beaten to a pulp --
bleeding tootsie rolls and gum;
kids have all the fun.
start jumping around --
swing a blind stick at your friends;
grow a year older.
beaten to a pulp --
bleeding tootsie rolls and gum;
kids have all the fun.
start jumping around --
swing a blind stick at your friends;
grow a year older.
Ever since I learned of atoms as a child
I have been obsessed with disintegration.
I mean, c'mon -- what's holding all those
atoms together?
Magnetism? Gravity. Electricity? What?
Some people are marked by an experience
with spontaneous combustion --
where a person just goes up in flames
for no reason.
With me, it's spontaneous disintegration.
And not just of people. Of things.
I have a memory as a small boy
of seeing a red fire hydrant near my house
slowly disintegrate before my eyes one
summer day. It was horrible.
Since then, I have worked at keeping
myself together.
I take collagen supplements.
If you take enough of it,
Elmer's Glue tastes rather sweet.
When I feel a loosening of my atoms
I immediately lay down in a tub of
warm mucilage.
So far, it seems to be working.
Of course, everyone else seems fine;
there's no reports of spontaneous disintegration
in the news.
Not that it would ever be reported
if it's been happening since the beginning
of time.
Something that happens all the time,
like dandruff,
is not newsworthy.
So I keep my eyes peeled.
And have placards printed that read:
"Keep yourself together!"
I just sent a shipment of 'em to
Lviv -- with rolls of duct tape.
One does what one can.
It was 'Adopt a Rock' Week in town.
So I found an orphaned rock, with no
mountain to nourish it.
And took it home.
At first the rock was shy and frightened.
It wouldn't talk to me or eat anything.
But little by little I got it to open up, to
tell me its
name.
Heathcliff.
I nicknamed it 'Cliffy.'
I sent Cliffy to St. John's Military School
in Kansas.
But it was dismissed for medical reasons.
It was hard of hearing.
So I took Cliffy into the family transport business.
It worked as ballast in one of our ships.
But sailors are a rough bunch,
and Cliffy took after their hard ways.
Between trips it holed up in the local gravel pit.
When I tried to remonstrate with it,
it pulled a chisel on me.
Now we don't talk to each other anymore.
Sad.
Next time, I'll adopt a sandbag.
"Unstable as water, thou shalt not excel . . . "
Genesis 49:4
Unstable as water, my wavering strength
can rush unabated to flood any length --
or pool into sorrow for sins yet to come;
O Lord, I feel covered in black faithless scum!
Help me rejoice in thy promises sure,
and find in thy laws saving fountains so pure!
Lucky East Coast residents, who had the sweetest brand
Things were going pretty smooth at work.
I'd been back for a month
when the boss called me into her office.
She did not greet me wreathed in smiles.
She said "Torkildson, you've been in your
comfort zone for too long. Hasn't the
pandemic taught you anything?"
"Glub glub glub" I replied intelligently.
"From now on you're to keep your left
hand immersed in iced Tabasco Sauce eight
hours a day" she told me.
I thought to myself "Everybody else is
quitting their jobs and going to live in
Tahiti -- I'll do the same!"
But when I opened my mouth
out came: "Yes, ma'am. Glub."
I slunk back to my desk, where
I found a stainless steel bowl full
of iced Tabasco Sauce waiting for me.
*******************
When I got back to my boarding house
that night my left hand was throbbing.
Mrs. Hoffnagel, the landlady, greeted me
at the door.
She announced: "We're having salmon patties
for dinner tonight."
I said: "You know I'm allergic to salmon. May
I have just a salad please?"
"No!" she replied in ringing tones.
"I'm taking you out of your comfort zone
for your own good. Imagine -- you,
a bachelor at 35! You need some shaking
up so you'll get on with your life." Her
arms were akimbo.
"But I lost my parents and my fiance
during the pandemic" I said quietly.
"Nevertheless" she shot back, performing
Katchaturian's Sabre Dance with a steak knife,
"You'll eat the salmon and like it. Your
comfort zone has held you back far too long!"
I slunk into the dining room and pretended
to eat the salmon patties --
pushing them under my plate when
no one was looking.
****************************
"Father, I have sinned" I started to say
to my priest while we were in the confessional.
The smell of wax candles always soothed me, so
I had gone down to Saint Andrew's after dinner.
"Stop!" the priest commanded from the
other side of the grille.
A dormouse crawled over my shoe.
"You're too comfortable with your sins"
he said quietly. Butter wouldn't melt
in his mouth; but margarine might.
He continued: "I want you to give away
all your wealth, join the Ukrainians
in their fight for freedom, and wear
sandpaper under your shirt for the rest
of your life."
*********************
I had my leg shot off at Kyiv.
I traded the sandpaper under my shirt
for a ride to the nearest hospital in Macedonia.
There I caught the Coronavirus Lambda variant
and was quarantined in a comfort zone for six
months.
When I got out my feet smelled like
the wick of a kerosene lamp.
But otherwise I'm still voting for
Ted Cruz when I get home again.
"But as for you, ye thought evil against me; but God meant it unto good, to bring to pass, as it is this day, to save much people alive."
Genesis 50:20.
To save much people God allows
the evil acts of men to rouse
the storms of war, deceit, and hate --
but in His hand are all men's fate.
He raises one, another fails;
but in the end His might prevails.
Small and delicate --
this girl child looks at the world
through white angel's wings.
Hot tub in winter?
Are these kings and princes or what?
In my day . . . spinach.