Monday, July 24, 2017

Desire



And the Spirit said unto me: Behold, what desirest thou?   And I said: I desire to behold the things which my father saw.

How much desire do I have for knowledge, clear and sharp?
It seems I’d rather speculate while strumming on a harp.
I sacrifice so little time in scripture study -- thus
Indicating to the Lord I will not make a fuss
If He revokes his mysteries from my lethargic gaze,
And gives me up to ignorance until I mend my ways.
For when I have the scriptures opened to the word sublime,

I have to dawdle shamelessly in making up this rhyme!

Sunday, July 23, 2017

Remembering Red Skelton

I am thinking back to a particular Friday evening, in the early summer of 1980. Enrolled as a freshman at the University of Minnesota, I was still smarting over my ejection from Ringling Brothers Circus six months earlier because of a feud with Michu, the World’s Smallest Man, in clown alley. I was also alone, and that, too, made me quite disaffected. I had dated a number of LDS girls, but because I didn’t drive a car I had to either take them to the movies on the bus or ask them to drive their own car -- neither of which option appealed much to young Midwestern girls, LDS or otherwise, 37 years ago. So this particular Friday evening, as I walked alone towards Northrup Auditorium on the campus of the University of Minnesota, with the nightjars’ distant raspy calls falling down on me from the washed out blue sky, I hoped to find solace from an old and deeply esteemed clown -- Red Skelton.

He was to appear for one night only at the Auditorium in a one man show, a mixture of goofy monolog and ineffable pantomime, with a few Gertrude and Heathcliff jokes thrown in for good measure. Because I worked part-time at the Auditorium, sweeping and burnishing the oak planked proscenium stage floor, I bought a front row seat for a discounted pittance.

I was going to stake a lot on his performance that evening. If the crowds roared that old roar of unaffected and affectionate laughter that I recalled so poignantly from my circus days, I would throw up my schooling and return to the tanbark, even if it meant joining up with a tawdry mud show that only worked bush hogged vacant lots in jerkwater burgs. If the crowd was at all cool towards Red, I’d take it for a sign -- I’d keep plugging away at the University, find a girl that didn’t mind my vehicle-poor lifestyle, and eventually enter a new, more stable, career. I made that decision while sitting on a cement bench on the Northrop Mall, which faced the Auditorium. I was early, and in no rush to find my front row seat. The evening was mild and decorous, as only a Midwest evening can be. It was to be savored, not binged upon like the wild mountain sunsets out here among the Wasatch Range where I have retired. As I sat there, recalling a boyhood debacle when I had laughed so hard at some bit of nonsense that Skelton had performed on his TV show that I had wet myself and been sent to bed in disgrace, a flock of well-dressed young people flowed out the doors of Northrop Auditorium to fan out over the Mall. A young woman approached me and handed me a cigar.

“With the compliments of Mr. Skelton” she said perkily, then moved on to pass out a dozen more stogies to other astonished Mall loungers. Giving a cigar to an active LDS member is like giving a pork chop to a kosher Jew -- the intention is appreciated, but the gift itself is well nigh useless. With a shrug I stuck the cigar in my inner coat pocket and sauntered into the Auditorium. (The next Sunday, wearing that same coat to church, I bent over to pick up something and it slipped out and rolled along the carpeted chapel floor -- arching enough eyebrows to build a pontoon bridge across the Mississippi.)

It was a large crowd; most of the 4800 seats were filled. The atmosphere was a happy ozone of expectation. Red always went over big in the Midwest. I glanced at the program -- the usual hoopla about Red’s past exploits in movies and on TV. There was a large notice, in bold font, warning patrons not to use any cameras with flashbulbs during the performance. Digital cameras were still a Star Trek kind of innovation -- most everyone was still using a Kodak.

The orchestra struck up Red’s theme song, Holiday for Strings, and the great man himself stepped out into a tidal wave of affectionate applause mixed with whistles and the creamy hum of ecstatic chuckles as he took his bright red silk handkerchief out of his breast pocket to wave enthusiastically at the crowd.

As Red swung into his first joke, the verboten flashbulbs went off like a silent artillery barrage. Red took it in stride; he reached into his coat pocket for a handful of flash cubes and threw them gleefully out into the audience. This got the first big roar of the night, and I settled back to bathe in that wonderful racket of unrestrained laughter that only a truly inspired clown can unleash.


Red kept us enthralled for two hours, including a twenty minute intermission. I was convinced I was wasting my time as a university student -- I would head out to the big top as a clown again the first chance I got.

But then . . . but then, Red came a cropper. He overstayed his welcome. After two hours, the audience couldn’t hold anymore of Red Skelton -- we were all replete with his eager silliness. Now it was time to go home and tell everyone how wonderful that old Red Skelton was, and ask each other why he wasn’t on TV anymore. But Red didn’t want to let us go -- he loved our laughter too much, he was too greedy for it. So he stayed onstage, repeating jokes and going into a long diatribe against CBS for canceling his TV show. At first we were forgiving -- after all, the man was a comedy genius; he had proven as much that very night. But then our mood soured. We needed to use the bathroom; we wanted to grab a bite to eat before it got too late (in the Midwest ‘too late to eat’ is around 10 p.m.); and he really wasn’t trying to be funny anymore, so why should we have to stay put?

I regret to say that I didn’t stay for his finish, which I learned from the Minneapolis Tribune the next morning had not gone over too well with the crowd. Many others besides me left before he was done.

So I was left with an uncertain mind -- should I go back to the circus or should I stay at school? In the event, it would be two more years before I returned to clowning -- but that tale will have to abide until another time for the retelling.  

Photo Pensee: A Tree Grows in Provo

I read this Sunday morning in the Book of Mormon: "And it came to pass that I beheld a tree . . . " Then I read this by Tagore Rabindranath: "Trees are the earth's endless effort to speak to the listening heaven." So I paused in my reading to go see and be mindful of the tree in front of my apartment building. Just as the sun crested the mountains to pick out its highlights and marble it with shade.



I picture pine cones as wizened and discarded old men, thrown away by an evergreen like candy wrappers -- but my tree now shows me how they cluster and grow green.


The determined trunk is covered with bark like reptilian scales


The bare ground underneath the tree writhes with roots



Religion teaches us to revere trees as part of God's landscape -- Science tells us that trees hold mortal strife with one another for space and light, such as my tree and its nemesis across the sidewalk that showers down a constant green rain of delicate seeds.


I look up to trees to realize how grand and yet inconsequential my life becomes




Saturday, July 22, 2017

Photo Essay: The Kids Market. Provo, Utah.


Held in the parking lot of Provo High School, the Kids Market went from 10:30 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. today, Saturday. There were approximately 75 booths set up, with kids selling everything from fidget spinners to honey straws. Parents were allowed to help set up and take down the booths, but otherwise were discouraged from helping or advising their children. 


So Jonny and Sarah just sat back in the shade and let Ohen and Noah run things out in the hot sun -- the way parents ought to.


Lance, of course, wangled a bubble blowing kit, which he proceeded to churn into a sudsy avalanche. 



Son-in-law Jonny just HAD to supervise a little -- to make sure the whipped cream in the krumkakes didn't go flat. A born rebel, that one. 



You make krumkake (pronounced KROOM-kaka) in this do-jig



And this is how they turn out, filled with flavored whipped cream, The boys sold them for a dollar a piece.



                     Big businessmen at work . . . .




                   There's always time for a tickle in the shade



                      Katrina gets the family discount -- on the cuff



Father and son -- Adam & Noah





Well, the crowd is starting to thin out -- time to pack things up


After everything is packed up, Grandpa Tim takes the crew out to eat at Panda Express right across the street. Yessiree, I'm the last of the Big Time Spenders! Jonny and Sarah are taking the kids up to Strawberry Resevoir this afternoon to go camping and fishing, so I wanted to spare Sarah the hassle of making lunch at home before they leave. They'll stay overnight and come back tomorrow night. One part of me wants to scold them for missing Sabbath services at church -- but another part of me wishes I could go with them. 



The New York Times Mail Art Project -- is it lese majeste in Thailand?

I have committed a crime. Or, rather, if I were in Thailand I would have committed a crime. I'm pretty sure. I used Thai stamps, featuring the likeness of the late King and Queen of Thailand, on a number of mail art pieces that I have sent to American reporters. 
I guess if the Thai authorities never get wind of this lese majeste, it won't matter. But if the Thai government does take notice, what happens to the reporters who have received these pieces? Are they considered collaborators in my felony? Partners in my criminal conversation? Will they be banned from visiting Thailand, if they ever want to go? That would be a very unhappy and unintended outcome of my mail art project. But perhaps it would serve to spotlight the ridiculous martinets that have hijacked Thailand these last few years.















Headlines & Verse. Saturday. July 22. 2017

PET SITTING IS BIG BUSINESS IN NEW YORK. BUT GETTING LICENSED IS A PAIN IN THE DONKEY.

I think that it’s very naive
To think that my pet I could leave.
When taking a trip
I never would skip

Bringing along my pet peeve.


FAREWELL, MR. SPICER, FAREWELL

Farewell, Mr. Spicer, farewell;
You’re through giving journalists hell.
No more will you hector
The media sector --
Scaramucci has broken your spell!



AS A BANKING INSTITUTION, THE NFL PLAYS LOUSY FOOTBALL

The NFL likes to pull rank,
Pretending that they are a bank.
Usurping their perks
Will bring fireworks --
So stadiums must walk the plank.

Friday, July 21, 2017

Ohen's Krumkaka



The Torkildson family has passed down their secret krumkake recipe from generation to generation. Residents of Utah County now have the chance to sample this toothsome delicacy at the Provo High School on Saturday, July 22nd. 
Ohen Read, a grandson of that master krumkake fabricator Tim Torkildson, will be selling his wares from 10:30 until Noon. These are made from scratch and handmade to boot. Filled with whipped cream.



These little goodies will go fast -- so get there early, and stock up on them. They make excellent gifts for those tired of giving chocolates to their sweethearts. 
It's ethnic. It's authentic. And it's for a good cause -- teaching kids that hard work still leads to good money here in the good ol' USA! 
So come out and support the Provo Children's Entrepreneur Market.

The New York Times Mail Art Project. Part Three.

My indoor workshop for collage, where I also eat cherries




When the mail art mania becomes truly ungovernable, and I need a quick fix, I use collage. It's fast, less messy than paint, and answers some despicable primal need I have to cut up books and magazines. The reporters I have been sending these mail art pieces to have, for the most part, remained commendably silent about the whole thing. I notify them by email and Twitter. Then I drop their mail art pieces into the nearest mail box.
I also confess that in Part Two of this series I created a faux journalist -- Rob Reed, of the so-called Island Ink newspaper in Hawaii. There is such a person as Rob Reed, an old friend and LDS missionary colleague -- but he is a computer programmer, not a reporter. 
To reiterate the purpose of this Mail Art Project -- to explore the connection between media and mail art -- and to explore the impact of sending participants their mail art via the Internet before they get it in the mail. 













Thursday, July 20, 2017

I send an Email

My brain has been gurgling all day as I try to decide how much work to do. I’ve written 2 very boring pieces for Adam about the “Internet of Things,” a concept I still don’t understand. But he pays me, so I do it. I’m trying to get enough money saved up to go to the dentist next week before Amy gets here so I can be in tip top form when she arrives and spend plenty of time w/her. The dilemma is that I have one more thousand-word piece to do for Adam, and then I’m done and can wile away the hours just as I please. I just had a bowl of soup and some hard boiled eggs for dinner, and I found a good movie on YouTube with Betty Hutton called Somebody Loves Me, which features the kind of old-timey music I enjoy -- so should I just veg out and watch it or should I pull  myself together and finish the last article for Adam and make that last bit of money? Finishing a big writing assignment always gives me a lift, more than most things. But I’m afraid I’m going to lose my focus before I finish it -- that I’ll get a headache and start to get drowsy and maybe make a big mistake on it, like I’ve done in the past. Once I thought I had written an original article for Adam, but when I finally reviewed it I saw that I had copied a bunch of stuff from another blog to rewrite and then forgot to rewrite it!
And I’m still hungry -- that soup didn’t really satisfy me. I want a big juicy hamburger and some greasy fries with lots of ketchup -- but if I go out to get it I’ll regret it all night. So that’s why my brain is gurgling right now.

gurglegurglegurglegurglegurgleBettyHuttongurglegurglegurglegurglefinishthedamnpieceforAdamgurglegurglegurglegurglegurglegogetahamburgeryoujerkgurglegurglegurglegurglemyeyesaretiredgurglegurgle


gurgle

Headlines & Verse. Thursday. July 20. 2017

URUGUAY LEGALIZES MARIJUANA -- FARMACIAS DO LAND OFFICE BUSINESS.


When strolling La Rambla today
Don’t let the strong fumes make you sway.
You’ll just have to cope
With all the strong dope

while citizens all shout 'Ole!'



CALVIN TRILLIN WRITES AMAZING BOOKS -- BUT HE NEVER ANSWERED MY FAN LETTER

I once wrote a note to Cal Trillin --
He never wrote back, which is chillin’
I think writers ought
To be better taught
With readers who find their books thrillin’



CHINA IS BEING VERY 'HELPFUL' TO ITS NEIGHBORS -- BUT THEY'D BETTER REMEMBER WHAT HAPPENED TO TIBET . . .

A dragon may do a good deed
With competence and fateful speed.
But trusting the wile
Of such a reptile
Will just make it eager to feed.




PLASTIC BAGS OUTNUMBER PEOPLE -- THEY'LL BE BLOWING INTO TREES LONG AFTER MANKIND IS GONE

If you would live longer than long
Then plastics should be your theme song --
Despite time’s sharp blades
It never degrades --

So eat it like sweet scuppernong.