Guess what day it is! Guess what day it is!!!
Well, yeah, but it's also New Year's Eve.
How is the old year ending and the new one starting? With a head cold. Yup, I will literally (and I mean that word literally) blow the snot right out of the New Year.
Of course I'm feeling sickly. It's my break from work. Why use sick days for sick days when I can use vacation days for sick days, right?
I figure it's the stress. Stress keeps me going, keeps me wound up. Now that the stress of posting grades at school is over, and now that the stress of Christmas is over, I have nothing to do but let down my guard.
The very moment I do?
Bingo!
Head cold.
So, guess what day it is! Guess, guess, guess, guess!
It's the day I relax and take it easy so maybe I can sneak out for a little while tonight while my head cold isn't paying proper attention, that's what day it is.
Happy New Year's Eve, folks. Stay safe. I'll see ya next year.
Tales of Trials and Tribulations ... and Other Disasters
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Tuesday, December 30, 2014
TRASH DAY
(Not my pile ... but close) |
I am cleaning out the basement, a daunting task at any time, but my trash day is Tuesday. This means I have to have some of this task wrapped up and out to the curb before the truck rolls by. This sounds like a simple task, but I know how this goes. Just when I think it's all under control, I am struck by the near-deadly brainstorm that whispers ...
One more box.
I uncover crayons and Halloween costumes and baby clothes and tools and camping gear and candles. I weed out some of this stuff, along with old CD holders, used-up floor mats, a broken tray-desk, some black-matte tea cups that feel creepy to touch, and some unfixable hand-held electronics.
I finally ignore the lure of one more box and step away, tying off the several bags of trash and hauling it all to the street. I can work on it later. After all, it will be seven more days before the next trash truck comes by. I have some time. I have a whole week before it's trash day again.
If you've seen my basement, you'll know I need every moment between now and then to make some progress. And if you don't hear from me before then, come untangle me from the giant cobwebs ... and that one ... more ... box.
Monday, December 29, 2014
AGAIN ... AND AGAIN ... AND AGAIN
Time to get
organized. Again.
Time to try and lose
weight. Again.
Time to be a better
person. Again.
Time to clean out the
basement. Again.
Time to make
resolutions. Again.
I know why the New Year’s ball
falls in Times Square:
It’s times like these,
Times when we try to
square our lives away,
That lead to bitter self-disappointment,
That lead to searing
self-flagellation,
That lead to wrenching
self-doubt.
This is the time of year
when we allow ourselves
One shining moment
One fleeting instance
Of hope for the future:
Hope that we won’t be
sitting here
At the same time next year
Kicking ourselves in
Our proverbial asses for
The Failures We Have
Become.
Square times in Times
Square.
It is almost the New Year –
Go forth and be
disappointed. Again.
Sunday, December 28, 2014
SATURDAY TASTINGS
There are three liquor
stores close to my house that host Friday night beer tastings (sometimes) and
Saturday afternoon wine tastings (always).
I have a route mapped out, as I have mentioned before in this blog, and
I time it so that I can hit all three tastings within about 75-90 minutes,
including travel time.
I think I am unique in my
strategy, but today that bubble bursts.
This week I can only find
two of the three usual tastings listed in my email “in” box, so I plan for just
the two stops today.
I arrive at destination #1
to find a six-bottle (perhaps it’s more) table set up with all kinds of
champagne, with the coup de gras at the end:
an $85 bottle of champagne (on sale at the store for $63). It truly is great champagne, but I don’t
think my palette will ever be able to discern an $8 from a $15 bottle from a
$20 bottle to a $63 bottle.
I buy the $8 champagne (which
is pretty darn tasty) and head to the next tasting.
The second place has a
four-bottle table set up. A couple has
just arrived, so we start the tasting together.
A few more people come by – a girl wearing a college sweatshirt, and a
couple that looks vaguely familiar, so I’ll call them That Guy (and wife). Here we
start with the more expensive and work down the cheaper ones. Nothing really
lights my fancy.
Afterward, I roam the
aisles comparing prices on the champagnes from one store to the other. This is where I run into That Guy and his wife again.
ME: Are you looking for an inexpensive bottle of
champagne?
THAT GUY: Yeah, nothing too ridiculous.
ME: (pointing to a bottle that was about $16 at
the other store and $18 here) This stuff
is pretty good, and it’s got a decent price on it. I was just at another tasting and I had it.
THAT GUY: Were you at the wine store in the old village?
ME: Yes … were you?
At this point, three of us
are laughing, me and That Guy and his
wife. We chat for a few moments about
how we are each doing The Unofficial Saturday Circuit. I already bought myself a bottle of champagne
at the last place, so I head to the back for a six pack of Budweiser in bottles
that I can drag out of the massive cooler.
As I’m finishing up my
sale, I call out, “See you next Saturday!”
That Guy laughs. “Sorry,” he says, sounding genuinely
apologetic, “but we’ll be away next weekend.”
“Then, the Saturday after
that,” I reply.
The conversation ends and
all is right with the world again. I
grab my beer, add it to the other brown bag on the floor behind my seat in the
car, and start counting away until next Saturday.
Saturday, December 27, 2014
PLOP PLOP FIZZ FIZZ
I like getting phone calls
from anonymous, unsolicited callers.
No, not those kinds of anonymous callers.
The “unknown number”
people, the telemarketers, the people who won’t stop calling even when I
threaten legal action. (A person
recently won over a million dollars after telemarketers were charged $1,500 per
each unsolicited phone call.)
So, I’ve started a new
tactic.
When I see “unknown
caller,” I answer the phone cheerily. “Why
… HELLOOOOOOOOO!” Then, I put down the
phone receiver and walk away, resuming whatever it was I happened to be doing
before I was interrupted by the unknown moron.
Tonight when I answer the
phone, I am in the middle of mixing up a frozen margarita. I’ve started cleaning the basement, and I
earned a refreshing reward for all of my hard work battling cobwebs and dirt
and dryer lint and dust bunnies the size of, well, bunnies. So, I answer the phone, put the receiver down
on the kitchen table, and resume what I am doing.
I’m no longer at the blending
part; I’m at the pouring part. The sound
the margarita makes going into the cup is kind of a whoosh-plop sound, followed quickly by the faucet turning on to
rinse out the glass part of the blender.
I realize, to my sinister
delight, that it must sound to the caller like I am in the bathroom.
Got to admit – it was the
quickest unsolicited caller hang-up I’ve ever had.
It reminds me of the old Alka
Seltzer commercial – Plop plop fizz fizz
oh what a relief it is!
Can’t wait until the next
unsuspecting idiot phones. (Insert evil laughter and the sound of a sloppy margarita hitting the glass here.)
Friday, December 26, 2014
THE DAY AFTER CHRISTMAS
‘Twas the day after
Christmas
And all through the home
I am finally relieved
For a moment alone.
The stores are all having
Their post-Christmas sales,
Plus all the returns for
The gifts that were fails.
Back to reality
The post-Christmas calm
But my house looks a
little
Like it got hit by a bomb
And the leftovers
Wrapped up, packed away,
End up on my hips.
(What the heck do I
weigh?!)
This brief little
down-time
Will not last too long;
It’s time for a list
Of all I do wrong
So I can pretend to make
Some resolutions -
As if 2015 has
Magic solutions.
I’d like to lose ten
pounds,
Or fifteen, or twenty,
But I am too lazy;
I like my chair plenty.
I’ve got five more days
Too try and be good,
To plan out my life
The way that I should.
At my age I’m lucky,
And luck will be taken –
I consider it lucky
If daily I waken.
So folks, it’s that time –
That holiday lull –
When all our bad habits
Are voided and null.
Enjoy this quick break
With no stress and no fear
Because in a few days
It will be the New Year.
Here’s to some planning
Xmas holiday –
I’m going to start
shopping
GET OUT OF MY WAY!
GET OUT OF MY WAY!
We all will exclaim
As the old year does pass:
“Next Christmas will NOT
Bite me right in the ass!”
Thursday, December 25, 2014
SIMPLE SENTIMENT
Wishing all of my friends a safe and happy and healthy Christmas and New Year.
(That's all. Nothing more and nothing less.)
(That's all. Nothing more and nothing less.)
Wednesday, December 24, 2014
TOO LATE TO PANIC NOW
It's Christmas Eve.
I have some baking to do, some cooking to do, and a bag of gifts to deliver.
The presents are under the tree.
Stocking gifts are ready to be stuffed into knitted socks fit for a giant.
I didn't decorate as much as usual.
I'm not going to cook as much as usual.
I'm not going to stress as much as usual.
There's a short list left to do.
It'll get done;
Or it won't.
I live on a street that doubles as the church parking lot.
I have to be home and secure before mass starts lest I am trapped streets away.
Every year I swear I will be ready.
Every year Christmas sneaks up on me.
Well, it's too late to panic now.
It's here.
Merry Christmas Eve:
Be safe, be happy, and eat just a little too much.
I have some baking to do, some cooking to do, and a bag of gifts to deliver.
The presents are under the tree.
Stocking gifts are ready to be stuffed into knitted socks fit for a giant.
I'm not going to cook as much as usual.
I'm not going to stress as much as usual.
There's a short list left to do.
It'll get done;
Or it won't.
I live on a street that doubles as the church parking lot.
I have to be home and secure before mass starts lest I am trapped streets away.
Every year I swear I will be ready.
Every year Christmas sneaks up on me.
Well, it's too late to panic now.
It's here.
Merry Christmas Eve:
Be safe, be happy, and eat just a little too much.
Tuesday, December 23, 2014
THE DAY BEFORE SCHOOL BREAK
‘Twas the day before
school break
And all through the class
Not a student sat calmly,
Not a one on his/her ass.
The teachers were nestled
Each one at a desk
Eating baked presents:
Some sweet – some grotesque.
I looked at my scarf and
I looked at my coat,
The day almost over,
I tried not to gloat.
When out in the hallway
There arose such a
clatter,
I sprang from my chair to
see
What was the matter.
I smacked my own forehead,
And said, “What a shocker!
It’s pre-vacation time
To clean out each locker.”
Then it came time
To the gym we did go
So we could enjoy
The school holiday show.
The band and the chorus,
And many more features,
Including The Twelve Days
Performed by the teachers.
“I won’t go up there,”
I laughed through my
belly.
“Make an ass of myself?
No way in hell-y!”
Though I like watching,
It’s apparent to me
That there’s some other
place
Most of us would rather
be.
Then the bell sounded
And all the dismissals
Sent kids through the
halls
Like they’re humanoid
missiles.
And I hear them exclaim
As they run and they
cheer,
“Happy holidays, Teacher,
We’ll see ya next year!”
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