Sunday, November 4, 2018

The prodigal and the miser




The New Retirement Plan: Save Almost Everything, Spend Virtually Nothing

A group of younger workers, devotees of the FIRE movement, are seeking ways to duck mistakes made by prior generations.

(Headline in the Wall Street Journal)


Never spend another dime,
then retire in quick time.
Young people now think it wiser
to become a grasping miser.
I am old and broke, but hey --
this prodigal enjoys each day!

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

"Better save for a rainy day."


Haiku: dividing the sky



dividing the sky
the contrail leaves behind it
wonder and doubt


Haiku: dry and thick of skin



berries and seed pods
brown and red in autumn sun
dry and thick of skin


Fools Before God




. . . and consider themselves fools before God . . .
2 Nephi. Chapter 9. Verse 42.

As vast and wide as all the stars, as deep as cosmos goes;
the Lord God is omnipotent and all that is He knows.
The past and present, what is to come, are right before His eyes;
what mortal fool would dare to think to be as great and wise?

Yet some have thought they could compete with Jesus Christ on high;
that what they thought and did and said made glory their ally.
The Earth can hold no wisdom, nor power like the Lord's.
A fool cannot dispute that, with swelling words or swords.

I know I am a fool, oh Lord, before Thy shining throne;
that I lack any power to exalt myself alone.
Have mercy on my ignorance and lead me with Thy grace,
that I, a clown, may someday see Thy keen and loving face!

Saturday, November 3, 2018

Haiku: the dull displaced leaves



the dull displaced leaves
are going to a new home
in their caravan


Haiku: light brown and dark brown



light brown and dark brown
rings inside a fallen tree
are recorded where?


Haiku: the screaming yellow




the screaming yellow
hysteria of limp leaves
as they fall silent


Haiku: a line of bright clouds




a line of bright clouds
slips past the mountains as smooth
as a flight of birds



A New York Times Story by Jason Horowitz Reminds Me of My High School Cafeteria




I went to high school in the late 1960s. My high school, Marshall-University, close to the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, was integrated by court order in 1969 -- but segregation lingered on in the school cafeteria. 

You either got the hot cafeteria lunch or you brown bagged it. The students who enjoyed a hot lunch were seated in the airy and spacious portion of the cafeteria, with wide clean tables and comfortable chairs -- the padded kind they had in the school library. The brown baggers were relegated to a drab and airless alcove stocked with dispirited gate leg tables that tipped listlessly to one side. Cobwebs hung from the flickering neon lights overhead. The chairs were splintery wooden relics dating from the Dakota War of 1862. There were cracks running around the concrete floor that formed a rough map of Antarctica, if you peered at them long enough. And since I was one of the brown baggers, I had plenty of opportunity to trace out the outlines of the Ross Ice Shelf and the Weddell Sea.

My mother did not believe in spending seventy-five-cents each day on a hot cafeteria meal for her children. Not when a loaf of Wonder Bread cost a quarter and a huge wedge of Oscar Mayer beef bologna cost just under a dollar. My sandwich featured no sort of window dressing, either. A smear of oleo margarine was it.  Lettuce? Tomato? Ikke en sjanse. Along with the sandwich, which never varied the entire time I was in high school, she included an apple and a Twinkie or Hostess cupcake. While mom was a dab hand at picking out most produce down at the Red Owl each week, she never seemed able to select a decent crispy apple. Mine were always mealy and brown. 

There was no use in complaining to my mother about the monotony and blandness of my bag lunch. Such complaints met with a loud snort, followed by a spirited discourse on how she grew up eating a piece of stale bread smeared with bacon grease and then covered with scallions when they were in season for her lunch. Did I wish to emulate her harsh childhood tiffin? It could be arranged . . . 

I did, however, receive a quarter each day to buy a small carton of chocolate milk at the cafeteria. But that did not allow me to sit with the 'in' crowd. I tried doing it -- we all tried, us brown baggers, but were immediately put in our place not only by the smug and supercilious expressions of the warm lunch gang, but even more so by the teachers who patrolled the lunchroom -- I remember Mr. Patten, the algebra teacher, asking me in a tone of voice that brooked no contradiction if I wouldn't feel more comfortable sitting with the other kids who brought their lunches from home. I meekly agreed and scurried back to my place.

Just exactly why this unjust separation existed, I have no idea. Some of the brown baggers I ate with explained in hoarse whispers that the school made a huge profit off of each hot lunch they sold -- the graft was tremendous, and financed teacher trips to Jamaica and the Riviera. So naturally we students who chose not to subsidize this boondoggle were tossed into outer darkness with our baloney sandwiches and hard boiled eggs. But these were the same pimpled rumor mongers who also claimed you got VD from sitting on the wrong toilet seat. 

Nowadays, a half century later, I will still make myself a bologna sandwich for lunch on occasion -- but you can bet your bippy I gussy it up with sourdough bread spread with plenty of aioli and stacked with slices of red beefsteak tomato and romaine lettuce, not to mention a bakers dozen of Kalamata olives on the side. And I have found nothing better for dessert in the intervening years than a good old Twinkie. But don't tell my doctor . . . 

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

"I prefer braunschweiger."


The Newsroom Remains Lily White




Newsroom employees are more likely to be white and male than U.S. workers overall. 
Pew Research Center

The newsroom remains lily white,
with male pattern baldness in sight.
With such status quo
how far must they go
to make these statistics more bright?

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

"I wouldn't trust 'em any farther than I could throw 'em."