Zombie Apocalypse Revisited

zombie-package-photoThe latest zombie-laden season of Walking Dead is off to a violent and bloody start. One of my kids still watches it, and gave me the details of someone from the original cast, season one, that is now off the show—killed off. I don’t bother watching it anymore. I saved recorded episodes thinking I may want to catch up; there are thirty or so saved now and I still haven’t felt like going back to it.

If you’ve never watched “Walking Dead,” it’s definitely not an off-the-shelf Zombie show. It is a custom-tailored adventure show about a band of people simply trying to live another day, against all odds and a lot of zombies who would like to see them become zombies. There are some social lessons we can glean from “Walking Dead,” too. But at one time my real reason was to see all the “What-Not-To-Do” moments. Continue reading “Zombie Apocalypse Revisited”

Filthy

Filthy is such a, well, filthy word. Even when it’s not associated with dirt, like filthy rich, it still sounds so negative. I like the word feculent. It sounds so upper crust, don’t you know. One could say “Oh, I love your feculent hair,” and one whose vocabulary was normal, would consider it a compliment. Deceptive, isn’t it?

It’s easy to smile at someone and say something that sounds nice but it isn’t really what is meant. I’ve heard a lot of folks talk about people who seem to feel the need to ask questions such as, “How does this blouse look?” What’s a good response: 1) “Oh, very nice, dear.” or 2) “Well, it’masquerades a nice blouse, but it looks a bit tight on you today.” There are some people who would handle number two. And then there are some that would be offended and respond curtly, “What? Are you saying I’m fat? I know I’ve gained fifty pounds but I’m stressed and what right do you have to accuse me of being fat?”

Continue reading “Filthy”

Mincemeat Tart

cawlGrowing up Welsh in America meant mincemeat tarts, Welsh cakes, beef kidney pie, shepherd’s pie, and, of course, cawl.

It also meant Dylan Thomas’s A Child’s Christmas in Wales,  Richard Llewellyn‘s How Green was My Valley, and learning to speak a little Welsh.

Growing up we celebrated St. David’s Day, prized leaks and leak soup, ate parsnips, ate lamb—lots of lamb served with mint sauce—and learned early on we’d gotten too dirty outside when Mom called us Mochyn Du (old black pig).

And you thought I was just fibbin'
And you thought I was just fibbin’

That’s just a start. What American boy begins his first year in school wearing short pants and a tie? But then what American boy could say he’d lived in Wales for a time and travelled through Europe, too? Those were the early 1950s that I only vaguely remember.

The food, though, I enjoyed well into the 1990s. If I disappointed Mom Continue reading “Mincemeat Tart”

“You’re Banned. . .”

The Daily Post Prompt Banned

As the winter of 2013 approached Atlanta. . .

“You’re banned from shopping at CostCo,” she said.

“Hey, it’s really important to continue filling the pantry,” he said. “I’ve told you how the storms came through the mountains and for several weeks the store was out of all food. Most of us stored food. Just in case. Yet there were always some who didn’t. They learned the hard way that a full pantry is literally a life saver.”

“We aren’t in the mountains,” she said. “Nothing like that is ever going to happen here. NO MORE TRIPS TO COSTCO UNLESS I SAY SO AND YOU FOLLOW MY LIST.”


January 2014 as reported in local news:

BuzzFeed ‏@BuzzFeed 29 Jan 2014 Atlanta Is Literally An Episode Of “The Walking Dead” Right Now http://www.buzzfeed.com/daves4/atlanta-is-literally-an-episode-of-the-walking-dead-right-no?bftw …
BuzzFeed ‏@BuzzFeed 29 Jan 2014
Atlanta Is Literally An Episode Of “The Walking Dead” Right Now

“People left schools and businesses around the same time. This coupled with winter weather conditions caused serious traffic gridlock that worsened throughout Tuesday afternoon and into Wednesday.”

• Many children were stranded overnight in classrooms or gyms.
• Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal said National Guard troops were sent to move stranded school buses from highways.
• Georgia state troopers were sent to retrieve students who were stranded at their schools.
“Snowmageddon” by the numbers
  1. • More than 2,000 cars were abandoned on Atlanta’s interstates.

    • More than 1,460 crashes happened between Tuesday morning and Wednesday evening.

    • There were fatal crashes.
    • There were more than 175 injuries reported.
    • More than 400 flights in and out of Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport were canceled by 6 a.m. Thursday.
    According to the Associated Press

    “Well, this is another fine mess you’ve got us in Ollie,” He could have said during snowmaggendon. But why start WWIII. It took nearly a week to clear the ice from roads north of Atlanta. And this was not the last time such a storm would come through. The next times, however, folks didn’t wait until the storm was upon them; they left work early and schools were emptied out well before trouble could occur.


    So then let us not sleep as others do, but let us be alert and sober. 1 Thessalonians 5:6.

    There is a need to be prepared for all circumstances. We must do in the physical realm the things we are meant to also do in the spiritual realm. We demonstrate our spiritual understanding by acting upon the Word of G-d while on Earth. When Paul wrote to the Thessalonians, he was specifically referring to apathy of spiritual things. He’s saying that those who know G-d through Lord Y’shuaJesus are to be mindful and alert. He contrasts the worldly ways of people who, at night, dull their senses with wine. To apply this verse to our Earthly lives, we are to be wise and aware of our ways and our environment. In a sense, it’s like fasting. The act of fasting is physical, yet it has spiritual ramifications and significance.

    Being aware spiritually is also being ready for the return of the Messiah, Lord Y’shuaJesus. This is seen throughout the writings of the Apostles. Y’shuaJesus, too, spoke about being prepared to meet Him when He returns. The Lord used various parables to tell of the spiritual preparation that is needed to meet Him. In one parable, Matthew 25, the Lord said, “Then the kingdom of heaven will be like ten virgins who took their lamps and went to meet the bridegroom. Five of them were foolish, and five were wise. For when the foolish took their lamps, they took no oil with them, but the wise took flasks of oil with their lamps. As the bridegroom was delayed, they all became drowsy and slept. But at midnight there was a cry, ‘Here is the bridegroom! Come out to meet him.’ Then all those virgins rose and trimmed their lamps. And the foolish said to the wise, ‘Give us some of your oil, for our lamps are going out.’ But the wise answered, saying, ‘Since there will not be enough for us and for you, go rather to the dealers and buy for yourselves.’ 10 And while they were going to buy, the bridegroom came, and those who were ready went in with him to the marriage feast, and the door was shut. 11 Afterward the other virgins came also, saying, ‘Lord, lord, open to us.’ 12 But he answered, ‘Truly, I say to you, I do not know you.’ 13 Watch therefore, for you know neither the day nor the hour.”

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Transformation

The Daily Post Prompt Transformation

April Fools to Fools

everyone1April Fools we were. Wasn’t it only yesterday that we ran away on the first of April 1968? We drove nearly through the night. I can’t believe we hit that snow pole and didn’t flip the veedub. Out of gas, we slept by the pump of a closed gas station, snow on the ground, wrapped in each other’s arms. Why didn’t we come prepared with at least a blanket? We were too young; we didn’t think so. After gas, it was on to Twin Falls. Where did we change before going to the courthouse to get our marriage license? I remember your white dress, with the flowers along the bottom hem and across the front from shoulder to shoulder. You looked so much like a young Cher. Your hair, long and straight and brown, with bangs almost covering your eyes. No make up at all; you didn’t need it. What did I wear? I know I had on my calf-height leather moccasins and Levi 501s. What shirt did I wear? Two April fool hippies. We each had leather cords around our necks, too. I’d started wearing one soon after high school, when I’d hang out in Manhattan Beach. I made one for you. It was the closest thing we had to engagement rings. We were quite the pair, standing on the courthouse steps.

The Chef’s wife’s–what was her name?–family met us there and gave us the bad news. We couldn’t get married in Idaho; the age had been changed to 21. We didn’t know we probably could have gone down to Nevada. We left, dejected, heading back to California. You cried. You said you didn’t want to go home. You said you wanted to be with me. If only I’d known what was ahead. There were no red flags waving about to warn of the sudden and irreversible transformation ahead. I could have taken you home to your parents. If only I’d known.

We ambled back toward California. Remember Highway 395 and all those small desert towns in Nevada. Didn’t we play a few nickel slots with refunded deposit money from all those soda bottles we collected along the way? Did we win anything? I suppose not. I don’t remember how long it took to return, but I remember calling my parents. It was a cruel joke to play, leaving note on April Fools Day to say we were running off to get married. Turns out we didn’t, and the joke was on us. My mom said to come home.  Why listen to her then, as I’d not listened before. So I didn’t.

That one-room apartment on Euclid Avenue cost $50 a month with utilities included. We returned to college classes, continued our weekend work at Chef in the Forest restaurant in Idyllwild, in the mountains. Carefree. No worries. No debts. Friends with which we hung out. Remember that Mothers’ Day and waking to a foot of unexpected snow. I really enjoyed closing at Chef’s on Sundays. We watched Blue Hawaii when Chef rented out the theatre for us all in the afternoons.

Those were the days. We collected and stored more soda bottles, walking all over to find them. When we had enough cash, we splurged on dope. I pounded out the big dent in the front of the veedub. But it never looked quite the same. Remember I’d done to body completely without the original chrome strips and the bumpers, welding all the holes, painted it Aztec Gold? I loved those diamond tuck seats that I’d had done in Mexico the year before.

oWhy did we decide to quit Chef’s anyway? Those weekends working in the mountains were nice. We had a good summer though, didn’t we. We messed around at the beach most of the summer. Remember that orange grove? We stopped to pick a few oranges. Who was with us then? I don’t recall. We got out and went into the orchard. We probably only picked a dozen when we heard that rattler’s warning. You ran like a rabbit to the veedub, with the rest of us in tow.

When the money got low I thought we’d both get work. I found a job hauling onions for P&P farms. One of your old high school friends got me the job. He moved in with us, too. I don’t even know why. Do you? Three of us in a one-room apartment. Then that one-bedroom upstairs opened up, so we all moved in there. After onion season I found a job at a lumber yard. You stayed home. So did your friend. Eventually he moved out. We moved too. Here and there. Out of state and back again. But things were different. You made your own friends and I worked and worked. But it was never really enough, was it? You had your secret daytime friends.

cartoon-people-fighting-clipart-best-16sxb0-clipartLooking back, I see that you weren’t happy. I tried my best. I tried to be the person you wanted in your life. I didn’t know that was impossible. I didn’t know I’d never be able to be that person. The struggles became intense. The years and our youth fell away. Finally you figured out how you could have both cake and ice cream and eat it too. I was recruited for a new job, in another city. You wanted me to take it. When I did, you stayed where you were. But you didn’t want to work then either. So I being ever the fool sent you three quarters of my pay. You stayed in that old Victorian house we’d shared. I lived in an empty lot in a travel trailer. No electricity. No heat. No money. No worries. I enjoyed my self, though penniless. Made friends. Eventually I left there, too. And the checks stopped coming. So you got a job. And I traveled around, working here and there like a gypsy. You hated me for that.

We put it all behind us. At least we must have, for we visited a few times over the years since our transformation from April Fools to just old fools. And we get along well enough, though we’ve both moved on.

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Fool I was.

Candle

The Daily Post Prompt Candle

dsc_0010“Candles have come a long way since their initial use. Although no longer man’s (sic) major source of light, they continue to grow in popularity and use. Today, candles symbolize celebration, mark romance, soothe the senses, define ceremony, and accent home decors — casting a warm and lovely glow for all to enjoy.” — American Candle Society

For five thousand years, according to the candle society, candle have been in use. While wicked candles were developed in ancient Roman times using tallow and papyrus, Egyptians and Chinese had forms Continue reading “Candle”