wordshadows.com
January 09, 2004

Yesterday is much clearer to me, now that I’ve had a night’s sleep.  The house is quiet except for the few machines who sort of sneak around the room like servants, making sure that I’m comfortable and all is well.  The coffee machine clears its throat one final time, either announcing that its work is done or its about to make a speech.  I can’t imagine it would ruin the perfect silence with words.

This morning I can see that yesterday consisted mainly of a series of life lessons.  Reaffirmations, really, because most of it’d already learned many times over.  You’ll see what I mean.

Reaffirming Life

You can write more in a silent house then a noisy house.
Eight year old boys prefer a constant playmate.
Frozen butter will form quite a lake if microwaved for 30 seconds on high.
The line inside the coffee maker does not represent the “high water” level.
Coffee makers can also form small lakes.
Important work papers, left on the kitchen counter, will sink to the bottom of a coffee lake.
Ice storms look beautiful but make life difficult.
People who are bored will call you on the phone the most often.
They will have nothing to say.
They will always call at the wrong moment.
You will always wonder why you picked up the phone.
Despite cordless phones, the spaghetti will still boil over.

I wonder what I’ll relearn today.


January 07, 2004

The two boys are back together, despite the combined efforts of Mother Nature and a slow-leak rear tire that is beginning to get on my nerves.  Call me demanding, but I like a tire that can hold its breath for 50,000 miles without whining.  This consistent I need air attitude is a bit much, forcing me to decide every two days whether to waste two minutes stopping for air or forty-five minutes seeking more thorough treatment.  So far, two minutes always wins.

The roads were nothing more then a spiderweb of ice rinks, and the van, even after thirty minutes of warming up and shaking the ice from its windows, was proving to be no skater.  The trip had mishap written all over it, so I just kept my mouth shut as we began a wild slide that only ended when the two of us were sitting side by side in a restaurant, eating greasy hamburgers for lunch.  Who am I to argue with destiny?

“The fries need more salt,” my son says.  I almost tell him to just rub them around on his greasy fingers, which already have enough salt stuck on them to season every spud in Idaho.  But I see he’s smiling.  He’s only joking, attempting to hone his budding sarcasm skills.

I did have an opportunity, while we were ordering, to come up with a new theory.  Or maybe it’s no theory at all, but just a reflection.  I’ll let others decide.

While I waited for my son to make up his mind, I found my gaze drifting away from the gigantic hamburger pictures and the faux shakes, spinning on strings all around my head.  And then, through the slightly hazy fog of grease, I spotted a monitor near the end of the counter.  It seems I’m on television.

And suddenly it’s time for theory.  Or reflection.  It’s simple.  If you take any unshaven man in a bulky jacket and ski cap, lean him on the counter of any restuarant, convenience store, or gas station, and then play this image on a television mounted from a ceiling, you will reduce that man into looking exactly like a desperate, potentially armed felon.

It must be some sort of translation error that happens along the way.  Something must get distorted somewhere between here and there.  I don’t think I look like a felon in real life, but I sure did just then.  Was it the clothing?  No, they seemed normal.  My facial appearance?  Couldn’t be, you could hardly see my face at all (which did seem cleverly felon-like of me, I thought, and a possible flaw in my theory).  Maybe it was based purely on location.  Hmmmm.  I wanted to take off my coat and hat and stick them on the next guy in line, just to give it a test.  In the name of science and learning and higher understanding.  All that stuff.  But I held back, not wanting the challenge of having to explain myself to not only the man, but my son, who would surely wonder what the hell? Or whatever the eight year old equivalent is.


January 06, 2004

Full of omelette, I am now prepared for battle.  For not ordering coffee, the waitress punished me by not bringing me my glass of milk, leaving me with only a tiny plastic cup of water to wash the whole thing down with.  Oblivious of my milk, oblivious of whether or not everything was okay with my meal, oblivious of my dissatifaction, and finally, oblivious of her own redemption when she turned the radio up just a bit and the ear worms that have haunted me for two days were finally refreshed.

I am the egg man slipped into someone else’s head (maybe yours - sorry) and was replaced by Willie Nelson’s two best song lines ever:

Love is like a dying ember
And only memories remain

I’m not partial to country music, but it’s hard to not like something that conjures up such visual imagery.

So it is with fresh ears that I turn towards the “work” desk and prepare for battle.  The pile of mail in the inbox finally reached maximum stack height last night and toppled over.  Toppling forward, unfortunately, and not backward.  A forward spill only brought it more into my life, while a backward spill would have conveniently dumped the entire pile into the To Be Shredded trashcan, which would have freed up my whole afternoon.  Rotten luck.


I’m not sure whether to be thankful for the ease of iTunes or not.  When I first got home with my new PowerBook and oohed and aahed and loaded all my music and realized how simple and reliable it was going to be, I never counted on my eight year old son discovering the huge stash of Beatles songs and deciding to burn one CD after another.

Yes, thanks to iTunes ease, I now have the words I am the egg man . . . I am the egg man . . . I am the walrus . . . kook kook a choo stuck in my head.  Two straight days of I am the egg man . . . is more then enough, I think.  So I’ve decided that the only way to purge this thing is to bundle up, brave the freezing rain, and walk the few steps it takes to get to the nearest diner and have them whip me up one of their delicious omelettes.  I give up.  I will be the egg man, hoping that it stops there.  I have desire whatsoever to be a walrus.

Curiously, in the fresh little blog Lines (which I’m hoping will blossom into the nice little writing & art combo blog the owner is also hoping for), I found a reference for what’s ailing me.  It seems I have a case of ear worms.


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