Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Marriage is ordained of God

And again, verily I say unto you, that whoso forbiddeth to marry is not ordained of God, for marriage is ordained of God unto man.   

Doctrine & Covenants. Section 49:15

God ordains that marriage be a part of mortal life,
even though it sometimes leads to sorrow and to strife.
Nothing worth the having ever comes too easy, so
the state of matrimony sometimes makes a man feel low.
But those that stay the course and don't give up will find at last
that marriage trains the heart and soul to always be steadfast. 


Monday, January 16, 2017

For LDS Readers Only -- Clinical Notes on the Returned Missionary

THE IMPULSE that propels a returned missionary (RM) to make a fool of himself with women is of mysterious origin. Doubtless, Hugh Nibley could solve the mystery in a moment; but he was too busy explaining Egyptian graffiti. It seems quite likely, however, that the initial impetus can be traced back to the Understanding (always capitalized) most missionaries in the field have with some sweet young thing (SYT) back home. The SYT unfortunately understands the Understanding somewhat differently than the missionary. While the missionary is either frying in the tropics or freezing in some arctic region, constantly urged on by a dog-eared photo of
himself and the SYT, the SYT finds herself widowed at an inconvenient age and does not long remain deaf to the entreaties of other men (usually RMs). The upshot of all this is that the poor fool (PF) out in the mission field receives a wedding announcement one day, on expensive cream-colored paper, telling him that his Understanding has been misunderstood. Moreover, the SYT artlessly scrawls on the announcement that the PF needn’t feel bad about not sending a present mMr. SYT’s daddy is loaded. His final slap in the face occurs a year later when Mrs. SYT writes to the PF, still toiling away in distant regions, saying that they are going to name their first child after him. (Bishops know that this is the self-sacrificing stuff of which Relief Society presidents are made.) He starts lifting weights and attending social events where he giggles witlessly when he spots a former mission companion with his wife. The foolish compulsion toward the opposite sex blossoms when the dupe returns home as the celebrated RM. After two long, dry years, he finds himself yearning for tieless companionship. He peruses the home ward and decides that unless he wants to marry for spirituality alone, he’d better check out the nearest University Ward. There, instinctively, the RM immediately begins looking for Miss Right. (If he happens to obtain an education at the same time, so much the better.) He flings himself on all available females with the wild abandon that drew praises from his mission president when he applied it to breaking tracting records. In his mind, the RM begins to misperceive the merely polite response of female ward members and thinks himself irresistible. At this point, he feels obligated to formulate a systematic plan of action and draws up a document listing all the qualities he desires in his mate. Such documents are kept carefully hidden from the public view and are never openly discussed by the author, unless he is invited to address a fireside audience of over five hundred. The RM’s list mandates that the longed-for mate be a superb cook, an excellent musician (i.e., she can play Primary tunes flawlessly on any piano), thrilled by the thought of babies by the dozen, able to stay thin even during pregnancy, and unable to utter a cross word. Ivlost of these lists omit good looks--but that is only because the RM assumes that only diaphanous beauties will be coming his way. While the RM is carefully matching his list with the women he dates, he undergoes an interesting transformation. Hair sprouts from every pore of his face and Levi’s are worn like a second skin. Ties are almost uncompromisingly avoided, as are shirts of white or any other color found in nature. The RM’s dating patterns become predictable. His first date is with a cousin. This is to get into practice again. The second date is usually with a chance acquaintance in the University ward, arranged on the spur of the moment. The woman thinks it mundane, but the RM is convinced that a new Understanding has been reached. For the next two weeks, he flushes in her presence, hums old Bread tunes incessantly, and sells his car to buy the rings. Upon discovering that his Understanding is the woman’s Irritation, he goes into shock for at least 24 hours. When he recovers, he does not remember anything between the time he got off his mission and when he came out of shock. Only the fact that his car is missing makes him the slightest bit suspicious about the events in between. The RM soon feels up to dating again. He has a short fling with an attractive, earthy woman who cooks only organic food. He gags down soy milk and nibbles on tofu-carob casserole before fleeing. After a large antidote of pizza, he generally runs into the female owner of an over-used Kodak Instamatic. She has slides of every single unimportant event in her life, from the Heritage Halls Preference Dance to her recent pilgrimage to New Jersey, where her ancestors once farmed. The RM endures several thousand of her photos before he comes to his senses. He then hides in someone’s attic for a month, giving out the news that he has perished at sea, or is waiting for a lady missionary. He emerges from his enforced imprisonment a sadder, but wiser, fellow. This is usually when he falls in love with someone he home teaches. Though love may be the byproduct, home teaching in a student ward is designed to provide RMs with physical exercise. Called upon at least once a week to move yet another female home teachee out of one apartment into another, the RM strains every muscle while cramming the home teachee’s solid mahogany dresser into his compact car. While recuperating from back strain, this helpful RM realizes that he is deeply in love with the home teachee. Not puppy-love, like the previous affairs, but the Real Thing. The Real Thing lasts exactly one date--during which the female home teachee burns dinner, has an embarrassing fight with her latest set of roomies, and spends the rest of the evening sporting a broad grin which does anything but hide the bright green pieces of broccoli casserole lodged between her bicuspids and incisors. Doubtless, Hugh Nibley could solve the mystery in a moment; but he is busy explaining Egyptian graffiti. Unless the real Real Thing happens at this crucial time, the returned missionary now desires nothing so much as a long bachelorhood. He starts lifting weights and attending social events with other RMs, where he giggles witlessly when he spots a former mission companion with his wife. This final stage lasts anywhere from a few months to several years, depending on the humidity. It is marked by vain attempts to avoid the judgmental gaze of a marriage-minded bishop and to cover a gradually receding hairline, thinning tresses flapped over his scalp from just above the left earlobe. Soon the RM abandons the University ward (except for an occasional visit to look over the new crop of Freshman co-eds) and joins the swelling ranks of Special Interests in the nearest Singles ward. His natural habitat.

 TIM TORKILDSON hails from Minneapolis. After a thoroughly middle-class childhood and adolescence, he kicked over the traces and joined Ringling Bros., Barnum & Bailey Circus as a clown. After several years traveling with the circus, and a brief jaunt to Mexico to study pantomime, Tim served a mission in Thailand, from 1975-1977. Upon his return, he again joined up with the Big Top, but unfortunately had an argument with Michu the Midget, billed as the World's Smallest Man. Tim had the great satisfaction of shoving the World's Smallest Man into a nearby wardrobe trunk. Circus management took a dim view of this, however, and Tim found himself free to pursue another profession. He chose the field of broadcasting, and currently is employed by KBTO radio, in Bottineau, North Dakota, as their news director. Tim has authored several plays, dozens of short stories and poems, and one novel. This is his first piece to see the light of day. If he doesn’t get a raise soon, he’ll probably write some more. (Editor's" Note: How does one shorten such a bio?) 22 Sunstone

China’s Poplar Trees: A Spring Nuisance That Snows White Fluff

From the New York Times:  Here’s the trouble: Every spring, the female poplar trees and their willow tree cousins blanket the streets of Chinese cities with cottonlike balls of fluff known as catkins. They get into everything, clogging car radiators and irritating people’s eyes. In some places they come down so thickly that they can disrupt traffic and even cause fires.

There was a young man from Beijing
whose thoughts, when it came to the Spring,
did not turn to girls
but rather great whirls
of catkins that made his eyes sting. 


The Good Samaritan at Ringling Brothers (Not Me)

Years enough ago, I was a cocky young first-of-May with Ringling Brothers Circus, spending my first season in clown alley trying to learn all I could from the old slapstick masters while thinking I was hot stuff.
“I quickly fell in with the circus hierarchy, which decreed that the roustabouts — those weary and abused men who scooped up the animal droppings, and who put everything up and then pulled it all down again — were the only thing lower than clowns. The roustabouts were, indeed, a motley crew — wasting their slim earnings on nothing but carnal and bibulous pursuits. I spoke to them only when it was absolutely necessary.
“Their circus uniform was dark blue Levis and a light blue cotton twill shirt with the Ringling logo embroidered on it. Each man had three sets of clothes, which were gathered and washed once a week — leaving each roustabout in an extremely fragrant condition during the warmer months. They bunked together in one train car, and their breakfast was coffee and doughnuts. For lunch they got a dukey box — a baloney sandwich, a bag of potato chips, and a mushy apple. They had to get their own dinners.
“That year, the show played Madison Square Garden for two months in the spring. The train was parked about 10 blocks away. So I walked to the Garden each day.
“One morning as I was making my way down the street, I noticed a man lying in an alleyway. He was dressed in the Ringling roustabout uniform. I assumed he’d been out drinking the night before and had gotten rolled and dumped in the alley.
Serves him right, I thought self-righteously, as I arrogantly stepped over his legs. He can sober up by himself and get down to the show under his own power.
“I had not gone more than a few yards when I heard a melodious voice shout: ‘Somebody give me a hand here, please!’
“I looked back and saw a very, very elegant lady stepping out of a limousine to rush over to the roustabout.
“My conscience, never a very active organ before, smote me, and I turned back to help. I told her I was one of his fellow workers with the circus up at the Garden.
“We put him in her limo, where she used her silk hanky to wipe some of the dried blood off his face. He had come to while we were helping him into the vehicle and weakly explained that he had been on his way to the show early that morning when he had been robbed and then pistol-whipped.
“He insisted on going to the show and refused the lady’s suggestion that he should be taken to a hospital. She then handed him all the money she had in her purse, plus several complimentary passes to the Metropolitan Opera, where she was singing.
“As we drove up to Madison Square Garden, she gave me a quizzical look and asked: ‘Why didn’t you stop to help him?’
“I had no good answer to give her. Instead, I blushed furiously.
“After we had been dropped off, I helped the roustabout into a side door and over to the elephant tubs where the roustabouts congregated before each show. His comrades took him from me and were about to thank me for helping him out, but I couldn’t stand their misplaced gratitude and fled to clown alley as if pursued by fiends.
“I’d like to use my extreme youth at the time — being only 17 years old — as an excuse for my callow and unfeeling behavior. But I know that I have had to struggle against a cold and callous and judgmental heart all of my life.
“I do remember that roustabout’s name, some 45 years later. Vlady. From Poland.
“I hope he doesn’t remember anything about me.”


The Doctrines of Devils

. . . that ye may not be seduced by evil spirits, or doctrines of devils, or the commandments of men; for some are of men, and others of devils.
Doctrine & Covenants. Section 46:7


The devil has doctrine indeed,
confusion and hatred to breed.
Seductive to hear,
it never brings cheer
to those who will give it much heed. 


Sunday, January 15, 2017

Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus to End Its 146-Year Run

From the New York Times:  Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey circus announced on Saturday night that after 146 years of performances, it was folding its big tent forever.


The slapstick troubadours are gone; the cotton candy fades.
The acrobats and teeter boards are naught but lonely shades.
The lions and the tigers and the pachyderms retreat.
The windjammers are silent; no parades go down the street.
No bleachers now for crowds to sit upon with green delight.
No more the trapeze artists in their stupefying flight.
For Ringling Brothers is no more; the big top is deceased.
And life’s a little flatter sans that fascinating yeast.




Brutal is the reign of all who Christ disdain to follow


"Brutality reigns where Christ is banished. Kindness and forbearance govern where Christ is recognized and his teachings are followed."
Gordon B. Hinckley 


Brutal is the reign of all who Christ disdain to follow.
Their governance is shameful and their undertakings hollow.
Built upon ungodly pride and trusting in the flesh,
their fruit will canker long before it's gathered in to thresh. 

How fair the justice and the love of those who seek the Lamb,
who govern by His precepts and interpret without sham. 
Their service will be honored and their deeds will cast a light
to guide the faithful and the meek through ever-growing night. 


Saturday, January 14, 2017

Newfoundland Is Big on Bologna: Fried, Stewed and Layered Like a Cake

No matter just how it is sliced,
Bologna is still cheaply priced.
In Canada they
Do eat it all day
(on birthdays it’s layered and iced)



Hygge



A cup of hot cocoa for me
Results in a warm rhapsody.
This snuggled down weal
Is hygge I feel
(unless it’s a Valium spree)

(Hygge: A quality of cosiness and comfortable conviviality that engenders a feeling of contentment or well-being (regarded as a defining characteristic of Danish culture).

Friday, January 13, 2017

The Great Pie Car Monopoly Game

Many and fabled are the Monopoly games in the long annals of diversion, but for my money there has never been a session to match the one on the Ringling Blue Unit pie car back in September of 1971. For drama, skullduggery, and farce, I doubt it can be matched by anything this side of the Spanish-American War.

It began when the circus train pulled out of Denver; destination, Chicago. We were due to open in the Windy City four days hence, and the train master, a hatchet-faced beanpole of a man, had warned everyone that the trip would not be a luxury cruise. There would be frequent side shuntings in the middle of nowhere to let high priority trains speed by. Water would be rationed, and would probably run out by day three for the humans -- the livestock had priority. There would be neither air conditioning nor heating during the trip; so if the September weather became extreme we would have to fend for ourselves. Those with TV sets would find that reception was spotty at best. Even FM radio would be a hit or miss proposition. And the pie car, where the circus hoi polloi got all their meals during train runs, would in all likelihood be reduced to canned beans and stale bread by the time we pulled into our siding at the Chicago Stockyards.

I prudently stocked up on sardines, canned peaches, crackers, and a case of Vernors ginger ale, along with plenty of paperbacks, to see me through the ordeal.

On the second day of our hijra I wandered into the pie car for a burger and some fries, to find several of my First of May comrades gathered in a booth. The click of dice was audible above the rattle of the train wheels as I craned my neck to discover a game of Monopoly just beginning.

“Hey guys, lemme play -- okay?”

Holst looked up from his Baltic Avenue card to give me the once-over, as if I were a complete stranger to him. He didn’t look particularly welcoming.

“This is a serious game, Tork. It’s not for pantywaists” he growled at me. The other players nodded their heads in agreement; this was not going to be played with “Minnesota Nice” rules just for the Minneapolis kid.

“I can take it” I said, giving my pants a hitch and jutting out my hairless chin.

“Alright, let the boychick in” grumbled Chico, who came from New York and played fast and loose with his girlfriends and his Utilities. “But the only token left is the dog. And you’ve missed the first turn.”

I quickly sat down before they changed their minds about letting a rank amateur into their midst. When my turn came I landed on Oriental Avenue and snapped it up, which upset Steve Smith immensely since he had Vermont and Connecticut. Smith was only five foot two and made up for his diminutive stature by doing imitations of cinema tough guys.

“You dirty rat!” he snarled at me. Then he decided to switch gears for the honeyed approach.
“Ah, my boon companion! My bosom compatriot and soul mate” he drawled in his best W.C. Fields manner. “Mayhaps you would consider a swap or a shuffle to benefit the both of us . . . “

“Forget it, Buckeye!” I snarled at him. Smith came from Ohio. “You’ll be selling out to me, at a discount, before we cross the next state line.”

Smith glared at me, fingering the clasps on his denim overalls as if contemplating removing them to hurl at me, ninja-style. But he said nothing.

Each player hunkered down in silence, tensely rolling the dice and praying for that lucky number that would put them on Boardwalk. Holst got the lucky roll. While the rest of us floundered around with skimpy dice rolls, Holst rode a wave of incredible luck to traverse the entire board in just three more rolls, landing on Park Place. With a malevolent chuckle he began erecting hotels, awaiting our hapless visits to his high-priced web while rubbing his hands together like a stage miser.  

There was the glint of mayhem in more than one pair of eyes by then, but the tension was broken when Hubert, the moon-faced Hungarian busboy, delivered an ultimatum from the cook. Either we order something or we take the Monopoly game somewhere else. Burgers and fries were ordered; twenty minutes later they came, with a side of carbonized grease hanging over the edge of each paper plate. Meanwhile we eyed one another with unalloyed hatred. Chico had snapped up all the Utilities and all four Railroads by methods that would not have withstood the scrutiny of the Interstate Commerce Commission, or the attention we should have been paying his dice rolls if we hadn’t been seduced by his current girlfriend Sandy’s come-hither stares. She was one of only three female clowns on the show, and the only one who might win a swimming suit contest even wrapped up in a burlap sack. She was in cahoots with Chico to distract us while he fiddled with the dice. Her bedroom eyes entranced the lot of us until it was too late. Then she gave a throaty laugh and sashayed out onto the vestibule to smoke a cigarette. The hussy.

Anchorface had been playing indifferently up until this point. Then suddenly he revealed his master plan. He sneezed and knocked the board askew, scattering tokens and currency like an autumn gale. (He was called Anchorface for the very good reason that he painted an anchor on his face and wore a sailor’s suit.)

It took an hour to get things rearranged back to their original state -- and even then there seemed to have been some hanky panky about several key properties that suddenly belonged to Chico instead of still being on the open market. A heated discussion ensued; some hasty threats were made, along with a mention of a necktie shindig for a certain party from New York. Backing down, Chico pleaded ‘no contest’ without admitting any guilt, and put the properties in question back into the public pile. But his machinations were hardly to be nullified by this paltry setback. He somehow convinced Anchorface, in sotto voce, that his sneeze was beyond the pale of humanity and disqualified him from further play. So Anchorface quit and tried to give his property and cash to Chico. This led to a prolonged uproar so obstreperous that Charlie Baumann, the show’s fearsome performance director, heard about it down in his luxurious caboose and ventured forth from his private car to see “was gibt.” We explained diffidently that it was merely a philosophical discussion, not a riot.

‘Keep qviet or I trow you off der train!” he thundered, brushing aside our feeble explanations. He trundled away.

Dusk turned to dark as we quietly continued our game. Holst squeezed several unfortunate players dry; they went belly-up and had to quit. Anchorface became a kibbitzer instead of a player; his cash and property were put back in the public pile for anyone to buy.

Finally the chef came out to say the pie car was closing. Our combined glares at him produced a trickle of sweat down his face and the announcement that just for the heck of it he would stay open a little bit longer. We all ordered ham and cheese sandwiches.

I may add that due to the toxic lack of trust, none of us had gone to the donniker in over six hours. In the interests of health and hygiene it was finally agreed that all players would go together, in a herd, to the donniker at the other end of the pie car, where we could keep an eye on each other.    

I was actually no tyro when it came to playing Monopoly; I had spent many an exciting Sunday afternoon playing the game with my best pal Wayne in his basement when I was growing up. So I had my blueprint set to go. When I inevitably got the “Go to Jail” card I simply stayed there. Once incarcerated, I couldn’t land on anybody’s property and have to pay rent. So I would just wait things out until everyone else went bankrupt. I’d never actually won a game that way, but that was no reason not to try it here and now with these cutthroat ‘friends’ of mine.

So I sat and waited for the others to topple. But instead they pulled a dirty trick on me; they looked up the rules and told me I had to pay bail after I’d been in jail for five turns. This was unconscionable! A flagrant violation of truth, justice, and the American way! But my passionate arguments fell on deaf ears. I had to start going around again, and by now all the properties and railroads and utilities were gobbled up. Smith, who had a memory like an elephant (along with its grace), suddenly went all Charlie Chan on me.

“Man who sit still lose his chair” he burbled in a sing-song voice. The sorry Buckeye.

It was dawn when all hell broke loose once and for all. Several of the dedicated drunks who had spent the previous day and night with nothing but high octane beverages staggered into the pie car to order coffee and pie. But the chef was sound asleep on a cot next to the grill and refused to get up for them. So they toddled over to kibbitz. Their breath would have given a polecat the jimjams. They were shushed several times, but, in the immemorial tradition of rum dums everywhere, they simply got louder. And more persistent.

By this time there were only were only four players left; me, Holst, Chico, and Smith. The hecklers numbered four. So we each took one and frog marched them out of the pie car.
To be more specific, Holst, Chico, and Smith gave their three drunks the bum’s rush. I, unfortunately, lacking any experience in this interesting social tradition, was grabbed by the last remaining drunk and slammed onto the table -- scattering the colorful money everywhere and embedding several of the tokens into my backside. My three pals came to the rescue and wrestled the last drunk out the door into the vestibule, where hopefully he fell off and was killed instantly.

The game was a tie, it was agreed between the four of us as we wearily threw some pots and pans at the still slumbering cook, demanding ham and eggs and lots of buttered toast.

Released from our competitive succubus and true friends once again, we now argued over picking up the tab for each other. The sunlight streamed into the pie car as we all got up and gave each other embarrassed grins; it certainly had been an interesting game. Next time, maybe, we’d try Uno. In the affectionate confusion I had somehow been handed the check for the other three. As I looked around I saw they had melted away like the dew upon the back of an alpaca. Ah well, a friend in need is a friend to keep an eye on.