PhD in Life

Posted in rantings and ravings on May 20th, 2014 by skeeter

Folks are sometimes surprised to learn I actually went to college. It could be they’re surprised I could get in, much less graduate. But mostly I think they don’t understand why someone would go to four years of advanced education so he could work blue collar jobs half his life. Kids nowadays go to a university, they’re going to come out with a debt that looks mountainous right out of the starting gate. They’re probably not gonna look for a minimum wage job and a cheap apartment above the TV repair shop the way I did. Then again, I didn’t come out of college in the hole. In fact, I rolled out with enough money in the bank from working 30 hour a week jobs while going to school that I figured why work at all for awhile? That, for you ambitious young’uns, was the first mistake.

You can learn to like not working for other people. Or, in my case, you can learn that on top of hating to work for other people. I took summers off, then I took spring and fall off. Mostly I would work for two or three months, give notice and take a long well-deserved vacation traveling around the country. Which is how I found Washington State and the Olympic Peninsula. I vowed to move out, buy a slug farm, cultivate mosses and ferns, make a new life in the foggy temperate rainforests. I didn’t quite make it to the coast, but … close enough for me.

I guess if you graduate with a degree as versatile as an English major – coupled with a second major in Sociology – your options for careers are pretty near exponential. Meaning, you can work most of those jobs folks with MBA’s from Harvard probably aren’t applying for. Nowadays the young student is more likely to take a degree in business or international studies than American Literature given that tuition costs aren’t the 250 dollars a semester I had to dole out back in 1968. 500 bucks a year. 2000 for the whole she-bang. Don’t ask me why I didn’t get a PhD for that kind of money. I should’ve. Except I was itching to see the country and I had a 1962 Rambler and I was fed up with schooling.

Life looked like an open road, let me tell you. And … it was. For awhile. But you quit jobs the way I quit jobs, pretty soon your resume tells any prospective employer you may not stick around real long. Hard to imagine why a young buck like myself wouldn’t want to make a career out of kennel worker at the local dog pound, I know, but oddly, employers value loyalty and longevity, even if it paid $1.75 an hour back then.

And pretty soon even a will-of-the-wisp worker like myself realizes the job market is evaporating faster than the icebergs polar bears are sailing. Combine that with the less than rosy employment opportunities of the South End, you maybe can see why entrepreneurism works for some of us desperate dead end graduates. Which, looking back now from a few decades of a so-called career in art, it did. Sure, it could’ve turned out tragic. It could’ve been a cautionary tale for my friends to tell their kids. ‘You want to turn out like Skeeter, go ahead, keep flunking math in your senior year, see how you like living hand to mouth in some hellhole.” As it turns out they keep their kids away from me about the time when college applications are due. You don’t let them play with a happy artist when what they need is to buckle down and make some serious Life Decisions.

I hear a lot of talk these days that history and literature and the fine arts are a waste of time for a college to offer. Not worth the high tuition when you rank it against potential earnings. I think that kind of thinking is too sad for words. That kind of thinking is right out of the mouths of the folks with no imagination and no use for one. Speaking for those of us with ‘useless’ degrees, I can say my education didn’t end back in 1972 when I missed graduation ceremonies. What I learned was learning is a lifetime endeavor. It didn’t end with a job. It didn’t end at all. You ask me, whatever that cost, it was worth every cent.

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audio — Rip Van Winkle Gets His Hair Cut

Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on May 19th, 2014 by skeeter

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Rip Van Winkle Gets His Hair Cut

Posted in rantings and ravings on May 18th, 2014 by skeeter

I went in for my bi-yearly haircut today. In the old days I’d haul in to Stanwoodopolis at Carl’s Barber Shop for a clipping and gossip and heated debates. Sadly, those days are long gone and Carl’s retired from his long tonsorial career. Back then I didn’t mind waiting for a turn in the leather swivel chair, mostly an excuse to put a finger into the political winds.

Now I’m forced to go to the chain haircut joints. Salons, I guess they call em. They’re quick, painless and anonymous. They take your phone and name, but not for socializing, strictly for data-mining, frequency of visits, favorite hair gel maybe. At the door of Great Clips I was asked even before I took my hat off if I’d made an Online Appointment. No, I said, do I need one? Not at all, I was told.

But … a couple of folks who had made an online appointment but who hadn’t arrived just yet, were before me. Be about 20 minutes. “Do you have a cellphone,” my would be stylist asked, telling me next visit I could be one of the favored few. Wouldn’t have to wait 20 minutes next time. Mrs. Jenkins, my first grade teacher, used to make her point to us ignoramuses in the exact same sing-song voice. I didn’t like it then and I sure as gel didn’t care of it 60 years later. Call me irascible, but I’m not sitting in the chrome and mirror sterility of a chain haircutting factory more than 20 seconds. Twenty minutes is inconceivable. I mean, look at the magazine rack. Us and People? Kill me with a scissors now!

I headed for the exit, heads newly coiffed turning to ogle this ogre. “Will you be coming back in 20 minutes?” my headhunter asked, sensing customer dissatisfaction. I said no. “It’s only 20 minutes,” she explained, obviously figuring since I’d waited 6 months for the next haircut already, 20 minutes was a blink in my tonsorial universe. “Come back and see us again,” she said, half a question. “I will,” I said, “soon as I get a cellphone.” She knew — and I knew too — I’d have hair down to my toenails by them.

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audio — future shock 2014

Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on May 17th, 2014 by skeeter

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Future Shock 2014

Posted in rantings and ravings on May 16th, 2014 by skeeter

Now as you might’ve guessed, I’m almost always in favor of any and all new technologies, unproven or not. Get those government regulations out of the launch path and let the good old profit motive dictate the future. As we well know in this Job Creating culture we love, let the marketplace rule. If you can’t trust a capitalist, who CAN you trust?

I just read they got a new 3-D printer for creating new life forms. Program in a funky DNA sequence , load up the amino acid mix and hit a button. Pretty quick you got an iridescent houseplant or a 6 legged, 4 eared puppy, whatever you want. Experiments are fine. A few new viruses introduced out among the billions we got already the old fashioned way, well, what’s the harm? Might be some human-friendly ones in there and that hobby lab you got turns into the next venture-capitalized pharma farm. The possibilities are endless. The profit potential immense! Sure, the naysayers will worry about some 3-D printout creating the next pandemic, but hey, nothing ventured, nothing gained. You think God didn’t roll the dice?? Check out some of these South Enders we got down here ….

I heard this week Amazon wants to use drones to deliver their goods. The Star Trek teleporter isn’t on-line yet, I guess, so this is their fallback. Oh, I suppose the Luddites will fight this. Skies filled with more drones than starlings. Collisions in congested areas. Free gifts for the earthbound after the crashes, if nothing else. Put some armaments on these birds and UPS package theft on unguarded porches ought to drop significantly.

The future is in the rearview now, closer than it appears maybe, but we’re accelerating fast and there’s no time in this multi-tasked, info-deluged world to start worrying about the dearth of deep analysis. Fasten your seatbelt, download a program for an experimental lunch and keep your twitter feed on 24/7. It’s a brave new world and you don’t have the luxury of fear. Sit back and enjoy the ride.

 

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Frozen Explosion

Posted in pictures worth maybe not a thousand words on May 15th, 2014 by skeeter

camano commons --- frozen explosion_edited-1

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audio — Us Varmints

Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on May 14th, 2014 by skeeter

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Us Varmints

Posted in rantings and ravings on May 13th, 2014 by skeeter

I just met my new neighbor to the north of me.  He bought the old farm and 17 acres when the bank foreclosed on it.  After the recession of ’07 hit, my previous neighbor watched his housebuilding business dry up like a Dust Bowl swimming pool.  He never was one to save a dime for a rainy day so when the drought hit, he was goner, just another casualty on Wall Street’s gamble to enrich themselves.

 

My new neighbor and I met over the fence line where he’ll soon be pulling out the old 7 strand barbed wire and updating to a mesh fence, keep his dog and horses in and varmints out.  Hopefully I’m not in the latter category.  When I first came here the woods was pretty much unbroken from Dallman Road down to the Head.  The cattle days being pretty much played out, there wasn’t much need of fences except for an occasional perimeter around a vegetable garden to keep the deer out.  Other than me and Colton, not many folks ventured into the nettle barrens.  Fences would’ve been a frivolous use of money and money was way too hard to come by.

 

Well, the Open Range is gone now around here.  You can still wander the interior from me to the Head if you know your way.  Still find duckponds and an occasional streambed lined with swamp cabbage, even a few hidden houses obviously off the grid and built without permits or government oversight.  There’s a few old homesteads disappeared except for their shadow in a periwinkle bed or a cluster of daffodils gone wild.  There’s even a 1950 Studebaker parked up a ravine near the last old growth cedar on the South End.  No skeleton sits behind the wheel.  The driver’s probably back in the salmonberry jungle, still looking for a gas station.

 

Good fences, Robert Frost said ironically, make good neighbors.  My neighbor was worried I might not agree.  And, of course, I don’t.  My world shrunk another 17 acres, and before long me and the deer will have to share what’s left.  I’m just hoping they remain vegetarians.

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audio — Shootout at the Not So OK Corral

Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on May 12th, 2014 by skeeter

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Shootout at the Not So OK Corral

Posted in rantings and ravings on May 11th, 2014 by skeeter

The aptly named Land’s End RV and Trailer Park sits near the end of the island back off the road just before it hits the Head and slingshot back north again.  The state park sends folks with travel trailers down there when they’re full up, but that advice has ruined more than a few vacations.  Johnny Reddick runs the place, mostly into the ground.  Back in the late ‘70’s it wasn’t too bad.  A dozen or so single wides were spaced out on concrete pads and an old caboose sat in there too.  There was a small area for tents and some gravel for the RV’s.  Rents were reasonable and the public showers and toilets were kept clean and operational.  The tenants, mostly elderly folks on small fixed incomes, were content down there even if it was the end of the road.  In more ways than one….

 

But old man Jensen had a stroke and Mrs. Jensen sold the kit and caboodle to Johnny in ’82.  Johnny was looking for an investment, something he could use a small inheritance to parlay into a substitution for working, and the trailer park seemed an ideal fit.  Jack up the rents, pull a few more trailers in he’d snagged cheap, collect the rents and drink the rest of the day.  If Johnny hadn’t been a bad drunk, things might’ve worked out for everybody, but like a lot things on the South End, things went downhill.

 

Most of the original tenants left after the shootout in ’88, just picked up their belongings and moved on, something they’d been thinking of doing for years once Johnny leased half a dozen dilapidated RV’s on the weekly or monthly basis.  Dangerous looking men showed up in rusted vehicles with broken windshields and missing fenders and dogs they kept on chains outside.  They never seemed to work, other than under the hoods of their jalopies, not totally uncommon on the South End, but their worried neighbors sensed whatever money they got was somehow suspect.  Apparently the sheriff’s deputies did too.  Land’s End became part of their drive-by route even before the gunplay.

 

Johnny says the gentleman in the last trailer was drunk when he knocked on his vinyl door to inquire about that month’s rent.  Johnny most certainly was.  What Delores in Lot#6 testified in court as ‘3 sheets to the wind.”  When the door finally opened after prolonged pounding, Johnny was staring at his delinquent tenant wearing nothing but a pair of black briefs and pointing a small caliber pistol at Johnny’s head.  Apparently interrupted in a 3rd rate romance, the man was noticeably displeased.  He suggested Johnny remove various anatomical parts immediately from his doorstep.  Which Johnny did.

 

Maybe Johnny would have been wiser to go home, let things settle, collect the rent in the morning.  Instead he went back to his own trailer, finished a 5th of Jim Beam, pulled a chrome handled .38 out of his sock drawer and hauled down to the last trailer with dogs snarling and barking, lights popping on, but before anyone could get to a window, shots broke the night wide open.  Andy Watson called 9-1-1 and told his wife to get on the floor behind the kitchen counter.  Still on the telephone, he watched Johnny stroll back to his own place, gun in hand. He was pretty sure he’d killed the kid at the last pad.

 

When the first deputy arrived, the entire Trailer Park was awake and terrified.  Bill Traxton, the cop, jumped out of his cruiser, gun drawn.  He’d called for back-up, but he knew that would be half an hour.  Nothing moved.  No one came outside.  The only noise was barking dogs, have crazed.  Bill Traxton turned his spotlight along the line of trailers, one by one, until he hit the last one where a man in his underwear sat on the step.  “Don’t move!” the deputy yelled.  The man didn’t.  “Put your hands where I can see em,” he commanded.  The man did.

 

Carefully, Bill Traxton approached him.  Finally he saw the pit bull, bleeding beside the nearly naked man where Johnny Reddick had shot it point blank, hitting it in the shoulder.  The dog was breathing hard.  The man watched Bill watch the dog.  Finally Bill asked, “You hurt?”  The man shook his head no.  “Just my dog.”

 

The deputy took Johnny away, cuffed and swearing, in the back of the squad car.  The man in the underwear took his dog in his pickup god knows where.  No one at Land’s End ever saw him or the dog again.  Johnny got a $500 fine for animal abuse, same as the rent he hadn’t been paid, and a year’s probation for reckless endangerment.  Most of the dog owners moved along pretty quick.  Some of the single-wide folks stayed, but not many.  And not because they wanted to.  They just hoped, like a lot of us down here, things would get better.

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