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Saturday, June 18, 2005

Silly T-Shirts
Yesterday Benny stayed with me while Lydia and Sadie shopped for Fathers Day items. When Lydia returned, she wrapped Dan's gifts. Several of them were funny t-shirts. Then, surprise...she handed ME a shirt. It said, "KEEP STARING...I might do a trick." The first-impression 38th Street possible meaning of that aside, I love it and mean to wear it to class today. Then this morning I got up at the cranky crack of dawn to walk Pork Chop prior to going to class, and a silly t-shirt idea occured to me. I must spend all day today listening to info re. domestic violence. That thought plus Lydia recently telling me that Benny is nearly through with Suzuki Book 1. Here it is....STAMP OUT DOMESTIC VIOLINS. Alright, you didn't die laughing, but it amused me. Of course, at 5:30 A.M. the start of a long day of dreary statistics, any little joke helps.


Posted by doubledog at 8:57 AM | Post Comment | Permalink

Friday, June 17, 2005

How To Qualify For Village Idiot
Yesterday I did a mediation. The situation had me so nervous that I locked myself out of the house. Crazy. I rushed around to get ready so I would arrive early with time to read the file. Then I thought, "Oh, dear, Porque will be home alone for a long time, I'd better take her for a good walk before I leave." I struggled the little mutt into her harness, and charged out the door. The instant I closed that door, I knew...I'd just locked myself out. There were no keys in my hand.

Frantic thinking like a scurrying rat, rushing around in my mind from option to option. Then I realized that Lydia has a key and she might still be at home. I grabbed Pork Chop and ran across the street to the construction site. Many times I've seen workers there talking on their cell phones. A man looked up and I said, "Yes, I know that this qualifies me for village idiot, but I've just locked myself out of my house. May I please borrow your cell phone?" He laughed and handed me the phone.

Lydia answered immediately and was at my house 5 minutes later opening the door. Happy, happy, joy, joy all around. Porkee did get her walk. I arrived at the mediation center a bit later than intended but it was OK. One of the mediatees was half an hour late.

In order not to maintain my standing as village idiot, I guess I'd better do what everyone else does and hide a key somewhere outside so if I lock myself out again, I can get back inside without calling for help. I bought a hollow plastic rock, but everyone knows about those things, so I suppose that's not the best idea. Must give the matter some thought.


Posted by doubledog at 9:11 PM | Post Comment | View Comments (6) | Permalink
Updated: Friday, June 17, 2005 9:16 PM

All Better Now
Whew! It was ugly. My yard was in danger of earning me a letter from the city. That does happen. Yesterday the city mower did the vacant lot diagonally across from me. That owner will now get a letter with a fine enclosed. Anyway the condition of my property was demoralizing. I felt like the local lowlife. Then yesterday about 6:00 P.M. two lawnmowers showed up, the yard guy and his brother. With two men operating two machines, it all went quickly. They had all the weeds and grass under control in about an hour, edged around flower beds, bagged up the clippings. What a relief. Now Porkee can go out into her own yard once again.


Posted by doubledog at 8:54 PM | Post Comment | Permalink

Wednesday, June 15, 2005

Fed Up
I am so sick of the way my yard looks! All those weeds. All that long grass. My yard guy still has not returned with a fixed mower. I can't take Pork Chop out in her own yard any more. Really. She disappears in the foliage. I'd fire the guy, but he needs the money. Also he does the properties on either side of me and it might make those people angry if I fired him; they like him.

On Sunday morning he came with his son-in-law's truck and took the mower out of my garage to return it to the store for repairs. I am not a patient person and I just seriously want to kick his ridiculous, down-south butt. It would not be fair to say that everyone in the south is exactly like him but there is for sure a down southness, a slow way to be, a yawn-kick back-scratch-grin-shuffle your feet way to get almost nothing done and to take a long time about it. Plenty of people here I would not hire to breathe. They'd fool around and let it go until too late.


Posted by doubledog at 1:31 PM | Post Comment | Permalink

Size Matters
Just now I dropped Porque off at the doggie beauty salon for her hair and nails appointment. They know her there and always make a fuss over her. All the girls come out to reception and ooh and aah, "Porkee Choppee, baby, OOOOOH, kisses, " and all that dog-lover rhetoric. She gets this smug, self-satisfied look on her face and blinks her eyes as if to say, "Yes, I am great. Worship me, all you fortunate people."

So that was going on when one of the girls said, "Wow. Look at that." I turned around and here came the biggest, blackest, most determined not to go to the salon Great Dane I've ever seen. A monument of a dog. It was wrangled into the salon by two handlers, each holding a strap attached to opposite sides of the dog's wide and substantial collar. Both handlers were those bulked-up, shaved-head United States Marines types, or they could be the people in the movie who wear black-tinted glasses and stand behind some mobster who ventures out into the public eye but who wants to survive the experience. Dog was giving those men a workout. Clearly it required an enormous effort to keep dog moving forward in the desired direction.

Silence in the salon except for yipping from the back room. Dog presented at the reception desk. An ultra-deep voice said, "This here is Daisy." Still silence. I think all the girls were stunned speechless. I know that I was. And Pork Chop had nothing whatsoever to say, a rare instance of good sense. The ultra-deep voice added, "You don't have to be afraid. She won't bite. And we're staying to move her around for you. The boss says we can't come home until Daisy does." Big guy smiled.

Receptionist says, "OK, girls. Who wants to groom Daisy."

Immediately every girl spoke at once, all together, "I'm doing Pork Chop." Then they had to laugh because it sounded silly but no one, seriously, wanted to groom Daisy. Lot of foot shuffling, and eye avoidance and finally one girl said, "Alright. I'll do it but somebody has to help me. And you guys," she looked at Daisy's handlers, "you have to keep her facing away from me. She doesn't ever turn her head toward me. Understand?"

"No problem," agreed deep voice.

I remained frozen in place until the Daisy entourage disappeared into the back of the salon. You know, Daisy might be a real sweetheart of a dog, but just the sight of her scared me...which doesn't take much since I am a nervous little old lady. However, the sight of Daisy also scared the staff of a salon which works with all kinds of dogs all day every day. And in my opinion, the most significant index of scariness is that Daisy was so scarey that even Pork Chop had nothing to say. Ordinarily, the bigger the dog, the louder she barks, but not this time.


Posted by doubledog at 12:27 PM | Post Comment | View Comments (2) | Permalink

Monday, June 13, 2005

The Hero
In each of the umpteen books I've read over the last months you find a hero. The individual author's concept of hero distinguishes these books from one another much more than does the plot, setting, time, etc. A book I read last night showed off a hero who said to another character, "You don't want to make an enemy of me," and later the hero shot that character between the eyes...cold-blooded execution, but he was the hero. Another hero refused to complete his assignment which was to shoot a man who certainly deserved to be shot. Then there is the hero who rigidly applies the law to one and all and for whom the law is a religion, but whose wife is a vigilante killer and he looks the other way. In another book the hero is a muddle-headed type who never really gets down to it. He doesn't act so much as he angsts. He's the hero because of the effect of his emotional upheaval on all the other characters. Another hero is a practically robotic fellow, a creature of great intellect but no appreciable reactions and interactions. He's the hero because his analyses decisively influence the plot. No females come quickly to mind as heroine other than Stephanie Plum in the Evanovich books about her career as bounty hunter. She's the heroine because no matter what, she's still standing when the dust settles. Nothing can extinguish a person with her combination of neediness and brainless elan.

In my opinion John LeCarre creates heroes with the greatest complexity.A LeCarre hero is the heart of everyperson, all of it, good and bad and in between. No one should close one of those books without feeling found out. The worst are good, the best are bad, embarrassing, depressing, hopeful, grim, completely, painfully real and worth knowing. My guess is that future generations will consider his thrillers the greatest writing of the second half of the 20th century.


Posted by doubledog at 3:10 PM | Post Comment | Permalink

More Boards
Going and coming to/from the ghetto grocery I noticed yet more boarded-up windows. The yellow apartment sides face red brick apartemnts looking out onto the cross street. This space is just some more hell hole like the yellow apartments. In January that's where a guy who parked on the sidewalk refused to move his truck 6 inches so I wouldn't have to take my shopping cart out into the street, and when I pleaded with him, the crazy old drunk came out and screamed at me, told me, "Get out in the street and die, you old white bitch." Well, every single one of those places is boarded up, all six of them. Of course the cosmic balance exists. Those people are gone, but I discovered a huge cockroach in my kitchen. There's just no such thing as getting rid of all the pests.


Posted by doubledog at 10:36 AM | Post Comment | Permalink
Updated: Wednesday, June 15, 2005 1:35 PM

Big C
Recently I was in the hardware store waiting to get the ear of an employee who stood listening to a drama queen, "Oh, I'm so ashamed! If my poor dear dead mother knew that her daughter had found a cockroach in the house, I do think she'd roll over in her grave." Yeah, right. Ha.

Well, I have not actually ever seen a live cockroach until last night, not once in my whole life. But now I live in the south and it's the steamy summer time. I have ants in the house, and last night I saw a cockroach conservatively as long as my incdex finger. I didn't think regular cockroaches got that big, maybe the Madagascar hissing kind, but not the run-of-the-mill household variety. Oh, well, now I've seen one and I'm still alive and I guarantee that my mother is not rolling around in her grave over it. Actually the cockroach was so big, I thought probably a person could saddle it up and give pony rides for kids. What a whopper. I was afraid to try to kill it for fear it turned on me and beat me to death with it's super-long feelers. It was high up on the wall over the stove.

For all I know, my house is just swarming with cockroaches I have not met owing to the fact that I'm not up and about at night. I only saw one, but he must have friends. I found him because yesterday I was sick most of the day, didn't eat. Last night I was having another readathon. About 2:00A.M. suddenly I felt better and was hungry. I decided that a bacon/lettuce/tomato sandwich was indicated and went to the kitchen, got the ingredients out of the refrigerator, turned toward the stove, and there was the BIG C up on the wall.

At first I didn't have courage to approach the stove thinking the bug might jump down off the wall and bite me. The remembering that I was hungry, I went toward the stove and was relieved that Big C ran up the wall and disappeared into a tiny crack. so he's still here. Doubtless I'll see him again. Maybe sometime I'll get up the nerve to whack him. Oooh. That would be a lot of bug squish.

Many years ago my sister lived in Spanish Harlem for a while. She had lots of horror stories some of which involved cockroaches which she claimed to at times swarm over her kitchen floor so numerously that they left no place to set her foot down on a non-roach spot. She tried every single anti-roach preparation available on the market at that time and none were successful. Someone told her that the only way to get rid of them was to create an absence of food, to maintain sterile technique like in a lab. She conscientiously tried that and it didn't help. The roaches thrived on chlorine bleach.

Last night, watching the giant cockroach, I remembered my sister's dilemma. That's one reason I didn't try to kill the thing. I had that fatalistic feeling, "Once they're onto you, you've had it. If they ever arrive, they never leave." I surely do not want to have to pick my way over the floor through clicking, hissing piles of hungry cockroaches, hope it doesn't come to that. I suppose I could call a pest exterminating company and pay them to poison my environment.


Posted by doubledog at 10:21 AM | Post Comment | View Comments (2) | Permalink

Saturday, June 11, 2005

Long Grass
I hesitate to venture into the back yard. Since the yard man's equipment went wrong, vegetation yelled, "Whoopie!" and leaped for the moon. Gigantic weeds, huge, evil green grasping things reach out to seize my ankles as I steer Pork Chop around her little potty experience. Squash plants overnight grow as high as my head. This isn't right. It's only June 11.
I suppose I could do a Dan maneuver. He so thoroughly napalmed all green things in the Netzer yard that when at last he changed course and planted a few flowers, those flowers began to wither as soon as he turned his back. The question being, which is less desirable; out-of-control veg or bare dirt? Summer in the south. Absent rigorous discipline of mower and weed whacker, one may only choose an extreme.


Posted by doubledog at 10:38 AM | Post Comment | Permalink
Updated: Saturday, June 11, 2005 10:40 AM

Friday, June 10, 2005

Yet More Chuzzle
Now my score is 650,000. Help. Please. Someone do a Chuzzle intervention.


Posted by doubledog at 7:58 PM | Post Comment | Permalink

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