Wednesday, October 3, 2018

Min Tull. Wednesday. October 3. 2018



A machine that prints chicken nuggets. Fake shrimp made out of algae. Edible coverings that keep fruit fresh. These inventions—and many more—are part of a technological revolution that is poised to shake up the way we eat.  WSJ
With scientists messing about
with pizza and crisp sauerkraut,
I do not pretends
to know where it ends --
a pot roast that swims like a trout?
*******************************************
6:44 a.m.
Today I see the doctor. Sarah will pick me up at ten for my ten-thirty appointment. She came by with the kids last night very late for a school night -- after 9:30. She said she had to get out and do some aimless driving and then remembered she had some Tupperware in the van to bring back to me, so she swung by. I'm always glad to see her and the kids, but her late visit made me wonder what's up with her.
I'll get a flu shot. I'll consult with him about my lack of energy and stamina. I'm gonna ask for a Handicap tag, cuz my knees are getting worse and worse; I haven't been able to handle a flight of stairs in over two years. I'll tell him about my kidney pain whenever I urinate -- probably a leftover from my kidney stone attacks when I lived in Virginia back in 2012. I'll get refills on my prescription medications. I'm currently taking Tamsulosin to keep my urethra open -- without it I can barely urinate at all. I take Levothyroxine for an underactive thyroid condition. And I take Lisinopril for my high blood pressure and to help control my edema. I'm also prescribed Atorvastatin cuz my cholesterol levels are too high, but the pills are gigantic and since I can't swallow pills but have to either chew them with a piece of candy or crush them up and have them with a tablespoon of honey, I decided to forget about them -- the prescription is from a year ago and the doc has never mentioned it since, so I won't either. Then there's a big black pill containing, according to the label, 50 thousand units of Vitamin D2, to be taken once a week. It says on the container "Swallow whole. Do not crush or chew," so I haven't taken them -- I'll ask the doctor if he can prescribe it as a liquid or something I can crush and take with honey.  
2:39 p.m.
Dr. Walker smiles constantly, showing teeth like white shoepeg corn. He sits in a very small room with a very small desk and computer and asks me if I would like a prescription strength antiperspirant for the top of my head, which is constantly streaming with sweat nowadays. I tell him no. Behind him on the wall is a blank cork board. He orders a Pneumococcal Polysaccharide Vaccine for me, but tells me to come back next month to get a full-strength flu shot. His brown-skinned nurse takes blood samples. Now that I'm on Medicare he is going to refer me to an endocrinologist for my parathyroid problems. (And btw, now that I'm on Medicare there are no more co-pays!) And double my dose of Tamsulosin. But otherwise he cheerfully says I seem to be in pretty good health. That's what Sarah said, driving me over to the East Park Clinic, too. I'm in pretty good condition. So why do I feel like crap so much of the time? I think the good doctor wants to tell me I need to lose a hundred pounds, at least. I weighed in today at 332. Maybe he will come out with it next week when I go in again. And maybe it's more psychological than physical -- what am I trying to avoid by feigning exhaustion and confusion all the time? 
Now that I think on it, when I attempted a rapprochement with Amy last summer I was taken sick almost every time we went out together to visit our kids or have dinner and see a movie. Diarrhea, a swelled scrotum, and anxiety attacks that left me dizzy, nauseated, and sometimes speechless. I had to be taken into the ER twice while we were together again. When I broke things off with her last April I felt bad emotionally, but my health improved markedly. 
"Is a puzzle" as Yul Brynner said in 'The King and I.' 
**********************************
My friend in the Pacific has a morbid fear of being quoted out of context with his emails. He's always begging me not to copy any of them into my work. And in return he sends me photos of his lunch and dinner:
  

He seems to think I can be cajoled into sparing him by appealing to my obsession with comestibles. So far he's been lucky. But he needs to make his meals look more interesting and appetizing if he wants a continuing reprieve. I'm not sure what the stuff is above -- there's rice in it, and scrambled eggs, and broccoli, but otherwise it could be flypaper and pencil erasers for all I know.
**************************************

white on far whiter
blue mixed with grey mixed with blue
the sky has no walls

Tuesday, October 2, 2018

Min Tull. Tuesday. October 2. 2018.


We ought to place a tariff on our Congress members, too.
They flood our lives with nonsense and they stick around like glue.
Make them pay a hundred ev'ry time they give a speech,
and double down that duty if they want to shout "impeach!"
 Consorting with a lobbyist should generate a fine
that puts them in the poor house or at least a deep salt mine.
Whenever they appear on TV or the world wide web
they need to be deported to Croatia, Zagreb.
And when they're still and humble they can carry on at last
with minding their own bizness as each honest vote they cast

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

11:55 a.m.
A slow start today. I was up early -- at 4:30 in the ever-lovin' morning, but I had a thousand words to write for Adam on the benefits of drinking lots of water and cooking with a microwave. He has a blog called Harcourt Health, which needs constant replenishing --- so he has me do basic health pieces. They bore me. But I made fifty bucks this morning for a few hours work, and I needed it to buy more white distilled vinegar. That vinegar pool of mine evaporates pretty fast. I rarely do any subtraction shopping when it comes to food and condiments, but this morning I put a bottle of Angostura Bitters in my cart, costing $9.89, but took it out again -- even though I'm dying to find out what kind of flavor it will give my next pot of vichyssoise. 

Then I did laundry. Fifty cents for the washer. Fifty cents for the dryer. The laundry room is just past my front door, which makes it a lovely convenience. Some residents have to lug their laundry baskets down a long hallway to the laundry room, and then have to stick around to make sure nobody comes along and removes their wet duds to start their own load. Me, I just poke my head out the door every once in a while to make sure the building simpletons are not messing with my socks and garments. There's an ancient couple who roam the halls looking for anything that's not nailed down to take back to their tatterdemalion apartment, including laundry. They once swiped a stack of linoleum tiles sitting in the lobby. They don't do anything with the stuff; they just hoard it. Then there's a bald headed guy who talks to himself and always dresses in a fluffy blue parka, even when it's a hundred degrees outside. He's knocked on my door several times to ask wistfully if he could have some of my laundry. Nonplussed, I've always answered him politely -- saying that I only wash items I really need and want to keep, but he's welcome to whatever's in the lint trap when I'm done. A gal I call the Toothless Wonder because of her disregard for dentures will sometimes surreptitiously drop some of her flimsies into someone else's wash and then show up to reclaim them and hang them up on her patio to dry. Lovable eccentrics, the lot of them. 

While my laundry was churning and then tumbling I emailed today's poem, the one at the top of this chapter, to 87 journalists -- one at a time. I loathe mass emails -- besides, I don't know how to do 'em. So far I've only heard back from one of 'em -- Jon Talton of the Seattle Times, who replied "I'm for that."  

Two years ago I started keeping track of reporters who replied to the verses I emailed them about their stories. I compiled 200 names, and then started sending each one of 'em the same poem each day. But it got too boring, and hardly any of 'em ever replied, unless it was their story I was rhyming about. So now I email maybe six reporters a day with my latest poem. But I thought today's effort was extra smashing, so I took up a good part of the morning sending it out to journalists on the New York Times, Washington Post, and Wall Street Journal. My vanity is going to bring me only carpal tunnel syndrome.

*********************************8

(News Flash! I just checked w/Amazon.com and my book, 'A Clump of Trump,' has now sold a total of 8 copies!)

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

A notice on my apartment door this morning reads:

Dear Resident; 
Due to cold weather expected throughout the remainder of this week, we will be switching the building from air conditioning to heating for the remainder of the season. Beginning tomorrow, Wednesday, October 3, 2018. 
If you do not want your furnace to blow hot air please turn your thermostat to the OFF position. Do not turn your thermostat to COOL, as the will cause the furnace to blow constant HOT AIR. Should you need further cooling in your apartment please open an exterior door, or window. Thank you for your cooperation.
Dean R. Clement.

My thermostat, which I don't actually control


 Mr. Clement must be a mighty important poobah, to be able to quash the ac of hundreds of people for the year with a single crisp command. 

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

2:54 p.m.
Mark Twain had a habit, a bad habit, of padding some of his books, like 'Roughing It' and 'Innocents Abroad' with extraneous material he brazenly plagiarized from other authors. This was meant to give his work that overloaded, hernia-inducing feel that Gilded Age Americans wanted in their books. They weren't for reading; they were for display on the pump organ in the family parlor. Availing myself gladly of this peccadillo of Mark's, I'm going to paste and copy a piece of writing into my story right here -- the difference being that it's not by a different author, but by me. From three years ago, when a Church missionary historian by the name of Sister Carol Teruko Harada-Smith up in Salt Lake, from the Acquisitions and Receiving Department, contacted me to ask for stories and anecdotes about my mission in Thailand during the mid-70s. Apparently I am considered one of the pioneer missionaries in Thailand. At the time I was living in a friend's unheated basement, recovering from a bladder stone operation. So I had lots of time on my hands. I sent her several reminiscences, of which the following explains in a bit more detail the concept of the Thai Muu Baan, which I have mentioned in previous chapters:

The Mormon missionaries do not go door-to-door anymore in Thailand. My understanding is that this sort of hit-or-miss proselytizing is frowned on by Salt Lake as a poor use of time and effort. Amen to that. I never enjoyed it, but felt duty-bound to do it.

Housing tracts in Thailand are meant to keep out the tropical shabbiness of shedding coconut palm fronds, mangy dogs and peddlers, and the inquisitive eyes of khamoys – those mysterious dim presences that come in the night to steal whatever they can get their hands on. Thus in America you might gauge the wealth and security of a person by the wide expanse of open lawn and shrub and garden that surrounds a palatial home bursting with French windows and balconies; but in Thailand the better-off people rear walls around their homes that would baffle Godzilla, topped with broken glass, nails, barbed wire and possibly land mines. The only glimpse you have of the house is through the peephole in the huge metal front gate that looks like something David O. Selznick would use for Gone With The Wind. The gate is always painted black with bronze sunburst outlines that give you the feeling that slaves from H. Rider Haggard’s novel King Solomon’s Mines will presently troop out to push it open. The houses are solidly built of dazzling white concrete and stone, with driveways laid out in pink brick. The dinky windows are shuttered or barred, or both. The heat of the tropical sun bounces off all that concrete to create narrow streets sizzling with broiling waves of heat. A few hours in a muu baan in the middle of the day and you’d find two Mormon Elders nicely roasted, ready to be served up with some barbeque sauce and coleslaw.

The utter inanity of it was that no one was ever home in these muu baans during the weekday. Mother and father went to work; the kids were in school or at special lessons. Only the maid and the family pug dog inhabited the place between seven in the morning and eight at night. The quiet was unsettling. I remember feeling like one of those poor schmucks in a Fifties sci-fi movie, who wakes up to find himself all alone amidst the towering, empty buildings of some Gotham. My companion and I could do up an entire muu baan in a few days if we walked fast and knocked hard. It was meeting a mindless quota, imposed by our own Pharisee-like conception of what missionaries were supposed to do.

On weekends, of course, the whole muu baan took on an entirely different aspect. Mom and Pop were sure to be home, exhausted, and the kids moped about the house, wanting to go out for ice cream or pizza or see a movie. Grandma sat in the corner, her lips a thin, disapproving line as she surveyed all this decadent luxury that a really faithful Thai Buddhist didn’t need to indulge in; a wooden house on stilts near a klong with a large clay pot full of rice grains was good enough for her generation! With a little betel nut and lime to chew on.

The problem on weekends was that we were almost killed with kindness. Literally.

We’d bang on a door, the father would saunter out, we’d give our spiel about wanting to help him be a better father would he like to hear our message please? Without further ado he’d crack the gate open and motion us in. Before we could even mention Joseph Smith or The Book of Mormon he’d say “Of course, you’ll have something to eat first?” Thai etiquette demands that you accept such an offer without reservation, which inevitably led to a full-course meal being laid out before us. The first two or three banquets weren’t so bad, but even a glutton would be hard-pressed to keep eating after the rice starts pouring out of your ears. I never knew a Thai householder who didn’t try to stuff us insensible when we were tracting in a muu baan. And if, by some miracle, we were offered just a piece of fruit and glass of hibiscus tea, we still had to compete with the TV and the kids. Thais keep the TV going full blast no matter who they’re talking to or what the subject may be. You can ask them to turn it down, which they’ll do, but immediately one of the kids will rush up to the infernal machine and send the volume soaring again. Thais indulge their children enormously, so that puts an end to all moderate dialogue. You can either scream your lungs out or start miming.

The very last muu baan I ever tracted out before coming home, I had a greenie companion. I patiently explained to him that we would be spending the next five hours striding from one gate to another, never being admitted and having our brains nearly baked out of our skulls from the heat. That is what the Lord wanted. My greenie innocently asked if we couldn’t say a special prayer, asking the Lord to please put a family in our way. I humored the lad and let him offer up his plea. Wouldn’t you know it, the very first gate we hit, the family was actually home on a Monday. Well, I would show my greenie that Elder Torkildson knows how to take advantage of such an unexpected situation. We ate some mangosteens and guzzled Fanta politely for ten minutes, then I dramatically asked for a glass of pure water. The wife brought me water in a beautiful cut crystal glass. I said that we would now demonstrate the necessity of a Savior. I solemnly explained that we wanted them to know that sin, any sin, leaves you separated from God. To illustrate I took out my fountain pen and plopped a drop of ink into my glass of water. See how it spreads, darkening everything, I told the family. The mother gently took the expensive crystal glass from my hands and went to rinse it out while I told the rest of the family about the Plan of Salvation – but my eye kept straying to the kitchen, where it was obvious that the ink was not coming out of the crystal glass. I’d ruined it. My head of steam dissipated rather quickly; I let the greenie struggle through the rest of the discussion in his halting, toneless Thai. We bid the family good day and went back into the white hot street.

"Maybe we should pray the next family uses paper cups" my greenie said. The twerp. 



Although I love to tell stories, I don't enjoy repeating them over and over again. This got to be a problem when Steve Smith and I were the Advance Clowns for the Ringling Blue Unit back in 1974. We did a lot of newspaper, radio, and television interviews, and after a while I got sick of repeating the same old tale about how I joined the circus and how much fun it is to make people laugh and blah blah blah kill me with a shotgun blast to the head. 

Me and Steve Smith, as Dusty and TJ Tatters, with Ringling


 So I started to improvise. In the morning I'd tell a newspaper reporter that I had grown up an orphan, shuttled from one distant relative to another until at last a drink addled cousin sold me to the circus for the price of a six pack. In the afternoon I'd explain to some drive time DJ that I came from a long line of circus performers -- the Torkilinis were famous throughout Europe and we actually owned a small tented show that toured the foothills of the Carpathian Mountains during the Goulash Season. 

And that goes a long way in explaining why I insist that this work is NOT a memoir, although it contains more of my life story than you can stick a shake at. Because, you see, I'm not telling my story as truthfully as I can. No, I'm bored to tears with that -- I'm reinventing myself as I go along. As I try to emulate Ben Franklin with his 13 virtues. As I attempt to find me an Asian wife. As I seek for fame and fortune. As I lie through my teeth to you, dear reader. Familiarity, after all, breeds contempt. 

But I do have a decent regard for the truth, when it doesn't ruin a good story. So I'll end my efforts today with another bit of narrative I sent to Sister Carol Teruko Harada-Smith about my Church mission in Thailand. It skates pretty close to the truth, and so you can read it and I won't have to think up anything wild and fantastical about my missionary work in Thailand in forthcoming installments. That period of my life can be put behind us, like an artichoke souffle that etiquette demands we tactfully acknowledge and then ignore in the future:

I would like to preface the memoir of my mission in Thailand by narrating just how I got the funds to enable me to go.  I was, at the time, a member of the University of Minnesota Student Branch, even though I was not a student.  The branch met in a cavernous former Christian Science church building on University Avenue, across from the University campus.  I lived just a few blocks away, with my parents.
When I told my branch president, Lewis R. Church, that I wanted to go on a mission, his first question to me was “How much do you have in the bank?”  I reported that I had exactly twelve-dollars.  He gently told me I would need much more than that in order to be called.  My parents were not members of the Church, and they made it known in no uncertain terms that they would not contribute a dime to my upkeep as an LDS missionary.  They both told me it was a foolish pursuit.
Having completed a season with Ringling Brothers, Barnum & Bailey Circus as a clown, President Church suggested I might advertise myself as available for birthday parties.  I did not own a car, nor did I know how to drive at the time, but with his help I put together a flyer and stuck copies on every telephone pole in Southeast Minneapolis.
As I was laboring in an area called Prospect Park, a woman called to me from her front door, to know what I was doing.  I told her I was advertising as a birthday party clown.  She came over to me, looked at the poster, looked at me (pretty scrawny and homely at the time) and asked if I would perform at her daughter’s birthday party.  I gladly agreed.  She asked me how much I charged, which floored me – since I hadn’t given that any thought.  I asked if twenty-five dollars would be all right and she agreed.  The party would be the coming Saturday.
I walked to her house on Saturday, carrying a suitcase with all my costumes, makeup, and equipment – a distance of about three miles.  At the party I played my musical saw, made animal balloons, and did a silly little pantomime with a golf club and a marshmallow.  This good woman had been inspired to call a friend of hers who worked on the Minneapolis Star newspaper, to ask if she, the reporter, would be interested in covering her daughter’s birthday party with the clown there.  As a favor to her friend, the reporter showed up, with a photographer in tow.  The reporter interviewed me about my career as a birthday party clown; I made sure to mention that I was doing it to save money to go on an LDS mission.  This lady reporter then did something that to this day I can only explain as being directed by the hand of the Lord – she asked me for my telephone number to include in her newspaper article.  This, I later learned, was strictly against the newspaper’s policy, as it smacked too much of free advertising. 
The piece appeared in the Minneapolis Star newspaper the next day, with plenty of photographs, and my phone number.  My parent’s phone rang like a fire alarm all that day.  I had more offers than I could handle.  But since I did not drive, I decided to knock down the price of doing parties to twelve-dollars, if the client would give me a ride to and from the party.  I did dozens of parties, and was even hired to do a few weddings!  Larry Lopp, the owner and operator of Paul Bunyan Land up in Brainerd, Minnesota, hired me for several weeks in the summer to clown at his theme park.
I had made a good start on my savings, but by late summer the work fell off – since I did nothing more to publicize myself, not wanting to spend any of my money on advertising.  By the end of August my career as a birthday party clown had ground to a standstill.  Dusty the Clown was not the hot commodity he had been back in May!
I hit the streets, looking for any kind of a job, while I put up more birthday party flyers, but found no one willing to hire me.
In early September, just before my twenty-first birthday, I was contacted by an old circus friend, Steve Smith.  We had performed together as clowns on the Ringling Blue Unit, and had then gone down to Mexico to study pantomime with Sigfrido Aguilar in Patzcuaro, Michoacán.  Steve had been offered the position of advance clown with the circus – traveling ahead of the show to perform at hospitals, schools, and libraries, as well as to do media interviews.  But circus management didn’t want him alone – they wanted a clown duo out ahead of the circus.  Once again, the Lord intervened; moving Steve, who was completely irreligious, to reach out to me to see if I wanted to work the season as his partner, our salary to be split 50-50.  I was overjoyed to accept such a wonderful offer, but made sure he knew upfront that I could only commit to one season.  After that, when I had the money saved up, I would be at the beck and call of my Church leaders to serve a mission wherever they happened to call me.  He was fine with that.
And so the team of Dusty & TJ Tatters was born.  The circus provided us with a handsome salary and gave us a large motorhome to travel and live in.  We crisscrossed the United States for the next nine months, having a hilarious time doing our own pantomime routines at hundreds of schools, colleges, hospitals, libraries, even prisons!
I saved my salary like a miser, eschewing eating out or going to movies.  I even turned down the few pretty girls I met along the way (sometimes at church and sometimes through work) who indicated they would like to go out with me.  Like Scrooge, I could not bear to part with a penny.  Not even for a date.  (Truth be told, that is the only part of my savings program I now regret!)
After the season was over, with a fat bank account, I proudly went back to my old branch and told president Church I was ready to go.  The papers were filled out and soon I received my call to Thailand – a place I had never heard of before in my life.
I have no doubt that once I had made up my mind and committed myself to serving a mission as the Lord wanted me to, He made it possible for me to earn the necessary funds.
When I arrived in Salt Lake City to enter the Mission Home, I was first greeted by a professor from BYU.  I am sorry to say I no longer remember his name, but he taught a correspondence course on Missionary Preparation, which I took while on the road as advance clown.  He welcomed me into his home and took me through my first temple session at the Provo temple.  He drove me back up to the Mission Home, with a passenger in the front seat, another professor at BYU.  This one I DO remember by name: Hugh Nibley.  When my professor friend asked Dr. Nibley to explain his latest project to me during the drive, the good Doctor gave me a long and hard look, then dismissed me by saying “I doubt he would understand it.”  Having dipped into some of Nibley’s books, I silently concurred. 
At that time the mission home, where all missionaries received their initial training, was located in Salt Lake City.  It was a large converted mansion, belonging, I believe, in the past, to some mining magnate.  I arrived with my one missionary suit, which I had purchased out in Burbank, California.  It was a robin’s egg blue seersucker.
The president of the mission home was a gruff old specimen, not much given to coddling his eager young charges.  Needless to say, I stood out amidst the sea of ZCMI-bought dark suits like a zircon in a pile of coal.  I was immediately called into his office on my first day there.  He looked at me with thunder in his visage, then asked me to tell him something of myself.  As I narrated my story, his visage softened.  At the end, he told me, in a kindly tone, that my suit was not appropriate to my calling as a representative of the Lord, and I would have to buy a regular dark suit.  He reached into his pocket, offering to pay for my new suit, but I told him I had sufficient for such a purchase, and thanked him.  I went to ZCMI and bought the ‘missionary special’ suit – dark navy blue, made of indestructible fiber guaranteed to last through Armageddon.  It cost $129.00.  In the event, I never used my suit coat.  When I got to Thailand we were told to hang up the coat in a closet at the Mission Office, to retrieve when we went home.  It was just too hot and humid to ever wear a suit coat.  We worked in our shirt sleeves. 
We spent most of our time paired off to learn the discussions, which, we were told, should be learned by rote and then recited to investigators – during recitation the Spirit would take over at some point, hopefully make it less deadly dull than I initially thought it was.
We also heard from many General Authorities, as well as some practical lectures on how to live without our parents cooking and fussing over us.  Since I had been on the road with the circus for the past several years, that part of it didn’t really interest me.  I knew how to take care of myself.  The one lecture I do remember was on driving safety.  It was given by a blind man from Holland. 
The LTM (Language Training Mission) for all Asian-bound missionaries was located on the BYU campus in Hawaii.  President Snow ran it with scriptures in one hand, a lei in the other, and a laid back smile that proved more infectious than measles. 
Most of our time was spent learning the Discussions in Thai, by rote.  We also received a smidgeon of Thai grammar and vocabulary, with a dollop of Thai culture.  But the days droned by mostly with recitation.  We took one break to climb a nearby inactive volcano, another break to attend the Hawaii temple for one endowment session, and, at president Snow’s request, I did an hour pantomime show for the entire LTM one Monday evening.  We also attended a performance at the BYU Cultural Center.  But otherwise it was strictly business, with no breaks except to eat and sleep. Many a pretty girl walked sedately by our windows, some walked by as if they were soldiers on sentry duty, but we never took our eyes off our studies.  Except, of course, in the evenings, when the geckos liked to hang on our screens and gobble up unwary moths attracted by the light – that was pretty entrancing to us entertainment-starved Elders! 
Eventually our eight weeks of study were up and we boarded our 20-hour flight to Bangkok.  President Morris met us at Don Muang Airport, escorted us to our hotel rooms, and let us sleep for the next eighteen hours.  We then had dinner at the Mission Home with his lovely wife Betty and their kids, and were given our assignments.  I went to Bangkapi, a part of Bangkok, where my senior companion was Elder Barton J. Seliger.
We hit it off right from the start.  His two passions in life were preaching the Gospel, and golf.  Mine were preaching the Gospel, and clowning.  President Morris had given me a special assignment before I had even arrived; he had charged me in a letter to use my performing abilities to create goodwill for the Church in Thailand. Elder Seliger was pretty long-suffering with me when we had a show to do --- he would basically tag along, moving my props for me, while I was in the limelight.  He never seemed to mind.
We did manage to spend one P day doing what he wanted, playing golf.  At the time there was only one main golf course in Bangkok.  It had been built by the British while they were building the Thai rail system in the 1890’s.  Never having played golf before in my life, I was somewhat of a trial to Elder Seliger, who had gotten a golf scholarship in Texas to go to college.  My balls consistently went into the klongs, or canals, or else wound up in the tall grass – where signs warned the unwary duffer that cobras did not take kindly to their tramping about.  Determined to make at least one decent shot, I at last took a vicious swipe at my ball, causing it to slice like a boomerang and bounce off the bell of a steam locomotive that was permanently parked nearby as a monument.  The peal of that bell, which had not been rung for the past fifty years, caused a dozen or so members to pop out of the clubhouse to see what was amiss.  For some reason, Elder Seliger became discouraged at this point, so we went back to our rented quarters early . . .
In addition to all this, Elder Seliger had to put up with my apparent allergy to the tropics.  The first six weeks I was in Thailand I had to stay in the hospital twice.  Once for a severe gastrointestinal attack of some kind that left me unable to eat so much as a spoonful of rice.  The second time was for a scorpion bite, which caused my foot to swell up until it looked like a pale watermelon with toes.  This took a very long time to heal, forcing Elder Seliger to spend long, long hours at my bedside, reading the scriptures and reviewing the discussions.  I never heard him murmur about my indispositions.  He was a great Elder to have as my first companion.  He and I are still good friends to this day.

If you find any discrepancies between the above narrative and other pieces of information I have hinted at earlier in this work, please remember what was said in that great Western movie, 'The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance:'  "When the legend becomes fact, print the legend." 

Monday, October 1, 2018

Min Tull. Monday. October 1. 2018



A bat cannot get in your hair
if with precaution you prepare.
The same cannot be said of those
who want their pipe dreams to expose
on TV and the internet;
for in your hair they'll surely get.
I'd rather have a bat encased
upon my head than be disgraced
by all the schizophrenics who
are currently on public view.

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

Dan Kelly, who describes himself on Reedsy as a 'Fastidious editor; Husband; Father; Golfer; Sports nut; Cat fancier; Harvard grad; and Most interested in Fact, but comfortable with Fiction,' used to be a great friend and mentor of mine. I first emailed him a poem back in 1999, which he immediately published in the Saint Paul Pioneer Press with great enthusiasm. For many years he would publish nearly everything I sent him in his Bulletin Board column, praising and editing my work in a very friendly and supportive fashion. In fact, he pressed me most urgently to compile my work into a book of poetry, and a book of memoirs. For a long time I demurred, not wanting to bother with the tedium of compilation and the boredom of reviewing and editing my own work. Once I write something and it posts I can't bear to go back and look at it.

Then, several years ago, he took a buyout and retired, and his attitude towards me turned mean and petty. When the New York Times ran a profile on me three years ago he was miffed that his name was not mentioned in the article -- though I repeatedly remarked to the NYT reporter, Rachel Abrams, how grateful I am to Dan Kelly for his staunch support over the years. When I finally managed to bring out a book of poetry I dedicated it to him. I sent him a copy, which he did not acknowledge except to say he would not plug it on his own blog because it was too political.  

I've been sending him copies of this work ever since I started it ten days ago. He finally had enough of it, emailing me this morning thus:

Honestly, and meaning no offense, I can't understand why you are pursuing this!

  
There was a time, not so long ago, when such a reply from someone whose judgement and friendship I trusted and valued would have devastated me. But I found his rejection, perhaps even willful incomprehension, of my work to be not at all emotionally crippling. Rather, it settles me further in my resolve to continue with it. For one thing, as I told him in my reply, I want to find out if an artist can give meaning to meaningless banality -- which, admittedly, abounds in this narrative to a generous extent. And I assured him he would not get any further installments. 

And I assure all my friends and family who are receiving this work that if they would like to stop seeing it I will not be offended or turn nasty on them. (On the other hand, I will feel no compunction in sharing with them the award money from the Nobel Prize for Literature when it comes my way.)

(Sidebar:  Can a restraining order be issued for a literary work? You know; it is not allowed within a hundred miles of a library or university or something?)

Getting back to the surprising meanness and pettiness that developed in my old editor friend, I am reminded of what happened between my mother and her oldest friend Helen. 


Helen and mom were neighbors for over forty years. They went from being young housewives with nettlesome children underfoot, and unreliable husbands, to battle-hardened matrons who had managed to hold on to their sanity and savings accounts so they could take Caribbean cruises together. They knew each other's business to the nth degree. But then when mom decided to sell her house on 19th Avenue to move into a Senior apartment she didn't tell Helen about it. She told me not to tell Helen about it.

"Why not" I asked her.

"Oh, that Helen" she replied waspishly, "she's been poking her nose into my business since forever, and I'm tired of it. This'll teach her a lesson!" I shrugged my shoulders and complied with her request.

 Helen didn't find out until the moving van showed up at the front curb. She bustled right over to demand what was happening. When mom told her she looked like she had swallowed a spider, turned around, and went back into her house, where she pulled down the shades. They never spoke to each other again, and Helen was not at my mother's funeral several years later. 

How to explain such pettiness? I cannot. But I  worry that I am prone to that same kind of picayune malice. I am hoping the study and writing of poetry, and the composing of this extended piece of nonsense, will have a mitigating effect on my incipient sourness. Also, I now understand much better why the scriptures often speak of 'enduring to the end.' If I wind up a mean old man I'm going to go to hell when I die, no doubt about it. Me for a happy and foolish and affectionate old age! 

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

I'm asking friends to take photos of people holding my poetry book, so I can post them on social media. Here's what my friend out in the Pacific reported to me today about trying to help me out:

As I was leaving for work there was a guy passing our house exercising.  He goes by often.  He always wears the most bright colors imaginable, and he's kind of a Rastafari guy with dreadlocks and all. I've spoken with him before.  He is a psychiatrist, I think, helping the poor people.  He'd had an accident and so he walks rather than runs, for his exercise.  He would have made an excellent backdrop for someone holding your book.  I asked him if he would.  He paused for a minute, looking at the book and said "No thank you."  I was terribly embarrassed.

He did manage to get some nice photos of my book with some interesting objects. He's a good egg, he is: 

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

4:49 p.m.  
After lunch I took the 850 bus down to Deseret Industries on Columbia Lane. Seated in the front row, I was hurled to the filthy floor when the driver stomped on the brakes to avoid back ending an idiot Camry driver who switched lanes without signaling. It took four people to pry me loose from the wads of gum and other unspeakable adhesives on the black bus floor. The driver asked if I were hurt.

"Only my dignity, son" I snarled back at him in my best W.C. Fields mutter.

While not personally funny to me (not yet, anyways), I recognize this incident as the comic highlight of my day. Because the sudden loss of dignity is the keystone of all comedy. Now that I'm back safe and sound at home, soaking my tootsies in a warm baking soda bath, I can speculate at leisure on this dynamic of human existence. When a man loses his dignity little by little, that's a tragedy. But when dignity goes all at once, as in a pratfall, that's the ripest form of comedy there is. Placed in that context, Lucifer's fall from the Celestial Heights was the greatest comic performance ever wrought by man or angels. Strange, how John Milton missed that aspect of it. I always thought he had it on the ball. Oh well, better luck next time Johnny.

I enjoyed my session of subtraction shopping at the DI. I gathered a paperback Agatha Christie whodunit for 75 cents in my cart; a blue paisley bandana for a dollar; a basting brush, also a dollar; and a set of superannuated steak knifes for two-fifty. I'm always a bit leery around the utensils bin at DI -- there are some mighty strange looking customers handling the knives and giggling nervously --


Then I took my cart over to the furniture section to sit in a lumpy recliner (selling for twenty five bucks) to start my subtraction shopping. First I decided I really didn't need another bandana -- I've got a dozen of 'em already. Next I gave the basting brush the old heave ho -- after all, how often do I roast anything that needs basting? I mean, I'd like to roast a turkey once in a while and baste it with melted butter every half hour like my mother did -- but my kids have grilled salmon and quinoa salad for Thanksgiving. They'd turn up their organic noses at a chemically suspect gobbler. Too many steroids and antibiotics. Phooey. 

Anywho. The Christie went next; I'd seen the movie. And last of all the steak knives went back in their bin -- I probably will not buy and cook and eat another steak for the rest of my life. Steak sits in my gut like a block of cement, digesting slower than an Entmoot.

So I left DI just as I had entered it -- and not a penny poorer. In their bathroom I was struck once again with how pleasant and soothing the perfume of their hand soap is. I can't identify the scent. It's not lavender or patchouli or ylang ylang -- and it isn't the same scent the Church uses for hand soap in their ward and stake buildings. If I could soak in a warm tub with that DI hand soap scent swirling around me I believe I could transcend to the next Plane of Existence (or maybe even reach Disneyland!) 

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


three colors waving
supporting each other now
and forever -- please

My Daughter Daisy's Missionary Email from California



Helloooo everybody!

Well, transfers have come and gone and I am in a new area now!! It's called Rancho Santa Margarita and my new companion is Sister Ahsmus, from Oregon :)  I've only been here in Rancho Santa Margarita for a few hours, but it seems pretty nice. It's very well known throughout the mission as being very hot because it's as far inland as we can go in our mission. I've heard great things about it though! And we'll be covering two congregations, so that will keep us busy for sure. Exciting things to come!!! 
Transfers always means saying goodbye to the people you've come to known and love, and that's what yesterday was for me. I will truly treasure the time that I've spent in Dana Point and the people that I've been privileged to come to know and love. I think probably the biggest lesson I learned there, was how to truly love people through the Savior by being patient, kind, compassionate, humble and willing to always help. I feel like my heart was really changed by being in Dana Point and getting to serve many people. 
Something that I learned in church yesterday was that the path of life is less like a pleasant garden path that you just stroll down, and more like a spartan race with mud pits, detours, climbing walls and other things that hurt and challenge you. When put like that, it doesn't sound very pleasant, BUT if you look at it from an eternal perspective, all of what we go through makes us stronger when we know where our strength comes from: God. This life was never meant to be easy, you can't just stroll through it without any problems and expect to learn and grow. We were always meant to be challenged and tested, so that we can learn to become as our Savior and Heavenly Father are. 
That's all I have time for today, but I love you all!! I hope you all have such wonderful weeks and see miracles! 

Love, Sister Torkildson

Sunday, September 30, 2018

Min Tull. Sunday. September 30. 2018




 The Atonement, which can reclaim each one of us, bears no scars. That means that no matter what we have done or where we have been or how something happened, if we truly repent, He has promised that He would atone. And when He atoned, that settled that. There are so many of us who are thrashing around, as it were, with feelings of guilt, not knowing quite how to escape. You escape by accepting the Atonement of Christ, and all that was heartache can turn to beauty and love and eternity . . . unlike the case of our mortal bodies, when the repentance process is complete, no scars remain because of the Atonement of Jesus Christ.   Boyd. K. Packer.


It was settled in the Heavens long before a man was born
that the Savior would atone for sins, that no one need to mourn.
Poor choices and black passions have begrimed us one and all;
yet through the grace of Jesus Christ we get up from our Fall.
So do not fear that you have sinned beyond the mortal pale;
when properly forgiven there's no penalty, no jail.
He is the Great Physician who has healing in His wings.
Embrace His promise to remove all scars and deadly stings!

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

6:54 a.m.
I am going to Fresh Market to buy a fresh bagel, with these words haunting me from General Conference 22 years ago:
Some mornings my stomach gets a little dicey from the pills I have to take on an empty stomach. But a bagel with cream cheese always has a soothing effect. And I'd like to be able to walk to Church this morning without worrying about having an accident. Of course, I could have simply bought a bagel yesterday -- but then it wouldn't have that newborn savor I relish so much. 
So I go from praising the sin-cleansing nature of Christ's atonement to committing a minor infraction just to satisfy my belly. Perhaps my friends and children can excuse such behavior, but I'm already depressed about it before going out the door . . . 
On my Church mission in Thailand I worried about breaking the Sabbath by eating out, as well. Being a Buddhist country, they have no conception of the Sabbath -- so Sundays are wide open. Sunday was our maid's day off. Yes, we had a maid who cooked, cleaned, and did our laundry. I felt like John D. Hackensacker. 
So on Sundays my companion and I would dine out, all three meals. Canned food, ramen noodles, and microwavable fare had not yet penetrated the raw environs where we knocked on doors and held street meetings. So it was either eat out or starve. I talked this over with Elder Heier one day, and we decided to carry our own lunch on Sundays when we went out tracting in the broiling tropical sun, and subsist on fruits and leftover rice for our breakfast and dinner. We bought 3-tier stainless steel stackable lunch pails and had the maid fill them with curry and Chinese pickles and other goodies on Saturday night. We didn't bother to refrigerate them, since our maid used an obscene amount of msg -- enough to theoretically disable every bacillus in a ten yard radius. Besides, once filled and stacked they didn't fit in our cramped little fridge. 
That Sunday we walked through an entire muu baan -- a gated suburban community -- and didn't find a single person home. Sensibly, they were all at the beach. At noon we found a shady golden shower tree to sit under and opened our lunches. Noxious steam and gas escaped from our canisters with an evil hiss, but like dimwits we went ahead and ate it all up anyways. It didn't take long for our innards to reenact the Battle of Bull Run. And brother, did we run! Elder Heier and I were hors de combat for the next several days. When our mission president, Paul Morris, found out what we had done in our zealous pursuit of Sabbath purity, he patiently instructed us to forgo the deadly brown bagging and stick to the inexpensive noodle shops that lined every rural road . . . 
10:03 a.m.
Well, sir, I did NOT go to Fresh Market for a bagel. I had cream cheese on crackers instead, with a V-8, and felt very sanctified for doing so. Then I strolled leisurely to Church, taking a dozen photos or so on the way to inspire my haiku. At Church I realized today is the Primary Program -- where the children take over the Sacrament Meeting with songs and stammering speeches. So I bailed after the first fifteen minutes. If any of my own grand kids had been in the program I would have stuck around. But as it was I made a bee line straight back home to push ping pong balls around in my vinegar pool. Nemo Sine Vitio Est.   
2:18 p.m.
All the pickle soup is eaten up -- all nine people who had some said it was good. I put a meal out in the lobby most Sundays. Most of the jello with gooseberries and marshmallows is gone as well. I guess I should be pleased that I whipped up a big meal that gave nearly a dozen old people a pleasant break from their own cooking. But the skies have turned a flat disappointed grey, and I'm lacking the savor of life the way a cow lacks it until it finds a salt block. Another day lacking transcendence, which I've been searching for most of my life -- only to find the Janitor's Closet at the end of my quest instead.
And the vinegar pool is full of dead bugs. Fool insects; don't they know any better than to monkey around with acetic acid?
I'm gonna quit writing for the rest of the day, to - to - to - to what? Sit immobile like a slug? But a slug doesn't sit; what has it got to sit on? It doesn't lean on anything or lay down. It piles itself on itself, then spreads out like an amoeba or spilled corn syrup. The freshness I started out with today has gone AWOL. I need a good movie; something schmaltzy and ethnic. I'll watch Irene Dunne in 'I Remember Mama' on YouTube -- I can stream it for three dollars. I watched that movie with Amy years ago and I still remember her bright laughter during parts of the film. I loved to hear her laugh; it's been nearly 30 years since I've heard that pleasant sound. I could rarely make her laugh myself. Her brother Wiley could make her laugh until she wet herself, but I could hardly get a giggle out of her. So when I did hear her laugh it was always a happy grace note to my day. In the early days of our marriage we would go to bed early and read to each other. She would read Jane Austen to me, and I would read James Herriot to her -- she loved his puckish humor around barnyard animals, giving out with a fluttery chuckle that was both innocent and arousing. 
Joom, being a Thai, loved laughing for laughing's sake. She could go from raging turmoil to guffawing delight in an instant -- for no discernible reason that I could see. One unbearably hot day, when we were both out of sorts, she warned me not to take another handful of her dog Neepoo's food from the bag to feed to the fish in the pond. I said okay, khrab. Then when I thought she wasn't looking I grabbed a handful of dog food, ran out to the fish pond, and began tossing nuggets into the water -- watching first the minnows come up to investigate, then the bigger fish to eat the minnows, then the solemn soft shell turtles to push every other thing aside to engulf the disintegrating nuggets. Enjoying myself, I didn't notice Joom creeping up on me, her scowl like a thundercloud, with a bamboo stick. With a crude curse she let me have one across the back of my legs, then chased me around the fish pond with every intention of raising some hearty welts on my farang hide. Half way around the pond I tripped over a liana vine, crashing into the mud. Joom jumped on top of me to continue her punishment but as she lifted the bamboo cane a gust of laughter overwhelmed her. We rolled around in the muck while I tried to take off her blouse, until Neepoo took it upon herself to start licking the mud off our faces. Joom was still laughing uproariously when she got up to go shower. I was smiling, too; but not laughing quite as much -- she'd left some very sincere weals on me.   
I don't remember my mom and dad laughing very much. At least not with each other. When they were with their own crowd they yukked it up like normal folks, but when it was just the two of them (and us kids) they clammed up and lost their sense of humor. I'm sure that's part of the reason I always wanted to be a clown; to get them laughing together. When Amy and I stopped being able to entertain each other our relationship suffered a terminal stroke.
When I was buying vinegar at Fresh Market yesterday I also picked up a TIME Magazine special edition, called 'The Science of Laughter.' It set me back thirteen bucks. I haven't delved into it yet -- it'll probably just lay around the living room like a piece of fusty bric-a-brac until I throw it out. After being a circus clown for so long, I kinda know all there is to know about any science that goes along with laughter:
When you're with friends or in an intimate setting you work as fast as you can to get the laugh. And you never repeat yourself if someone doesn't get the joke the first time. Just keep going. That's the most effective way to get a laugh.
With big impersonal crowds, you work real slow. Slower than you think you should. I remember watching Otto Griebling, the great Ringling tramp clown, sitting on an elephant tub during come in -- when the audience is finding their seats and getting their popcorn before the show starts. He patiently knitted a formless skein of yarn, holding it up whenever a busty young woman walked by to see if it might fit her generous proportions. He did so in a slow, workmanlike manner -- dead serious. The crowd loved it, giving him a standing ovation when he finally shambled off at the tweet of the ringmaster's whistle. So I kept slowing down my own clowning, until it seemed like slow motion to me -- and that's when I finally succeeded in getting the real belly laughs out of a crowd.    
Sunday evening; nobody calls, nobody visits. Should I watch Supergirl on Netflix or read a book to improve my mind? Seems like I can only read for an hour at a time anymore. After that my eyes start to smart and my attention wanders atrociously. It wasn't always that way.

On my mission in Thailand there was a snafu at the Mission Office, so I was left without a companion the very last week I was there.  I was marooned at the office, since missionaries could not go out proselytizing by themselves -- they tried to give me some gainful employment. I don't remember what I did -- maybe lick envelopes -- but whatever it was I botched it, so I was told to sit in a corner quietly and maybe read a book or something. President Harvey Brown, who took over from Paul Morris, had a ton of Church books, which he kept at the office, so I dived right in. It beat tracting those hot muggy Bangkok streets, so narrow that a tuk tuk might run me over at any moment, or a rabid dog sink its fangs into my tender white shin.

I remember starting with a huge volume: MAN: His Origin and Destiny, by Joseph Fielding Smith. An anti-evolution tome that exhaustively examined the fakes and flummery of early evolutionists like Huxley and Thomas Hunt Morgan. Then I moved on to 'The Fate of the Persecutors of the Prophet Joseph Smith' by N.B. Lundwall -- a hair-raising account of the grisly end of some of the Prophet's worst enemies. I immersed myself in the Cleon Skousen trilogy:
The First 2000 years; The Third Thousand Years; and The Fourth Thousand Years. 'The Miracle of Forgiveness' by Spencer W. Kimball moved me to tears. I inhaled all five volumes of 'Out of the Best Books.'  I read from nine in the morning until seven at night, with breaks only for eating and the bathroom. I didn't want to stop reading Church theology and history, and almost went into shock when it was time to get on the plane back to Minneapolis and I had to leave all those books behind. 

As President Brown shook my hand and bade me godspeed at the Don Muang Airport, he asked me what I wanted to do when I got home -- try college, perhaps, or would I go back to the circus?

"I want to be a barber" I told him, truthfully. 

"Whatever for?" he asked, thunderstruck.

"They always have a lot of reading material around their shop" I replied confidently, "and I want to keep reading like I did this past week."

He gazed at me shrewdly, saw that I was actually sincere, and gave me some profound advice:

"Elder" he told me, with his hand on my shoulder, "girls don't like men that read too many books."

*********************************
A friend in Thailand, with family ties here in Provo/Orem, emailed me back about barbers, thus:  

ohhhhh Tim... you would have made a great Barber!
The barber from my youth, Don Dick, a Menonite with a sharp tongue, learned the trade in the Navy! I like to get my haircut by him just to have the conversation and hear his jokes and sarcasm! 

Maybe you should go to barber school now and start cutting heads in your front room. You could use the Perpetual Education Fund to pay for it. Seriously! You'd make a great barber!


So, girls don't like men that read too many books, eh....what about men who "write too many books?"




Saturday, September 29, 2018

Min Tull. Saturday. September 29. 2018




I took an Art class at the University of Minnesota back in 2000. It was held in an old paint factory that reeked of turpentine and Paris blue. The teacher had us draw things. I hated to draw things, so took photographs of things that looked like what we were supposed to draw and turned those in instead. The teacher appreciated my devil-may-care attitude, so gave me carte blanche to do whatever I wanted in class, or in the entire building for that matter. Naturally, I gravitated towards performance art.

One morning I came very early, before sunrise, and hung 32 cheap umbrellas upside down with fish line from the studio girders. The teacher couldn't stop laughing when he saw it; but some busybody from the Dean's office was alerted to this brolly brouhaha of mine and decided there was a chance someone could poke their eye out on one of the sharp ends of an umbrella rib, so I had to yank each umbrella down and hand it off to a stoical janitor. 

A week or two later I once again stealthily entered the Art building before the sun made its appearance. This time I blew up a hundred plus balloons and laid them on the cement steps leading from the first to the second floor. As sleepy students trickled in they initially tried to avoid stepping on the balloons, but then got tired of pirouetting and started stomping on them. This created a booming reverberation that someone took for gunfire. Soon the campus police had the building surrounded, and my Art teacher had to do some fast talking to keep me from being tossed in the hoosegow for terrorist activities. 

You'd think this would cool my jets, artistically speaking. Not a chance. 

Towards the end of the semester the teacher, whose good name I regretfully cannot remember, offered me a small side room on the first floor to exhibit some of my stranger whims if I so wished. It was painted dark purple, about the size of a broom closet. I accepted his challenge, immediately going to the Goodwill Store to purchase the largest glass fishbowl I could find. I swiped a cheesy pedestal from the basement, painted it black, put the bowl on it in the purple exhibition room, and filled the bowl with two gallons of cheap vodka. Then stuck a long straw into the bowl and hung a sign on the pedestal reading: 'NO UNDERAGE SIPPING.'

I had to replenish the bowl every other day, after carefully netting out all the dead flies (I'm sure they had a spiritedly happy demise.)  The Art faculty began commenting on how cheerful yet inattentive their students were for Finals that semester. 

I enjoyed taking that class, though it's debatable if I actually learned anything in it -- except perhaps to refrain from placing hundreds of inflated balloons on busy public stairways. 

That artistic vagary lives still in me today. My last two goldfish died this morning, so I emptied the light green plastic sled I had kept filled with water for them. Then I went over to Fresh Market for 3 gallons of vinegar and a package of six ping pong balls. Now the light green pool is full of vinegar, with the white ping pong balls blown by the breeze into a huddle on the side. 


My vinegar pool, with ping pong balls


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

Readers are becoming passionate about my new book of poetry . . . 


Donuts




Give me donuts, sweet and light;
I can eat 'em ev'ry night.
In the morning, too, I munch
on 'em, and they're good for lunch.

Frosted or filled up with jam,
into my mouth I'll gladly cram
as many as they have on sale.
(Oh stomach, please do not me fail!)

Who cares if logos change a bit?
As long as crullers do not quit!
A baker's dozen I declare
will be the answer to my prayer.