Monday, August 31, 2020
And they profaned not.
Sunday, August 30, 2020
The Loyalty Meter
But I never saw him again.
Instead I got a bill in the mail
for fifty-five dollars.
Which I tore up and threw away.
Another one came the next week.
This one included a key chain with
a red vinyl sticker that read
"Your continued loyalty is appreciated."
I threw the whole shebang away.
Then I got a UPS package.
With the same bill, and a
set of rare 1943 steel pennies.
Now how did they know I was
a numismatist?
I was sorely tempted to keep the
steelies --
but I dropped them,
one by one,
off of the Washington Avenue Bridge,
as the sun traveled a horizontal line
from left to right.
The very next day a man brought me
a pony.
To keep.
If I would just be loyal.
I'd always wanted a pony.
And this one came with a red leather
saddle and silver stirrups.
Okay, okay, I told the man.
I give up -- I'll be loyal.
"It's not quite that easy"
the man said with a leer.
"You have to prove your loyalty
by shooting the pony."
And he gave me a gun.
I fired it once.
But not at the pony.
Timericks from stories in today's New York Times.
Confronting a climate crisis that threatens the fossil fuel industry, oil companies are racing to make more plastic. But they face two problems: Many markets are already awash with plastic, and few countries are willing to be dumping grounds for the world’s plastic waste.
The industry thinks it has found a solution to both problems in Africa.
In Africa the nations find a campaign that is drastic
to put away organic things and only buy what's plastic.
And that ain't all they've got to face; as plastic turns to litter,
the jungle's full of styrofoam, which makes the monkeys bitter.
People are not buying gas, so Big Oil pushes vinyl;
as plastic bags hang from palm trees -- and that is pretty final.
Ayahuasca, a vomit-inducing hallucinogenic brew, draws thousands of people each year — including former soldiers — to jungle retreats that have become an unlicensed and unregulated mental health marketplace.
When my mental health decays
I can still find better ways
dealing with my psychic fits
than a drug that gives me s***s.
Jungle humbug, so it seems,
peddles snake oil's ancient dreams.
All you need to cure cracked head
is a book, some bucks, and bed.
New Yorkers Are Fleeing to the Suburbs: ‘The Demand Is Insane’
The suburbs are a lonely place
where no one knows your name.
The lawns kept green and pristine,
or it's ridicule and shame.
I'd rather be a prisoner
in some low dungeon cell
than ev'ry stinking weekend
have to deal with dead cow smell.
Timericks from stories in today's Wall Street Journal.
No man-made thing competes
What painting or portrait
gives beauty like the dawn?
No man-made thing competes
with what the Lord has drawn.
Saturday, August 29, 2020
How to grow white mushrooms.
(based on a news story by Christopher Mims, WSJ.)
I worked real hard over the years
to afford a home on Lake Minnetonka.
They don't go for nickels.
Still, once I was moved in
I felt that I had gotten a bargain.
The crystal blue water.
The soughing pines all around
my property.
On stormy nights the waves
slapping crazily on the rip rap.
Imagine my consternation, then,
when one morning I awoke
to find an ocean going vessel
run aground on my beach.
I called 911.
They sent the police.
The police sent for the
Coast Guard
from Duluth.
When they arrived
they told me it was
an automatically piloted
ship.
Autonomous,
they called it.
No skipper, no crew.
All done by FM signals
or some such thing.
But how,
I asked them,
did the blame thing get
onto a freshwater lake
and crash on my beach?
They shrugged their shoulders.
Coulda been a high tide
said one guy.
"Thank you, Captain Peachfuzz"
I told him sourly.
It took 'em a month to get
the hulk towed off my beach.
By then it was Christmas.
I was all alone in my house
on Lake Minnetonka.
My family and friends
mostly didn't believe in
wearing masks.
So I didn't join them
for Christmas
or invite them over.
But Christmas Eve
there was another wreck on my beach.
This time it was a tanker,
filled with eggnog.
Autonomous again, so no crew.
The eggnog dribbled out of the tanker
and froze on the rip rip,
making everything smell of nutmeg.
But there was a stowaway.
I caught him creeping out of the tanker,
covered in eggnog and shivering.
"Come on in, friend" I told him.
"Nobody should freeze to death covered
in eggnog."
I had to help him inside. He was almost gone.
I washed him up and put him to bed.
Then sat in the living room by the
lighted Christmas tree, reading
Martin Chuzzlewit.
The next morning when I
went into his room
he was gone.
He didn't leave a note
or anything.
Just three lumpy woolen socks
and an open can of Vienna Sausage.
When they finally got the tanker
hauled off my beach it was spring.
The eggnog killed all the fish.
Must've contained alcohol.
I sold the house, my fine house,
to some Welch salvors.
Then moved into a cave
to grow white mushrooms.
The Dry Places
He opened the rock, and the waters gushed out; they ran in the dry places like a river.
Psalm 105:41
No stone can withstand His touch
Rock into water will flow
And my arid heart shall rejoice
with green jubilation aglow
Friday, August 28, 2020
Not of this World.
(Special thanks to Matt Privratsky for the original idea on Twitter.)
So I went on vacation for a week in August.
No big deal, right?
When I got back
someone had weeded my front lawn
and trimmed the edges along the sidewalk.
And planted mushrooms --
because I never had mushrooms before
on my front lawn.
Dandelions and creeping charlie,
sure,
but never mushrooms.
But there they were --
big as life.
I asked around the neighborhood,
to see if anyone knew anything about
it.
Everyone was silent as the tomb --
but they all looked pretty worried
at the same time.
One of my neighbors,
old Mrs. Henderson,
actually began to sob
when I asked her if she knew
who had been monkeying with my lawn.
"I dasn't tell you" she moaned.
"They'll kill me."
Double-yew, Tee, Eff --
something screwy was going on.
Of that I was sure.
But I had to wait six weeks
to find out what it was.
A shake-down is what it was.
The mushrooms in my front lawn,
which I had sprayed with poison
and lashed with weed whackers,
and which would not go away,
suddenly got up on their hind legs
one fall morning and marched into
my living room.
"We demand surrender or you will suffer"
said the lead mushroom, in a mushy kind of voice.
"Give us gold and silver if you want to survive"
the damn thing continued.
"Get outta here!" I yelled at them.
"We are mushrooms from far away in the galaxy"
intoned the head mushroom. "We will destroy you."
I snatched 'em all up, put 'em in a pot, and made
cream of space alien mushroom soup.
I gave a bowl of it to Mrs. Henderson.
She said it was real good, but needed more
cream.
Huh. More cream. Does she think I'm made
out of money?
That's the last time I save the Earth for some
picky old lady.