become almost anything - as long as it's a weapon. Traditionally, a stick's primary use is for hitting something. And that something is anything that's within reach, including one's sibling if he or she is not smart enough to stay out of range.

    Once hitting grows old, or becomes forbidden in this household, almost any stick can quickly become a gun, or a spear! Or a knife! Or, or, SWORDS! The possibilities are limited only by the child's imagination and the parents absence. And while it is true that more boys play with sticks than girls, I still have a mark where, in the 3rd grade, Ida Jo Waller stabbed me with a pencil, which is a stick in church clothes. That, by the way, is not the only scar given me by Ida Jo, but rocks did not make the list.

    2. Box
    The bigger the better! Sometimes you get really lucky and find a box that is so big there's almost no way to get it home. Almost, but where there's a will there's a way. And once you possess the box - any box - it can become a rocket ship, or an automobile, or a club house, or a cave, or a ship, or a table, or (usually unsuccessfully) a chair, or a castle, or, or... What can't you do with the right box? And cardboard boxes also incorporate the thrill of sneaking one of your mother's sharp (until you get hold of it) knives, so that you can cut portholes or windows. And other things. See? Right here on my left index finger. A scar that Ida Jo was not responsible for.

    3.String
    Another toy that comes in all sizes and infinite lengths. It can be used to connect other toys and small furry animals, though that didn't work well in my case. Or it's great to string between two tin cans to make a telephone. It's almost always associated with other objects of play, such as tops, or big buttons (to make them spin) or if it is of sufficient girth, tied around other playmates hands and feet. As mentioned, cat's tails are not recommended. Nor is the neck.

    4. Cardboard tube
    Also known as a "doot de doot" in its smaller sizes for the noise they make when you hum or sing into them.  The smaller ones can also become wonderful drum-like instruments that make a really neat, annoying bonking noise when you hit them on other things, such as other cardboard tubes, or your sibling's head. See number one, above. Believe it or not, Chet Atkins released a rock and roll song in the '50s called the "Boo Boo Stick Beat" that featured - cardboard tubes being hit together. Hey! I was a disk jockey then. I actually played the song on the radio!

    Cardboard tubes, if large enough, assume the properties of an artificial stick. Flimsy tubes, such as those found in Christmas wrap make wonderful swords, in that it's really hard to significantly hurt one another with these. The downside is that after a few whacks they tend to break apart and return to ordinary strips of cardboard and are quickly abandoned. Occasionally, you find an industrial strength tube, and then you become the baddest dude on the block.

    5. Dirt
    Now we are talking the quintessential toy! Available anywhere, in infinite quantity and multiple consistencies, dirt comes in a rainbow of earth-tones. You can work with dirt in its dry state, but to really appreciate the stuff, you also need water. Digging holes is a wonderful dirt pastime. Filling them with water is even better. Sitting in water-filled holes you have just dug tops it all. Girls appreciate a good mud pie now and then, but if you are patient and get the consistency just right, you can used dirt as - that's right, a weapon! Push it around, pack it into any container, throw it up in the air, track it in the house, even eat a little of it. There's just no end to what you can do with dirt.

    So, as you brave the malls and prepare to pepper-spray your fellow shoppers so that you can grab that last X-Box, give some thought that maybe, just maybe, you can't top the top five.

    Monday, December 5, 2011

    Monday Meandering 12.05.11

    Before the end of the year some visitor will log the 10,000th visit to my blog. Note that that's 10,000 visits, not unique visitors. But that's all the more amazing since there are only three regular readers out there - you guys are really doing a good  job! And I noticed that this is my 615th blog entry. I'm amazed that I've stuck with it to that long. So here's the deal: you keep visiting, and I'll keep writing. We deserve each other.

    We've been watching with interest a construction project up the street. The house on the corner of January and Braker - the one that burned a while back - was on a double lot. Some previous owner put a swimming pool on the 2nd lot and for a time, an RV was parked there. But all the sudden a construction crew scraped the ground in front of the pool, poured a foundation on the tiny space left, and in a matter of a week framed a house on that lot. A big house. Almost a McMansion. Curious.

    And further up the street the Valero station is messin' with my head. I'll drive by on the way to run an errand and the price for regular gas will be $3.06. When I come back a few minutes later it's $3.08. OK, gas is going up again. But a few hours later Barb and I will drive by and it's $3.06 again. What? Then that evening it's back to $3.08! Three times in one day? and this is one of the signs where someone has to come out and change the numbers manually. I got the last laugh, though. I bought gas at Costco for $2.90. Take that Valero!

    My ENT doctor sent me to Austin Radiological for a scan. Walked in for the appointment and was met by a hostess! She took my name, directed me to a seat, asked if I wanted coffee, then went to get my paperwork. She brought that, took my insurance cards, traded them for my filled-out forms, asked if there was anything she could do, or if I had any questions. In a minute she came and got me and handed me off to the radiologist, who was equally solicitous of my well-being. Really not my usual doctor's office experience. Wonder what that cost me?

    Had to eat a big helping of crow the other night. My spouse and I were in disagreement about whether the limbs of Christmas trees grow up or down. I was finally able to persuade her that I was right, with just the teeniest bit of gloating after she came around. Then later in the evening, I realized she was right. Hot sauce really helps make the dish edible.

    And Barb was the one who pointed out that the cows in the Chik-Fil-A commercials are actually dairy cows, and as such are seldom eaten.

    We picked up a couple of DVDs in the Wal Mart bargain bin, movies I thought suitable for watching-while-walking. Opened the first one and the disk was totally blank - no title, no verbiage of any kind. Put it in the drive and the first thing up was a little message about staying alert for pirated DVDs. Like those with no printing on them. Huh?

    And here's a billboard between here and Waco:

    Friday, December 2, 2011

    Do you smell what I smell?

    The sense of smell is an interesting phenomenon. If you have one. My sinus problems have diminished my ability to smell for many years. Most of the time, I wouldn't be able to smell gasoline if it were squirted up my nose. And then, after some medical intervention, I'm acutely aware of the odors around me, and for the most part it's sensory overload!

    Most often, the difference-maker for me is steroids; a few days into a course of Prednisone and I can detect strong odors. A few days after that, the more subtle aromas become evident. Opening a container of coffee becomes a heavenly experience. Walking into Chuy's is almost more than I can abide. It's a whole new world.

    Of course, there is a down side. Not all aromas are pleasant, but let's talk rather about the association between smell and taste. It is well established that smell is the larger part of the taste experience and significantly affects appetite. So I've always said, if I could smell, I would weigh 400 pounds. I wonder if that is why steroid users usually have significant weight gain. They can smell, or smell better than they could. What I find is that things taste differently to me when I'm able to "smell good." And interestingly, not all things taste better. It's what you are used to, I guess.

    There's also the issue of lingering smells. Sometimes they linger because that's normal. I fried a slice of bacon the other morning (47 calories, okay?) to go with my scrambled eggs (120 calories). The house smelled of bacon the rest of the day! Good thing I wasn't trying to hide it. Jana commented the other day about the unmistakable aroma of an Allsups that clung so, she felt she would have to burn her jacket to get rid of it. And sometimes my "smeller" gets stuck on a particular odor. Just a short exposure can trigger a lingering smell that stays with me the rest of the day, no matter where I am after that.

    I'm due for a second round of steroids soon, so I'm expecting my sense of smell to be elevated to a new level. Think I'll go to the Candle Factory. They may have to drag me out by my heels when I OD on aromas.

    Wednesday, November 30, 2011

    Serve Out

    Amazingly, it is the end of another month. Usually, I drag out all the bizarre photos that have accumulated in the inner recesses of my computer, but this time I think I'll recycle some of the newspaper articles that I have clipped and stuck on the wall.

    Like the one about the middle-aged white couple seen stealing political signs in the Austin area. Not all that unusual for one party to vandalize another party's signage, but these two seem apolitical - they are taking all of the signs from all candidates that they can get their hands on. The printed portion, the wooden stakes, the metal rods - it's all being scooped up. Police are looking for a house under construction using recycled materials.

    Speaking of signs, how about the prank brought to you by the letter 'T' and the students at Georgia Tech? The letter 'T' is disappearing from signs all over campus, costing the school more than $100,000 in repairs. Officials at the school are asking students to knock it off. Undergraduate President Elle Creel says the tradition of stealing the 'T' off Tech Tower began in the 1960s. But this new ritual involves taking a 'T' from everything from stadium signs to book return bins in front of the campus library. Student leaders recently launched an amnesty program to try and retrieve some of the letters.

    Did you see that PETA wanted Turkey, Texas to change the town's name to Tofurkey, Texas? That's a contraction of Tofu and Turkey, a vegan alternative, if you didn't get it. The mayor of Turkey, Pat Carson, was not too receptive to the idea. And shortly after, the owners of Pork Barrel BBQ, a barbecue sauce company, offered the town $1,000 and part of the company's web site profits to briefly change the name to  Barbecue, Texas. Apart from being the home of Bob Wills, the little town of Turkey hasn't got a lot going for it; maybe auctioning off the name is a good idea.

    Or did you hear about the wild turkey that smashed through a plate glass window at an empty restaurant near Pittsburgh, PA. and ended up where millions of its fellow gobblers did on Thanksgiving: a dining room? Penn Hills police said the feathered fowl didn't survive impact when it barreled into the dining room of the Eat'n Park on Thursday afternoon. The restaurant was closed at the time. Obviously the turkey's escape plan didn't work out as planned.

    Several possible victims have come forward alleging a woman posing as a Florida doctor and promising buttocks enhancement pumped their behinds with a toxic concoction of, well, cement, superglue and flat-tire sealant, state health officials said Tuesday. It gets stranger -

    Oneal Ron Morris — who police say was born a man and identifies as a woman — was arrested Friday after nearly a year of being sought and charged with practicing medicine without a license with serious bodily injury. Authorities say a victim who was looking to get a job at a nightclub and wanted a curvier figure paid Morris $700 for the injections in 2010. Morris allegedly used some type of tubing and injected the toxic chemicals into her backside during a painful procedure. You think?

    And all the violence surrounding Black Friday shopping became so common it was no longer an unusual news item. Tasers, pepper spray, clubs - it used to be credit cards that you shouldn't leave home without.

    How about the guy in Lubbock who had to be rescued from the chimney of his house? He said he wasn't trying to be Santa Claus. He was just locked out of his house and wanted to save the price of a locksmith, so decided to enter the house through the chimney as his wife and child waited outside around 1 a.m. Monday. The man's wife called 911 after he became stuck and firefighters hauled him out uninjured about an hour later. Ho, ho, ho.

    And I'm sorry to report that Frosty the Snowman got arrested in Maryland. Maybe "Surly the Snowman" would be a better name for a costumed man accused of getting out of hand at a Christmas parade. Police in Chestertown, on Maryland's Eastern Shore arrested a man dressed as "Frosty the Snowman" on Saturday after he allegedly fought with a cop and kicked at a police dog. Kevin Michael Walsh became agitated when a dog-handling officer tried to escort him away from the crowd. It's unclear what prompted police to redirect Walsh in the first place, but cops claim that the suspect allegedly hit one officer in the face with the head from his Frosty costume and pushed another cop who tried to put him in a patrol car. Nothing in your stocking this year, Frosty.

    Stay sane, my friends. The hard part is still ahead of us.

    Monday, November 28, 2011

    Monday Meanderings 11.28.2011

    We enjoyed a peaceful Thanksgiving this year - certainly was not as exciting as the Thanksgiving when we tried out the "cook a turkey in a brown paper bag to retain flavor and juices." This was way before the commercial cooking bags hit the market. We were hosting guests - students from ACU - that year. We got up early to get the cooking started, and after everything was set and the bagged turkey was in the oven, we went back to bed. But not for long. The house filled with smoke when the bag caught fire and burned down to the liquid line. Then we almost dumped the whole thing in the floor getting it out of the ash-filled pan, but finally got it cleaned off and back in the oven. As I recall, Thanksgiving dinner was served late that day.

    We did not, however, do as badly as a local restaurant, whose deep-fried turkey operation went up in flames early Thursday morning, depriving 125 customers of the Cajun-fried turkeys they were planning on serving in just a few hours! Fortunately, they had set up the fry stations out back, so at least the restaurant itself didn't go up in smoke.

    And while we did not enter into the Black Friday shopping frenzy (except online), we did get out and go shopping on Friday for normal stuff, like groceries. We even braved Wal Mart, but stayed in the grocery section and kept purchases under 20 items so as to be able to use the Express lane. Pretty, daring, if you ask me. We might have encountered the lady who used pepper spray to hold off all the other shoppers while she made her selection.

    Enjoyed the historic UT-A&M football game - especially the way it turned out. Someone said, "UT won the first one, won the last one, and won the majority of the ones in the middle." I have to gloat a bit; when A&M made their last touchdown with only a couple of minutes to play, Barb packed it in. I was able, a few minutes later, to stick my head in and say, "Oh ye of little faith."

    While preparing breakfast the other morning we began hearing a strange noise - something between a small animal in distress and an alarm of some kind. Could not locate the source. Stuck my head outside - nope, coming from in the house. Strongest in the kitchen, Wait, now strongest in the dining room. Something in the attic? Not in any other part of the house. This is really annoying; the eggs are getting cold but how can we sit down to a peaceful breakfast with Eeep! Eeep! Eeep! going on in the background? Wait! It's...it's...coming from Barb's pocket! It was a game app that somehow got punched up!

    It appears that in Austin, the F in F1 stands for Flop, not Formula. Anybody want to buy 500 acres of scraped ground in Southeast Travis County? It's out of character, but at least the City and the State didn't sink any up-front money into this boondoggle. Yet.

    And this sort of sums it up for me.



    Enjoy your week.

    Friday, November 25, 2011

    A small Thanksgiving memory - stories for my grandchildren

    The tryptophan fog has lifted a bit, but the leftovers live on! I trust your Thanksgiving was a joyful experience, and you were blessed by the day.

    A small Thanksgiving memory from many years ago -  Grandmother Anderson, my father's mother, had a brother who lived most of his life in the remote, wilderness areas of Canada. His story, and those that he told, are subjects of blogs to come, but for now the focus is on a particular trip he and his wife made to Texas.

    I was a teen when I first met Great-Uncle Virgil. I'm unsure of his age at that time, but he and his wife were at the point where the harsh Canadian winters drove them to warmer climates, so annually they came south - usually spending some time with my Grandmother and the rest of the trip exploring warm places.

    One of the trips co-insided with Thanksgiving, so the family gathered, and a great feast it was. Great-Uncle Virgil brought a few quarts of Cranberries, picked from bushes in a bog near their home in Canada. Picked fresh, they made the trip to Texas in the back of the car and got processed into Cranberry sauce for the meal. Delicious.

    The story is a bit vague from that point, but around the table heads began to snap back after a taste or two of the Cranberry sauce, and knowing glances were exchanged among some of  family members. I myself do not clearly remember, but the story is that my little Grandmother, who had consumed several helpings of Cranberries by that time, was just a little bit giggly.

    "Why yes, there had been several nights with the temperature below freezing before we picked the Cranberries. And yes, I did seal them in quart jars before we came down? Why do you ask? And would you pass the Cranberries, please?"

    Wednesday, November 23, 2011

    Pigorian Chants

    Someone handed me a small booklet with an enclosed CD of...Pigorian Chants. Yes, classical Gregorian chants, by pigs. Well, voices assuming the role of pigs, and cows and chickens, and even the farmer.


    Although this delightful little book has been around for a while, it's a new finding for me - so if you already have 3 copies, I apologize. The whole thing is from the imagination of Sandra Boynton, long famous for her whimsical greeting cards embellished with, well, pigs and cows and chickens, etc. I tried diligently to incorporate a sample of the pictures and audio, but I don't have the technical acumen to pull that off, and if I did, I would probably fall afowl (that's a pun) of Ms. Boynton's lawyers, never mind the pictures you see here. So I'll just describe as best I can what the book is about.


    The chants begin with the pigs fast asleep. They chant:

    Ore-Snay, OreSnay.       Snore, snore.
    Ore-Snay, OreSnay.       Snore, snore.
    Ore-Snay, OreSnay.       Snore, snore.
    Ore-Snay, OreSnay.       Snore, snore.

    It's possible that you noticed that the pigs chant in Pig Latin. The dawn comes, and the animals awaken. First the Rooster, then the chickens:

    Coccadoodul du.           Cock-a-doodle-doo.
    Ego dixi:                 I said,
    Coccadoodul du.           Cock-a-doodle-doo.


    O, primam lucem.          O, first light!
    Sol surgit.               The sun is rising.
    Gallus magnifice          The strutting
    incedens exclamat.        Rooster calls.
    Nunc venit agricola.      Now comes the farmer.


    Ecce Macdonaldus Senex    Behold Old MacDonald,
    qui fundum habet.         Who has a farm.
    E-I-E-I-O                 EIEIO.

    And it continues to name the farm animals, with a Ni oink oink hic, and a Ni oink oink ibi.

    The gist of the book is that the pigs want to sleep(Et-lay us-ay eep-slay) and not until the farmer threatens to give their food to the chickens can they be rousted (Op-stay, Opstay. E're-way oming-cay!).

    The cow's response?


    Margaritas ante porcos.    Pearls before swine.
    Allemooia, allemooooooia.  Allemoia, Allemooia.
    Et in Arcadia sumus.       Country life is 
                               overrated.

    There's much, much more. Quoting from the back cover:
    "Intoned in the original Pig Latin, with antiphonal responsoria and commentaria in Latin by the lesser barnyard animals, and featuring the ethereal polyphony of chickens, this music is not soon to be forgotten."

     I'll be honest - this is not a recording that you will treasure over the years and play it again and again. A little chanting gos a long way, But it may be that you are in need of a white elephant gift for an upcoming party. This might be - if you can still find it in the stores - just the item.

    Monday, November 21, 2011

    Monday Meanderings - 11.21.2011

    They handed out the annual certificates of appreciation at Learning Ally this past week. Mine said that I have logged a total of 527 hours in the studio. I think 500 of that has been devoted to a business statistics book that goes into excruciating detail on building Excel spreadsheets to solve detailed business problems. #notlikethatbook.

    Still motivated to keep the exercise and smarter food-choices action going. It continues to bring results, one of which is an increased level of, well...chafed-ness. Not sure how marathon runners handle that. Family-friendly suggestions are needed.

    And just in case you are keeping a log, I have now watched all 194 minutes of Titanic, a 1966 movie called Blue Max - an oldy with George Peppard and Ursala Andress, and next is The Iceman Cometh, with Lee Marvin. Maybe I will have to figure out this streaming stuff, after all.

    After lackadaisical attendance and flagging interest on our part last year, we decided to forgo season tickets to the Lady Longhorns this year.  We have access to good seats if we do decide to see a game on general admission (Barb's hairdresser has access to a block of seats). Have to see how the team does this year.

    Typical Texas weather. Put the extra blanket on the bed a few nights ago. Air Conditioning came on yesterday.

    You all have a good week.

    Friday, November 18, 2011

    A small memory abberation

    From time to time, we go up the highway to Pflugerville, to a Catfish restaurant that we enjoy. On the way, the road curves to the right, and just at the bend of that curve is an eating establishment called "Charlie's Steak House." Every time we pass it, I have a small memory hiccup and I think of trips to the little town of Lowake and steak dinners.

    I can only guess that one of the two steak houses that once were in Lowake was named Charlie's, or was located at the bend of the road, or both. I do know that this was not the one we went to; we passed Charlie's and stopped at the Lowake Steak House.

    Further clouding my memory is that this was all about 50 years ago, when a student in Abilene. A trip to Lowake was a special date; it was, after all about 75 miles away, down toward San Angelo. And the steaks were not cheap, even back then. Huge, but not cheap. You only took hot girls to Lowake. Barb says she doesn't remember going with me, but I am certain that I did take her. I remain adamant on that point.

    Lowake was a hoppin' place, to have been in the middle of nowhere. There was even an airstrip for the fly-in traffic. Possibly, part of the attraction was the availability of adult beverages served with your meal. Abilene was located in what was at that time a dry county. Not the case in Concho County. I was always too chicken, but it was always very interesting to look around and see fellow students (and one or two faculty members) pretending that was not their beverage in front of them.

    There is still a Lowake Steakhouse today. I understand that it's hard for you and your date to get out for less than $60, even without adult beverages, and the reviews are not too favorable. I don't know if ACU students still make that trip or not. I know the few times that I went down there remain memorable; so much so there's a little mind trick every time I pass by Charlie's Steak House.

    Wednesday, November 16, 2011

    Older than Dirt?

    Count all the ones that you actually remember; not the ones you were told about, or saw on TV or in a movie.

    1. Blackjack chewing gum
    2. Wax Coke-shaped bottles with colored sugar water
    3. Candy cigarettes
    4. Soda pop machines that dispensed glass bottles
    5. Coffee shops or diners with table-side juke boxes
    6. Home milk delivery in glass bottles with cardboard stoppers
    7. Party lines on the telephone
    8. Newsreels before the movie
    9. P.F. Flyers
    10. Butch wax
    11. TV test patterns that came on at night after the last show
    12. Peashooters
    13. Howdy Doody
    14. 45 RPM records
    15. S& H green stamps
    16. Hi-fi's
    17. Metal ice trays with lever
    18. Mimeograph paper
    19. Blue flashbulb
    20. Packards
    21. Roller skate keys
    22. Cork popguns
    23. Drive-ins
    24. Studebakers
    25. Wash tub wringers
    26. Head lights dimmer switches on the floor
    27. Ignition switches on the dashboard
    28. Heaters mounted on the inside of the fire wall
    29. Pant leg clips for bicycles without chain guards
    30. Using hand signals for cars without turn signals

    There's supposed to be some kind of score matrix with this quiz, but I forget what it is.

    Monday, November 14, 2011

    Monday Meanderings - 11.14.2011

    It's been an interesting week on the political circuit; Governor Goodhair is proving himself a prime candidate - as the source of humor for the late-night TV guys. Natalie Manes (Dixie Chicks) got in some serious hot water for saying she was ashamed to admit she was from Texas. Hmmm.

    Latest entertainment is giving the telemarketers grief. Usually we just let the answering machine pick up, but for those very, very persistent ones that call several times a day, the new approach is to answer and play the role of an old, disoriented person (which I find is not all that hard). While they are trying to tell me about refinancing my mortgage, I'm acting like this is a call from cousin Kenny, and asking how the family is and whatever happened with Oscar's parole hearing?  Too soon to tell if they cross the number off the list, but I'm having fun.

    Yes, thank you for asking. My better eating choices are indeed paying off. I try not to make a big deal about in front of Barb, but I have lost 16 pounds to date. I tell her that this is just the low-hanging fruit - the easy pounds; it will be a lot harder from here.

    Part of the kerfuffle with everybody wanting out of the Big XII has been the formation of the Longhorn Network, the TV alliance between UT and ESPN. Seems other schools thought this gave Texas an unfair advantage on several fronts. The only problem is, to date, only one small cable company, mostly in San Marcos, has picked up the Longhorn Network. So to promote viewership, LN had a free weekend - everything was available to view - on your PC. Being the technical guru that I am, I went to Frys and got the cables that were supposed to allow me to connect the PC to the TV. If you like watching a big screen of nothing but blurry green lines, it was a great success.

    Saw an ad in the AARP magazine that said I could look as good as I feel. I was hoping for something a little better than that.

    One of the big toys this year is apparently a remote control roach. Really? We pay regularly so we won't have those critters crawling around.

    And speaking of unwanted pests - you know how, when you are out and about and checking mail and such on your smart phone, you will get notifications of nearby hot spots that you can access? Here's one that popped up on my phone. How many unwanted visitors do you think this spot attracts?

    Friday, November 11, 2011

    Movies to walk by

    I mentioned that I was taking my exercise to a new level, which is certainly not hard to do if one was sort of doggin' it, which I was. So instead of the occasional mile on the treadmill, I've committed to a semi-regular regimen of two or more miles on the endless belt each outing (don't judge me - I'm old). But you know the problem. Walking for a long time on the treadmill is like reading the Bible and getting to Leviticus. Boring, Boring,  BORING!

    I started with the 5th and Final Season (sniff) of Friday Night Lights, but now I'm watching movies. Since Barb and I see, on average, one movie every two or three years, there's an enormous backlog out there just waiting for me. I found a copy of The Shawshank Redemption at the library and that turned out to be quite well done. I picked up a copy of Breaker Morant next, but it was veddy, veddy British, old chap, and there was a danger of falling asleep during the movie, which probably would have had unfortunate consequences, considering the circumstances.

    So I switched to The Russians are Coming, the Russians are Coming, which is one of my all-time favorite movies (okay, I know it came out in 1966 and most of you have never heard of it; you will just have to trust me on how good it is). And next was Once Upon a Time in the West - the penultimate Spaghetti Western. I know you've never heard of this movie - it was a colossal flop in the US.

    So how do I describe this movie? So bad it's good? Every Western Movie cliche crammed into a mere 171 minutes? Would it help to know Clint Eastwood, who found fame and fortune in spaghetti westerns, turned down a role in the movie? Or that two of the actors committed suicide - one during the filming of the movie by leaping out of his hotel window in full costume?

    How could you go wrong  with a movie that stars Henry Fonda cast against type as the villain, Charles Bronson as his nemesis, Jason Robards as a bandit, and Claudia Cardinale as a newly widowed homesteader with a past as a prostitute? Scoff if you will, but the film is now generally acknowledged as a masterpiece and one of the best western films ever made. In 2009, it was named to the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress for being “culturally, historically or aesthetically” significant and will be preserved for all time!

    But I digress. I have a copy of The Men who Stare at Goats from the library (I didn't say you could get good movies from the library) but it's only 90 minutes long, so I'm going to need a new movie to walk by soon, so the floor is open for nominations. What would you like to see while you are grinding out the miles? Better yet, what should I see? The longer the better, and weirdness is a plus.

    Wednesday, November 9, 2011

    Band Bus - Stories for my Grandchildren

    One of our at-large family members, Sarah, recently blogged about the great adventure that comes with being a band parent. We have that experience in common. Who knows how many trips, how many concerts, how many BBQ dinner fund-raisers, how many hours Barb and I spent supporting our two through Junior High Band, High School Band, Concert Band, Stage Band, Marching Band, UIL, State Tryouts, etc.? We felt then, as Sarah does now, that band activities provide significant pluses that make it all worth while. Band kids, by and large, are the kind of peer group you want your kids to associate with. Band activities require discipline, and provide reward for hard work, and promote pride in oneself and one's classmates.

    And then there's the band bus.  Sarah, you might want to skip the rest of this.

    It's not done exactly the same way these days - especially not in the metro areas and big cities, but when I was a band member, we spent hours and hours rolling down the highway in the common yellow school bus on the way to some football game, and then hours and hours rolling back home again. Most of the time, there was a stop somewhere for supper; often there was a stop at a DQ or equivalent after the game before starting home. It was not uncommon to roll in at 2 or 3 in the morning. When you live in a small town (Breckenridge), your opponents are often many miles away. Abilene, at 60 miles distance was a breeze; Wichita Falls at 90 was a lark. Snyder, at 121, was just on the way to Abernathy, 233 miles distant. And Crane was 390 miles away. We got back in the wee, small hours that trip.

    It took two school buses to convey the band (and some few twirlers and cheerleaders). There was the underclassman bus, and the Senior bus. Physically, there was no difference in the two. Psychologically, and esteem-wise, one was a royal coach, the other was a tumbrel. It is with some pride that I can say I never rode on the underclassman bus. It's all in who you know.  School was out for us about noon; we made a pretense of gathering our things while waiting for the two buses to pull up, then it was a mad dash to claim a seat. Mrs. Funderburk, the chaperone, and Mr. Roan, the band director, sat on the first two seats, so naturally, the further back in the bus one could position oneself, the more out-of-sight and thus more enjoyable the trip.

    We loaded the instruments in bus-top racks, stashed all our gear (and hopefully all of our uniform and regalia) and endured the outbound trip. It was all social, and daylight, and card games and the like. I'm told that some students on the other bus sometimes studied and did homework. Our bus was two or three hours of  benign boredom.

    The evening meal was always at some location like Underwoods (in Brownwood) or the Crosskeys Cafeteria in Wichita Falls, or wherever two or more fast food outlets gathered together. Get dressed, discover you forgot your Sam Brown belt, swipe one from the other bus and finally get underway to the stadium and the game. First half, showtime, cruise through the second half and gather back at the buses. This was sometimes tricky, in that locals usually took umbrage at the loss the Buckaroos laid on their boys. Once in Wichita Falls, the locals staged a fight beside the buses, hoping to draw in some unsuspecting bandsmen, then pounce on them. They hadn't reckoned on Johnnie LaForge, our raw Cajun drum major and his big drum major baton. Another successful outing.

    And then the trip home. Some slept (the aisle was always the best place for that), couples who had already made allegiances paired off for the trip and the rest of us formed new and temporary friendships for the duration. What happened on the band bus stayed on the band bus. Every week was a new beginning. Mr. Roan had a wooden leg; he never risked walking to the back of the bus. Mrs. Funderburk was usually the first person to go to sleep. If it was quiet, Mr. Munnerlin, the driver never turned on the overhead lights.

    So what went on in our band bus? Well... I was usually one of the ones who went to sleep. Right away. And I slept until we returned. That's my story. You'll have to ask your kids about theirs.

    Sunday, November 6, 2011

    Monday Meanderings -11.7.11

    Oh, "fall back" means one hour - not one day.

    We enjoyed a cool, crisp weekend - a little too nippy of a morning for coffee on the patio (unless one brought one's Snuggie along with the coffee) but the afternoons warmed up delightfully. Trimmed some trees to get ready for bulk brush collection next week. Domesticity is killing me.

    Occupy Austin continues to be in the news. Police did arrest a number of folks after a quick rule change about food tables. Unlike Oakland, our folks lined up to get in the paddy wagon, got released and were back on the premises for the next afternoon rally. I do wonder, though, if this is a "leaderless, agenda-less, non-organized" protest, why are we getting automated recorded phone messages urging us to support the protest?

    Shouldn't those big bumps in the roads be called "slow bumps?" Just asking.

    I think it goes without saying that people who break the law aren't very smart to begin with, but what kind of stupid do have to be to steal a big backhoe from a construction site, like Austinites Steven and Teresa Labato did last week - and then try to hide it in their backyard. Next door to the construction site they stole it from! "This is not the backhoe you are looking for."

    I was feeling pretty smug about my daily exercise on the treadmill - until I looked it up and found that the calories burned just about cover the sugar in my coffee. Sigh.

    Asked for our favorite waitress at Chuy's on Halloween. They said she was not working. In fact, she and some friends and family were soon seated at the next table, being served by others. Seemed a little strange, especially when she asked her wait person how a particular dish was prepared.  I wonder how well she tips?

    And the Chuy fish dressed up for Halloween.

    Friday, November 4, 2011

    Curiously popular post

    Back in May, I wrote a blog about a man named Broderick James, who has come to be known as "Austin's Running Man." He's the dude that could be seen most days - never mind the triple-digit temperatures - running and jogging in place and making like Rocky on the courthouse steps. Except he was doing all this on a swath of grass by the HEB until construction moved him across the street to the Sonic lawn.

    I mentioned that he says he runs "because I am free. I run to inspire others to be bold in their dreams, their thinking, and be who they were created to be. I offer true optimism through my dedication to the city and its people thereof. I run to show that I am opposed to poverty, stress, depression, and obesity."

    I also mentioned later that corporate HEB was keeping a very close eye on Mr. James and they visited my blog regularly to see if there was more news about the gentleman. Seems HEB is not the only one interested in the Running Man. I have had more visits to this particular blog than to any other blog I've written save one - all from people Googling "Austin Running Man" or something similar.  More than 140 people have accessed this blog entry as a result of a search. Some have even left comments. Like this one posted just a few days ago:
    "Well, I know Broderick James Jr. personally, we first moved here when he came back home from Iraq. Broderick doesn't tell people he has children or even acknowledge them. I was very sad when someone that knows Broderick and I and our children, informed me that he says that he doesn't have children. I wonder if that is the reason why they do not get phone calls on birthdays, Christmas, or any other holidays. He is a great guy but when you don't take care of your children and you help everyone else, what does that really say about you. I'm not saying dead beat dad like others, but that's what it's called."
     So now it appears that I can add a new dimension to my blog. Marriage and Family Counseling. Maybe I can get a TV show.

    The Doctor is in.

    Wednesday, November 2, 2011

    You picked a fine time to lose weight, Lucille!

    I finally broke down and went back to see Dr. S - otherwise known as the Rotor-Rooter guy. Sinus congestion and blockage was driving me (and all those around me) crazy, so I made an appointment to start up the process that will eventually end up with long sharp objects in places I never want them. Hey, I've already had needles stuck in my eye this year! What's an electric drill up the nose after that? Oh. Sorry. I wasn't going to be so descriptive.

    But first, Dr. S. has to deal with the immediate issue that I can't breath through my nostrils much of the time. That's not a new problem with me; I was 14 years old before I learned that you were supposed to be able to breath through both nostrils at once. That's why you had two, right? Breath through one for a while, then it stops up and you breath through the other one. It's when they gang up on you that's the problem. So, I'm back on industrial strength steroids.

    The Doc asked me if I tolerated steroids well. I said he probably ought to ask my wife that. Other than the occasional outbursts of rage ('roid rage it's called in the sports world) and the staying awake all night, steroids are wonderful! They cure what ails me, Big Time! I can breath freely, I can smell things, I've got boundless energy (until I crash). I love 'em. Oh, and there is that other little problem. On steroids, I want to eat every thing on the table and then I want to start in on the table itself!

    Now comes the conflict. A couple of weeks earlier I had an annual check-up with Dr. R. Tests came back pretty good, but there were a few things he didn't like - mainly my weight. So after reaming me out pretty good a stern lecture some counseling on the Doc's part, I came away with the conviction that it was time to do something. Dr. R. does not preach dieting; he is wholly vested in the gospel of changed lifestyle. I read that that's a good thing and that there are a number of ways to approach it, but approach it you must.

    So, with my good wife's help, I am now walking the path of portion control and healthy choices. And I must say that so far it only partially sucks. I was managing pretty well until I augmented my diet with 50 MG of Prednisone a day. Did you know that with a little salt, the morning newspaper is not too bad? Bland, but filling. And I'm not saying a word about the missing potholders.

    Oh. And exercise. Barb walks at the Mall. Thank goodness she just walks and doesn't shop. I walk on the treadmill because Dr C. (yes, I can sing the alphabet song with my doctor's initials) does not want me walking outside "vacuuming up allergens." But I wasn't walking that often, nor very far. So I set up the laptop on the treadmill and now I watch episodes of old TV programs (just finished the final season of Friday Night Lights. I'm a little behind. And I still say it's the best thing ever done on TV!) I haven't figured out the download streaming thingy so I get DVDs of old movies from the library.

    Watching programs while you walk is similar to driving and listening to Books on Tape. First thing you know you are in New Mexico and some police officer says you crossed the border doing 90. You sort of loose track of time and distance stuff.

    So. Now you know more than you ever wanted to know about me and my diet, exercise and meds. But that's just the steroids talking. You want to make something of it??!!

    Monday, October 31, 2011

    Monday Meanderings -10.31.2011

    I got my first Halloween fright the other night. The first political TV commercial of the season.  Scary.

    So after Barb saying she could live with a St Louis Series win, she decided in retrospect that she was wrong about that.

    A couple of blogs back, I visited some improbable obituaries. My daughter, for some reason I cannot fathom, commented that she thought I might be making some of that up. Now I ask you - do you take me for the sort of person that would fabricate... oh, never mind. But here, here is a made-up obituary:
    Waldo, 36, is missing and presumed dead. “We Gave up looking for him years ago.” Said a spokesman for a local search team. “In the past we’d scour the earth, but every time we’d find him he’d take off again. Finally, we put his picture on a mild carton and said the hell with it.” Other reactions were mixed.” It was a case of sibling rivalry,” said Carmen Sandiego a half-sister. “Waldo tried to outdo me by hiding in shopping malls and outdoor rock concerts. These had no educational value, so it’s no wonder people stopped caring.” “The little deadbeat owed us for 20,000 tasseled caps, said a spokesman for the Acme Headgear Co. “Now we’re filing for bankruptcy, thanks to him.” A memorial service for Waldo will be held at 11 a.m. tomorrow at an unspecified location. Those wishing to attend will have to find it for themselves.

    Article in the paper the other day about a Bastrop resident who lost her home in the fires trying to cancel her satellite TV service, since she obviously didn't need it at the moment. The service rep was insistent that the customer must return the satellite, converter box and cable to the company. The customer kept asking "What part of the house burned down do you not understand." I could make a fortune and benefit mankind in general if I could write an app for your phone that would bop stupid people in the head at the press of a button. Of course, it would only work in one direction. Of course.

    Every time I see one of those big TxDot highway signs that says "Missing Elderly" I check the license plate to make sure I'm not the guy who wandered off. You never know.

    You know I likes me some coffee on the patio of a morning, but I am to the point that the evening is just not complete without that wonderful cup of decaf. Here's an unpaid plug for Community Coffee out of Louisiana (unpaid, but if some corporate social media VP at Community wants to reward me... Just saying...). Try the Cafe Special, available in both decaf and leaded at most major grocers. Use a little more coffee than you might be used too. Oh, and their tea is superb as well.

    And a very scary Halloween to you.

    Friday, October 28, 2011

    Serve Out

    Why yes, it is the end of another month and things have indeed piled up around here again, as usual, so let's pull out some of those things lurking in the dark.

     Need a Halloween costume suggestion for your dog?



    Or your phone?


    Good. Punctuation is important.



    An OCD snake!



    Hmmm.



    Never thought about the view from the Canadian side, did you?

    Well, perhaps just snippy!


    And some days nothing goes right.

    Have a pleasant Friday.

    Wednesday, October 26, 2011

    A few last words

    I don't want to make too big a deal about this, okay, but I've been thinking about my obituary, so I decided to see what others have said. You know, kinda looking for inspiration. I probably won't go with something like this -


    But there are other choices:
    Dolores Aguilar, born in 1929 in New Mexico, left us on August 7, 2008.

    Dolores had no hobbies, made no contribution to society and rarely shared a kind word or deed in her life. I speak for the majority of her family when I say her presence will not be missed by many, very few tears will be shed and there will be no lamenting over her passing.

    Her family will remember Dolores and amongst ourselves we will remember her in our own way, which were mostly sad and troubling times throughout the years. We may have some fond memories of her and perhaps we will think of those times too. But I truly believe at the end of the day ALL of us will really only miss what we never had, a good and kind mother, grandmother and great-grandmother. I hope she is finally at peace with herself. As for the rest of us left behind, I hope this is the beginning of a time of healing and learning to be a family again.

    There will be no service, no prayers and no closure for the family she spent a lifetime tearing apart. We cannot come together in the end to see to it that her grandchildren and great-grandchildren can say their goodbyes. So I say here for all of us, GOOD BYE, MOM.

    Or this:
    Frederic Arthur (Fred) Clark, who had tired of reading obituaries noting other’s courageous battles with this or that disease, wanted it known that he lost his battle as a result of an automobile accident on June 18, 2006. True to Fred’s personal style, his final hours were spent joking with medical personnel while he whimpered, cussed, begged for narcotics and bargained with God to look over his wife and kids. During his life he excelled at mediocrity. He loved to hear and tell jokes, especially short ones due to his limited attention span.

    When his family was asked what they remembered about Fred, they fondly recalled how Fred never peed in the shower – on purpose. He died at MCV Hospital and sadly was deprived of his final wish which was to be run over by a beer truck on the way to the liquor store to buy booze for a double date to include his wife, Rush Limbaugh and Ann Coulter to crash an ACLU cocktail party. In lieu of flowers, Fred asks that you make a sizable purchase at your local ABC store or Virginia winery (please, nothing French – the *censored*) and get rip roaring drunk at home with someone you love or hope to make love to. Additionally, all of Fred’s friend (sic) will be asked to gather in a phone booth, to be designated in the future, to have a drink and wonder, “Fred who?”

    GRAHAM MASON, the journalist who has died aged 59, was in the 1980s the drunkest man in the Coach and Horses, the pub in Soho where, in the half century after the Second World War, a tragicomedy was played out nightly by its regulars. Unlike his friend Jeffrey Bernard, though, Graham Mason did not make himself the hero of his own tragedy. His speciality was the extreme. In one drinking binge he went for nine days without food. On one cold day he complained of the noise that the snow made as it landed on his bald head.

    His practice of “boozer’s economics” meant dressing in the shabbiest of clothes, many of them inherited from the late husband of the woman with whom he lived. He wore a threadbare duffel coat with broken toggles. One day it was inexplicably stolen from the pub coathook. After Marsh Dunbar’s death in 2001, with almost all his friends dead, he sat imprisoned by emphysema in his flat, with a cylinder of oxygen by his armchair and bottles of white wine by his elbow, looking out over the Thames, still very angry.


    Louis J. Casimir Jr. bought the farm Thursday, Feb. 5, 2004, having lived more than twice as long as he had expected and probably three or four times as long as he deserved. Although he was born into an impecunious family, in a backward and benighted part of the country at the beginning of the Great Depression, he never in his life suffered any real hardships. Many of his childhood friends who weren’t killed or maimed in various wars became petty criminals, prostitutes, and/or Republicans. Lou was a daredevil: his last words were “Watch this!”

    And is this guy related to Frederic Arthur (Fred) Clark (above)? It's almost the same obit.
    A celebration of life for James William "Jim" Adams, 53, will be held at a later date. He died Tuesday, Sept. 9, 2008 at Memorial Hospital of Converse County in Douglas. Jim, who had tired of reading obituaries noting other's courageous battles with this or that disease, wanted it known that he lost his battle. It was primarily as a result of being stubborn and not following doctor's orders or maybe for just living life a little too hard for better than five decades.

    He was sadly deprived of his final wish, which was to be run over by a beer truck on the way to the liquor store to buy booze for a date. True to his personal style, he spent his final hours joking with medical personnel, cussing and begging for narcotics and bargaining with God to look over his loving dog, Biscuit, and his family.

    During his life, he excelled at anything he put his mind to. He loved to hear and tell jokes and spin tales of grand adventures he may or may not have had. In lieu of flowers, he asks that you make a sizeable purchase at your favorite watering hole, get rip roaring drunk and tell the stories he no longer can.


    Robert James (Bob) Smith, 69, of Wilmington, North Carolina, surprised and annoyed his wife by dying in his sleep in the early hours of January 6, 2005.

    In the middle of nearly any conversation, he loved to toss out the fact that he had ten children. He did this often, and generally for the sheer entertainment value of watching peoples' expressions. He would want it noted that these children hold nearly twenty degrees, from bachelors to doctorates. Since he celebrated his 42nd birthday for eight years in a row, many folks, including at least one of his kids, had no idea how old he really was.

    Bob survived Cathedral Latin High School in Cleveland, and then graduated from the University of Dayton with a Bachelor of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering: he is now at Duke University's medical research facility, awaiting an incoming class of first-year med students with shiny new scalpels. He surely hopes to get credit for attendance, so Duke University is officially added to his resume, albeit posthumously.

    After college, Bob served in the United States Army as an Intelligence Officer at the National Security Agency, attaining the rank of Captain. Fed up with the Army, he landed as a civilian at Wright Patterson Air Force Base, where he stayed for years and years. He really liked planes. He also liked blowing things up. He also loved his chainsaw.


    Bob is survived by his wife. Other mourners include Libertarians, Unitarians, artists, beach-walkers, and an enormous extended family of friends, colleagues, and admirers. Please come to a celebration service for Bob.  Or, just put on a silly hat and a comfortable t-shirt, grab your beverage of choice, and think about him.

    Now you see why it's important that I write my own obituary. You just can't trust others to say the right things.