Sunday, November 26, 2023

Syllabus #228

We Thanksgiving'ed in New Orleans.  They should call it the Big Queasy, because most of our group was constantly intoxicated and I was constantly migrained, which segued into a delightful head cold that I am currently enjoying.  

Overall I guess it was a successful trip.  I bought an extremely tasteless t-shirt using the Visa debit card I earned as an incentive from my health insurance plan for getting an annual check-up.  Thanks for buying me a t-shirt with about 30 pair of cartoon boobs printed on it, Cigna.  I was, at long last, reunited with the sandwich of my dreams, a double-decker collard green melt with coleslaw, at Turkey & the Wolf.  

One member of our party nearly fell victim to the "where'd you get your shoes?" scam.  All 7 of us were nearly taken out by a lil scuffle between the police and a person resisting arrest while we were waiting on the sidewalk outside a restaurant.  I also watched a gentleman defecate on the sidewalk.  Felt just like home, really.







What exactly is a Bourbon Street Candle supposed to smell like?  If it's not vomit and urine we are all complicit in this lie.

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Progressive Flo, national treasure?  There's hope for all of us who are just annoying enough to be memorable and forgettable at the same time. 


New York Times 100 Notable Books of 2023.  I've read 7 of these already, am in the process of reading 1 more, and have 3 others on my Kindle or in print, waiting to be read before the year's end.  I feel like I didn't make a very strong showing this year, but this is giving me some inspiration for when I need to queue up some more holds from the library.


Analog Reading:

Finished Gary Gulman's memoir, Misfit.  It was sweet and poignant and funny and I hope he continues to de well in his career and his mental health.  What a mensch.

Now I'm reading North Woods by Daniel Mason.  Too early to form an opinion, but it's on that 100 notable books list, so it better be decent.

Sunday, November 19, 2023

Syllabus #227

And now to the tune of Alicia Keys, everybody SING:

This Kroger's on fiiiiiiiiire...

Oh snap, you guys.  I might have psychic powers.  Or I might have learned how to manifest, a la The Secret.  What I'm saying is, I might have accidentally burned down Murder Kroger with my mind.

I usually go grocery shopping on Saturdays.  This Saturday was no different.  I gathered my list, grabbed my purse, told Andy I was leaving.  On my way out the door, I grabbed a bottle of Windex and some paper towels in a spontaneous burst of inspiration to clean the inside of my desperately smudged and streaked windshield.  That led to me finally cleaning off dog slobber and nose prints from the cargo area, festering for the last 5 months since I took Charlie on a road trip to South Carolina.

All this time, Andy thought I had left for the store, so he was surprised to see me walk back in the house 10 minutes later.  I go, "I'm back, store was closed!"  And he's like, "Why?  Somebody else get murdered there?" And I told him sarcastically that no, the store was on fire.  So I turned around and came home.

I explained about the window cleaning diversion, and left for real.  I ran to the art supply store to re-up my stash of supplies for making deranged-magazine-collage holiday cards.  Then I finally arrived at Kroger and as I'm crossing the threshold of the store, the fire alarm starts going off.

At first, I question by sanity/sobriety.  No one else seems to notice, nor give one single iota of a shit about the alarm.  People in the produce section are just going on squeezing avocados, sizing up the girth of the cucumbers, living life unfazed as this alarm is blaring and emergency lights are flashing.  I finally lock eyes with an older employee in the floral department and she gets it.  She's looking around nervously and I'm like, "Should we be evacuating or...?"

At long last, someone gets on the intercom and tells everyone to evacuate.

I walk back to my car, thinking, wow, this is an exciting departure from my normal Saturday routine!  But also wondering, did I somehow cause this?  Did I manifest this?  With my uninspired, offhand joke?  As I'm standing back at my car and pondering these newfound powers I may or may not possess, an ambulance and two fire trucks come roaring into the parking lot.  Then another fire truck.  And two more.  It feels like an episode of Sesame Street.  The Count going "Four Fire Trucks, Ah-hah-hah!  Now five, now six, now SEVEN Fire Trucks, Ah-hah-hah!"

At this point, I cut my losses and decide to drive up Gallatin Pike to the other Kroger, which is bigger and arguably better but also somehow worse because the layout of the store is reversed and I feel like I'm doing everything backwards when I shop there, and also their parking lot is stupidly designed, and it's necessary but not always possible to make a left out of their driveway to get home.  

But I digress.  On my way up Gallatin, traffic directly in front of me slows to a mysterious crawl.  The lights ahead are green, the road appears empty, and yet the car in front of me in the right lane, and the cars beside me in the left lane: 10 miles an hour.  It all becomes clear when the car ahead of me changes lanes, and I see that I am now following something that can't possibly be street legal.  No insurance.  No tags.  Because it wasn't a car.  It was a dog.  With no tags.  Or collar.  But a dog, just trit-trotting down Gallatin Pike like he was late for an appointment.  I put my hazards on and was just like, well I hope this guy turns right soon.  

And before you judge me for not stopping in the road to help this dog, it was me or him in that scenario.  One does not simply just STOP in the middle of Gallatin Pike, unless one is high on meth or otherwise does not care whether they live or die.  Eventually, the dog did wise up and start running down the sidewalk, but after I passed him, I saw in my rearview that he ran back into the street.  I don't know how that turned out, but godspeed, little dude.

Epilogue:

On Saturday evening, I found out via my good pal Mark Zuckerberg that the Kroger was never actually on fire, but a Frito Lay delivery guy hit a pipe and somehow caused the sprinkler system to flood the store?  Who knows if any of that is accurate.  Also, at some point shortly before or shortly after I was on the scene, there was a car flipped over in the middle of the street between the Kroger and the Aldi?  In an area where you can maybe get your speed up to 15 mph between a stop sign and a traffic light?

I dunno, man.  Bunch of savages in this town.

---

I downloaded this app that is supposed to translate your cat's meows.  Hadley never shuts up but as soon as I open this app she's all, "I refuse to speak without my lawyer present."


Look at these kids using the library!  I bet back in the day when you could get rapped across the knuckles with a yardstick, these kids knew how to put a book back with the spine facing out, I'll tell you that much.


Analog Reading:

Still reading, but honestly losing interest in, Outlive by Peter Attia.  It's getting a little into the weeds with medical jargon, and I'm just over here going, yes but please explain it like I'm five (going on 75).  Tell me how to be old but not decrepit.  That's all.

Also reading Gary Gulman's clever and moving memoir, Misfit.  He writes with such precise, vivid detail and wit about events and feelings from his childhood.  At first I was questioning whether it's even possible to remember such experiences with any degree of accuracy, but then I remembered that all my most vivid childhood memories are also the very worst moments.  Could I describe what happened on any middling to good day in elementary school?  Absolutely not.  Could I narrate with fidelity a minute-by-minute rendering of every time I was embarrassed, disappointed, or misunderstood?  Yes, right down to the weather, the outfit I was wearing, and what the teacher's gross coffee breath smelled like.

Sunday, November 12, 2023

Syllabus #226


There was a Connections this past week that was plucked from my very own brain, it seems.  Although, I was utterly floored when I deduced that Fresh Air was a red herring and was not among the podcasts.

This morning I am currently, as I type this, experimenting with an Instant Pot that was rehomed to us in August.  It has been gathering dust on the kitchen floor because this dumb house lacks adequate storage and I am a slob.  I vowed that if we didn't use it by Thanksgiving, I would take it to Goodwill.  I found myself with just over a pound of small, past-their-prime apples languishing in the fridge, leftover from a recipe, and decided to kill two birds with one stone by possibly blowing up my house and using the IP to make a very small batch of apple butter.  There are 7 out of 15 minutes of high pressure cooking remaining, and I haven't been coated in shrapnel yet, so I think we might be in the clear.  

Will try to remember to report back next week on the quality of the apple butter, if I'm not in the burn unit.

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I thought we were done with this pile of equine doodoo that is changing our clocks.  Now it gets dark at like 2:30 pm.  Not really but it sure feels that way and even though it has also been weirdly warm, I just want to crawl under a weighted blanket with a loaf of warm, buttered bread and wake up in mid-April, covered in crumbs, blinking my sleep-crusted eyes at the glorious sight of trees just beginning to leaf out.  Like, the AUDACITY of humans to be like, hey, you know what we should do twice a year?  TIME TRAVEL.  And everyone except Arizona is like, great, let's do it.


Analog Reading:

Reluctantly finished Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver.  What an engaging, compelling, humane portrait of the rural South, poverty, and the effects of the opioid crisis.  The ending was hard-earned and highly satisfying.

Now I'm reading Outlive:  The science and art of longevity by Peter Attia.  I can't remember where I read a review of this book, but it sounded interesting.  I'm not sure about it yet.  A lot of books of this ilk tend to be pure quackery, but this guy seems to be pretty keen on using data to extrapolate likelihoods and generalizations, and is prescribing approaches to thinking, rather than giving precise, one-size-fits-all commands.  It's interesting so far.

Sunday, November 5, 2023

Syllabus #225

Getting older means that every Halloween, instead of plowing through a truly alarming quantity of fun-size candy bars, one or the other of us is treated to the sweet sweet release of general anesthesia.  Last year, it was me and my cataract surgery (jealous?).  This year it was Andy's turn.  Maybe I shouldn't blast it all over the internet, but he's fine, everyone is fine.  Next year, maybe it will be my turn again, perhaps for a lobotomy.  A girl can dream.



Also, Daylight Savings is so dumb.  Of all the things we do as a society, collectively agreeing to time travel in a coordinated manner has to be the absolute stupidest.  Wasn't this crap supposed to go away?  I thought we legislated it out of existence?  Somebody has some explaining to do.

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R.L. Stine taking a spin as a guest writer in Slate's Dear Prudence column might be the best thing on the internet this year, definitely the best in this fiscal quarter.  His responses are refreshingly direct and downright bitchy.


Speaking of being old, here's an elder millennial breaking down the sub-generations of weariness within our age cohort.  

And just for some more generational context...


Analog Reading:

Finished Meet Me Tonight in Atlantic City by Jane Wong.  I enjoyed it.  Interesting window into the experiences of someone who grew up in the same time and sort of same place, with such a very different life.

Sinking my fangs into Barbara Kingsolver's Demon Copperhead.  Add this to your list NOW.  I am as enthusiastic about this book as I was about Tom Lake, but don't expect this one to make you feel good.