Thursday, April 28, 2005

Shall We Eat Out or Eat Out in the Car?

An exerpt from my forthcoming book, We Found the Vacuum Cleaner. It's only forthcoming; I didn't say "soon coming."

I was watching TV the other night; 20/20 or something like that. I know, I know, I should have been blogging, but something caught my attention finally. It was a story that claimed it’s safer to eat in an expensive New York restaurant than it is to eat in your own home. I used to be in the restaurant business, so…

Here’s the scoop. The newshunter and his camera crew slipped into one of the most expensive and exclusive restaurants in New York City—the kind of restaurant that keeps an on-site health inspector. The owner proudly took them on a tour of a spotless kitchen where the staff ate their own meals directly off the gleaming floor.

Pretty soon the newshunter sat down with a handsome couple in the dining room and announced that they were eating in a really clean restaurant. They didn’t have to worry about salmonella or the plague or anything unhealthy. (I think this was New York. Correct me if I’m wrong.) The couple seemed pleased—until the newshunter said, “Let’s go to your house and see if it’s clean enough to eat in.”

“Hey, great, Dude,” said the husband. “Come on over.”

“My house is a mess,” said the wife. “I don’t think so!”

"Aaah, no problem," said hubby. "Let's go." Then in a brilliant flash of insight, he added, "Waiter, gimme a sack for our wine bottle."

Grrr!” snarled the wife, but everybody went anyway. The house was a mess alright, but that’s not the point of the story.

The in-house health inspector immediately gagged over a damp sponge in the kitchen sink. He gasped and gasped about open potato chip bags in the cupboard. He snapped on some latex gloves. The wife glared at her husband. The inspector opened the refrigerator and lifted a plastic bag full of something slimy and green. He held it up with a thumb and forefinger. Then he hoarked.

”I’m embarrassed, dude,” said the husband. “I think that’s the applesauce. Isn’t this the applesauce, hunny? Do you still want it?”

The newshunter stared into the camera and harrumphed self-righteously at us. (“What’s the big deal?” I wondered. “It looks like home to me.”) Meanwhile, the wife quietly slipped a big butcher knife out of the drawer and stepped behind her husband.

Outside, the newshunter looked into the camera again and told us [words to the effect], “... you should never eat at home; you should only eat eighty dollar dinners in expensive New York restaurants every night so you won’t get food poisoning, ptomaine poisoning or athlete’s foot.” He even said it with a straight face.

Well, the next day, my daughter, who lives down the road in Wheatgerm, Kansas, came over with all three grandkids. It wasn’t long before we decided to go to the shopping center. We all jumped into her van (or is it an SUV?). I climbed into the back end to be close to the grandkids who were already snacking. My First Wife Chancie sat up front.

“What are you kids eating?” my daughter asked as she pulled out of the driveway.

“French fries,” they said in unison.

“Where’d you get French fries?”

“They’re left over from last Saturday,” said Grandson One.

“No, dummy! From last Thursday,” said Grandson Two, who has the great memory. "After basketball practice. Remember?"

“Oh, yeah.”

While we rode to the shopping center I found several little bits and pieces of French fries, Pez candies, M&Ms, napkins, chip crumbs, unfinished lollipops, a sock filled with something spongy that used to be ice cream, popcorn, one of those diapers that you just roll up after you take it off the baby. One of the boys pulled a short length of licorice from under my shoe. I didn’t see it down there; it being black and hidden with lint. Apparently, it still tasted pretty good.

I found two cold-cheese pizza slices. “Why don’t you throw these away as soon as your done?” I asked.

“We can’t. We have to save them for breakfast tomorrow so Mom won’t have to stop when she’s taking us to school.”

I picked up a hamburger wrapper from under Mom’s seat. It was partially covered by an almost dry gym towel. I peeked inside the wad and saw something that had turned green. “Anybody want this?” I offered, tongue-in-cheek.

“Give it to the baby,” said Grandson One, seriously.

“No, Granddad! We can’t give this to her!” said my alarmed Grandson Two. He turned to his brother. “Mom said she can only have a bottle in the car! Remember?”

“Oh, yeah,” said Grandson One, and he groped around under the seat untill he found her bottle. It was stuck—but not too tightly—to a soft drink cup. He picked dog hair off the nipple, then sterilized it clean on his pant leg. The baby, safely strapped down in her car seat, went right after it; seemed to enjoy it.

“This reminds me of the time you were little." I said to Grandson Two. "You and the dog were eating dinner together—right out of his bowl.”

“Yeah, I still remember that. That's funny.”

“Oh, good!" My daughter called from the front seat. “I’ve been looking for that bottle for two weeks. Where’d you find it?”

I handed Grandson One a flattened candy bar, which he expertly licked off the wrapper, which he carefully folded and slipped into the diaper bag.

I decided to do a little newshunting of my own. “When’s the last time you were sick?” I asked.

“Mom,” he hollered. “How old was I when I had the chicken pox?”

I’m thinking that the newshunter, the restaurant owner and the on-site health inspector have never been married.

Wednesday, April 27, 2005

Attitudes and Beatitudes

Blessed are the creative; for whole new worlds shall unfold before them.
Blessed are the rejection slips; for sooner or later they shall enrich.
Blessed are they who type and type and type; for they shall be comforted.
Blessed are they who hunger and thirst after new ideas; for they shall be overwhelmed.
Blessed are the merciful; for they shall sleep well at night.
Blessed are the pure in heart; for they shall see God and other bright lights.
Blessed are the peacemakers; for they shall be called the children of God.
Blessed are the clean of language; for their blogs shall prosper.
Blessed are the meek; for they shall inherit a publisher.
Blessed are they who read to their children; for their pleasant memories will never fade.
Blessed are the children who long to read; for they shall become creative.

©2005 by Paul Nichols

Tuesday, April 26, 2005

Junior Red Hat Society

I don't usually do things like this, but in this case I'm going to make an exception. Darby is my Texas granddaughter and I think this is a classic photo. Her mom took it with a digital camera the size of a matchbook. Her mom is my younger daughter, Amy, an SAHM.

Image hosted by Photobucket.com

This is not to say that I don't love my other grandkids, nor that I wouldn't put their pictures in my blog. I just think this is a prize-winning photo.

Monday, April 25, 2005

Once in a Lifetime

One of our credit card bills arrived recently, just a day after I mailed off the full payment for it. Hoo, boy, did they stick the late fees to me. Well, smart as I am, I didn’t panic. My plan was to call Customer Service and start a small war. I waited a few days till my check cleared.

Tonight I sat down at my desk and called the customer service department. Let’s just skip over all the numbers I had to press to Speak English, Speak To A Customer Service Representative and so forth. You’ve been there. You know what I’m talking about. While all that technology was slowing me down, I organized my bill, account number, purchase dates, cleared check number and date—hey, I was armed and aiming at the heart.

Finally, Tanya came on the line and cheerfully went through all the same requests for information—verbally, this time. Ho-hum: here we go again. You know what I'm talking about here, too.

She finally asked me the big question, and following is our conversation.

Tanya: “Now, how can I help you, Mr. Nichols?”

Me: “Zero out my account, please,” I demanded arrogantly. "That'll get her attention," I thought to myself.

Tanya: “Mr. Nichols, please hold just a moment.”

[Click] The phone went dead. I figured three minutes at the earliest. You know what I’m talking about. I sipped some water so my throat could withstand the shouting match I was about to launch. But …

Fifteen seconds later. [Click back]

Tanya: “Okay, Mr. Nichols. I zeroed out your account. Is there anything else I can do for you this evening?”

Me: ??

Tanya: “Mr. Nichols? Hello?”

Me: “W-w-well, Tanya, th-th-that’s the sweetest news I’ve heard in a long time. Th-th-thank you very much and God bless you.” I pinched my other earlobe with a staple puller just to make sure I was awake.

Tanya: (Giggle) “Thank you. I accept that and I’m glad I could make your night.”

Me: “Y-y-you didn’t even ask for an explanation.”

Tanya: “You’re all set, Mr. Nichols. Have a nice night. (Giggle)”

How could I have a nice night with blood spurting out my earlobe? You probably don't know what I'm talking about.

“A gentle answer turns away anger...” Proverbs 15:1

Friday, April 22, 2005

That's the government for you


Have you been to www.mypyramid.gov yet? It’s quite a site and quite a sight.

First thing: they ask you for your age and sex. That’s the government for you. I don’t think either one of them is the government’s business, but I gave them my age and put “yes” for sex. You’d think they’d ask for my gender, but they didn’t. And you’d think they’d ask for my weight, too, but they didn’t. Hello!...I'm trying to get rid of some of it.

Then there are several colorful pages to read, study, copy, print, all of them promising a healthier me. The site even has a tracker. Again, that’s the government for you: always snooping around. It even wants to know what I had for lunch today. Honest. Does the government have to know everything? Even how many slices of salami? (Two, and an orange, too.) And it wants to know if you ate at McDonalds or Wendy’s. What the…?

I could go on and on about this nutritional site, but I’d take all the fun out of it for you.

Chew on this, though: there are no goals for anyone. I want to lose 0.6 pounds per day for the next 30 days so that I can get back into my suits. Does OurPyramid dot gov help me out here? Nooo. It just wants to know what I ate, how much I ate, where I ate, who I ate with, what city, how fast/slow, did I have sex or have a gender for lunch, do I regularly change the batteries on my smoke alarm(s), did I exercise today, did I sweat, why am I looking at this site, aren't I healthy, do I know where my children are, is it that late already, what I read at breakfast* (*do not include back of cereal boxes), did I file my 1040 on time, do I smoke, do I wish I could smoke, what’s my address, what’s my e-mail address** (**optional), how much paperwork did I reduce today…

All this designed and uploaded by The Lowest Bidder. Maybe that's why I don’t feel healthier yet.

Question: If I open a government web site, is it okay to pray, mention God/Jesus, or quote the Ten Commandments?

Answer: Well, I did!

Wednesday, April 20, 2005

Interesting...


I'm hovering all over the Internet reading blogs. Here's a few observations; aka personal opinions.
  • Is this a great country, or what? Everybody gets to have their say and everybody else gets to forward it on to millions of others. So say something nice.
  • The most interesting blogs are written by women, and most of them are professional SAHMs. Now isn't that interesting? There are some great "Bombeckers" out there!
  • Too many blogs contain profanity just for the sake of profanity. People who think that violent language is important should give their sites an "N" rating (nasty) so the rest of us can quickly move on to interesting sites with some quality and depth. This applies to bloggers in all countries. (¡Yo hablo EspaƱol, pendejo!)
  • Speaking of stinky language: how is it that complete strangers can leave vile comments on another person's blog? [You're *** right, dude! I hate them *** three syllable words, too. Gotta love ***. I am *** and *** of her *** and his ***! ***!! Keep on ***! Bring it *** on!] If you did that on the phone, the sheriff would be knocking down your door within 10 minutes. If you sent a dirty letter to someone you didn't know, you'd be in jail and on the evening news within a week. Come on, be honest: you wouldn't talk like that in a Wal-Mart check out line, would you?
  • Contemporary blogs remind me of early Internet days when everyone (businesses included) had a "My Favorite Links" button. Will people eventually get tired of plugging their friend's blogs? I hope not.
  • When I first started blogging (Feb '04) I once saw my other blog listed on Blogger's 10 Recently Updated posts. Ooooh! Wow! Now I notice that there are so many posts that Blogger is almost 24 hours behind in posting the most recent. That's interesting.
  • Some blogs have magnificent graphics. I wish I could do that. But I wonder: if the point of the blog is personal comments, then why the excessive energy on the colorful frills and commercial icons? Just wondering.
  • There aren't too many older writers (bloggers). Retirees and the like. Maybe I'll go out and recruit a few. The blogs I've seen by older people are quite good; quite entertaining; provacative.
  • I've noticed that most dedicated bloggers don't blog on the weekends. Now that's interesting.
  • My other blog is the only one I'm aware of that has a beginning and an end.
  • I love those blogs that feature good photographs. Music-oriented blogs are nice, too, but take up a lot of my valuable time. (You know why they invented bassoons? So there'll be plenty of kindling for an accordian fire.)

I'll probably add some more comments later on.

If you add a comment with foul language, I will delete it as soon as I discover it. I have kids and grandkids. Show some respect.

Friday, April 15, 2005

I'm a Big Fan, Part 2


I forgot to tell you: I have two classic books,
Mac for Dummies and More Mac for Dummies, both by David Pogue. He autographed them for me. I watched him. And his wife autographed one for me, too.

Then he did some magic tricks. But the magic of all this is that these two books survived our house fire.

I'm a blessed man.

Saturday, April 02, 2005

1 Calorie, 2 Calories, 3 Cal…

I went walking through the neighborhood early this morning. I thought I’d burn off a calorie or two with a power walk. But it turned out to be a beautiful, aesthetic, refreshing, leisurely, nurturing walk along pretty streets, past well-groomed lawns (which are greening up, by the way), through a mini-forest, across a creek… Wish you were here.

It was definitely a spring morning. Bright sunshine; no wind; moderate temperatures. Even the children were out on their bikes. I saw a cardinal; some robins and even a teenager. Whoever heard of a teenager out of bed early on a Saturday morning? I got some pleasant thinking done.

This walk today was one of the great hours of my life. I don’t know why. Maybe it was the all the conditions of the time and place. Maybe it was me. I guess all the forces of the universe came together in this one moment to really bless me good. I could have walked on and on.

Two things would have made it better: a horse under me and my wife along side me.

"...for his mercies never fail...They are new every morning." Lamentations 3:22,23

It looks like I used up my allotment of punctuation marks for this week, eh?