Participating in the Economy

I was watching TV the other night.tv2

I watch TV at night because it’s less tiring than getting dressed and going somewhere, and less tiresome than doing nothing at all.

But not much less.

A commercial came on touting a new miracle product. In the run-up to Christmas there are lots of miracle products available on TV. I know, because I’ve bought a few.

I have a garden hose that’s really small until you turn the water on, and then it gets really big. Although vaguely miraculous to observe, that transformation does nothing to enhance the hose’s capacity to convey water. The commercial convinced me to order the amazing expanding hose with the promise that when I wasn’t using it to convey water I could store it in a coffee can, or a desk drawer, or a CD case, or some other unlikely space where I might not otherwise think to store a garden hose. The claim turned out to be true enough, but not as personally fulfilling as I had imagined, and I’m just as happy to dump that technological marvel in a tangle under the deck next to the tangle of non-expanding hoses.

hose1I also have a space-age meatloaf pan. I already had plenty of meatloaf pans, but was seduced by the ad’s fast talk and slick production values. This particular meatloaf pan comes with a perforated insert that allows fats and juices to drain out during cooking, and features handles so you can quickly and easily lift the finished meatloaf out of the meatloaf pan and dump it unceremoniously onto a serving dish. In the course of a one-minute commercial they dumped out a meatloaf that way at least 10 times – once every 5 seconds, more or less – so there could be no doubt as to the quickness or ease of the dumping. The tumbling meatloaves were very telegenic, and I bought two because I only had to pay shipping and handling on the second one, and, well, I eat a lot of meatloaf.

meatloaf1

The pans worked perfectly as advertized. For perhaps two happy months I tumbled, and tumbled again, decanting healthy, heart-smart loaves to the admiration and satisfaction of everyone fortunate enough to join me at table. They are everything I ever wanted in a meatloaf pan, and yet, for deep psychological reasons I fear to explore, whenever I make meatloaf these days I reach for the oldest vessel in my fleet, a scratched and dented old battlewagon that collects grease like a commissioner’s palm and jealously hangs onto its contents with an iron grip.

I’m complicated.

knife1I might mention that, by “acting now”, I also received a free gift. It’s a meatloaf knife, which highly specialized cutting tool features a secondary blade parallel to the first that can be adjusted to yield perfect meatloaf slices of any thickness desired. In practice, I could probably carve a meatloaf more efficiently – and more neatly – with an eggbeater. I haven’t thrown that useless instrument away, though.

It came with the pans.

I don’t share this information to elicit scorn, but rather to foster understanding. Like all primates, I possess a capacity to learn, and for the past couple of years I’ve successfully resisted those breathless come-ons punctuating my evening stories. From late November to Jan. 1, through acute mental discipline and supreme force of will, I am able to screen out those maniacally enthusiastic pitches, relaxing my vigilance only when the purveyors of Valentine’s Day start dialing up the heat.

And that’s when they got me.

spiritsJust hours after I’d deactivate my crap-filter for the season, the makers of the Stone Wave Ceramic Microwave Cooker launched a second wave of TV advertizing. The purportedly miraculous Stone Wave cooker is a hand-sized faux-stoneware crock with a cute little handle and a purportedly miraculous hole, er, chimney in the lid that, I am led to believe, allows pressure and what appear to be evil spirits to escape while locking in flavor. The commercial is a nice piece of small-screen cinema, with free-flowing red arrows surrounding the entrée, dessert, or festive snack in a multi-pronged attack reminiscent of Napoleon’s advance against General von Melas’ entrenched Austrian forces at Marengo, and we all know how deliciously that turned out. Harnessing the awesome power of microwaves, the Stone Wave is designed to cook all manner of tasty dishes in five minutes or less, and its patented non-stick coating makes clean-up a snap.

A snap!

Anyone who knows me will tell you I’m lazy, and so a tireless champion for microwave cookery. They’ll also tell you I hate to clean up things including, but not limited to, my hard-drive, my language and my act. Even so, I was immediately underwhelmed by Stone Wave’s obvious attractions for one simple reason – alone or in pairs, I just don’t do dinner-for-one.

With a potentiality just 12 ounces strong, the Stone Wave is a one-course wonder. Sure, you can make a three-egg omelet in it, but what of hash browns? What of bacon? And what’s breakfast without an English muffin? Or four? The ad shows an unwholesomely excited woman making a rich, chocolate cake right in her microwave, which would be great except it’s a really just a fluffy, unfrosted cookie that you have to eat with a fork. How is that simpler?

General von Melas

General von Melas

“Make French Onion Soup in minutes!” I don’t care if it takes only seconds – 12 ounces of onion soup is vegetarian au jus waiting for a nice brisket to come along. There’s even a meatloaf recipe that starts with a quarter pound of ground beef. I don’t eat anything that weighs a quarter pound, unless it’s the cheese on my half-pound bacon-burger. No, the Stone Wave Microwave Cooker clearly doesn’t offer the scope I look for in kitchenware.

On the other hand, it is a good-looking accessory, snug in the hand, easy to store, and the hole, er, chimney in the lid is “scientifically designed.” And then there are those evil spirits to think about. They could be causing the mild distress I sometimes experience after single-handedly accounting for a pound-and-a-half of Kansas City-style barbecued spare ribs. I’m not a superstitious man, but I won’t tolerate demons in my food if there’s a really easy way I can help it.

sucker2I ordered two.

The second one was free for an additional shipping and handling charge.

Damn TV.

My Austerity Plan

vacation-movie-poster-395x600I don’t object to presidents having a little break, now and then.

I’m swell that way.

Hey, everybody needs a vacation, right? Obama works hard for his very nice living, and far be it from me to deny a working man a little well-earned rest and relaxation. I have no doubt that a couple weeks on an Oahu beach will send Barack back to the Oval Office marvelously restored and revitalized and ready to confront the problems that 2014 holds in store on a fresh set of Duracells.

And think of the fun for little Sasha and Malia, splashing in the surf, collecting shells along the waterline, wearing grass skirts at the hukilau – the stuff of treasured memories. There’s a reason that millions of Americans make Hawaii their winter destination of choice. Why should the Obamas be any different?

Because it’s costing you and me a fortune, that’s why.

The number that most often appears in the press is $4 million. That’s the cost to taxpayers, they say, every time the Obamas jet off to the 50th state for the holidays, which they’ve done every Christmas for the last five years running, which yields a cumulative tab of something in the range of $20 million dollars worth of leis and luaus. But if that sounds like a lot of your tax dollars and mine, it’s really just the tip of a far more expensive iceberg.

It sets us all back about $180,000 an hour to keep Air Force One in the air, and takes about nine hours to fly from Washington, D.C. to Honolulu, which makes for a super-first-class round-trip fare in the neighborhood of $3.25 million dollars. Tack on advanced security teams, chase planes, and air and lodgings for the massive and ever-present Presidential retinue, and you’re probably getting pretty close to the stated mark.

The ultimate upgrade

The ultimate upgrade

But the mark should be set a lot higher. Last year, when Obama was wrangling with Congressional Republicans over raising the debt ceiling, Michelle and the girls flew out ahead of him, doubling the mileage and dumping an additional $3.25 million in the First Family’s Christmas stocking. This year, Barack flew back mid-way through their holiday, again doubling the cost and tapping the public purse for something approaching $8 million.

But wait! There’s more!

There’s always more.

Lots of real costs aren’t counted in the standard press estimate. For the two weeks of the Obamas’ vacation, the Secret Service has uncontested control of Oahu, and it doesn’t care how much you or I spent on our modest junior suite at the Hilton Alana Waikiki, or what we’re hoping to see and do while we’re there. The president is a high-value target, and the Secret Service is quite reasonably fixated on protecting the Commander in Chief. And if that’s institutionally expected and patriotically commendable, it can play havoc with civilian economies.

You will respect my authori-tah!

You will respect my authori-tah!

On the tiny island of Oahu, already burdened with the second worst traffic in the country, security teams descend like a swarm of locusts, barricading streets, installing checkpoints and generally restricting public ground movement during peak tourist season. The president and his 30-car motorcade breeze through the maze of inspection stations while local, tourist and commercial traffic is choked nearly to unconsciousness. Local law enforcement and emergency services are on high alert, and on ‘round-the-clock overtime, from well before the Obamas arrive until long after they’ve left, straining state and municipal budgets.

Wade at your own risk

Wade at your own risk

Tourist-heavy Kailua Bay becomes a densely-patrolled security zone, and anyone inadvertently blundering across the Coast Guard’s invisible cordon risks a $40,000 fine or 10 years in federal prison. Popular surfing spots on the bay are off-limits during the Obama’s vacation, bad news for local businesses that depend on them. The beaches and shorelines near the Obamas’ residence are also taboo, and Coast Guard vessels stand 24-hour picket all along the waterway that ebbs and flows past the foot of their sculpted yard.

The 'short' tour

The ‘short’ tour

Nobody worries about Imperial Japanese Zeroes, anymore, but the Secret Service is still diligent in protecting the president from airborne assault. Temporary flight restrictions require flights within 30 nautical miles of CinC’s location to obtain special FAA approval before turning rotor or prop, which is a major headache for an island simply buzzing with flightseers. Because there is no place on Oahu that’s not within 30 nautical miles of everywhere else on Oahu, that stricture applies to all of them. And standard practice designates the airspace within 10 nautical miles of Barack Obama as off-limits to all but law enforcement, “life-saving” medical, and military traffic, effectively idling all private and commercial aircraft based within that circle. And, of course, that 10-mile radius moves along with the Obamas every time they and their caravan head off in search of touristical adventures, grounding Cessnas, Bells, and vacationers’ long-planned activities as they go.

Continental breakfast included

Continental breakfast included

Although it may seem like a small thing compared to the expense of Air Force One, the Obamas’ posh vacation rental house on the gated peninsula of Paradise Point set taxpayers back a lot more than the $50,000 rent the Obamas’ are footing out-of-pocket. While far easier to secure than, say, the Royal Hawaiian, the five-bedroom, five-and-a-half-bath bungalow wasn’t built for such problematic guests and needed substantial upgrades before the First Family could settle in. Pre-Obama listed at about $3 million dollars, the waterfront sugar-shack known as “Plantation Estate” had to be outfitted with bullet-proof glass throughout, and modifications to the grounds facilitate surveillance and protective tactics. And so the leader of the free world can stay in the Beltway loop while strolling white sands a half a world away, the property was decked out with state-of-the-art satellite communications and encryption equipment, all of which must be uninstalled at public expense when the Obamas pack up their “I-Heart-Honolulu” T-shirts and go home.

Hard figures are just about impossible to come by. They’re just about impossible for me to come by, anyway.

Averaging available estimates, it’s likely that every Obama Christmas since 2009 has required close to $20 million federal tax dollars to celebrate, for a five-year total of nearly $100 million, which whopping figure doesn’t account for local and state taxes deployed, local and state taxes lost, lost commercial revenue, and collateral costs borne by John and Jane Q. Public. It also can’t address the frustration and disappointment experienced by thousands of locals and vacationers caused by the annual presidential disruptions, costs that have no dollar value, but are no less painful.

It probably sounds like I’m picking on Obama, and I suppose I am. But I don’t mean to. My beef is less with him, specifically, than with the broad acceptance of allowing a public official to lavish public monies on personal amusements. Fact is, the problem is probably just more obvious now because Barack Obama is among relatively few recent presidents who haven’t had a private retreat to fall back on. Reagan and George W. had their ranches. Bush Sr. had Kennebunkport. Even Jimmy Carter could hide out on his peanut farm when the pressures of office grew wearisome. But if there’s no shame in not owning a private compound wherein to recluse, there’s no excuse for sticking it to your constituents every Christmas just because you don’t. Granted, $20 million is a drop in the federal government’s $3.6 trillion 2013 bucket, but there’s principle to be considered, and principle matters.

The Obamas – and, to a distressing degree, the press – justify their annual Hawaiian holiday as a “family tradition.” I would say that’s no justification at all. Most American families have Christmas traditions, and most of those traditions are dictated by, and at the changing mercies of, factors beyond mere whim and desire. If a family can’t afford to spend the holiday at Epcot Center, they celebrate at home. If a corporate employee is transferred from Chicago to the Dallas office, their family necessarily trades family portraits at the Christmas Market for postcards of Santa’s sleigh pulled by a team of armadillos. Every time a soldier is reassigned to a new post, that family’s traditions are adjusted accordingly.

armadillo-santa-1

The president’s post is in Washington, D.C., and he should accept the limitations it places on his family’s movements and recreations. If the Obamas’ “tradition” can only be supported through massive infusions of tax dollars, then it’s a tradition that should never have been started in the first place. For a president to insist on a right to squander mountains of public funds on his family’s vacation because he did it last year, and the year before that, defies both reason and rectitude. Would you let the plumber gouge you just because he got away with it before?

There’s just something incredibly shabby and decidedly un-American about bartenders and teachers and small merchants subsidizing a “public servant” in his leisure pursuits to the tune of millions per year.

That same culture of political privilege and free-spending excess is what encourages the government to ask for a fleet of plush $65 million Gulfstream 550 jets to spare “Congressional leadership” the indignity of commercial air travel, or the drudgery of being ferried about at whim aboard bought-and-paid for Air Force executive aircraft. It’s why the Internal Revenue Service thinks nothing of blowing $49 million in two years on a series of swank and boozy “conferences.” And it’s why Congress approves $440,000 annually to pay for attendants to push the buttons in all of Capitol Hill’s fully automated elevators.

A bulwark of democracy

A bulwark of democracy

But, as I said about a 1,500 words ago, everybody needs a break, and no president can rightly be denied his down time. Trouble is, the office itself guarantees additional public expense and interruption every time its current occupant sticks his nose outside the White House door. Is there any place, the long-suffering wage-earner might wonder, where the President and his posse can kick back without kicking taxpayers in the teeth?

 

Officially, it’s Naval Support Facility Thurmont. Originally it was called Shangri La. These days, it’s better known as Camp David.

It was established by President Franklin Roosevelt in 1942 to provide presidents and their families with a peaceful, secure and convenient vacation destination. It’s located in Catoctin Mountain Park, nine square miles of hardwood splendor, peace and repose, resting just 70 miles and a half-hour helicopter ride from the South Lawn. It contains a miniature village of posh accommodations, all of them decked out with the finest amenities tax dollars can buy. It’s replete with first-order satellite communications and encryption technologies and a world-class kitchen. It’s the kind of top-tier Appalachian resort for which other folks might gladly lay down $2,500 a night, or more.

It has a golf course, for crying out loud!

It has a golf course, for crying out loud!

It’s operated by Navy personnel and guarded 24-7-365 by lean, green, mean Marines, comes equipped with its own Cold War-class bunker, and it’s already paid for through normal budgetary channels.

I would propose that all presidents – starting in 2014 and henceforth for all time to come – be required to take all vacations at Camp David. This simple and perfectly reasonable plan would not only save taxpayers a large fortune up front, it would spare the nation at large the collateral costs and inconvenience that attends every presidential holiday.

But perhaps a personage of such august position would find repetitive exposure to that brand of completely free luxury a tad monotonous.

Cry me a river.

Every occupation entails certain conditions, constraints and obligations, and if a politician sets his sights on a position with a $400,000 salary, a solid-gold benefit package and perks that would have made Tsar Alexander blush, he should be prepared to make some sacrifices for the job. No doubt the tax-paying 45-year-old Manhattan dishwasher who spends every Christmas, Easter and Independence Day with his family in a 2-bedroom cold-water walk-up in Queens would be more amenable to the arrangement, if only he could afford it, which he couldn’t in a million years, or if Camp David were available to civilians, which it isn’t and never will be. And it’s certain that the Marine private prepared to lay down his life for his vacationing CinC would prefer to spend his own holiday in Cabo, if his duty and his honor didn’t demand he spend it at his post.

Now that's not so bad, is it?

Now that’s not so bad, is it?

While they may not always have a lot of honor, presidents have posts, too, and duties to the nation that elected them, and budgets to live within. They’re not kings, and the wealth of the nation is not at their disposal. If presidents don’t want to avail themselves of the plush vacation digs the country provides, they can spend the holidays languishing in the opulent comfort of the White House. Their high office doesn’t come with a blank check on the Treasury, or provision to indulge their every animal appetite, or the right to discomfit the productive public for purposes of personal entertainment.

But it does come with some pretty sweet bennies, and Camp David is one of them.

I’m sure the presidency is a stressful job, and I would encourage Barack to take advantage of that sumptuous taxpayer-funded resort every chance he gets.

vacationChevy

 

I’m swell that way.

 

Getting Some Trim

People who know me will tell you I’m pretty gorgeous all the time, and it would be both discourteous and dishonest of me to dispute them.

Still, even a man of my enviable physical attributes must at large intervals attend small matters of grooming, lest the unrestrained vigor of my robust animal nature divert admiring eyes away from my Romanesque posture and voluptuous contours. What with the holidays and whatnot, I resolved to engage an expert who could sculpt my luxuriant mane into a proper frame for my chiseled features and cerulean orbs. Best to enter the New Year with best foot forward, I thought. It’s impossible to predict how many women will behold me for the first time in 2014, and native gallantry forbids me from denying them any portion of that full delight.

I normally rely on John to tailor my silken tresses. His barber shop is a manly place, two chairs, Field and Stream magazine, a stuffed trout, pictures of his snowmobile and his handmade log getaway outside Yellowstone National Park. John doesn’t style. He doesn’t shampoo, or gel, or dabble in scents or salves. He cuts hair the way the

No relation

No relation

pioneers did it, with scissors and clippers and an unblinking faith in Benevolent Destiny.

But on that morning I drove straight past John’s Barber Shop. I had a coupon, you see. There was a new kid in town named Sport Clips, and he was prudently trying to get on my good side with the offer of a free haircut. Since among my many commendable qualities is a highly-developed sense of economy, I figured I’d give some fortunate young haircutter the thrill of their professional life. It was a selfless decision, and typical of my generous spirit, and I started to regret it the moment I walked in the door.

There were big-screen TVs hanging all over the place, all of them tuned to different sporting events. I might not have minded so much if any one of the TVs had been positioned where it could be seen by a person seated in a barber chair, but none of them were. They were, in fact, ideally situated to entertain such as might be in a haircutter’s standing attitude. Like most Alpha males, I believe that a man’s hair is his crowning glory, and I simply can’t approve of anything that might distract a barber’s complete attention from my own.

Worse, he was a she. The staff was uniformly female, and none of it had been alive while the Soviet Union still was. Could I trust such callow flowers with my fulsome locks? The shop’s decidedly Venusian cast also presented a serious moral dilemma. Could I, in good conscience, permit one of those bright-eyed beauties to run their sensitive  fingers through the enchanted forest that rises above my aqualine brow, and thereby ruin themselves at a young age for all subsequent clients?

Still, I had a coupon.

“I’d like a haircut,” I said, pleasantly, but not invitingly.

“Come on over!” chirped the girl behind the counter. “My name’s Katie!”

So bright. So eager. So hungry to please. Poor lass.

Katie seated me smartly, and, I couldn’t help noticing, at a station where I could be easily seen by potential customers passing by on the sidewalk. It was a slightly demeaning, but for a free haircut I supposed it was only fair that I serve as celebrity client-bait. Katie’s hair may once have been a fiery, wiry Irish red after the manner of her Hibernian foremothers, but on that day it was platinum blond, about an inch long, and standing straight up in ragged rows of cruel-looking spikes. I have always supposed that hairdressers assume bizarre and off-putting hair styles as a way to assure customers of that they’re up on all the latest fashion trends. I merely find them bizarre

So delicate

So delicate

and off-putting.

 She shook out my cape with a sharp snap, and tied it on me with quick, practiced motions. She spun me around so I could enjoy my view as much as she, and so I couldn’t possibly see any of the TVs.

“Would you like a hand massage?” she asked.

That caught me off guard.

“A what-now?”

“A hand massage. You get a hand massage with your haircut.”

Yeah, I’ll just bet. I hadn’t been in the chair for 60 seconds and Katie was already trying to squeeze me like a ripe melon. I thought it best to nip the thing in the bud.

“No, just a haircut, thanks.”

“Are you sure? You should try it!”

To another man, that might have sounded like sexual harassment. For me, it was just another day-in-the-life.

“No, I’ll stick with the haircut.”

She seemed genuinely disappointed. I felt bad for her, but took some comfort in the knowledge that I was doing her a tremendous favor, whether or not she knew it. My personal dignity is such that I could never become serious about a needy Irish chick with spikey white hair, and there was no point giving her false hope. I’ll give her this, though – she was persistent.

“Do you want a hot towel?”

Why on earth would I want a hot towel? There are probably lots of guys in places like Beverly Hills, and maybe France, who never leave the barber shop without a hand-

They do things different

They do things different

massage and a hot towel. But this isn’t 90210 and I’m not Jean-Yves Thibaudet, and plying me with sensual indulgences won’t fill the hole you feel in your heart, Katie. 

“No thanks. Just the haircut.”

Katie worked quickly, efficiently, all the while talking a blue streak, trying to seduce me with words, perhaps hoping a steady stream of verbal intimacies would succeed where brute enticements had failed. She said she was originally from California and had only been in Colorado for a few months. She said she’d had a very nice Christmas. Correctly interpreting my taut cranial muscles as indicating superior athleticism, she said she loved snowboarding and rock climbing, and although she’d never actually done either of those things, would be doing lots of both before too long. I showed a polite interest, but nothing more. She grew quiet, and I had reason to hope she was finally ready to accept me as the-intoxicating-pate-that-got-away. Sadly, I had dangerously underestimated the force of my appeal.

“How does it look?” Katie asked.

“Good,” I replied, carefully stifling any hint of romantic inflection.

“Hey,” she said. “I want you to try something.”

Before I could speak, or make a single move to protect my virtue, Katie grabbed my left hand and dispensed at least two ounces of cold, slick nasty into the palm.

“It’s Tea Tree lotion,” she crooned. “Doesn’t it smell good?”

It did not smell good. It did not feel good. I’m sure there are plenty of guys in places like The Castro and, er, France, who just love getting a handful of greasy stink with their haircuts, but this isn’t San Francisco and I’m not Jean Baptiste Lully. I don’t do lotion, any more than I do bikini-waxes, and for a moment I just stared in confusion at the quivering pile of ick in my hand. Fact is, there’s no cosmetic formulation in the world more soothing, more healing, more lubricating, more rejuvenating than the unique blend of essential oils contained within my own supple, alabaster skin, and if Katie really wanted to do her clients a favor she’d take a swab for chemical analysis at Sport Clips’ commercial laboratory in Greenwich Village, or possibly France.

“Um, I don’t really like lotion,” I said.

Gooped!

Gooped!

“Don’t say that until you rub it in,” she urged. “It’s made with real green tea!”

I tried to rub it in. I really did. But it wasn’t going anywhere. I assume my delicately calibrated sheath was rejecting the contamination with all its might, and all I accomplished was to spread the noxious substance from my recoiling palm to my previously pristine hands and arms. It was awful, and I was getting increasingly frustrated, and then, on the counter next to my chair I saw two clean, white terrycloth towels. They were fluffy and soft and carefully stacked for maximum visual impact. They weren’t for wiping, they were for effect. I grabbed one and started wiping myself down like King Lear trying to cleanse the blood from his murderous hands. Katie frowned, clearly annoyed, and it was with a small twinge of guilt that I realized she must be annoyed with herself for inadvertently displeasing the object of her adoration through rash amorous gesture. After maybe 30 seconds I’d shed as much of the disgusting mess as I figured I was going to, gingerly grabbed my jacket and made for the door. I thrust an oily $5 bill into her hand as I passed, hoping the liberal tip would ease the pain in her heart. She intercepted me by the counter.

“Just one sec, okay?”

I winced, dreading the prospect of being forced to declare my emotional indifference toward her in stark terms, and fearing the flood of tears that must inevitably result.

“Can I have your phone number?”

It had been only a matter of time, I guess.You’re young!, I wanted to say. You’ll find a nice fellow one day. A fellow with hair of his own, hair meant only for you! Not this heaven-sent cornsilk, of course, but some rough and inferior fiber that you can comb and pet and scrape out of the shower drain. But I didn’t say that. It was all so tragic.

“I don’t think so,” I smiled, gently.

“How about an email address?”

“No, I’d rather not.’

“You’re missing out. We send coupons. Good ones!”

I could have wept for her sake if I hadn’t been so intent on getting home and scouring myself with lye soap.

“No, no, I’m good with the haircut,” I assured her, and turned away.

“Just one more thing,” Katie said, insistently. Here it comes, I thought. The ugly scene. From beneath the counter she produced a 10-ounce bottle and thrust it forward, almost into my befouled hand.

“Would you like to buy some Tea Tree lotion to take home?”

I fled into the parking lot, never to return.

Hollywood pretty

Hollywood pretty

I still think about Katie now and then. I think about her yearning heart. About her spikey hair. About her sad optimism and doomed perseverance. About her willingness to sacrifice every last shred of self-respect in the cause of unrequited love. But mostly I think a free haircut is simply not worth the emotional cost of breaking a young girl’s heart, nor sufficient compensation for getting lotioned against my will. I will not see Katie again. And that’s too bad, really, because it was a really good haircut. I’m better looking than ever.

Because Gratitude Matters

goose6Come closer, children, give an ear
A tale is told this time of year
About good Christians full of cheer
Which I will tell apace

Be still and hush and take a seat
Down here beside my slippered feet
And learn why always, ‘ere you eat
To say a word of grace

The Barrows were a Godly crew
Right and righteous, true and blue
They occupied the foremost pew
Each Sunday without fail

 At Christmas-tide they hit their stride
Gath’ring near from far and wide
And in their father’s house abide
The newborn King to hail

‘Twas not so very long ago
a-trudging through the crunchy snow
The Barrows came to table so
To eat their Christmas feast

Candied yam, stuffing, dinner roll
Potato drifts, both mashed and whole
Savory green-bean casserole
Cinnamon apple juice

The sideboard groaned with toothsome fare
And gleaming silver dinnerware
And basted with surpassing care
A jolly Christmas goose

Despite the bounty on both flanks
The Barrows in their pious ranks
Forgot to offer words of thanks
For reasons not pursued

They had no sooner taken seats
Than reached for greens and meats and sweets
Pled little Tim “Let’s first entreat!”
But none were in the mood

As Grandpa rose to carve the bird
Abundant helpings seemed assured
When of a sudden there was heard
A yummy crackling sound

The goose lay squirming on its plate
An entrée oddly animate
Imbued with a malicious hate
For all the Barrows ‘round

On drumsticks baked a golden brown
It first brought luckless Grandpa down
Ripped out the throat beneath his frown
Then leapt for Aunt Lenore

 Her pretty face in ribbons fell
Her piquant giblets pureed well
More quickly than the eye could tell
Her dress was soaked in gore

It ate the heart of Uncle Phil
Filleted his wife with vicious will
When Cousin Buck went through the mill
His guts oozed out like clay

And thus it went, around the room
Each Barrow meeting bloody doom
The sav’ry fowl a savage broom
Their lives to sweep away

An age it seemed to little Tim
His cup of terror filled to brim
And shiv’ring in his every limb
As kith and kin were flayed

 At last an awful silence fell
As loud as any funeral bell
And Tim surveyed the festive hell
Upon the table laid

Aunt Effy was a total loss
Eye-sockets stuffed with cran’bry sauce
Her braided hair now dental floss
Her tongue was in her ear

Brother Jubel was coarsely ground
The carving knife stood from his crown
In rich brown gravy he was drown
A horror without peer

On every side Tim’s family
Lay sliced and diced most expertly
The Barrow Clan, except for he
Had sung its last Noel

Lo! there upon its polished tin
Reclined the goose who’d orphaned him
Still crispy outside, moist within
Waiting the supper bell

Its vengeful angel having fled
And cleansing anger put to bed
The lethal bird was simply dead
And seasoned to a tee

Tim clasped his hands and bowed to pray
“Lord, bless this dinner, anyway”
And that made everything okay
A simple courtesy

He seized a drumstick, tore it loose
Pulled up a chair, parked his caboose
“If none of you is having goose
I guess that’s more for me!”

And such, my dears, may be the lot
Of all whom breaking bread will not
Thank Providence for what they’ve got
On merry Christmas Day

goose-graceNow everyone, get on your feet
The table’s set, go take your seat
But if you’re smart, before you eat
You’ll find a word to say

My Year of Living Favorably

49When I turned 49 last year, a friend told me to expect great things.

A year of wonders, she predicted. Romance, fortune, happy communions and serendipitous partings. In my 49th year, she promised, the world would be spinning my way from birthday to birthday.

The reason for her confident optimism on my behalf was numerical. Or more precisely, numerological. The number 7 is lucky, she said, and 7 times 7 is seven times luckier. I should start pricing Mercedes, she said.

Now I generally don’t hold with mathematical mysticism, possibly because I’ve never been particularly good at math. All those numbers give me a nervous stomach. On the other hand, I know enough about the strange and intricate ways of numbers to hold them in high regard. In the hands of their priests, humble digits can be made to perform miracles, and to reveal secrets beyond the salon philosopher’s most ambitious imaginings.

chaldeansThe ancients certainly liked numbers, and they seemed to know a thing or two about turning them to productive purpose. The ancient Chaldeans believed the number 49 to be fraught with portent, although their endless metaphysical dissection of it failed to predict the Persian armies that reduced Chaldea to one of history’s lowest common denominators. The medieval Masons took 49 for a harbinger of change, but somehow managed to keep from actually changing for the next 1,200 years and counting.

Compounded of 49 symbols, ancient Sanskrit styled itself the language of the gods. The Zohar tells us there are 49 possible interpretations of the Kabbalistic “Writings”, and Tibetans have long believed the soul must wander between Earth and Sky for 49 days before getting clearance to land in the Great Beyond.

So it’s not like 49 doesn’t come with credentials.

Still, I wasn’t expecting much, because in 49 years I’ve learned to never expect much. Truth be told, I pretty much forgot about my hypothetical arithmetical advantage until last week, when I took in mind to run a quick mental inventory of the preceding calendar to see if that magic number had any quantifiable influence on my circumstance. The results, I discovered, are mixed.

I didn’t get rich, but I didn’t go bust, either. I picked up some new clients, and made reasonable progress on two separate books. On the other hand, my Lotto activities were utterly unproductive. While I did win $3 in April, I sank the winnings into fresh statistical opportunities that didn’t pan out.

cursingI had a scary moment on Silver Plume Mountain in August. Took a fall and messed up my ankle pretty good. It happened at the top of a cork-tight canyon full of deadfall and roaring snowmelt. Thankfully, the ankle wasn’t broken, and after raising a fine stink that nobody got to hear I managed to creep my way down 3 miles and 3,000 feet of Nature’s Worst.

In July I got a voucher from eMachines for free electronics. Seems a tower I owned maybe 10 years ago had a bad floppy drive. Since I didn’t know that at the time, because even I, and even 10 years ago, was too hip for floppies, I didn’t feel especially injured, but could hardly say no to free stuff. Turns out I was given my choice of reconditioned items that I didn’t need or want. I now have a used tablet collecting dust on my shelf because I’m too cheap to pay for the service that will make it work.

jalopyIn October my car started acting up, losing power, smoking excessively. I took it to the shop. The mechanics started pricing new engines for me. It was a cruel blow. I’d been determined to get 250,000 miles out of that car or know why not, and here it was kaput at a mere 160,000. Fortunately, a car-savvy acquaintance proposed some possible fixes short of a $3,000 rebuild. While his diagnoses turned out to be somewhat wide of the true mark, by persistently bringing them up I seemed to have sparked a bright new era of diligence in the garage and the mechanics eventually contrived a way to restore my choking motor to like-new condition for a considerably gentler $1,800.

Last week’s live telecast of The Sound of Music starring Carrie Underwood was a Finsteraarhorn-sized stinker, by all accounts, but I didn’t try to watch it.

Fact is, a good many good things happened to me last year, but every good thing was accompanied either fore or aft by some cosmos-balancing bummer. Frankly, that pretty well describes the world as I’ve come to know it, and I’m perfectly comfortable with the arrangement. But what does it say to my friend’s numerological prophesies?

Nothing bad, actually.

As it happens, Zoroastrians did and do regard the number 49 as a symbol of dichotomy, instructive of the eternal tussle going on between fundamental concepts such as light and dark, life and death, good and evil, Coke and Pepsi. Seen that way, my hitch as a 49-year-old has gone more or less by the numbers.

The way I figure it, that’s lucky enough.

cokePepsi