I saw a scamper in the woods
I heard a shiver in the cold
I didn’t do my list of shoulds
then suddenly I was too old
I saw a scamper in the woods
I heard a shiver in the cold
I didn’t do my list of shoulds
then suddenly I was too old
I took me a shower
Washed with the soap
The dirt went down the drain –
I brushed my teeth
And combed my hair
Then washed my face again –
With Q-Tips, oh so carefully
I cleaned around each ear
softly dressed in Sunday clothes –
so no one else would hear –
I walked into the living room
Little Sis was there
looked my way, then sadly said,
“Nope -
still Cooties everywhere.”
My phone
forever upside down
I dare not drop it
on the ground
The insides then
would surely mangle
this pricy, plastic
black rectangle,
It dings, it rings
and buzzes too
I pick it up
surprise - it’s you,
I say hello
you ask what’s new,
I touch the screen
when we are through,
It shows the weather
I need not guess,
It finds me here
with GPS,
Blips of news
not hard to take
I just ignore
it’s mostly fake,
My phone is nice
though not a thrill,
when every month
I see the bill.
📱
At one point during the tour I asked to see their system.
That Sir, is proprietary.
What do you mean?
It means we don’t want anyone out there doing the same thing
we are doing.
Why not?
Because they could figure out how to do it cheaper and then
charge less for the product. We would
lose sales.
Can’t you figure out how to do it cheaper?
Why should we compete with ourselves?
So you could lower your price and then sell more. You’d have a larger audience. You’d make more
money.
We believe if we keep the price high people will think they
are getting a high- quality product.
Is it a high-quality product?
Not really.
Then why do you give these tours? What is it you are so proud of?
We make a small fortune at the gift shop. It’s where this tour ends up.
So off course was his ship that the sky held no stars at all. His compass spun uncontrollably and his crew had gone silent. He was alone in his lostness.
Even his internal
chatter had begun to turn on him. Doubt
was festering, and fester doubt did for his confidence began to melt like the
forgotten ice-cream cone laying over there on the table.
Sure, people saw it but no one stopped to clean it up. If it lay there much longer it would begin to
dry and then stain the tabletop. And if
it were allowed to exist throughout tomorrow's Sun – flies would gather.
Somewhere in the back of his mind the Captain knew. He knew that should flies be drawn to the
abandoned cone they would have had to come from the mainland.
Tomorrow, with his high-quality, brass spyglass he had
ordered from Amazon, $73.00 with free shipping, he would scan the skies to see from which direction the flies
were coming. Then he would know and he would point his ship in that direction.
His internal chatter began to calm down, his confidence
slowly building.
Suddenly - from the crow’s nest he heard, “Building! I see a building.”
Everyone just assumed the building in question was on land.
Spirits rose - pirate flags were lowered. The ship was returning home.
zc
You are not real
You’ve got no arms –
You cannot feel
You have no charms –
It’s human traits
You mostly lack
Tis why
You’ll never write me back –
You live nowhere
But in my nog
Where other people
call my Blog
I’ve traced your roots
And found no speck –
a little me
the rest
Spell Check.
Where now sits a house
There were trees and shadows and things in the night
Where now sits a house
I would imagine creatures and could see birds
Where built a foundation
Sunlight now hits - birds have moved on
Where walls now stand
There are windows looking out over an absence of trees
There is a roof deflecting rain and bushes leading to a
door
Where a lawn now lays
Memories of a forest slip away
In the distance an ice-cream truck plays a happy tune
zc
I’m not sure what nincompoop ever came up with that phrase
but trust me when I say - the life of me is worth much more than remembering –
whatever.
December 21, 1856
Nelson Cootameyer
was the first behaviorists successful in
teaching animals to brush their own teeth.
Each and every post on this blog started with a blank
page. It was only through a combination
of my brain and typing fingers that they were filled with what you see today.
It may not be readily apparent but that simple combination
is the correlation between Shakespeare and MAD magazine. That is the unspoken truth that nobody talks
about.
It reminds me of that great… OH, what’s his name? You know… He was the one who… Boy, my mind these days.
Let’s start over, maybe it will come to me. I remember it dealt with the Pavlovian
response. You remember, ring the bell –
the dog salivates believing he is about to be fed…
Okay, I remember. It
was Alpo. Jason Alpo, the guy who talked
Ed McMann into doing TV commercials live.
Those were the days, I’ll tell you.
I believe it was those commercials that led to Stupid Pet
Tricks on the Dave Letterman show. Now
there’s an active brain for you. Filming
watermelons being thrown off a roof, now THAT’s entertainment. I doubt William Shakespeare ever thought of
that.
There are no shoes in the front hall, no aromas of cooking
wafting through the house and no sounds of life beyond that which is
occasionally heard in the walls. The
lockbox on the front door suggests the realtors have given up. The scampering and nest building in the attic
are signs that the new tenants, the woodland creatures, have moved in.
An open listing is what the squirrels, chipmunks, bats and
insects wait for. It is their invitation
to survive winter indoors. Only every now and then do they glance out of the frosted
windows at their previous home, the trees, hedges and rotted logs of the back
yard, that are now frozen and snow covered.
It is a changing of the guard, so to speak. With fresh wires and insulation to feast on they are free to lounge about without fear of a hawk watching their every move. There are no predators or people, with the exception of a random showing, even humans with their feeble bait traps and annoying pesticides have left for parts unknown.
This 3-bedroom, two bath house, with pantry,
walk-in closets, den and plenty of storage is now theirs and they knew it the moment the sign went up in the front yard.
The thing about the dark isn’t the unknown or the strange
noises.
It’s not about your imagination running wild or your
heightened sense of danger.
No – wait, yes, it is.
It’s all those things.
Forget what I just said.
I tied a string onto my cell phone
and carefully lowered it into the water.
to snap the picture.
OK, truth be told, the cell phone was in
a plastic sandwich bag
and the string was tied to the bag.
that a space craft has already landed here,
has touched down in a swamp -
and the space creatures were eaten
by gators.
I am aware that the clothes I have already worn are in the
laundry basket and the fresh, clean ones are hanging up. I know the very basics of an automobile and
am completely aware of the dangers and hazards of driving one. I believe I have a firm grasp of
conversational English and a rudimentary understanding of sign language for the
deaf.
My motor skills appear normal for my age and my instincts,
up to this point in time, have served me well, The part I cannot comprehend is
why my brain does not realize it has had a stroke. Apparently, it is not self-aware.
How can a brain not be aware of itself? How does a house not know there is a window
open somewhere letting the cold air in?
The furnace knows. It is suddenly
working harder to heat the house. The
curtains know. They are excitedly flapping
to alert someone, anyone.
A few houses along the same street have noticed the open
window but so far have not said anything.
Why is that? An open window is
not contagious. Maybe it’s my
neighborhood watch. Maybe they have fallen
down on the job. Surely an open window
would be worthy of their report.
Thinking about it, however, these are volunteer positions. No one is getting paid to participate in a neighborhood watch program. Maybe my brain looks at things the same way.
"Why should I
snitch? What’s in it for me?"
It is a very old city, although new to me. So easy to get turned around, lost. Cobblestone streets, narrow – uneven. The feel is cold and impersonal. My outlook for today is nothing. I have no expectations, only hunger. I’d like to come across a café and get a hot
coffee – maybe a pastry but I doubt I even know what the currency is. The language couldn’t be more foreign, the
signs – forget about it. I am fully aware
this is a dream and yet I find myself here every night. What does it mean? Where am I and why am I here?
How is it I am now smelling coffee? Is it just up ahead? Maybe around this next bend? Without even thinking about it my hands dig
into my pockets for change. There is
nothing, no car keys, no papers. What’s
the matter with me? How did I get here?
From behind me I hear footsteps. This seems unfamiliar. I don’t remember anyone else in this
dream. It has always been just me. Should I stop – turn around and look? Why is it suddenly different? They are not high heels. They sound more serious, if shoes can sound
serious. They are deliberate and getting
closer. Shoes can be deliberate. I’m thinking nonsense. My thoughts have gone off the rails. Is this it for me?
Around the corner there is a café. I know this place and instantly I can feel there
are coins in my pants pocket. I take a
seat at the counter. A middle-aged lady
with too much makeup, wearing an apron asked what I would like.
I dig the coins out of my pocket and place them on the
counter. Is this enough for coffee and
one of those pastries? She nods. Her cigarette bounces as her head moves.
“What about those?” she asks.
I turn and look behind me.
There, on the floor, are a pair of deliberate shoes.
There is a 5 o-clock Owl
and 6:30 Crows
that refuse to sleep in
just why, Heaven knows
A dog barks at joggers
who try to stay fit
They are up before dawn
before anything’s lit
There’s a list of to-dos
bouncing round in my head
and a 5 o-clock Owl
as I previously said
There’s a fog on the lake
and a chill in the air
An uncomfortable ceiling
when I lay there and stare,
So I guess I’ll get up
shake off morning dew
turn on the computer
and send this to you.
It wasn’t what anyone would call warm inside the old
cabin. Snow drifts piled high around
three sides, with a very thin shoveled path at the front door. A whistle of wind was making its way through
a crack in the wood next to the kitchen window causing the lantern to flicker
more than it should.
I wasn’t worried about provisions. I had a completely stocked pantry and enough
lamp oil to get me through the rest of winter.
No, my greatest concern was the uninvited guests that could possibly see
the smoke from the chimney and knock upon my door.
If such an intruder had the virus, then I could certainly
accommodate their needs for a few nights, but should anyone show up who has had
the government issued inoculation then absolutely not. No one had anticipated the grisly side
effects or drastic behavioral changes seen in those treated. It was as if the entire country was in a
Stephen King novel, with no happy ending in sight.
What began in Europe as a few isolated incidents, quickly
became connected with local homicide cases.
The news media were instructed to keep a lid on things, but in no time
at all there was widespread panic based on the stories that did get into the
press.
Mandatory lockdown orders from the governor were ignored by
those suffering the effects of the vaccine.
In no time at all the jails were full and make-shift holding tanks were
established. Hospitals and their parking
lots became war zones. It was never safe
to be outside, especially after dark.
Only a few close friends knew about my cabin and they also
knew better than to come up here. So any
knock on the door would most certainly be some stranger, someone lost or
someone up to no good. I’d like to think
I would give people the benefit of the doubt, but if it came right down to it,
who knows? Anything could happen.
There are Trees of Shredded Wheat,
though you'll need your own bowl -
A Letter to You,
Hi. First I’d like to
thank you for reading my blog. I know it
is 99.9% gibberish and nothing here really amounts to anything, yet here you
are, day after day. Sometimes you even
let the important things go just so you can come and see what I have
written. That is impressive but I hope
you are not becoming obsessed with it.
I mean, I haven’t heard you vacuuming in a while, and I know
last week you were going to get the oil changed in your car but instead you put
it off. You came in here and spent – I forget
how much time, just looking back over some old posts.
What is it you are hoping to find? Did you see something once that caught your
attention and now you can’t remember what it was, or even if it was here in
this blog? Nothing should be that
important that you put your life on hold for this. I guess that is why I thought I had better
write to you directly, you know, before this gets out of hand.
Here’s what I suggest, try limiting yourself to just one
hour a day. It doesn’t matter when, any
hour of the day, but make it the same time every day. That way you won’t end up sitting here for
hours at a time. You do know, don’t you,
that you only have so many days left?
No, I haven’t heard anything. I’m
just saying, the clock keeps ticking no matter what you are doing, so don’t
waste your life staring at this screen.
I’ll tell you what, whenever you are not in here just turn
out the lights in the room, maybe close the blinds. Just make it dark. That way when I’m here working on this blog I
won’t be looking at your empty chair. I’ll
just know that something more important has come up and that you will be back
later.
I wouldn’t suggest that you be gone for days at a time. I mean, remember – I will be looking at a
dark room, wondering what you are doing, where you have gone. Maybe you’ve forgotten about me. How am I to know? There are other blogs out there, some a lot fancier
than this. Maybe you’ve outgrown me. It is all together possible you’re tired of
me. Who could blame you? Look at this…
It’s pathetic; no moving animation, very few pictures. No spark.
And Left-to-Write, now what’s that all about? Who needs it?
I’m outta here.
My choice for the
new year is Happy
I won’t do as I’m
told – I’ll grow a bit old –
and avoid things that
make me feel crappy.
My socks will all
match as they lay in the drawers
If a cold I should
get, rest assured you can bet
I’ll sneeze into
my elbow - not yours.
Although it’s a
crime, poems won’t always rhyme
so your tongue it
may stumble as my meter may crumble
and you’re left
with a thought in the air -
I’ll not get
uptight, it will all turn out right
If it don’t, I
doubt I will care.
zc
They live in the woods. They are extremely quick and have ultra-keen vision. In fact, they only move when they see you momentarily look away.
When they are standing still
you could be looking directly at them, yet never see them. They can travel about 40 feet within a blink
and you’ll never hear them. Your only
response will be to think – you saw something move, but you are never sure, and
they’ll be right up on you before you can say Stephen King.
They aren’t the only ones of course living in that unseen dimension,
but they are the only ones that enjoy taunting humans. Much like people sneaking up on sleeping cows
and tipping them over, these guys scoot right up to your imagination, jump out into
your peripheral vision and then just as quickly – step to the side.
If you hear anything at all, it’s an ever so slight giggle.
We pass in clusters.
The mass of us you see here were all born and live on this planet at the
same time. Of course, we each depart on
our own schedule, but the cluster of us is, for the most part, a specific
collection of people. There are X number
of doctors, engineers, schoolteachers, bums, muggers and factory workers. Sprinkled into the mix are firemen, policemen,
con men, the rich, the struggling and the middle class.
But for now, it’s the collection I wish to focus on. Our particular cluster doesn’t have Henry
Ford, or Lewis & Clark. Our cluster
has Neil deGrasse Tyson, The Beatles and you and I to name a few.
The point of this is to assist us in examining our own
function. The question of, why are we
here, can never be answered until we first examine the general function of our
particular cluster.
A key aspect of the cluster is its starting and ending
point. I’m sure you can see where this
would be a very debatable issue. It
cannot be a solid line, identifying a specific division, but rather an abstract
blur of time and events, with some events experiencing abrupt endings, while
others festering in memories, leaving confusion as to their exact reality.
Think of it this way; you take a standard #2 pencil and one
sheet of typing paper. You draw a sketch
upon the page. We can all see the sketch. We all heard the dry scraping sound of the pencil lead
across the paper, and although each of us may see the drawing as something
different, none of us knows exactly how many pieces of typing paper there were
in the stack. This page has this sketch,
seen by these people. Human knowledge has
built-in limitations, whereby none of us is privy to that cluster of paper, whose partial function has now been to accommodate the theoretical sketch.
Okay, you just lost me. I was with you right up to the
guy drawing something on the page, but you follow that
up by saying it was a "theoretical sketch."
How am I supposed to deal with that? What's real
and what isn't? And how does something not end,
but simply fester in someone's memory?
I don't think this is food for thought at all.
I think it's a recipe for indigestion.
There are a great number of products on the market that get
a five-star rating - as long as you never use them. They are clever, fun to look at and absolutely
useless.
Do yourself a favor.
Before you buy, read the reviews.
Hear what the people have to say that have already spent their money and
tried these products.
The DVD rewinder is a good example, also the yard catapult,
if you look closely, just below the picture, you’ll see the words, Actual Size.
Advertisers walk a fine line, and leave even a finer print. They sell you on an idea, that may or may not
be ready for market. These ads are
always in high gloss, with brilliant colors and are shown being used by smiling
morons, jumping up and down. Give me a
break.
If the Energizer Bunny keeps breaking through the base drum,
then it isn’t a stronger battery, it is a defective toy.
Wake-up People.
This is ZC with your Holliday review.
Seasons Greetings
"Catch a falling star
and put it in your pocket
save it for a rainy day -
Catch a falling star
and put it in your pocket
never let it fade away..."
Tragedy struck Muncy Indiana last Thursday when Mr. Nelson Heymeyer, of 714 N. Loyola Street, attempted a romantic gesture for his estranged wife, Wanda Heymeyer.
Spurred on by the lyrics of an old Perry Como song, Nelson positioned himself directly into the path of a falling star.
Onlookers said he just
stood there, holding his pants pocket open.
The glowing
projectile traveling at some 30,000 miles per second…
Story
continued on 3C, below the fold. (Nelson’s,
not the papers)