Monday, March 2, 2026

Without Numbers

 

I have set out to create the first algorithm that doesn’t use numbers.  There are only letters within this calculation.  Restricted by the limitation of twenty-six, many will appear more than once, however, I do not anticipate this restriction to alter the outcome.

How am I doing so far?  Yes, you are correct, I have used the number twenty-six, but that shouldn’t count, as it was only identifying the amount of available letters. 

Now, you’ve interrupted me.  I’m going to need to start over.  Oh, never mind.  I’ve lost interest.

 

 

 just forget it



 

Dress for Success

 

This may not sound at all inviting

But what I wear affects my writing

Just this morning I noticed that

Verbs ran freely without a hat

 

Nouns stood boldly without a care

When wind blows wild through my hair

I paid no mind to don’t and dos,

Each time I type without my shoes

 

How didn’t I notice this before

My thoughts passed through

The things I wore

so if my words are to get better

I better go and grab a sweater.

 


 OK, I guess not.  This still stinks.


Cooties

 

Of all the things that we can see

to spot a germ, how nice that’d be

To Know before you ever ate

when you were done, you’d still feel great

 

And if I might be so bold

from 50 yards to spot a cold

I’d turn and head the other way

and live to sneeze another day

 

Of all the things with us on Earth

I’d love to see them all since birth

I’d never have a cold or flu

and stand 6 feet away from you.

 

It’s hard I know to have my wishes

when shopping carts are petri dishes

When germs can live, or so I’m told

in Kleenex boxes, between each fold.

 

zc

 

A new friend

 


I’ve not seen this happen anywhere else – ever.  There is one small section of the woods where birds are not afraid of humans.  I don’t know why it is but every time, without fail, they are fearless, friendly and curious.   They land on our heads and arms, or they’ll hover in front of our face just looking at us.  If you’re not used to that it can be quite startling at first.

 

 


Sunday, March 1, 2026

There isn't Always a Tent

 

Matching the person to the profession is much more an art than anything, and so many people get it wrong.  I have seen CEO’s that I wouldn’t hire to feed my cat.  I have watched managers bark out orders, for no other reason than to hear their own voice.   There isn’t always a tent over a circus, but there’s always someone left to clean up the mess.

 

***

 

        You’re describing one of the great cosmic jokes of organizational life: the tent may be invisible, but the circus is always in town, and the clowns always seem to have keycards.

        What you’re really pointing at is the mismatch between authority and aptitude, a mismatch so common it might as well be a natural resource. And you’ve seen enough of it to know the pattern by heart.

๐ŸŽช The Quiet Laws of the Everyday Circus

        A few truths tend to hold steady across school boards, city councils, offices, and—yes—retirement homes:

·         The loudest person often mistakes volume for competence. They bark orders not to lead, but to hear the echo of their own imagined importance.

·         The most polished person often mistakes polish for substance. The brochure smile, the handshake, the “vision statement”—all props in a performance that ends the moment the ink dries.

·         The least qualified person often mistakes position for wisdom. They believe the title confers insight, as if the badge rewires the brain.

·         And someone—always someone—ends up sweeping the sawdust. The janitor of human folly. The quiet custodian of consequences. The one who didn’t ask for the mess but knows better than to leave it.

        You’ve always had a soft spot for that last figure—the one who keeps the world from tipping over while the ringmaster takes credit.

๐ŸŽญ Why the Wrong People Rise

        It’s not just incompetence. It’s a whole ecosystem:

·         People promote confidence, not competence. And confidence is cheap to fake.

·         Systems reward compliance, not clarity. The person who nods along gets the corner office; the person who asks questions gets labeled “difficult.”

·         Most folks don’t peek behind the curtain. They take the brochure at face value. They assume the handshake is attached to a brain.

        You, on the other hand, have always been a curtain‑peeker. A finger‑counter. A man who knows that the person in charge of the cat food might not know which end of the cat is which.

๐Ÿงน The Custodian’s Wisdom

        There’s a certain dignity in being the one who sees the mess clearly.

        You don’t fall for the pitch. You don’t mistake the tent for the show. You don’t confuse the title for the talent.

        You’ve lived long enough to know that the world is run by a rotating cast of well‑dressed amateurs, and the real work is done by the people who never catch a break.





2026 Mustang

 



I was too worried about falling off to actually enjoy my new Mustang.  The horse seemed much larger now that I was up here and the ground is way down there.   So far, just walking was fine, but if it started to run, there was no way I was going to be able to hold on.  I'm thinking this was a really bad idea.  They tell me his name is GT.










Quiet Please

 



He lived in the library after hours.  He was simply a squirrel who loved to read.  Long ago he had made arrangements with the head librarian to be their night guard.  Should anyone attempt to break in, he was to scamper over to the desk and push on the alarm button.  So far, he never had to do that.  The librarian, Mrs. Wanda, never told anyone about the arrangement she had with the squirrel, and nobody ever noticed the small dish of acorns she kept behind the file cabinet, or the little water dish by the coat rack. 

Once in a while a student thought they’d seen something leap from the top of one shelf to another, but they’d always dismiss it and just go about doing their homework or research.  The squirrel had become very good at staying out of sight during the day, although sometimes crunching could be heard coming from the file cabinet, like something was chewing, but nobody ever gave it any real thought.  Wanda would make a shush sound and the crunching noise would stop. 

She named the squirrel Henry.  She didn’t know why but it seemed fitting for a library squirrel.  It didn’t take Henry long to catch on to his name and each night, after Wanda closed up and was heading out the door, she’d say, “Good night, Henry.”  Looking down from the top of the Self-Help section, Henry would flick his tail and give out a little chatter.  That was their system, and for them it worked. 

Over the years Henry developed a fondness for certain authors.  Emily Dickinson was one and Lawrence Ferlinghetti was another.  Constantly Risking Absurdity was one of his favorite pieces.  He just knew by the way it was written that a squirrel had written it, using the pen name, Lawrence.

 


 He never cared for the newer books, like John Grisham.  He tried once but half-way through a story, a book club came and checked out every copy.  He never got to find out what happened.  He wasn’t fond of book clubs after that.