Friday, December 17, 2021

Posture

Posture is important. I once knew a man who stood with a pronounced slouch. There was something crooked in his posture and in his demeanor. He looked like a question mark when he wrote on the blackboard. The crooked man had the power to allow or restrict my access to an opportunity. I had been the top student in the German’s math class, but the crooked man held the cards of all our fates for the following year. I had earned that opportunity, but somebody with money and power had paid him off to give away my opportunity to someone else. It was the girl who chased my coattails, who ended up being promoted with the advanced class.

The crooked man admitted his betrayal to me privately. In his weakness he thought that his reasoned excuse would appease me. He assumed that everyone was as cowed by privilege as he. Instead, his betrayal only focused my detestation for him. But now, I was stuck with the crooked man for nine more miserable months. He talked to us like children, but we were young adults. His classroom had floor to ceiling windows that opened on the ground floor. I always sat in the back. In the warm months we would open the windows, and during class I would gradually ease my chair backwards until I was sitting entirely outside. I was bored by his class, but I was always prepared to answer when called upon. Otherwise, I was inching my way outside, free but tethered, under the fluttering maple leaves and a blue sky – until he yanked me back with his insipid droll and his crooked stance.

By the time we were done together, I hated not only him but the very thing I had excelled at prior to meeting him. It did not matter that the girl who had been given my spot washed out after a year and transferred somewhere else to disguise her embarrassment. Nothing could correct the wrong that had been done to me.

However, hate is a self-destructive emotion, and pity is useless. If there is no recourse to right a wrong, the individual still must figure out how to overcome its shadow. Yet that man was just a piece of a much larger puzzle. I carried a lot of rage, for a lot of reasons, for too much of my youth. It does not matter whether rage is haphazard or directed at injustice. Rage cannot be contained. It corrodes the vessel in which it is carried, struggling to get out. It took me a long time to learn how to set those negative feelings free from the sanctuary of my mind.

Scars scab over, but some of the residue of trauma never leaves you. Twenty-something years later I came across that same man again, at the wake for one of his colleagues. The man who had passed had been a mentor and a hero of mine. But I knew by then that some people attend events surrounding a death, to pay their respects to the deceased and their loved ones, while others attend to be seen attending. The crooked man stood like an old tree that had been permanently bent by a perpetual wind, even more crooked than I remembered him. He was still weak, and still mealy mouthed.

It made my skin crawl to be near that cockroach. But cockroaches live in the shadows, so most people never see all the things that they do in the darkness. As far as I knew, the crooked man only ever abused the trust of those powerless to defend their honor against him. The time for discussing his betrayal was long passed by now. He would get nothing from me, but that which I chose to give him. I understood that my etiquette was about me and not him, so I straightened my shoulders, made my spine extra erect, and tilted my head only enough down to look him in the eye. Then I said "Hello."

We exchanged pleasantries in the company of some others. In my mind, some part of me was still seething, yet I remained polite, betraying no emotion. After a few moments, I excused myself. As I walked away, I looked back over my shoulder. The crooked man was speaking with a lovely woman who had been his colleague all those years. She must have known who he was, but perhaps she did not know that there was anything to be done about it. Dealing with a sick mind can confound even the most well-meaning people, especially when no obvious solution reveals itself. Perhaps she was just being polite in the same manner as I had been. Sometimes there is no choice but to trust others to their own judgments.

When I was a boy, we had a diseased peach tree in the side yard. It would drop rotten fruit all over the yard and then we would go about picking it up to throw away. My mother did not know what to do about it. I think that she wanted to save it but did not know how. I always suspected that it might have been beyond saving. Then, in 1985, Hurricane Gloria came along and blew the tree partially over, leaning it propped against the neighbor's fence. It took us a couple more years to figure out what to do, but eventually that tree became so profoundly diseased and crooked, that resolution became imperative. It was abundantly obvious that its life was more painful than any pleasure we might derive from having a peach tree growing in our yard. The neighbor was a landscaper, so he came by and took it down.

Walking away from the wake, now with some distance from the crooked man, I stopped and turned. The wake had been held in a building I knew well. To anyone who noticed me staring, it might have seemed that I was assessing the structure. They would have gotten the action correct, but the object wrong. The crooked man looked like that old peach tree standing bowed by the weight of its own disease. In that moment, I allowed myself to think of the Portrait of Dorian Grey, that novel by Oscar Wilde, about a man who appears youthful to the world, while all the evils of his character are revealed on a magic portrait of himself that he keeps hidden in his attic. That novel was a fiction. In the real world, nature has her way of delivering justice to those who deserve it.

Even as a little kid, my great uncle Lou used to admonish me on my posture. Lou looked like Benny Hill, and he had a similar, though perhaps more wholesome, sense of humor. He was the first person I knew with a VCR, an old beta max that he would play on his projection television. Uncle Lou had a collection of Benny Hill and Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In videos that he would show to anyone who was willing. I loved sitting on the carpet and watching those videos with him. I had a huge crush on Goldie Hawn as a child. She played dumb, but I thought her bits on Laugh-in were clever. I also liked looking at all the pretty women Benny Hill would chase too. Comedy and pretty girls produced the surface level appeal but spending time around Uncle Lou was the real prize. It takes a village to raise a child. Some children have their village delivered to them, while other children need to go out searching for it. Uncle Lou was part of my village, and I learned valuable lessons from his about how a man should act and strive to carry himself. Uncle Lou was the one who told me to “Try something new every day.” To this day, that phrase is a central tenet of my risk assessment matrix.

Lou had been an MP in the military during WWII, but had once divulged that he never loaded his gun. He diffused most situations with a smile and his good humor. I was more terrified of disappointing him, than I was of him per se. When he would tell me to stand up straight, or pick up my feet when I walked, I just thought those were the sorts of things that old people say to kids. Now that I am older, I see how these things matter.

In the past I have posted about how everyone gets a chance to become their own kind of hero. Thinking back on the heroes in stories I read or watched as a child, none of them ever slouched. All those heroes lived by a code of honor, and dignity and integrity. When I played with building blocks as a child, the structure never stood long if the foundation was not solid. Posture is the foundation. Everything, about who you make yourself to be, is built upon how you choose to stand.

Monday, November 15, 2021

The Blossom

Men are like plants,
We grow at different rates
And reach different heights.
Two saplings planted side by side
May seem destined to grow together,
But the rose bush stays low
And guards its beauty with thorns,
While the oak stretches towards the sky
High above that against which the other guards.
You cannot be your brother,
Nor can he be you.
Do not apologize for what you are not,
And do not scold those who cannot follow.
With respect for the nature of oneself
Each individual blossoms in his own way.



Friday, October 29, 2021

Choose

Death is Certainty. Life is Risk. Death is Emptiness. Life is Full. Death is Fearfulness. Life is Courage. Death is Coming. Live Now! There will be no hereafter. The virtue is laughter Emanating from the mouths of the Free. Choose every Moment While the choosing is yours. The world expands before you; Earth and Sky, Wind and Water, Birds above and Worms below, And you here now as witness To Wonders beyond your Imagination. Every Moment is a Choice And every Choice is cumulative. You perpetually program your Mind For every Consequence that follows. Your kindness towards an injured turtle today, Will be the Compassion you demonstrate Towards a fallen man tomorrow. There are no guarantees, Only options and outcomes. You can stand on your feet, Or fall to your knees. You can beg from the world Or mold it like clay. You get to choose, Every Day. Choose every Moment And Live by your Choice. Stand for your Self. Raise up your Voice. You get only one Chance To make your mark on Eternity, So Fight like hell to Live Your Life Free.


Thursday, October 7, 2021

Sidewalk Daisy

Going alone is dangerous
And could be seen as invective
Independent thought angers us
So says the collective

They want us all to think alike
And don't you dare ask why
The minions of the new Third Reich
You must either conform or die

Goose steps along the sidewalk
Long march into the sea
Duct taped and afraid to talk
Find the courage to break free

When will you have had enough?
Are you so bold to interrupt?
Little flower hang in tough
Sidewalk Daisy do stand up!

The conformists are all cowards
Co-dependent and suicidal
They want to play your cards
Because they fear you as their rival

You know they'll go to any length
To make your Titanic sink
But reason is your greatest strength
If you've got the nerve to think

The people in the background
May not know what to do
But if you magnify your focus
Perhaps they'll follow you

When will you have had enough?
Do you dare to interrupt?
Little flower grow up tough
Sidewalk Daisy do stand up!



Saturday, October 2, 2021

Family in a walking condom

Family in a walking condom
Keep your who-ha clean
Never mind looking dum dum
You need not steam your bean

Family wrapped in plastic
They dare not think it through
They'd gargle with Fantastik
If the late news told them to

Grandma went to see them
They freaked and got all tense
Turned mole hill into problem
Cause her family is quite dense

Facts don't care about feelings
The podcast guy said so
But fear will send you reeling
If you evade instead of know

Forget masks and social distance
There are plenty other ways to die
So any virtue signaling nuisance
Just mind your bunk and fly

Family in a walking condom
Keep your who-ha clean
You're already looking dum dum
Cause you didn't steam your bean



Friday, June 18, 2021


Your life is like a pebble in the instant when

it pierces the surface of a pond, while time

stretches through infinity, both forwards and back

beyond the limits of your imagination. And

only in that moment, as the pebble breaks the tranquility

of smooth waters, do you exist. What will you have done

with that instant? How will your legacy of ripples

expand long after you are gone, sunk to the bottom

with the mound of pebbles that have come before?

Wednesday, June 16, 2021

The Not So True Story of How Rigatoni Pasta Got it’s Name


Paulie returned home to his brownstone in the Bronx one day and saw a 25-foot box truck parked at the curb in front of his walkway. He paused and stared at it for a moment. It was unusual to see a truck that size parked on one of these narrow little side-streets. But what could he do? The vehicle was not blocking anything or breaking any law. Paulie shrugged and climbed up the steps to the front door. He grabbed the mail from the box and went inside.

Paulie entered the apartment and tossed the mail on a side table. “Hey Carla, you here?” He called out.

“I’m in the kitchen,” a woman’s voice called.

Paulie crossed the living room and went into the kitchen. His wife Carla was at the stove with a couple of pots going. “I’ve been thinking about you all day babe,” he said as he leaned over to kiss her.

“Paulie, your such a sweetheart.” She smiled. “Dinner’s almost ready. Can you set the table?”

“Sure thing.” Paulie went to a drawer and pulled out silverware. “Oh by the way, who’s that parked out front?”

“That’s Tony’s truck.”

“Tony who?”

“Tony from next door.”

“Which one?”

“Not Anthony. Tony.”

“Oh, okay. What’s he doing with a truck.”

Carla turned to look at Paulie and spoke with a tint of wonder in her voice. “He started a business.”

“A business?”

“I know. I never saw him as the entrepreneurial type.”

“Yeah, I know. Although he does have a lot of experience driving trucks.”

“He does?”

“I shouldn’t talk about it. I ain’t no Johnny Dimes.”

“Ah,” Carla pursed her lips in understanding. “He’s a good guy though.”

“Helped furnish about half of this place. This dining table came off the back of one of Tony’s trucks.”

“But you’re right Paulie. We shouldn’t talk about it.”

“Okay. Changing the subject. What’s this new business for Tony from next door?”

“He’s making pasta!”

“Pasta? Tony is making pasta?”

“Yeah, big, fat, tube shaped pasta.”

Paulie felt bewildered. “But what’s that gotta do with the truck.”

“He’s just getting started, Marie told me.”

“Tony’s Marie?”

“Who else?”

“Just asking.”

“Okay. Sorry for interrupting.”

“So anyway, to save money he and his cousin Sal are doing distribution themselves.”

Paulie scratched his head. “So that’s why the rig out front?”

“He’s says its only for tonight.”

“He should’ve asked before taking up all that space.”

“He did one better.”

“how’s that?”

“A case fell off the back of his truck.”

“He made a case fall off the back of his own truck?”

“And he split it up among the wives on the block.”

Paulie laughed. “That does sound like Tony. He’s a good guy.” He leaned up against the counter, beside Carla, and glanced into the pot. “What are you making?”

“It’s the pasta Tony gave me.”

“Off his rig?”

“That’s it.”

“I don’t know Carla. Do you think its any good?”

“We’ll find out. Get me some plates.” Carla turned off the burner and the drained the pasta. She put servings on both plates and then added sauce.

Paulie took the plates of pasta and put them on the table. Then they both sat down. They both looked at each other. “I guess I might as well try it.” Paulie shoved a forkful of pasta into his mouth.

“What do you think Paulie?”

Paulie made a frown of satisfaction while nodding yes. “This rig of Tony pasta is pretty good.”

“I’m glad you like it. Let me try some.” Carla took a bite. She was not quite finished chewing when she spoke again. “It is pretty good.”

The two of them ate in silence for a few moments. The Carla spoke again. “It is ironic though –“

“Right,” said Paulie. “Of all the people to become a pasta maker –“

Just then there was a knock on the door. Paulie got up to answer. A man with a mustache was standing in the open doorway. Paulie greeted him “Hey, Tony Pasta! Come on in.”

“Paulie, how you doin’?” said Tony. The two men hugged and then tony entered the apartment.

“We’re good Tony. We just sat down to dinner,” said Paulie.

“Sorry to interrupt,” Tony apologized.

“No worries. We’re just enjoying this hot off the rig of Tony Pasta’s pasta.”

“Haha!” Tony nearly doubled over. “I should call it that.”

“What?” Paulie looked confused.

“Rig of Tony Pasta’s pasta.”

“What were calling it before?” Carla asked.

“We don’t have official packaging yet, but Sale and me had been calling it tube pasta.”

Paulie made a face like something stunk. “Tube pasta?”

“I know,” said Tony. “It really has no ring to it. But what you said, that has a ring.”

“It’s a long name,” said Paulie.

“And the printer charges by the character.” Tony sighed.

“So you shorten it,” offered Paulie.

“And I ain’t paying for spaces.”

Carla was astonished. “They make you pay for spaces?”

“Only on the big print,” answered Tony.

“You want me to straighten this guy out?” offered Paulie.

Tony tried to disguise his shock. “No, no, I’m trying to do this thing legit.”

“So leave out the spaces. Squash it together and make one word.” Then Carla added, “and change the Y to an I for your daughter.”

“I like your style Carla. I’ll call it Rigatoni pasta!” Tony’ smile was a mile wide. “Wait ‘til Sal and Marie here’s this!”

And that is how Rigatoni Pasta got its name, maybe.

Sunday, April 4, 2021

Redemption and Brotherhood

Here is something perfectly irreverent, yet too benevolent to entirely irritate most remotely rational devotees. This is how it is done, not with fire and brimstone, but with a kind smile and a dose of humanity. And what if... Ah, it is kind of fun to imagine a scenario like this.


Redemption and Brotherhood

After laying in a cave for what seemed like forever, nursing his wounds, the wounded man woke up early one morning, finally feeling quite refreshed. He decided to sneak out before dawn to rustle up some mutton and eggs on a biscuit.
The whole ordeal took quite a while. He had to visit three different farms. At the first farm he spotted a door off its hinges, so he fixed it and took some eggs. At the second farm he saw the barn was a mess, so he swept it and took some mutton. At the third farm he saw that the rope for the well was frayed, so he replaced it and took a biscuit. Then he went in to the blacksmith's cabin, where the hearth was always going. He cooked himself a meal. Then he noticed that the blacksmith had left some unwashed dishes from the previous evening. The man washed those, and the ones he had dirtied that morning.
After the man was well satiated, he stepped outside. The sun was just emerging far out over the horizon. He strode out over the hills and watched the sun climb up into the sky. It was such a blissful sight, that he lay back in the grass and took a nap.
Approaching mid day, the man awoke to the far off sound of a commotion, in the direction of his cave. He rose to his feet and strolled over to investigate.
The circumstances which had originally placed him in that cave to die were unfortunate. The man could not be sure that all had been forgiven by the authorities. It was possible that they might still want him dead. He pulled a shroud up over his head to hide his identity as he grew closer to the noise.
Presently he came within earshot, hiding behind a thicket of trees to listen. An excited crowd had gathered outside the cave, and some were in clear histrionics.
"He is risen from the dead!" one exclaimed.
"He died for our sins!" cried another.
"We have sinned against the chosen one," pronounced a third.
"Let us pray for his forgiveness," they all agreed.
Then suddenly the thunder of hooves approached, and Roman Centurions rounded the corner, emerging from the hills into the clearing. "What is the meaning of this!?" demanded the Captain.
"He is risen!" a peasant repeated.
The Captain dismounted from his stead in a huff and marched into the cave. He had been in there only a moment when he stormed back out into the clearing. "Jesus of Nazareth is missing! Find him! Or by Zeus I will have one of your hides in place of his!"
With that the Captain mounted his horse and with his men galloped off into the distance. The peasants all breathed a sigh of relief once the Centurions were out of sight. "Ah men," said one. "Jesus died for our sins. Let us pray that he returns."
Jesus thought about stepping out of the bushes These people certainly seemed to worship him. But when this whole thing started he had never imagined it would get so out of hand. He was just a carpenter who had reasoned out a few things and shared them with his friends. Now people were worshipping him like a God. He just wanted to find a nice girl, settle down somewhere, make a small farm, and raise a family. All that celebrity would get in the way of those ambitions.
After a few moments of mulling it over Jesus sighed. He decided he would just slip away, and go somewhere that nobody knew him so he could start over.
By now, the chanting in the clearing had reached a fevered pitch. Jesus backed away quietly. When he had created enough distance he ran up into the hills. Centurions were everywhere. He wouldn't get far walking in the daylight. He ducked into another cave to rest and wait for nightfall.
About ten minutes had passed when Jesus heard footsteps outside. Jesus backed far into the shadows of the cave and held his breath. To be caught now by a centurion would be a fate worse than death. The peasants would feel betrayed, and they would all spit on him as he was put to a more certain death this time.
The footsteps grew closer, and then they entered the cave. The figure appeared as a silhouette in the doorway, with rays of sunlight streaming in behind him. Jesus could not make out who it was. Then there was a whisper, "Jesus." Who could it be? The voice called a little louder. "Jesus, are you in here?"
The figure shuffled a little deeper into the cave. "Jesus, if you're in here, I am sorry that I betrayed you."
Could it be him? The friend who had done him in? From the cross, Jesus had looked down upon the regret in his eyes. He believed in the sincerity of the words he had just heard. But could he risk that he might have misread the man? How could he not? Such a friend would not betray him twice.
Jesus stepped out of the shadows. "Judas, is that you?"
"Jesus! You're alive!"
"Yes my friend. But how did you find me?'
"So wracked was I with guilt, that I had gone into the woods to hang myself. Then just as I was fitting the noose over my head, I spotted a man who looked like you running into the hills! I could not believe my eyes! I removed my head from that deadly tourniquet and followed the one I had witnessed, to see if it was truly you or if madness had set in to justify my darkly mission."
"It is me, my friend." Jesus smiled. "I am glad you are not dead."
"And I, you." The two men stood staring at one another for a wondrous moment. Then Judas sighed. "Jesus, did you call me friend?"
"Well, that's what you are."
"But after what I have done."
"Nonsense. You were confused. I could see how that tragic misjudgment weighed on your conscience. I did not imagine you could ever consider taking your own life. However, while I lay about healing, the center of my contemplation was over how the guilt of what you had done would follow you for all your days."
"I could not bear it!" Judas admitted, the tears streaming down his face.
"Ah, but I am alive now," said Jesus as he threw his arms around his friend. "You have suffered enough by believing that I was dead. I forgive you."
"Thank you Jesus."
Jesus stepped back and took stock off the other man. "What are your plans?" he asked.
"I don't know. There is nothing here for me now. Even if the others are to know that you live, most would not forgive me as you have. I suppose I must go away and start over somewhere new."
"Music to my ears!" Jesus laughed. "This is my plan too. Celebrity has run its course for me. I seek a quiet life in my next iteration."
"A quiet life sounds nice. But how? Your name, and even my name, are known far and wide."
"Then we shall change our names and shave our beards."
"What shall we call ourselves Jesus?"
"No more Jesus. From now on, call me Hank."
"Hank? I like it."
"Good. And what shall you call yourself?"
"I don't know. Do you have any ideas?"
"I always thought Jerry was a cool name."
"Jerry? I like it. I'll be Jerry and you will be Hank, and we will journey north to find wives."
"Then it is settled," said Jesus, aka Hank. "As soon as night falls we will go."
And so they went, never to be seen in the south lands again.