I want to thank everybody for
the birthday wishes yesterday. As much as I dislike my birthday (two days after Jesus' birthday kind of
takes away some of the glamour), I do appreciate all the attention. What I
have never liked about my birthday, along with sharing with Jesus, is that it is
always damn cold. Every year it's the same thing, bitter cold, snow on the
ground, and everybody exhausted from the holidays. I did try to make it better
by moving to Florida for twenty seven years, but with all the retirees down
there it only reminded me that I was hurtling towards old age. So yes, I have
ticked off another year from my life. When I look back to that time I moved to
Florida, it seems like only yesterday. I remember it all. The move out of my
apartment in Chicago, driving down there with Garrett, the house I moved into.
It all seems so fresh in my memory. It was nearly twenty nine years ago. Those
years have just flown by. I'm not stupid, I can do rudimentary math. Twenty
nine years from now, if I'm still alive, I'll be ninety seven damn years old. It
wouldn't be so bad if you could maintain your looks, health, and stamina right
up to the moment of your demise. But no, you end up living like a slug. Barely
able to move. You can't go to the bathroom without fearing that you'll fall in.
Personal hygiene suffers. I'm sure that even Hugh Hefner was a smelly old fart
during his last years. The difference is that he was rich. I don't have the
money to pay young people to hang around and pretend that I don't smell bad. Oh well,
today I'll go out and visit Mom. She's ninety six and she's pissed off about
growing old too.
Thursday, December 28, 2017
Wednesday, December 27, 2017
We Had An Über Christmas
Can you see me now? |
Christmas Day, my sister Lisa
was to visit and stay for dinner. At around six in the evening she called to
tell me that she was in an Uber car, on her way.
"Where are you right
now?" I asked.
"We're on the expressway."
Wrong answer. My sister lives
downtown, near the Loop, and the best way to get to our house is on Lake Shore
Drive, all the way to the end and then head west. The expressway is prone to
traffic jams and requires two extra miles of surface street driving. At a
quarter to seven Lisa called again.
"What's your address?"
Okay, I'd think she would
have given the driver the address before leaving for our house, but I repeated
it to her.
"I think I'm standing in front of your house. At
least that's the address on the building."
I looked out the front
window. Nobody was out there.
"I don't see you. Are
you sure you're on the right street? Tell the driver he is on the wrong
street."
"I'm not in the Uber car anymore. He left."
So the Uber guy dropped my
sister off on the wrong street and left her there, in the dark, on the coldest
day of the season.
"Lisa, walk over to
Peterson and look at the street sign. What street are you on?"
No answer. Lisa had hung up,
so I called her back and repeated those instructions.
"Okay... it's so fucking cold out here...." And then she hung up again. I called her back. I was
worried about her out there, all alone in the dark.
"What street are you
on?"
"Talman..." And then she hung up again.
By this time I had my big
coat on and was walking down towards Peterson in my slippers. Did I mention how
goddamned cold it was? I called Lisa again.
"Are you on Peterson?
Are you out on the sidewalk, on the south side of the street?"
"I don't know fucking south from fucking north...."
I was now standing at the end
of our block, at Peterson, looking up and down the sidewalk. Way off in the
distance I could see the figure of somebody.
"Is that you way down
there? I'm waving my arms. Can you see me?"
She had hung up on me again.
So I called her back and asked her again if she could see me waving my arms
like a used car lot, blow up man.
"I don't see a fucking thing. It's so damn cold
out here.... fuck!"
"You don't see me?
Everybody else on the street sees me. They think I'm nuts." I told her as
I continued to wave at the distant figure. She had hung up again. I called
back.
"Lisa, walk west towards
me."
"I don't know which fucking way is fucking
west."
"Look across the street.
You see the park? Go to your left, that's west."
Slowly the distant figure
kept getting closer. As she moved down the frozen street towards me I noticed a
random man stalking her, so I called again. Lisa did not answer, but did
continue walking towards me. I continued with the crazed arm waving. I started
walking towards her and when she was a block away we met. Lisa had a giant
basket laden with heavy Christmas presents.
"Geez, I thought that
was a shopping bag you were carrying, not a basket."
I grabbed one handle of the
basket, Lisa held the other one, and we scurried on down the street towards my
house. All Lisa could say at that point was, "Cold, fucking cold.... cold.... fuck... " She's the only
person I know who swears more than I do. At least, since my dad died.
Friday, December 22, 2017
Doggy Christmas
When we got Scout I depended
upon Chandler to help show her some good behavior examples. She did catch on
fast that the backyard was the place to do her toilet duties. Chandler also
taught her that when the lights go out, it's time for bed. No midnight barking
allowed. One thing that Chandler taught Scout was that if you look up into the
sky, there are big noisy birds up there that you are supposed to bark at.
Airplanes, Chandler loves to bark at the airplanes and we are under the landing
approach for one of the runways at O'Hare. Lots of barking. What I didn't count
on was Scout teaching my old dog, Chandler, new tricks. When Scout wants
something, she sits in front of me and talks. If I ignore her, she starts
barking at me. Most of the time this will get my attention and I will ask her,
"What do you want?" Easy to figure out, either she wants to go out,
or she wants a chewy stick. Sometimes she is telling me that Mark has left a
plate of half finished food on the counter in the kitchen and I need to give
that to her. This is something that Chandler has never done, until now. He
watched and learned and now will sit in front of me and give me a soft bark. If
I ignore, he goes loud. He wants that half finished plate of food. What I can't
get them to communicate on is posing for their Christmas photo. "Chandler,
sit! Stay... Okay, Scout, sit!... no,
no, Chandler you stay.. Scout come back here.." And so it went. I managed
to get some quick shots off of the two of them. In all of the photos though,
one or the other was blurry because neither one would sit long enough to get
the other posed. The above photo is of two different pictures blended together.
It's the best I could do.
Wednesday, December 20, 2017
More Assholery
Yesterday I mentioned to Mark
that somebody had vandalized the Christmas display that the lady down the
street had on her front porch. He found that to be quite distressing. Then
later in the day I was out in the back yard with the dogs when I heard some
young male voices in the alley. Just as I peeked over the fence, I saw two
teenage boys toss a bottle of cologne, then something else. So I hooked Chandler up to the leash and went out to investigate. What
I found was a black canvas bag with two energy bars and some other
inconsequential things in it. On the ground was the bottle of cologne. Down at
the end of the alley I saw the two boys tossing the rest of their booty into
the alley. From the looks of the canvas bag it didn't seem like they got much
for their efforts. Once again I mentioned what happened to Mark. This time he was
more than distressed and went off about how horrible it is to live in the city.
After the theft of his Echo on Saturday added to these two incidents, He was
quite upset. I understand his weariness with bad people cropping up all around
us, but it isn't all that bad. First off the theft of his Echo. Thieves have
taken advantage of Christmas for decades. It's nothing new. Second, the
vandalism of our neighbor's beautiful Christmas display. Teenage boys have been
vandals forever. I saw it in the suburbs, and back in Florida. It's what little
asshole, teenage boys do. Finally the theft of that black canvas bag. Those
'little asshole, teenage boys' saw that somebody had left their mini-van
unlocked out in the alley, with the tailgate open. It was a crime
of opportunity. Anybody who has lived in the city for even a few days, learns
not to leave anything unlocked. The guy with the mini-van might as well put a
sign on his car, "Please steal something."
One thing I have to agree on
with Mark, we both despise thieves. I don't like them in my house, near my
house, or in my life. Nothing is worse than taking something that somebody else
has worked for. I of course, would never steal something from somebody else. Except
for those four pair of large rubber gloves I took from the doctor's office the
other day while nobody was in the examination room. I felt I was owed those for
having to wait nearly an hour past the appointment time.
Monday, December 18, 2017
If I Haven't Said it Yet, Merry F**king Christmas
I am seriously disappointed
with my two watch dogs. On Saturday Mark was expecting a delivery from Amazon.
It was one of those new Echo devices. Which by the way, why the hell does
anybody need one of those? We already have one in the kitchen that I can't get to work.
I say, "Alexa, WXRT radio." and after a few seconds my radio station comes on.
Then about thirty seconds later, it disappears. So I start to tell Alexa to
turn it back on and before I can say anything, it comes back on. As I turn my
back on the piece of crap, it turns my radio station off again. That leads to me screaming
obscenities at the little white cylinder, who then flashes a blue light and
begins playing music again, but not my music.
So anyway, Mark had checked with the Amazon tracker and saw that his Echo was out for delivery along with two other things he had purchased. All day long he sat in the window waiting, until I told him I was going to the Jewel.
So anyway, Mark had checked with the Amazon tracker and saw that his Echo was out for delivery along with two other things he had purchased. All day long he sat in the window waiting, until I told him I was going to the Jewel.
"Wait, I'll come with you." Mark called out.
I cringed because I really
wanted to go alone. You know, run in, grab what I need, and run out. We were
gone for about forty five minutes, which is a miracle by Mark's shopping standards.
As I schlepped all the bags of groceries up into the kitchen I could hear Mark
out front, in the living room.
"What is that? What the hell is that? Alan....
"
Mark was looking out the
window at the front porch. I took a look. At first I did not see anything out
of the ordinary. Then I spotted it.
"Umm.. I'll go get
that."
I walked out on the front
porch and picked up the package from Amazon. It had been opened. I quickly
jammed my hand in there and felt around all the packing. Nothing, not a thing in
that box. I looked up at the window and mouthed the word, 'Empty' while tipping
the box towards Mark.
On the first Tuesday of every
month, the City of Chicago tests it's warning sirens. We live very close to one
and it can be quite loud. However, it is no match for the wailing that came
from the other side of that front window. Mark went nuts.
"What kind of horrible place did you move me to?
Waaaaaaaaa... I never, ever had anything
stolen off the front porch in Florida. Waaaaaaaaa... I hate this place, I hate
you, I hate... Waaaaaaaaa... I need a
gun... Waaaaaaa" (He's not
getting a gun.)
Interesting fact, Amazon does
not have a way to contact them anywhere on their web site. No chat line, no
phone number, no email, nothing. If you follow their instructions for a problem
with receiving a package, you end up going in circles right back to the web
page where you started. Also, nowhere on that empty box was a label indicating
what delivery service had delivered the
package, and nowhere on the Amazon web site did it say who they had used
to deliver it. You take a lot of chances when you order from Amazon. From the
moment you hit that 'Complete the Order' button, you are on your own.
Now about those dogs. Those two,
nosy, loud, territorial beasts that won't let anybody pass our house without
scaring the shit out of them. They let somebody come up onto our porch, open
the door to the vestibule, and steal Mark's stuff.
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