Where are you?
I keep listening for you moving around
in the TV room,
walking downstairs to smoke,
making noise somewhere.
I know you're gone to West Virginia.
I took you to the airport,
for goodness sake.
Yet, I keep listening for you
moving around in our house,
so used to you being there.
I guess I'll take the Puli
out to pee,
and check on the Yankee score,
and have a snack
or just go to bed
and lay there
waiting for you to come, wondering
where you are,
missing you in my space
more than I imagined I would.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Bird and Bach
OK, I think I've gotten some of the nonsense of the new and unimproved Blogger.com down. Maybe I can write about something besides how upset I am with the new and ridiculous home page for Blogger.
Our bird, a parakeet named Maggie, loves classical music. So we keep WSHU--the last classical music NPR station we can receive--on by her cage all day.
I haven't done a scientific study (Lord knows I couldn't do a 'scientific' study given the NFP ending of my Meyers-Briggs scale) but I've noticed some things.
Like that organ music makes her lean against her cage on the side where the radio is and not move.
Bach, in any form, seems to have the same effect.
She dances back and forth to most of the Romantic stuff.
She sings along with Mozart.
It gives me faith in music to watch her.
It has similar impact on me. I really miss the great McManis organ at St. John's. I'd just lean into the side of my cage and be joyfully still.
Our bird, a parakeet named Maggie, loves classical music. So we keep WSHU--the last classical music NPR station we can receive--on by her cage all day.
I haven't done a scientific study (Lord knows I couldn't do a 'scientific' study given the NFP ending of my Meyers-Briggs scale) but I've noticed some things.
Like that organ music makes her lean against her cage on the side where the radio is and not move.
Bach, in any form, seems to have the same effect.
She dances back and forth to most of the Romantic stuff.
She sings along with Mozart.
It gives me faith in music to watch her.
It has similar impact on me. I really miss the great McManis organ at St. John's. I'd just lean into the side of my cage and be joyfully still.
I'm so frustrated....
So, I'm not even sure how to view what I've posted. The terms have changed--'publish' instead of 'post' is, I think, how to send stuff.
In place of a spell check click, there is an ABC click with a line through it which simply puts a line through the word you want to know if you spelled correctly or not.
And nowhere I have found, is their a 'view posts' tab.
I'm sure no one--out of the 12-15 people that might read "Under the Castor Oil Tree" wants to read my rants about Blogger.com. But until I figure it out, that's all you'll get. IF I can figure it out.
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
OK, before I even get started....
OK, before I even get started.
I noticed just now two things, it's getting harder and harder for me to get to this place a write a blog. Blogger.com spent 5 minutes tonight trying to tell me how they've made my blogging easier, better, more fun before I could get HERE and actually write a blog!!!
Also, I've noticed my new, improved, easier, better, funner blogs are being written out without acknowledging my paragraphs. Their fault, not mine....
Being an English major, I write in paragraphs--on old typewriters there was even a symbol on the upper row of the keys that stood for 'paragraph'. It was a capital P with an extra leg. Who knows where that went.
And typewriters had a key called "Return" which on computers is called "Enter".
For my taste, "Return" trumps "Enter" every time.
I'm going to 'publish' this and then view it to see if my careful use of pagination has been changed.
I HATE CHANGE....
Saturday, September 22, 2012
Dinner list
I have lots of files on my computer--hundreds and hundreds--and sometimes I glance through them to see what all I have.
I found one tonight called 'dinner list'. What it is, I think, though I don't remember writing it or when--is a list of rules for children when going to another person's house for dinner.
Surely I didn't write it so long ago as when our children needed such a list. I didn't have a computer back then. I suspect I went to what I expected was going to be an adult dinner party and sat next to a child too young to come to an adult dinner party. Who knows.
At any rate, I share it with you tonight...
DINNER LIST
1.You will not take off any of your clothes during dinner, lest you die.
2.You will not wipe your hand on your clothes after shaking hands with our hosts, lest you die.
3.YOU WILL SHAKE HANDS LIKE NORMAL PEOPLE…..Lest you die.
4.If our hosts have any pets, you will not twist their legs or ears or tails or otherwise annoy them lest you die.
5.You will take your napkin and put it in your lap. There it will stay, verily, throughout your meal.
6.You will accept anything passed to you in way of food—no matter how icky it is—and take only the smallest amount of the most icky things and not scream about how icky they are, lest you die.
7.You will not spit food on your sister/brother or on your plate or on the dinner table, lest you die.
8.If you must—lest you die—spit food at all, it will be into your napkin on your lap.
9.You will not comment on any body part of our hosts either to your sister/brother, or your parents or anyone else lest you die.
10.You will not say any of those 14 words we all know you know but have agreed you will not say, lest you die.
11.You will not—under any circumstances—tell any stories about your siblings or parents that will humiliate and mortify them…lest you die.
12.You will stay at the table throughout dinner, even if you think you are going to explode; especially if you think you are going to explode…and you will not mention your impending explosion under any circumstances, lest you die.
13.No matter how good dessert is, you will not eat dessert from someone else’s plate nor lick your plate nor say, GIMME MORE CAKE, nor do anything to humiliate and mortify your parents, lest you die.
Friday, September 21, 2012
Survivor...
I went to my urologist today. I took Ann Tyler's "Beginning Good-bye" and finished it in the waiting room and the exam room waiting for the doctor. I recommend it highly--or anything by Ann Tyler, the girl's a writing machine.
In between the waiting room and the exam room, I peed in a cup and talked to the nurse, asking her how my PSA was. She wasn't supposed to tell me but because I am so disarming and charming, she did. It was so low it couldn't be measured. I was thrilled! That meant, I imagined that I wouldn't get an injection of Luprin--a drug I was on for over a year before last March. I haven't had it since then and my PSA actually went down!
The doctor came in. We shake hands a lot. We shake hands when he comes in and when we leave and then again at the desk after making my next appointment. It's not bad because his hands are small and soft. The urologist who removed my prostrate 8 years ago had hands like an NFL linebacker. Since these are people who stick their fingers up your butt, small hands are a plus....
He told me that--after 8 years and after surgery and radiation (that messed up my bladder quite a bit)and hormone treatment, I was "essentially cured". I'd come back every six months for a year and then every year for a while, but what I heard him saying was that finally, finally I could say I was a cancer survivor!
Praise the Lord and pass me another glass of wine!
I told him in the last six months that I realized how lethargic Luprin had made me. He smiled, "well yes," he said, "I hear that a lot."
So, I didn't go to them gym today as celebration. My seldom going to the gym over the year before the last six months (when I've gone 5 or 6 times a week) was due to the drug. I just didn't realize it until now. And the 15 pounds I gained and the occasional sweating spells and the lack of energy--all that was Luprin related, but I didn't realize it because in a year you can get used to how you feel and think it is normal, I guess.
(He was so pleased with my progress that he didn't even put his finger up my butt. I had a cover story that I needed to have a bowel movement and a finger up my butt would be a problem, but I didn't need it. Truth is, whenever I think a doctor is going to stick his finger up my butt, I need to poop. That's just me and don't know if it is generally true....Women might be interested in this: whenever a doctor sticks his or her finger up your butt--I've had both male and female urologists--they invariable, like a knee-jerk reflex--say "sorry". My inclination, when they say 'sorry' is to say--though I've only said it once to my GP who've I had for a quarter of a century--"how was it for you? Want a cigarette?")
I'm so happy about all this I could weep for joy...Probably, I'll get hit by a bread truck crossing the street next week....
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Blog Archive
About Me
- Under The Castor Oil Tree
- some ponderings by an aging white man who is an Episcopal priest in Connecticut. Now retired but still working and still wondering what it all means...all of it.