Play Money and Lights in the Sky

Husband read my blog entry Wilder Days, in which I ruminated about our disenchanting experience with the French on our honeymoon, and he suggested we go ahead and visit Quebec to wipe the slate clean and start anew.  We’re just wrapping up our Canadian vacation as I write this, and bravo to Husband because this trip and everything about it has been terrific.

To begin with, Husband signed up years ago as a rewards member of a major hotel chain so we could accumulate points for visits and get a free night here and there.  So when he made the reservation for Quebec, he entered a request for any upgrade available at the time of check-in at no extra charge.  Unbelievably, we got assigned to an upper floor, corner deluxe room with panoramic views and executive lounge privileges, including complimentary breakfast, evening hors d’oeuvres, and free Internet.  Jackpot.

Quebec City is GORGEOUS.  It’s a stunning, walkable city, with exquisite architecture, friendly people, and a bustling street life.  I have to give the Quebec Hilton its props for service, which began the moment we arrived.  There was a fierce wind blowing, and when I asked the concierge outside if it was always this windy, he opened his arms wide, placed himself between my back and the wind, and protectively ushered me into the lobby.  For a moment I thought he was going to scoop me up and carry me inside.  I mean I like to think I’m a delicate flower, but wow.

It’s a good thing there’s lots of walking because those almond paste, chocolate stuffed croissants are murder.  You’d think pairing one with a double-shot cappuccino would be overkill, but you’d be wrong.  Caribou is a frequent entry on bistro menus, along with oysters and succulent steaks, but the item we chose to share at a sunny outdoor café was smoked duck pizza with melted gruyere and sprigs of rosemary.  Oh God.  Then we climbed up the 310 outdoor steps known as L’Escalier Casse-Cou (Breakneck Stairs) to the Jardins des Gouverneurs (Governors’ Gardens).  You can take the motorized Funiculaire, but we decided on the hike.  The entire walk was probably less than a mile, but it was all up and down steep escarpments.  By the time we reached Battlefield Park, I was dragging one foot behind me like The Fly.

Canadian money is cool, with the pastel-colored bills sporting a holographic silver band down the side.  The one-dollar coin is called a loonie because of the bird depicted on the back, a loon.  That makes the two-dollar coin a toonie, simply because it makes sense.  The toonie is the neat bi-color coin with the brass circle inside surrounded by the silver border.  It’s very easy to spend because it all feels like Monopoly money and I’m sure that’s the whole idea where tourists are concerned.  Husband was flipping toonies to any hotel employee who smiled at us.

Unbeknownst to us, we arrived for the Festival International De Musiques Militaires De Quebec, a yearly event featuring military bands from all over the world, the nightly climax of which was a spectacular fireworks display happening right within our magnificent view.  There aren’t many things that ratchet up the excitement quotient for me than fireworks.  Unless of course, it’s breathtaking, Top Gun-style aerial acrobatics by military fighter planes moving faster than the Internet, and upside down to boot.  All right outside our windows.  I was afraid I’d under packed for this trip, but it turns out all I really needed was my camera and pajamas.

Look for my amateur action pix next time.  Today we have Daughter’s Foto tribute to Bold Statements

toes

toes

cans

cans

growing

growing

waving

waving

chomp

chomp

stable

stable

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In the High Zeroes

I’m in the midst of gathering my transcripts and test scores in preparation for transferring to a different college.  It turns out that the specialized school I was originally enrolled in with its enormous dropout rate has claimed me as one of its victims.  I moped about it for a long while, and then with Husband’s support decided to just get over it and move the hell on.  So I have orientation next week and then start classes sometime after that.  I’m very excited.

It was while copying all my previous transcripts that I was reminded of when my kids were in high school and took those all-important SATs, with the tense days of waiting for the mail to be delivered and the scores revealed.  It so happened that Daughter was on a visit out of town when her test results arrived at our house.  Son was about thirteen at the time, and he waved the square envelope addressed to his sister in the air, enthusiastically suggesting we call and let her know.  Nothing excites a youngster more than finding out a sibling’s test results first.

We called Daughter and she said to go ahead and open it and read her the scores.  Son ripped open the envelope and ran his finger over to where it was marked Verbal and called out “640!”  Extremely verbal Daughter said, humph, she thought it would be higher.  What about Math?  Son looked down to the sheet and his eyes got wide and I thought uh-oh.  I raised my hands like “What?” and he said in a hushed voice, “It’s all zeroes.”  “WHAT?!” I gasped, and grabbed the paper out of his hand.

Now Daughter was yelling “WHAT?” over the phone and I shrieked at Son, “What are you saying?  They aren’t zeroes!  The first one’s an eight!  She got an 800 on the Math!!”  We could both hear Daughter’s voice calling out over the noise and confusion.

DTR:  I got a WHAT?  What did I get?

OSV:  800.  You got an 800.

DTR:  That’s awesome.

SON:  That’s sick.

Several months later, I overheard the following between Son and Daughter as they sat in the kitchen having an afternoon snack.

SON:  What’s in the envelope?

DTR:  My second SAT scores.

SON:  You took them again?  What for?

DTR: I knew I could do better on the Verbal.

SON:  Did you?

DTR:  Yeah, I got a 680.  I also wanted to prove to myself that the 800 on the Math wasn’t a fluke.  No one could believe I got a perfect score because I don’t really work that hard in math class.

SON:  Well, how did you do?

DTR:  I got a 770.

SON:  So I guess it was a fluke.

Daughter’s Featured Fotos are For Your Information

architectural skateboards

architectural skateboards

japantown peace sculpture, san francisco

japantown peace sculpture, san francisco

hot shoes anywhere

hot shoes anywhere

nyc grand opening: sunbathing rooftop (don't mind the melted chair)

nyc grand opening: sunbathing rooftop (don’t mind the melted chair)

the topple effect

the topple effect

crack dream flower girl

crack dream flower girl

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The End of Time

August 29th is my late father’s birthday, ironically, the same as Michael Jackson’s.  I read today that his family’s long-publicized plans to bury the King of Pop on his birthday have been postponed, further keeping my father’s birthday in the news.  It was actually news to me that Jackson is still above ground; I thought he’d been buried weeks ago.  Being Jewish and of the tradition that bodies are interred immediately if not sooner, I can’t imagine what’s holding things up.  Tutankhamen went underground faster than this, and he took a trainload of swag with him and maybe even some guests.  My advice to the Jackson clan would be, “Focus, people, focus.”

I know that in the depths of grief (and merchandising deals) people don’t always act with clarity or speed.  There’s a lot to deal with at the end of a loved one’s life when you’re in charge.  I got a crash course in death plan management several years ago when both my parents and maternal grandmother died within weeks of each other.  It was dreadful and shocking, and no amount of prior planning could have prepared me for such an upheaval.

Husband and I hadn’t been married very long when my spunky, 90-something grandmother sat us down to go over her final wishes.  She said flat out she wanted to be cremated and was unimpressed that Jewish law mandated otherwise.  She said she was always too busy in her life to pay attention to rules like that.  I asked her what she’d like done with her ashes and she said, “Who cares?  I’ll be dead.”  Husband blanched a little at her bluntness, but I expected nothing less.

I said, “How about this, Grandma:  we keep you in the trunk of the car in case we ever get stuck in the snow.”  Most of the color drained out of Husband’s face.  My grandmother laughed with her whole body and replied, “Perfect!  At least then I’ll be of some use.”  Grandma and I continued to yuk it up while Husband sat there looking at us like maybe he’d married into the Addams Family.

I really felt like the Addams Family in January of 2004 when my mom died suddenly while we were waiting for terminal illnesses to claim my father and grandmother.  My brother and I had sat down with a funeral director the month before, sadly making arrangements for our dad’s funeral, which seemed imminent.  When we returned a few weeks later, the undertaker somberly ushered us into his office and offered his condolences on the passing of our parent.

He pulled out a folder with our family name on it, and said we were very wise to have made all the arrangements in advance, as things have a way of happening unexpectedly.  Then he asked where he could pick up our father.  We looked at each other and said, no, our mother.  He looked at the folder and said, no, your father.  We kept going back and forth like Faye Dunaway and Jack Nicholson in Chinatown with “My sister, my daughter, my sister, my daughter” until my brother and I got so frustrated and overwhelmed that we started to laugh.

What began as a startled chuckle quickly mushroomed into the kind of laughter you can’t control, no matter how inappropriate, like when the whole class is silent, or the hushed echo in church sends it out to the heavens, and the harder you try and stop it, the more it needs to come out.  The funeral director jumped up from his seat and rushed to close the door to his office.  Maybe he was afraid we’d wake the dead.

Daughter’s Featured Fotos present Things To Wonder About

cereal killers

cereal killers

frogs

frogs

delusions of modesty

delusions of modesty

that eye of the beholder thing about beauty

that eye of the beholder thing about beauty

end 5 8_22_vices

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Wilder Days

Husband and I have been discussing where to go on vacation this year, and I said I heard Quebec City was lovely, except for all the French people there who’d pretend they don’t speak English and otherwise act like Americans are one step up from toe jam.  Our experience with the French on our honeymoon left a lot to be desired when we flew Air France to Rome for our Mediterranean cruise.

They managed to piss us off right from the start when we checked in at the gate and were asked if we wanted to sit together.  We said, yes, we were on our honeymoon.  “Oh, so the two of you are mahreed?” the ground attendant inquired.  She handed us our tickets and said crisply, “Enjoy your treep.”  Once on board, we discovered we were indeed in the same row, but on opposite sides of the aisle, both window seats.  Seeing how upset we were, the flight attendants shrugged, like, “C’est la vie,” but some kind American passengers rearranged themselves so we could sit together.

It may strike you as petty that I’m still annoyed nine years later, but consider this:  THE SAME THING HAPPENED ON OUR RETURN FLIGHT.  Different crew, different plane; same request, same result.  Air France.  So we’ve decided to wait on Quebec, at least until I simmer down.

When we first got married, Husband mentioned that he loved camping, and was that something I was interested in?  He said my response was similar to his father’s whenever Husband asked to go camping as a family during his childhood.  His father would say, “I served in World War II.  I’ve done all the camping I intend to.”  My answer was that I achieved my camping pinnacle back in college when I spent a summer on safari in Africa.

Back in 1970, my favorite teacher in high school taught biology class.  Sometimes a group of us would eat our lunch in the lab just to talk to Mr. R some more.  He was always saying it was his dream to visit Africa while it was still an unspoiled haven for wildlife.  I told him that no matter where I was when he got the trip together, he should write me and I’d be ready.  In the spring of my freshman year at college, my mother called me in my dorm room and said I’d received a postcard at home from Mr. R.  It had two words on it:  GET READY.

There were 23 of us on that chartered flight to Kenya and Tanzania in the summer of 1973.  Some were current students of Mr. R, some were teachers, some community members, and a sprinkling were former lab lunchers like me.  For over a month we shared tents, campfires, and a thousand miles on dusty East African roads in Land Rovers that could never have outraced a hungry lion if they had to.  We decided to let the guides worry about that.  After all, they were the ones with the rifles.

But no amount of arms could get us past the Ugandan border, and we were forced to revise our itinerary.  More was going on beyond that checkpoint than we could ever have known.  By the time it was over several years later, half a million people would be massacred by the monster in charge, Idi Amin.  And three summers after we were held at the border, an international incident known as Operation Entebbe took place at Uganda’s airport.  An Air France flight carrying 92 Israelis among its passengers was forced to land by terrorists who had taken the plane hostage.  Before they were rescued by Israeli commandos, the Air France crew refused to leave the plane when ordered unless all the passengers were released.  That alone makes me ashamed of my childish grudge.

Daughter’s Featured Fotos tell about the Inside

art and fashion at 112 Greene Street

art and fashion at 112 Greene Street

looking out at LA

looking out at LA

roxy's diner, seattle

roxy’s diner, seattle

PS 122 gallery

PS 122 gallery

the corner

the corner

come on in!

come on in!

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Melting in the Park

Thursday I had to be in the city for an afternoon appointment, so I arranged to meet Daughter near the Museum of Natural History on the Upper West Side after she dismissed her students for the day.  I texted her my location on a bench inside the park that surrounds the vast museum, a lush, wooded area with winding paths called MacArthur Park, a fact I didn’t know until I saw the bronze sign at the entrance gate.

Well, this is just charming, I thought, as I took a seat and opened my book.  Very soon, a pair of pigeons landed a few feet from me and started pecking around for crumbs.  My thoughts wandered, and I considered whether this was the MacArthur Park from the song of the same name.  Also, whether anyone really knew what the hell that song meant with its bizarre sweet green icing flowing down in a tortured voice.  As a refresher, here is verse one, guaranteed to leave you scratching your head and mumbling WTF??

Spring was never waiting for us, girl
It ran one step ahead
As we followed in the dance
Between the parted pages and were pressed
In love’s hot, fevered iron
Like a striped pair of pants.

Truly.  Right about then, I looked up and noticed there had to be fifty pigeons pecking near my bench.  I looked around and saw people on all the other benches, but the pigeons were only around mine.  Not only that, they were growing sinister in their proximity.  One was pecking the ground a half-inch from my sandal.  I stamped my foot and the bird didn’t even flinch.  I’m not convinced pigeons are real birds anyway.  They’re more like robobirds or birdnoids.  No scatter instinct at all.  If they could be intimidated, it wasn’t by me.

I got up and moved to the bench next to a group of Asian tourists eating bagels.  I hated to sick the birds on a bunch of visitors, but I was frankly a little spooked.  Within minutes, the flock was surrounding my bench again, this time joined by a sprinkling of jumpy little sparrows.  The sparrows were literally hopping up next to me.  Since the Asians on the next bench didn’t speak English, I pointed at them and yelled, “Bagel crumbs!!” to the birdnoids.  The Asians threw their heads back and laughed, their teeth coated with cream cheese.  The birds ignored my invitation to go away and moved closer.

Daughter waved from the entrance with her trademark big smile, and I tried to shoo the birdnoids toward the Asians, who had literally covered the ground around them with bagel bits.  I stood up quickly, but the birds weren’t fazed.  I must look just like their regular crumb lady, some sad phobic who sits on a bench in a housedress, tossing out stale pound cake cooing, “Here kitty, kitty, kitty.”

As we walked along Columbus Avenue looking at restaurant menus for juicy hamburgers, I said to Daughter, “Did you know that park around the museum is called MacArthur Park?”  “If you say so,” she said, pointing to the newly opened uptown Shake Shack, home of New York’s best burger.  “I hope it’s the same as the one downtown,” she said, reading the menu in the window.  All I could think was if someone left a cake out in the rain, those pigeons would be all over it.

Color In The City peeks out from Daughter’s Featured Fotos

welcome back

welcome back

ride

ride

sit

sit

tote

tote

recycle

recycle

blast off

blast off

remember

remember

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Parking War and Peace

My most recent embarrassing moments occurred during the same week in July.  First, I was at Trader Joe’s in the produce aisle when a fellow female shopper observed I had just selected a container of grape tomatoes.  She asked me if I thought they looked crunchy or soggy.  I told her I had no idea; I was buying them either way.  She said she hated when they looked crunchy but turned out to be soggy.  I wondered if I could suddenly say my mother was calling me and take off down the aisle.

While I stood there planning my move, this normal-looking possible crazy woman picked up a container, popped open the plastic lid, picked out a tomato and pushed it against my mouth to taste.  I instinctively knocked her hand away from my face, causing her to drop the entire container of tomatoes.  They bounced EVERYWHERE.  I gasped, “Oh my God!” as they scattered, so of course everyone looking up assumed I was the one who dropped them.  The crazy lady then said under her breath, “They look soggy,” and walked away.  I couldn’t believe it.

The next thing I couldn’t believe happened the following day when I got a ridiculous parking ticket at the train station.  The tomato fracas was out of my hands, but for this $50 parking fine I could write a letter:

July, 2009

Village Justice Court:

I did something very foolish today which resulted in a parking ticket.  I did not see a “guilty with an explanation” box on the ticket, and I hate to waste the Court’s time pleading not guilty, so I’m hoping you will give me a moment of consideration since I have been a Village homeowner and taxpayer since 1987.

I parked in Field 19 in the newly designed compact car area, which I have never done before.  Since there were no cars parked across from me, I did not realize that the meter directly in front of my car was not mine.  It’s my mistake.  I didn’t look closely at where the arrows were pointing, so I put eight quarters in the wrong meter.  The policeman who ticketed my car twenty minutes after I parked was justified since the meter for my spot was empty.

When I returned from the city, I saw the ticket on my windshield and realized what I’d done.  Since I had my camera in the car, I took the following picture of the meter I put the money into that shows an hour and forty minutes was still left on it.  Whether you ultimately require me to pay this ticket or not, I GUARANTEE you I will never repeat this idiocy.

It would make me feel so much less like a moron if you would consider dismissing this ticket or possibly reducing it.  Either way, I won’t tell my husband if you won’t.

Thank you for your time and patience.

Sincerely,
OneSaneVoice

I sent the letter off with my corroborating photo evidence the day I got the ticket.  I just learned that the Village has graciously decided not to pursue my parking infraction, so I’m home free.  Someday I can even return to Trader Joe’s.

Daughter’s Featured Fotos play at Evoking

badass

badass

ocd

ocd

trapped

trapped

space

space

proposal

proposal

angels and demons

angels and demons

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Jerry’s Kid

I told you in Family Déjà Vu about going to see In The Heights, Broadway’s groundbreaking musical hit, for Daughter’s birthday.  Unfortunately, Husband took ill just before the show and we brought in a ringer to fill his seat, so that left just Son and me in the car on the way home.  I drive a beloved 2006 Sentra, which has developed a strange noise in the air conditioner after it runs for a while.  The unit will seem fine; then from the depths of the condenser’s bowels rises a hollow, satanic whining that dissolves into a furious gurgling sound like a thousand lemmings drowning.  Driving home from the city with Son, the air conditioner had been on about half an hour when the screeching rodents from hell began their unearthly howl.

OSV:  Do you hear that noise?

SON:  Do I hear it?  I’ve never heard anything like it in my life.

OSV:  But you weren’t going to say anything?

SON:  Mom, it made the same noise last summer.  I figured if you’re keeping it around that long, you must like it.

OSV:  I don’t like it.

SON:  Then take it over to Artie.

OSV:  Don’t you think I have?  Every time I bring it to Artie, it won’t make the noise.  He can’t fix it if he can’t hear it.

SON:  Give Artie the car.  Tell him to take it home and drive it around for the weekend.  It’ll get fixed.

The lemmings leaped toward the vents in a high-pitched squeal, scratching to escape.  Son looked at me like I deserved a telethon.  He shook his head sadly.

SON:  You don’t have to live like this.

The next morning, our new landscaping service began.  I had been using a guy for years who was even more complacent about our grass than I was.  The only difference was he got paid for it.  Husband suggested we hire the service used by the neighbors across the street since their lawn always looks amazing.  That Monday morning, the new truck pulled up and Carlos knocked at the door.

CARLOS:  We’re going to work first on the shrubs along the side of the house.

OSV:  You’ll give them a good trimming?  They’ve never been properly groomed.

CARLOS:  They’re dead.  We’re taking them all out.  We’ll plant new ones next week.

I nodded and then he nodded.  Unless I’m mistaken, his was a telethon nod.

Daughter’s Featured Fotos set the Mood

shadows

shadows

missbehave magazine

missbehave magazine

majestic

majestic

lost

lost

connected

connected

jerry's 6 graphic_noir

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That’s how we roll

Cadillac has a commercial on TV these days that features a sleek car driven by a gorgeous woman who tells the camera that buying a car is like buying a dress.  You know which one you want, but you still check out the back to see how it looks.  Here the woman tilts her head and says seductively, “Because they hate to see you go, but love to watch you leave.”  With that, the camera pulls back to watch the car zoom into the dusky, musky distance.  First-rate Madison Avenue shit, that.

What came into my head when I first saw that ad was a day the week before in a Soho art gallery/vintage clothing store.  I was standing in front of a mirror in a couture dress by the late British designer Jean Muir, while Daughter critiqued its elegant lines from various angles.  She struck a pose reminiscent of Tim Gunn on Project Runway when he surveys what the designers are creating, and with one hand on her hip advised me, “It makes your butt look great.”

Daughter’s boyfriend was within earshot, and along with my silent glee over my complimented behind, I wondered at what point does a guy get used to that brand of womenspeak?  I mean, first of all, men don’t go clothes shopping with other men, do they?  And they certainly don’t do it for a fun day out with their dad.  Maybe the boyfriend was thinking, “If any man in the fitting rooms told me my butt looked great, I’d drop him.”  He was lucky he didn’t catch the other comment women shopping together often share, “You’ll need a little more support in that.”  Hearing those words might make him return to the store with a posse.

I know a little bit about guys and shopping.  Going with Son for back-to-school clothes required me to do the ‘dance of invisibility’ starting about sixth grade.  I’d carry those big, baggy jeans around like a mule until we reached the fitting rooms.  Then he’d scoop them out of my arms and give me a look like, “If you care about me at all, I won’t see or hear you until we’re in the parking lot.”  I couldn’t even ask if anything fit or he’d look so embarrassed you’d think one of us was naked.  My job was to wait by the cash register and pay for whatever he was still holding when he got there.  When you’re a parent, sometimes you’re the organ grinder, sometimes the monkey.

In contrast, Daughter and I have tried on clothes together since the day she was born.  We’ve leaped around dressing rooms in bathing suits calling out, “Can you see anything when I do this?  What about this?  How about when I bend over like this?”  Women shopping together don’t want to play, “Mirror, mirror on the wall.”  We want the truth.  And yes, we can handle it.

Despite its butt-enhancing powers and attractive price, I didn’t buy that vintage dress the day I tried it on.  I had to spend a few days talking myself in and out of it, and then finally pick the rainiest possible afternoon to travel back down to Soho and make the purchase.  It’s a process, you know.  My friend’s son is getting married in November and we’re all invited, so that leaves a few months to whip my bottom into the kind of shape that will do that dress proud.  Coming off the dance floor, Husband might even stop to watch me walk in front of him.  Daughter will smile knowingly.  Boyfriend will head for the bar.

That taste in Daughter’s Featured Fotos is Urban Flavor

skateboard benefit

skateboard benefit

skate and destroy

skate and destroy

glide

glide

nighttime street

nighttime street

stella mccartney robots

stella mccartney robots

bway's hip-hop musical In The Heights

bway’s hip-hop musical In The Heights

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The light at the end of the tunnel

I was recently advised by a doctor that it’s time for my second colonoscopy, my first having been five years ago when I turned fifty.  In memory of what I know lays ahead, I am running an excerpt from humorist Dave Barry’s hilarious 2008 column.  And I use the term running loosely.

Dave Barry’s Colonoscopy Journal:

. . . I called my friend Andy Sable, a gastroenterologist, to make an appointment for a colonoscopy.  A few days later in his office, Andy showed me a color diagram of the colon, a lengthy organ that appears to go all over the place, at one point passing briefly through Minneapolis.  Then Andy explained the colonoscopy procedure to me in a thorough, reassuring and patient manner.  I nodded thoughtfully, but I didn’t really hear anything he said because my brain was shrieking, quote, “HE’S GOING TO STICK A TUBE 17,000 FEET UP YOUR BEHIND!”

I left Andy’s office with some written instructions, and a prescription for a product called MoviPrep, which comes in a box large enough to hold a microwave oven. I will discuss MoviPrep in detail later; for now suffice it to say that we must never allow it to fall into the hands of America’s enemies.

I spent the next several days productively sitting around being nervous.  Then on the day before my colonoscopy, I began my preparation.  In accordance with my instructions, I didn’t eat any solid food that day; all I had was chicken broth, which is basically water, only with less flavor.

Then, in the evening, I took the MoviPrep. You mix two packets of powder together in a one-liter plastic jug, then you fill it with lukewarm water.  (For those unfamiliar with the metric system, a liter is about 32 gallons.)  Then you have to drink the whole jug. This takes about an hour because MoviPrep tastes — and here I am being kind — like a mixture of goat spit and urinal cleanser, with just a hint of lemon.

The instructions for MoviPrep, clearly written by somebody with a great sense of humor, state that after you drink it, “a loose watery bowel movement may result.”  This is kind of like saying that after you jump off your roof, you may experience contact with the ground.

MoviPrep is a nuclear laxative.  I don’t want to be too graphic here, but have you ever seen a space shuttle launch?  This is pretty much the MoviPrep experience, with you as the shuttle.  There are times when you wish the commode had a seat belt.  You spend several hours pretty much confined to the bathroom, spurting violently.  You eliminate everything.  And then, when you figure you must be totally empty, you have to drinkanother liter of MoviPrep, at which point, as far as I can tell, your bowels travel into the future and start eliminating food that you have not even eaten yet.

After an action-packed evening, I finally got to sleep.  The next morning my wife drove me to the clinic.  I was very nervous.  Not only was I worried about the procedure, but I had been experiencing occasional return bouts of MoviPrep spurtage.  I was thinking, “What if I spurt on Andy?”  How do you apologize to a friend for something like that?  Flowers would not be enough.

At the clinic I had to sign many forms acknowledging that I understood and totally agreed with whatever the heck the forms said.  Then they led me to a room full of other colonoscopy people, where I went inside a little curtained space and took off my clothes and put on one of those hospital garments designed by sadist perverts, the kind that, when you put it on, makes you feel even more naked than when you are actually naked.

Then a nurse named Eddie put a little needle in a vein in my left hand.  Ordinarily I would have fainted, but Eddie was very good, and I was already lying down.  Eddie also told me that some people put vodka in their MoviPrep.  At first I was ticked off that I hadn’t thought of this, but then I pondered what would happen if you got yourself too tipsy to make it to the bathroom, so you were staggering around in full Fire Hose Mode.  You would have no choice but to burn your house.

When everything was ready, Eddie wheeled me into the procedure room, where Andy was waiting with a nurse and an anesthesiologist.  I did not see the 17,000-foot tube, but I knew Andy had it hidden around there somewhere.  I was seriously nervous at this point.  Andy had me roll over on my left side, and the anesthesiologist began hooking something up to the needle in my hand.  There was music playing in the room, and I realized that the song was Dancing Queen by Abba.  I remarked to Andy that, of all the songs that could be playing during this particular procedure, Dancing Queen has to be the least appropriate.

“You want me to turn it up?” said Andy, from somewhere behind me.  “Ha ha,”‘ I said.  And then it was time, the moment I had been dreading for more than a decade.  If you are squeamish, prepare yourself, because I am going to tell you, in explicit detail, exactly what it was like.

I have no idea.  Really.  I slept through it.  One moment, Abba was shrieking “‘Dancing Queen!  Feel the beat from the tambourine. . .” and the next moment, I was back in the other room, waking up in a very mellow mood.  Andy was looking down at me and asking me how I felt.  I felt excellent.  I felt even more excellent when Andy told me that it was all over, and that my colon had passed with flying colors.  I have never been prouder of an internal organ.

–Dave Barry

Daughter’s Featured Fotos offer Reflections from coast to coast

brick sofas and us

brick sofas and us

bathroom in oakland, ca

bathroom in oakland, ca

nature, nyc

nature, nyc

at the bottom of a pint

at the bottom of a pint

smart art, san francisco

smart art, san francisco

leap

leap

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Say what?

It’s no secret that life has become increasingly frenetic, with new ways to communicate continually popping up.  Do we really have more to say, or merely more opportunities to say it?  Thoughts were once celebrated for the way they were expressed as much as for the content within.  Now it’s about speed.  Did technology purposefully make things go faster to fit the pace of our lives, or is our endless motion an attempt to justify what we thought we needed to have?

Speed does not always serve us well.  In The Maltese Falcon, private eye Sam Spade is advised by the Fat Man to take his time deciding how to deal with the crime he’s uncovered.  The bad guy warns our hero, “In the heat of action, men are likely to forget where their best interests lie.”  Or the best words to use.  Glancing at the TV news last night, I caught an image on the screen of a group of shirtless firemen posed in a group.  The news caption read, “NYC’s finest bear it all for calendar.”  If that was the story, they should have been dressed like grizzlies.  Somebody’s got to set the standard here.  If major networks keep blowing off homonyms, the next thing you know, “Where you at?” is considered a real sentence.

On the train home the other day, the woman in the seat ahead of me was telling her travel companion that a guy who asked her to dance at a singles event said he almost didn’t approach her because she looked like the bookworn type.  How worn? I wondered.  Instead of mentioning that the word she was looking for was ‘bookworm’, her companion said he often mistakes women for being bookworns also.  Proving once again that a major cause of marriage is avoidance of singles dances.

As far as the speed of life goes, it’s amazing how much the wind shifted in just one generation.  Compare the TV shows of my childhood, Romper Room and Captain Kangaroo, to my children’s early experience with Sesame Street and The Electric Company.  I had the mellow rambling of Do-Bee and Mr. Green Jeans, while my kids saw vignettes and video bits in rapid-fire succession – ideas, images, alphabet letters, numbers.  No wonder they had the smoother segue to iPhones and Blackberrys and texting what they’re doing thisverymoment at the speed of light.  But do you know what’s wrong with instant gratification?  Pretty soon, it’s just not fast enough.

The generation that considers my children their elders will move even faster.  I visited Daughter’s classroom earlier this week during story time, and marveled at her command of a room filled with so much independent action.  She teaches a group of special needs children aged six to eight, students who respond well to her stimulus junkie yet calming demeanor.  After the story was read, it was time for free play until the buses were called.  One boy brought the anatomically correct doll he was playing with over to Daughter and me and said proudly, “Look!  You can see his little penis.”  “That’s right,” Daughter said, nodding approval.  At which point another boy piped up with, “And you can see his tentacles, too!”  Now that’s something that (a) bears (b) bares repeating.

Os Gemeos, the identical twin Brazilian graffiti artists, have been commissioned to paint over the Keith Haring tribute mural at Houston and Bowery.  Check out their progress in Daughter’s Featured Fotos

say what 1 7_25_from_the_bus___houston_and_bowery

say what 2 7_25_crew

say what 3 7_25_working

say what 4 7_25_paintin

say what 5 7_25_fish

say what 6 7_25_waiting

Answer:  (a) bears

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