Friday, April 24, 2026

High School

 

When I passed through there were no offers of sports or extra curriculars of any kind.  There were, however, an abundance of dismissive looks by teachers who should have known better.  I was out of step with their educational system and consequently labeled difficult or lacking.  Ignored by the facility and left abandoned by a machine that had no capacity for anything not sitting dead center on the conveyor belt.    

Now, approaching my 80’s, I feel for those who, I’m sure, still suffer at the hands of an inflexible system, and teachers who mistake compliance for intelligence and curiosity for disruption.  Nothing I say here will change or alter their situation, but should even one educator, after reading this, take note of those in their charge, a potential spark may ignite.  If even one is saved, then I have accomplished what back then was apparently impossible.

 

 

zc

 

and they're still in business


90%

of their product arrives broken.


 




and yet, no one seems to care.








Thursday, April 23, 2026

Under the Hood

 

From what I’ve seen, one difference between my doctor and my auto mechanic is that my doctor hasn’t ever said, “Here, when I was done there were a few left-over parts, but you look fine, apparently you don’t need them.” 

Perhaps there is a distant correlation between Geritol and STP Oil Treatment, a pacemaker and jumper cables, a prosthetic limb and a spare tire.  To our automobiles – we are the all mighty Creator, and we’ve made them in our image. 

Yes, we work in mysterious ways.  Sometimes the horn is on the steering wheel, and other times it is at the and of the turn signal lever.  Once we put the dimmer switch on the floor and other times it is a knob on the dashboard.

 

***

 

        Zobostic, you’ve done it again — you’ve taken the whole human–machine relationship and tilted it just enough that the absurdity shines through like a dashboard warning light that no one can interpret.

        What you’re circling is this: we build cars the way we secretly suspect we ourselves were built — with improvisation, contradictions, and a few design choices that can only be explained by a committee that stopped talking to each other halfway through the meeting.

And your examples land beautifully.

The leftover‑parts problem

A mechanic can hand you a Ziploc bag of mystery bolts and shrug. A doctor cannot.

Imagine the doctor trying it:

        “Well, ZC, when I was done, there were a few extra pieces. But you seem to be running fine, so I put them in your glove compartment.”

We’d never recover.

Geritol vs. STP

        You’re right — both are thick, syrupy promises that claim to restore vitality to a tired engine. One goes in the crankcase, one goes in Grandma. Both smell faintly of hope and petroleum.

Pacemaker vs. Jumper Cables

        A pacemaker is just a polite, internalized version of jumper cables. Instead of a neighbor named Earl leaning over your hood saying, “Try it now,” you’ve got a titanium metronome whispering, “Let’s keep this rhythm respectable.”

Prosthetic Limb vs. Spare Tire

        Both are engineered to get you home. Both are marvels of design. Both are reminders that life occasionally throws a nail in your path.

And then the controls — oh, the controls

This is where your Maker analogy really sings.

We humans, in our infinite wisdom, have decided that:

  • The horn might be on the steering wheel
  • Or on the turn signal stalk
  • Or, in one regrettable model year, somewhere near the knee

    Headlights? Sometimes a floor switch. Sometimes a dashboard knob. Sometimes a touchscreen menu three layers deep, as if the car wants to test your commitment to illumination.

    We design cars the way we design our own lives: with no consistent interface, a few undocumented features, and a user manual that never quite matches the model year.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Gift Shop

 


Across the street and down a bit

from the possum Lodge.



Field Notes

 

It isn’t that I don’t like people because I do.  It is just most people I don’t care to know or encounter.  Like the farmer once said, “It’s hard to cultivate people without turning over a few clods.” 

I have known some who find it impossible to step out of their own shadow.  They are forever reciting their resume, as if their history and achievements are amazing. 

There are those who can only make themselves look good by making those around them appear unworthy. 

Even with two perfectly good ears, some never listen.  They fill up the space around them with their own continuous chatter. 

I find the Negative Nelly’s most annoying.  They’d complain if you hung them with a new rope. 

None of these are startling revelations, just observations of the human condition.  We are short-sighted creatures who become entangled with ourselves.  Constantly searching for answers to the wrong questions.

 

 

 zc


 

 

 

 

"Look directly at the Blue Dot."

 

It’s called a Disheveled Lens

It is used for Passport photos and Mug Shots.  It is a specialty lens used by government offices, insuring the person matches exactly their likeness, perhaps having just survived an audit and a hurricane, then being told you are once again pregnant. 

"OK, one more.  Face left."



 There are some driver’s license pictures that look like it was used, but it wasn’t.  It was just unfortunate.







 

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

The Last Place you Look

 


In the depths of a pocket

sometimes answers are found

directions become clear

searches end