Wednesday, October 31, 2007

what's In Your Medicine Cabinet?

You better check it out because if you don't, one of your visitors will.  Everybody wants to look in other people's medicine cabinets.  And most people do. Admit it!  If you haven't looked in another
person's medicine cabinet, you've certainly wanted to as you stand there washing your hands and wondering what's behind the mirror.
 
It's called CURIOSITY.  The same thing that has killed all those cats.
 
I look. I don't mind saying it.
 
But I look very carefully. A friend of mine puts about 200 loose marbles in her medicine cabinet.
So if you take a peek without knowing what's inside, hundreds of marbles come bouncing out
and hitting the sink and her tile floor.  And she's usually outside the door laughing and asking,
"What's going on in there Nosey?"  She makes you pick them up.  I know because I've opened
the cabinet door before.  More than once.  I have a short memory.
 
Another friend of mine has a big sign inside that says: WHAT HE HELL ARE YOU LOOKING FOR?
 
Another one has a big assortment of Adult Store "toys" just to get the neighbors talking.
 
My medicine cabinet is dull by comparison.  And  I don't care if people look in it.  It's filled with
dozens of half-used prescriptions....all of them are way out of date and I don't know what most
of them were for anyway.  Half the doctors who prescribed them are dead now.  I've got enough
prescription medicine to start my own drug store.  If I could only remember what they were for.
Must have worked however because I'm still alive.
 
I have a lot of stuff in little bottles with droppers.  But I don't know where you drop the stuff or
why.  There are two partially used bottles of Caldarom.  I think it's an herb of some kind.  A
naturepath doctor in the mountains sold it to me to cure a hand disease that had baffled four doctors who had prescribed various expensive hand creams.  The naturepath guy made me quit taking vitamins and other stuff...then I took the Caldarom drops in water. And like a miracle, my hands  were clear again.  (Sadly he got arrested soon after for murder...he was treating a young girl and had her quit taking her regular medications. She died and he went to the clinker.)
 
I have a bunch of grey whiskers on the top shelf.  A stack of them.  II was saving them for an art project but have  forgotten exactly what the art project entailed. But it will come to me one day...and I hope I can
remember where the whiskers are stored.
 
On that shelf I also have a tube of DARKIE TOOTHPASTE...it's suppose to whiten and brighten
your teeth. But I think you have to paint your face black like Al Jolson to make it really look
effective.  The guy on the tube of toothpaste looks like Al and it always makes me break out in
song.  Usually "Mammy".
 
That's pretty much it for the medicine cabinet itself.  But we have about l0 drawers.  My wife
keeps  her assigned drawers sort of neat.  She knows what's in each one.   I just sort of open
a drawer and throw whatever I have into it.  I have an unbelievable collection of crap in the drawers.
 
One drawer has seven razor blades.  All used.  I am taking a blood thinner medicine now and the doctor advises against using a razor to shave.  So I have grown a beard. I could throw the old razors away, but I don't really need the space.
 
I've got quite a collection of motel soaps, shampoos and lotions.  I figure you pay for all the
stuff they put out, so I take it with me.  I don't think I've ever used any of it. For one thing, you
can't get the wrapper off the soaps.  I can't imagine how they seal them so tight.  And if you
do get one open, the pungent odor breaks out into the room and your bathroom then smells
like a cheap motel for eternity.
 
I have eyewash, mouthwash and three partially used cans of shaving foam...a Dry Look hair spray(but I don't have any hair so it would make my head dry looking...I must have had this left over
from when I did have hair...and nobody can remember that far back).  I have Herbal Ed's salve
but I'm not sure where to apply it. I have a pencil sharpener and a pencil with white lead...you
use it to put the white under the tips of your fingernails when you want them to look neat.  Then
I have about four different fingernail clippers in various sizes.  Yet I can never find a single pair when I want to clip my nails.  I have some dog shampoo...although we haven't had a dog in years.  I guess I could really get rid of that but who knows when a dirty stray dog may wander
by and need a shampoo.  I want to be ready to clean him up.
 
 

Getting Ready for Fly Season

I hate flies.  And  I hate them most at this time of the year because as the weather gets colder
they start dying off.  And because they know they are going to die anyway, they start opening the door and coming in the house...flying around and landing on your nose...they know no fear.  They are like Kamikazi pilots with four feet.
 
I am not a hateful person by nature, but I sure hate flies.  I must have had a swarm of them attack me when I was a baby out for a stroll.  They probably ate my ice cream cone.
 
I am a collector.  I collect lots of different things.  If you have three of something, technically you have a "collection".  So I have a fly swatter collection.  My fly swatter collection includes one that
functions as a wall clock.  There's a big black fake fly on the second hand...so  as the clock ticks
away, the fly moves around.  I have another one that's shaped like a big screen hand.  Then I have some home made fly swatters...a friend of mine calls them "make do" fly swatters because they
were put together by poor people who had to use whatever was at hand to make them. One of my make do swatters has a ruler for a handle.  And I yell, "Joe Rules!" when I smash a fly with it.
 
I spent a summer in Maine one year...in a wildlife preserve.  And I think it must have been dedicated to preserving dreaded black flies.  They are the biggest and meanest flies I have ever
met.  And you never see a word about them when you read Maine tourism literature.  They are always writing about their lobsters, but their flies are bigger than lobsters..  If they showed the dreaded black flies in their literature, their tourism business would die out.  You need more than a regular fly swatter to combat these things.  I tried to hit one with a regular swatter and he grabbed it, swatted me on the head and flew away with it.  You can see why they aren't featured on Maine's website.
 
If you mention these black flies to somebody from Maine, the person will absolutely deny their existence.  It's like people from the coastal area of South Carolina who deny that we have huge
flying cockroaches.  We call them Palmetto Bugs. But a roach is a roach.  And you can't kill
these things with a fly swatter.  It's no use to put out one of those Roach Motels where the roaches
check in but they don't check out.  These South Carolina roaches don't check out because they
eat the motel.  I tell my wife, "you just have to learn to live with them."  But she still jumps up on the couch if one goes scampering by...as if they can't jump up on the couch.   The minute
she goes to bed, they all jump up in her spot, sit and watch tv.
 
The last time I was in Jackson, Mississippi, I stayed in a Brand Name Hotel.  My daughter makes my reservations and I have told her if the person who answers sounds forgeign, not
to make it.  I know this sounds discriminatory..and it is.  Quite a while ago, Indians (not
the American kind but the ones from India) have started buying up motels. First it was the
Mom and Pop type, but now they own chain and name brand ones.  When I got to Jackson
and checked in, there was a young college-looking guy at the desk...but the lobby was filled
with flies.  I mentioned this to the guy.  He just shrugged and said, "The place is owned by
Indians.  They don't kill anything.  They have a goat in their room." I don't think people should be in the hospitality business if they keep goats in their room.  And his comment is not
true about them not killing things.. They kill chickens.  And if they can kill chickens, they can damn well kill flies.  When I
went to my room,  it too was filled with flies.  I went back to the lobby and asked to have
the manager come down.  He did and I explained about the flies and that I wanted him to go
to Wal-Mart and get me a fly swatter.  But he started that routine about the fact that they might
be reincarnated relatives, etc.  I asked him, "Does your grandmother have big buggy eyes and
four legs with poop on them?  Because if she does, she is flying around in my room and I'm going to swat her with USA TODAY unless you get me a fly swatter."  He said he would come and collect the flies.  He actually shooed them out of the room with a towel.  I thought he would probably bring the goat down and let them light on him.
 

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Why Can't We Have Everything?

People often wondere why we can't have it all. 
 
We can have it all.  We just can't have it all at the same time.  And if we did have it all at the same time, we wouldn't know what to do with it.
 

Saturday, October 20, 2007

I MIGHT DIE TONIGHT

Or maybe not.  My doctor says I have sleep apena.  It's some new thing they've come up with to make you worry.  People who have it quit breathing while they are sleeping...and they die.   But generally they start breathing again...and start living again.

The doctor said, "You could die in your sleep." 

I told him I wouldn't mind going that way.  If you die in your sleep, you don't even know you're dead.

The conversation got me to thinking about death and dying.  Mainly the different ways one could die, and the many ways I don't want to go.  Not that you have control in the matter.

I would not want to be sucked into a batch of quicksand like Tarzan was always doing.  Fortunately he had his trusted monkey,
Cheetah nearby (star of "Are You Smarter Than a Hollywood Monkey").  Cheetah would run get a vine that allowed Tarzan to
get out.  Sometimes the bad guy would fall in, but Cheetah would not get the vine...he would just laugh hysterically.  I have
a feeling he would get the vine for some dried banana chips.

I wouldn't want to be run over by an l8 wheeler.  Even at a slow speed.  Or by a 4-wheeler for that matter.  No head-on crashes
either.  Or being suffocated by a white air bag.  (I got hit by a car once and my air bag came out.  Once the car settled, I was
fairly certain I was in Heaven and that the air bag was a white cloud.)

The ocean scares me.  And the things that live there.  I wouldn't want to be eaten by a shark, a barracuda, or an octopus.
Or even a gang of hungry crabs.  No piranahas or anything else that lives in the water.  I especially wouldn't want to be eaten by an alligator.  And don't say it couldn't happen because an 83-year-old woman here in South Carolina got eaten except for her feet.
I don't think the alligator liked her Crocs.

I hate snakes and wouldn't want to be eaten by one.  I've seen pictures of them swallowing live rabbits so somewhere there may be a snake that could swallow me (that I would almost like to see!).  No snake bites and no choking by a snake. I cut off my friendship
with a guy who bought a pet snake...a big one...and insisted on bringing the snake with him to social gatherings.  He was soon gathering by himself.

I wouldn't want to fall out of a tall redwood tree or have one fall on m.  Or be sawed in half at a sawmill...or by a poorly trained magician.

No beatings and no muggers, please.  I wouldn't want a brick building to fall on me...or even one brick.

I wouldn't want to be nailed o a cross or burned at the stake even if it meant that someone would make a movie about me or
that I would become a saint.  I'd rather help the poor.

I'm afraid of being put accidentally in a coffin while I am still alive.  I am a shallow breather, so I have told my cousins to
put a mirror under my nose when they come to the funeral home and make sure I am not buried alive.  It happens more
than you might imagine.

I don't want to be burned up (why do people say houses  burn down, but people burn up?).  A friend of mine wants to be
dro. pped into an active volcano when she passes on.  I just think she is too cheap to pay for a regular cremation.

No poison arrows, please.  Not even a plain one.  I can't believe that William Tell actually let someone shoot an apple
off of his head.

I'm not crazy about dying from natural disasters --- floods, earthquakes, volcanoes, hurricanes, tornadoes.  They seem to
be happening all the time.  One deaf man like me got hit by lightning and it restores his hearing.  But there have been
thousands of others who were fried like a big piece of bacon, so I'm not standing out in a storm flying a kite with a key on the
string.

I don't want to die after a long illness at home...or worse yet, aftere a long illness in a nursing home that would bankrupt mr.

I don't want to be hit on the head with a baseball at a Braves game.  Or even at a Little League game.  Or run over by a loose
racecar at the track.

I know you can't control how you are going to die unless you do it yourself which isn't my style.  But I hope it will be quiet and
painless with a smile on my face without my tongue hanging out.  (Have you ever noticed that funeral homes never put a smile
on anybody's face?  The dead always look so....dead.  I want a smile on my face with my teeth showing...maybe even have
my hand in my pants.)


F

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Thursday, October 18, 2007

EATING YOUR HEART OUT...FOR PRIZE MONEY

I remember fondly when Ranlo Mill would set up long tables under the shade trees and bring in a truckload of ripe watermelons for their annual Watermelon Eating Contest.
 
I don't know why I thought I could  win,  but every year I dreamed of winning.  Nobody ever remembered who won even a week later so fame was fleeting.  But yet I yearned to win.
 
Men would slice up dozens of watermelonons and we would gather around the table and start
eating, saving empty rinds to prove what we ate.  I don't think I ever ate more than two pieces.
Maybe three.  I also don't remember girls eating, although I'm sure they were welcomed.  But
having an eating contest to your credit isn't like being Homecoming Queen.
t
I thought of these contests recently when I watched the International Hot Dog Eating Contest
on TV.  It was the sixth annual one and it was held at Nathan's on Coney Island.  Nathan's Hot
Dogs aren't those skinny little finger dogs.  These are MAN SIZE DOGS.  And you have to eat
the bun and condiments including kraut.  It's also a time-based competition to see how many you can eat in 12 minutes.
 
Last year's winner was on hand.  He was a little Japanese guy.  I thought he would at least
look like a sumo wrestler.  But, no.  He was small.  And apparently most of the competitive
eaters aren't big and fat.  Fat people can't hold as much.  It's something about fat people having a small "first stomach".  But the Jap didn't win again this year and I was glad.  I still
haven't forgiven them about bombing Pearl Harbor.  I know this guy didn't bomb us, but his
grandfather might have.  And why is a Japanese person eating Nathan Hot Dogs?  Let them
eat sushi, is what I say.
 
Anyway an American guy won.  Guess how many he ate?  Wrong!  He ate 66 1/2 and it makes me gag even to write it.  And I love hot dogs. 
 
Soon after the contest I found that eating competitions have become a big thing.  It's not an Olympic sport (yet),  but it's a sport of sorts.  They even have MAJOR LEAGUE EATING, a
franchise just like baseball and football.  And you wonder why America is obese!  There's even an International Federation of Competitive Eating.  The name fills me with visions of members getting together eating everything in sight...paper plates, napkins, floral centerpieces, trays of bones.  Even tablecloths.
 
My oldest grandson was glad to discover there is a wing eating contest.  He thinks he might be able to win it.  I told him about the watermelons but he's still confident. Last year's winner ate 146 buffalo wings in 12 minutes.  That really doesn't seem like a lot.  My grandson could probably eat that many but I'm not buying him a tray of wings to practice which he is hoping I would.  When he was 8 years old he entered an apple eating contest and won.  It was suppose to be an applie pie eating contest but they had already eaten all the pies so they
switched to plain apples.  I was afraid my grandson was going to choke himself to death because he took huge bites and I don't think he chewed them much before swallowing.  I guess that's what you have to do to win.  The prize was a bucket of apples.  We booed.
 
In the U.S. there are more than 4,000 sanctioned competitive eating contests each year.
And the number is growing.  I guess people find it amusing to watch people stuff their faces
and overindulge. Many of the competitions are telecast on SPIKE and I imagine ESPN will
soon have a channel devoted to eating.
 
Here's just a sampling of what you might see: SPAM, hamburgers, cow brains, pizza, chili, corn dogs, cheesecakes, hardboiled eggs (winner last year ate 65 in 7 minutes),  burritos,
blueberry pies, meatballs, corned beef and cabbage, grits (they had the contest in Louisiana
but South Caroline is the Grits Capital of the World...the winner ate 21 pounds), waffles, jalapenos, french fries.  I wonder if they have Spring Training Camps?
 
Think you could win one of these?  Get out your eating bib!
 
Richard Shea says competitive eating  celebrates the individual freedom to strive and achieve;
to  express the innermost self and ideals found only in the laws of nature.  Sounds awfully high faluten for competive eating.  Maybe this quote was about Dancing With the Stars.
 
 
 

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

HANGING WITH MAD MEN

Jack Kerouac said he liked to hang with people who were mad.  I agree.  I do, too.
 
Not the kind who hqve to be put in straitjackets, but the kind who are funny-mad, not scary-mad.
 
My wife thinks all my friends are crazy.  That's her term.
 
I used to tell her, "They're just not like you and me."
 
I noticed lately that I've been saying, "They're just not like you."
 
I may have gone over to the other side.
 
 

PILLOW TALK

When I was a kid, as an only child I would hold a pillow over my face to see how long I could hold it without suffocating to death.
 
I know that probably seems a strange thing to do.  But, mind you, we were poor and I had few
things in the way of store-bought toys.  So attempting to suffocate myself was just one inexpensive way of playing.
 
I could go for about a minute and a half back then. Then I would yank the pillow off my face and gasp loudly for air.  Just seconds longer and I would have been a goner.  At my own hand.
 
My Mother, when she would hear the gasps (we had a very small house with very thin walls),
would yell out, "What are you doing in there?"
 
What did she think I was doing, I wondered.
 
I never answered her.  I just tried to gasp quieter the next time.  But it's difficult to gasp quietly if you have a real pillow on your face.
 
I would usually do the pillow thing four or five times trying to better my time, much as a swimmer might do.  I pretended to be in training for underwater swimming.  I had no intention
back then to end it all.
 
I still put the  pillow over  my face now that I am very old.  But now I'm practicing to put myself away when the time comes...mainly if things get any more shitty.  And I'm not apologizing for saying shitty.
 
You be the judge.
 
I am completely deaf.
I am blind in one eye.
I have had eye surgery on the so-called good eye four different times.
I had colon cancer that left me with a belly scar so big people think it is my ass crack.
I had a stroke.
I am bald.
I am fat.
I can't sing.
I will never get on DANCING WITH THE STARS unless they do a segment for physically challenged  people...which they probably will do.  (Wayne Newton looked physically challenged...he's had so much plastic surgery, he can't turn his head and he moved like
a robot that needed oil.)
My friends are dying like flies on the first cold day of autumn.
 
Add it up!
It comes to "shitty".
 
So I now put my pillow over my face after taking what I think might be my last breath.  I pretend it is my wife that's doing it.  Who could blame her.
 
I can hold my the pillow there for two minutes most.  Then I yank it off because, really...in
spite of all the aforementioned, I still condider myself lucky.  Especially with such a wonderful caregiver.
 
But I must say, I get a little nervous when I see her changing the pillowcases and coming
toward the bed with a fluffy pillow.  I start to cry out, "NO!  Not the PILLOW." But who would
hear me.

MR. GOODFOOT

I am recovering from a stroke that paralyzed me on the left side.  With therapy I am learning to walk again but with the aid of a walker.  The walker does me no good on steps so I have to hold on for dear life and take one step at a time. Surprisingly I am suppose to lead with my bad foot first.
When it is safely in place, I follow with my good foot.  Going up, I lead with my good foot.
 
I got in the habit of saying aloud: "Bad foot first.  Now good foot".  And I started affectionately calling my right foot Mr. Goodfoot.
 
But then I feel psychologically I should stop calling he bad foot "bad".  It was like scolding a dog
for soiling the carpet.  "Bad foot.  Bad foot."
 
Really now, Mr. Goodfoot had not done anything to actually deserve being called Mr. Goodfoot,
although I certainly appreciate its support, literally and figuratively.  Yet it was truly just the regular foot that it had always been.
 
I felt as if I were undermining the comeback of my geek foot by calling it "Bad Foot".  I did know how to reward it.  Maybe I could yell, "Way to go boy," evereytime it made a step.  But
it still  needed a name of its own.
 
I decided to call it Mr. Not-So-Good-But-Getting-Better-All-The-Time Foot.  Of course now
I am much slower going down steps with that monoger.
 
 

Monday, October 15, 2007

TARZAN: KING OF THE TALL GRASS OUT BACK

I loved movies when I was a kid.  I started going to town on my own when I was only six.  I took the bus and I usually had fifty cents to spend.
 
My friends and I liked Tarzan movies and were always pleased when one was playing.  They were so exotic
compared to Gastonia.  They had big snakes.  Alligators.  Elephants.  Quicksand.
 
It seemed that Tarzan would step in quicksand in every single movie he made.  We would yell out,
"Oh, no.  Not again."  Today people would call him mentally challenged.  We called him stupid.
 
The quicksand was like a magnet that drew Tarzan to it.  Thank goodness he had a monkey, Cheetah,
who was always handily nearby.
 
"Get the vine, Cheetah," Tarazan would yell.  "Get the vine!"  Cheetah would run off and soon come back
with a glass of chardonnay.
 
"I said get the VINE, stupid, not the wine you dumb cluck."
 
Meanwhile Tarzan was sinking deepeer and deeper into the quicksand.  He should have known that flapping his arms only made him sink faster.  Here's a tip from the book THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW BEFORE GOING TO
THE JUNGLE...if you are in quicksand, you try to float.  And try to get a human to help you instead of calling a monkey.  Even a Hollywood monkey.
 
We liked to play Tarzan after we had seen a movie of his.  We would play in the high grass behind my house.
That's as close as we could come to simulate a jungle.  We had to hand out parts.  Almost everyone wanted
to be Tarzan.  (We called him TAR-ZAN...it made him sound more like an action hero.)  I wasn't personally crazy
about being Tarzan because you had to wear a loincloth.  If it had been made of tiger skin I might have liked it.
But we usually used a piece of oil cloth from a castaway tablecloth.  Plus I didn't like the idea of wearing a homemade loin cloth without my underwear, and especially if I had to climb a tree. Some boys didn't care.
Just like Hollywood today.

Cheetah was a popular choice.  If you got to be Cheetah, you could jump around and roll around like a fool....pick your nose and flick the boogers...show your genitals inappropriately.  You know how monkies
are.

Sadly nobody really wanted to be Jane, not even the girls.  She was very pretty in the movies and she was often an highly trained scientist of some sort and it made you wonder why she would take up with an Ape
Man.  But put her in some kind of animal skin and she reveerted to a ditsy housewife every time.  Even in
a treehouse without a gas stove.  She tried to make Tarzan and Boy eat oatmeal for breakfast every day
and pick up around the treehouse after breakfast.  And she kicked poor Cheetah out.  She said monkies didn't belong indoors.  And that they were very smelly, and I'm sure she was right about that.
If we had no girl to play Jane, we would try to make a Sissy Boy play the part.  Preferably a blonde boy.

The main thing we did was hack through the high grass whicH was filled with man-eating snakes (so we
said).  Well, maybe not man-eating but certainly ones that could eat a monkey which, of course, made the
role of Cheetah slightly less desirable.

Remember in Tarzan movies how a big snake would swallow another living thing and you could see the
form of it in the snake's body.  Scary, huh?

If we whacked through enough grass, we would come out at a little store where they sold penny candy.
The storekeeper would usually say to Tarzan, "Why you got that tablecloth on you, boy?"

And Tarzan would say, "I am not Boy.  I am TAR-ZAN, King of the Jungle. And this is a loin cloth."
Neither one of them knew what a loin cloth was.

We would conduct our business as quickly as possible before the storekeeper looked under Tarzan's
loincloth.

Back home we would run into cannibals.  My grandmother washed clothes in two big black kettles
over open fires.  My friends thought she was a witch when she would be outside punching and stirring
the clothes.  But she didn't wash on the weekends, so the big black pots were perfect for cooking a
cannibal meal.

We always wanted to cook Jane figuring she would be the most tender.  Our other choice was the
Sissy Boy playing her part. We certainly didn't want to cook the monkey, and Tarzan was the star.
So we would pick Jane up and put her in the pot.  We really didn't cook her although I am sorry now
that we didn't try at least once.  Of course I would be writing this from Juvenile Jail.

We pretended to cook her and Tarzan would beat his bony chest and proclaim, "Sweet ribs tonight."

Oh, those were glorious days  before electronic toys and computers.  And that, dear readers, is why
we grew up with FAMILY VALUES.
 

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WHAT GOD HATH WROUGHT

I'll tell you what he hath wrought.
I have to dress myswelf with a pair of giant tweezers.
 
Yes, you read that correctly.
Tweezers!
 
I"m recovering from  stroke.
The Occupational Therapist (O.T. as they like to be called)
prescribed the Tweezers.
 
The Tweezers are like a long stick with pinchers on the end.
 
The O.T. says you can amazingly pick up pennies with them.
But why would a stroke victim need to pick up pennies?
 
I pick up my underwear.
I pick up my socks.
I pick up my shirt.
I pick up my glasses when I accidentally drop them.
I pinch my wife inappropriately.
(Heh, these things are more fun than I thought.)
Anf I would pinch the O.T. if she were here.
 
I just hope none of my friends from my former life
don't see me dependen on big Tweezers.
 
I mean, I used to be somebody.
Mr. Somebody, they called me.
Now I'm putting on my underwear with Tweezers.
 
Amazing tweezers to be sure.
I'm Edward, Tweezerhands.

Saturday, October 13, 2007

FRAGILE

I feel like a package being tossed around the post office of life.
 
Put a FRAGILE sticker on me dammit.
I can't take much more.
 
At least give me a HANDLE WITH CARE sticker.
I'll never get to my destination in one piece.
 
Couldn't you have asked for EXPRESS MAIL. 
Or Special Handling.
 
Where am I going anyway?

Friday, October 12, 2007

WAILING

I admire those old MIddle Eastern women you see on tv.
They are always wailing their hearts out over the insane killings and bombings.
Sometimes they are wailing over the rotten fruit in the marketplace.
But the whole idea is that they wail when they are pissed.
 
I think we should have Wailing Walls here in America...
Someplace to go and wail when things don't go our way.
Maybe have one in every backyard instead of a plastic pool.
 
I would like to wail, and I would do it even without a wall
but it scares the dog and sets him to barking...and my wife yells
"Stop that wailing you crazy old man".
 
I suspect that wailing is quite healthy.
But I would do it over all kinds of stuff.
I wouldn't want to have family members killed
just to get in a few good wails.
 
I would wail if my morning newspaper got wet
and I couldn't unfold the pages.
I hate that.
 
I would wail if the lightbulb goes out on the stove.
(You can't reach the damn thing!)
Or if one of the kitchen flourescent lights goes out
and has to be replaced.
I do in fact wail when this happens.
Fortunately flourescents last for hundreds and hundreds of hours. 

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

On the Road to Recovery

Remember those old Bob Hope-Bing Crosby-Dorothy Lamour movies? The famous "road" pictures that were so funny? My recovery from a recent stroke would make a great road picture. Or one of those stupid reality shows. I used to tell my children when something bad happened: "Two years from now, you will be laughing at this". They never believed it. Some things took longer, but they were girls.
I always believed the sooner you could find humor in a bad situation, the sooner your got over it. But don't laugh at funerals. Unless they drop the casket. I am trying to apply my philosophy to my stroke recovery and I am laughing already. I laughed first when my wife was trying to find a medical transportation company to take me from North Carolina where I had the stroke down to a rehab hospital in Savannah, a distance of about 300 miles. They wanted $7,000! I told my wife to go down to Main Street in Saluda and find some guy who had a pick up truck and see if he would put a mattress in the back and haul me home. But she was smarter. She called a limo service and found someone to take me in a limo for just $432. My grandson wanted to ride with me. When we got to the hospital, they thought a rock star had arrived. The hospital was very, very nice. They have won awards for 6 years now as one of the top 100 employers in the country. They treated me like a prince...the nurses were so nice and so were the therapists. I can't say much for the food but the night nurse made me a peanut butter and jelly sandwich as a snack. All the patients were stroke victims since that's what the hospital specializes in. The doctor said I should have a fast and complete recovery. But his idea of fast is a lot different than mine. I was in the hospital for six weeks and I've been out for six weeks...and I am still recovering. I am making progress, but it is very slow. I'm trying to be a patient patient. My wife is my primary care giver...when she came to get me from the hospital I reminded her of saying "for better or for worse" some 50 years ago. I said, "This is worse." Actually she's been very good at it. She's been trying to get control of me for all these years so now she has my checkbook, my car, my credit cards. I don't even get an allowance. Plus I think it brings out her mothering instincts. At first we had therapists who came to the house...one suggested getting Amazing Tongs, those things that are like giant tweezers...you squeeze the top part and these claws come together like those machines in convenient stores where you try to get toys. She said I could pick up pennies with it. Now, why in hell would I want to pick up pennies? Honestly. Stroke victims don't need pennies...we need hundred dollar bills. I am using my tweezers to pinch my wife inappropriately. I go to a regular gym now for outpatient physical therapy. It should be decorated like a dungeon because the machines are designed to torture people. I was hoping they were machines where they strapped you on, turned on the switch and the machine did all the work. But no such luck. I think my therapist guy came over here from Parris Island, at the Marine base. He doesn'r put up with any whining. YOU CAN DO IT! he bellows. And when he bellows, I do it. A lot of people come to the gym who aren't doing therapy. I have noticed that the older women are in much better shape than the men. The guys arrive at the gym in walkers or with canes. The women skip in. They have cute clothes and nice shoes. They jump right up on the machines and start moving. My personal take on this is that the guys are in recovery and the women are on the prowl. They are probably recently widowed and want to get back in the game. They aren't the least bit interested in the guys in recovery. Why should they be? They have televisions on the stationary bikes, but none of the programs are as interesting as watching Chicks roll around on huge colored balls. I always want to throw them a fish when they finish and watch them clap their flippers. They have so many balls around the place but I've already told the therapist that I am not getting on one of those balls. He says they hold up to 500 lbs. I'm not worried about the ball exploding; I'm worried about rolling off. I threw myself out of bed the other night, accidentally of course. But as I slid off the side I was smart enough to take a pillow with me. I could not get up and I didn't want to wake my wife in the middle of the night so I just snuggled up on the floor with my pillow and slept until she came downstairs and found me. I am deaf so I have to read lips. But lying on the floor and trying to read her lips was difficult. So she stretched out on the floor beside me so I could read her lips. I said, "How in the world did we ever come to this?" And I do wonder. I want to recover but sometimes I think it would be easier to become an invalid. You could get one of those modernized scooters that are advertised constantly on television (and I don't believe for a minute that those people are crippled! They're models and they probably have a champagne party after the filming.) If I were an invalid, I could catch up on my reading. People could come visit me (but would they?) and bring me food. I could eat anything because as long as I had the scooter I could get fatter and fatter. And if I got too fat for one scooter, I could get a double-wide. But I'm not ready to give up yet. You have to keep at it if you want back in the game. And I want back in the game. Soon.