Monday, May 8, 2017

Restaurant Review: Magleby's in Provo

At 3360 North University in Provo, Magleby's offers a clean and quiet setting for good eats. Each table has a demure vase of fresh dwarf carnations. Ya gotta like a place that goes to that much trouble. I took my daughter Sarah and her kids there for brunch to thank her for widening my one and only pair of summer shorts and doing some other sewing chores I'm too ham-fisted to manage myself.



She and I both ordered the biscuits and gravy, which comes with home fries and eggs and a strip of their brown sugar coated bacon. The kids split a plate of chicken strips with french fries. I had a fountain drink and the others had water. Oh, and a piece of their celebrated chocolate cake. Total came to $20.54.




Service was fast and cheerful. The portions were handsome. And the food was good. No Olive Garden pretension. No obnoxious background music. The booths are wide enough for me to sit in comfortably. A good place to eat. Four Burps, hands down. And next time I'm getting a side of their bacon.








Obama Warned Trump About Hiring Flynn



Mr. Obama, who had fired Mr. Flynn as the head of the Defense Intelligence Agency, told Mr. Trump that he would have profound concerns about Michael T. Flynn becoming a top national security aide, said the administration officials, who were briefed on the Oval Office conversation. Mr. Trump later ignored the advice, naming Mr. Flynn to be his national security adviser.
from the NYTimes

Loose cannons are all very well
Out in the battlefield hell.
But in the White House
They certainly louse
Up the place with lots of bombshell.

Thailand Memories: Bangkok Gridlock



After finishing my TESOL course at TEFL International I was anxious to get to work as an English teacher.  My first job was in Bangkok. Having heard all the moans & groans about apartment prices in Bangkok I thought I would be a smart cookie and head out to the suburbs for my pied a terre.  I located an apartment in Nonthaburi for 3-thousand baht per month.  It consisted of a large tiled room, with a bedstead holding one of those impossibly rigid Thai mattresses, the ones stuffed with sand, and a bathroom.  The sink and mirror were located out on the balcony, where Greater Racket-tailed Drongos used to perch on the ledge to watch me shave.   It even came with air conditioning – a massive, elderly unit that at one time must have graced the lobby of the Marriott Hotel, as it sent out a turbo-charged blast of arctic air that put ice on the walls within ten minutes of being turned on.  When functioning, it produced a roar like an F-5 tornado.  I only used for ten minutes at night before going to bed. The apartment building was populated by a sprinkling of local factory workers and Thai college students, and an abundance of bar girls.  The bar girls were crammed 6 to a room, all sleeping on the floor on rattan mats.  I remember them as pretty good cooks when they'd wake up around noon.  They'd giggle and whisper to each other whenever I walked by one of their open doors, and would invite me in for some curry & rice.  Nothing loath, I often accepted – their food, that is.  It was hard to believe these gals were bar girls – out of makeup and rested, they appeared to be about 15 years old, but once they got back into their nightly working attire I was reminded of a bad Halloween costume.

I initially gloated over my housing coup, thinking how much money I would save because I was willing to commute to work.  That was before I discovered that the Bangkok Public Transportation System was designed by lunatics, built by sadists, and held together by betel nut and rubber bands.  My first morning's commute to my school started at 7am – that allowed me an hour and a half to arrive on time.  On paper, it looked simple.  Walk out to the mouth of my soi, wait for the Number  27 bus, get off on Silom Road, catch one of those truncated buses that used to be painted bright green, and gracefully descend outside the very doorsteps of my school.
I started out towards the mouth of the soi, only to be met by a pack of howling canines.  Luckily, as the weather looked dicey, I was carrying an umbrella, so I scattered the mongrels with several deft swipes of my bumpershoot.  (Nowadays I carry a bottle of water – dousing doubtful dogs as they approach always sends them flying.)  I made a mental note to engage a motorcycle taxi to take me out to the main street from now on.  I arrived at the mouth of my soi in time to see the Number 27 bus receding in the distance.  No matter, I assured myself – another one would be along soon.
An hour later I was fuming as I uneasily rolled on the balls of my tired feet.  I couldn't be late for school, so I flagged down a taxi and wound up paying 150 baht to get to work on time.
The next morning I got a motorcycle taxi out to the main road in plenty of time for the bus.  Piece of cake, really.  I hopped on, paid my fare, and sat back smugly to enjoy the rich tapestry of life that presents itself to one gazing out the window while riding an unairconditioned bus in Bangkok.  I highly recommend it to both amateur and professional photographers.  The only weevil in the rice was that we never reached Silom Road – we stopped at the Victory Monument – which, I was to find out, acts as a kind of maelstrom for all buses, mini vans, motorcycle taxis, and everything else on wheels that charges a fare.  If you stay on any bus in Bangkok long enough you will eventually find it drawn to the Victory Monument – even if it was supposed to go to Chiang Mai!  In a panic, I flagged down a taxi and made it to school on time by the skin of my teeth.
My bus map and my neighbors assured me it was the Number 27 bus I wanted to catch.  So I tried it several more days, with the same result.  I was learning that hard lesson of commuter life – trust no map or printed schedule, for they are fairy tales at best, devil-spawned traps for the unwary at worst.

I went to Plan B.  This involved taking a taxi to the Municipal Boat Pier in Nonthaburi, taking the express boat down to the Taksin Bridge, and then getting on the skytrain for several stops, and then walking about a half mile to the school.  This was more time-consuming and expensive, and I occasionally got soaked when filthy waves would overflow the delicate craft as it charged down the river, dodging rice barges and fishing trawlers.  At the end of the month, toting up my commuter bill, I realized I could have gotten a swanky place in Bangkok, probably right next door to my school, for less than I was spending on commuting.  Plus I could sleep past 5am. 
I eventually did trade my homey Nonthaburi abode for something closer to work – at which time, as is according to Torkildson's Law – my teaching contract was not renewed and I had to seek another school.  Which I found rather quickly . . . out in Nonthaburi.  But now I was locked into a one year lease on my apartment in Bangkok.
My advice to aspiring ESL teachers here in Thailand when it comes to accommodations?
BUY A TENT.

Sunday, May 7, 2017

Trump's Whimsical Wall



The whimsical wall made of twilight and dreams
is mortared with hummingbird song and moonbeams.
The bricks are of sponge cake, the spotlights of stars
That twinkle sedately behind candy bars.
The rag dolls that guarded this make believe fence
Have licorice sticks as their sturdy defence.
And dragons fly high overhead just in case
Some dangerous nino would dare make a face.
A moat full of pudding surrounded the roots,
And all of the gates are of sweet Juicy Fruits.
Around the great wall ride the fairies and imps
On hop frogs and pink little dear little shrimps.  
Although an illusion, it seems very real
To many lawmakers or vapid schlemiel.
And all the king’s horses and all the king’s guys
Will never find money to make that wall rise.   

Puerto Rico Files for Bankruptcy


Ricardo A. Rossello. Governor of Puerto Rico.


When belts must be tightened, you’ll find
That sacrifice really ain’t blind.
Those who are loaded
Stay uncorroded.
The poor get a piece of the rind.

Raul Labrador




“Nobody dies because they don’t have access to healthcare.”


Cancer isn’t fatal, if your attitude is right.
Diabetes is a breeze if you will not take fright.
A heart attack should not disturb your way of life at all.
And kidney failure does not mean you cannot have a ball.
Healthcare isn’t vital to a long and happy span.
If you are poor just suck it up and take it like a man!

From My Circus Diary




Having kept a personal journal for the past fifty years, I sometimes go back to review my sadly misspent life. I found this entry from 2009, when I was living in Thailand but thinking about the circus. I hope you enjoy it:

Thais, in some respects, are very security-conscious; in other ways, they remain as casual as sweat pants.
Two back stories, please, to set up my thesis.
A few years ago I took a hiatus from Thailand to work as the publicity director of a small, one-ring, tented circus back in the States. One of my responsibilities was to visit public schools where the circus would be playing, to hand out free tickets to students for the matinee performance.
Getting into a public school, as a stranger, in the United States, is now tantamount to getting past a sphinx in a Greek fable.
I entered one school in northern California, with a fistful of free tickets for the students, and was immediately stopped by a stern-visaged harridan who demanded some credentials.  I handed over my driver's license while explaining I had already called the principal for permission to hand out circus tickets in several classes.  With a grunt, she turned and gestured for me to follow.  I was taken into a sterile cement block room, painted pukey green, and handed a form to fill out, after which I was escorted to another room, where they took my photograph, and then I was escorted back to the pukey green room and told to wait.  I thought maybe they were going to send in a blacksmith to fit me for shackles.
 I was then presented with my photo, now embossed on an ID tag, and taken to the principal's office, where I was informed the principal was out and would not be back in until 2pm, so I would have to wait until this worthy returned to verify my story before I was allowed anywhere near the students.  Two hefty-looking cops glowered at me from a corner, fingering their holsters as if hoping I would make a suspicious move so they could plug me.
I finally managed to give away the tickets, but it took several days before I lost the urge to check my arm for a tattooed ID number.
I think you'll agree that was overkill.  From all I hear from friends back home, it's getting worse.
Back here in Thailand my Thai fiancé Joom became concerned some months ago after hearing constant news stories about car thefts in Pattaya, which is a 2 hour drive from us. She consulted the ghosts that inhabit our house (former residents who committed suicide and have a friendly relationship with her) about security measures.  The ghosts (who I would think could scare off robbers pretty easily – but apparently the ghosts have a pretty strong union and don't go in for that kind of overtime) advised Joom to have anti-theft devices installed in her truck.
Which she did.
Trouble is, she keeps accidentally triggering the piercing horn blasts and whistles and can't remember how to turn them off.  Trying to take a nap around our place now is like trying to sneak a siesta at Super Bowl halftime.
We have a dog, of course, that barks in the middle of the night at every toad and Tokay gecko that dares to intrude on our gravel drive.  I can only hope she will be equally zealous if human toads show up to despoil us.
All this leads up to the subject of security at Thai schools.
Would you be surprised to know that there isn't any?
The only guards, and I use the term extremely loosely, at a Thai public school, are the crossing guards. Usually one of them will stay behind after herding all the children across busy thoroughfares, to doze under the shade of a pink cassia tree.  They are usually superannuated and would not rouse themselves if Godzilla came rampaging down the nearest soi.
The only exception to this are the very elite international schools, many of which reside inside an exclusive muu baan where a guard zealously mans a pillbox and you are required to leave some form of identification behind when you enter.  The last time I was up in Thonburi I went to the Rongrian Nana Chad and left the guard my expired library card from Minnesota.  He seemed quite satisfied with it.
Of course, I can't remember anything dangerous or disruptive, outside of stray dogs fighting over a piece of offal, ever disturbing the somnolent droning of students during school hours. 
Now I'm not saying that the Thai public school officials are negligent about the welfare of their charges.  On the contrary, if you are a farang and want to teachEnglish in a Thai school you are going to have to produce a criminal background check, otherwise it's no go.  In today's depraved world, sadly, that is to expected.
The fact of the matter is I am amazed, and tremendously grateful, that here in Thailand there have been no Columbines or madmen attacking little children with hammers.  I hope the Thais appreciate this wonderful blessing their schools still enjoy – something that has passed out of existence in much of the Western world, much to the sorrow and disgust of all thinking people.

Saturday, May 6, 2017

Civilization



To civilize the native tribes
We offer them all sorts of bribes.
Disease and liquor, pants and skirt --
Sugar that makes their teeth hurt.
Instead perhaps we ought to push
Ourselves back to the jungle bush.

The Circus Changeling



Not everybody survives working for the circus. I don’t think I did. It has nothing to do with the physical dangers of broken bones from inept pratfalls or being mauled by an uncaged lion. It is the mindset engendered by the sorcery of the entire big top adventure that proves so inimical to a successful return to quotidian existence. Ringling Brothers was and always will be a fairy kingdom -- one that can change a person’s very DNA before letting him go, and not always for the better.


The encomiums are coming thick and fast for Ringling, now that it is become extinct. There is nostalgia and honest mourning for the passing of a way of life from the American scene. As a clown on the Ringling Blue Unit fifty years ago, I share in such emotions -- but I can’t let it rest at that. There are darker passions and obsessions that come into play -- at least for me.


Like Christina Rossetti’s famous poem “Goblin Market,” where the imps inveigle the virginal Laura to “come buy, come buy” their wares that “men sell not such in any town,” I was bewitched the moment I read about the Ringling Clown College in Life Magazine. It spoke to my deep need to make people laugh as a way to validate my own existence. I was not curious so much as lustful for what that place seemed to offer. And so it fell out that I attended that Goblin Market in the fall of 1971.


Untalented, awkward, and completely jejune, I think my presence was an embarrassment and irritation to most of the other students and staff -- but no one could deny my powerful longing to exist as a circus clown. In the end, the only reason I was allowed into that fay realm that is the circus was because I was thin and not too tall -- just the right size to fit into the preexisting show costumes that were hand-sewn and thus so expensive to create. I was, in a very real sense, just another warm body to Ringling.


Thus began my “Lost Weekend” with the circus. The circus became my bottle; with it, I could do no wrong, and without it I was a miserable and unknown cipher. This became the pattern of my life -- one which still haunts me today.


How I relished strutting out into the ring in time to Fillmore’s “Lassus Trombone” to become embroiled in some ridiculous scrape that involved foam rubber mallets, shaving cream, and black powder explosions! Or playing at inflating a huge balloon in front of a raucous crowd while the band tootled Allen’s “Whip and Spur!” The off-kilter camaraderie of clown alley -- where I knew I was accepted once Swede Johnson gave me an official nickname: Pinhead. Intoxicating flashes of inspiration when a new idea for a clown gag came to me like a religious epiphany -- sometimes they clicked with the audience, and sometimes they didn’t. But the sheer exhilaration of juggling those sparks in my mind was very bliss indeed!


This began so long ago that there was as yet no such thing as ‘creepy clowns’ or coulrophobia. Clowns were still thought of as icons of innocent and robust mirth. Each Sunday when I was asked to stand up and introduce myself in an LDS Sunday School class I would brazenly state my name and occupation -- Tim Torkildson: Clown at Ringling Brothers, Barnum and Bailey Combined Shows. There would be ‘oohs’ and ‘ahs’ from the class members, and several invitations to Sunday dinner after church. Cub reporters (they really did have such people on newspapers way back then) interviewed me with envy -- they often spoke of wanting to do just what I did, kicking over the traces to become a wandering gypsy. The townie girls that I met in bookstores and restaurants treated me like an exotic hothouse flower. And even when I left the circus to serve as a volunteer proselyting missionary for the LDS Church for two years in Thailand, Salt Lake City asked me to bring along my clown trunk so I could entertain at schools and hospitals instead of knocking on doors. I was transformed into the One and Only Clown Elder!


It was all insidiously wonderful.


But ultimately this potent brew I had been drinking for so long left me unfit for normal daily life and its accompanying responsibilities, duties, and inevitable dullness. I met my wife Amy at church after my mission in Thailand; we married and raised eight children together until the day she put them all in the van and said to me “Everything bores you but the circus” and left. I couldn’t deny her diagnosis. During our fifteen years of marriage I had tried and failed at several different careers. We moved frequently, sometimes living with her parents and sometimes living with my parents, while I tried to find suitable work -- or gave up on normal employment and went back to the circus. We even tried reversing roles -- she got a teaching job while I stayed home to tend the kids, do the laundry, and cook dinner. I was pretty good at it, if I do say so myself -- but it eventually broke Amy’s heart that she was married to a man who couldn’t tolerate the commonplaces of existence. Every boss I ever had was ripe for a pie in the face. Every office routine I was tasked with had to end in comic disaster. Every social cue I was given demanded a loud raspberry. I honestly believed that I could get away with the same kind of misanthropic stunts that Harpo Marx or W.C. Fields pulled --  and eventually come out on top with wealth and fame. I was seriously compromised as a functioning member of society. To me the idea of the clown was inextricably identified with Genesis 16:12 -- “And he will be a wild man - his hand will be against every man, and every man’s hand against him - and he shall dwell in the presence of all his brethren.”


My real income declined each year as one career disaster followed another. My divorce did not act as a wake up call for me to come to grips with reality. Instead I sunk deeper and deeper into my delusion that this clown gag called Life would end with a happy blow off.  I would win the fight, find the pirate treasure, blow up society, and wander off into the sunrise with Paulette Goddard on my arm like Charlie Chaplin in “Modern Times.”


Instead I wound up in a homeless shelter in 2012.

Since then kind friends and government assistance has seen me placed into a cozy apartment with subsidized rent, where I  collect a modest Social Security pension that keeps me fed and clothed and occasionally able to see a doctor. Where my kids invite me over for Paleo diet dinners so the grand kids can laugh when I make funny faces at them, and so I can give them Kennedy half dollars as good luck charms. Where I still dream, and write, about shaking the laughter down from the trees. Where I no longer believe I am a member of the human race -- I am a circus changeling. God help me.




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

This email response came from an old friend up in Salt Lake City a few weeks later:

Dear Tim,
                And He will!  He has already!  And He will forever!  I read your essay below before retiring for the night last night.  I was very tired, but something about your essay kept replaying in my “father and sons’” outing very tired brain. (from the previous night when I substituted for my son who could not be there for the full outing).  Mingled with my replay of your essay was another essay which I wrote in my brain.  Thus, what follows is a hodge-podge of that brain salad.  It might not make sense to you, but somehow under the surface it does to me.  Here goes: 
                The other “essay” in my brain had to deal with a friend (and former missionary associate from my younger mission).  This friend, Fred, worked for many, many years as an associate warden at the Utah State Prison.  Working in police work, prison work, parole work and all related jobs requires two fairly opposite mind sets.  First, you must learn to mistrust your prisoners.  Yes, you must treat them civilly, but for the sake of your own safety and that of other prisoners and co-workers, you must mistrust them.  Then you go home after work and must shift to another mind set – that of loving husband and father.  That shift is not easy.  In fact it is near impossible.  As a result, my friend Fred was married and divorced 3 times – I think because of the difficulty or flat out impossibility of making that mind set shift.  Yes, he’s an active member of the church; he serves well where called.  But now retired, tries hard to focus on the pleasanter mind set/self.  I have another friend – also a former employee of the prison – who made the mind shift more easily and gracefully.  But he was a teacher at the prison, not a punitive officer.  This latter fellow knew of the difficulty of the mind set shift and strove mightily to keep his pleasanter self at the forefront of his life and dealings with his wife and children.  Yes, those in law enforcement work can and often do have a negative influence on their relationships at home, but there is an old saying in Idaho that goes like this “It’s a damn thin pancake that doesn’t have two sides.”  While I cannot (and will not) judge the impact of circus life on you or anybody else, I doubt the accuracy of your self-condemnation.  And, yes, women – especially mothers crave and need security, both financial and emotional.  But they must deal with their side of the “pancake” and not blame all the relationship troubles on the other.  Relax!  Take off the judge robes, and be kind to my friend Tim!  You did the best you could with what natural skills and heritage and training gave you.  You are talented, gracious, respectful, kind, and good.  There will be a Kind, Gracious, Ultimate Judge who knows all this far better than this mere mortal.  Trust in that ultimate judgment.
                I hope some of this makes at least a little bit of sense.
                With every good wish,

                LRC

Friday, May 5, 2017

Watermelon Seasoning


Watermelon seasoning
Is something without reasoning.
Perfection cannot be improved;
Those who try should be removed.
May those who sprinkle on a spice
Be pressed into a garlic vise.