Sunday, December 3, 2017

An email to my daughter Madelaine.



How now, my little larkspur?
Hope all is well on the homefront. I was just going to complain that Daisy hasn’t sent out her weekly email yet, but it just came through. My computer is so slow that in comparison ketchup out of the bottle breaks the sound barrier.

I have so many aches & pains this week that it’s hard to decide where to start. Perhaps I’ll just sweep them all under the rug this time and spare you the agony altogether -- that’s the kind of good deed that would get a Baptist into heaven, no doubt.

Excuse me a moment while I go trim my fingernails. I hadn’t noticed how long they’ve gotten until they started bothering me as I type this . . .

There, that’s better. I should have done my toenails too -- they really need it -- but I can’t manage to bend over and snip them anymore; my belly gets in the way. Sad, very sad. I just calculated how much I spent on my feet alone last month, November. It came to nearly fifty dollars -- what with a pedicure and then foot creams and oils and epsom salt baths. And I still can barely get to sleep at night from the throbbing and heat my feet give off. But that’s one of the aches and pains I decided to spare you from, isn’t it? So never mind. Strike that last statement from the record, bailiff.

I still manage to hobble over to the Rec Center most mornings to swim and stew in the hot tub. There is a virtuous feeling to grunting and sweating when you reach my age.

Steve asked me today why I haven’t written any long pieces lately, like a novel or a play. I had to admit that I no longer have the mental or physical stamina to tackle such a project. Instead I find ridiculous headlines in the newspapers and create limericks from them. Surely one of the most trivial literary pursuits in the long, sorry, history of letters. But I solace myself that sometimes I hit the mark in ways that are appreciated. Just today I got an email response to one of my limericks from Amy Argetsinger, a reporter for the Washington Post, who wrote me:  “Do you know, sometimes I am actually learning about some bit of news because you've written a limerick about it. That's how crazy the news cycle is these days.”   So that helped me feel like I am not completely wasting my time.

I had Steve and Doris over for lunch today. I made lamb stew in the slow cooker, adding a full cup of red wine to perk up the broth. It still tasted rather blah to me -- although Steve not only had 2 helpings, but also ate both his and Doris’ chickpea salad  mixed in with it. That boy can eat, when he has a mind to. While we visited after the meal I decided I wanted a new map on my living room wall -- one of Brazil. The current map is of Germany; I put it up to get Virginia to come over and tell me all about her days in the Air Force in Germany, but now that she and Andy and Cici have moved down to Alamo Land I dislike that map. So I suggested to Steve and Doris, or ‘Storis” as I will call them from now on, that we take a little trip to the Utah Idaho Map World store in Lindon so I could get a new map. We had trouble finding one that featured all of Brazil on just one side -- the maps divided the country into 2 sections, North on one side and South on the other. That was not satisfactory, so I had to buy a National Geographic map of South America, which turned out to be a good idea. I posted a picture on FB of the new map, with Doris next to it, and I must say the new map is an improvement on the old one. Leaner and more centered. It gives my living room more focus. My next project is to review the hundreds of negatives I took of my last few years with the circus before I went back to Thailand in 2009; I believe I took some striking photographs of the circus tents and performers and the audiences on the bleachers, which would look appealing and be very distinctive if I had them developed and put in simple 8X10 black frames. Most of them are black and white.

Whoops. The timer I use on the microwave that Nathan Draper gave me years ago just went off. That means the washer is done, so I gotta go put fifty cents in the dryer. I’m doing my laundry tonight. Washing all the new clothes that Storis bought me this past week. Be back in 2 shakes of a dead lamb’s tail . . .

There we go, all set. I put in a Valu Time brand fabric softener sheet, spring sunrise scented, and then dumped in the soggy bundle of clothes to tumble merrily around and around for the next fifty minutes. I wonder what people did before there were fabric softener sheets? I don’t remember my clothes being especially itchy or irritating when I was a kid. We didn’t even have a dryer until I was in high school -- before that, mom hung everything out to dry, summer and winter. What I do remember is the endless ironing and starching my mom did. She ironed my dad’s shirts, his handkerchiefs, and even his socks! And sprayed his jockey shorts with spray starch before ironing them. Why? My dad was a bartender, sitting around all day with a bunch of drunks -- why did he have to look so dressed up? I think that working up a sweat at the ironing board was one of those virtuous chores that built strength of character in women back in the 1950’s and 60’s. They don’t do that anymore, and look at the mess we’re in now!

On the way back from the map store I asked Storis to stop at Fresh Market so I could buy some beef heart. I’m having a couple, the Uharriets, over for beef heart stew tomorrow night, Sunday night. I’m trying to duplicate a dish I had at a Peruvian restaurant some time ago. It was very rich and savory. I’ll serve it over egg noodles. And beef heart is very cheap. If it turns out well I’m going to try a steak and kidney stew -- I wonder who I can get for my victims? Storis is going out of town for several weeks on Monday; Sarah is really busy with her in-laws on their annual Christmas visit; Adam is on a special diet (when is he not?); and your mother is up in the Idaho tundra nursing her wounds. I’ll have to have my old pal Phil Hinckley try it -- he likes to come over and tell me how Obama sent the country to hell in a handbasket. He thinks Trump is doing okay. I don’t even try to argue with him. He’s really into fake news -- he believes anything that makes the Democrats and liberals look bad. I just nod my head and chew my food.  

Somebody is out in the alley right now, singing Jingle Bell Rock. A woman’s voice. But it’s dark and I don’t feel like getting out of my recliner again until the timer dings, telling me the dryer is finished. There’s probably an interesting, possibly sad, story behind that woman’s wailing -- but we’ll never know what it is because I have become a human slug.

The ward Christmas party is also tonight, and you will understand to what low depths I have sunk when you realize that I am forgoing a free ham dinner because I don’t want to walk the four blocks to the chapel. If I could still do balloon animals I think I would force myself to go -- you know how much I love showing off and grabbing attention. But the arthritis in my hands forced me to quit doing balloon sculpting months ago. And I don’t relish sitting around like a bump on a log, doing nothing but exchanging banalities with ward members. Call me a crotchety old coot or a flint hearted iconoclast, but my fund of small talk is bankrupt. What I yearn for is a group of people who sit still and quiet until one of them thinks of something brilliant or innovative to say, then gets up to say it -- or to ask an intriguing question and then gets up to ask it -- and then we can all ponder and talk to one another in simple declarative sentences for a few minutes. And then go all quiet again until someone else comes up with something refreshing to share. But when is THAT ever going to happen?

So in other words, I’ve become a complete snob and think my thoughts and conversation are so far above everyone else’s that there is no use in me even trying to communicate with my inferiors. Sad, very sad. But in my own defense I have to point out that I do enjoy having people over to taste my cooking and am always eager to hear what they say about it -- good or bad. At such moments I am affable and attentive and do not try to overawe my guests with my sparkling intellect.

Well, good gracious me, I’ve run this email up to 1500 words! I guess I better cease and desist and start watching some movies until I fall unconscious into my bed. I’m starting with Hope and Crosby in Road to Rio from 1942, then on Netflix I’m watching Boss Baby and then Deep.

Say hello to Donald and Deisel for me. And save a lump of coal for me!  Love, dad.


Saturday, December 2, 2017

Your Daily Horoscope for Saturday December 2, 2017



TODAY is a good day for waffles and fidget spinners. Don’t go near any cyclotrons or delicatessens. You have friends in high places who are about to fall on you.

 

AQUARIUS

January 20 - February 18
What happens in the next 48 hours will determine hardly anything at all for the people of Bemidji, Minnesota. So go back to bed and let the Lennon Sisters enter your dreams to guide you to a place that is not a bathroom, nor a living room, but resembles nothing so much as your old high school auditorium after ISIS gets through with it. Conducting business today would be both disastrous and a sign of belligerent against the Klingon Empire.

PISCES

February 19 - March 20
Your weekend will be taken up with accusations from Sesame Street characters about your misbehavior -- you know what you did . . .
Don’t change any plans after midnight tonight; and don’t let your left hand know what your right brain is doing. But above all else, remember the Alamo!


ARIES

March 21 - April 19
Your luck has run out for the present. Try to live on less than your earn, and earn less than you like -- it is the only true path to understanding your destiny and the Senate’s Tax Bill. You deserve more than what you’re getting, and less than what Matt Lauer is trying to hang on to. The cosmos is trying to tell you that you need more fiber.

TAURUS

April 20 - May 20
Keep your friends close to you this weekend; they hold the key to your prosperity in 2018, as well as the magic bottle of Tabasco Sauce that can grant your every desire -- if you lead a pure life and don’t spit on the sidewalk. The chances are good that someone you know only as a tree surgeon is about to show you how to double your life insurance premiums without getting any further benefits.

GEMINI

May 21 - June 20
Certain people are after your licorice stash. Others are about to introduce you to an otherworldly experience that can only be described as ‘meh.’ In order to differentiate between the two groups you must learn to pull yourself up by your own bootlicks and never give a lolipop and even break.

CANCER

June 21 - July 22

Beware of new projects in old clothes and of wombats in the bushes. No one knows the real you except your accountant, and some nerd working for Google out in California. There are reasons within reasons for your lack of success in romantic affairs; but always remember that no one eats their heart out without a drop of ketchup. Hold back on financial plans involving hemorrhoid creams.

Friday, December 1, 2017

Things that aren't going anywhere




  • Dirty dishes
  • Bill collectors
  • Telemarketers
  • The garbage
  • Congress
  • April 15
  • That burrito from 7-11
  • Your career after age fifty
  • Kardashians
  • Foot odor
  • The alarm clock
  • Tedious dinner guests
  • A sinus infection
  • That funny noise when you brake
  • You uncle’s fishing story
  • Fruitcake
  • Grandkids who think your pockets are only for candy
  • Day old sushi on sale at the supermarket

Thursday, November 30, 2017

Headlines & Verse. Thursday November 30 2017


Serial Killer Undone by Asking McDonald’s Co-Worker to Mind His Gun, Police Say


When ordering up a Big Mac
Make sure you ain’t under attack
By serial killers
As order fillers
Who supersize you with a whack.

Apple wants to know your heart rate. For science.

For scientific purposes your heart rate is desired
By Apple and by Google and by Facebook -- so you’re wired.
They’d like to know your weight and height, and all about your dreams.
Then you will join their army of consumer zombie memes.


More than half of American children set to be obese by age 35, study finds



American children are apt
In blubber to be slowly wrapped.
This breed of tweeters
Are not picky eaters;
With taste buds they’re not handicapped.

Couple accused of putting infant son in microwave


If your babies misbehave/put them in the microwave/if their attitude don’t change/cook ‘em on a stove top range.


Autism, sleep apnea added to Minnesota list for medical marijuana


A stoner from Sleepy Eye said
“Man, when I sleep I feel dead;
I don’t even snore --
I guess I should score

Some weed and a softer bedspread.

Wednesday, November 29, 2017

Headlines & Verse. Wednesday November 29 2017



Trump Shares Inflammatory Anti-Muslim Videos

I guess that a leader is great
Whenever he advocates hate.
The peaceful white dove
Is given a shove,
And put in a cheap packing crate.

NBC Fires Matt Lauer Over Sexual Misconduct Allegation

There once was an anchor named Matt
Who found in the fire his fat.
Though details are vague
It seems that the plague
Of misconduct knocked him down flat.

North Korea says new missile capable of reaching entire U.S. mainland

It’s no use to try for aplomb
When dodging a damn atom bomb.
I only hope Trump
Will use his big rump

To block North Korea’s pogrom.

un disciple de Alexander Calder




Il y a six mois, l'artiste cinétique de Brooklyn, Juan Fontanive, a inspecté le Museum of Contemporary Art de Jacksonville, spécialement pour étudier les possibilités de la galère dans l'Atrium Haskell. Il avait entendu dire que c'était un lieu spacieux, aéré, spacieux et accessible pour le genre d'œuvre qu'il était actuellement intéressé à créer. La visite de Fontanive a conduit à une invitation de Jaime DeSimon, le conservateur de Moca, à construire un projet spécial dans l'atrium du musée. Fontanive appelle son exposition «Mouvement Quatre», et il est maintenant exposé au public dans l'Atrium Haskell pendant les heures d'ouverture du musée. Lors d'une récente conférence de presse à l'Atrium, Fontanive a expliqué la philosophie et la mécanique de son travail cinétique: "La sculpture et l'art cinétique impliquent du mouvement, mais pas de l'activité. Les gens qui se rendent au travail dans le métro sont occupés, se déplaçant avec un but, mais pas dans un but plus large que leurs propres préoccupations. Mais un danseur se déplace avec un objectif plus large que ses propres préoccupations personnelles - les danseurs se déplacent au rythme de la musique et au rythme de questions plus importantes. Et c'est ce que l'art cinétique est tout au sujet - en utilisant le mouvement pour répondre à des préoccupations plus grandes. Bien que parfois simplement voir des choses à travers un kaléidoscope peut être cathartique pour les téléspectateurs. " La chute verticale de quarante pieds de l'Atrium et ses gradins à plusieurs niveaux en font l'endroit idéal pour que Fontanive démontre sa dextérité et son expertise en matière de cinétique. Les murs blancs de l'Atrium, ainsi que la lumière naturelle qui baigne l'atrium à toute heure du jour, créent des ombres qui non seulement reflètent ses pièces mobiles, mais les déforment et amplifient son effet sans créer de bruit gênant. L'ensemble est équipé d'une série de plus de 30 ceintures motorisées qui propulsent certaines formes vers l'avant et inversent leur trajectoire à une vitesse constante de dix miles par heure. Le vrombissement constant des courroies et le cliquetis intermittent des engrenages de la courroie rappellent aux observateurs une grande horloge.


Fontanive, 30 ans, a reçu une maîtrise en art du Royal College of Art de Londres. Son principal centre d'étude était l'animation et le cinéma expérimental, dont il s'est diversifié pour devenir un artisan dans le mouvement de la sculpture mobile. Son portefeuille prétend qu'il s'intéresse à «tout et n'importe quoi qui a des parties mobiles mais qui n'est pas guidé par l'intelligence». Le conservateur DeSimone dit qu'elle s'est intéressée au travail de Fontanive quand elle a vu ses installations précédentes à SoHo et West London, où il a passé plusieurs années à créer des projets qu'il a intitulés "Movements One, Two, and Three". et des roues qui ont vidé un tas de sable sur une table de marbre et l'ont ensuite balayée de la table dans une poubelle pour être empilées à nouveau. Au moment où Fontanive inventa le Mouvement Trois, il avait appris à être plus rusé avec ses mains après avoir suivi des cours de soudure professionnelle et d'outillage. DeSimone dit que si le travail de Fontanive rend hommage aux premières sculptures mobiles d'Alexander Calder, l'œuvre de Fontanive n'est en rien dérivée ou plagiée. La complexité de l'installation actuelle de Fontanive au MOCA est loin des fascinants carillons éoliens et mécanismes de liquidation de Calder, a-t-elle dit.

Tuesday, November 28, 2017

More Headlines and Verse. Tuesday. November 28. 2017.




Holiday Spending Surpasses Forecast as Millennials Lead the Way

The Millennial habit of spending
Apparently now is ascending.
They’re looking for ways
To make Black Fridays
Become episodes neverending.

New Recognition for Chronic Fatigue

Don’t tell me of chronic fatigue --
It’s ain’t in the same pickin’ league
As my apathy,
so cultured like brie,
That I couldn’t dance a French gigue.


 

How the Amtrak Dining Car Could Heal the Nation



How pleasant to travel by train,
To traverse the mountains and plain.
With no internet
And railroad baguette,

Nirvana’s a cinch to obtain.

Headlines and Verse. Tuesday November 28 2017.


Senators Scramble to Advance Tax Bill That Increasingly Rewards Wealthy

A Senator once told a pauper
“You must have a spirit that’s proper;
The rich need more dough
Than you, Shoeless Joe,
Or the GNP will come a-cropper!”

Casting Wall Street as Victim, Trump Leads Deregulatory Charge

On Wall Street the stockbrokers weep;
The bankers are all losing sleep.
With so many laws
There’s no Santa Claus
Until Trump can find one that’s cheap.


Trump and Russia Seem to Find Common Foe: The American Press

Nobody likes a nosy press; it’s too close to the bone
When sniffing out the maladroit, the tawdry, and the clone.
A free press is a menace to the peace of mind of those
Who don’t know how to govern but just love to sit and pose.


Lurking in Toilets, Swimming the Streets: Snakes of Bangkok Move In


Lurking in toilets, swimming in streets,
Reptiles in Bangkok are looking for eats.
A bug or an egg or a bird or a toe,
They’ll get you from drains or lurk in your chapeau.

Don’t put on your shoes till you’ve checked for a viper,
And never turn off your car’s new windshield wiper;
For geckos and frogs and amphibians riot
All over your car to augment their wide diet.   

A python will slither right up to your chair,
Looking for mice while it raises your hair.
The tropics may be a relief from Jack Frost,
But I’ll take a blizzard that snakes will accost.


RIGHT NOW Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer said they were pulling out of a White House meeting after President Trump attacked them in a tweet.

Our country is ruled by the tweet.
Consensus admits to defeat.
Democrats, bitter
About ev’ry twitter
From Trump only show their conceit.

When playing at marbles the terms
Do not allow any cheap squirms --
So taking them home
Betrays a syndrome
That smacks of the finest law firms.


‘Ghost Guns,’ Homemade and Untraceable, Face Growing Scrutiny

Americans passion for guns
Has killed many daughters and sons.
But still we persist
In raising our fist

For gun rights, despite the reruns.


Monday, November 27, 2017

Letter from a Missionary Daughter






I miss y'all so much but I'm having an awesome time here at the MTC :) If ya'll want to email me any time of the week you totally can, but I just can't reply to them until Saturday. I really enjoy hearing from friends and family and despite what people may say, it really helps me focus on my purpose knowing you're all safe and loved out there in the world.So tell me all about what you guys get up to, I'd love to hear from you all. Also, I really like pictures too; just FYI :)
I had a pretty great Thanksgiving! Elder Bednar spoke about how important the Holy Ghost is in the Lord's work. It was really awesome to be in the same room as an apostle of the Lord. Later that afternoon, we got to do a humanitarian service project helping put together breakfast meals for starving kids here in Utah. We packed over 350,000 meals in under 2 hours! I love service, it's one of my favorite things about being a missionary.  In the evening we had the Nashville Tribute band as our musical guests and I sang in the choir and we got to accompany them on some songs. It was Grand! They kept us pretty busy so that we wouldn't really have time to think about what we would be missing at home. 

We get to start teaching actual investigators and I'm so pumped! I love seeing how the Spirit can work in people to change their hearts. I've seen how it's changed mine just in the short amount of time I've been here at the MTC. I'll be here until the 12th of December; then it's out to California I go! Some days I really just want to leave the MTC and get to the field. Other days I really just want to stay here with the people who have become my family. We play four-square a lot during exercise time and it's so fun getting to act like we're 8 years old again. The food here is pretty okay, they serve large portions. We have pizza every Friday from Papa John's and I think that's my least favorite meal here now haha. It's not super hard to get up in the mornings like you think it would be for me, since I'm still totally not a morning person. It takes at least an hour for my face to un-scrunch, but my roommates are used to it now. I'm just learning so much all the time, but I'm so grateful to be learning skills that I will use for the rest of My life. I wish everyone could experience a mission, or at least the MTC. The things you learn here are eternal, and the spirit you feel is unmatched. 

 My companion Sister Stout is hilarious! She makes me laugh all the time haha. We have so many inside jokes, it's great. We make a good team teaching together I think. 
The biggest thing I learned this week was how important the holy ghost is in our lives and the crucial role he plays in the work of the Lord. Because honestly, it's not us missionaries who convert people; it's the Spirit telling them that the things we testify of are true. Elder Bednar straight up told us (meaning the natural man) to get out of the way and let the Spirit do its job. So I'm trying hard to focus outward instead of inward and be worthy of and listen to the promptings of the Holy Ghost. This doesn't mean that we neglect ourselves and our needs, but it does mean that we should be focusing way more on our investigators and their needs. When we do that, we will be filled with joy and with the love of God and will have His power to effect change in people's lives. The missionary spirit is contagious and I think I've caught it pretty bad ;) 
I love you all so much and I'd love to hear from you more! Stay the course and you will be blessed. 

Love, 
Sister Torkildson 

************************************************

Dear Sister Torkildson;

My, you sound all afire with the holy spirit! That’s how LDS missionaries should function all the time -- it’s the only way to survive the slings and arrows of door to door tracting and missed appointments!

I went over to Sarah’s for Sunday dinner yesterday, and just as we drove up to their house, her husband Jonny was dismissing 2 Jehovah Witnesses from the front door. An older man and a boy about 15 or so. They wanted to come in to discuss Bible scriptures and when Jonny politely explained that they were about to sit down to dinner, the man got a little pushy, so Jonny had to give him the old heave-ho. You’d think they’d have mighty slim pickin’s around Orem, but they persist in trying to show us Mormons the errors of our ways. I think the 15 year old boy was feeling pretty embarrassed -- he looked miserable.

I was pretty miserable the first two days I was in the Mission Home in Salt Lake before I went out to the LTC in Hawaii to learn Thai for 2 months. That’s because I had already bought a nice missionary suit -- or so I thought. It was a seersucker robin’s egg blue, with white pin stripes! The Mission Home president took one look at it and gave me the afternoon off to go over to ZCMI and buy a regulation sober-colored suit. Trouble was, I didn’t have the money for it. It cost $75.00, as I recall. So I sold my leather briefcase, my wristwatch, and my camera to some of the other missionaries to raise the funds. Turns out that one I got to Thailand I didn’t even need a suit -- we only wore dress pants and short sleeved white shirts in that tropical climate. But I never really missed those items -- the briefcase would have just gotten in the way, and the watch and camera would have just been distractions. Many of my companions had expensive cameras that they lugged everywhere and made a nuisance of themselves taking photos of everything and everybody. No such thing as a cell phone camera back in those prehistoric days!

And I had my first bout of insomnia those first few days. I just couldn’t sleep a wink at night. We were in a dormitory that slept around a hundred Elders, and they had pillow fights and bull sessions all night long, while all I wanted to do was get my eight hours. I was always falling asleep during the training workshops and talks by General Authorities. But finally I managed to tune out all that nightly nonsense.

Sarah and Jonny are getting serious about moving to either Thailand or Cambodia for six months next year, and they want me to come along. But I don’t think I could stand the long flight -- it takes about 23 hours, not counting layovers, to get there from Salt Lake. Jonny is doing well with his online supplement business, which he can do from anywhere. I guess I’ve told them so many tall tales about Thailand that they think it’s an earthly paradise! So I’ve been hoisted by my own petard! In my mind, I’m never leaving this cozy little apartment again, not even for a trip to Thailand. But we’ll see -- I get my Medicare coverage next September and then can get all the examinations and medical procedures done that the doctors have been nagging me about for the past 2 years, so maybe I’ll feel up to traveling again. But I’m not holding my breath.

Take care, my little prairie gentian -- Love, dad.