Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Year end

 


2020.  Yes, it was that bad. Oy!

Cookie started off 2020 deathly ill.  It was not your normal flu event. High fever, trouble breathing horrible cough, chest tightness, loss of taste and smell, and a thirty-pound weight loss because nothing smelled good or tasted like anything.   The doctor said, "Oh, there are numerous flu virus' floating around, I would monitor it and let it run its course."

The virus started in mid-December, peaked after Christmas, and then came back with a vengeance in the week between Christmas and New Years'.  It abated at the end of the first week of January, and then came back again for final linger blow. 

I have asked if it could have been COVID, but the doctor seemed non-plussed in February.   We still don't know. 

And that's how the rest of 2020 went for Cookie. Sealed off except for the husband, and chats friends only at a distance, this year would go down as the worst in our collective lives - because we are all in it together. 

And then there is the Presidential Election.  The ultimate stressor. 

And then there is the current president - who isn't doing his job and doesn't deserve a capital "P".  What a grotesque and vile version of the leader of the "free" world.

Anyhow, there is enough about him. 

On the COVID topic, Cookie received some bitter news today. 

In 2019 I contracted with a genealogical society to speak at the annual meeting in May 2020.  Well, we in COVID lockdown mode when that rolled around and Cookie was in lockdown because of Asthma and breathing issues left over from the "flu".  The doctors forbade travel except for the grocer, the doctor, or walking the dogs.   So I contacted the person who hired me and said I couldn't fulfill the contract. 

I was doing this pro-Bono, so no money had changed hands when I made the call on March 31st not to do the gig.  EVERYTHING was on lockdown by that point, but the client insisted I reconsider. 

Then the first spike really took off.  And Cookie reconsidered and said no, again.

"But it isn't bad here," said they. 

Cookie refused to become a possible Covid-Cookie posterchild.  And there were frustrating feelings.  Someone wasn't taking this for as dire as it was.  And in fact, on March 31st it wasn't that bad where they were. 

But it certainly was getting very bad, very fast, elsewhere.   And it still is.

Today, I found out that this person and their spouse both came down with the disease, and both were hospitalized.  That's the bitter news.  

I hate, hate, hate finding out that people I like are hurting. With this virus, I hate that people are hurting, period.  Damn this disease. Damn it to Hell. 

Sometimes I wonder if we will ever beat it back.   Yes, I know that there are vaccines - and Cookie will get right in line when told to do so and I will gladly take it.  I worry though that person will not get the second shot.  I worry that they will think they are invincible having gotten the vaccine.  It doesn't prevent you from carrying it, it's designed so if you get it, hopefully, you can shrug it off faster. 

So I guess you know what is in Cookie's mind. All the time.  If it's not COVID, it's the person in the White House and those who would undermine the election. 

But we have hope. 

A new year is always the start of new hope, better things to come, more and better Joy, and less OY!  

And mine, for myself, the people I love, the people I know and the people I don't are that 2021 will end on a higher note. 

 

Monday, December 21, 2020

Horrible Christmas Movies You Can't Avoid on TCM


Gale Storm gives Don Defore a piece of her mind and a big fat Merry Christmas in It Happened on Fifth Avenue

Cookie is going to get all sorts of hate for this post, be the Clarion of Truth and the War Tuba of Warning need to be sounded. 

This is the season when TCM hauls out every holiday stinker in the vault. Fitzwilly. King of Kings. You know.  And that ever dreadful Shop Around the Corner.  Hint, Cookie is not a Margaret Sullivan fan, here, Mr. Matuschek.

We all know that every Christmas movie has to have either a religious miracle or a miracle to help us see what really matters, or romance.  And unfortunately, holiday movies are either wildly famous and beloved and well know, or they fall into a trash heap. There is nothing more out of place than a Christmas movie that comes out in May.

Two of the lesser-known are like accidents, once you watch the first few minutes, you cannot look away.  They are It Happened on Fifth Avenue and Holiday Affair.  Both are post-war 1940s movies and have WWII as providing something to the plot. It Happened on Fifth Avenue, uses Vets in search of affordable housing.  In Holiday Affair, it's a war widow with a young son.

They aren't horrible stories for film.  It Happened on Fifth Avenue is "Capraesque" in its story, but actors - B list - and all are wrong for their parts, save two.  The second, "Holiday Affair" has the wrong leads in the "male" roles, and it simply feels cold.

Let's start with It Happened on Fifth Avenue.   As I said, it's Capraesque in its story, but Capra was never part of the project.  Instead, the studio used Roy Del Ruth as the director.  (This was a disappointment for Gale Storm who wanted Frank Capra.  But had Capra been involved in the project, Gale Storm's role - make that everyone's roles - would have gone bigger profile stars.)

IHoFA's story is about a hobo, who spends his winters living in a mothballed mansion on Fifth Avenue every year while the owner winters in Virginia.  The hobo is played by Victor Moore, a one-time stage and silent film comedian turned supporting actor. Moore's high pitched voice didn't record well, meaning an end to most of starring credits. Instead of becoming the avuncular lead needed to provide guidance to the other characters, Moore simply becomes a nagging voice of advice never asked for, but ready to shoot whenever there is a lull in the conversation. Along the way comes Don Defore and his band of homeless vets who camp out with Moore in the mansion.  Defore is too old to play the juvenile love interest to a very young Gail Storm.  And Storm, whose character is the daughter of the man who owns the house, has a limited range. Her acting talents at that point in her career rivaled Shirley Temple's limited range, and they aren't right for the part either.  In fact, the only two actors that are up to their parts are Charles Ruggles and Ann Harding who played a divorced couple.  Ruggles character actually owns the house he pretends to be squatting in.  Harding is an undervalued asset that Hollywood never used properly. In the end, they all scattered to the winds, and all ends well.  Wrongs are righted, and the future looks loving for all involved.  And Ruggles tells his wife that next year, instead of coming into the house through a hole in the fence, that "Next year he's (Moore) coming in the front door," as Moore walks away on a treadmill with a grainy rear projection of Fifth Avenue is played in the background.

Our other ho-hum holiday movie is Holiday Affair starring Janet Leigh, Robert Mitchum, and Wendell Corey.  Also appearing as the spunky son of the WWII widowed Leigh is Gordon Gerbert.  Only Leigh is in the correct part in the right movie.  Mitchum is flat as the Vernors Ginger Ale your moth made you sip when you were ill as a child. There is zero chemistry between Leigh and Mitchum.   Also horribly miscast is Wendell Corey as Janet Leigh's boyfriend. Corey puts as much effort into the role as the Vase on Harriett Craig's mantle put into being a valuable antique.   

Gordon Gerbert as Leigh's spunky son is spunky enough, but I understand that he grew up and became a well-known architect.  Good for him.  Life after movies isn't often kind to children in the film.  Gerbert seems to have landed well. 

Anyhow, the movie is a simple plot - Janet Leigh is trying to make the best life she can for her son while working.  She's engaged to a solid man, but it lacks passion.  In comes Mitchum (Steve) as the rogue she needs, not the stuffed shirt that Corey plays. But Mitchum and Leigh have as much spark as wet cardboard.  And you find yourself kind of rooting for Wendell Corey.  But Hollywood being Hollywood - Leigh decides to throw all caution to the wind and go with the guy who longs to build boats, not the one in the gray flannel suit. 

So if these two stinkers are so bad, why watch them?  Simple: They are far better than any of the Hallmark Christmas movies and better than most of the modern-day over the top holiday specials. And it's fun to watch and think of which actors would have been better in the roles. 


Sunday, December 20, 2020

Sue Mengers was such a doll.

 

Now apparently she's BACK as a doll.

The real Sue would never wear dark lipstick.  

Still, if you knew her, this was her. 

Saturday, December 19, 2020

Tuesday, December 1, 2020

And now I know someone who has died of COVID

 Until this point in the pandemic, I considered my friends lucky in that none of the people in my orbit that I knew had fallen victim to COVID-19. 

That streak ended today when a friend from high school - a super guy - a year younger than I died back home. 

I had known people who had lost people that they knew, but this was the first person that I interacted with for a period of time with.  The last time I saw him was at his place of business while I was doing a compliance visit.  That was about 14 years ago, but if I saw him back home, we'd know each other and catch up. 

This sucks, on so many levels. 

I don't need to tell y'all that it does - we're all in the same boat together. 

My husband likes to joke that life with me is seven degrees of Cookie.  I am always running into people that I know in some way or another. 

This is one of those times when I wish that it hadn't touched the life of a schoolmate.  

Wear your mask, stay home, only go out when you have to. 

Stay safe,

Cookie

Thursday, November 26, 2020

When Thanksgiving gives you lemons...

 ...It's time to roast that turkey for a seasonal surprise.  Make sure the volume is turned on the video. 


Happy Thanksgiving from the Cookie's.

Sunday, November 22, 2020

What Thanksgiving day movie should we see, 1975 version.

 


As is traditional, after the parade, after the Thanksgiving meal, after the football games, after dinner left overs, what movie shall we see?  And in 1975, these are our options.

Jaws for the 100th time? Paper Moon? The Sting? 

How about this double bill from the third column?  


Now, Cookie has questions. 

How does one approach this?  "Oh, honey, how about seeing the film adaptation of one of Shakespeare's greatest works on power and how it corrupts, followed by an X-Rated film of an unknown subject?  Sound like a plan?"

I mean Macbeth is, well, Macbeth - "Out damned spot, out!  Hell is murky..." and all.

And what sort of X Rated film does one chose to run in the theater?   The Devil in Miss Jones would work, I think.  But what if it's a three minute Rip Colt loop film involving men creating their own salad dressing? 

  


If 2020 were a birthday party...

 ...this would be it.


Seriously, I mean.  What the fuck. 

This is more like a dream that you need to talk to your therapist about:  

"Well, Dr. Freud, I am trapped in a French birthday party.  There is only me, the guest of honor who speaks no French at all, and two faceless people who walk around, dressed as emotionally ambivalent clowns, who are observing me, acting out pantomimes that make no sense.   The man occupies what I think is the woman's costume.  A woman occupies what appears to be a then old man's costume.  They dance about, feigning shock, surprise, and ennui. 

"Yes, there are candies to eat, but I am told that they are not for me, but guests.  Who the guests are no one will tell me.  And they generic brand candies, too.  To drink is warm strawberry quick, with peppermint sticks.  And there is a cake which I am not allowed to eat.
 
"The wall of balloons prevents my escape. And the mute clowns keep pulling me back into this scene. 
I can now only seek sexual fulfillment if there are people in costumes made of boxes, judging my performance.

"John Paul Sarte appears, doing magic tricks.  "Pick a card," he says.  I look, it is the three of hearts.  Sarte then holds up a rubber rat and says "You guessed wrong."

"what does it mean, Dr. Freud?  What does it mean?"

 


Wednesday, November 11, 2020

Horseshoe Lake, 1908

 


Simpler days, no?

This was taken way back 1908 and it appears to be folks out for an excursion to Shaker's Horseshoe Lake.  And it's so early that Shaker Heights as a village wasn't even established.  The concept was there, just not the incorporation.  That would happen until January 1912. 

The lake was full - they have been dredging the lakes, I believe, to get rid of years and years worth of silt and muck.  I don't know if it's full again. But they called it a Beauty Spot, and for good reason. 

Apparently, this was taken along the earthen damn that separates (and makes possible) Horseshoe Lake from Doan Brook. The map below, looking SSE is about right:




The house in the distance of the original picture is still there today 17050 South Park Boulevard, and it is a masterwork of Chateauesque style.  You just can't see it from this vantage point in the original picture from Google Maps street view. 

We should be grateful that this still exists.  In addition to the lake providing parklands and a nature reserve, this vista could have been a giant freeway interchange had a fiend by the name of Albert Porter had his way. 

Long story short, Albert Porter was the Cuyahoga County Engineer.  In addition to being a grade-A creep (he would ultimately lose his position when it found he had been demanding salary kickbacks for years from his employees) hated Cleveland's eastside heights communities.  He felt that the people that lived there in the 1950s looked own him.  So chip firmly planted on his shoulder, Porter devised a network of freeways that would effectively destroy Shaker Heights and the Doan Brook watershed.  

Two of the freeways were the Lee Freeway - an eight-lane monster that would have torn through the right side of the picture, and the Clark Freeway, also overbuilt, would have gone from left to right in through the middle of the image.  Connecting them was a multi-level exchange of concrete, steel, and pavement.  Porter got as far as convincing the State of Ohio to fund the project. (I believe that there were four freeways involved in this diabolical plan. 

What stopped it?  Shaker Heights citizens led by mostly housewives and professional women including one Alice Van Deusen, principal of Mercer Elementary School.   They are the ones who brought Governor Jim Rhodes to this site and showed him what he would be destroying.  It worked; Porter was stopped dead in his tracks.  Moreover, ODOT moved to cancel funding on any highway that would never pierce the sylvan scenery. The nature center building was built in the wooded area and name for Mrs. Van Deusen, who was also Cookie's grade School Principal until her retirement in 1970. 

Why all this now? 

Remember, when you fight for what is right, just, and serves a purpose larger than yourself, beautiful and enduring things happen.  In this time of unsettlement, remember what side you are on.  Good people win when they choose the cause larger than themselves, and the bad guys who want to wreck it all for their own greed don't win when you stick to your principles and fight the smart fight. 

Thursday, November 5, 2020

On the record about the facts of life

 For some reason, pediatricians and record labels got together in the 1950s and 1960s and decided it would be a fine idea to teach the facts of life using records. ALL of these are an example of products sold to parents who dreaded having "the talk" with their children.

So, lets start with something that seems somewhat tasteful:



Well, alright.  The title is oogie.  I think that they would have better off stating "How parents should talk to their Children," instead of using the word "instruct". Which well, is oogie in this context.  But the model children look normal or at least haven't been grossed out yet.  We give this a B grade. 



Oh look, this one comes with a book! The book is instructional and filled with basic line drawings.  And now we have reached a product written by a doctor, who we hope understands what children should hear, and delivers it in a clinical but slightly avuncular tone.  Mom and dad are there - they bought these outfits just for the talk.  And the young girl appears to have a nice jumper on her support hose. 

We give this an A for presentation and authority.



And here comes Dr. Fishbein, America's Dean of Physicians. He's not interest in talking to young girls, but he'll talk to your ninth grader.  Well, it says (Growing Girls)  so there.  Now I wasn't able to find him on Google, so we're just going to have accept that Fishy here is what they say he is.    Nothing to unsettling.  The cover is clinical, almost grandfatherly.  Fishy would probably say that "One of the responsibilities of becoming a woman is knowing these facts, rather than rely on rumors."  At the end of the recording, Mrs. Fishbein brought out a tray of sugar cookies and some Kool-Aid for the growing girl and scotch for Fishy. We give this an A- for questionable and unverified authority but he looks trustworthy, too. 



And here we go into the toilet.  SEX and RECORDS!  Long, long, too long answers to an adolescent's questions that really were horrible rumors being spread between these too.  Bud looks really uncomfortable - he doesn't have any questions.  In fact, Bud has all the answers. Father, thoughtful, but ashamed.  Sis looks hypnotized by the spinning record label. 

But it's MOTHER that draws your eyes.  

Mother looks like she's had a past.  SEX is how she snagged Father.  And MOTHER is the one who is forcing this family gathering. She'd rather be screwing the milkman, but she wants to be sure that her daughter is sufficiently scared and save herself for a lonely marriage to a college professor with good benefits and who never touches her.  Father can't even bear to look at his wife.  And she is disgusted by the way he ting-tings the teaspoon in his coffee cup.  MOTHER gave up her best years by running off with that old fool, but she has "needs" too.  Mr. Simpkins, the milkman always has something for mother's needs.  "No heavy cream today, George.  But I'll need a delivery tomorrow."  

This gets a D for being creepy and an A for creepiness.


And prepare yourself for the worst:



"IT'S TIME SHE KNEW" sounds like a lot of bellowing, but notice the sotto voce application "about Menstruation" speaks to the shame - the sin of Eve, the curse, well you get the ugly picture.   

The "you" in "YOU need not be embarrassed" means it's something unpleasant, distasteful, and frankly, so oogie that YOU, parent/guardian, get a pass.  

But then, of course, the ad wants you to do the cowardly thing.  Buy the 45rpm record for one dollar, and then make the child listen to "Sally and her mother" do your dirty work for you, which will be told in a nice manner that you cannot muster up for your child/foster child/ ward, whatever. 

And once you have shamed her into listening to the record, for added embarrassment, can you imagine this 45rpm record getting swept up in her Fabian, Ricky Nelson, and Patsy Cline record collection that she takes to a party?   One minute it's Brenda Lee singing I'm Sorry followed by Sally and her mother having an adult conversation about menzies.  

Yeah, she'll never live that down.  And she'll just die from embarrassment, too.  So we give this an "F".

As for Cookie - I learned everything that I could as young as I could.  By the time the boys in school started with the "He puts his thing in the hole where her thing should have been..." story was told Cookie reacted to it with a look that said "And what?"

"Aren't you grossed out by it?"

"No, and neither will you one day."

"That's nasty."

"Then you're nasty because that's how you were made."  

SCORE!

But the idea of being sat down by either of my parents and being told to listen to ANY of these while they watched is simply creepy.  

UGH.



Saturday, October 31, 2020

Every day, a hair turns white on my thinning pate...

 

...over this damned election.  Like the cartoon, you think you have made it through the day only to find out that dog has prepared a gourmet dinner, but is still using water from the toilet. 

You have to wonder IF this nightmare we are living is heading toward the proverbial morning after (I mean, there's just got to be a morning after, right?) and yet I refuse to believe that the outcome is going to be good. 

When the husband cut my hair today the pile was white with worry.  If this goes on much further, I'll look like Albert Einstein before sixty. 

As my friend says - "45 is like herpes: You can't get rid of it and it ruins everything by popping up at the worst moments." 

And even if 45 loses, 45 is not going quietly.  And his cult members won't let him go quietly.  

"Just you wait and see," says one of the brainwashed cousins. Said cousin is recovering from COVID, was on a ventilator, no home and back on her three-pack-a-day Parliment "cig" regimen but she's not blaming the guy in the White House or his failed policies.  Nope.  She's blaming the "Chinamen who released it into the U.S."  She is also convinced that the Iranians started all the fires in California.  

"The Ayatollah sent his firebugs to burn up the country.  The only good thing is that this taking care of the Lib-tard filmmakers and stars and pedo perverts." 

Well, she never was the brightest lightbulbs in the box.

"Any of those BLM riots comes to my trailer park and I'll be ready."  How do you tell someone who lives in a double-wide with one room devoted to Elvis Jim Beam liquor decanters that BLM doesn't want her mobile home?  And I don't think that "Hazy Acres" is place where anyone would like to riot as much as they aspire to par-tay with Lynyrd Skinnard. 

"As soon as I get my strength back up I am headed to the shooting range {cough, cough, wheeze, cough}."  

What about Biden? 

"He wants my home too for his socialist friends."

No.  Just no. Again, no one wants your 1972 Wanderlust two-bedroom mobile home with saggy floorboards.   

Anyway, so we are trying to avoid any news on election eve. 

Our plan was to make a comfort food dinner and then watch the final three episodes of Shetland season six.  Well, that isn't going to happen because last night there was NOTHING on TV, so we said we'd watch the fourth episode, and leave the other two for Tuesday. 

Wrong. 

This season's story on human traffickers is so compelling that we decided we had to see episode five, and that lead to the finale and well...

Let's just say Jimmy Perez needs another sweater. 

Back to the election. 

Our sister in law called to ask us if we were going to vote for "Kym Klacik" who is running against Kweisi Mfume for Maryland's 7th Congressional district.   First of all, Mfume is a giant in the pantheon of modern American leadership, so if we lived in that district we would vote for him.  But we don't, so we can't. 

Kim Klacik's credentials? In addition to not living in the district that she wants to represent - which is a huge no-no in my book - there is nothing there.  Yet as a Black Female, she is a darling of the Republican Party, a party that wants to convince itself that it's a big tent party.  But for the most part, she's just an operative.  Strip away the four-inch heels, dresses way to tight for her own circulatory good, and a 5,000 watt smile but there is nothing.   Looking good in a commercial is not a qualifier for a seat in Congress.  Being seen on TV is not a qualification for elected office - that's how we got 45. 

Klacik's goal is adoration, not public service. 

So our goal on Tuesday night may boil down to a game of Scrabble and chicken pot pies for dinner.  Or a Miss Fisher and maybe a Father Brown or two. 

As for election results, in the morning I'll have a cup of coffee before turning on the news.  

And if the news is good, I will drink my second cup of coffee from my "Hilary POTUS" coffee mug. 

Monday, October 26, 2020

He gots the a) Covids, b) Cancer, c) Sugar

 



Cookie would like to know when in the hell it became conversationally OK to insert the "He gots" in the present tense?   Especially when it comes to illness. 

In the old days, it was acceptable to use "Johnny got sick," if it was followed by "but he is much better".

We didn't need the details unless it was contagious, like chickenpox or measles.   Once in the early 70s a kid named Sargent came down with mumps and all hell broke loose.  It wasn't his fault.  And it wasn't a reflection on his parents, but the school took no chances.  Parents were notified and warned what to watch for. Boys in his cub scout den - his mother was den mother - were highly advised to go to the pediatrician where some of us were given shots of something to protect us.   No harm, no foul, but our poor classmate had to suffer out the miserable disease, so we sent cards. 

Now, I hear all sorts of "he gots" and on social media, I am reading "he/she/they gots the [fill in the blank] as if its become part of accepted language: 

"He got the appendicitis."

"She got the cancer."

"Grandpa got the hemorrhoid"

"They both got the sugar."

You really know its bad when "He got the cancers."

Into this comes the one that makes me really insane: "She got the covids."  Not just COVID-19, but evidently ALL OF THE COVIDS. 

And this came from a doctor!

Folks, it's like nails on a chalkboard.  BUT if we must, let us conjugate "gots", shall we?

I GOTS

You GOTS

He/She GOTS

We GOTS

They GOTS

And for our southerners out there:

Y'all Gots - and - 

All y'all GOTS

See how wretched this sounds?

Thirty years ago, this "gots" used to a reactionless nod of the head.  Many of my clients were in S.E. Ohio, so you heard it frequently, but not universally. 

And even back home, I started to hear it, I just thought that people were parroting back what they heard. 

But last year, on a trip back home, my cousin was yelling at her husband when he forgot the five-pound bag of sugar she needed for holiday baking.  He called his friend, Bud, who was at Walmart picking up prescriptions and asked him to pick it up on his way over.  Bud agreed.  

Five minutes later cousin's husband's phone rang again. A brief conversation was had, and the call was over  Then this transpired:

"That was Bud."

"Did you tell Bud that I wanted Domino and not the store brand?"

"I told him. Honey. Bud's got the sugar," in his Illinois monotone.

"Lord have mercy!  Bud's got the sugar? Why would you ask Bud to get sugar if he has the sugar? It's be like tell Twila to pick up flour with the gluten sh's got.  Dear good when?  When did the doctor tell him he has diabetes?  Did he take one of them instant sugar tests at the Walmart?  Poor Diane..."

"Sharon, Bud called to say he bought the sugar.  He's got the Domino sugar, but he doesn't have the sugar."

"Oh."

"Dingaling."

Folks, words have meaning, and things have names.  Like a coaster in a motel, USE THEM.

So if you will y'all excuse me, I'm going get me a cup of "the coffee".



Wednesday, October 14, 2020

There is merit in backing up the computer, to a point

 


So the COVID-19 house task of the week has been going through a stash of 20+-year-old CD-ROMs that I have kept for way too long. These files were supposed to ease the setting everything else back up.  You know, because "you never know".

Remember when writable CD-ROMs were the in thing?  If you do, you're old like me.  

When I made these, the stuff I saved was really important.  Looking through a dozen CD-ROMs of these I found a total of forty files worth keeping. 

Forty. 

And they were family pictures, scanned at what I thought was great resolution at the time.  Granted - I had an 18" tube monitor that was deeper than the picture was wide.   The computer at the time, an HP with a four gig hard drive running Windows98.  I never imagined then that I was going to be dealing in terabytes of CdV's, Cabinet Cards, Brownie card, created art, etc., and so on.  That computer back then was almost as much computing power as we used at the trade association I worked for! 

The problem that those family pictures are mostly *.gif files, AND each one is about the 300 pixels wide.   Pretty useless. But they have since rescanned at 200% their size, 600dpi, and stored in multiple clouds.

The jewels in all of these were some images I scanned in 2000 that belonged to my cousin Di who passed away in 2019. (I just found out about her death on Monday morning.)  

Things changed in 2004 when I signed my first respectable book contract, but the way I backed stuff up also changed instead of using CD-ROMs, I started using portable drives, so they are my next target.  I have about 20k regional history images for north central Ohio. 

The downside to this is that CD-ROMs are starting to fail after 20 years.  So they would lock up my computer when I run them. The upside is that computers reboot in the blink of an eye.

What I didn't find was anything of monetary value, which would have been great.  

I'll be content with the 4" of cleared CD-ROMs on the shelf.  

And happily, there are no 5.5 floppies that I have to contend with. 

Huzzah.





Friday, October 9, 2020

How are your nerves, and what color is your discharge?

Cookie has no idea what the Viavi Cure was. But these types of traveling doctors were the rage in the late 19th century.  They would distribute forms, gather information and then based on returns, schedule time in various towns, usually in hotels near railroad stations where they would thump, palpitate, feel things on the body that affected you.  Towards the end of the 19th century, with the advent of the portable electric vibrator along, so they could release women's feelings of frustrations and shame. 

Can you imagine that? 

But wait, there is more!  They also sold patent medicines, and syrups to calm the nerves, relieve neuralgia, and otherwise soothe those sick headaches.  When the patients were all seen - off they were to the next town with advice ("If that beast of a husband takes care of his own needs and not yours, see your doctor. And thank you, madam, that will be one dollar for our time, your treatment and the tincture of Lillies White Laudanum...")

Well, right here, dear readers is your own copy of the Viavi Company's very own, official, symptom list for its next visit to a town, city, or rural hickville nearest your abode.  This was found in a treasure of family papers left in a box for nearly 100 years!  Simply fill out the form with your name and will write to you with the date of the first visit and what time the doctor will see you.  Notice that discretely, on the back, is a place to discuss those topics worthy only of whispers and private miseries, lest any creeping eyes spot your application while you are filling it out.  Leave no detail unmentioned, even if its the "vapors".  

Tah, Tah, and I am off to the next metropolis down the road. 

Tell us reader, what are your complaints and maladies?  Coated tongue?  Yellow or greenish-yellow discharges?  Halitosis?  Bromedosis?  Oh, dear lord not the scourge of bromidrosis, we hope!  Tell us it all. 





 

Thursday, October 1, 2020

Tell us, what do we have here...

 


This is a tacky postcard from the 1950s - 1960s.  It needs a description and your boss wants you to come up with one that will appear on the back of the card. Put on your thinking caps and tell us, what is going on here?

Wednesday, September 30, 2020

RuPaul and Snoop Dog in a cage fight. Bing made the pairing

Cookie is not a lover of Google. I don't hate it, I just don't love it. 

The irony of this is that I use Blogger, which is their product.  I used to love Blogger, but since they revamped the interface I still love blogger, though I hate their interface.

Anyway, back to Google - I don't like how Google places emphasis on the number of link backs to determine how reliable sites are.   If I want sites based on the 1961 Chevrolet Bel Air Interiors, I don't need, want, or even desire to get all loaded up on subpar sites that promise to sell me one. 

So I have been using Microsoft Bing - it tends to get the search right without the advertising garbage your face like Google. 

Microsoft has been "tweaking" Bing, which is no longer "Bing" but now MICROSOFT Bing with the windows logo.   But they have been adding in all manner of nonsense to their sidebar results.  One of the most annoying is telling how tall different notable people are. 

For example, let's pick someone who was popular, but isn't: Brittney Spears. Search for her and Bing returns its results AND insists on telling you that she is 5'4".

If no one cares about "Brit'ney" they sure as hell don't give a tinkers damn about how tall she is. 

But Bing takes this trivial pursuit one step beyond.  NOW they tell you who else is 5'4", as in "as tall as" for comparison sake. 

So now, we don't give a damn about Britney Spears, we sure as hell don't care who she is, but... It's who they pick that Cookie finds absurdly funny, to a point.

And who does bing tell us is a tall as Britney? Alecia Beth Moore, aka PINK

This is only useful if you imagine that they are in what I have come to call BING CAGE MATCH, an imaginary "what if" the game in which you get to pick the winner of an all-out locked cage match, brawl to the end battle.

And BING CAGE MATCH, Pink pins Britney. Pink has that bitchin' body. 

Joe Manganiello?   He's 6'4" of beautiful muscle and perfection.  And he is as tall as Pablo Schreiber.  In BING CAGE MATCH, Joe Manganiello pins Pablo Schreiber.  On looks alone, but Joe is simply the winner given his build and good looks. Yes, I know its subjective, but that's part of the fun.  But you see that this can be a momentary parlor game, right?

David Letterman v. Bill O'Reilly?  Letterman. See. The only thing is that it has to be a modern celebrity.  Evidently, Bing didn't feel the need to tell us how tall Marie Curie was, or Marie Antoinette - with her head attached of course.

Earlier in September, Jeopardy announced that it was bringing Ken onboard its production team.  Husband asked me if Jennings was going to replace Alex Trebek given Trebek's health situation.  So I looked it on Bing and Bing gives me results and in the sidebar feels the need to tell me that Ken Jennings is 5'10".  

That's well and fine; 5'10" is one of the average heights in the United States.  So I decided to Play Bing Cage Match with Ken Jennings...

...and it compared serial Jeopardy winner Ken to...

...serial killer Ted Bundy.

And in a Cage Match, we know who is going win, and it is not going to be done with "Alex, I'll take Personal Defense for $500."

I mean seriously Bing, what the hey.  Out of ALL the celebrities that are 5'10" your system chooses Ted Bundy? 

I spoke with a cousin who's spouse works for Microsoft about this match-up and her reaction was simply "Oh, my god."  She called Kyle, and Kyle's reaction was, and I quote "No, oh, no, no, no."  Within 5 minutes that pairing on the screen caption above was gone.  

Now Ken Jennings is incomparable in the height contest. 

So then I wondered what other unlikely BING CAGE MATCH matches were being made.

  • At 5'2" each, Charles Mansion, v. Yoko Ono.
  • At 5'8" is Kanye West v. Eminem.
  • At 6'4" is RuPaul v. Snoop Dog.
  • At 5'2" is Amy Winehouse v. Nelly Furtado - AND - 
  • At 5'10" Rodney Dangerfield v. Sally Kellerman.
I am NOT telling Mindy about the Yoko/Manson match, but I have captured this in an image just to have a record of it.  I am not posting it because I do not want people I am a fan of his.   

But try it yourself.  Or try it with someone else's famous name and see what you get. What really gets me is that if weren't in this COVID mess, it would make for a great game to play with friends while having a drink on a fall night. 



Sunday, September 27, 2020

Wishing everyone a meaningful and fulfilling Yom Kippur

 

Cookie has done his time in retail and I have seen pretty much, it all.  A gun pointed at me during a robbery, shoplifters, the "raid" by the woman who called herself "The Worthington League For Decency" where she sent her six-foot-tall son into our retail book store to pick up a copy of Playboy two inches off the top rack so she could charge us with peddling smut - I have seen it all.  

I even had to deal with a best selling diet doctor - Dr. Stuart Berger - from the 1980s who was at the top of his game, in town for a signing.  He insisted and insisted that I come by his hotel, do a couple lines, and have unsafe sex. His hands were like tentacles, everywhere, but I got him through the signing, gave him someone else's phone number, and told him to call me.  (No, I never would, and I never did.  The man was vile.  He died in the 90s from an overdose and morbid obesity.)

But what topped all others was my stint working in Pikesville, an area of Baltimore with a high Jewish population.  The problem was always around Yom Kippur, and it was gentiles who meant well, coming into our store where I worked asking for "Happy Yom Kippur" stuff.  

Happy Yom Kippur cards, party invitations, cookbooks, and stuffed animals for gifts. 

In my mind, it was always "Yeah, it doesn't work like that lady," but in practice, it was my cue to be helpful, help them - gently - see Yom Kippur for what it is - a time of reflection, atonement, forgiveness, and to ask G-d to write your name in the book of life for the coming year.  People can learn if you are kind. 

"Well, it's not a Hallmark holiday.  It's a serious day of introspection.  One looks at how they have lived in the past year and if necessary - and it always it - extend apologies and accept them.  And there is fasting, a symbolic act of yearning, and to understand how others feel their hunger."

Everything gentle. 

Now, every now and then we'd get some bellicose ass in who wasn't taking no for an answer.   But for the most part, people wanted to show support for their friends and neighbors. 

My store manager, an older woman said at a staff meeting the first year that we should suggest gift cards as presents.  

"No, this isn't a holiday for that.  The only thing you give is of yourself, and humble acts."

"Not even a card?"

No. Just stop it.  "It's about you, not merchandise.  Jews have enough days to give merchandise.  This isn't one of them."

The second-year I was there, I jumped in front of that bus before she could utter the words. "You weren't going to let me, will you."  No, I was not. 

Corporate wanted us to sell merchandise, and we did.  But not for Yom Kippur.  For Passover, buy that stuffed lion for the little girl next door.  But for Yom Kippur, the greatest gift that non-Jews can give Jews is respect for the day, some breathing space, and if you borrowed a hammer from the neighbor, return it and ask for forgiveness.  We'll be happy for the hammer and the bonus of saying that they can let you off the hook. 

So, for the next 24 hours or so is about looking inward, becoming better people, seeking forgiveness, and giving it.   Give it a try.  It might lift a burden or two from your shoulders.



Wednesday, September 23, 2020

No, you really aren't the nicest person you know.

 


One thing that a young child I was blessed with was self-consciousness, and too much of it at that.  Growing up I felt awkward, uncoordinated, and ugly.  I had no use for sport because my biggest competition was myself, and we both hated losing.  And contrary to every camp counselor and gym teacher, "Athletics" did not imbue me with confidence.  It made me a target, and I held the honor of last chosen for every school year I was at Mercer of Byron Junior High.  Moreover, whether a twist of fate or not, I was always chosen for the skins team, which made the public humiliation all the more painful. 

My desire to be liked and accepted was always ground out like a cigarette butt by junior high gym teachers who were better suited to a U.S. Marines Training Center than an upper-income Junior High.  

Bullies picked up on that, and to show everyone what a waste of human flesh. I was shoved downstairs, had my locker trashed, and was I was put down, not only by some of the other boys but some of the better-looking boys.  As the years went by they were in my mind as I spent my first years in the gay dating world. In my eyes, I was good enough to use for sex, but nothing more. 

One of my worst tormentors however was a girl.  A short, mean one named "Bertha".  Imbued with a shock of hair that looked more like a broom, Bertha's master art wasn't physical abuse, it was verbal abuse.  And she worked with it like Vermeer worked in oils.  I endured it for two years. A pint-sized harridan, Bertha's words cut like a hot knife through my cold lonely soul.  The only time she was nice was when she wanted something - like to be the star of a photography project or help on a history test. 

We left Shaker for a more sane life when I was 14, mostly because my mother was certain that if another year happened like eighth grade, I was certain to kill myself, and most likely I would have.  In our new town, a new school system, I found friends.  Out of the 400+ high school students, subtract out about 20, and we all got along.  I was never manhandled, bullied, or abused.  High school was pure bliss. 

At the last Shaker reunion, I went to, a long time friend said that I should forgive Bertha for all the anger I held towards her.  "She's grown."  So said friend maneuvered me into Bertha's orbit, and Bertha instead of hello, treated me with a "Cookie? What are you doing here?"

In talking with Bertha, before I could forgive her, I mentioned that it was would nice to get along and start over.  Bette who was headed toward a table of her friends from school - Deb, Debbie, D'bora, Deebs, Dee, Deedee, and Angela - stopped, and looked at me and said the following:

"It was your fault we didn't get along.  If you thought I was the problem, well, you need help. Why I'm the nicest person I know."

And with that, she walked to her table. 

The table filled with her friends that she just threw under the bus.  

The same friends that she just claimed she was better than. That's what you are saying when one says "I am the nicest person I know."  It says that they are better than everyone else, and it says they don't give a damn about anything but them.

What I learned very fast is that you can't forgive a bully unless the bully asks for it.  And unless they ask for it, that's who they are - accept that move on. 

But I walked away having great admiration for Bertha's friends.  She uses them and they are there for her, oblivious to the fact that she uses them. I mean, it takes a whole lot of ignorance or patience to be friends with the Bertha's of the world, because, after all, she is the nicest person anyone, including her friends - who are something far below Bertha's wonderfulness, will ever meet.  

Of course, one day, Bertha just might wake up and realize it.  

But my sense she won't.  

Said another friend from school who had been burned by Bertha one too many times in high school, "Self-awareness was never her strong suit." 




Monday, September 14, 2020

In this Time of COVID: The ultimate in "Staycations"

Careful, time these days just loops and loops and loops some more. 


I had a call from my longest-running friend from Shaker Heights the other night.  She called to tell me that Lake View Cemetery - where Cleveland's best go to be buried - is running a sale on plots, vaults, and, grave markers.  The most enticing the brochure is that they are advertising their cemetery as the final destination trip you'll ever take.

"They are calling it the ultimate place for your end of life staycation," she remarked.  I almost feel some days that would be more exciting than this endless loop we're in now. 

Right now, the husband is on vacation and our staycation is blurring the lines of the days - they are all the same.  

And we seem to have lost all concept of what day of the week it is.  

Because we can't travel - my lungs and asthma, and his essential worker status - we are stuck here in Baja Towson, doing things around the house.  And they are the things that no one wants to do. 

Saturday, we pushed a couple buttons and the oven in the range went on automatic cleaning mode for four hours. The temperature was low enough that we could open windows, but by God, it was stinky and smokey.  Still, after four hours the oven was pristine after a wipe with some damp paper towels, and you could see in the window. 

Last Friday it was a new hot water tank. We said farewell to Bradford White - whose age the old people who sold us the house lied about.  Bradford was not five years old as they stated.  Bradford was 12 years old.  At 17 he crapped out.   Bradford's position was filled by A.O. Smith, and the money in the bank replaced by a giant void of nothingness.  Mr. Plumber on the other hand made enough to make two payments on his Mercedes Van. 

Yesterday, I worked on a project for a client (all these Slavic names and strange punctuation marks!) that I have to deliver this week, while the husband weeded the gardens.  

Today the BIG news was that multiple things happened!  

First up, the husband gathered all his paperwork up to get his real ID driver's license renewed.  Per Maryland's Vehicle Administration, he lugged in his certified this, that and a current bill moved to the address.  The MVA is where humorous control hungry people go to work and you never know if you are going to get a human being or Morbo who commands you to "Sit there and remain SILENT puny human!  I will ask the questions!" while tentacles of bureaucracy move about in slimy squishy sounds.  In this case - and SUPRISE! -he got a human being who looked at the reams of paperwork he brought to the only appointment he could get since last May, who gave a brief look and said "We good."   He was amazed - ten minutes!

Secondly, the Husband decided it would be a swell time to core aerate the sylvan grounds of Staten Cookie.  I only exist to help remove the rented beast from our truck and put it back.  What I hate about this process is that for the next month our sylvan grounds are littered with dirt plug that looks like a convention of Canadian geese was held here.  We can do it for $65. TruGreen wanted us to pay them $200.  Anyway, it will take a month for these things to either be dissolved by rains or chewed up by the landscapers. 

Neigh Katty is crossing the street as I type to come to get about $100 dollars word of iris plants that the Husband had to divide two weeks ago. 

Tomorrow, it's the exterminators for ants, followed by the arborist's (Trees by Felize) to look at the birch trees.   The cable guys show up on Friday to replace the dying cable modem. 

And in NONE of these instances to I get to send you a postcard with the words "Wish You Were Here" because I know that isn't what you would find fun.  

Alas, in this time of COVID, the days seem to blend together and together and together.  No fun at all.

Wednesday, September 9, 2020

No, the doctor did not declare him deceased




When Cookie was a journalism student, the first rule of writing news was get the facts, and then verify those facts.  Without verifiable facts, your story is hearsay, worthless, gossip.  The second rule of thumb was if you doubted those verifiable facts, double down and verify them again. 

Do you the reader see a pattern?  FACTS matter, and what matters better be based on facts.   

Since the rise of the internet where anyone can call themselves a news site, and the rise of "entertainment" masquerading for news, we see to have a crisis of confidence.  Too many people prefer to hear what makes them feel validated, and they love to mock people who put a value on truth.  And not enough people who want the truth don't stand up for standards. 

Add to this the culture of everybody getting a certificate for showing up and you get what I came across today, and why I needed someone like my friend to back me up with the AP style manual. In this case that I am railing about is that of declaring someone legally dead. Now there are several types of death, aside from the good old fashioned "when you are dead, you're dead" school of thought. 

There is such a state as Civil Death.  And there is such a thing Social Death.  

But today, we're talking about DEAD - as in no longer showing signs of life, lung, heart, and/or brain function dead.

This raised itself up because Cookie was reading a news blurb by a radio station.  Apparently, a car ran a stop sign, hit a motorcyclist, and the injured man was transported to the hospital where the ER doctors declared the victim dead, as in declared dead.   Not Dead on Arrival (DOA) but in this case, the victim showed signs of life but died in the ER. 

Get it?  Got it? Good.

The problem is that the news outlet stated that "where the doctors declared him deceased."

Hello? 

"The deceased...", sure.  "The decedent..." alright. 

But declared deceased?  Huh?

So I contacted said news outlet and said "this is incorrect. One is declared dead by a doctor, not deceased."  

I didn't do it because I needed to be right, but because it was a violent accident and a terrible way to go for that young man.  

The answer, that I got back simply stunned me:

"Hello, I am the station's wordsmith..."

Stop right there.  

Writers, reporters, editors, columnists, feature reporters, traffic eye in the sky, yes.  Wordsmith?  No.  Oh, no, no, no.  The Wordsmith continued:

"...as you'll agree, 'dead' and 'deceased' are practically the same words..."

Sweet Smoking Jesus!  NO!  First, do not paint me into that corner with getting me to agree that words mean the same when it is the legal action - the declaration of death - at the heart of this matter.  And yes, a duckpin bowling ball and a tennis ball are both round balls, but neither can be substituted to do what the other was designed to do.

One is not declared deceased in hard news. One is declared DEAD. Declaring one "deceased" sounds cliche, and as the AP Style manual will tell you, avoid cliche and euphemisms.  

But the Wordsmith promised to get back with me and the Wordsmith did:

"There is a certain truthiness to being declared deceased...and English is a constantly evolving language... "

Reader, if I had a brick wall, I would be banging my head against it. 

Another thing, the "man is pronounced dead" by the doctor.  Why?  Because to say say that the man "pronounced deceased" sounds really bad.  Try saying that allowed, or show an English teacher.  It is affected.

To me, "deceased" is for feature articles, for obituaries, for (and now I am dating myself) the late Harold Denzer, clasping his hands while asking my grandmother what the music the "deceased" would have preferred ("Perhaps "Whispering Hope, and other songs of hope and eternal life?"

Even us Jews (when I wear that yarmulke) know, when you are dead, you are dead. You are going into that Light of G_d because that's what we believe. There is no everlasting life for Jews. You leave life's stage and you go into the light of God and you are dead, as in not coming back, dead. People who use "truthiness" as their fulcrum to try and cleave an argument from where there is none to split off.  This kind of logic is what we get when someone builds a society of "certificates" for just showing up.  

So I did some searching.  One newspapers(dot)com, one of the largest databases of searchable newspapers, "Declared Dead" - 321,662 occurrences. "Declared Deceased" - 2,665 matches. 

The problem with truth is that Wordsmiths only care about what sounds poetic, soft, winsome.  Whereas old news people like Cookie want facts.  I want news that is meaty, lean and something I can chew on and ponder. People like the Wordsmith only care about pablum, that goes down easy. 

And that ain't me.

Monday, September 7, 2020

Goodbye and good riddance summer, and here comes fall


 

Well, that was one Hell of a summer vacation season.  Here comes fall 2020 and like summer, I am predicting it'll be pretty - and unfortunately - Hellish. 

Hold onto your seats, its going to be a bumpy flight...

Monday, August 31, 2020

Best of DHTiSH: A Children's Salon, On the Rocks

I shudder to think about it. So Would Ann Douglas


Somehow, without our consent, the people in the last years of the baby boom era have reached that age where we simply don't get "young people".  That I could even use that phrase astounds me - when did I become elderly?  When did I become that old person that people look at and wonder: Is he having a mid-life crisis?  Does he understand how pathetic he sounds?

My husband and I are too old for living our entire lives online, and for preferring text our friends instead of talking with them on the phone.  I don't want to subscribe to blogs to get my news, I want to hold a copy of the Sunday Washington Post, or the New York Times, and savor it.   And yet my husband and I are still way too young for Social Security or thinking about the easy carefree lifestyle that a retirement community could afford us.  And music today?  Don't get me started. 

That we are most likely younger than the people in the image above really sets my teeth on edge. Those are old people. We are not.   So the idea that they would be "wife swappers"  just kind of scares us.  Shouldn't they be at home, watching Lawrence instead of trading partners?   Does anyone even admit to swapping spouses?

A neighbor's 20Something-year-old son is into VCR movies, something that we experienced in the decades ago in its first iteration. But to him, its all-new, it's all hysterical.   His mother Sue came over with her dog for a play date with our dogs yesterday and laughing that a box of used tapes that he found at a Salvation Army Store included "Bob and Carol, Ted and Alice." 

Sue is about ten years younger than us and had our rapt attention as she tried to answer her teenage son's question about whether or not the movie was pornographic.  And Sue said "I remember the term, and the movie, but did anyone actually that.

Yes.  It really was real.  Wife Swapping was a "THING" in the 70s, as I remember it.  In the 1950s, when the people in this picture would have been "into it", it would have been a bit Avant-guard.  But in the sixties and seventies, all sorts of stuff was happening in homes with shag carpet and lamps swagged by ceiling-mounted chains.

When I was in or about fourth grade, wife swapping, however, was all the rage.  Or so the magazines would have you believe.   

My neighborhood friends and I would go to Campus Drug and pick out our dime candy bars and our quarter (.25) cans of cold pop and stop off look at magazines to see what we weren't supposed to know about.  The covers talked about all sorts of things that we were clueless about.  "Weed".  "Giving yourself permission to look at your vagina."  "Premature ejaculation" and "How to make him feel like a potent man." If the headline was "Are you and you other compatible signs?  What's a Cusp? We show you how to draw your own STAR CHARTS."  

All of it, in the seventies, was on magazine covers.

But, according to Cosmopolitan, Wife Swapping Was Empowering - "It's a BLAST" the headline read while the subline read "We show you how! See page 69."   Playboy's cover was all IN for girlfriend swapping. In fact, the magazine even suggested that a man could please three women at once, without his buddies even participating.  There was even an article on one cover that asked "Why Swap? Orgy Instead!"

My friends and I spent our dollars on enough sugar to cause a diabetic coma in adults and took our hoard to the vacant lot across Fairmount Boulevard.  There, amongst the ruin of a house that was never built, we stuffed our faces and just would just yabber away. 

One of the boys in the neighborhood wondered aloud about the topics we were reading in the headlines.  The Wife Swapping topic proved to be as puzzling to our uninformed minds as any other topic.  Back then, at ten, you don't know about what don't know because you don't have that awareness to know that you didn't know.   And if you wanted to learn anything, you either needed a much older brother to tell you - and good luck with that. OR you needed a girl who was going into sixth grade - because they knew everything. 

But the boys knew from the word "Swapping" that this somehow involved trading.

"Why would you want to do that?"

What?

"Swap your wife?"

"Because you're tired of her.  It's like trading your car with a friend because you want to drive his convertible, but he needs your station wagon," said Beth McClatchy. Beth was headed to junior high school in a couple weeks for seventh grade. We were in awe. Little did any of use understand the snake pit that every junior high school was.

"Hey," said Ann Douglas "You aren't going to mix pop rocks and Pepsi together are you?"  Beth, her mouth full of pop rocks, wide-eyed, nodded 

"Its certain death," admonished Ann Douglas.  Ann had always been Ann Douglas as not to confuse her with Ann McCauley who lived further down the block.  Ann McCauley was fourteen and had "developed", so she had better things to do with the prepuberty crowd.

But Ann Douglas was such a buzz kill; Beth looked really annoyed.  Beth got annoyed so easily and the boys figured it was because she was getting boobs.  We couldn't see anything, but she made it a point to remind us that she had a training bra "because my bosom is growing."  And that to a ten-year-old made us giggle. "Don't laugh fart face, just wait until you see what you're going to through."  But for now, she was still one of us. 

"What if she's tired of him?"  Colin, Beth's younger brother asked.

"In our house, my parents just sit in different rooms, sleep in different rooms, and grumble about going places together."  Brad Silverman said.

"Why don't they get a divorce?" asked Colin.

Sally Wilson rolled her eyes said "Because stupid, they are staying together for the sake of the children.  So Brad and his sisters can come from a happy home. GAH! Don't you know anything?"  Beth nodded in agreement.  Secretly, in their heads, I just knew that they were annoyed beyond all words. Girls were like that, because boys all had cooties. 

Not wanting to be left out, I chimed in reminding them that my parents were divorced.

"But my mother says your father is a 'hound' and a 'skirt chaser.'  So your mom was smart to get a divorce."  Sally had a point.  My father loved women.  He didn't love my Mom.  But other women, yes.  My father loved women in every shape and flavor.  And he always picked the wrong one to marry.

"Wife Swapping," started Ann Douglas, a sixth-grader who "knew things" paused for us to pipe down and get the attention that an oracle deserved, then said: "I think they do it to spice up their marriages and love lives.  Marriage has to be like an episode of the Waltons. Every week you tune in and expect something different at the end, but all you get is a "G'night John Boy."  

Anne's brother Chuckie piped in with "Sometimes I wish someone will ask "who farted?"

"GROSS!"

"Ew!"

"Chuckie, Mother doesn't like you using that word." We started on the second candy bar, there was a lull as each of us took that first gulping bit.

I asked, "None of our parents would do that, would they?"  And I immediately knew that I shouldn't have said it. 

At that point all everyone else's parents became suspect. Every last lawyer, accountant, doctor, den mother, and housewife could be into "Wife Swapping" and we would have no way of knowing.  The crinkle of candy bar wrappers stopped.  All was silent as we look at each other, asking in our minds "would Lisa's parents have sex with Colin's parents, or would they peel off with Ann Douglas' parents? It was our first Mexican Standoff, and any of our parents could be doing things with other parents.  Collectively, our stomachs sank for a brief moment. 

Then, someone broke the tension.  "NO!"

EW!

BARF!

Beth sighed and growled "Your parents are divorced; they can't swap.  Your mother could become a Swinger, I guess.  Then again, your father remarried so he could be a wife swapper."  It was a backhanded comment, but I figured it was her "bosom" making her like this.  I really want her to grow the pair and start hanging out with Ann McCauley.

Secretly I knew that my father's wife was promising men sex in bars because both of my parents had first names that began with the same letter (M) and my mother was in the phone book as "M Cookie, and my father was in the phone book as MA Cookie.  So drunken men were calling the first "M. Cookie" house asking to speak to "Tonya" because "Tonya promised to mumblemumble me off."

The first time it happened, I went to my mother said "there is a man on the phone who wants to talk to Dad's wife."

My mother, watching a medical drama and playing solitaire replied, "Well, she's not here, give them your father's phone number.  He ought to enjoy taking that call."  

It seemed like the thing to do.  So I did.

The second time it happened a few days later, I told my mom and she had the same response.  But she didn't just drop it like she did the first time.

"What did this guy want?"

"He said that Tonya was going to 'mumblemumble' him off.  I don't know the word or what it means."

My poor mother.  She wasn't expecting that.  "What did you say?"  I started to repeat what I had said but she cut me off.  She was angry, but not at me.

"I only said it because you asked what the guy on the phone said."

"Don't say that word again."

"What word?"  Needless to say, Mom sat me down and she gave me the talk.  I was appalled.  I was appalled that I had spoken to the guy, I was appalled that my mother had to explain "masturbation" to me, and I was just appalled.  The next thing I knew was that my parents were fighting over the phone and my mother was really angry. 

But back to the idea that my mother could be a swinger.  We all knew that was as unlikely as mankind exploring Pluto because my mother would never have sexual feelings.  Or muss up her hair. She was a Daughter of the American Revolution!  Moreover, she wore a sash that read CHAPTER REGISTRAR.

The truth as we knew it was, not one of our mothers would, well, because they were our mothers and that would be gross.  In reality, all our mothers really want was ten minutes of peace and quiet. 

"Do you think that anyone in our neighborhood would become a Swinger?" Colin asked.

Beth chimed in and said: "I think it could happen, but if the membership committee at their country club found out, then they could kick you out."

"Why would they do that?" I asked.

"Because you can't get in until they judge you. Country clubs aren't in the country, they aren't about golf.  Getting into a country club means you have a good reputation, and someone is willing to sponsor you into the 'club'.  When your father tells someone that he belongs to Acacia, or Beechmont or even The County Club, that means that he has money and that he and the family have been approved," reasoned Ann Douglas.

I must have had the word STUPID on my facial expression because Beth read it and added: "Country clubs aren't about the bad food and golf. It's a social code for being good people. And getting caught sleeping with someone else's husband or wife is not the kind of thing that looks good.  That's how reputations are ruined."

Beth had a point, and Ann Douglas was irritated by her because "She thinks she knows everything" Ann once said

The Richman's (not to be confused by the Richmond's who lived in the house next to the lot we were seat in) went to Israel and came back raving about living the kibbutz lifestyle.  They gave their house a name: "Kibbutz Rosenstein" and became vegetarians.  They even had their oldest son Gary enlisted in the Israeli army. 

Again, Ann Douglas took charge "Mom said that Beechmont Country Club kicked them out when they insisted that they help with the day to day operations of the club instead of annual dues, which they felt was a capitalist concept."

Capitalist what?  Huh?

"If," Brad started to say "anyone in this neighborhood is going to 'swinger', it's going to be the Shipley's.  Mr. Shipley is, according to my mother, 'handsome like a news anchor' and Mrs. Shipley can wear hip-huggers."

John Wise added in "And she has big boobs."

We all talked about Mrs. Shipley's boobs until Ann pointed out that damning bit of evidence: "They have that modern house."

They looked the part, and they lived it, so they had to be honest God real wife swappers.  The nail in the coffin though to securing our decision that they were both on the road to living the lives of a Jacqueline Susann character lifestyle was the house.  It was big, and bold and had an all-white interior with huge plate glass windows.  And they had no children. Well then; That was the key to everything.  

"So they can swap without worrying about finding babysitters."

"And they ski. There's a lot of drinking and sex at a ski resort.  And they do IT on bearskin rugs."

How would you know, I asked - never having been skiing myself.

It was, of course, a foolish thing to ask.  "Andy Turner's father reads Playboy." Well, that wasn't news. Every ten-year-old boy at Mercer knew that.  It was the only reason to go over to Andy's play, and his dad kept the evidence under the mattress in his parent's room.  

"Playboy is a magazine of nude women and cartoons showing escapades at ski lodges that took place on bearskin rugs, My father reads it for the articles," said David Wright.  David was mostly silent, you almost forgot that he was there, so when he spoke up it was something.

After deciding that all wife swappers could be swingers, but not all swingers would be into wife swapping, I asked - having my silent yearnings even at that age and wondering what Mr. Shipley looked like without his shirt - "Why do they call it 'wife swapping'?  Why not 'husband swapping?"  Now I could see a couple of the male camp counselors at Hawkin day camp doing it.  But I was smart enough not to say that.

And the answer my friends proclaimed was one of major importance:

"No!"

"Never!"

"Can't happen. Because men are men, duh!"

"GROSS!"

This is when the boys told me that it was OK for two women to do it together because that was hot, and men got off on that.   But two men having sex was "totally a 'mo thing."  And Beth rolled her eyes to emphasize how childish we were. 

"So women never think about two guys together?"

Sally let out one of those pre-adolescent girl growls - "GAH!"

And with that bit of drama, Sally put an end to the salon on the rocks having finished her Pop Rock's and moved on to Hubba Bubba, the absinthe of under 13-year-old set.  "Look, you guys are just gross," which is kid speak "Oh, fuck for fuck's sake."  And thus our enchantment, our kiddie salon, ended.

"What are we going to do now?"

I announced that my father gave me a tape recorder.  "We can go to my house and swear into it?"

Ann Douglas proclaimed that as something she wanted to do, and that meant we were all going to follow.  "I love saying fuck. And now I'll be able to hear myself fucking say it.  Fuck, I mean."

And that's what you did when I was a kid in the 70s. You made up life as you went along.  From candy and cola to solving the question on Wife Swapping, and the answer was "gross" to swearing into tape recorders, that was a summer day in Shaker Heights.

I still have those old cassettes with us swearing on them.  

But like those late August afternoons before school started, the cassette's are breaking down, as our minds and bodies.  I am one half of a happily married old couple.  Still, if my husband wanted to become a swinger, it's his option, not mine.  He wouldn't, but once we hit the retirement community in the next decade, maybe he will.  As for Cookie?  I am in the Sons of the American Revolution. 

One day, in 2060, a twenty-something will bring home a box of cassette taps that they bought at an estate sale.  He'll load it in and hit the play button and out of the speakers, with pops and scratches will come the voices of ten to twelve ten to twelve-year-olds from the year 1972 saying the word Fuck.  They will say it softly, yell it, they will sing it and shout it. He'll write about it on his social media platform, or play it on the nightly news.  He'll muse, did people used to do this?  Why would anyone do this?  

And that will be his moment to ponder and make sense of a bunch of kids, one summer, on the rocks figuring life and all that other stuff out.

Thursday, August 27, 2020

Really? That boozy-boozy?


This is a chart, by Brown Forman Distillery, allegedly tells one how to prepare for a party, and provide the host with a gauge as to how many drinks you and your friends would consume while you are entertaining them, 1950s style.

Cookie is shocked and appalled!  YES, our outlook on boozy-boozy lunches have changed, but this is a lot of hooch!

Just look at the lunch recommendation.  Four people for lunch, and EIGHT cocktails, two apiece!  Now eight glasses of whine sound reasonable for a brunch.  But regular lunch?  "No more than two cocktails for me honey, I still have to drive that afternoon school bus of children to their homes in about three hours."  Dear God! I hope not.

The amounts grow as you increase the hour of the day, evening, and night, and the number of guests you have.  Throw a dinner buffet and you might as well just to cater the affair or better yet, book the party room at the Theatrical Club!

Now Mame Dennis could pull this off - Beekman Place is big enough to hold the backstock. But put another way, let's pretend that you are Holly Golightly and you are having twenty people up to your apartment for a little "thing" you are throwing together. That would be a minimum of enough booze for eighty drinks AN HOUR if you going by this chart. 

And where would you put the bottles? 

Well, I can tell you that Mr. Yunioshi isn't going to let you use his place to store the spirits.  And if you could cram into chez Golightly, when you add the guests, just where will Mag Wildwood fall when she faints from hearing about Rusty Trawler's fortune?

Considerations all.  But as for Cookie, the days of drinking are pretty much over.  We were down to only having cocktails when we threw a party, but between Baltimore being Baltimore, and this COVID thing, it could be years before we get out the barware. 

But trust Cookie.  If this president doesn't destroy this country, or the world, when the COVID cure - the one that really works - actually appears, the 1920s will look like a church picnic.  So hang onto your hopes and your drinkware.  Happy days could be here again.

Monday, August 24, 2020

A call to arms...

Mammam est spectaculi sensus fashion!


As we approach our SIXTH month of social distancing and muffled by masks conversations, Husband and Cookie are running out of things to discuss that don't descend into how much alike feel about the current President and Administration in Washington.   Politics aside, our evening conversations consist of how expensive groceries have become, 400 channels and nothing to watch, or sneezes and coughs brought on by the allergy season.

The other night however we charted unknown territories.   All y'all - and yes you can put an "all before "y'all" and grasp a larger group of inclusion - know that when you are an old married couple like this, unchartered territories of conversations are for marriage encounter groups, marriage counseling sessions or for new acquaintances that one can make. Since none of that is going on, these new topics are a bit like sailing to the end of the world and then dropping off the edge, so one treads carefully.

And all y'all know that Cookie is a genealogist, and my husband caught the tombstone twitch from me.   So the topic came up that if we would create our own "Coat of Arms" what would the family look like, and what would the motto be. 

While we haven't finalized a design, which so far includes a fish, a chicken, and a platypus, the motto is also a work in progress. My mother's family is lousy with family mottos - remember, my grandmother was That Woman's fourth cousin, twice removed.  The motto has to be something that says something about goals, lofty ideals, or just something that the family is known for.  Like Bill's Knapp's Family probably has something that roughly translates to "Famous for fine food," or the like.

And it has to say it in Latin.  Why? Because.

Since the husband and I are of the simple folk, neither of us knows Latin.  What I remember about Latin is that you have to keep it simple or you can easily create something completely unwieldy or something that takes twenty words to say something that was created in English using five words.

Our top competitors include:

1) Since my mother in law loved lots and lots of butter with her "lobstah", was known to call out "Buttah, wheres my buttah!" while were melting her third stick of Land-O-Lakes.  That pharse converts to roughly "Butyrum: butyrum ubi est?"

2) Then there was the bad milk in the plastic jug that was two weeks out of date and had separated like Kim Bassinger and Alec Baldwin, Mom' well into her eighties said it was fine and to "Just Shake It Up!" which becomes roughly "Vastata est lac, agitabit ante bibens!"

3) From my family comes "Who left the bathroom light on?" which is a bit less esoteric, but more universal, and the rolls off of your tongue with Qui relicto in balneo lux?

Of course, no one will ever say such things aloud, but any would look swell embossed upon a golden banner underneath the large shield, adorned with a fish, fowl, and platypus rampant upon a field of azure, whilst argent lions pose in a noble stance on either side of the scene playing out on the Cookie Family Arms.

What about you?  What would your family motto be?