Thursday, June 28, 2018

The Beds in My Life



I am reading Patrick O’Brian’s rollicking biography of Picasso, and one
recurring theme in the book has me thinking back over my life --
O’Brian continually mentions how Picasso slept in until noon for
most of his busy artistic life. How does a man do that, stay in his
bed until lunchtime? Picasso must have had some beds as beautiful
and alluring as his mistresses. I’m not so much interested in the
carnal side of a man’s bed here, of my own beds, but of the kind
of bed that can hold a man until the day is half over. I’ve rarely, if ever,
had that kind of a bunk.


Try as I might I cannot recall anything about my childhood bed, except
that I often fell out of it. This is not a comic exaggeration. I was a
thrasher. First I’d kick the covers off; then my pillow would fly off the
bed from an unconscious thrust, and then I’d roll off and continue my
uneasy repose on the carpeted floor -- usually winding up underneath
my bed by cockcrow.


I shared a bedroom with my two sisters until the age of twelve, when
my older brother Billy moved out of the house and I inherited his room
and his bed. That’s when I discovered the unalloyed pleasures of
reading in bed at night. My parents did not care if I stayed up half
the night reading -- it beat having to keep tabs on me during school
nights. I delighted in the Bantam paperback adventures of Doc
Savage and his muscular band of do-gooders. I developed a
taste for inexpensive Signet paperbacks of fusty classics. Such
as “Oblomov”, by Ivan Goncharov -- about a Russian guy who
takes fifty pages to get out of bed and go sit in a chair. I thought
to myself then, as I think to myself now, that must have been
some bed. I thrilled to Jules Verne’s “Off On a Comet” in the
cheap Dover reissue -- the pages started to fall out and litter
my bed like autumn leaves.


But of the bed itself where I read “The Groucho Letters” and
“Erehwon” I can recall nothing. Like the kitchen table and the
faded but well-padded furniture in the living room, I took it all
for granted. Many years later when I rented a bungalow in
Thailand stocked with unupholstered rosewood chairs and
low benches my aching hams compelled me to look back on
my childhood home as the very sine qua non of comfort. And
since most Thais prefer to sleep on bamboo mats on the floor,
or in a hammock, they had no idea how to manufacture a proper
mattress for a proper bed. The fiendish contraption I had to
make do with on my bedstead was first cousin to a sandbag.
About five hours was all I could take at one time.


I have often written with great affection about my murphy bed
on the Ringling Circus train. I had to step out of my cramped
roomette in order to pull it down. The mattress was thin, but at
least it was stuffed with cotton or kapok or something soft. And
when the train rushed through the night to our next stop, the
swaying motion and insistent clicking of the passing rails
underneath were a potent lullaby.


With other circuses, my bunk was not as cushy. I shared a
motorhome with a heavy smoker on one show. He ran the
concessions and so was higher up on the social scale than
a measly clown; he took the main bed for himself. I got the
slide-out doodad that functioned as a padded bench with a
table during the daytime and then slid out into a three-section
torture rack at night. In theory the three sections should have
aligned into a straight horizontal plane, over which I would spread
a sheet -- but in practice each section was skewed and lumpy.
I woke up every morning with a second hand smoker’s cough
and incipient scoliosis.


On another show I had a bunk bed in the back of a semi that
was too short for my five-foot-eleven frame. Unless the door
were left open at night there was no ventilation; so I either
roasted or froze.


After my divorce I gave up keeping my own home for a
number of years; instead crashing with family and friends
on hideabed sofas that inevitably had a sinkhole in the middle.
But a divorced LDS man who does not quickly remarry to regain
respectability is often made to feel superfluous by the Mormon
pecking order, and I figured I probably deserved my disagreeable
sleeping arrangements.
When I moved out to Utah in 2014 I discovered La-Z-Boy rocking
recliners for the first time. Even though I had a perfectly good bed
with a three-inch layer of memory foam overlaid for decadent
snoozing, I prefered tilting back in my recliner with a volume of
“The Discourses of Brigham Young” of an evening and reading
myself to sleep. With Brother Brigham’s heavy preaching, it didn’t
take long for Morpheus to come knocking. Or if insomnia paid a
call instead, I could click on a YouTube series of old radio shows,
like Fibber McGee and Molly, to lay oil on my troubled sleep while
I rocked away the middle watches of the night. I save my traditional
bed for bouts of the grippe or mild sciatica.  


But a bed where I could snuggle under the covers until noon?
Even now when I’m retired and have no appointed rounds to
make for anything or anybody, the robin’s early chirp finds me
awake and restless to get on with the day. Perhaps it’s because
I know that after lunch I will close the blinds, turn off my cell phone,
and fall into a heavy doze in my recliner. Something I thoroughly
enjoy as I contemplate the many many friends and family who
are still working a steady job and are not allowed to take forty winks.

But still, I envy Picasso his remarkable bed. If I had a bed that
enticed me to embrace it until noon I bet I could be a painter, too.

The Same Old Headlines This Morning . . .

The headlines always seem the same:
The president tweets something lame.
And soccer upsets in detail
Do int’rest me as much as braille.
Pollution in the China Sea
And ICE hostility.
While pundits by the score must prate
About the Fed’s new in’trest rate.
Those editors must all reuse
The same old stuff -- and call it news.
If they’d have subscriptions humming
How about the Second Coming?
Or a Yankees/Dodgers match
Played in marijuana patch?
When man bites dog, reporters write
It’s all the fault of the Far Right.
This morning’s online news report
Reads as prosaic as a wart.
Of course I’m second guessing here;
Not ev’ry scribe can be Shakespeare.
Forgive an old man’s grumpy spree;

My prostate hardly lets me pee . . .

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

The Red Ants of Thailand

Joom and I.  2010. 


In 2010 I lived in Thailand, working as an English teacher and
a social media director for TEFL International. My salary allowed
me to rent a three-bedroom bungalow that was a few blocks from
the beach on the Gulf of Thailand. The bungalow was on an acre
of land with a huge pond seething with fish and turtles, along with
a rundown orchard of sapodilla fruit trees. You won’t believe the
rent I paid; a measly two-hundred dollars a month. There was
a small teakwood pavilion nestled in the quiet shady sapodilla
grove, where I liked to sit and spoon with my Thai girlfriend, Joom.
Between bouts of canoodling we’d gather the fallen fruit for our lunch.

It was idyllic alright, but there was a fly in the suntan lotion. Red ants.
Aggressive, inquisitive, biting red ants. They considered the sapodilla
grove to be their private property; Joom and I were the trespassers.
To keep them at bay, Joom sprinkled the pavilion with talcum powder --
the ants disliked traveling through the perfumed dust. Talcum powder
is cheap in Thailand; everyone uses it to fight the roaring midday heat
and humidity, blanketing themselves until they look like ghosts.
We had to dust the teakwood pavilion frequently, since each
monsoon downpour washed away the talcum protection.

One day Joom decided to leave suddenly so she could visit her
brother’s rice farm up in Jungwat Loey -- three hundred miles
away by the Laotian border. I had to stay and work. After she
was gone I realized that she hadn’t told me where she kept the
talcum powder in the bungalow. I ransacked the cupboards and
closets but couldn’t find any. Oh well, I thought idly to myself, the
next time it rains I’ll just run down to the local shanty shop for a
couple of cans.

The rain came down in pails that night and the next morning
the red ants were all over our love pavilion. So I sauntered down
to the open-fronted shack that served as the local
grocery-cum-everything shop in the neighborhood. It was closed,
the rusty steel shutters all the way down and padlocked.
 I’d forgotten the day was one of the innumerable Buddhist
holidays that Thais observe. There’s about 25 of them, from
Loy Krathong to the full moon Magha Puja. Drat! I’d have to
forgo an afternoon snooze out in the shady grove (Joom had
rigged up a weaved sisal hammock inside the place for desultory napping.)
The next day I once again toddled off to the store for talcum powder,
but the place was still shuttered. I’d also forgotten the slew of
Thai national and royal holidays -- the Thais normally take a couple
of days off to celebrate the birthday of each previous monarch of the
Chakri dynasty -- and there were nine of them; plus a week or two
off for the birthdays of the current king and his royal consort. Plus
more time off for the annual plowing ceremony, which is set by the
Brahmin priests at the royal palace according the phases of the
moon and some kind of ouija board thingamabob. Come to think
of it, that’s why Joom had been in such a hurry to get back to the farm --
she wanted to be there in time to help her brother celebrate the ploughing
ceremony to insure a good harvest (but mostly, I think, to imbibe as much
of the local rice beer as possible before the wild elephants in the
neighborhood trampled down the bamboo fence surrounding the big
wooden vat and went on a toot.)

“No wonder nothing ever gets done around this place” I muttered to
myself as I slunk back to the bungalow and its appealing grove of
sapodillas -- now Off Limits to me.

I decided to improvise; there’s nothing that good old-fashioned
Yankee ingenuity can’t handle, I told myself with pride.

There was a gallon of bleach back by the laundry tub, so I gingerly
walked out to the pavilion with it to slosh around. The red ants didn’t
like it, but the bleach soon evaporated, not sinking into the hard
teakwood a bit, and the critters were back in a matter of hours --
more belligerent than ever.

I kept a can of roach spray in the house, so I tried that next.
The ants seemed to thrive on it. I swear on a stack of pancakes
they even started to grow bigger!

Admitting defeat, I sat all alone in my bungalow, fuming,
or went out to the pond and fed the fishes and turtles all of
the dog food Joom kept at the house for her mutt, Neepoo.
Sapodillas covered the ground in growing mounds, and they sure
went good in a Panang curry -- but each one had a troop of savage
red ants around it. I suspect they sensed that they had a farang
milquetoast at their mercy, and made the most of it.

When Joom finally returned I did not greet her as kindly as I
might have. Instead, I lit into her about her thoughtlessness
in leaving me alone with the red ants and no talcum powder.
She was not at her best that particular day, what with the long
bus ride from home (and the after effects of all that local homebrew),
so she gave as good as she got, and we had what might be called a
lover’s spat -- one that ended with her throwing a thumping great papaya
at my head and me threatening to duck her in the fish pond.

I did not see her for a week after that, but then one evening she was
at the door, with Neepoo and a large box of yellow chalk. Although
I spoke Thai reasonably well, she insisted on speaking in English.

“This make it better than powder!” she told me forcefully.
Demonstrating, she marched out to the pavilion, now overrun
with those insufferable red ants, and began drawing circles around
the posts that held it off the ground, and then began drawing lines on
the floor and the bench with more chalk. The ants grew confused.
They hesitated. They didn’t bite. In fact, within a half hour they had
disappeared from the pavilion completely. Joom thrust the chalk box
into my hands in smug triumph and then demanded “You say you
sorry now!” And I did. And she made us a lovely curry with stewed
sapodillas that night, which we ate companionably out in the pavilion,
the  cool breeze off the Gulf tossing her shiny black hair in a most
attractive manner.

To this day I don’t know if there was anything special in that chalk --
she bought it right off the same shelf that held pencils, notebooks,
and other grade school accoutrements, and she made sure I had
several more boxes squirreled away in the bungalow for the next
time she decided to wander off on her own to celebrate Songkran or
some other Thai fiesta. And the best thing about that chalk was that it
didn’t wash away after the first or even second monsoon rain.

I’ve tried drawing chalk circles around the tiny brown and harmless
ants that swarm along the sidewalks here in Utah in the summer,
but it doesn’t faze them a bit. I’m beginning to think that Joom
(whom I haven’t heard from in over five years) had something
magical about her. In fact, I believe that all the Thai people have
some magic in them that we farangs just never will understand.

My New Personal Best: 10 Original Limericks in Five Hours




The American Library Association is dropping Laura Ingalls Wilder’s name from a prestigious children’s literature award in order to distance the honor from what it described as culturally insensitive portrayals in her books.
NYT

A writer cannot buck the trend
Of seeing her eminence end
When gatekeepers choose
To downgrade her views
For what she so long ago penned.



The nut harvest’s early this year.
They already start to appear
In front of cafes
With their winning ways.
(I bet they don’t tip worth a sneer.)


A butcher who lived in Marseille
Claimed protestors got in his way
Whenever he carved
A roast for the starved,
And so he removed to Green Bay.



You’re free to be Muslim, my friend;
But traveling here’s at an end.
Without crucifix
We don’t care to mix
With your kind, nor even pretend.






Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez

Our Congress has reached a ripe age.
They’re getting too old, and not sage.
I think the time right
To tell ‘em “Goodnight!”
And make ‘em retire offstage.


In childhood I ate cottage cheese,
Though telling my mother “Oh please!”
Not artisan-made,
Twas duller than suede --
But now it’s commanding great fees . . .



If spiders can fly, I’ve no doubt
That pigs can dig caves with their snout.
That snakes use chopsticks
And chickens lay bricks
While kangaroos make sauerkraut.


I’m using a new dating app
That makes me a lovable chap.
I’m handsome and rich,
But there’s just one glitch --
The girls somehow know it’s all crap!


We live in a terrible era
When jungles become the Sahara.
If I were a tree
From the tropics I’d flee
And put down some roots in Canberra.



There’s always a headline or two
I love to sit down and review.
This one is a pip;
It sure has got zip.
(If only she’d used a corkscrew . . . )


Tuesday, June 26, 2018

A Letter from my Missionary Daughter



Hello wonderful people!!


The life of a missionary is sometimes quite unpredictable. You never know when you could be called upon to speak at church, or give a training in a missionary meeting, or be asked to help someone move out of their house, or babysit dogs, or have conversations with crazy people about vowels and consonants meaning something significant.. The list is endless, but you know, I wouldn't change a single thing! There are things we get to experience as missionaries that we really couldn't really experience anywhere else. For example: We went over to a member's house, the Wettengel family, and they have about 6 kids. The youngest two are 4 and 7, and they were kind of shy at first. But after about 10 minutes or so, they come running into the room with these latex gloves blown up and they say: 
"Look! We made you hand balloons!!" Sister Peterson and I about died laughing, they were so adorable haha. I think one of my favorite parts of being a missionary is getting to know so many people and their families and seeing how they raise their kids. It gives me a lot of ideas on things I want to do or don't want to do when raising my own family. And it gives us a never ending list of friends and family :) 
We've been trying to spend a lot of time with members this week to let them know how much we love and care for them and that we're here to help strengthen their families and their faith. We have had many opportunities for service doing moves and cleaning houses, and we've had the opportunity to make them cookies and take them to different people in the congregation. That has worked pretty well, but our goal in doing all of this is that they trust us enough to tell us about their friends or family who would be interested in learning the message that we have for people which is all about Jesus Christ! It's awkward or frightening for a lot of people to tell others what they believe to be true, which we definitely understand. It's still frightening for me sometimes to talk to complete strangers about what I believe and ask them if they'd like to learn about it and know for themselves if it's true. But it's important, and everyone deserves the chance to know for themselves. Ultimately though, love for God and for others is our motivation in sharing our beliefs. I don't think that people go out into the world looking for "religion" necessarily but what they ARE looking for is lasting peace and joy. And knowing what we do about Jesus Christ, his teachings, and his restored gospel is what will bring people that lasting peace and joy that they are looking for. But it only works if they are willing to have an open heart and mind, and honestly seek to know the truth. You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him drink; it's a choice that everyone deserves, always. 
There's much more to tell, as always, but I'll leave it at this: God is real, He loves you and knows you; Jesus Christ is the person who knows how to help us best, but only if we let him in; miracles are happening every day, we just have to open our eyes :) Ya'll are wonderful and I love you! Have a wonderful week! And as one of my missionary friends likes to say: " Hasta La Pasta! "
Love, 
Sister Torkildson

dead among the stones



dead among the stones
the ebbing blossoms show up
white like worn-out bones 

my brown spotted stone




my brown spotted stone
belongs to nobody else
but me and the sand