Saturday, November 28, 2020

Today's timericks.

 



A loaf of bread is all I ask/no jug of wine for me/and as for female company/I'm far too brusque, you see/Underneath a scented pine/or in my hushed study/I paint word pictures by job lot/to peddle artlessly.


The world is fraught with leftovers/as turkey gravy prowls/from fridge to fridge post holiday/congealing all our bowels/the tupperware is fit to burst/with dressing and green beans/and no one possibly can wear/a pair of decent jeans!


I think Black Friday was a bust/nobody went a-shoppin'/People stayed at home instead/to shop online non-stoppin'/Of course I stayed above the fray/Conspicuous consumption/takes more money than I've got/and a lot more gumption. 


I hope that Trump evaporates like a patch of smog/in the coming years and finds repose in some gulag/The media should guarantee his antics to ignore/so as a beaten zombie he disturbs our peace no more.


China is so generous they build across their fences/hoping to promote a bunch of happy consequences/Then they get their feelings hurt when other nations holler/All they want to do is get much bigger, and not smaller . . . 




Friday, November 27, 2020

The Unauthorized Autobiography of Me. Section Nine. The River. 1961.

 



The heavy river water

pushed away

by black coal barges.


The boy with

a cane pole

Watching and smelling.


Phew! Mississippi water

mixed with sewage

and hungry carp.


Can of corn.

One kernel for bait.

The pole bends slowly.


It's a big one.

Two pounds maybe.

Molting diseased scales.


Three on a fume-laden

summer afternoon

with an oily reflected sun.


Under the rose bushes

at home;

calamine for stinging nettles.



A probationary time

 



I'm living on probation;

God is checking up on me.

But more than that, he's helping

to bring light and clarity.

The test is rigged, I'm glad to say,

so no one needs to fail,

because results are scored 

by Him that hung upon a nail.


Today's timericks.

 



Any day that ends with pie, and too much pie at that/is the kind of day that I consider can't fall flat/which is to say Thanksgiving as excuse to gormandize/is the kind of holiday to win a Nobel Prize!


WASHINGTON—U. S. government agencies from the military to law enforcement have been buying up mobile-phone data from the private sector to use in gathering intelligence, monitoring adversaries and apprehending criminals.  WSJ.

The mobile phone's a wonder of our modern age, but hark/it gathers information like a hungry hungry shark/which then is sold to bidders, maybe government, or not/who then know all about us, from our bank book to our thought/This breeds strong paranoia in consumers not a few/who fear complete brainwashing with a perilous shampoo/Perhaps a tinfoil helmet is the only good defense/against this great conspiracy, whether real or just pretense! 



I've got some homespun wisdom for the youngsters on the street/looking for their first good job by going suite to suite/Let the work just come to you in Zen-like fashion, dude/The karma of the universe cannot be spun or skewed/Your career is written by the hand of fate -- submit!/It is to pay your student loans till you're too old to spit!


Thorstein Veblen, Ph.D/studied our economy/with contempt and little fact/and with doubt was never wracked/Consumers were 'conspicuous'/which on Black Friday's ridiculous!

Thursday, November 26, 2020

Photo Essay: Zen Postcards.

 




Thank you, Sun. #GiveThanks.

 



Thank you, Sun,

for sometimes hiding

your power while

revealing your beauty.

Thank you, Mountain. #givethanks

 



Thank you, Mountain,
for being you --
and letting me
be me.

Today's Timericks. #GiveThanks.

 



I'm grateful to be growing old; seniority agrees/with my inclination to sit back and take my ease/The hustle and the bustle, not to mention hurly burly/I leave with thankful heart to younger folk who get up early /There's time now for reflection and nostalgic reverie/for stories told to grandkids with their fresh credulity/I've kept my hair and all my teeth, so what more do I need/contentment to experience and happiness to breed?


If ever I was grateful, it's cuz I'm not the fowl/who's parted from his noggin around about the jowl/Dear turkey, I am sorry that you must eaten be/but in the grand scheme of things, it's better you than me!


Wednesday, November 25, 2020

The Unauthorized Autobiography of Me. Section Eight.

 

My family, on the Torkildson side, is descended from royalty.


Jimmy Antone had a great garage
for experiments.
It was empty most of the time,
since Mr. Antone preferred to
park his car on the street,
as did my own dad.
It was a lazy man thing;
too much trouble to open
and close
those old garage doors.
They had huge groaning springs
and byzantine hinges like a
drawbridge. 
They'd give Tarzan a hernia.

So in the Antone garage we brought
our spoils from the nearby railyard
to fiddle with.
I specialized in half burnt flares.
Naturally. Since I always
inclined towards pyromania.
Ronny Antone contributed a two foot
steel pipe.
We plugged up one end with gravel.
I stuffed it full of sulfur from the flares.
Jimmy Antone lit it with the forbidden
matches he carried around 
furtively like a cartoon
anarchist with a bomb
at a parade.

It roared to life
wanting to suffocate
us dumb kids.
But we were so dumb
we kept the garage door 
wide open --
cuz we were lazy, too --
and the violent fumes floated
harmlessly away.

Laid on bricks,
the steel pipe turned red,
then yellow, then blue
from the heat of the dripping
sulfur.
We roasted stones in the flame.
Mad alchemists.
Until they cracked and flew apart.
The heat and the glow
and the fumes gathering
near the roof
produced an unhealthy
excitement.
A callous disregard 
for the life of small animals.
"Let's try a squirrel"
suggested Jimmy Antone
with a Boris Karloff leer.

Just then
Mrs. Antone
came out
of her kitchen
to investigate.
She denounced us
in ringing tones:

"You kids have got to be the worst bunch of idiots
this side of the river! Dammit, Ronnie, you're 
supposed to be old enough to keep your little brother
out of trouble! Wait until your father gets home. Wait
until I tell your mother, Timmy! Just wait until I get
my hairbrush! Burn down the whole neighborhood --
that's what you're doing! Put that thing out! Bring me
the hose, Ronnie! Look at the garage floor. You've ruined
it! Where in the Sam Hill did you get that all that junk from? 
Did you steal it? Have you kids been STEALING? Wait 
until your father gets home! Just wait! That's all I can
say -- just wait!"

I decided not to wait.
I ran home and told mom
that Jimmy Antone was
playing with matches.
She told Mrs. Antone,
and in the ensuing hullabaloo
my part in the Great Sulfur Scandal
was forgotten.
I may be a dumb kid
but I know how to protect
my own tush. 





Today's Timericks.

 




I'm grateful to my critics/whose constant carping tongue/have kept me trying harder/and feeling mighty young/Their petty commentaries/though obvious and flat/have tightened up my writing/improving my format.


Americans are yearning/to visit home again/to sacrifice a turkey/to goodwill among men/these altars to indulgence/must now abandoned stay/unless to spread a virus/becomes the Yankee way.


The government is tracking/my whereabouts by phone/I wish they'd stop their snooping/and leave me all alone/The data they're collecting/will blow up in their face/when I reverse the process/and their phones start to trace!


Those data mine claim jumpers/near San Francisco Bay/are too big for their britches/and need a good fillet/Europe's got their number/and cuts them down to size/But Uncle Sam won't step up/and look them in the eyes.


The Congress of Peru/is twisted as a screw/Despite their diatribes/they all take massive bribes/The janitors alone/no perks are ever thrown.