Blog 473 April 2, 2026
Hey, I have a question
for you. Do you lie? Of course you don’t. I would never suggest that you lie. But do you exaggerate – maybe a little? I have made a study of the most common topics
of exaggeration.
First Exaggeration: Have
you seen my grandson hit a golf ball?
Yesterday, on the 11th hole, my Jacob hit a ball, I guarantee
it was 300 yards if it was a nickel.
Truth: Jacob is seven and the farthest he has ever hit a ball
is 42 yards – into a hot-dog cart.
Second Exaggeration:
My daughter’s boyfriend
just got a new job. He’s the CFO of a
new start-up that’s all over the world.
I can’t tell you exactly what they do, but they’re huge. He’s doing very
well.
Truth: He quit his job as a Bar-Mitzvah disc jockey and is
selling a line of pizza ovens in Rapid City.
Third Exaggeration: I’m going to a new neurologist. He’s one of the top doctors. Top! He’s the foremost
expert in the world on the kind of disease I have. He graduated first in his class.
Truth: Dr. Patel Rajmiri was the only one in his class at the Karachi
School of Incantations and Pita Making.
His office is in the back of a Lebanese deli.
Fourth Exaggeration: I’ve got a great new sleeping thing for you. You place a pecan under your pillow. It works great.
Truth: I
haven’t slept since the Bush administration.
No, the old one. And I have tried
every pill, powder, lotion, potion, salve, inhaler, concoction and Haitian
Voodoo ritual known to man or beast. The
pecan doesn’t work either.
You absolutely know
someone who is guilty of one or all of the above. Maybe even you. Hi there and welcome back to Limerick Oyster
where nobody’s going to lie to you. A
little capricious hyberbole perhaps, but it’s all in fun. I hope you’re well and I’m glad you’re
back. I’m back too, recovering from my
surgery. I thought Shakespeare would
have been more enthusiastic to see me, but he was a little leery of the
walker. At first, he thought it was his
AI replacement, Cat-GPT, but now I think he likes it.
Message from Shakespeare: Un-thread
the rude eye of rebellion, and welcome home again (King John). I’m so happy Pops is
home. He even brought me a new friend.
It has two legs and two wheels. I
call him Rolleo. Where’d he go? Rolleo, Rolleo, whereart thou. Purr.
I still have a few
hospital observations for you. I did not
see a calendar in my room. A clock, yes,
but no calendar. Even a prisoner gets a
calendar. Are they afraid you’ll be
counting the days until your co-pay runs out?
I also noticed that when the Physical Therapist person would take me on
a walk, we would never pass a mirror.
Oy, God forbid I should see myself unshaven, hair unwashed; I probably
looked like Quasimodo.
But now I’m home:
·
Without one
appendix. I never read the appendix
anyway.
·
With some
additional scars. No big deal; I’ve got
plenty.
·
With an addition
of approximately 75 new members to the once-exclusive club of people who have
seen my butt.
Who designed those
hospital gowns? And why is just your
butt exposed? Expose everything. There is no privacy in a hospital. I loved it when the nurse team would come in
and ask whether I wanted the door closed while 60 people examined my naked
body.
Yes, I’m home, and very
lucky to have a lovely, caring and efficient nurse to take care of me. Carol is doing a wonderful job, doing almost
everything for me, but sometimes, it’s a little aggravating.
Where’s your toothbrush, she asked. I
told her.
What kind of ratty,
gangrenous, antediluvian piece of garbage is this? She threw it
away and got a new one.
Ok, where’s your
toothpaste? I pointed.
What kind of arboreal
moron keeps his toothpaste in a drawer that far away from his toothbrush?
There’s no place like
home! Let’s do arboreal as
our Weekly Word. It means
living in trees.
I have admitted many of
my faults and failings to you over the past years. Here’s another. I’m just not into highbrow stuff -- art,
symphony, opera. I must not have been
around when they handed out the gene for high-class sophistication and good
taste. Except, of course, my taste in
women. But you know that already.
I like realism in art,
but not Modern art. I was once in a museum in Bentonville,
Arkansas looking at a painting that was completely
black. I found a nearby docent
and asked, “Can you explain to me what there is in that painting that is
supposed to stimulate my admiration?” He
replied, “Damned if I know.” And
the symphony? I like some classical
music, but I must admit I grew up on three-minute songs that started with Take
out the papers and the trash or I heard about the fella you been dancin’
with. Three minutes is a good
length for a song. Twenty minutes or
sixty minutes – I’ve already forgotten where I am. And opera is four hours! In Italian!
I
guess that I’m just not aesthetic
I
think modern art is pathetic
And
Mozart and Bach
Are
pretty much schlock
And
opera requires anesthetic.
What can I say?
Call me a boor, call me low-class, call me Ishmael. And anyway, should I care what other people
think? You’ll worry less about what people think of you when you realize how
seldom they do.
By the way, those two songs I mentioned above:
Take out the papers and the trash – Yakety Yak, The Coasters (1958) written by Leiber
and Stoller.
I heard about the fella you been dancin’
with - Shake a Tail Feather, The Five Du-Tones (1963) written by Andre
Williams.
I have to stop now. I can’t write while I’m shakin’ my tail
feather. Plus, my doctor says I
shouldn’t. I love that song, though. C’mon, do it with me – shake it, shake it, shake it,
shake it Baby. You can still do
it. Don’t hurt yourself. See you next week. Stay well, count your blessings and Rock n
Roll. And thank you all for your
wonderful outpourings of love and concern.
They mean a lot.
Michael Send
comments to mfox1746@gmail.com