You Wreck Me, Baby

The subject of bumper stickers has come up on this blog before; I get a kick out of them.  Mostly, they make me laugh because they are impotent to affect change.  I have 3 stickers on my car and while they make me feel good, I’m not naïve enough to think they change the world, someone’s mind, or a vote.

Bumper stickers are narcissistic.

One sticker I see on Seacoast cars says “No Idling.”  I’ve searched the web and have not found what organization provides the particular stickers I’ve seen.  According to this minimal and anonymous website, the idea behind the “no idling” campaign is that an idling automobile increases pollution, wastes fuel, and increases wear and tear on an engine.  School drop-off zones, ATMs, and drive-through food services are popular targets for the ire of the no idlers.

I’m sure the no idlers are perfectly lovely people.  Unfortunately, our modern American infrastructure was built on the idea that there would be limitless cheap oil forever and that’s why it’s dangerous to park the car and go into the Lafayette Road McDonald’s in Portsmouth.  My bank’s Lafayette Road branch is also unfriendly to a “park and shop” customer like me.

Last night I was tired and hungry.  I’d worked late at The Big Corporation and was meandering home in the Jeep, contemplating something simple and comforting for dinner.  A memory of a McDonald’s French fry crossed my mind and I veered off towards the location on the corner of Lafayette and Mirona Roads, an asphalt scar on the earth if there ever was one.  I parked my car in the large and empty parking lot and dodged my way through the careening automobiles lining up to idle for their supper.  In spite of the spacious invitation to park and dine, the drive-through line circles the restaurant and makes it difficult for pedestrians to enter the facility.

Once I gained access to the restaurant, it was a typical mid-sized McDonald’s with one lonely evening diner and no one working the counter.  All hands were on the drive-through deck.  After about a minute of waiting, someone shambled over, greeted me resentfully, and took my order.

“May I have a large order of French fries?”

The employee said

“That will be two minutes.”

I noticed two containers of French fries sitting in the fry carousel.  I pointed over to them and said,

“Are those French fries for sale?”

The employee looked at me and said,

“Those are for someone at the drive-through.”

Hungry and tired as I was in my first world way, I knew nothing good was going to happen if I didn’t turn away from the counter gracefully.   I was either going to pull a John Kerry (“do you know who I am”) or demand to see the manager.  The baseball game was on in the safety of the Jeep, so I decided to walk away from pending trouble at the counter this time.  I weighed the French fries in the crucible of grace and grace won.  No heavenly hosts and angels were flying around my head, though, because I still felt ugly inside.  I walked through the dining area toward the rear exit and heard the nasal sounds of a favorite Tom Petty tune sinking into the plastic booth seats from some hidden speaker.

I should have known better than to take my tired soul to the golden arches for refreshment.  It wouldn’t be the first time I’d been disappointed.  Tuesday night, it almost wrecked me.

If I had more time, I might begin a one woman rampage against the anti-pedestrian antics of the world’s largest hamburger chain.  Such things take time, though, and who am I to wage such a battle?  I’m just a lonely blogger, drifting around the Seacoast suburban sprawl in a Jeep Grand Cherokee looking for a French fry and getting some tired Tom Petty lyrics.  I’m one person against billions and billions served.

The no-idlers will have to take on McDonald’s this year.

Posted in Experiments and Challenges | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Thirty Two Dollars

I got a sponsored tweet from the “Bla Bla Bla Store” yesterday.  It said “Spend your tax refund wisely—save big with offers at the Bla Bla Bla Store.”

For the last few years, I have not gotten a tax refund.  I’ve had to pay income tax.  It’s not because I make millions of dollars.  It’s because I’ve decided that it’s a better practice to have the money in my own coffers all year and then write a check on Tax Day for whatever I owe to Caesar.  By adjusting my withholding, I’ve managed to owe for the last two years; I prefer it this way.

The alternative is that I give the money to Caesar during the year, Caesar keeps it and uses it (interest free) and then gives it back to me.  This is the preferred route for many.  It always breaks my heart when I read comments like this on social media:

“I just got my tax refund back and booked my vacation to Bermuda!  Woo hoo!”

The tax codes are intricate and involved; there is a whole profession that exists to help the subjects of Caesar weave their way through the labyrinthine system and pay fewer taxes.  I am not a member of this profession.  I’m just an observer, writing a check for thirty two dollars and putting it in its assigned envelope today.

In case anyone has forgotten, it’s Patriot’s Day here in New England.  This is a civic holiday to commemorate the first battle of the American Revolution.  Some may think the Minutemen were training for the Boston Marathon, but they were actually involved in a tax protest.  A few terms I vaguely remember from U.S History class were “The Stamp Act” and “No taxation without representation.”

I don’t have a philosophy or a position on taxes and I haven’t studied it closely; I just don’t think the Bank of Caesar is the best place to park a few extra fiatsoes which might be rattling around.  I know, I know…no one makes any interest in the non-Caesar banks either, based on ZIRP.  Still, I’d rather have a few extra dollars from paycheck to paycheck.

You decide.

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Gin, Herring, and Cheese

Prior to the first known speculative bubble in 1636, the bulb of the elegant tulip flower was the fourth leading export of the Netherlands, after gin, herring, and cheese.  Prior to 2008, I had never heard of “tulip mania” or “tulipomania.”  I dropped Macroeconomics in college; a dull science it was, especially after lunch.

I’m pleased there have been no speculative bubbles in tulip bulbs these last few years.  The only speculation involved with the bulbs I planted in the Redemption Garden was a low-grade worry about whether they would grow or not.

How useless it is to worry; it makes us sick and sometimes tired.  The tulip bulbs had a substance unseen all winter.  Although I had a dim hope they would grow, based on my trust in the bulb merchant, I still worried.

I should have had faith.  It’s not like I had planted gin, herring, and cheese.

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The Pebble in My Shoe

I was on “vacation” this week.  I’m not sure what that means and it’s probably the topic of another blog post.  While I was away from the work I do for money, I was out gathering geographical information for a story I am writing.  I spent time in a familiar town, a place I like to walk around in after work on Friday evenings.  It’s one of those places I imagine living in if I had a trust fund or I won the lottery.  I’d buy a good size house near the ocean, install some attractive vegetable gardens, and live life.  I’d entertain and have house guests; maybe I’d have an “in-law apartment” for my parents.  I’d have salons and stammtisch; maybe my entertaining friend Reggie Black could be a house guest.

Do people still have salons?

Each time I visit this charming town of my dreams, I explore different neighborhoods.  My story almost writes itself as I walk along the sidewalks and the characters jump out of my imagination and into my i-phone notebook.  There’s a library, several post offices, a historical society and a grocery store to which I could hypothetically walk or ride my bicycle.  Should I desire to join new clubs, there is a yacht club, a golf and tennis club, and a seasonal private club.  Did I mention there are a number of good restaurants?  One restaurant has a cozy pub for those nights when I tire of preparing meals for my house guests.  There’s even a community garden.  This town has it all.

There’s just one problem I’ve observed in my pedestrian exploration.

There are a lot of rules and ordinances in this town based on the large number of small signs in unassuming places, reminding town residents and guests of their obligation to stay in line.  When I went to the town’s website, I counted no less than 55 categories of ordinances.  There was a littering ordinance, a noise ordinance, a fireworks ordinance, and a yard and barn sale ordinance.  Although it wouldn’t apply to me, there was a cable Tee Vee ordinance.

There was this ordinance.

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I understand a few general rules and regulations may be necessary in a fashionable summer resort.   I’m just not sure what would prompt a town to create a sand and rock ordinance.  It was the pebble manifesto.  I don’t think we have a sand and rock ordinance here on the Seacoast, but our state motto is “Live Free or Die.”

When I got home from a seaside jaunt the other day I took off my shoes and I heard something click.  A pebble, stuck in my shoe’s tread, came out and fell on the floor.  I hadn’t purposely taken the pebble from the beach, but I was a scofflaw nonetheless.  I put the pebble on the table where it will sit until I return to this lottery ticket trust fund beach.

There are two or three houses for sale in this fashionable summer resort and each of them could be the perfect location for salons and house guests.  I’m not so sure about the litany of ordinances, though.  Ordinances won’t matter in the story I’m writing; I can dismiss them, ignore them, or even break them.  In my own little fictional corner of the world, I don’t need many rules and regulations.

In a world of my own creation, it’s just one foot in front of the other and damn the pebbles.

Posted in Friday Pillow Talk | Tagged , , , , , | 5 Comments

April is Different Here

April doesn’t look like this around here.

photo(4)Even though it’s gray, rainy, and ugly, I ran into a forsythia hedge with tiny buds.

The ugly will pass.

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Dear Facebook

I read an article about Facebook’s “like” button in The Wall Street Journal.  The article claims researchers can create a profile of a Facebook user based on what they “like.”

For Harley-Davidson bikers and “likers,” the study’s profile wasn’t very flattering.

I’m selective in my use of the “like” button.  I rarely “like” name-brand products unless I use them, I can attest to their quality, and I am willing to promote the product for free.  For instance, I “like” Coast of Maine Organic Products.  Facebook categorizes them as a “local business.”

I don’t generally “like” public figures; I’ve “liked” one.

What’s funny is how Facebook thinks it knows me based on the things I “like.”  Just today, Facebook suggested I might like playing “Farmville” and “Candy Crush Saga.”  It could be because I “liked” a picture of a friend’s cow and I posted a picture of a banana split.  I’m surprised Facebook didn’t suggest “Words with Friends” based on my “liking” of witty wordsmiths F. Scott Fitzgerald, P.G. Wodehouse, and Dorothy Sayers.

Why does Facebook create profiles?  Is it some plan for world domination or mind control?  Or is it because they want to sell people stuff?  What are they selling?  The things they have suggested to me, based on my “likes” aren’t things I’ve been interested in buying.  Maybe I’m overthinking this, as is my tendency, but my “liking” of Facebook lately has waned.  Some days, I dislike Facebook, but there is no button for that.

And no, just because I’m tall doesn’t mean I’m shopping for a pair of edgy, unique flat shoes.

Facebook, you don’t own me.

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The Wall of Sleep

Last week, someone asked me “How do you decide what you’re going to blog about every day?  Your topics are so random.”

To the drive-by observer, there is a random quality to this “work” but I’m reminded of a thought game I used to play with my high school classmates before Alan Treworgy’s “Western Civilization” class.  I wonder if the players would remember.  I still have my notes from class and the textbook, Earlier Ages.

We’d be sitting in our uncomfortable school seats during the eight minutes between classes, waiting for Mr. Treworgy to start his lecture.  I might turn around in my seat and say to my classmate, Mike,

“Let’s play ‘Sudden Psychology;’ the first word is pyramid.”

Mike would think about the word for 30 seconds and then respond with

“Peace for our time.”

I’d think about his response and decide if I could follow his train of thought.  I assumed the word “pyramid” had caused him to reflect on the Hebrew slaves building the Pharoah’s pyramids and maybe he thought about Moses.  Since it was springtime when we had this discussion, The Ten Commandments had been on Tee Vee and he was thinking about Charlton Heston.  Charlton Heston had also played the character Robert Neville in the dystopian film The Omega Man.  This film occasionally played after the eleven o’clock news back in the 1970’s, so maybe Mike had watched it over the weekend.  Neville was also the first name of the British Prime Minister who was famous for saying he had achieved “peace for our time” following the signing of the Munich Agreement in 1938 and we were studying this treaty in class.

Here’s the diagram of Mike’s move in “Sudden Psychology:”

Pyramid to Israelites to Moses to Charlton Heston to Omega Man (Neville) to Chamberlain to Peace.

Follow?

It really wasn’t as “stream of consciousness” as it seemed when we invented it.  Mike had a script he was running in his brain.  We’d laugh at what we thought was our random brilliance.

This “thought game” is sometimes how I approach blogging.  My brother recently wrote a blog post about “30 Minute Writing.” I confess, most of my blog posts take longer than 30 minutes to write and that’s not counting the time and energy the mental script consumes when I’m not writing.  It only seems random at first glance.  The script is running in the background all the time, even when I’m sleeping and there is a somnolent mumble of “order out of chaos.”

I woke up this morning and my bedside lamp was on; no wonder I was already exhausted.  It could only have been worse if I’d left the radio on too; the ESPN overnight audio feed runs in a crazy loop of random sports stories.  The lamp reminded me of a conversation Reggie Black and I had about blue lights and sleep.  I thought about writing a blog post on the importance of a good night’s sleep and when I searched for “the blue light of sleep” I found this article.

Someone had already written everything I wanted to say about sleep so I had to write about something else.

Here is the diagram of my move in the “Sudden Psychology” of random blogging:

A bright bedside lamp to the need for restful sleep to a Smithereens song about sleep to a high school memory to a conversation about blue lights to creating order out of chaos.

Follow?

How do you create order out of the chaos in your life? 

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The Old YDB

I went on a mission yesterday, searching for a certain sign of spring.  They’re everywhere, those little things that signal its arrival.

I looked for a sign telling me when the York Dairy Bar might open but there was nothing.

It was still a beautiful evening for a walk; today will be a good day for one, too.  Fresh spring air and sunshine is what is needed today.  Maybe an afternoon nap.

But no soft serve ice cream.

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The Best Advice

Every few weeks, I get an e-mail update from my farm share.  Annalisa Miller sends out a status of things at the farm and any news which might be of interest to farm share participants.  She always closes her note with:

“Please remember to breathe, stretch, drink plenty of water, and eat beautiful meals every day.”

That’s good advice, isn’t it?

It’s the best advice but the hardest to follow.  Even the breathing part is difficult on Fridays when everything is urgent.

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Is everything really urgent?

A couple I know may be moving to an island.  What will be urgent on an island?  What will be important?  I may have a nostalgic and idealized picture of island living in my mind, but something tells me the urgencies of life are different there.  The “faux urgencies” get sifted out.

Not everything is urgent today.  If I leave The Coop right now, I can make the 1:00 p.m. ferry to the island.

Find the island of the important and cast off the faux urgencies today! 

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Knock Knock

Knock Knock.

Who’s there?

Bulldozer.

Bulldozer who?

photo

Bulldozer here to knock your beach house down.

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