Jitter Java

Posted in pictures worth maybe not a thousand words on February 18th, 2015 by skeeter

JITTER JAVA2

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audio — haberdashery

Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on February 18th, 2015 by skeeter

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Haberdashery

Posted in rantings and ravings on February 17th, 2015 by skeeter

 

A woman sitting next table to me at the newly remodeled Island Café said, “You’re lucky my husband isn’t here.” Since I hadn’t made a pass at her, I asked why was that and she said he used to wear a battered, beat up, half composted hat a lot like mine. “He called it his ‘Go to Hell ‘ hat.”

It’s amazing how this old fedora of mine elicits continuous comments and sometimes physical interventions. I was accosted by the Safeway security guard up north awhile back who demanded I stop. “Stop? Who, me?” I asked and she insisted I produce a receipt of purchase after accusing me of stealing the two half racks of beer I was loading into my truck. Not that my hat made me a Prime Suspect. Safeway, let it be known far and wide, is a Profiler. And apparently my sombrero fit their profile.

Sitting in an airport lounge a few years ago, an attractive stewardess sat herself down next to me to ask which I was, a writer or a musician? She at least didn’t ask if I was an artist or a bum. Or an old geezer with a Go to Hell hat or a shoplifter.

I’ve worn hats since I was a kid in high school, mostly the ones my grandpa gave me when he’d updated to a new one. Me, I don’t update. And anyway, I don’t have an impressionable grandkid to lead down some non-conformist primrose path. A hat makes a good umbrella. It keeps my head warm and it hides my uncut hair, saving me hundreds of dollars in bad haircuts. I don’t go anywhere without one, sort of like a credit card only the truth is, it makes getting credit harder, more profiling, I guess. So I wear mine until it falls pretty much to pieces, then, worst case, I’ll put em on my garden scarecrow to give the crows and the deer a good laugh.

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audio — cruising down memory lane

Posted in rantings and ravings on February 16th, 2015 by skeeter

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Cruising Down Memory Lane

Posted in rantings and ravings on February 15th, 2015 by skeeter

It’s disheartening sometimes to see yourself becoming what I used to call ‘an old fogie’, a poor clod so behind the times he doesn’t know what the newest fad is or what Kim Kardashian said yesterday, someone shuffling along life’s autobahn in slippers befuddled by the traffic whizzing by. Obviously the technology gets a little ahead of us fogies. That’s just something we accept. If we got grandkids around, we let them handle things like downloading music for us. Me, I don’t have grandkids laying around so I’m stuck in my timewarp.

Trends, fashion, innovations — it would be a full time job to keep abreast. The world is accelerating just when I’m slowing down. I got friends who can tell you the name of every actor in every movie that came out in the last six months, what HBO series was cancelled, who John Stewart skewered last night and what gangsta rapper was involved in what ruckus where…. If the Information Age is all this, I’m thinking maybe we should go back to, if not the Dark Ages, maybe the Age of Partially Drawn Shades.

Today I read an article in the Sunday newspaper — and yeah, I read it on newsprint, not on a ‘feed’ (sad, I know) — about museums contemplating a ban on selfie sticks. Now, a few days ago, practically a lifetime in today’s fast paced universe, I came across the nomenclature and found it incomprehensible so I just moved on to another article. Today I saw a picture of one. A stick holding a camera to take a picture of the person holding the stick. I got it. I mean, I got the picture, not the stick. And the point, I’m guessing because I really don’t know, is so the photographer can shoot hisorherself to post on Facebook, which, fogied up again, I’m not on.

What can I say that won’t sound hopelessly geezered? If folks want to walk around snapping pictures of themselves, is it worth my snide commentary? Is it an indictment of society at large or just a normal need to see ourselves on the internet alongside Kim? Us fogies, we’re disappearing, that’s for sure. And I doubt if snapping a selfie off a stick is going to make it happen any less fast. So I’m thinking maybe me and the old lady are going to take a bike ride down the road today instead. Just a sunny two wheel cruise down memory lane where we seem to spend most of our time now.

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audio — systemic exertion intolerance

Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on February 14th, 2015 by skeeter

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Systemic Exertion Intolerance

Posted in rantings and ravings on February 13th, 2015 by skeeter

It’s not uncommon down here on the much maligned South End to be at the leading edge of the breaking wave. So far ahead, actually, that those trailing behind misunderstand us. And of course misunderstanding leads to mistrust and mistrust leads to avoidance and avoidance leads to contempt and contempt leads to fear and fear leads to hatred. We artists understand this implicitly. Or at least we like to say that is why our work is reviewed with such negative criticism. We’re just ahead of the Curve. We’re misunderstood. We’re too sensitive for this world.

Redemption sometimes comes too late to do us much good. Down here, we’ve been stigmatized for our handicaps and ostracized most of our lives. We’ve been badly misunderstood, isolated from the island mainstream and treated as third class citizens. Maybe it’s too late to help most of us, but in light of the medical community’s latest findings, we can at least take some cheer that we were victims of ignorance.

Branded as shirkers of work, lazy lay-about and shiftless men of leisure, we now have the full backing of the AMA that ours was a bona fide, certifiable physical affliction, not some bogus hypochondria intolerance to work. Just recently the Institute of Medicine called for a review of the malady we South Enders have lived with most of our lives, one that heretofore was considered, not a disease, but a psychosomatic condition. Those who have never known its symptoms easily viewed us as whiners and misfits, slaggards and sloths. We were treated as psychological lepers, shunned by our newly arrived neighbors and subjected to their silent scorn, just as those with depression and anxiety were once similarly abused before science substantiated the underlying root cause. We suffered silently, secure in the knowledge that we were victims of a disease little understood or studied by the medical community.

Until now. What previously was diagnosed by our decidedly non-medical neighbors to the north as chronic laziness or chronic fatigue syndrome has now been deemed a true physiologic pathology deserving of a proper name: Systemic Exertion Intolerance Disease (SEID), a crippling affliction most of my buddies and me have lived with for years with little sympathy from our mizzuses. Well, guess who’s going to have to apologize now, eh, little Miss Critical?? And, with a kinder gentler healthcare system in place, maybe now we can get the care and treatment we need … and even a sizeable disability check to help us cope with our difficult lives.

So next time you feel see a South Ender balking at work or employment, maybe you’ll show a bit of compassion. All I can say is you better hope this isn’t contagious.

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Save the Date — St. Paddy is Coming Soon to a Pub Near You!

Posted in pictures worth maybe not a thousand words on February 12th, 2015 by skeeter

SHAMROCKS OF FIRE e-mail2

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audio — time is money?

Posted in audio versions ---- the talkies on February 12th, 2015 by skeeter

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Time is Money?

Posted in rantings and ravings on February 11th, 2015 by skeeter

 

I was doing a little supper shopping today at Island Foods up the road. Had my little baby cart half filled with about anything that didn’t seem double-the-price and fell in behind a lady whose overflowing groceries indicated a resident who didn’t worry much about little things like prices or specials or coupon discounts. If she’d been sporting a mink coat, I wouldn’t have expected less.

Tina, the checkout clerk on register #4, the one labeled ‘Utsalady’ as a nod to our island’s sketchy history, was scanning items faster than a TSA agent on meth. She turned to Marie Antoinette and said in her usual cheerful greeting, ‘How you doing today?’ By this time Zsa Zsa had a smart phone in her bejeweled ear and ignored Tina as any High Lady would when an impudent commoner affronted her status. M’lady was now occupied with a conversation about the horrific traffic resulting from a fender bender we’d both apparently passed earlier. It had been a terrible inconvenience to her schedule for Tea Time.

They say time is money, but they don’t say it on the South End. Tina, who lives half a mile north of me in a small ghetto subdivided with a zoning variance that made some commissioner’s friends rich, well, Tina makes minimum wage plus a buck. Time, I seriously doubt, is mostly money to her. It’s a bad back, varicose veins and a wrist brace for her carpal tunnel syndrome that will soon doom her fabulous career. Half the people she checks out never say boo to her. A quarter are on their cellphone. A few are just unfriendly like she was price gouging them.. And the rest don’t see or hear her, she’s just the checkout girl.

Tina has a husband, Billy, used to be a contractor before he crushed a disk in his spine that ended his career. He gets some disability and between that and Tina’s largesse, they make the payments on their double-wide, but barely. It’s a scrape every damn month, but I’ve never heard her complain. She’s glad to have this job. “You have a nice day!” she smiles to Her Majesty who’s still chattering on her cell. Tina turns to me and asks happily, “How’s it going, Skeeter?” If she and I weren’t happily married, I swear to God I’d propose to her on the spot.

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