Friday, December 31, 2021

2021: Don't let the Door Hit You

This is it, December 31, 2021, the last day of the year. What we're supposed to do now, if we are to be traditional about it (and I am generally traditional), is write a reflection on the year just past.

Well I don't wanna and you can't make me. It would only be a litany of what you already know. 2021 has merited about every negative adjective in the book and I don't wanna think about it no more. 

I have not stayed up to greet the New Year in about six years now but I might stay up tonight only to make sure 2021 leaves, and then I'm done with it. Finished. There will be no reflections of the past year by me. End. Of. Story.

This doesn't count as a reflection, does it?

Thursday, December 30, 2021

Stretching A Buck

Me Grandpa Joe had his welder rental business, but he also owned a couple of rooming houses with single rooms and apartments for rent. With eight kids plus he and me Grandma Cosgriff, 10 mouths to feed and house and clothe required a decent income stream.

Joe's money rule was simple. He used the earnings from the welders to pay for the business. Me Grandma Cosgriff got all the income from the rooms and apartments to pay for the food and clothes and such for her and me Pops and his seven siblings. You know, the various household expenses. 

Now, me Grams was good with a buck. I'll likely go into more detail on that in another blog, but suffice it to say her reputation for handling money was well established. Me Grandpa Joe garnered no such respect.

One day Joe was lamenting to his older brother, me Great Uncle Bill who me Pops was named for, "Boy, a dollar from the room rents sure goes farther than a dollar from the welders."

Uncle Bill replied simply, "Look who's spending the welding money and look who spends the rent income."

Joe couldn't challenge that judgement. He knew it was true.


Tuesday, December 28, 2021

On The Other Foot

This may seem more melancholy than I intend it to be, but I'm really only trying to be observational. 

Watching the Ohio Cosgriffs drive off home yesterday morning, Christmas being over, I found myself reflecting on little things in life which had never quite occurred to me before. I was thinking of how me Grandpaw and Grandmaw Hutchins may have felt in years gone by as we would leave their home in North Carolina after our annual summer visit. Or even, perhaps, how me parents and grandparents up here felt when my family would make our exit after spending time at their homes.

With more extended stays it's as if you just get into the new routine and it's over. Several times yesterday after the family left I found myself expecting one of the dogs to be staring at me as I opened the door into the dining room, or to see my son or daughter-in-law or granddaughter sitting on the couch as I entered the living room. I expected those things so much that it took a second or so for me to re-orient when nobody was there. 

I believe I would rather be the one leaving than the one staying. The ones moving on are naturally occupied with that: the drive back home, returning to work, anticipating the usual day in and day out life. While I certainly had my routine coming back at me, there was still a rather marked change for me as all I had was that routine returning. There wasn't the relative distraction of a four hour drive home. There wasn't so much as a walk down the block to occupy me. I just went back into the house and locked the door as I closed it, changed into work clothes, and got back to normal. Poof. In the bat of an eye, nothing was different than it had been last Thursday. But it felt radically different, at least for the first few hours.

I suppose it does offer me a better sense of what my elders felt way back when. I don't really like it, but it is what is, eh?

Monday, December 27, 2021

You say potato

I was once trapped in this middle eastern marketplace, filled with individuals plying their wares. It was bizarre.

Or is that bazaar? I forget which.

Saturday, December 25, 2021

A Christmas Tip

This may be too late to be of help to anyone this season, but you might keep it in mind for next year.

If you are wrapping Christmas gifts on the bed, take care not to cut the sheet while you're cutting wrapping paper. 

You're welcome. And Merry Christmas everyone!

Friday, December 24, 2021

Christmas Bonus

For really too many years as we've replaced burned out motors on drain snakes, we've simply thrown the old ones in a pile at one end of the Shop. There was an accumulation of easily 95 or 100 old electric motors as we replaced, I would hazard to guess, 4 to 6 a year. We didn't actually count them though.

The motors are heavy, having a lot of copper in them as well as what I think are steel armatures. Still, they have been in the way for a long time, the pile having built up to about three foot high. We've been saying we need to get rid of them. Yesterday, we did.

We piled them in my new old van as I had long taken the seats out to have room for equipment. I was hoping for maybe a nickel a pound, and to get perhaps a hundred bucks if we were lucky.

We were beyond lucky.

The scrap yard allowed us a quarter a pound and there was just over 2,000 pounds. Me brother Phil and I walked out with $545 (and sixty cents). $272.80 apiece made a nice little Christmas bonus for merely turning in scrap, wouldn't you say?

Thursday, December 23, 2021

Happy Christmas Eve Eve 2021

Happy Christmas Eve Eve! If you remember, it's a new holiday which I created just last year. You can read about it here: Christmas Eve Eve

You forgot, didn't you? Or you only just remembered and was hoping I'd forgotten, right? Just for that, no Christmas Eve Eve gifts for you. And that's not because I never actually bought them either.

So again, Happy Christmas Eve Eve. We'll do it again in 2022. Be ready next time.


Wednesday, December 22, 2021

Chesterton on Science and Christmas

A little of Mr. G. K. Chesterton for you today. It may help you understand the punchline to know that he grew rather rotund as he aged.

I like how he, in that very British way, jibes the scientists for supposedly knowing more about what he was doing and why he did it than he did. He was simply looking for his lost coin, rescuing a cat, and celebrating Christmas.

"THERE is one very vile habit that the pedants have, and that is explaining to a man why he does a thing when the man himself can explain quite well — and quite differently.  If I go down on all-fours to find sixpence, it annoys me to be told by a passing biologist that I am really doing it because my remote ancestors were quadrupeds.  I concede that he knows all about biology, or even a great deal about my ancestors; but I know he is wrong, because he does not know about the sixpence.  If I climb a tree after a stray cat, I am unconvinced when a stray anthropologist tells me that I am doing it because I am essentially arboreal and barbaric.  I happen to know why I am doing it; and I know it is because I am amiable and somewhat over-civilised.  Scientists will talk to a man on general guess-work about things that they know no more about than about his pocket-money or his pet cat.  Religion is one of them, and all the festivals and formalities that are rooted in religion.  Thus a man will tell me that in keeping Christmas I am not keeping a Christmas feast, but a pagan feast.  This is exactly as if he told me that I was not feeling furiously angry, but only a little sad.  I know how I am feeling all right; and why I am feeling it.  I know this in the case of cats, sixpences, anger, and Christmas Day.  When a learned man tells me that on the 25th of December I am really astronomically worshipping the sun, I answer that I am not.  I am practicing a particular personal religion, the pleasures of which (right or wrong) are not in the least astronomical.  If he says that the cult of Christianity and the cult of Apollo are the same, I answer that they are utterly different; and I ought to know for I have held both of them.  I believed in Apollo when I was quite little; and I believe in Christmas now that I am very, very big.

~Illustrated London News, Jan. 1, 1910.

Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Wanted: Listeners

Bill Newman was a fella who used to come into the Shop a lot. He was a plumber and a gregarious sort. Mr. Newman liked to talk. Perhaps the best word to describe him was raconteur, a teller of fanciful stories. 

Now, me Grandpa Joe liked to talk too. I remember many days where Mr. Newman would come in and Joe would stop his work to visit. And, no doubt, swap tales with his cohort.

One day they were off to the side talking and things became animated. Not because they were mad or upset with one another, no. It was due to the fact they were each so wanting to tell their stories that they were constantly interrupting one another, making it hard for either to finish what they was sayin.

Finally Bill Newman, who was about a head taller than Joe, grabbed me Grandpa by his lapels and lifted him off the floor just enough that Grandpa's toes were all that was left touching the ground. He pulled Joe's face in close to his own. "Joe! Joe! Joe! We got a problem here!"

"What's that?" me Grandpa asked, actually laughing already at his predicament.

"We're both talkers! We gotta find us a couple'a listeners!"

Maybe you had to be there, but it was funny watching Joe being held by the lapels like that, and him just laughing along with it.

Monday, December 20, 2021

He Wouldn't Approve

Me Mom and I have developed a few running jokes during our Sunday rides. One of them involves me brother Phil, who's her primary caregiver.

At least once over the course of a trip Mom will spot a party store and ask, "Should we get our liquor?"

"No," I'll answer, "Phil wouldn't approve."

Yesterday while caught at a traffic light, she saw a tattoo parlor. "Park over there," she commanded, a twinkle in her eye. "I want to get me a tattoo."

"Oh, no," I replied, rather overdramatically,  "Phil really wouldn't approve of that!"

We may have found our newest running joke.

Sunday, December 19, 2021

Old Style Christmas Candy

Time, it changes a man. It surely does.

When I was a boy, you knew it was nearing Christmas when me Grandma Cosgriff brought out the Christmas candy. For the holidays, there would always be a bowl of these odd hard candies on the dining room table. There was ribbon candy, and these odd little triangular things in striped colors, and little round, rock hard buttons with color on the edges and images on the faces, flowers or fruit or pictures of Santa even. Some even had what was soft, apparently fruit fillings.

I never cared for those candies. They weren't terrible, and certainly not inedible. Yet they didn't exactly entice you like candy should. You would roll them around in your mouth and suck on them until they, well, I won't say melted away. They more like wasted away. The tastes weren't anything outstanding at all. I might, might pop one into my mouth the entire Christmas season. I never wanted a second.

Yesterday I found myself in a store searching for anything but that candy. Indeed, I hadn't thought of it in ages. Nonetheless, as my eyes roved over a shelf of holiday delights, I discovered bags of Old Fashion Mix Classic Christmas Candy. They were just like what me Grandma Cosgriff set out on Christmas. And I said, out loud in excitement despite being alone in an almost empty store, "Hey! It's Grandma's Christmas Candy!"

And I bought a package of that candy which I never particularly liked.

It's stupid as hell, but I've almost got tears in my eyes from finding bland old fashion Christmas candy from Christmases long past. I guess sentiment trumps taste somehow.

Saturday, December 18, 2021

The Toilet Bowls

It began yesterday with two. They were the first of forty-two. There were only forty-one, but they, the NCAA, had to, they simply had to, mind you, add another so that all eligible teams could play in one. 

Eligible teams are defined as those with 6-6 records. Current rules also allow 6-7 Hawaii to play another game.

I'm sorry, mediocrity shouldn't pay, and a .500 record is most certainly mediocre. At least half of these bowl games are simply participation trophies. They aren't merited.

It's really that simple.

Friday, December 17, 2021

Seeking the Transcendent

If you only want to be what you already are and to be taught what you already think, there’s no real growth, no authentic dynamism possible. You’re stuck within the limits of  “Me.”

- Robert Royal

Robert Royal is the editor in chief of a website called The Catholic Thing. I found that above quote in an article of his addressing the proposed renovations of the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris. You may read his opinion of that here if you like: Notre Dame Restorations

The words I lifted from his essay are among the most profound I have ever come across. In a nutshell, I think he speaks to what a good, real, and true education should speak to, and by extension it demonstrates where modern education fails miserably (at least, too often). When we stop seeking what is beyond ourselves, when the transcendent is shown the door, what too easily and readily replaces it? The "Now" or as he puts it, the "Me". 

But most people, I believe anyway, don't want simply the "Me". They are looking for the better thing, what C. S. Lewis among others refer to as the numinous, the other than me, that thing which might be called the Divine. We know in our hearts that we lack that transcendence. We visit places such as Notre Dame to actively seek it. It is not in our schools. Indeed, I rather think we've outright banned it in public education. In too many of our private schools, in fact.

At the risk of going from the, ahem, sublime to the ridiculous, I will compare transcendent feeling to our current modes of education based on what I found in, of all things, a book titled Baseball Haiku. Haiku is a form of Japanese poetry, and baseball being popular in Japan the sport has found itself the subject of haiku poets both there and here in North America. 

Stripped to its very basics, haiku is a 17 syllable poem in a 5-7-5, three line pattern. The first line has five syllables, the second has seven, and the third five again. The authors of the book, in explaining haiku, teach that it is much more than a rhyming scheme. Haiku is supposed to be the expression of deep and profound thought in limited words. It is supposed to open a door for the reader to the numinous, based on the poet's solitary, one on one connection with it. It is an attempt to express the nearly inexpressible.

When I was both a student and a teacher I remember giving and being given English class 'lessons' in haiku. Yet we weren't given that background, that essential understanding. In retrospect now I see that the idea of haiku was so dumbed down as to be genuinely insulting to the true point of it. That's because all we were told was, "See here, write whatever you want in this 5-7-5 pattern and look! You're a haiku artist!" The emphasis wasn't placed on haiku; it was placed on the student.

I assure you that my 11th Grade attempts at haiku were pathetic, and with all due respect so too were the offerings of my students when I was teaching. To the greatest degree it was due to one thing: no actual, honest understanding of haiku. Stripped to nothing but its mechanics, haiku is meaningless. As such, talking about haiku in class was meaningless. It did not have meaning because it could not, given such bare and rote instruction. The meaning isn't in the form: it's in the intent of the poet as he does his best to reflect transcendent truth. It's not something you simply 'do' for mere classroom credit. It's not a thin way of experiencing another culture. Haiku is about touching the eternal.

Even my poor explanation doesn't in any way get to the real point of haiku. That's greatly because you can't describe it so succinctly in one blog, just as you can't really understand it in one or two class sessions of high school. You're only playing around in a classroom and in fact not learning anything, about the style of expression, about yourself, about the world around you or the otherworldly. There's no connection made between the here and now and the not here and now, the eternal. The student's mind is not made to see beyond itself, and therefore cannot expand and grow. Our education today isn't about anything quite so mystical, despite our natural longing for it. Teachers are left with the mundane drivel of making you the best you you can be, without any true consideration of what might actually do you the most good. 

When education becomes only about you, well, quite bluntly, you will not turn outward but inward. You will surely have little but your own selfishness and self interest indulged. You will be affirmed merely in your base desires. You won't grow. You will only be, again as Royal puts it, trapped in the "Me". I don't see where that can bode well for our future.

Thursday, December 16, 2021

Ghost of a Pepper

Recently a buddy and I, I'll call him Cloyce just to give him a name, were sitting at the drive thru of a Burger King. The menu board offered something called Ghost Pepper Chicken. "What's that?" Cloyce asked.

"I dunno," I answered, "But I think it's a spicy kind of pepper, which goes on unseen."

"A seasoning which can't be seen!" Cloyce exclaimed. "I think it's a sham. I think they're saying they put a hot new spice on it but it's really nothing."

You know, maybe. Maybe it's the Emperor's New Clothes of chicken nuggets, and you're not smart or worthy if you can't taste it. Ol' Cloyce may be onto something.

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

Blah Blah Right, Blah Blah Wrong

Believe me, I have heard far too many times in my life What gives you the right to call blah blah wrong? Well, the best retort I know to that came from a Dominican priest, Father Jim Murray. He said you throw the question right back at the accuser: What gives you the right to call blah blah right?

He's, ahem, right. If I don't have the right, to the best of my knowledge and understanding, to call something wrong, why do you have the right to call it right? Or even just to assert it doesn't matter or is none of my business? Why can you use your judgement but I can't use mine? 

We're talking about an issue (in this case blah blah) about which I have as much right to an opinion (right or wrong) as you do (right or wrong). You're essentially saying I'm wrong for no reason except that you apparently don't want me to be right.

It's really a form of the ad hominem argument, attacking the speaker instead of the speaker's points. It dodges the question at hand by trying to claim I have no right to express my position. And blah blah is, I assure you, a critical question.



Tuesday, December 14, 2021

Sorry, But There Are Stupid Questions

Here's another log on the fire for you: I give thee another useless phrase, to go with the useless words I've spoken of in this very blog. It is: 'There are no stupid questions'.

To cut straight to the chase, there are indeed stupid questions. To be a bit silly about it, if someone asks, 'Why is the sky blue?" when we're talking about George Washington's Farewell Address, they've asked a stupid question. More practically, when an answer is obvious yet the question is put forth anyway, it's a stupid question. Quite a few of us I suspect have teased friends when they produced that sort of query, the one which begs for the 'Well, duh' response. I know I have been on both sides of that, er, question.

Then too, we've all, most of us, anyway, seen courtroom dramas where one attorney directs a question at whoever is on the stand only to have the opposing lawyer yell something like, "Objection! Irrelevant!", or "Objection! Leading the witness!" at which point the judge will either sustain the objection or overrule it. What is the judge in such instances doing? Essentially this: determining whether the question is stupid or not.

Oh, it could be worse than stupid. It could be evil. But as evil is a form of stupidity I'll take it upon myself to overrule that objection.

Maybe a question has no bearing on the issue at hand. Maybe it's a subterfuge, an attempt to distract or divert attention from what's actually being discussed. Maybe the asker simply doesn't know better. In those last cases we might have to tolerate his question for reasons of charity or decorum. But the question itself is still stupid.

There you have it. Put 'There are no stupid questions' on the fire with 'You can't judge a book by its cover' or phrases such as being for peace or education or freedom. When not in proper context to the issue at hand, a question can be stupid. That's simply it.

Monday, December 13, 2021

Mom Approves

I took me Mom out a little before Noon yesterday. Once we were in my new old van and pulling away from the curb she said, "Now, I'm with you. We can go wherever you want and do whatever you want."

With an invitation like that, I decided to be mischievous. "Cool. I figure we can find a bar, drink beer, and watch football all afternoon."

Silence.

Silence. 

Just a bit more silence.

Finally Mom responded, "Okay, maybe I don't want to do whatever you want to do."

"All right," I replied, smiling. "How about we go to Ollie's Discount Store and do some shopping, and then find a McDonald's and have cheeseburgers for lunch?"

With a bright smile of her own and a nod of approval Mom said, "That sounds just fine."

So that is what we did.


Sunday, December 12, 2021

Bait Snake

As most of you likely know by now, I sell and repair drain snakes. They are the steel cable machines used to open various drains. 

We have a shop, colloquially called the Shop or the Old Barn, where we store new units and the ones left for repair. The Shop (or the Old Barn, if you prefer) is well secure. We have four locks on the door, an alarm on the building, and we even run heavy chains with locks through the machines we have on hand inside, all just to make things as theft proof as possible.

A few weeks ago I bought out the remains of an old plumbing store. There wasn't much, but there were some cables I could use or resell. And I bought an old drain cleaning machine which wasn't worth much. In fact, the company which made it is out of business. But I bought it anyway.

Back at the Shop me brother Phil asked incredulously, "What'd you buy that for? We can't get parts or anything. It's obsolete."

"True," I responded, "But you know how there was that old TV show called Bait Car, where the police rigged a car so that they could catch car thieves?"

"Yeah."

"This will be our bait snake. We'll leave it unlocked and if any thief gets this far into our building in a late night robbery attempt, maybe he'll just grab it and leave the rest alone, seeing them locked."

Yes, we have a Bait Snake. Think I can talk Tru TV into a new reality show?

Saturday, December 11, 2021

It's Not a Miracle

Some people expect miracles. Now, I believe in miracles. Fervently, in fact. There is no doubt in my mind that I have had miracles happen for me and for others. But I make no claim that those miracles are or were in any way, shape, or form brought on by me. Indeed, I am quite certain that I had absolutely nothing to do with them. Still, there are folks who apparently expect the miraculous from me.

A plumber brought his drain cleaning machine into my shop at the beginning of the week. It didn't run. I explained that I couldn't look at it immediately as I was too busy. "Could I get it by Friday?" he begged. I said I'd see what I could do.

Thursday arrives, and I set his machine up on my work bench to look it over. The clutch would not turn; on that particular unit, you ought to be able to spin the clutch by hand with ease even when connected to the motor. That not happening, I removed the clutch, which spun freely in my hands. So I tried turning the armature of the motor where it stuck out to engage the clutch. It was so solidly tight that it wouldn't move. As with the clutch on a normal machine, you ought to be able to turn the armature by hand on that style of electric motor.

This all meant that I needed to look inside the motor. I removed the back plate: it was immediately obvious that the unit had been in standing water for quite some time. There was all sorts of greenish corrosion on the copper windings, and the water had caused the armature to weld itself to those windings. The man had no option but to replace the machine.

So I call him. "What's the good news for me, Cosgriff?"

"They ain't none, sorry. You have to replace the machine. You didn't tell me it had been underwater; it would have saved us both some trouble."

"No, no, no, it wasn't the water long, Cosgriff," he insisted. "Remember all that flooding a few months ago? It was only under water for a couple of days. I got it out real quick." Somehow, in this case anyways, I don't believe that the phrases 'couple of days' and 'real quick' quite gel. But he continued, "So it wasn't the water. And I cleaned all the slime. They was a whole lotta sludge come out of it too."

"Friend," I responded, my free hand, the one not holding my cell phone, rubbing the temple on one side of my head, "What caused the slime and sludge? This thing was obviously in the water a long time."

"So all I can do is replace it, huh?"

"Yes. That is all you can do." Because, I wanted to add but did not, I'm no miracle worker. I surely would not be working on drains snakes if I were.

Friday, December 10, 2021

Well, Water

Me Doctor has preached to me for years (you know how doctors nag) the importance of staying hydrated. That means drinking lots of water. But water is like, well, water (well water; see how I worked that in?). 

Well water is great. I still remember me Grandpaw and Grandmaw Hutchins having a well right by their back porch. It looked exactly like something from an old movie too: round and wooden, with a bucket and pulley to drop down into the water for a nice cold drink. There was even a metal ladle hanging on a hook just under the small roof of the well.

That was maybe the best tasting water I ever drank. And cold! You wouldn't believe you could drink it. But you could, right out of the ground.

Sometimes as a kid I would get a drink simply for the neatness of it, to lower that bucket and withdraw that clear water. It was kind of disappointing when the removed the old well and installed a pump. But so it goes.

Thursday, December 9, 2021

$10.71

Ten Dollars and Seventy One Cents is not a relative term. It stands for exactly that: $10.71. However, the value of it in terms of what it can buy might vary.

Last Thursday I had to make a delivery to Grand Rapids, about a five or five and a half hour round trip from Detroit. I was sure I had taken the complete order.  Yet it turns out I had forgotten a three dollar steel clip.

The customer called me in the late afternoon that Thursday, almost as soon as I was back home. I promised to ship it first thing Friday. I did: for $10.71.

That seems like a lot to send a clip which hardly weighed an ounce. But that's where I began to wax philosophic. I have made mistakes in the past which have cost me far more than $10.71, and I certainly wasn't going to make a round trip to Grand Rapids for Ten Dollars and Seventy One Cents. So it wasn't nearly the most costly mistake of my life, and it bought me five hours of time. I can live with that.

Wednesday, December 8, 2021

This Ukraine Mess

Inflation, an iffy economy, vaccine mandate attempts which are totalitarian (and thrown out by the courts), calls for more IRS agents (who will go after you, not the rich), and now saber rattling over Russia and the Ukraine. War after all is the go-to to a leadership which is failing. It might be just what the doctor ordered to shore up the Biden Presidency and the Democrats' chances in the 2022 midterms. I am galled that some Republican senators appear to support them in that.

Say what you want about Donald Trump, but he had the economy purring and he kept us out of new war (while supporting the troops already in action), the latter (no new wars) unheard of in the last hundred years or so of American History. But we can't have that. We can't have peace and prosperity. 

This Ukraine thing scares me. I see no real US geopolitical reason to get involved. I'm not saying Russia would be right to invade. I'm simply unconvinced it's a situation we should stick our nose in. 

Tuesday, December 7, 2021

The Gaming Generation Gap

Their is a generation gap. It's always existed in one form or another. "You call that Elvis guy a singer? Now Rudy Vallee, that was a singer!" So it's patently false to say it's a recent development. It simply takes different forms.

For myself and my kids, it's in the video games we play. Theirs are all action packed, running around, role playing games with lots of flash and dazzle and sound. Mine are, well, video poker, with nothing at stake except pretend chips earned which have no actual value.

Pacing is everything for all video games. Theirs are, as I've said, running and shooting or racing around in carts as colors and all sorts of images fly by. With online poker, every player gets dealt two cards and then waits patiently for the next deal. Then we take our turns raising, calling, or folding - always patiently - until the next round is done. Then more cards are dealt and more things - patient things, I stress - happen, until someone wins. Absolutely no chance of seizures in video poker, I guarantee you.

Of course, there is action in my games. The background of the poker room changes with the seasons. Currently there's a Christmas train meandering about a simple oval track on a table behind the dealer. It's taking its time, and not difficult at all to spot, such as an enemy hidden behind a boulder would be in the kids' games. So while they're running around defending their turf amidst the flash and brilliance of their games, I sit at mine thinking: "Look! A choo-choo! And you can see the smoke puffing out of the stack on the locomotive!

The generation gap yet exists.

Monday, December 6, 2021

Save The Date

For all of you who are interested, Sunday December 19 at 7:30 on your local PBS station will be this year's free showing of the classic Charlie Brown Christmas special. Even though we have it on DVD and can stream it (though streaming, whatever that is, is still something I can't seem to wrap my head around let alone manage to do efficiently) I still make the effort to watch it on free TV.

Part of it is only the old school guy in me coming out. Many if not most of us remember, and quite fondly, how the TV Guide served as our entertainment schedule way back when. If you missed a special you were out of luck for an entire year as to catching it again. I'm not, or at least don't intend to, argue in any way that this 'streaming' thing is wrong or bad. On the whole it really is good. Still, sentimentality...

So anyway, I'm going to watch Charlie Brown, the good Lord willing and the creek don't rise, on PBS in thirteen days. The childhood vibes come shining through until yet watching a revered show at a scheduled date such as that. Undoubtedly I will watch it again with family on Christmas Day via DVD or stream. But if you want to experience something as it once were, mark December 19 on you calendar.

Sunday, December 5, 2021

Beware of Internet Purchases

You gotta be careful what you order off the internet. 

To help protect my property I ordered attack trees. They didn't work out at all. Their bark was worse than their bite.

Aren't you glad you took a moment out of your life for this?

Saturday, December 4, 2021

The Evil that Men Do

The recent murders at Oxford High School in Michigan were reprehensible, despicable, and, perhaps, totally avoidable. But not avoidable for the reason too many people will leap towards.

The go-to excuse is the availability of guns. Yet while that is an understandable reaction, it is ultimately knee jerk. It fails to address a great many issues, and the first and foremost of those is that there is evil in the world. Take away every powerful, projectile firing object on earth, and you will still have evil. And it will not rest.

This does not mean that we cannot or should not fight it. But notice that we must first acknowledge it, we must admit that evil exists. Without that, all talk of preventing tragedies such as Oxford must be muted. Indeed, without that admission I don't see how we can ever possibly defeat evil.

What are we fighting, if not evil, if we are to usefully work towards avoiding future travesties of justice? You may have noticed in news reports that the parents and the shooter were called into a meeting the same day as the murders, because of alarming ideas expressed by the shooter. Yet he was allowed to stay in school nonetheless, because the school district as a core policy didn't want to deprive him of the academic and social support which formal education, in the mind of modern educators, asserts is paramount. So paramount in fact that questions of evil and evil intent are set aside. So much so that what was taken as a credible threat could not be removed from the building.

They can hardly argue that such an event was unthinkable. It happens too often, and surely was in the minds of the school people or they wouldn't have called the parents in, pulled the student from class, and had that meeting to begin with. Yet despite that acknowledgement, they could not see it within themselves to remove the shooter from the premises. They could not recognize evil, or even the mere potential for evil, preferring instead to leave it to take four lives and seriously injure many more.

We laugh at honor and are shocked to find traitors in our midst, C. S. Lewis wrote. Similarly, when we do not see that evil exists, we will not fight it. It is because we cannot.

Friday, December 3, 2021

Emphatically Refused Service

Among many of the old plumbers and drain cleaners who've come through the old barn there was this one, I'll call him Cloyce just to give him a name, who related the following tale.

Cloyce was in a bar, actually snaking a drain behind the actual bar. A man walked in and sat at that bar. With him were five women, whom Cloyce referred to as the guy's concubines. They each sat at the bar with the fella, so that six barstools in a row were taken. 

The bartender, a grouchy old woman who Cloyce knew as the owner of the place, asked of the man, "Whaddaya have?"

The customer folded his hands and pronounced solemnly, "I would like a Budweiser." Solemnly, mind you, as if actually making a pronouncement.

The bartender reached into the cooler, grabbed a beer, and popped the top. It was then the man added, "...and six glasses."

Cloyce said the old woman bar owner exploded. "Get outta here! I ain't selling you one beer and having to wash six glasses! Get out! Go away!" He raised an eyebrow, huffily, Cloyce said, yet the entourage left quietly.

The woman turned to Cloyce. "You wanna free beer as a tip? I'd rather give it to you than sell it to him."

Cloyce finished the job, sipping on his beer tip. All the while, he said, the bar owner crabbing about one beer with six glasses. 


Thursday, December 2, 2021

Tis the Season

Now that we are beyond Thanksgiving, let's welcome Christmas.

Of all the trappings of the Holiday season, what I like most is simply listening to carols. My favorite is probably (this is one those things which changes occasionally, depending on mood) 'Hark the Herald Angels Sing'. That's greatly sentimental because the Peanuts gang sings it at the end of their marvelous Christmas special, but it's still a great song.

As we all know there's tons of celebrity Christmas songs out there, and most of them are at least ok. I just heard for example Paul McCartney's 'Wonderful Christmas Time'. It's simple and sentimental, but infectious.

The Little Drummer Boy is classic, and let me tell you that of all people Bob Seger's cover is fantastic. He really nails the song. That's one that's on my list of maybe favorite. It's that good. And Bing Crosby and David Bowie's is right up there too. Talk about cross-generational; I don't know who's idea that was but it really works.

A list such as mine can't be complete without Silent Night. It's a carol which succinctly expresses what Christmas is all about.

I might ruminate more on this as Christmas grows nearer. But, for now, it's a good start.

Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Young Marty Schools Old Marty

Sweet gherkins. Sweet, sweet gherkins. You know, those little pickles that are soaked in some kind of brine and come out oh-so-sweet? I have rediscovered them.

As a small child, me Mom used to say that whenever her or me Pops came back from major grocery shopping (and with seven of us rug rats there were few minor grocery trips) and set the bags on the kitchen table, I would climb on a chair and begin unloading. Not to actually help, good Heavens, but in search of the fresh jar of sweet pickles which I knew were coming. When discovered, I stopped helping and waited, patiently, I assure you, for the one of the adults in the room to stop that nonsense of putting things away and open that jar for me.

Young Marty was pretty smart, at least about some things. As I have recently come back into a love of sweet gherkins, he's surely able to teach Old Marty a bit. Although Old Marty can open the jar on his own. 

Quiet Ron.

Tuesday, November 30, 2021

Be Careful Jumping to Conclusions

Chuck Gaidica was a local weatherman in Detroit for years. I always liked him; he seemed sincere and honest about forecasting. One thing I recall him saying in an interview about ten years ago was that after 5 to 7 days, all bets were off about the weather. We simply couldn't know with any certainty what would happen after that. 

That sounds about right to me. Generally, the forecasters can't go very far into the future, and we've all known times where they were wrong about the next 24 hours, let alone next week. Even with science, we can't predict the future, especially the far future, with any reliability. And that's one of the main reasons I'm skeptical of the value, and the inherent fear involved, with issues of climate change.

We don't know how much snow we're going to get next Monday but we know Miami will be underwater in the year 2100. Bah and humbug. Yes, we might be able to take decent guesses about the coming days, weeks, or even months. But knowing for sure, with anywhere near complete accuracy? Color me skeptical. Especially considering that so many models, so much 'science' is based on mere human thought and action. It is after all human beings making up the various catastrophic scenarios for our future based on the data they feed into the algorithm they have chosen and developed. Human thought being human thought, that means guesswork will enter in the equation. Bias will too, even if unintentional. I can't help wonder how many scientists (many of whom are directly or indirectly paid by a government somewhere) are actually superimposing their belief on the endeavor. And I haven't even addressed the issue of presumption: they claim that simply because one thing has happened one way it will continue to act in exactly that way into eternity. That's an assertion fraught with peril, particularly when you're asking for trillions of dollars which will keep you, erstwhile scientist, in the driver's seat about my life, and the lives of millions of others, born and yet to be born.

I'm not saying that future climactic catastrophe isn't in the cards. But knowing that nature is resilient and men fallible, I simply don't believe the crisis all that foreboding.

Monday, November 29, 2021

And So It Begins

Winter, I won't say I loathe you.

Okay, I will say I loathe you.

Detroit had somewhere around an inch of snow over this past Saturday night. They, the famous they, although in this case they are weathermen and they are to be particularly despised, are calling for one to three inches of snow tonight. It seems a bit early in the season for measurable snow just yet, but man proposes and God disposes, right?

Winter and I get along all right when she arrives late and leaves early. She appears to have other ideas for Winter 2021-2022. I do not find that amusing.

Sunday, November 28, 2021

Darkness Descends

I woke up this morning with every intention of seizing the day for all it was worth. Anticipating that, I grabbed a favored hoodie and pulled it over my head.

Suddenly it was dark, very dark. I know it was early morning, ahead of the sunrise, but I never expected the darkness to take over so suddenly and completely. The feeling was so overwhelming that I thought something horrible yet astoundingly fast had come over me. Had I left the earthly realm of my bedroom for something else, some new adventure?

Of course, there was a simpler explanation. I had thrown the hoodie on backwards and was then temporarily out of sorts, the deep darkness not affording my eyes any reference points so that they might make sense of the world. I was sure I had checked that I was putting it on correctly too. 

Saturday, November 27, 2021

Pity the Pups

My son and his family, the Ohio Cosgriffs, are up this weekend for Thanksgiving. They brought their dogs along with them, and that's cool. Gaspode and Riley are quite welcome here at this one branch of the Michigan Cosgriffs.

Naturally enough, the animals pay more attention to my son, daughter-in-law, and granddaughter than to me, at least when the aforementioned folks are nearby. Yet they have learned to begrudgingly live with the lesser evil if their more direct adoptors are not at hand.

Yesterday the Ohioans went shopping, leaving the pups home with me. The pets spent the appropriate amount of time pining for their masters, whining a bit and routinely marching between the living room window and the closed dining room door where they had witnessed the departure of their Ohio family.

But they eventually gave that up and, to my surprise, began paying attention to me. I was working at the desktop computer, doing real work and not playing video poker at all, mind you, occasionally arising for a cup of coffee or to make myself a turkey sandwich or whatever. Quickly enough the dogs would jump off the couch where they had laid, having given up all hope of their favored humans returning, and follow me around. 

I hope it was to show that they loved me and wanted to make sure I didn't leave them either. Yet I suspect it was really only in the hope of getting a treat or two out of pity. 

They did get that. After all, I'm not inhuman, even knowing they would abandon me when the Ohio Cosgriffs returned. Which they promptly did.


Friday, November 26, 2021

Destroying Trust

Teachers sometimes distrust students. Students sometimes distrust teachers. Perhaps that last bit is my fault.

I taught for 26 years. Needless to say, and please forgive my going on and saying it because whenever you preface something Needless to say you have to go ahead and say it anyway (it's a law), I lectured with some regularity. It's a teaching standard. During one lecture, I went and threw my students' trust in me under the bus.

While teaching a section of American history on the labor union movement I was speaking of a few early union leaders. One of whom, Samuel Gompers, was an organizer for the American Federation of Labor, or AFL. Rambling along in talking to the students, who were actually eagerly taking notes that day as I droned on, I said something like, "Then we have Samuel Gompers, the founder of the AFL, the American Football League." The pupils dutifully scribbled that down.

A minute later I paused to explain, "Gompers was not the head of the American Football League. He started the American Federation of Labor."

The sighs and the "Aw mans" were audible and exasperated. I must confess that I was far too proud of myself.

Unfortunately I caused an entire generation of learners to not trust instructors. I'm sorry.

Thursday, November 25, 2021

Thanksgiving 2021

It doesn't have to be perfect. Indeed, it can be quite flawed and still be a good holiday. The food doesn't have to be fit for, well, the Food Network. The house doesn't need to be set for, well again, House Beautiful. I would go so far as to say that if any holiday can past muster if all is simply okay, Thanksgiving is it.

Of course, I mean that in the sense of the trappings (the trappings being the least important part of any holiday). But the point of the day, to remember all the good things which we have and, Lord willing, shall continue to have, that's the idea. Be thankful. Thankful for friends and family. Thankful for the roof over your head. Thankful, yes, for the food and festivity. All those things are little perfects which, left to themselves and seen by themselves, will allow you to have a very good day. 

Happy Thanksgiving everyone.

For those who might like a more serious on somber look at what makes Thanksgiving important, and why we should guard its origins zealously, click here: 400 Years of Thanksgiving

Wednesday, November 24, 2021

History Repeats

Sometimes, in putting these little bits of wit and revelry to, well, not to paper anymore, yet putting it out into the ether just doesn't strike a chord with me, I come across an instance of the old writer's block. I have no idea what to say. When that happens I get cutesy. Sometimes I pull up a webpage and offer a This Day In History column. Sometimes I simply reprint an old missive or reword an old story. I'm sure you folks have noticed that.

Today I thought I would try something different. I though to meself, Self, why don't you look back to exactly one year ago, to November 24, 2020, and republish that. Do it just for kicks: hey y'all, look what I writed on this day last year. So I scrolled back through my records, and, well whaddaya know?

I didn't write anything new last November 24. My entries leapt from November 23 to November 25. 

It's true. History repeats itself. Sort of, in this case.

Tuesday, November 23, 2021

Practical Poison

I'm not sure how I got on their radar, but my Facebook feed will occasionally offer me posts from a group called Science and Atheism. They tend to post short videos defending atheism and knocking religion. Where exactly science comes into this is beyond me, seeing as science and religion are quite compatible. But that's a question for another time.

Occasionally I will take a moment and watch their short videos. You really never know what you might learn, and you should know your enemy, right? This particular one asserted that believers invented God as an explanation for things. To be fair, that's a plausible philosophic argument. I don't agree with it, as it strikes me as hollow: it dismisses any talk of God without actually considering any of the arguments that He exists. But that too is for another time. 

My point today is this: don't the folks who preach to us (and it is a form of preaching as it tends to take on a kind of religious quality) that we must follow science urge us to do so because we need answers to our questions? Don't they assert (rather strongly) that if we would all just become scientists we would eventually have all the answers? 

I will set aside for now the idea that science can't have all the answers, for science is ultimately very rote and therefore a comparatively low form of knowledge. Science can tell us that injecting a body with poison will kill it...but it does not, it cannot, answer the question of whether we ought to inject a body with poison. This morning I simply want to point out that such scientists as the one I gave two minutes of my life to this morning are speaking with a bit of a forked tongue. Don't go to religion to find explanations, come to us, they say. Come to Science. Left to itself, that's really nothing but saying, 'Don't do things his way, do them my way' and all shall be well. 

I will deign to say, that hardly strikes me as scientific.

Monday, November 22, 2021

Down by the Riverfront

"How far away are we from the river?" Mom demanded as a traffic light caught us out in Farmington. It's a suburb of Detroit.

"The river?" I responded. "The Detroit River?"

"Yes!"

I pondered the question briefly. "I dunno, 12, 15 miles maybe."

Pointing towards a street corner Mom demanded, "How can they get away with that then?" She was indicating a party store named Riverfront Liquor. 

That became the mantra the rest of our drive yesterday. "How do they get away calling it Riverfront out here?"

I gotta admit, it has me wondering too.

Sunday, November 21, 2021

Trust, but Verify

President Ronald Reagan, among his many famous quips, once said about why oversight was needed with treaties, "Trust, but verify." You can trust your treaty partners well enough while still independently making sure everything's on the level.

I think of that every Saturday. I typically take me Mom to the 4 o'clock Mass at our Church. Me brother Phil, who oversees her finances (and is, I assure you, the model of trustworthy) gives me her donation envelope for the usual collection. 

When the time for collection comes around, I take the envelopes, hers and mine, from my pocket and give hers to her, so that she can place it in the basket and get the sense of fulfillment in helping the Church. But she always, always takes it from me and opens it immediately, to see that the money is there. She does this without fail, even to the point occasionally of taking the bill out, checking it over, and placing it back in the envelope.

I find it funny, in a cutesy way. She trusts Phil with everything and is not comfortable without his approval of things. But she has to check that envelope. 

Trust but verify. I don't mean that to reflect poorly towards anyone. Indeed, I actually find it rather endearing.

Saturday, November 20, 2021

The Verdict is in

I agree with the Rittenhouse verdict. But we should be careful not to make it into more than what it is, from either side of the aisle. 

Despite all the peripheral issues which may or may not have any actual bearing on the matter, the fact is that justice is individual. If Kyle Rittenhouse acted in self defense, and the jury seemed to think so and they, after all, are the cornerstone of American jurisprudence, then that is the bottom line. We ought to accept it and move on.

We can argue whether he used good judgement in going to Kenosha to begin with but that cannot be a factor in the legal issues over what happened when he arrived. If poor judgment were illegal there wouldn't be enough innocents to guard the guilty, and we have the right to freedom of movement in these United States. Rittenhouse may have put himself in a bad position. But that doesn't take away his right to self defense. 

Grand and broad theories can rarely be drawn from single incidents. Let's not do it here.

Friday, November 19, 2021

Airing Up Tires

Awhile back me brother Phil was out and about. While stopped somewhere, he noticed that he had a low tire. Fortunately he was near a gas station which had a working air compressor.

Unfortunately it was $1.50 for air, and he didn't have enough quarters. He went into the gas station for more change. In doing so, he remarked to the attendant, "I remember when it was only 50 cents for air."

Without hardly cracking a smile the attendant replied, "Inflation."

Hey, don't blame that one on me, readers.

Thursday, November 18, 2021

Starved by Loyalty

As a bit of a follow up to Yesterday's blog where I spoke of people trying to pull the wool over our eyes, there's another category of customer who makes me equally incredulous. That's the one who brings me 'all his business'.

It's gone on for as long as I can remember, and is as inane as the fella who 'always' comes to us first. Just don't even go there. It's not gonna convince anyone.

Last Friday a man came in and bought a couple cutters. I appreciate that, as I do all sales. But he had to take the time to tell me that "I bring you all my business. I been doing it for 40 years."

Other than knowing his name was Kevin (because he told me) I have no idea who he was. Neither did me brother Phil. And he clearly knew who and where we were, as he found us without a phone call. But Kevin and his daddy and granddaddy before him brought us all their business, we were assured. I even asked the names of those immediate ancestors, and though I played nice and pretended to recognize them, I did not.

I'd starve with that kind of loyalty, I tell you what.

Wednesday, November 17, 2021

Always Our First Choice

You know, if you're trying to pull the wool over someone's eyes, you really need to watch what you say.

A common refrain which we've heard for years is that "You're always the first guys I come to see." Whatever. I know it isn't necessarily true (though I trust that we are the first choice for many) and I'm okay with that. I understand business and common sense. If a fella's working two blocks from a plumbing supply and eight miles from me I don't hold it against him to buy from the closer store. I would too.

But as my friend Jen Psaki says, let's walk this back to my first point. It is incredible how many times someone has came into the old barn and asked for a part we didn't happen to have. "That's okay, Cosgriff, you're my man. You're the first guy I come to."

I can still hear me Pops, being the decent man he was, not wanting to hold a customer off from doing a job and offering, "You could call Cloyce's Plumbing Supply if you're stuck."

"Nah, we already tried them, Cosgriff." This response not more than a half a minute after assuring the old man he was always their first option.

In the first place, you don't need to zoom us at all. We'll be cool. In the second, if you're going to zoom us, at least consider that you're doing exactly that and not immediately contradict your wool pulling.

Tuesday, November 16, 2021

When you really want to pamper your car

I was driving along Michigan Avenue yesterday when I came across a parking lot. But this was no ordinary parking lot. Oh, no. This was a Luxurious Parking lot. The sign said so.

But how luxurious was this lot, exactly? Not so much to my old eyes. It was a large gravel - you heard me, gravel - lot, covering a city block. A luxurious parking lot which was not even paved.

There was, however, a wrought iron gate and wrought iron fencing. Perhaps that allows the owners to call it 'luxurious'.

Monday, November 15, 2021

Mom is Funny

Ah, Sundays with Mom. They really are cool.

One day as we crossed the city limits of a small town, she began going, "Oooooo. Oooooo." Looking at her questioningly,  I realised we had just entered Howell. "We are supposed to howl, right?" she remarked.

Passing a large building, she asked if it was a warehouse. "It's a steel plant," I answered.

"Oh." Pause. "What did it steal?"

"Where are we going today?" she once queried.

"Wal-Mart."

Mom squirreled up her face as though confused. "We need to buy a wall?"

These are what memories are made of, right?


Sunday, November 14, 2021

A Joke by Yours Truly

I went to confession yesterday. Don't worry, this isn't going to be religious. I'm only setting up a joke. You're certainly not hearing my confession any way you slice it.

Okay, maybe it's a set up of two jokes. So now, the second.

Due to COVID protocols, chairs were set up six feet apart in the hallway leading to the confessional. When the confessional door opened, the person in the chair closest to the door left his chair to go in. The rest of then us moved up a seat. 

At one point I remarked out loud, "This is the slowest game of musical chairs I've ever played."

Ba-dum-bum, one in a row. I'm here til Tuesday, folks.

Saturday, November 13, 2021

Cafeteria Scientism

Follow the science, insist our liberal friends. I might be more amenable to that if they were. 

What grates me as much as anything else is the rank hypocrisy involved. We're expected to follow the science when they like it on things such as COVID protocols and climate change. Yet in areas where the science is far greater settled, such as gender identity and human sexual relations, they are noticeably reluctant to follow its conclusions. This is really nothing more than a cafeteria approach to science, accepting it when you like what it teaches (or might be trying to teach, arguably) and ignoring it when you don't.

That simply won't wash. If you expect me to follow the science no matter where it leads or what it says then I have the right to expect that of you. Otherwise, you have virtually a zero chance of convincing me you're right about the questions you deem critical. It is nothing less than selfishly polemical to insist on devotion to a principle which you yourself will not respect.

If I must follow the science on climate issues and COVID then you certainly must follow it on the questions of gender identity and human sexuality. Anything less is intellectual dishonesty. On that ground alone I see no obligation to listen to your arguments on what amount to pop scientism rather than honest fact.

Friday, November 12, 2021

Late Fall?

I realize that I may only be speaking for the Detroit area, but has Fall been late this year? At the least, the trees around here seem to believe so. The red maples are fire red this morning but there appear to still be a lot of leaves on a lot of the trees until yet.

I mean, It's November 12. Aren't we normally beyond the leaf falling season by now? Or should I just shut up and enjoy the late scenery?

Thursday, November 11, 2021

International Calls

I just hung up the phone, and as though hanging up the phone isn't enough of a aging old guy meme, I hung up the phone with a dear old friend in Canada. An international call. Damn, I miss Canada.

He keeps me in the loop, and I love him like a brother. Unfortunately his news was not good.

Still, he thought enough to call. I appreciate that; it's what makes him such a good man. He thought of me.

I think I should leave it at that. He knew of something he thought I should know of, and he extended that knowledge to me. That is good.

And he should know that. He will now.


Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Life Goes On

Yesterday I took a call from the wife of an old customer. Sadly, she was calling to tell me her husband had passed away. I offered my condolences of course, and promised to pray for him.

I had known the man since my teens, so we're talking about the 1970s. It seems so long ago, and yet almost yesterday. The older we get, the more such experiences we have. C'est la vie, I guess.

He was a Shriner, and a couple of times he gave me tickets to take my family to the Shrine Circus. I always appreciated that, especially as a young family man with hardly any disposable income, and appreciate it all the more today.

Godspeed, good sir. Godspeed.


Tuesday, November 9, 2021

We're Dune-ed

“When I am Weaker Than You, I ask you for Freedom because that is according to your principles; when I am Stronger than you, I take away your Freedom Because that is according to my principles.”

The above quote is from the science fiction author Frank Herbert, who penned the classic Dune. It was first brought to my attention by my eldest son. There is much truth to it.

At the risk of kicking up the sand, although as I've said before (in intent if nothing else) I see no reason to allow a chance of controversy to get in the way of my blog, the quote is an on spot indictment of the modern American Progressive. I mean it.

Do you think it not so? Well, consider this: years ago when I would decry the reprehensible or gratuitous content of music or television programs I would be told by my liberal friends something like: 'Just turn off the radio' or 'Change the channel'. If you don't like it, don't listen to or watch it. Why was I told this? So that I would not suppress freedom of expression. Because it would be wrong, obviously, to keep anyone from expressing something in any way or manner they deemed fit for themselves. Didn't I, after all, believe in Freedom? To that challenge I reply with one name.

Dave Chappelle. 

Why, my dear progressive comrades, can he not be afforded the same freedom of expression, the same platform as the depraved scripts and tunes of yesteryear? Why can you not simply change the channel? The only reason I can see is that because your ox is being gored this time around. The obvious conclusion is that the thoughts and actions with which you disagree can be questioned, denigrated, and denied a seat in the arena. Why is this?

Because the modern progressive doesn't really believe in freedom. It is merely a tool for their use when their side isn't carrying the day. Yet when it feels as though it is winning the culture wars, freedom is out the door. It's that simple.

I really think I must read more Dune. It makes me wonder what other gems Mr. Herbert has among his volumes.

Monday, November 8, 2021

She Likes Me

Our Sunday ride yesterday was quite productive. We found a space heater for the Shop at a good price, and had our usual McDonald's cheeseburgers. That took about a half an hour when it didn't appear that it should have but, hey, first world problems, right?

Mom frequently asks if we're in a hurry, yet always adds, "But if you're in a hurry I'm in a hurry," indicating that if we have to rush home we simply have to, and she understands. Fortunately we've only had to rush once, when the heat gauge was creeping up and I felt it better to get home promptly than be stuck somewhere waiting for a tow, well, with Mom in tow.

Right after we left Home Depot with the heater Mom asked, "Do we have to hurry?"

"Nope," I replied, then added, "But we can hurry if you want to hurry."

"No, take your time. I'm enjoying the company."

Now, I ask you, how could I deny her such quality time with her favorite son? We took a nice, long, leisurely ride.

Sunday, November 7, 2021

Keeping Things Standard

Daylight Savings Time ended early this morning. We 'fell back' an hour. I always liked that. Seven PM yesterday was, for all practical purposes, Six PM. It's a good feeling, if only something of a psychological trick. It beats spring forward, that's for sure.

19 states apparently want to keep DST year round. I don't agree. The claim is that it's better to have the light later in the day. But do we really want sunrise held off until after 9 AM during the worst of winter? Not me. It's bad enough that it doesn't rise until a few minutes after eight that time of year as it is.

I would rather keep standard time the whole 12 months.  Admittedly, I like the idea in part because the thought of summer days beginning before 5AM appeals to me. Taking my morning constitutional at 4:30 is something I could get into. It would be neat.

When it's all said and done I suppose it isn't a big deal exactly when the sunlight comes. There ain't enough sun in the depths of winter no matter how you slice it, and plenty in the summer either way. Still, if it were up to me, we'd never go back to DST again.

Saturday, November 6, 2021

Take My Money, Please!

I don't mind asserting that I'm old school on many things; in fact, I revel in it. Still, it can be annoying. Quiet Ron.

Although I pay most things online I do write a couple checks a month. And because I watch my banking online I don't really pay attention to check numbers anymore, nor do I keep a check register. When I write a check, I do my dead level best to keep in mind that a check for such-and-such is out there, and to allow for it when looking in on my account.

Right now there's one check from September which has still not cleared, and it's driving me insane. Again, quiet Ron.

I contacted the people two weeks ago and they assure me they have it and will be cashing it. I have no fear of anything bad happening as they are, I am certain, reputable. But doggone it, they as yet haven't actually put it in their bank.

It's little enough that it won't cause an overdraft unless I badly lose track of things. Yet it's driving me crazy waiting. Will you please, please take my money? is not something I ever thought I'd hear myself say, to anyone under any circumstances. But I will feel much better when the check clears. 


Friday, November 5, 2021

Playing Let's Pretend at the Shop

Me Grandpa Joe had a way about throwing himself into his work. Sometimes he literally threw himself into it. Or among it, between it; I'm not exactly sure how to describe what I'm about to describe.

I remember a day when I was just 16 and he decided I needed to learn how to back up a trailer. That was fair enough so far as it went. As I worked with him delivering welding equipment and we often delivered smaller machines with a two-wheeled trailer, it was a good idea. Yet his teaching methods left a few things to be desired.

Quiet and tact come immediately to mind. I love that old man and I miss him every day, but he truly subscribed to the concept that the louder he was the better you'd remember and the quicker you'd learn. Higher decibels somehow equaled greater understanding.

Yet the loudness of his screaming instructions did not seem to help me initially. Neither did his insistence on visual examples: I cannot tell you how many times he would jump right in between car and trailer as I vainly tried backing the trailer into place, each time yelling, "Pretend you're right here! Right here!" But you're right there Joe! Right where you're telling me to be! And I'm moving a car and a trailer as you leap in and out of that space.

As I recall, me Pops returned from wherever he was at that point and calmly took over. I soon mastered it, and I do mean mastered it. I could back up that old trailer perfectly into a space with four inches of clearance to each side. And I do wonder if maybe, just maybe, Joe's intensity actually helped.

I do know me Pops calm certainly didn't hurt.

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Screwing Up My Schedule

For the last six or seven years I have made it a habit of being in bed by about 6, yes, 6 PM. It works for my schedule: if I need to be up for a business trip (I'm in sales and cover two states and part of a third) I can roll out of bed at two or two-thirty in the morning and have had a full night's sleep. This time of year it's not so bad as it's dark already by my bedtime, but it can feel odd in June when the Sun is still in full shine.

When I don't have work I can use those early morning hours to read or answer email or work on my writing or watch ancient TV shows. Our Miss Brooks was quick with a quip, I've discovered. That being so, the practice has rather turned my world a bit on end.

In the last two weeks I've went out to a couple of movies, one last Tuesday and again last night. That's no big deal for most folks. Yet for me, driving home at 9 or 10 at night felt profoundly weird. There was traffic and everything. It was so unusual for me to be in the evening darkness.

I'm almost never awake let alone out and about at those times of the day anymore. It felt like it used to feel ages ago, when I was then rarely up in the wee hours before that became my standard. The world turned upside down. 

But, hey. They were good movies and worth the change of pace. It's going to take me until Monday to get my timing back in place though.

Wednesday, November 3, 2021

Braving the Long Cold Winter

The Atlanta Braves are the World Series Champions for 2021. I'm glad of that, not the least reason why because I believe it poetic justice. Major League baseball tried to punish Georgia by moving the All Star game to Colorado. Now it must endure the championship parade and accolades of Atlanta getting the last laugh. I don't believe in karma but if I did, I would argue this is it.

Now, along with Hall of Famer Rogers Hornsby, I stare out the window and wait for spring, when baseball returns. Sorry, football, and although I do still pay you some attention, I soured on the NFL (and even the college game) years ago. You're simply too brutal, and far too full of yourselves (among other things, which I will let hang for today). I see some of your obnoxious attitude creeping into baseball and I don't like it. Sports should be sportsmanlike, with sportsmanship rather than ego stroking. People complain about taunting penalties as they are? Hell, they ain't called enough.

So I leave you now with the famous lines of former Baseball Commissioner A. Bartlett Giomatti:

“[Baseball] breaks your heart. It is designed to break your heart. The game begins in the spring, when everything else begins again, and it blossoms in the summer, filling the afternoons and evenings, and then as soon as the chill rains come, it stops and leaves you to face the fall all alone. You count on it, rely on it to buffer the passage of time, to keep the memory of sunshine and high skies alive, and then just when the days are all twilight, when you need it most, it stops.”

Amen to that. 102 days, and counting, until pitchers and catchers report.


Apple-sauce

I haven't made me world famous applesauce in a few years, in part perhaps because it isn't famous except in between me own ears and personal taste buds, and in part as I have been lazy. Still, I made a batch yesterday.

If I may say, it's rather good. 

The cinnamon, it blends well with the sugary taste of golden delicious apples. Nutmeg adds its own distinction. They appreciate one another, as fair tastes should.

Let's allow it to cool, and age. Then, maybe, it will allow a fair judgement. And then, to hell with it.



Tuesday, November 2, 2021

Editing Marty

I write. I like writing. I (generally) like what I write. But enough is enough, even of me and my own creations.

My current project is to get a book in print which has fell out of print because the company who I originally published it through has gone out of business. No, I don't think it was because of my book. But if so, woe to the one who has accepted it for republication.

Let me tell you, though, the editing process can be a chore, especially on a tome which I had considered finished. I myself, after some suggestions the company had made, offered 203 edits following the initial round of review. Some I don't think were my fault: there were issues of spacing in the proof copy they sent to me which were not in the document I send them. Still, 203 changes were far more than I expected. When I read an old copy of it as first published, I didn't find nearly that much wrong. 

Now I have another proof copy to go over which includes those alterations. In reading it I have already found 18 edits which I want to make in the first first 49 pages of a 217 page book. Some have to be made, some are more stylistic. Still, 18 more after the initial 203 seems to me an awful lot, and I still have 158 pages to go.

Then there's the fact that this makes the fifth time in three months I've had to reread my own writing. Even I'm getting sick of me, and I really like the story. The editors tell me it's a good story. But I'll have to go over it one more time after the next batch of edits are made. I'm not particularly looking forward to that.

I sure hope it sells after all this...


Monday, November 1, 2021

Halloween in Review

Halloween 2021 wasn't bad. It was definitely a throwback; we had more kids than last year, although with COVID and all I suppose that was to be expected. But the groups and individuals who came around to us were a good bunch. We tend to lament the same thing as many (if not most) other times and places that 'kids today aren't what they once were'. I don't think they are, as a whole, any better or worse than in most generations, at least in general terms of respect and courtesy.

I think we had around 300, but we didn't count. For me it's more about enjoying the moment, one of the few days a year when the community actually feels like a community. That's a spirit we could stand more of, quite honestly.

I honestly anticipate Halloween more than any other major secular holiday. It's a relatively no frills celebration. Our religious holidays could use a dose of that, methinks.

Ah well. Let's do this again next year, shall we?

Sunday, October 31, 2021

No Weather Tricks I Hope

Halloween lately has seemed lame. Last year of course was COVID, but the weather hasn't been particularly cooperative in ages, as I recall. But the forecast today appears to bode reasonably well here in the D. Sunny, breezy, and a high of around 58. So from my early morning perch, the day holds promise. 

In the meantime, Happy Halloween y'all.

Saturday, October 30, 2021

Shredded Washcloth

Someone that I know bought a spaghetti scrubber. I think it's for washing dishes. It's just like this:

https://www.smallflower.com/products/goodbye-detergent-all-purpose-spaghetti-scrub?variant=37056484245655&gclid=CjwKCAjw2vOLBhBPEiwAjEeK9v_3NSxUHWUU-5RpgUTvP6uRBqFjqdYfM2__r5GO5kqf8yIV09FWtxoCZX4QAvD_BwE

It looks like a shredded washcloth quite frankly, and it appears to have grit a little like sandpaper. And I really don't get it's purpose. Or after all these years, have I finally learned that we have to scrub our spaghetti?

Seems tedious.


Friday, October 29, 2021

The Other Near Detention

I wrote yesterday of how I almost got a detention in high school for something I totally did but totally got away with because, well, my good (at the time) reputation proceeded me.

The only other time I came close to detention was in my freshman year. But doggone it, I was in the right that time.

It was May and we were in Gym class and it was warm, so the instructor took us outside to play softball. I'll call the gym teacher Miss Cloyce just to give her a name, and because, yes, I'm still upset about the injustice 47 years later. I suppose I can hold a grudge.

Be all that as it may, in my first at bat that day I singled. The next batter hit a ground ball to the kid playing first. Now, in baseball, when you're on first and there's a ground ball you have to run for second base. It's called being 'forced': because it's a grounder the batter has the primary right to first base. This means a runner already occupying that base is forced to vacate. Make sense? If not, take my word for it. But you can look it up if you like.

Now in this case, the first baseman fielded the ball, took three steps, and touched the base. That meant the batter was out. But since the batter was out, I no longer had to surrender first. I could have returned to it because there was no longer a runner behind me, the batter being out. I was no longer forced. That means that in order for me to be put out I had to be tagged, because I had two safe spots I could choose between. 

After the opposing player touched first, which I obviously saw, I continued towards second anyway. She threw to second. The second baseman caught the ball and touched the base. I slid; he did not tag me. So I was safe, under the rules of the game.

Miss Cloyce called me out because the throw from first beat me (which it did) and the kid touched the bag ahead of me with control of the ball (which is true). But neither address the rules of baserunning.

I took exception. I pleaded my case, arguing to a degree which likely shocked my peers (believe it or not I was a quiet kid at least in ninth grade) that no, I was safe because a tag was required because the force was off. Miss Cloyce said I was wrong. I was not. I insisted upon this point quite vehemently.

I kept it up until she said, "Say one more thing and you get detention." I sputtered and stammered, but went to the bench, muttering.

To be fair, I know you can't argue too harshly with a teacher, so I do admit that Miss Cloyce had to play the detention card, for the sake of discipline and respect. But dammit, I was safe.

Thursday, October 28, 2021

A High School Yarn

Dad really loved this story. When I first told it to him, he laughed in that hearty guffaw of his which I loved to hear. Still hear, in my fond memories. Of course, I didn't tell him the tale until 25 years after the fact, well after the parental statute of limitations on schoolboy mischief had expired.

Back at good old St. Hedwig on Detroit's southwest side, this was in the 1977-1978 school year, there were I think 26 of us Senior boys who had not earned the 1/2 credit of Art required for graduation. Someone in the administration had developed, or perhaps the course already existed for exactly such contingencies, something called Art Appreciation. It was kind of an Art class, though we didn't do much real Art. We read about artists, did reports on styles and types of Art, and made the occasional stab at what might in a stretch be called Art. Those projects were not much if any better than first grade macaroni pictures, but it got us guys off the hook for that precious half credit so we could graduate.

The instructor, who'm I'll call Miss Smith, had a large box full of yarn for use in classes where actual artistic endeavors were attempted. One day, she left the room for whatever purpose, and some yoyo opened the box and began throwing balls of yarn at the rest of the class. What followed was the delightful chaos of less than mature schoolboys hurling yarn at each other, bouncing each skein off one another's heads and laughing like idiots. Fortunately, someone was wise enough to act as lookout. With the cry, "Smith's coming!" someone held the box open and we tossed the yarn back in as quickly as possible. By the time she was back in class we were all back at our seats, apparently doing our work.

This happened another time or two, with the same face saving result. But next time the guy tossing the yarn from the box took the tape off the end of each ball as he distributed them to the class. Miss Smith had taped the ends of the yarn to the skeins to know where the ends were, and of course to keep the yarn in order.

It goes without saying that Senior boys doing mischief cared little for such sensible ideas. We threw the balls of yarn at each other anyway, just having stupid fun, not at all concerned that the yarn was quickly unraveling as each skein flew across the classroom, the strands all weaving into and across themselves. This went on for about five minutes until the lookout yelled, "Smith's coming!"

Everyone immediately froze, all stuck in place either while picking up a ball to throw, eying our next target, in the act of follow through after a delivery, or right before letting one fly. Only our eyes moved, roaming between each other and the massive yarn tangle we had inflicted upon the art room. Then, all of us, as if one thought, began frantically trying to roll up all that yarn; there were dozens of skeins worth strewn about. Very quickly realizing the futility of the exercise, we abandoned our cause, and stupidly jumped to our seats and went back to the pencil drawings we were supposed to be working on.

Miss Smith returned to spy the most magnificent display of yarn carnage imaginable. Lines of color, from pastel to primary, were strewn everywhere and in every hue: over the tops of cabinets, across her desk, even over the shoulders and under the feet of all of us students. I might go so far as to say it was a work of Art itself; you know, maybe we ought to have gotten assignment credit, now that I think about it. But we sat there working as though nothing was out of the ordinary.

"Would someone care to tell me what's going on?" Smith asked.

Can't you see? We're working on our pencil drawings. Practicing shading, just like you taught us.

Giving the silence a few seconds to itself she finally asked, "Is no one going to tell me what happened here?" What's to tell? We're doing our Art. We want to graduate.

Seeing the futility of her situation, she calmly went and called for Sister Principal.

Now, Sister Principal was a old line, strict, authoritarian nun. She had to be, to deal with miscreants such as we senior guys. She entered the room and repeated both of Miss Smith's questions, with no further insight into the situation. She began slowly pacing the room, glaring in turn at every one of us. She intended to make someone crack, like a commandant at an Army camp with errant minions.

You need to know here that I had kept myself pretty clean in high school. No detentions, no mischief, and I had decent enough grades. I was no goody two shoes, no brown nose who would rat anyone out either. I just stayed clean. I got along with everyone so far as I remember, with no real incidents. But I was fully participating in this fiasco. Willingly, I confess.

Sister continued around the room; we kept at our work, even subtly brushing strings of yarn off our sketch pads as we scratched at them. She wasn't going to break; neither would we.

The dismissal bell rang. We all started to put away our stuff and gather our backpacks to leave. Sister sternly announced, "No one is going anywhere until we get to the bottom of this. If no one speaks up, you'll all get two detentions: one for this, and one for being tardy to your next class." We slumped down into our chairs. This was going to take awhile, until Sister decided that the inevitable detentions were her only recourse.

Sister Principal continued her slow tour. She came around the table where I sat with about 7 other guys, giving the deep glare all around, stopping directly behind me. I knew it, I thought. I'm the first to be grilled.

The deafening silence seemed to take forever though it was only mere seconds. Then I actually heard her open her mouth: here it comes. I'm on the spot. Be strong, Marty. Go down with the ship. But she said, "You may go to your next class, Mr. Cosgriff. We all know that you would never participate in such nonsense."

What could I do? I wasn't about to rat the guys out, nor confess my guilt either. I slowly gathered my things, mumbled a quiet, "Thank you, Sister Principal," and went to my next class.

So my official record stayed clean. To be sure, there is a part of me who feels sheepish to this day. But the imp on my other shoulder does smile about it. And Pops thought it was a great story.

Wednesday, October 27, 2021

My Two Cents Worth

Who says you can't teach an old dog new tricks? Why, I've become adept enough that I monitor my banking activity online, thank you very much. I've even learned to get comfortable with and use the ATM in the lobby of my bank. I make deposits and withdrawals all by my lonesome. It's what the bank wants, and you can't fight the onslaught of history, right?

I'll leave that last question alone for now. But technology is not without its issues, and I had one yesterday while banking. The first machine failed to work properly. It wasn't my fault, the bank employees assured me. They'd been having trouble with that particular ATM all day. Moving to the next machine, everything worked fine.

But in checking my bank account online this morning I noticed an unexpected deposit for, I am not making this up, two cents. Yes, two Lincoln coppers. Two entire pennies. The explanation was that it was an interest payment, an apology of sorts, for my trouble with that first ATM. 

So you ain't gotta worry about Marty's two cents no more. It's laying right in the bank. But if you upset me enough I may still give it to you.

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Not Just for Roofing Anymore

Me Grandpa Joe once had this big black Cadillac, I think it was an Eldorado, and it was a monster. A veritable battleship. I mean, that thing was huge. It's passing by would cause a solar eclipse. And like most of Joe's cars, it was, well, unique.

We never did get the brakes working quite right. You learned while driving it to anticipate traffic lights, slowing down blocks away when it looked like the light would go red soon. Me Uncle John known in some quarters as Zeke once suggested we install those big parachutes like they have on drag racers to help the car stop on time because, being big and heavy, it took a lot to stop that vehicle. The engine required so much work that Zeke also quipped that once he saw the car on the street and almost didn't recognize it with the hood down.

But what got me the most about the car was the first time Joe had me changing the oil. Crawling under the belly of the beast to drain the motor, I couldn't help but see that the oil pan had apparently once sprung a leak. The clue? The pan was covered in heavy roofing cement.

I called to me Grandpa, "There's roof cement slathered on the oil pan. Maybe it used to have a leak."

"Does it look like it's leaking now?" he yelled back.

I studied it closely and replied, "No."

"Then we won't worry about it," Joe answered.

A typical Grandpa Joe view of a typical Grandpa Joe car. Damn, I miss that old man.

Monday, October 25, 2021

What's to Understand?

You know, you don't have the talk the same talk to come to an understanding. Really. 

A older Polish fella named Stanley was a drain cleaner who used to come by the old barn to get his snakes and machines repaired. I liked Stanley. He was cool guy.

He was from the mountains of western Pennsylvania, where his father worked in the coal mines. Stanley liked to tell the story of his father and his father's best friend, an Irishman who lived nearby. Both Stanley's dad and the Irishman were from their respective old countries. Stanley said that his father's heavily accented English and the friend's brogue made it hard enough to understand either of them in routine conversation. When they were drinking, they each lapsed into their native tongues.

Stanley explained that the two buddies would sit on the porch of Stanley's family home and drink on Saturday nights, recovering from the work week. As the drink took effect, they fell into Polish and Gaelic (quiet, Ron) respectively. The fascinating thing was, despite speaking different languages, they were always in total agreement. Stanley said his dad would rattle off something in Polish and the Irishman would nod approvingly. He'd then give his opinion on the matter, whatever the matter may be, in prosaic Irish. And Stanley's dad would reply in the Polish equivalent of, yeah, yeah, shaking his head in agreement. All this even though the one didn't know a peep of Gaelic and the other not a syllable of Polish.

It does make you wonder what might actually have been said. But it was a release valve for them any way you slice it.

Sunday, October 24, 2021

How would I know?

Charlie Rich was a 1970s country singer of some note. I rather liked him, myself. His two biggest hits as I recall were Behind Closed Doors and The Most Beautiful Girl.

Now, I understand artistic license. Sometimes you have to write or sing things a certain way simply because the words fit, or you are going with the flow of the tune. But one line of Most Beautiful Girl which always jumped out at me was, Did you happen to see the most beautiful girl, that walked out on me?

Well, I don't know, Charlie. How many girls have walked out on you? I mean, most beautiful is comparative, right? What are we comparing this particular girl's looks to: women in general or the women who've walked out on you? I just can't answer the question without knowing that.

Have a great day everyone.

Saturday, October 23, 2021

Get Real

Years ago we took our then young sons to see the then new Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movie. A friend asked what I thought of it. "Well, it was all right for a kids movie, but there was some mild swearing I don't think was necessary."

"Don't be such a Dad!" he chided me. "They were only going for reality."

What, again, was the movie all about?

Teenage. Mutant. Ninja. Turtles. 

I don't think reality was high on the menu.

Friday, October 22, 2021

Laying the money down

They're always in a hurry until it's time to lay the money down. That's an old saw of me Pops, and it holds true as much now as whenever he first said it. Yet it still amazes me that it happens, that people will hold off on paying for things which, theoretically at least, pay for their living, their food and trucks and houses and such.

For larger projects and orders, except from well established customers, we get significant down payments. Even then, with as much as half down, we'll have folks leave things hanging for weeks, or even months. Yet there are repairs which we simply do and trust that they guy will return. Generally that involves things which we can easily sell to someone else if it comes down to it.

A good example is repaired sectional drain cables. If a fella doesn't return after awhile we just sell them. I won't bore you with the details, but we can make it up to the original customer if it comes down to it. Why, I would even honor our oldest obligation on that count.

We have a man, whom I won't name even though you wouldn't know him and he won't see this, whom we owe six cables from 1983. We called him several times back then until the old man decided it was no longer worth his trouble. Yet if he comes in today I will give him the cables he's owed. I will even sell them to him at the price we charged back then, nine bucks a cable (they're $35 each now) just for the novelty of it. And out of an odd respect for the chutzpah it would take to try and claim them 38 years later.

Hey, it may even make good PR, right?

Thursday, October 21, 2021

It won't be on my account

I'm not letting myself be played this time around. Oh, no, no, no.

Thanks to reading an article online brought to me by the Internet and our trusted mainstream media, I won't be caught unawares by shortages. It seems that among anticipated potential shortages in the coming months, toilet paper and coffee are high on the list. Well, I for one won't be driven to madness over it.

In recent days I've bought what's supposedly the equivalent of 114 rolls of toilet paper (why isn't it bathroom tissue anymore, which sounds so much better?) and will likely buy more in the coming days. And coffee, oh, you other hoarders won't be getting a leg up on me. Thanks to Ollie's Bargain Outlet and Cedarville Foods I have six large cans of Chase and Sanborn, my coffee of choice. I figure I'm set for about a year and a half on java.

There are other things which maybe, might be subject to unavailability. Carbonated drinks are among them. But the bottom line is this. I won't be caught wanting when the shortages which may be, could be coming, according to our wise and knowledgeable experts and their media friends. I'm all set on coffee and, uh, bathroom tissue. And I am also satisfied knowing that I won't be part of the coming problem either. I figure I can gouge you-all for about twenty bucks a pound on the coffee alone.


Wednesday, October 20, 2021

A needed change

I love baseball, especially October baseball, especially October baseball when I don't have a stake in it. If there's anything positive about my beloved Detroit Tigers not making the postseason, it's that I can watch the games for their own sake rather than chew my fingernails to the bone fretting over the performance of the Detroit Nine. 

Like most baseball purists (and I certainly am one of those) I don't like changes to the game and I worship tradition. There are rumors swirling around that the National League will adopt the designated hitter next year, a move I will offer a giant raspberry. Pitchers should bat. Period. It's in the natural order of things; anything else is barbarity.

Now, where was I? Oh yes: as a purist I don't care for the various innovations which have crept into the grand old game. But after last night's ALCS match between Boston and Houston, I have to come down solidly in favor of using the existing technology and going to the robot strike zone.

It's time. Human umpires are making too many glaring mistakes calling balls and strikes and that element simply has to be removed from the game. Human judgment affected last night's game far too profoundly. J. D. Martinez was called out on strikes in the fourth inning on a pitch clearly out of the strike zone, while the Red Sox lost what should have been an inning ending strikeout in the top of the ninth, after which the Astros scored seven and put the game away.

Yes, yes, yes, the Red Sox still had other chances. They didn't do well with runners in scoring position. Still, how different does that fourth inning become if Martinez gets first base and the Sox have two runners on with one out? How different is the outcome of the game if Boston gets the strikeout they should have gotten to end the Houston ninth? Conjecture, true, so that we never can know for certain.

Still, fairness demands we make things as right as possible. One way to do that is with robot strike zones.

Tuesday, October 19, 2021

The Incredulous Curmudgeon

I can be a curmudgeon. I can be impatient. I can be astounded, outraged, and incredulous all at once too. Would you like to know, as my old friend Cloyce might say, "How could that be?"

It could be like this: I walked into a gas station the other day to pre-pay for my gas. I am increasingly using a debit card at the pump to avoid precisely the type of situations which I then encountered.

The woman in front of me was buying $100 worth of scratch off lottery tickets. That's frustrating when waiting in line for something simple - give me thirty bucks on pump four please - but it's how things are. I can accept that. And at least the woman asked for five $20 tickets; she could have wanted 100 one dollar scratch-offs, right? So it should still have been a quick transaction. 

Note the operative term, should have been. The attendant slid the tickets through the slot below the glass, and was given a debit or charge card for the purchase. But then - I still can't really believe it, and perhaps you can't fathom it - she slides them back along with a quarter and tells the man, "Scratch them off for me." She doesn't ask; she orders it. 

I think all three of us in line behind her openly groaned. The look she gave us in return in was, basically, um, ah, blank you. I was here first.

The attendant, equally astounded, took a moment to react, and I don't blame him. How exactly do you react when faced with an inherently bizarre demand? He finally shoved them back out at the purchaser and said, "You scratch them."

She grabbed her tickets and stormed out, all the time muttering about how rude people are. One guy behind me clapped as she left.

I should have joined him. But what was in it's turn funny was the attendant, as I paid him, held up the woman's coin and remarked with a grin, "And she forgot her quarter!"

Monday, October 18, 2021

Mom's Marathon Redux

The Detroit Marathon has come and gone (hah!) and I have to say the day was grand, a cold, early start notwithstanding. Mom got up in plenty of time for it, insisting all day Saturday that she wanted to see it. 

She was quite pleased. Dressed up for winter and even draping a quilt around her, she sat for the the entire 45 minutes it took for the runners and walkers and bicyclists to pass. "This is nice!" she said constantly, waving regularly at the participants.

It especially pleased her to hear people shout compliments about the Halloween decorations spread about the lawn. "I'm glad they like Sammy's yard," she remarked several times. Moms appreciate when their kids are appreciated.

On that note, one woman took a minute to say to Sam directly, "You have a very sincere pumpkin patch." He always has pumpkins all over the place. And Charlie Brown fans surely appreciate the compliment.

Saturday, October 16, 2021

Mom's Marathon

"What are they putting out?" me Mom demanded of me brother Phil, watching a crew shoving signs into the curb in front of her house.

"The Detroit Free Press Marathon is Sunday. It's coming down our street," he explained as they sat on the porch. So no, it's not 'her' marathon, and obviously she's not participating directly. Still, it's an event, and events are cool, right?

Mom is surprisingly excited about it. I doubt she ever considered before exactly what a marathon is, other than knowing it's a long race. But now, she's looking forward to sitting on her porch tomorrow morning, a free front row seat to the annual Detroit Marathon. "I bet they'll like the Halloween decoration Sammy's (another of me brothers) put out," she opined. 

Sports never interested Mom, but the idea of watching the race from the catbird's seat really appeals to her. She's excited like a child. I hope the weather's great, and am myself happy for her. Not to get all sappy about it, but especially these last few years, I'm really happy when she's really happy.

Ella's right at mile three, runners. She'll be waving at ya.