final fowl

Yawning_Raccoon

It is cold and windy here.

I can hear the wind chimes on the porch working overtime.

It’s funny how a gentle breeze can produce a beautiful sound…but a gale makes a racket that can be kind of obnoxious.

They should call them breeze chimes…but on the other hand, nobody advertises them as “gale chimes.”

I’ve never seen that.

I haven’t heard the last of our chickens lately.

I don’t mean, “I haven’t heard the last of our chickens lately”….like “YOU HAVEN’T HEARD THE LAST OF ME!!!  I’LL BE BACK!!!”

I mean that he was the last of his breed….the last rooster at our house that was still alive.

Unless he’s lying low somewhere and riding out this storm, I think that the rooster is gone.

I think that a fat coon got him in his hypothermic rooster trance state.

Of course, that’s just conjecture on my part.

I don’t really know for sure…he may be out pecking corn when I get home from work tonight.

You never can tell.

This cold is pretty….cold.

They say on the news that it’s a polar vortex coming down for us.

If I can attach a little bit of science to it, I can let myself know that something a little more extreme than just a cold and windy day is coming down the pike.

“Polar Vortex” sounds a lot scarier than “a cold and windy day” or even a “blustery day”.

“A blustery day”….that sounds like Pooh and Christopher Robin would be showing up soon.

If Pooh was around, you wouldn’t be reading anything about the death of a lone rooster.

I don’t remember any of Pooh’s friends freezing to death in the old stories.

That’s not very kid friendly…whether you call it “blustery day” or “POLAR VORTEX”, it’s not kid friendly to kill off Eeyore with extreme weather.

No matter how many times he moans, “Is it cold in here?….or is it just me?”

Eeyore

But I think this rooster…this last survivor of the group…I think that he’s gone.

He’s gone…or he’s too cold to crow.

I wonder which one it is?

I’ve got a lot more on my plate than sitting at desk and listening for a rooster to crow, though.

I must have something more vital going on than just doing that.

Good grief, I’m a fully grown man (spelled M-A-N)….I’ve got more going on than just being concerned about a frozen rooster.

I did our taxes last night.

I do them online now.  It’s so much easier than sitting with a pile of papers and a calculator and a sharp pencil.

It’s a piece of cake.

Of course, complicated taxes might mean that our financial situation was bountiful and multi-faceted.

That might not be such a bad thing…to have to say, “Oh, nooooooo…I let our man do the taxes. They’re much too complex…what with the house in Montreux and the Virgin Island shelters. I wouldn’t even know where to start to shelter all the cash we’ve squirreled away.  Do my own taxes?  I wish I could…but they’re much too convoluted now.”

“That’s a little bit above my paygrade, you know?!!! Ha, ha, ha, ha!!!”

I wouldn’t know what that felt like.  It takes me about an hour to do both the returns.

Ah, the simple life.

And I still wonder where that rooster might be

.

attack-of-the-giant-rooster

talkin’ ’bout the Whitleys

I used this song in a post the other day.

Chris Whitley is gone now…but what a talent he was.

They used to play interesting people on the radio.

When programmers were including people who weren’t judges on American Idol, they still didn’t play a whole lot of Chris Whitley’s music.

This song was the big radio hit.

Here’s a short excerpt from a documentary about Chris Whitley…the language is strong…kind of rough…but he was an original, especially when you consider what music was like in the early ’90’s.

He was an original.

Here’s another Whitley who left too soon.

I heard him the other day on the mail route and remembered how good this Whitley was when he was around.

A lot of folks I know don’t like “country music”. They just don’t like it for some reason.

Good music is good music, though.

This guy was pretty darn good…and like Chris Whitley….he’s gone now.

There’s a lot of good music out there.

I don’t know if Chris will be remembered.  I hope he is…he was pretty unique. There was something going on there in his music that you don’t get a chance to see very often in “popular music” these days.

I suspect that Keith will be remembered.  “Country legends” have some staying power, for some reason.

These guys were the genuine article.  “Real” stands out.

 

touch me. hold me.

football helmet

“Keep your hands off my football.”

Football is kind of sacred. You don’t mess with football. You don’t say funny things about football.

Football is serious.

I was thinking the other day about how many things are a knife-edge from being something that would kind of bother us if we thought about it in the wrong light.

Like football.

If these big guys were fully lubed well moisturized* and dressed in tutus (that little dress that ballerinas use…how do you spell it? TWOTWOzzzzzzzz?), I think that it would be hard for the generally well-intentioned and mature audience to watch them go at each other.

We’d have a hard time watching that.

What if someone who didn’t know what they were talking about was describing what goes on down on the field to someone who knew even less than they did about the game?

They might say:

“OK…here’s the deal.  You have two groups of men dressed in different colored outfits. From what I understand, both groups of men want the ball.  One of the groups gets it at a time…then the other group has to try to take it away or wait for the men in the striped suits to give it to them.”

“When one group of men has the ball, they might throw it into the air…or they might try to run on the grass with it…or they might even kick it. You never know what is going to happen.”

“One thing that is sure to happen is that if you have the ball, someone from the other group will try and grab you and hold you and throw you on the ground so that they can jump on top of you. Often a bunch of the men in the group without any ball will jump on you also.”

“They will stay on top of you until the striped suit men blow a whistle to tell them to get off of you.”

“Sometimes it takes a while for the whistle to blow. When this happens, the men who held you on the ground will pat your bottom when you get to stand up. They want the ball….but they are still your friends, so they pat your bottom.”

“If something happens that is exciting, the crowd of people watching you hold each other on the ground will yell loudly.”

“People get excited to see other people grab each other or catch the ball before they get grabbed.”

“When the two groups of men stop grabbing each other, and the game is over, sometimes the people in the watching area will run on the grass and pull down the metal posts that poke up out of the dirt.”

“And that’s what we know as ‘football’ ”

And that’s why we only let people who know what they’re talking about discuss topics that matter.

Like football.

Do you see what I mean about it being creepy if the men in groups wore tutus and lubed moisturized* themselves before every game, though?

That would be FREAKING CREEPY.

It would completely change the nature of the game.

It wouldn’t be something to even think about.

It wouldn’t be right.

It wouldn’t even be AMERICAN.

*this is a postscript. “fully lubed” was too strong a choice of language….and prompted some confused and negative comments. It is a potent and scary image, though.  Unless you are talking about automobile maintenance, using the word “lubed” and “man” in the same sentence seems to provoke some strong feelings. I apologize for any psychic trauma my gaffe may have caused.  “Moisturize” is much less incendiary.

How about that Velveeta?


velveeta

The post that I’ve written that’s gotten the most “looks” is one that featured a picture of a giant dog.

People all over the world want to see the picture of the giant dog.  They can’t get enough.

It gets, like, a hundred views a day.

Every other post that I’ve written might get a couple of hits.  I have some faithful friends who’ll read it. Jenny reads it.

People read the blog…but that dog picture really pulls them in.

It is beloved.

So I thought I’d do a post about something that fired up the imagination again.

So here goes….”How about that Velveeta shortage?

It feels like pandering to write a post about a subject that is that obvious.

Who doesn’t love Velveeta? Who? (Other than me…I’m writing this post so I don’t count.  I don’t love Velveeta… but don’t count me.)

Who in their right mind doesn’t love Velveeta?  It’s so soft and meltable.

You can smear it on stuff….heat it and pour it all over things.

What is not to love?

Finally, some competition for a giant Newfoundland dog picture.

This kind of reminds me of the very real Twinkie shortage.

This Velveeta news makes me think that I should throw the contents of the refrigerator out onto the front lawn and go buy enough black market Velveeta to fill the void.

I don’t even like Velveeta…it just seems like it might be a good barter item for TEOTWAWKI…if only TEOTWAWKI (the end of the world as we know it) would hurry up and come before all my cheese spoiled.

But…maybe Velveeta never spoils?  Maybe the magic of chemistry has created a super food that will stand the test of time? I don’t know how it goes with Velveeta…I may have hit the jackpot when I decided to co-opt our refrigerator space to sanctify my greed.

“Sanctify My Greed”….that’s a great name for my first album.

It’s got legs…more legs that a giant black Newfoundland dog.

This whole Velveeta thing sounds like a manufactured emergency to me.

Super Bowl whatever number is coming up and now they trot out that we aren’t going to have enough soft cheese to make it through.

And I believe that’s true.  You never can have enough soft cheese. It’s always an emergency looming over our heads…the media never drew our attention to it before , though.

I believe in Global Warming Climate Change, too…but that’s not really popular to do in some circles these days.

“Look how cold it is?!!! Global Warming is a crock of liberal defecation!!! They ain’t no such thing as Global Warming!!!!”

China-pollution-cc-565x310

Look how yellow that smoke in China is, though…kind of reminds me of Velveeta.

I just want hits. I’m a hit fiend.  I need the hits.

I’ll even write about Velveeta to get them.

There’s a shortage out there and it couldn’t have happened at a worse time.

Nothing’s the same with only some string cheese to nibble on while we watch the men grab each other.

We need our yellow, soft, meltable cheese.

Fix this cheese thing, America!

Forget about the yellow Chinese smoke for a while…and fix this cheese thing.

you are not alone


Mavis-Staples-You-Are-Not-Alone

 

 

“Open up, this is a raid….”

In between my first and second years of college, I had a job driving a beer cart on a country club golf course in Marietta, GA.

Marietta is a suburb of Atlanta. It gets hot in the summer.

My job was to drive a cart loaded with beer and soft drinks, sandwiches…snacks…around on the course and sell the stuff to the people playing golf.

I have a feeling that it was one of the best jobs that I’ll ever have.

It was certainly easy.

I remember this one period…deep into the Georgia summer….when we were having a massive heatwave.

I think it might have been over 105° for a couple of days straight.

There weren’t any golfers out on the course. It was too hot for anyone in their right mind to be out in that heat.

It was my job to be out there in that heat.

So I loaded up, went out in the morning, and parked under a shade tree to wait for nobody.

And nobody came.

For three days, I think I only might have seen a couple of old rich men, too obsessed with the game of golf to notice that the heat was trying its best to kill them, too.

During that down time, I read John Steinbeck’s East of Eden.

I love that book…I should read it again soon.

Anyway, one of the main thoughts in the book is the idea of timshel ( I linked to the passage in the book that talks about the concept)…”thou mayest”.

I wrote about this already a while back…a post called, with great imagination, “timshel”…so I guess I’ve covered all this “Steinbeck/beer cart/Atlanta heat” ground already…and this post isn’t really only about timshel…so I better get to the point.

I heard an interview with Mavis Staples yesterday…and she was talking about this album that she made with Jeff Tweedy, the frontman for a band called Wilco.

She talked about what a fun, family oriented experience it was…band member’s kids in the studio, lots of love and laughter.

Jeff Tweedy wrote this song for the album…I guess he kind of wrote this song for Mavis.

“Open up, this is a raid…”

We are frequently given the opportunity to be confronted with the “message”.

Sometimes it’s beautiful and subtle…a sunrise or a kind word at the right time, a caring effort when that effort makes all the difference in our lives.

Sometimes it’s boneheaded and awful…a stumbling anvil to the side of the head, a screaming face spewing out reminders of just why some make the decision to never take the “message” to heart. There’s a saying, “don’t kill the messenger…” but sometimes you just want to knock them out to put yourself out of your misery.

The “medium” makes a difference. The message is always beautiful.

Through it all, it’s our choice to accept or reject…or even consider.  It’s our choice.  That’s a beautiful thing.

Like a parent watching a little child…watching the child in their wildness…saying, while they’re waiting for the “prodigal come-around”, “no…just wait a minute…they’ll be alright….just give them a minute.”

“open up, this is a raid”…but when the door is busted down, the choice is still there.

What kind of deal is that?

I have no earthly idea what the word “constancy” really means…so I guess I haven’t figured “the deal” out yet.

 

elephant

Martin+Luther+King+Jr+PNGI’d like to think that we had anything figured out at this late date, but it looks like it’s just more of the same in some ways.

But a birthday celebration is to be celebrated…and today is Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday.

We need to celebrate what happened as a result of this man’s life.

We need to celebrate what his brave efforts helped to bring about.

So everybody celebrate.

It’s a huge deal….put on your party hats and rejoice like you would at any good man’s party.

But…and I looked it up to make sure I understood exactly what the phrase meant…there seems to still be an “elephant in the room”.

The older I get, and the more I think about everything, the less sense this whole “race thing” makes.

This whole “race thing” seems to still be a pretty big issue sometimes.

We still notice who looks kind of dark….or maybe really white, like albino white…or kind of middle eastern dark…or mexicanish…or maybe wonder “Just what is that guy? He’s darkish…but not so dark that I can place where he comes from…..do I need to worry about him?! He’s kind of different from me…do I need to worry?”

Why the heck do we notice things like that?

(Somebody is thinking, “Don’t lump me in with that bunch, you racist little Norwegian…I don’t notice things like that. Why, some of my best friends are Blacks….or Asian….or Mexican…or some other nationality that I can’t even pronounce…but they’re all my friends.  That’s how big a person I am…I let all nationalities be my friend! I’m not one of the ones who notices race.”)

You shouldn’t invite somebody who’s caught up in deep issues like race to come to a birthday party.

“All we wanted to do was wear a funny hat and eat some cake.  You’re spoiling the party with all this ‘race talk’. ”

Now if you believe that we really are “spirit”, walking around in a temporary skin-suit like astronauts just visiting a strange planet for a while, then the whole race thing makes even less sense.

How did we get to the point where we thought it was possible to look at someone else and pass a judgement that caused their life to be less than what it should be?

That’s an easy road to take.  We all love the surface. That’s as far as we’re willing to go…that’s as far as we’re able to go. We don’t commune on a spiritual level… for the most part.

For the most part, we don’t commune with strangers at all. We don’t want people we don’t know to invade our space.

But every once in a while, we get a chance to smile at someone or look into their eyes and forget for a moment that this person we’re talking to is kind of different from us….and then it becomes a habit, and pretty soon everybody is the same, and things are easier.

I’ve met people of different “colors” or nationalities who are some of the greatest people. I have met people of different “colors” or nationalities who are some of the biggest jerks I’ve ever encountered.

People are people wherever you go.

Red and yellow, black and white…they are precious in His sight….

“Could you move your elephant over a little, please?  It’s hard for me to see…”

Oh….I got caught up in some weird diatribe for a moment….forgot why I came.  Happy Birthday, Martin Luther King, Jr. !

Thankyou.

new porch rooster

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

We’re down to one rooster now.

Something ate one of the chickens when they were all in the relative safety of the coop, and I guess they all stopped trusting the efficacy of the sanctuary.

The chickens flew the coop.

And then the polar vortex blew into town, and one by one, the chickens and remaining rooster herd fell prey to the environment and a really fat raccoon.

There isn’t much that won’t eat a rooster given the chance.

I might even eat a rooster…given the chance.

This raccoon, I saw him on the porch, reaching up for the remaining rooster, but he sauntered off when I turned on the porch light.

He sauntered off slowly, glancing back over his shoulder as if to say, “We’ll finish this later. You haven’t seen the last of me…”

So now we’re down to one last rooster.

Now we’re down to the tough guy bully of the bunch.

The one who chased the sweet rooster off the porch railing when all the other chickens relocated.

The one who sent sweet rooster to his death by abducting his throne.

So the one who is left…or was left, I haven’t heard him crow this morning…is/was, we’ll see…both smart and scared.

He knows/knew (we’ll see) what’s coming for him.

It’s a slow-moving coon who understands the limits of a rooster’s night vision.

It’s a slow-moving coon who said, in best Terminator Coon fashion, “I’ll be back”.

He’s smart …and he’s scared…but I think that the proportions have blown way out of whack.

He’s more scared than smart at this point.

I left the door to the lower porch open a couple of days ago, and when I came back inside, the rooster was up on the washing machine.

(Our laundry area is on the lower enclosed porch.)

When I went to grab him to put him back outside, he defecated.

That the main problem with that rooster. I don’t mind him being on the porch occasionally, but I don’t like the defecation part of the deal all that much.

I can’t have a bunch of rooster defecation where we do the laundry.

I can’t have any rooster poo where we do the laundry. That just won’t fly with me.

We have a new baby….I don’t want to have to clean up rooster defecation all the time….too.

Anyway, the point of the story, and I got sidetracked with the rooster poo stuff, is that, although he’d come into the laundry room before, he’d never worked at carving out his territory like he did that day.

He’d never asserted himself by flying up on to the washing machine like that.

I believe that his fear made him assertive.

From what I gather, a rooster isn’t really all that smart. I don’t believe that their little rooster head holds a very powerful brain.

I don’t know how to find out how smart a rooster is. I “can’t know” if a rooster thinks about much.

Knowing “how smart a rooster is” is above my pay grade. I don’t think that I can even “google” it and get a definitive answer.

But this rooster seems to have a plan.  He’s going to ride this whole coon thing out in the relative safety of an enclosed laundry room porch…get up high on the washing machine, sleep in safety, terrorize the cat, and avoid that fat raccoon every night until another morning comes and he’s safe in his solitude once again.

Every single one of his “purposes” is gone now, though.

What’s he got to live for, anyway?

mail jeep rave

rave-culture

I check new music out of the library sometimes.

Actually, I check a lot of music out of the library. It’s a lot cheaper than even looking through the cutout bins for new music.  It’s about as cheap as it gets.

Free is pretty darn cheap.

When I “don’t have a dime in it”, I can afford to try on as many hats as I want.

I can listen to music that I wouldn’t take a chance on otherwise.

I checked out a couple of CDs the other day that I guess would be considered “electronic dance music”.  I didn’t know that when I checked them out…it was more a situation of “who are these people?” than it was an educated choice.

Soon I was rocking out…turning it up and delivering the mail.

Here’s one of the songs I was listening to…you’d need to crank it a little to understand what I was going through.

I mean CRANK IT. You need to crank it to understand.

You need to stand in my ears for a while to empathize with me.

I was listening to this EDM…which is a really cool way for us “club kids” to describe the “jamz we’re kicking it to”…and thought, “Wow…this is like my own little one man RAVE.”

My one man rave.

I came up on James Taylor…and Dan Fogelberg….and Jesse Colin Young.

I didn’t RAVE.  I didn’t often RAGE.

I was a sensitive young man….absorbed in the gentle sounds of love and loss

This music…this new techno music…spoke to me the other day.

I needed a bunch of strobes…many, many glow sticks….a Theodore Geisel hat.  I needed to complete the effect.

I don’t think that any of that would be “official government issue”, though.

JeepMailTruck

It would bother people to see and hear me coming while they were waiting for me to deliver their medicine.

It might blow their minds to see me jamming out like that.

That isn’t even something they discuss in our “safety talks”.  They say “don’t let the dogs bite you” and “always set your parking brake”, but they never say “don’t turn up the techno until your ears bleed”.

To the USPS, that would not even be a possibility.

“One Man Raves” in a mail jeep are outside the realm of believability for the USPS.

“Who would do such a thing?!”

I’m driving everyday. I drive everywhere in a constant and consistent loop.  My life is pretty much the same…work wise….everyday.

Except for the wild card that the weather can become, my job is good and regular.

It really is both good and regular .

I’m a Mailman. That’s not a highly exciting occupation. I’m not a Navy Seal or a Lion Tamer or even a Produce Manager. I’m none of those exciting things….at work.

At home, I’m pretty darn exciting.

But I can crank up the correct soundtrack, and I can be anything I want.

I AM THE TECHNOKING!!! I AM THE ONE MAN RAVE!!!! I DELIVER YOUR MAIL ON TIME…AND I ROCK OUT DOING IT!!

You might see me, music pumping loud, putting your first class letter in the box, yelling out, “YO, BOYEEEEEEEEEEEEEZ…HOLD ONTO YOUR HATS!!  HERE COMES THE DROP!!!!

How much cooler does it get than that?

you’re not an artist

I watched this video this morning and I thought, for a moment, “How strange….we do love to pigeonhole people….listen to this guy…..”

“….and he’s not even a singer!”

And he’s not even a singer.

He’s singing….it sounds pretty good…it sounds really good…but it must just be acting, because he’s an actor…he’s not a singer.

Robert Downey Jr is just a man pretending to be a singer. He must just be acting.

If you can do a lot of things…or a couple of things well…but you’re known for doing one thing really well…then everything outside of the thing that you do really well is suspect.

Like if Michelangelo was known for being a great artist…was known for being a great sculptor…and someone said, “You know…he’s a genius with cars. He can fix just about anything. It’s amazing…he really knows his way around an engine….” we’d discount everything he did outside of the thing he was well-known for.

We might say, “Uh…get back on topic.  Did you see that big dude sculpture he did?  Now that was a good big dude sculpture!”

We can’t let anyone be multi-faceted.

If we allow them any of our attention at all, it needs to be on our terms.

We define the parameters…it’s easier to say, “OK, you’re an actor.” or “OK, you’re a dentist.” and stop there.

We can’t allow them any more than that. Our interest doesn’t run that deep, usually.

And if someone seems to have a lot of interests…has a lot of abilities…it can kind of take away from the main talent…like we might say, “Imagine what he could do if he could really apply himself…if he wasn’t screwing around with all this singing stuff…why, he might even win an Oscar if he’d stop screwing around with all this singing stuff.”

From my experience, from what I’ve seen with my talented friends, if they can do one thing well, if they have more than one “creative bone in their bodies”, then they can do a lot of things well.

We still need to figure out what they’re all about.  It’s easier to have a one word description like “songwriter” or “painter” or “writer” or, even, “mother”.

“Mother”…talk about multi-tasking.

But that’s just normal…nothing heroic or strange about that.

Here’s another song by Robert Downey Jr.

I’m not going to champion Robert Downey Jr. as being the greatest singer who ever walked the face of the planet. He’s probably not.

But he’s really pretty good, in a sea of really good singers, he’s pretty good.

And he’s famous already…so he can get his album made.  He doesn’t just get to sing along with the radio while he does the dishes in his apartment kitchen.

He gets to step onstage with Sting and sing for a while.

Now here’s another guy who kind of surprised me.

I like these “Will you look at that?!  Who knew he could do that?” kind of moments.

There are lots of talented people in the world.

 

I have a backpack, too….

Usually, when someone tells you, “The house is great….but the access is really bad” it means that it might be a little rough to get up to the house.

The road might have some potholes…strange grading…needs some gravel.

There might be some fixable issues.

Most of the time, I find that it’s sort of an overstatement.  The road isn’t as bad as they say. I can maintain optimism and look beyond how hard it was to arrive at my destination.

Jenny and I went to look at a house last night that lived up to the hype.

The road was about a mile of ungraded weirdness.

It was bad access defined. It was some scary driving when the road was dry.

My head was swirling with thoughts of what the road would be like if it snowed.

I was ready to go home before I even looked at the house.

So much for my spirit of adventure.

This is a documentary about travelers.

From the looks of it, if you’re young, you can go anywhere you have the money to go.

I’m “middle-young” and we have a family, but I bet we could figure out a way to “go”, too.

In between the living “here now”, we might be able to figure out a way to “go there soon”.

But when it feels kind of awkward to drive a mile up a bad “driveway” to check out a house that’s just a little ways down the road from us…I have to wonder how it would be to pack up and really explore the “big world”.

Maybe the “big gesture” is easier than the small day to day? Maybe planning a big trip puts you in a different “place” in your head than planning a trip up the road?

It’s something about attitude, I suppose. India is a lot more exotic and exciting than the road you’ve lived on for 20 years.  It’s easier to get jacked up about something new.

The energy and enthusiasm for life is always there, sometimes you just need something new to stir it up again.

And when it’s a situation where it’s hard to get a single day off from work ( “How about Tuesday? Would Tuesday be alright for a day off?”), I can’t imagine taking a year off and trying to stay employed.

The United States Post Office does not encourage “walkabouts”.

There is so much that I want to see. It is a big world.

“One of these days”, I might do some roaming around.

One thing that I did notice watching this video is all these young travelers eventually talking about how their travels made them appreciate home. Maybe that’s the real reason to travel…to get us back to a place where we fall in love again with where we live.

I’ve got a backpack, too, you know.