Sunday, July 12, 2020

The True Story of My False Teeth.




The fact of the matter is
I don't have dentures.
I have all my teeth.
Because my mother made
me go to the dentist every
six months as a child.
It was a horribly cruel
ritual,
which she carried out with relish.
It was her kismet to send me
to the torture chamber 
because she loved me.
It was my kismet to
submit,
until I turned sixteen.
And then I refused.

So my mother sold me off
to a moped gang.
she thought this would
ripen me to remorse,
and I would return 
a more pliant child.
But I fooled her.
I liked the moped gang.
Elderly folk,
with too much time on their 
hands,
who sped up and down
Larpenteur Avenue,
shaking down greenhouses
and truck farmers.
The only drawback
was you had to have dentures
to gain full membership
in the gang.
So I sucked in my lips
and pretended.
It worked.
Since most of the gang members
were nearly blind as a bat anyways.
I became leader of the moped gang
at age 19.

Now at the sunset of my life
I go to the dentist every month.
A perky dental hygienist cleans
and polishes my teeth as I sit
in a very comfortable leather
chair. She smells of sweet apples
in the fall.  

I put my mother's cremated remains in 
very rare and expensive jade jar
and donated it to the University of Minnesota
School of Dentistry.
They have it out in their lobby.
Kismet, mommy, kismet. 


Timericks from stories by Nick Timiraos, Kate, Davidson, Jon Kamp, Joseph De Avila, Eun-Young Jeong, and Tom Fairless.

Mount Rushmore, from inside George Washington's left nostril.




Fed, Treasury Disagreements Slowed Start of Main Street Lending Program.
@NickTimiraos   @KateDavidson

To the rescue, Uncle Sam/has the speed of sleepy clam/When he's giving out the dough/he can seem a bit too slow/that's because his servants vie/for the biggest piece of pie/Next time Main Street help requires/they'd better pull some better wires.



The Suburbs Continue to Grow During Pandemic.
@jon_kamp  @jdeavila  

I never liked the suburbs/they always seemed to be/a haven for the dullard/a sink of iniquity/John Cheever wrote about 'em/and so did Updike, too/I'd rather have a condo/with fish market in view.



Why China Isn’t Expected to Power a Global Recovery
@TomFairless

I'll tell ya why ol' China can't revive our fiscal woes/She will not buy our chicken feet or make all our cheap clothes/She's had it up to here with Trump and all his mangy crew/She'd rather deal with India, Malaysia, or Peru!

Saturday, July 11, 2020

Zone of Avoidance.





I deal in voids and walls.
Been doing it since I was a kid
in my father's workshop.
He was a great old guy, my father.
He used to let me stretch out a common
ordinary void into a massive black hole
that would engulf worlds without number
and their suns. 
Then I'd let 'em snap back into shape,
disgorging hundreds of solar systems
like peas out of a peashooter. 

As for walls, or curtains as we sometimes called them;
my father was unparalleled at setting 'em up so they'd
mask the namby-pamby universes from the
Deep Terrors that lurk just beyond the next red giant.
If those Casper Milquetoast astronomers ever
really got a squint at what's out there behind the curtains
put up by my father long ago,
well,
let's just say,
they'd use String Theory to hang themselves.

 When father passed things on to me
I immediately set up a zone of avoidance --
sort of a neutral zone, or safety zone,
where the cosmos could gather together
and work things out without terror and
justice taking complete control.
I wanted to see if both sides of the wall
could create some pity and charity.
There was free bottled water 
and whole wheat snacks.

So far things have gone pretty slow.
I mean, I'm a patient guy -- I can wait for
an ocean to become a desert --
but progress has been dismal up to now.
I may have to hurry things up a bit.
Solar flares. Gamma radiation. That kind of thing.
But I never give up hope; I can't abide entropy.
Molecules may unravel along the way,
neutrinos may go astray,
but I'll tie it all up
in the end. 
Just like my old man would have done.


Photo Essay: Postcards to my President. Vol. 45.





















Timericks from stories by Stuart Condie, Sarah E. Needleman, Catherine Lucey, and Byron Tau.

Stuart Condie.  WSJ. 


‘Buy Now Pay Later’ Is Having a Moment as Pandemic Changes Shopping Habits.
@StuartLCondie

My father told me long ago to spend less than I make/Even if it meant that I would never order steak/Such homely truths do not seem to be practiced much these days/In fact, I've given up on it myself as just a phase/I figure that the virus has my number, so why not spree/cuz when I am defunct I'll need no credit history!



Sarah Needleman.  WSJ. 

Amazon Says Email Ordering Employees to Delete TikTok Was Sent in Error.
@saraheneedleman

Memos in a corporation/cause a lot of keen vexation/First they text "verboten!' now/and then reverse it anyhow/If TikTok's not a hairy deal/stop wriggling like some darn eel!



Catherine Lucey.  WSJ.


President Trump Commutes Sentence of Roger Stone.
@catherine_lucey    @ByronTau

When you're buddies with the Chief/you don't have to sweat relief/Even when in durance vile/you can manage still a smile/For the Chief won't let you sit/He will spring you from the pit/Let that be a lesson, chum/Sucking up is never dumb.


Friday, July 10, 2020

the chain restaurants that proliferate in this region of farmland, rolling prairie and lakes.



We moved to the country, my wife and I,
to get closer to the truth.
But all we found were fast food joints.
It was a disappointment.
But we faced it like true pioneers;
we ignored the hazards and 
planted acres of okra, bitter melons,
and reindeer lichen.
The reindeer came in vast herds to our land;
they browsed contentedly --
and Amy and I knew our own contentment 
for the first time in many years.

But then a lightning storm came out of the West
and killed or maimed all the reindeer.
The ones left alive fled in terror.
They have never returned.
The lichen all turned to useless prairie kelp.

The seed catalog said that okra
restores youthful vigor in lovemaking.
We planted a lot of it.
But we forgot that in our part of the country
it can snow in late May.
And it did.
And the okra never came up at all.
The field turned first to mud
and then to spindly weeds that
even the crows avoided.

We had much better luck with
the bitter melon.
It thrived, even during drought.
The grasshoppers, thrips, and Mormon crickets
left it strictly alone.
So we harvested many tons
with our old John Deere tractor and trailer.
To sell at bonanza prices to China.

Then Trump screwed things up with China.
And the COVID 19 put us out of business.
We had to sell the land back to the bank,
which in turn sold it to Cargill  --
they now raise strange GMO things on the land:
stirrup-shaped mushrooms that attract biting midges;
corn that drips turpentine;
mud skippers that they market as free range chicken.
And they harvested our field of prairie kelp and distilled 
it into an artisan vodka that everyone drinks in Manhattan.
Amy started to drink it, too, to blunt the pain.

Now we live in a small town, the county seat, and run the only pawn shop in the entire county. We are very popular. 
Everyone relies on us to get them through the hard months.
The hard months are November through August.
We take all our meals at McDonald's.
Amy wants to move to Canada.

Timericks from stories by John McCormick, Catherine Lucey, Jacob Bunge, Jesse Newman, and Griff Witte.



John McCormick.  WSJ.


Trump Casts Wide TV-Ad Net to Shore Up Support.
@McCormickJohn   @catherine_lucey

If all the money spent on ads/by Trump and all the other cads/were spent instead on better things/we all might live like splendid kings/and queens in comfort for a while/instead of subject to their guile.


Jacob Bunge.  WSJ.

Tyson Turns to Robot Butchers, Spurred by Coronavirus Outbreaks.
@jessenewman13  @jacobbunge

Robot butchers on the loose/they are gonna cook our goose/Algorithmic chopping widget/they will never lose a digit/But beware when they escape/We'll all begin to dress in crepe!





Time to shut down again? As coronavirus cases surge, a growing chorus makes the case.
@griffwitte


Many experts now agree/we opened early, ruinously/Corona cases now have soared/because the danger we ignored/I guess as hermits we must strive/to keep ourselves somewhat alive!


Thursday, July 9, 2020

Timericks from stories by River Davis, Sarah Krouse, and Joe Wallace.


Tim Torkildson, creator of 'timericks,' and placed third in mini skirt humming this year.








Reopened Theme Parks Ban Screaming on Roller Coasters. Riders Are Howling.
@riverakiradavis


The simple pleasure of a scream/at a park that hosts a theme/when the roller coaster dives/is a thing that oft revives/happy thoughts of childhood glee/But now becomes a felony/Next they'll ban the cotton candy/Making outdoor fun too blandy . . . 


Wait Times Grow for Covid-19 Test Results as Infections Rise Sharply.
@bysarahkrouse

My test results have took so long/I hope there isn't something wrong/I wonder why the lab delays/It's been a long month of Sundays/By the time I may hear back/I could be dead from an attack!



Oil Went Below $0. Some Think It Will Rebound to $150 One Day.
@josephttwallace

I'll never figure out the way/statistics in the oilfield play/zero dollars for a barrel/seem to me absurd and sterile/No one's giving out free gas/not even in a small shot glass.



Tuesday, July 7, 2020

Investors have trimmed their bearish bets



I was out of work and pretty desperate,
so I answered an online ad that asked
for people to be trimmed. Payment would
be in gold Krugerrands.

I showed up at an abandoned shopping mall,
where sweet peas came up through the cracks
in the asphalt.

There were bears all over the place.
Polar bears. Grizzlies. Pandas. Sun bears.
They rushed over to me and began wielding
scissors around my long beautiful brown
hair.

I have always been very proud of my hair.
My dad never let his grow out until he was 
put in a nursing home -- and then it grew
into a luxurious mop of silky brown wonder.
And then he died of the coronavirus.
My hair is the same. I guard it with scalp massages
and douse it with olive oil each morning.
Now these bears were ready to trim it all off!

I decided not to fight them. There were too many.
And they were bears, for heaven's sake. You
don't win a fight with a bear.
When they were done they threw Kruggerands
at me. And I was completely bald.

I used the money to buy that abandoned shopping
mall.
I threw all the bear out -- in fact, I managed
to have them captured and put behind bars
in zoos all over the world.
Serves 'em right.

Monday, July 6, 2020

The Haunted Flea Market.



On my way to the post office I passed an old abandoned parking lot, full of upheaved and cracked asphalt with weeds springing out
of the cracks like frozen green geysers.
The abandonment was poetic to me, and I forgot about the post office and instead went to the park, where I found a brown paper sack blowing down the path and used it to write down an elegy:

A dull black, sullen in the sunlight.
Cracked like egg shells from dinosaurs.
This parking lot used to host a flea market.
Every Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.
The click of metallic legs on cheap card tables,
unfolding in the early morning smudge,
could be heard in the land.
And gave joy to the junk-minded.
I often stopped to look at the National Geographics.
The things people can do with wooden clothes pins . . . 

But then the land got sick; the people got scared.
No one would stand next to you
and you would not stand next to them.
I sent my wife and kids to Chernobyl,
so they would be totally isolated.
The flea market stopped.
But I see ghosts and skeletons there.
Selling homemade hand lotion,
made out of glycerin, gravel, and Dawn.
Face masks sewn from leeks.
Rocks to throw at people who don't wear masks.
 Giant plexiglass hamster balls to crawl into and 
roll safely down the street.
Camphor prayer wheels.

Will a flea market ever open again in the land?
Will my children grow a third ear in Chernobyl?
Can a face mask cure bad breath?
And where will all the popcorn go?
The answer is melting in the sun.
Climbing an elm tree.
Eating a pretzel.
Kicking a mime.


Good-bye, Mrs. Calabash --
you're running a fever.