Thursday, July 31, 2008

This just in...
'Clean enough': The new standard for housekeeping
"No crumbs visible around the toaster, it stipulates; just don't look under the toaster. The tub isn't grimy, but it doesn't gleam either, which is why God invented shower curtains. And you could knit a scarf with what's behind the refrigerator."
I like Clean Enough. Because it gives one so much latitude in definition.
Knit a scarf? I could build a new dog...

Wednesday, July 30, 2008


Antidote:
For the summer time blues*:
Happy memories!
(Happy winter memories.)


* - I can't begin to imagine having twelve people, three dogs and assorted stuff in the living room on a day like today. Even with AC, just looking out the window makes me sweat.
Mysterium iniquitatis
And then some. I can't say that there is much evil that surprises me. But when it is coupled with rank stupidity...

I may have read before of sad circumstances of priests who misappropriated money for gambling. But a priest who had an undergrad degree in mathematics? That just puts "he should have known better" into a whole new category.
Inspired by the 4th of July RoadTrip
Fran finds inspiration for a name. In the event she should ever form a band.
Rinkin Park

Monday, July 28, 2008

Lord of the Flies, Lord of the Rings, Catcher in the Rye...
Now it's your turn: which book are you most embarrassed to admit you have never read?
Except that now I'm not so sure I'm even embarrassed.
And there has been no week-end, no rainy day, so boring that I've been tempted to make up for those gaps in my high school reading list. But I did buy the Cliff notes for the first and last. Just to get me up to speed, what with all the cultural references.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008


St. Bridget of Sweden
Patroness of all those who would like to convince their in-laws that their daughter's name isn't too Irish.
If we needed any proof...
of why any singers in our church must have their qualifications vetted by our musical director, I present this. I dare you to listen all the way thru. I want to sing or I have sung before just won't cut it. Who am I to criticize? Only because I sing about as well as the crackhead in the video and I accept that reality.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Many, Many Thanks!And I like the cleaner, more sophisticated look, too.
Chu-Chu-Changes...

Sorry guys, in order to get the archives working... I had to updated to a newer template. I hope you can all forgive me.

Sunday, July 20, 2008


Knollwood Daily Photo
It's been awhile since I've mentioned the 'unpleasant' woman down the street. This may be because I had the (mistaken) impression that she no longer considered us a menace to the neighborhood and/or blemish on the face of the "Belle Reve Homeowners' Association."* She caught me in a vulnerable moment. Just as I had returned home from work; trapping me in my car. I didn't mind having to cover the driver's seat before I went into Mass because I couldn't close the window. We make do. But what I wouldn't have given for a window that I could have raised.

Then I would have backed back out of the driveway and taken off at a speed that would have intimidated the lunatic drivers that she had come to complain about. Look, lady, I don't like those drivers, either. But you lost me with the "too many people at your address who park on the street, there's too much traffic into those apartments and it's probably mostly from drug dealers and if there's drug dealers there's probably prostitution, too, and while we're at it the Homeowners' Association is going to be asking the township to put up NO PARKING signs up and down Smith Ave. and that schoool bus driver who leaves his bus on the street sure won't be doing it this year and if you have more visitors that can park in your driveway I really don't care..." Do you see where this was going? One of the most ambitious stream of consciousness rants ever! All manner of complaints real and imaginary. Except for the sinkhole. She's not the least bit concerned about the sinkhole.

What could I say? Nothing. For once, nothing. There are times when I feel like we are a crazy magnet. But we can't take credit/blame for all the problems. Next time I see her in the cul de sac, it will be a quick 180 and I'll go sit at Starbucks until the coast is clear. Or maybe we'll finally get the window fixed.

Belles reves, tout le monde!


* - Something of a pseudonym. Not that belle. Certainly no dream. And we're only renters.
Hellooo, Em....
I know you're really busy these days, but if you read this before I get a chance to talk to you could you try to figure out the archive thing? I tried to work on it myself but started to run out of patience when I couldn't click on a link that specifically said, "Where the #@%$ are my archives?" I think this might be the sort of thing that calls for a patient children's librarian to help me through it.
And where are we now?
An interesting article from the Milwaukee Journal (or whatever it calls itself these days), via Get Religion. Our recent trip to the north woods reminded me of the kids having once seen some Hasidim walking downtown in Highland Park and remarking, "Look, Amish guys." On a later Wisconsin road trip, we stopped at the WalMart in Tomah (now forever in our lexicon as the Amish WalMart) and some young scholar pointed out the large number of ultra-Orthodox Jews in the store. Every trip out of the neighborhood being a teachable moment.
(Not that staying in the 'hood isn't teachable, too. More later. When I've collected myself.)

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Note to self:

Avoid Jad Draggon Tattoo Parlor

Though, on a closer reading, it would appear that the artist in question did exactly what my father taught me back when I was learning typesetting. "Follow the copy right out the window."

I'll just avoid all tattoo parlors for the time being. When most essential commodities are $4 a gallon (I haven't read the water bill too closely lately. I just read the bottom line, hold my breath, write a check and hope it placates the DPW) and many prices are increasing at ten-times my yearly cost-of-living increase, funky body art just has to be on the back burner. I'm not particularly anxious to find a pro bono or prison tat artist, either.

Friday, July 18, 2008

Work thought for the day...
If this is a scam, to hell with it.

There is more in today's Trib about the Armenian Church of Lake Bluff and its pastor, George Michael. (My goodness, the 'pastor's' name alone is riff-worthy: Faith, Father Figure, Praying for Time Where to begin? How to stop?)

It is to be expected that his neighbors and fellow citizens would take umbrage at his successful dodge of a massive property tax bill. I say, especially since the official Armenian Church in America has no knowledge of consecrating a place of worship in Lake Bluff, that it is, indeed, a scam. Of course, one of those scams that many people might wish they had had the ambition and testosterone to attempt.

A comment left on one Trib columnist's blog , "Which church is not a scam?" bounced around my mind all morning. I believe in one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church. It is not a scam. That's not to say that religio-spiritual scams don't exist. And if I were in any way interested in working for a sham church, the Catholic church sure wouldn't be the one. I need only to turn on the TV to find evidence of what could easily be called sham churches. Churches which all but announce that the Holy Spirit has spoken through the profits.

In this Pauline Year - you know, kids, after St. Paul, the saint whom mom pays after robbing St. Peter and vice versa, so to speak - we can, among other things, savor the rich history of our Church. 2000 years. A story which speaks of anything but scam. Though that's not to say that there haven't been those who attach themselves to the framework of "church" and work it for all it's worth.

The Catholic Church sure isn't it. Suffering and sacrifice. Even martyrdom. Even in the year 2008. And it's no cakewalk in the bland suburbs of middle America. The priesthood and religious life offer daily opportunities for suffering and sacrifice. There is plenty of work to be done by any and all who are in the Church's employ. None too glamourous nor particularly highly remunerative. As scams should go, it's not working out well at all.

I'm interested to see how the Armenian Church of Lake Bluff holds up over time. Not 2000 years, more like 6 weeks. And, Em and Ed, if you're thinking of driving by the church while you're in town this week-end, I'd be interested in going along.
Just Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Night Nanny?
That's more than a bit over the top.
(Looking at my baby album and seeing the exhausted look on my parents' faces from those early "screamer" months, I wouldn't have blamed them if they had wanted a night nanny at least one night a week. Just so they could be rested in the morning for more screaming. I was a screamer. Or colicky or something.)
NOW WITH THE RIGHT LINK!!!
Right-y o...

Embot and Ed beat the Trib to this scoop:

State gives Lake Bluff estate a religious break worth $80,000 in property tax, but village says not so fast to pastor-owner

Just a little droll tale to pass the time on the road to the north woods. (They are friends with a fellow who used to live in the house 'church.'

They saved the bigger news for later:
I'M GOING TO BE A GRANDMOTHER

I mean they are expecting a baby. I can't see myself as a grandmother. I'm still having trouble looking in the mirror every morning and realizing I'm not 17. I think time heals these problems. Rick's mom was much more elated to find out that she is going to be a great-grandmother than I think she was when she found out that Emily was on the way some thirty years ago. Because the elation of finding out about the new ba
by is tempered with the thought, "Me? A grandmother?"

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Never mind...
That newsy New Yorker is dated July 21.
But I still don't think the mailman likes me.
Too hot to blog...
Or do much of anything else.
Counting the hours until AC repair man arrives. Sorry kids - I don't care if we don't eat for two weeks. I'm skimming this straight off the top of Friday's paycheck. (It's all the same to me anyway. I don't want to eat when it's this hot.) I'm OK up in the bedroom with the fan, but that dooms me to the laptop which generates way to much heat.

So...
has anyone received the new New Yorker? Mine usually arrives days before the cover date, leading me to, as usual, suspect the mailman of messing with my mind. But I don't like doing a lot of reading in front of the fan anyway. I think it dry's out my eyeballs or something. And then there is positioning myself so that the pages don't flap around.

Maybe I'll watch a movie. Netflix has opened up a whole world of movies I would never remember to rent while in Blockbuster plus cable TV shows like Extras, etc. Not everything is a winner. A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints had been recommended to me. That movie merits about one star. I wish I could remember who recommended it so I could find him and ask why I wasn't cautioned to watch the DVD with the subtitles on. The characters talked so fast and mumbled so much that all I could recognize was moments of the barrage of cuss words. Honestly, I could not figure out what was going on without the subtitles. Strange. I don't even always use the subtitles for foreign language movies.

The most difficult scenes were the ones where there were about 8 people in a room with bad acoustics - and eveyone was speaking at once. Not unlike our family dinners. Except somewhat less vulgarity.
And here I'm usually up to speed with the plot.
So let's get this straight?
It's pretty obvious that Obama won't be picking Eustace Tilley as his running mate.
And he won't be getting his White House mortgage through BernieMac.

Other people can make more compelling cases for the serious issues with Obama. Allow me to chime in here and add that he and/or his people show a highly inflamed lack of humor. As in, must his people release a statement every time they think something is not funny, inappropriate, etc? And they are such "sticks in the mud" that they can't see the humor in a New Yorker cover. Do they ever look at New Yorker covers? Have they ever listened to Bernie Mac? Do they ever laugh? Obviously not all 'puritans' are old conservatives.

Monday, July 14, 2008

On the plus side...
they did mention mental_floss. But, really, I think I would have been shocked if there had been a 'faith' category.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Just in case...
anyone thought Christianity has a lock on the "feminization" of religion:
Hindu women take up priestly profession
As more Hindu men enter more lucrative, secular professions, Shashi Tandon and a handful of Hindu women in America have begun performing priestly duties as a way of passing their faith to the next generation.
And while I'm whining...
Can I take off Monday for "quatorze juillet?" I think not.
Maybe I'll bring my three foot high Eiffel tower with me.
Listen, I'm not joking. This is my job!
Saturday morning…I’m at work right now. Which is what I had been planning on.
I’ve been scheduled for today for about a month. I’m not sure if I am eligible for ‘personal days’ yet, so knowing that I had an extra work day scheduled was a major determinant in whether or not to take off Monday to go see my sister.

Now…in what can be best described using a military term that starts with “cluster-,” I come in to work followed five minutes later by a part-time employee who thought she was scheduled. She doesn’t want to go home because it would waste gas (with gas at $4.35 a gallon, this kind of dispute will become more common)..I’m thinking (but not saying, because, blogging at work notwithstanding, I wish to be the consummate professional), “You have a real job. This is my real job. I’m not doing this for a little something extra..”

I shall say no more. But I think I will take it up with my direct supervisor on Monday.
I won’t leave a note. I’m more restrained when speaking. At least with those outside the family. At this moment, a note would definitely begin: What kind of cluster…

Friday, July 11, 2008

Doot-doot-doodle-oodle oot doot do do
or
The Bohemian Sousa

An example of why Wikipedia, as Big Ed and I were discussing just last evening, is quite the tool for expanded learning opportunities.
I'm not implying that it is the final authority for serious research...but it does permit one to look into items of interest with frightening immediacy, rather than toting around a little notepad of "things I would really like to look up one day when I go to the library."

Thursday, July 10, 2008

The Passing of a Young Knight
Sorrowful. Painful.
Crummy Church Signs
For real. There is an impression that the crummiest church signs are in the South. But I saw some 'good' ones last week-end. (Reinforcing my theory that Wisconsin is the South of the North!) In the absence of a camera, I really should have at least jotted down what I saw. Now all I can say is that I saw some signs that put forth a theology both dreadful and hysterical. (Hysterically dreadful?) Alas, not sufficiently dreadful to sear any particular string of approx. 15 words or less into my memory.
But they were bad.

Wednesday, July 09, 2008

Teachable Moments:
Use them where you find them.
That's what I wanted to say to a fellow shopper who looked askance at me while I was giving Eddie a short tutorial on how the Indian Maiden on the Leinenkugel label is not just a tribute to the Chippewa tribe, but also symbolic of the face made by the map juncture of Minnesota and Wisconsin. I thought it was interesting. Not interesting to merit buying any product, but interesting.
I've just returned from the area slightly to the right of the top lip.

Morans?
Don't Make Me Call OSHA...
Rarely do I complain about working conditions. We're air conditioned. More than adequately well-heated in the winter months, thanks to the efficiency of old school radiant heating. I have an office totally incommensurate with my station. I even have my own bathroom (which makes me claustrophobic and rarely use). But now... I may have a complaint. The summer intensive religious ed kids are in the church singing with their music instructor. Basically all I am hearing is the instructor singing the OCP's greatest hits. (The fact that she's a "little pitchy" this morning doesn't help.) These are not favorable working conditions.

Here I am Lord, Make it stop Lord...
Coq en l'heure d'or
Has more je ne sais quoi than "Big Chicken, Moe's Diner, Osseo, Wisconsin"

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

And we're back...
In recovery phase from the latest adventure. Lots of fun that was extra delightful because it was totally spontaneous.**
Waiting to get pics from Em.

Let me mention one thing I learned over the week-end. This isn't called the information age for nothing. Don't think you can do something profoundly stupid while out of state and not have your mother find out because she's traveling at high speeds in the opposite direction. There will now always be a less than disinterested fourth, fifth or sixth party eager to share information with a more interested party. And somehow she will find out...
I shall elucidate when I have calmed down.*

* - provided I'm still alive and 'functional.' I bought a mocha cappuccino milk drink at Dominick's on the way to work. While waiting on hold I looked at the half empty bottle and saw a 7/1 sell by date. Suddenly I don't feel so good. I have to stop at the store on my way home to pick up a prescription, so I think I shall return this item and ask for my 1.25 back. I hope I don't have to ask them to comp me some Imodium.

** - albeit with moments of absurdity that could only have been stranger if we had opted to stop at Necedah rather than the Leinenkugel brewery.

Saturday, July 05, 2008

No, No, No Knollwood Daily Photo
A) The camera is with Fran as Bridget and she lead a group of wannabe yoopers around the von Huben family farm for the week-end. I'm not expecting much in the way of pics, since I found the memory card is still attached to my laptop. Ooops. Hope the fishing worked out.

B) Any pic would be of me running about the house in dishabille in preparation for a 48 hour road trip. There was a time I could prep six children for an extended expedition with military precision. Now I can barely pull an overnite bag together for myself.

C) The sinkhole is about the same. I'm truly surprised that the idiots who were putting off fireworks in the cul de sac the past 2 nights didn't think to try launching something down the sinkhole.

D) If I had a camera...the only things new are a)Scrappy alternately sulking and preening as he waits for the other dogs to return from the UP b) Martha screaming as she tries to access a train schedule for the "most horrible part of the trip," i.e. the half hour ride to meet Em and Big Ed in Kenosha. c) Me - trying to explain that after all the driving they had done in the past week (as documented in yesterday's post plus more miscellaneous moving and visiting the family of July 4th) it would be quite ungracious to ask them to not only give us a free ride to the north woods, but come an hour south to pick us up d) Me - on the phone to work leaving voice mail messages explaining why I left on Thursday saying "see you Monday" in good faith but I just happened to be given an invitation too good to pass up. After seven years there I should have established a reputation as "not a flake" but then...the last time I went on a quick trip to see my sister I was calling in with that Bridget's emergency appendectomy stuff.

Gotta run.
Laundry's done.
Harold and Kumar Go to the USCCB Office of Film and Broadcasting
Sounds absurd doesn’t it?
And the more I play with the title, the absurd part is not so much the existence of the archetypes of “Harold and Kumar,” but the fact that the US Conference of Catholic Bishops needs to have an Office of Film and Broadcasting.

Descended from the old Legion of Decency, an organization which had its mission on display in its name, the USCCB OFB is a bland melange of aims. On the one hand, they say that their aim is to give the public a Catholic evaluation of entertainment. On the other, they hope to give simple guidance to those choosing a movie to view, including a distilled “viewer’s awareness line”, in an oddly Puritanical way. In other words, they will count the F-bombs for you.

So I’m a little unclear on the concept. As a fairly well catechized Catholic I already know exactly why (based only on trailers) a film, let’s say one of the Harold and Kumar oeuvre, would fall far outside of the definition of edifying. To quote from the OFB review: ”To make a dumb story short, the, er, plot can be boiled down to a baby-burger-sized synopsis: Two toked-up stoners drive around New Jersey in search of fast-food nirvana.” The US Bishops are paying some dude to tell us what we’ve already discerned from the trailers?

It would almost be better if there were a Legion of Decency that flat-out told us we must not see this movie. Instead, the Bishops have someone on their staff who went to see the movie and counted the scat-gags, naughty words (OK, in this case I think he lost count) and ‘drug references.” And who is this someone, anyway?

A search of the internet reveals what the OFB website does not. The reviewer is one Harry Forbes, plus his assistant John Mulderig. Most of the information I could dredge up was from various discussions of the flap concerning the OFB ‘endorsement’ of The Golden Compass. I won’t even get into the Golden Compass flap. Enough has been written about that snafu; an instance in which there was a realm of content that couldn’t be quantified by someone with a checklist of ‘bad words’ and ‘drug references.’ This having been one time parents could have used a heads-up about the ‘faith related’ value of a film and were left in the lurch.

Perhaps the USCCB should get out of the movie review business. I’m not really saying that I want to see Mr.’s Forbes and Mulderig standing on line at the unemployment office. Could their talents be put to better use?

There is an abundant sufficiency of media resources and the USCCB Film Office is just not one of the places I would look for guidance. Well catechized Catholics with even limited access to other avenues of information don’t need their help and why would the poorly catechized even care. And as the OFB website itself says: “Thoughtful adults are the best judges of their own tastes and values.” Of course, they then go on to give a complicated alphanumeric assessment formula that taxes my limited mathematical skills. The old Legion of Decency A, B and C for condemned was easier to interpret and had a degree of resolve that the new rating system tries rather desperately to avoid.

I have taken under advisement the endorsement of a priest, who is, in fact, now a Bishop, for The Polar Express. Even that was solicited more from his wisdom as a train afficianado than as my spiritual shepherd.
Perhaps it would be best if the USCCB, in regards to movies, spoke less.
Obviously they have Harry Forbes to spare the Bishops the ordeal of having to winnow through the banal fare that is out there. But...if a movie isn’t worthy to have someone like Cardinal George, if he would have the time, see it, why are the Bishops even bothering to give them a cursory look by way of an underling.

Most cinematic fare is on the ‘pulp’ level of other entertainment. Like ‘beach reads’ and reality television. The USCCB doesn’t review those and it might be best if they banished full length film to the same category. When they do speak they should have something important to say. Something that will make us stop and take note.

For the time being, I, Mrs. Average Catholic Mom don’t need my
local ordinary’s opinion on whether or not to watch Harold and Kumar.

Friday, July 04, 2008

LV!
or
Another Carload of Bad Catholics Careening Through Wisconsin

When Rick and I were planning our wedding, late in 1977, my most important aim was to be a June bride, to synchronize the banquet hall and church. As with so many brides with whom I speak these days, the banquet hall was the big obstacle. [This could explain why, when talking with brides who so obviously want to wed in our parish because of its beauty and proximity to posh accomodations, I vacillate between a sentimental sympathy and an urge to grab them by the throat and scream, “Get a life. If you consider this a crisis, then marriage is going to be a real surprise.”] Friday, June 30 was the appointed day. At the time, it seemed like we would have a lifetime of midsummer party bliss. Anniversary, Rick’s Birthday, My parents’ anniversary plus Rick’s brother’s birthday all culminating in the Fourth of July.

Yeah, we’ve had some long holiday week-ends. And for our thirtieth. Well, it was special...

Last Sunday, Rick took the St. Is Foundation box truck into the city to help Em and Big Ed move on to their “real” life near Racine, WI. After some irritations, misunderstandings and multiple unanswered cell phone calls I gathered Martha and the boys to take the train into the city to help load.
Not a bad trek, considering the train was packed with families heading into Taste of Chicago and the boys have limited patience with impatient children who lose patience on train rides longer than those on the little train that circles the lake at Lambs Farm.

(May I recommend Can You Name Them All? - a deck of quiz cards that helps to pass the time and facilitate conversation. Very useful in the absence of the high tension altercation that broke up the boredom of our last train ride. Having previously witnessed a calling out and potential shanking, I thought it would less egregious to open up disputed answers to the car at large. My companions felt otherwise, so we kept it in the family.)

The truck loading was a rather quick affair. There were no appliances to move. No dripping washer, no bulky refrigerator, no 500 pound stove.
Easy.

Monday was our low-key anniversary. Although it dawned on me that it was sort of a “golden” anniversary, you know thirty on the thirthieth. I really should have dredged up the left over edible gold dust from Chuck’s birthday. Oh, well.

On the way to drop me at work, Rick was suddenly seized with the realization that he was about to turn 55. Reassurances that this was the normal thing that happens to those who are about to embark upon their 56th year helped, I think. But these reassurances would be undone when we went to Culver’s for a celebratory ice cream cone. My dejected spouse, not yet officially 55, returned to our table and announced that he had been given the senior citizen discount. The dejection was salved by saving a dollar.

Tuesday was going to be the big day. Em needed everyone’s help moving and offered to combine a complimentary work meal with a birthday party. Fran and Bridget, not yet ever having negotiated a lease, could not understand why their father’s birthday celebration had been subsumed into a moving party. I was forced to explain that this was not some sort of a scam, merely an oversight on the part of their grandparents, having conceived a child (two actually, counting Uncle Keith of the July 2 birthday) whose birthday would coincide with moving days.

The chalk markers that Martha brought home from the toy store have led to a new tradition of birthday tributes scribbled on the kitchen window. Our pater familias received a Roman numeral tribute; LV having more gravitas but less taint of doom than 55.

I toyed with the idea of bringing the camera along on the trip up to Racine. I wish I had. I also wish I had grabbed someone’s camera-phone a few times. Just to preserve some of the fun for posterity.

Chuck and Rick took the well appointed, air-condtioned box truck with the top of the line sound system. Martha, Bridget, Fran, Eddie and I took the mini-van with 270,000 miles. Under so-called ‘normal conditions’ I would not drive it outside of a radius of about ten miles. But for my baby, well, just this once it would make it over the state line and back. It wasn’t until right before we left that I realized that Em and Ed were much farther north than I had originally envisioned. But we were commited and like the Light Brigade it was Forward. Forward. Like Wisconsin’s motto.

“This reminds me of Little Miss Sunshine.”
So now every family trip reminds us Little Miss Sunshine. Who am I to argue with nicotine addicted disgruntled riders stuck in the back of mini-van without opening windows? And their long-suffering brother? There was a lot of kvetching going on.

The fun didn’t really start until we were stuck in traffic on Hwy. 41 and the van started to overheat. We cut the AC and I was praying very hard that we could inch along successfully until the next intersection. Once we were moving on a perpendicular route and could go at least 20 miles an hour, the thermostat came down. We were able to turn the AC on intermittently. usually when the wailing from the back became unbearable. To cast this all in an optimistic light, I must express my surprise at the good mileage we were getting.

Someone heard church bells ringing when we were stopped at an intersection. I invited any interested parties to join me in the Angelus. The response was about what I expected. Eddie’s a sport when it’s time for the Angelus, but the girls... I should have tried harder with the girls. (Over a lifetime. Not in the car. I wasn’t about to invite a mutiny.) All I can quote here (bowdlerized and paraphrased) is Bridget’s plea that we just pray that we get there.

Get there we did. A close call. More screaming. But we still beat the truck. That gave us time to scope out the new apartment. Calm our nerves. Soothe the traumatized Murphy the cat. And the horrified Martha who noticed that Em’s new closet is about one foot longer and wider than her bedroom.

Thirty years of marriage gives one the gift of knowing when one’s spouse is joking. Usually. Rick and Chuck walked into the apartment, with Chuck gasping. Rick said, “I forgot the key (for the padlock).” That seemed like a typical Rick joke. And all I could understand from Chuck was, “no - really!” We were in another state, about 45-60 minutes from home and THE KEY WAS ON A HOOK BY THE FRONT DOOR. Then came the usual recriminations. “I forgot I took it off the key chain.” “I would have reminded you if I knew it was on the hook.”
And so on.

Ed had a bolt cutter. In the truck.
Em decided to run back to Lake Bluff (new car, AC, windows, the works) and Bridget, to whom I had promised that we would be back by about nine, played her IBS plus “I really need to get back to the place where I’m housesitting” card. Em was back in about an hour and a half. IBS not withstanding, Bridget convinced her to stop at Rocky Rococo. And Ed called to suggest that she stop at his mother’s house to fetch some speakers.

This was the cataplexy point.
No furniture. No cable. PlayStation in the truck. Books in the truck.
Everything in the truck.
Chuck and Eddie sharing a magazine.
I decided to get up off the floor and check out the guest bathroom again - more out of boredom than anything else - and I started laughing in typical Smith family fashion. Hardly breathing, weak, rubbery muscled. Martha and Fran followed.
Refreshing.

The move itself was anticlimactic. The boys were needed for a few big pieces of furniture, but basically we just helped drag stuff off the truck and into the garage. Fran brought her usual hyper-organizational skills to the mission and it was fast. Like I said, no appliances is a good thing.

Pizza was the original birthday dinner plan, but we had all gone to Lou Malnatti’s on the way out of the city on Sunday night, so we voted on something else. Popeye’s Chicken won. Feeling relieved, reenergized and beneficent I couldn’t argue with anyone. I allowed - maybe even encouraged - Chuck to do his dramatic interpretation of Grandpa’s chicken soliloquy from Little Miss Sunshine.

Em consulted her GPS oracle thing and decided that we should just go to Popeye’s since it appeared to be close and then we could have a civilized sit-down casual finger lickin’ dinner. We left the truck and took two cars.
I traveled with Ed, newly licensed in Wisconsin having cleared up the little bench warrant misunderstanding from my sister’s wedding, following Em as she let the ‘device’ take us to Popeye’s.

It was...much more urban, indeed vibrant, than we had anticipated, being just 48 hours away from living on the near west side of Chicago. How shall I say this? We, I fear, were the people bringing the vibrancy to the neighborhood. The chicken took so long, it was so close to closing time and we felt so North Shore-white-L.L. Bean wearing-quilted handbag toting out of place that we decided to dine back at the apartment. This was not such a good place to goof around signing Dad’s age in Roman numerals.

My next cateplectic moment came on leaving Popeye’s. Right in front of the entrance was an aged puke blue/green Chrysler mini-van. My thought? It followed us... I was doubled over with laughing/gasping as the family prodded me to just pick a car and get into it.

The rest of the evening was typical family birthday party nice. Maybe the first time I had to help put legs on a table as part of setting it, but typical nonetheless. Then we hit the road. I had offered to drive home. Which might not have been the best idea, but I wanted a slower, cooler, calmer trip home. Hwy. 41 was down to one lane each way and there was night work going on so the trip was slow. So slow. But no Little Miss Sunshine quotes by this time. Just me snapping, “I have a headache - I can’t take the Led Zep now...”

It’s unusual for me to ever get home at 1:30 in the morning. My eyes were stilled crossed the next day. I had to go to the sacristy and tally the altar server robes, ivory versus white. What a headache. I don’t have the resilience that I used to.

I was going to use the long week-end to get caught up around the house.
But Em, Big Ed and Martha twisted my arm and I’m leaving with them tomorrow to drive up northeast of the Twin Cities to visit my sister.
I haven’t seen her since we were up north for the Halloween party.
We can hope there is no appendicitis this time.

On (back to) Wisconsin.
Forward.
The Last Person On Earth...
I was informed on Friday that I am the last person on earth to have not seen the barely amusing YouTube video known as My New Haircut. I needed to watch it to put into context Bridget’s comments about some of the Jager girls making appearances with “that JagerBomb guy.” The best reason to watch “My New Haircut” is to give context to all the Haircut parodies. Especially the Irish. Featuring a spokesdude that Bridget wouldn’t mind working with.

Thursday, July 03, 2008

Strictly Speaking:

One pupil who wrote ‘f*** off’ was given marks for accurate spelling and conveying a meaning successfully.
So much for the strict application of a point system in grading essays.
Or should the examiners institute a system of counter-points for disrespect and vulgarity?

‘It would be wicked to give it zero, because it does show some very basic skills we are looking for – like conveying some meaning and some spelling.’
If we're giving credit for skills that basic, then how about a couple of points for writing on the correct side of the paper. Or even for knowing which end of the writing instrument to apply to the writing surface.
NSFW
Things have changed a lot since my father first taught me electronic typesetting. And mostly for the better. I think Dad would have had a blast with all that can be done so easily. On the other hand, I was thinking of him the other day while looking at my favorite reliable source for free downloadable fonts. The names of some of them - not to mention what some of the type actually looks like. Fonts with titles that are definitely not safe for work. Fonts that I must move past before someone sees my monitor. Fonts that might not make a Marine blush, but would certainly make him say, "What the...?"

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Road trip*...
We're still savoring the delicious comedy of Rick's 55th birthday celebration.
Yeah, I should have taken the camera along. To document our descent into cataplexy.

* = a better term might be "Chinese [Man's In-Law's] Fire Drill. I do not use the term Chinese Fire Drill in any pejorative sense. Especially since I've been informed that in Chinatown any large, ineffective, and chaotic exercise is called a "von Huben Fire Drill." With good reason.

St. Isidore Foundation



I cannot live under pressures from patrons, let alone paint.
-- Michelangelo, quoted in Vasari's Lives of the Artists


Meet the Family...
Collect the Action Figures





Yes, three jade ribbons. 15 Years!
(not all the same child)
If you need to ask, you may not wish to know.


 
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