Sunday, August 23, 2020

Sunday Email to my Kids. August 23, 2020.

 



Hello, my little chickadees!

I was so grateful to be able to spend some time with Virginia, Cici, and Addie, this past week when they came up from Texas. I can never get my fill of seeing any of you kids, or the grand kids. I wish I saw more of all of you . . . 


Well, as I cast my feeble thought back over the past week I really don’t come up with much to write about. Adam has been very good in giving me rewrite assignments -- I’m still saving up to get a pair of new glasses!


Did I mention before that they now take attendance at the pool at Provo Rec Center?  Only 19 people are allowed in the deep water pool at one time for our morning exercise class -- so you have to make a reservation (which I forgot to do for this coming week -- drat!) Sometimes the instructor actually asks people who are already in the pool to get out if they don’t have a reservation. I’m usually on the stand-by list, and usually get to go in. I sure love to go swimming == it’s usually the highlight of my day.


This morning I did a prose poem called “The Government School.”  I emailed it out to about forty different reporters. Didn’t hear anything back from them -- except one, who apparently didn’t like it and tersely replied only “Pls remover from list.”  That made me kind of peeved, so in revenge I made up a nonsense thumbnail biography of him and posted it on my largely inactive blog. I feel much better now.


Here’s the prose poem that reporter Gregory Zuckerman had such a problem with, and then a copy of his faux bio I posted on my blog:


We were working in the cook tent, my friend Maria and I, 

when the bloody men appeared.

At first I took them to be

new roustabouts,

or maybe reporters from

the local rag.

I've noticed in the past few years

that journalists are getting more and more

frowzy and fly-blown.

Things, I guess, are tough all over.


Anyway.

They asked for beans and tortillas.

With scowls and threatening motions

with their forks and spoons.

Mental midgets,

I thought to myself as I served them.

'Bloody idiots' Maria whispered to me

as they took their tin plates to a picnic

table and silently wolfed down their food.

When they left I felt like a sentence of death

had been lifted from me.

I didn't like anything about them.


'Who were those guys?' 

I asked Trey when he came in for 

an early lunch.

Since he owns and operates the show

he gets to eat whenever he wants.

"What guys?" he asked.

"Those rotten looking guys that just left"

said Maria. She is sweet on Trey,

and gives him extra gravy on his

mashed potatoes.


"They're from the government school down the road."

He took his tin tray back to his trailer.

I could tell Maria wanted to follow him back to

his trailer for some hanky panky,

but there were thirty-odd people expecting lunch

in an hour, so I couldn't let her go.


The entire student body from the government school

came to the matinee. Their clothes were shabby

and sullen.

They didn't applaud anything

except when the elephants defecated.

They didn't buy anything

except sour pickles on a stick.

Their eyes were angry blue marbles.

When they left, trooping out like a chain gang,

they left behind pamphlets about their school

under the bleachers.


I told the crew to throw them all away 

with the rest of the trash.

But Maria kept one to read while

we got dinner ready before the

evening performance.

That's why she didn't get the potatoes

peeled in time.


"Hey" she said to me while we ladled out

the stew that evening,

"That place up the road is a government school

for journalists  -- they're being trained to sit

quietly and take notes of what the President

and his Cabinet says all the time."

"Any money in it?" I grunted back, my back

beginning to ache.

"Sure. They make good money when they can

start a war or make minorities feel insecure. It's all

in the pamphlet." Just then Maria dropped

the ladle into the stew -- again.

"Oh, get out of here!" I yelled at her in 

deep frustration.

She flounced out.

And left the show.

Didn't even say goodbye to Trey.


I didn't hear anything about her 

for several years.

During that time I quit the show

and went back to school.

Now I'm a corporate lawyer in

New York.

That's when I met Maria again.

She enrolled in that government school

after she left the big top.

Got her own radio show and started making

powerful enemies. 

She hired me to dig up the dirt on them;

which I did.

So they all became her friends.

She starts a new war about once a year;

usually in South America. 

Then goes down to conduct peace negotiations

and give away powdered milk and blankets.

She tells me she misses doing the Spanish Web.



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


A noted author, as well as a respected journalist for the Wall Street Journal, Mr. Zuckerman began life as a tree surgeon. It was only after he became infected with Dutch elm disease that he decided to find a safer career and became a reporter.

His first  job was as a cub reporter with the Washoe County Impediment -- a weekly paper in Nevada that printed mostly lost animal announcements and ran large ads for the Aetherius Society. 

After five years apprenticeship he found work as an obituary writer for the Dracula Fan Club newsletter.

Then he hit the big time with his first book:  "Public Enema Number One: The Fallacy of Prune Juice."  It topped the New York Times bestseller list for ten weeks in a row.

He began work at the Wall Street Journal, reporting on ticker tape parades, in 2008, and has gone from triumph to triumph ever since.

His honors include the Heim Potts Award for Best Punctuation; The Tilden Medallion for Most Consistent Parchesi in an Amateur; and the prestigious Miller-Cockleburr Citation for his work with displaced ground sloths. 

His hobbies include growing club moss, cheating at crossword puzzles, and carving darning eggs out of soapstone.



It’s all basically nonsense, so I don’t understand why Zuckerman wanted no more contact from me. Guess you can’t please everyone.  You may have noticed that the prose poem (which I entitled “The Government School) is kinda autobiographical. Although I doubt you can actually learn anything truthful or useful about me from reading it. I am growing quite fond of ambiguity in my work.


Other than that, my apple dumplings, there’s not much to report here at La Maison Tork.  My older brother Billy is forwarding me tons of political nonsense by email, which I’m ignoring, and a Wall Street Journal reporter, Bob Davis, who really likes my work, sent me a complimentary copy of his new book, Superpower Showdown. It’s all about the trade war between Trump and China, which is not something I’m very interested in, so I find reading the book slow going -- I’m only on chapter three. Still, it was a nice thought.

Guess I’ll eat some beans and rice and then take a long Sunday afternoon nap. Then watch Netflix and/or TCM until it’s time to go to bed. What an exciting life I lead!

Love, dad.


Meet Gregory Zuckerman.

 



A noted author, as well as a respected journalist for the Wall Street Journal, Mr. Zuckerman began life as a tree surgeon. It was only after he became infected with Dutch elm disease that he decided to find a safer career and became a reporter.
His first  job was as a cub reporter with the Washoe County Impediment -- a weekly paper in Nevada that printed mostly lost animal announcements and ran large ads for the Aetherius Society. 
After five years apprenticeship he found work as an obituary writer for the Dracula Fan Club newsletter.
Then he hit the big time with his first book:  "Public Enema Number One: The Fallacy of Prune Juice."  It topped the New York Times bestseller list for ten weeks in a row.
He began work at the Wall Street Journal, reporting on ticker tape parades, in 2008, and has gone from triumph to triumph ever since.
His honors include the Heim Potts Award for Best Punctuation; The Tilden Medallion for Most Consistent Parchesi in an Amateur; and the prestigious Miller-Cockleburr Citation for his work with displaced ground sloths. 
His hobbies include growing club moss, cheating at crossword puzzles, and carving darning eggs out of soapstone.
 

The Government School






Deliver me from the workers of iniquity, and save me from bloody men.
Psalm 59:2


We were working in the cook tent, my friend Maria and I, 
when the bloody men appeared.
At first I took them to be
new roustabouts,
or maybe reporters from
the local rag.
I've noticed in the past few years
that journalists are getting more and more
frowzy and fly-blown.
Things, I guess, are tough all over.

Anyway.
They asked for beans and tortillas.
With scowls and threatening motions
with their forks and spoons.
Mental midgets,
I thought to myself as I served them.
'Bloody idiots' Maria whispered to me
as they took their tin plates to a picnic
table and silently wolfed down their food.
When they left I felt like a sentence of death
had been lifted from me.
I didn't like anything about them.

'Who were those guys?' 
I asked Trey when he came in for 
an early lunch.
Since he owns and operates the show
he gets to eat whenever he wants.
"What guys?" he asked.
"Those rotten looking guys that just left"
said Maria. She is sweet on Trey,
and gives him extra gravy on his
mashed potatoes.

"They're from the government school down the road."
He took his tin tray back to his trailer.
I could tell Maria wanted to follow him back to
his trailer for some hanky panky,
but there were thirty-odd people expecting lunch
in an hour, so I couldn't let her go.

The entire student body from the government school
came to the matinee. Their clothes were shabby
and sullen.
They didn't applaud anything
except when the elephants defecated.
They didn't buy anything
except sour pickles on a stick.
Their eyes were angry blue marbles.
When they left, trooping out like a chain gang,
they left behind pamphlets about their school
under the bleachers.

I told the crew to throw them all away 
with the rest of the trash.
But Maria kept one to read while
we got dinner ready before the
evening performance.
That's why she didn't get the potatoes
peeled in time.

"Hey" she said to me while we ladled out
the stew that evening,
"That place up the road is a government school
for journalists  -- they're being trained to sit
quietly and take notes of what the President
and his Cabinet says all the time."
"Any money in it?" I grunted back, my back
beginning to ache.
"Sure. They make good money when they can
start a war or make minorities feel insecure. It's all
in the pamphlet." Just then Maria dropped
the ladle into the stew -- again.
"Oh, get out of here!" I yelled at her in 
deep frustration.
She flounced out.
And left the show.
Didn't even say goodbye to Trey.

I didn't hear anything about her 
for several years.
During that time I quit the show
and went back to school.
Now I'm a corporate lawyer in
New York.
That's when I met Maria again.
She enrolled in that government school
after she left the big top.
Got her own radio show and started making
powerful enemies. 
She hired me to dig up the dirt on them;
which I did.
So they all became her friends.
She starts a new war about once a year;
usually in South America. 
Then goes down to conduct peace negotiations
and give away powdered milk and blankets.
She tells me she misses doing the Spanish Web.





 

Conqueror.

 



Pray always, that you may come off conqueror -
D&C 10:5

True champions the arm of flesh ne'er seek to endure trials;
but pray in constant humbleness while running weary miles. 

Saturday, August 22, 2020

Quit you like men

 


Watch ye, stand fast in the faithquit you like men, be strong.
1 Corinthians 16:13

I know the Lord my strength prepares/when to him I give all my prayers.
I'll watch and wait as He unveils/how I'll be quit of my travails. 







Friday, August 21, 2020

The Greatest Man I Ever Knew.

 



The greatest man I ever knew lived under a bridge.
The bridge ran over the Mississippi River.
The cars driving over it made a continuous
and monotonous buzz.
In the summer the river smelled to high heaven.
And the carp grew to the size of leviathan.

The greatest man I ever knew spoke very little.
He had bad teeth. They were very crooked and brown.
But he liked to shake hands a lot.
He kept his hands spotlessly clean. Even had an
emery board to keep his nails smooth.
He smiled at everyone he met.

The greatest man I ever knew met me one day
by accident. At an old hotel being demolished
downtown. 
I was working a temp job there, ripping out carpets
and throwing moldy furniture out the window
 into a dumptser.
I found an old barometer, encased in brass and weighing
a ton.
I was taking it home when I saw him smiling at 
me.
"May I have that please?" he asked me.
I don't know why, but I gave it to him.
Then I followed him down under the bridge,
where he hung the barometer onto a rusty iron
rod sticking out of the bridge foundation.

The greatest man I ever knew opened a can
of pork and beans and offered me some.
But I couldn't stand to eat them cold,
so I went away.
But not before he smiled and shook my hand very
warmly. 
And I never saw him again.

The greatest man I ever knew was gone when I went
back under the bridge years later.
But the old barometer was still there.
A bird's nest sat on top of it, with three blue speckled
eggs inside. 
There was a rusty can of pork and beans on the ground
right underneath it. 
A small turtle crawled out of it, looked up at me, then smiled.
I wanted it to speak to me; I almost wrote down here that it
did speak to me -- words of warmth and wisdom, of comfort and great joy.
But of course turtles don't talk. 
They're not supposed to and they don't need to;
they have all sorts of other pleasant and important
things to do in this world.

The greatest man I ever knew taught me that.

a rip in the fabric of interstellar dreams (NYT)




Interstellar gossip suffers from an accident/The Arecibo network has been twisted and then bent/No more can we eavesdrop on an asteroid's affairs/or find out what Venusians have been whispering downstairs/We'll have to be content with dishing dirt from our own sphere/which is about as striking as a bottle of stale beer.

 

Crazy Henry Fights Wildfires.

 



Crazy Henry enjoys reading the newspapers. He never has gotten used to an online newspaper subscription.
So when I went over to his place the other day I was not surprised to see newspapers strewn all over his living room. I didn't mind in the least; it meant I didn't have to take off my shoes -- I could just walk all over the newsprint with my dirty shoes.
"What's new?" I asked Crazy Henry. 
"Have you heard about those terrible wildfires out in California?" he asked.
"Yeah" I said. "It's a tough break for all those people that have to leave their homes and then come back to find nothing left but ashes."
"I have cousins out in California" he said.
"Yeah?" I asked. "Where?"
"Oh" he waved his hand vaguely, "they're out there somewhere -- my dad's sisters moved out there back in the 60's to sell swimming pool filters -- they all had a million kids and they're scattered around places like Sacramento and San Francisco."
"Any of 'em in the wildfire danger zone?" I asked.
Instead of answering me, Crazy Henry dived into his bedroom and came back out with a large and floppy black notebook.
"I'm gonna call my aunts right now and find out!" he said fiercely, as if someone was trying to stop him from doing it.
"You go, girl!" I told him encouragingly. In an emergency, we're all feminists.
Naturally he couldn't find his cell phone so he borrowed mine. 
In a few minutes he'd found out that he had a dozen cousins right in the path of the wildfires. 
"I'm gonna volunteer to go out there and fight them wildfires" he told me when he had hung up.
I didn't doubt him for a minute -- Crazy Henry does everything he thinks about doing out loud. If he said to me "There must be some truth to that saying about pigs can fly" I would expect him to immediately procure a shote and toss it out his window to see how far it would glide.
This was one time, however, when I refused to be carried away by his enthusiasm and altruism.
"Good luck with that" I told him. "I'm staying right here where nothing burns but barbecues."
Crazy Henry didn't mind my craven attitude. He's big-hearted that way. Or doesn't recognize anyone else in the world that can be a hero but himself. I've never been quite sure which it is.
"First thing" he said to me as he scattered newspapers around looking for his shoes, "is to get a hold of some good firefighting equipment."
His shoes were actually on his dining room table. When he got them on he asked if I wanted to go with him to get his firefighting stuff.
I told him no thanks; I'd stay at his place and look for the comics and then do the crossword if I could locate it.
He was gone for several hours. He came back with a large box full of boxes of baking soda and bottles of  apple cider vinegar.
"What's all that?" I asked him.
"Remember in school when we made those volcanoes with the baking soda and vinegar? Well, you combine the two to put out fires as well!" 
"Who told you that?" I asked him.
"It's just common sense. C'mon in the kitchen and we'll test it out."
So we went into Crazy Henry's kitchen, where he started a small fire out of newspapers in a coffee can. Then he poured a whole box of baking soda into an empty plastic gallon milk carton and on top of that poured in a bottle of apple cider vinegar.
Boy, did it fizz!
It not only put out the coffee can fire, but knocked over the salt and pepper shakers and blew an empty Mason jar right off of the counter onto the floor -- where it shattered into smithereens. Crazy Henry was exultant. I cleaned up the shattered Mason jar.
"See how good that works!" he yelled at me in glee. "Now I'm ready to go fight wildfires!"
Something got into me just then, and I had to say it.
"You know what works even better than vinegar and baking soda?" I asked him.
"No, what?"
"Mayonnaise" I told him earnestly. "You know how it gets bubble gum out of hair? It also puts out any kind of fire."
"No kiddin?" 
"No kiddin."
Crazy Henry rushed back out to corner the mayonnaise market. But I decided not to stick around for when he got back. He has a nice big fireplace in the living room, laid with wood from the corner convenience store, and I'm betting he's going to light a fire in there and then try to put it out with mayonnaise. I didn't wanna be around for that. 
Besides, the smell of the apple cider vinegar he used with the baking soda made me think of the apple cider donuts they sell over at Aamodt's Apple Orchard this time of year -- so I decided to go get a dozen or so. 
I'd bring some over to Crazy Henry's tomorrow -- if he hasn't left for California yet.

Deliver me from darkness

 




Deliver me from all my transgressions: make me not the reproach of the foolish
Psalm 39:8


Deliver me from darkness, Lord: I wander aimlessly.
Help me repent so fools reproach not my plain frailty. 



Thursday, August 20, 2020

Unbuttoned.

 




“Scratch my back” I asked my wife.

But when I turned to her she wasn’t there.

I got up and went into the kids’ bedroom.

“Hey, have you seen your mother?” I asked them.

But there were no kids. And it wasn’t a bedroom.

It was the garage, with a green plastic barrel

Full of greasy washers.

It smelled harsh and cold.


I buttoned the cuffs on my long sleeve shirt.

Propriety is important during a crisis.

But it made no sense,

Since I had to immediately unbutton them

To roll up my sleeves to move the greasy

Barrel of washers into a corner.

So I could open the trapdoor.


At the bottom of the trapdoor stairs

I found a magic abalone shell.

My one wish was to have a clean oven

Again.

The shell spun around, then puffed

Out yellow smoke.

When I went back upstairs to check the oven

I discovered I had no kitchen. Just a hotplate

On a gate leg table on the sun porch.


But the sun refused to shine.

This wasn’t very strange because

A permanent eclipse was taking place --

Congress refused to release funds 

To end it.

I guess my mail-in ballot never 

Got through.


My back still itched something fierce,

So I found a long shoehorn to use.

It worked fine.

But now I’m worried about that barrel

Of greasy washers.

They don’t belong to me. I have to turn

Them in.

But to whom? I don’t have a receipt.

I could be accused of theft. Or worse.

Of a hate crime. 

I’m leaving immediately for Uruguay. They 

Have no extradition treaty with the United 

States. 

I guess it’s a good thing after all 

I don’t seem to have any family.

They’d slow me down shopping

For souvenirs.