Blog #410 January 16, 2025
Our
Saturday night plans were cancelled last weekend, so we decided to do something
wild and crazy. “Live, live,
live!” said Auntie Mame. “Life
is a banquet and most poor suckers are starving to death.” So we decided to go wild. Did we fly to Tibet? Did we ride the Ferris Wheel? Rob a liquor store? Nope, we had a tête-à-tête and decided to embark on a high-risk
venture appropriate only for the young and fearless. We went to the nearest casino and shared a
nickel poker-machine for two hours, rooting and hooray-ing like a crowd
watching James Bond beating the arch-villain at baccarat. And we didn’t lose too much.
We
played the machine, then departed
But
we didn’t leave broken-hearted
‘Cause
me and my Queen
We
left the machine
With
five dollars less than we started.
Plus,
I got a free Diet-Coke -- shaken, not stirred.
Weekly Word. A tête-à-tête is a private conversation. Head-to-head
in French.
Larry McMurtry says that the chief paradox of life is that the thing
you most want is the thing you are least likely to get. I cannot agree. It seems to me that the thing I most wanted
in life, at least when I was seventeen, was a small, cute, dark-haired girl I
spotted in the High School cafeteria.
And I got her! I’m still not sure
how. Yes, maybe I was a little smart and
a little humorous. Mostly I was
completely devoted and easily trained.
But I certainly wasn’t remotely Rock Hudson-ish. Of course, in retrospect, neither was
Rock. Did I tell you that my wife could multitask?
There
is, in the Guinness World Records, a record for
Multitasking. They report it like this:
Multitasking has taken on an entirely new meaning for one UT student who can
recite the first 100 digits of the mathematical constant pi while solving a
Rubik’s Cube and balancing 15 books on her head. Pshaw! You call that multitasking? That’s only three things, not one of which is
remotely useful. My wife would not be
caught dead solving a Rubik’s Cube -- I might break a nail. Or placing books on her head -- my
hair! Or memorizing the digits
of pi – what a waste! But
Carol is the undisputed Queen of Multitasking. This morning, for instance, I walked into the
bedroom and found her simultaneously performing four tasks using four different
electronic devices and four separate parts of her body:
·
Her feet were walking on the treadmill
·
Her eyes were watching the television
·
Her fingers were playing bridge on her iPad
·
Her ears were listening to a Podcast on her phone
And she still managed to use her mouth to tell me to change my shirt.
Five tasks at once. I was so
proud! The woman just has a surfeit of
internal energy. She even has a sign
hanging in the kitchen: Don’t Just Sit There – Nag Your Husband.
Look, I’m not trying to make fun of people who
multitask. In fact, I’m jealous. I cannot read and listen to music at the same
time. I cannot talk and drive. It amazes me that I can, at the same time,
breathe and write things like “Hi there, and
welcome back.”
Hi
there and welcome back. I hope you are
feeling well and staying warm. Next
Monday is Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, a day which celebrates his
birthday five days after it really was.
His actual 96th birthday was yesterday. There are no longer very many holidays named
after people. Washington’s
Birthday is gone, Lincoln’s Birthday is gone and Columbus
Day is gone, shredded and burned to a crisp. The only eponymous holidays left are Christmas,
named after Christ, and Easter, named after Eostre, a
pre-Christian goddess in England, probably the goddess of bunnies and colored
eggs and Judy Garland.
Carol
will be upset that this blog mentions her so much, but I’ve been with her 24
hours a day for over 57 years – who else would I write about, a three-legged
cat?
Message
from Shakespeare: It is not
enough to speak, but to speak true (A
Midsummer Night’s Dream). Whoa!
I am not just some run-of-the-mill (maybe that should be
limp-of-the-mill) cat. I am Shakespeare,
the most famous three-legged cat in the world.
So there, Big Mouth. Purr!
Last
week, Blog #409 included a poem. After
the poem I asked if you had made it all the way through, and I received many
comments saying, “Yes, I read it.” But
not one of you told me that you “got it”.
You see, there was a trick. The
poem was my confession that I am a compulsive rhymer and also my attempt at
breaking that compulsion by making the last two lines not rhyme. Which they didn’t. Or did they?
Here is the ending of the poem.
To
think that I can’t write without a rhyme is just pathetic.
The
next two lines I promise won’t at all appear poetic.
It’s
surely just as trivial as putting on your socks.
I
told you I could do it and I’ve done it.
Michael
Fox
Now,
you’ll see that by including my signature as part of the last line completes
the poem and that I failed at avoiding my compulsive rhyming. Do you get it now? Good.
Sorry to take up your time.
And
speaking of time, there are many ways of measuring time. Sand in an hourglass, atomic vibrations, the
movement of a pendulum, the progress of the sun. I was at the doctor’s office last week, and
he decided that the cough I have is just a lingering vestige of the pneumonia I
had in August. He suggested I get a CAT
scan. I said, “Fine, I’ll have Shakespeare
do it. Here, kitty, kitty.” He decided a radiologist might do better, so
off I went to the hospital. I arrived
early (punctuality is the politeness of kings). I brought a book (The Patron Saint of
Liars by Ann Patchett). When I
got home, Carol asked me how long they made me wait. “About 35 pages,” I replied. As I said, there are many ways of measuring
time.
And
now, the old sun-dial on my wrist tells me it’s time to go. Stay well and count your blessings. See you next week. Trump will be your President then.
Michael Send
comments to mfox1746@gmail.com