The Happy Harmonica

   

Originally this piece was to be titled “The Butt Darts Bar” until my editor took her first swipe at it. “You have absolutely got to get away from this anal fixation you have,” she said. “Everything you write about has some reference to the buttocks or its major product. What is it with you? You weren’t this way when we first met.” I couldn’t responde to that, so I picked a title that would make Walt Disney himself beam. That doesn’t mean that it’s for all ages. Don’t be reading this to your two-year-old as a bedtime story.

    Butt Darts Bar sat on Freezeout Hill.  I don’t remember its real name, but the name Butt Darts Bar is way sexier. In the late 1990s I was playing harmonica there with a fair to significantly less than fair band called Code Blue, made up of middle-aged Rock ‘n Roll wannabes. All of us were driven by visions of sexy groupies throwing their undergarments with their telephone numbers written on them on stage. It never happened. The owner of the Butt Darts Bar, an ex-Green Beret, loved the harmonica so he kept inviting us back. I wasn’t that good, but I rammed it down by bandmates throats whenever I needed to. It helped that we came cheap. We did get all the Curs Lite, the house beer, we could drink.

     We had alead female vocalist who sang off key, a bass player who often brought to our gigs a long-barreled pistol from his extensive gun collection, that he kept down his pants leg. If it was for protection at the Butt Darts, it would have taken him 15 minutes to get it out. We had lead male vocalist and guitarist, my friend, Mike, whose voice and playing were good but he wasn’t Eric Clapton, a rhythm guitarist who played badly and sang one song, “Mustang Sally,” a drummer who chained smoked on breaks, and who had a gravelly voice that sounded like The Boss, and me, the harp player, just a normal guy, from a good Midwest family. How harmonicas came to be called harps is beyond me because we weren’t pluckers, we were blowers and suckers. I also played the tambourine whenever I could because I’ve always loved percussion instruments. Usually, I was a couple of beats off, but no one said anything because I honestly don’t think they cared.

    Butt Darts Bar was a cowboy bar. It had been hot spot for brawlers, but the new ex-Green Beret owner put a stop to that practice. The main draws were the game of butt darts and the whorehouse next door. Butt Darts involved pinching a quarter between your butt cheeks and two-stepping up to a shot glass where you stopped, hovered over the shot glass, and relaxed the cheeks. Bombs away. If the quarter landed in the shot glass the contestant got whatever wagers were under the shot glass. Both cowboys and cowgirls played, but it was beyond interesting when the cowgirls played because their jeans had been shrink-wrapped on. If they had cellulite, which they didn’t, it looked like the Himalayas.  It left zero imagination to the mind, a statement which makes no sense because the effect on us lads’ imagination was just the opposite.  It was a marvel to watch them, discretely of course, cram that quarter up into their sanctuary and then wiggle down the bar, maybe 25 ft. without losing it. Band members were always asked to join in, but no one was willing to make a fool of themself but me. I so intrigued by the process that I conned one of the young ladies to demo the technique at very close range (the lighting was bad). It worked because I won on my first attempt.

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    I was born in 1943 in Paris. Paris, Texas, that is good buddy, Paris, TEXAS. Paris France has a slightly difference ambience. I not sure when I started playing harmonica but probably when I was around six and bed-ridden for two years with rheumatic fever. I was inspired by the record, The Happy Harmonica, about J.B., a young boy in the 1940s who buys his first harmonica at Mr. Humferdinkle’s candy story after being turned on by parade instruments (drums were too big but flutes just right), circus seals tooting “God Bless America,” and train whistles. The Happy Harmonica is told and the harmonica played by John Sebastian, the father of John (Benson) Sebastian, the founder of the band, The Lovin’ Spoonful. Both father and son were and are great harmonica players.

    After I got over the rheumatic fever, I was the comic book 98 lb. victim of all kinds of abuse, and I wore thick glasses because the fever had damaged my eyes. To put it succinctly, I was the classic nerd, pretty much until high school when I wrestled for three years. Wrestling transformed me from a guy on the beach getting sand kicked on him and his babe swept away by Charles Atlas devotees, into a serious hunk and babe magnet. As for the harmonica, during my early boyhood as a nerd, I played the crowd pleasers, like Old Susannah and She’ll Be Coming Around the Mountain, for my parents’ friends, but probably very little during my teenage years. It would not have been cool to get caught with a harmonica in your pocket.  

    I do remember in 5th grade when we got a choice to play a musical instrument for two years, I wanted to play the piccolo. When I told my father this, I can remember his response vividly, going something like this:

    “You want to play what? he stammered. I remember we were sitting at the dining room table. It was good that both of us were sitting down. “Why would you ever want to play the piccolo?”

    “Because it’s small and I can put it in my pocket like the harmonica. Or the flute.” I mumbled, probably looking at my shoes.

     “Well, I can tell you this much, no son of mine is going to play the piccolo OR the flute.” I remember him getting a little red and agitated. “Look, I’ve got a good cornet which is smaller than a trumpet but not small enough to put in your pocket. The piccolo would never fit into your pocket anyway. You can play the cornet like I did. That’s a man’s instrument.” Well, I did, and I hated it. My chops always made me look like a red-lipped guppy with thick glasses, a character lifted right out of the Little Mermaid.

**********

     The first time I remember playing for others than family and at Boy Scout campfires was onboard the Jambeli, an WW II LSM landing craft, given to the Ecuadorian navy by the U.S. for trips from Guayaquil to the Galapagos Islands. In the summer of 1966, I was headed to the Galapagos Islands with a research team from Ohio State to study the paleoecology of the islands’ crater lake fossil pollen in the sediments. I was a masters graduate student at OSU at the time. To get on the expedition, I had to lie to the leader, who later became by advisor, Paul Colinvaux, a world-famous paleoecologist. The only way I made the expedition team was because Paul still needed a cook and official photographer. I told him that I was a great cook and even better photographer, both were sheer BS. As a graduate student, I cooked a lot of liver and onions and made coffee. As a photographer, I had my mom’s Brownie. I’d seen my grandfather’s light meter. Paul figured out my cooking skills on our first camping trip away from the Charles Darwin Research Station, and my photographic skills when we got home to Columbus, and he saw my ill-exposed pictures. Needless to say, he was none too happy.

     LSMs, like LSTs, were flat-bottomed landing crafts that were made for short trips to dump GIs and tanks on shores, not fighting 10’ white caps for days on end. They bucked the waves instead of neatly slicing through them. So, during choppy conditions, the Jambeli made for gut wrenching sailing. The trip from Guayaquil to the islands was three-day, 600 mile journey. We started out sleeping on tight bunks essentially in the kitchen where the main staple was bananas fried in rancid grease, for every meal. By the end of day one,d we were spending all of time at the railing and looking like green chilis, so we moved our sleeping bags to the deck. It hadn’t helped that our Navy bunks were stacked about a foot apart, so quick exits to get to the bathroom usually involved a lot of bruising and swearing if you made it all. As our guts returned to normal on deck, I entertained the team with renditions of “Sail Your Boat Down the Stream.” As I did, I noticed my mates started getting sick again, so I quit, and they quickly recovered.

**********

    I began to take the harmonica seriously after my 50th birthday party in 1993. At the party was a good friend from work who sang and played the guitar. I became a fan after his rendition of “Happy Birthday,” and we began to jam in earnest. I instantly fell in love with harmonica blues. I consider that 50th birthday party a turning point in my life and it helped get through a true, life-threatening, midlife crisis. Most men turn to sports cars and 22-year-old mistresses, and even though I wanted both, I could afford neither, I turned to the harmonica, the logical substitute for speed and hot sex.

    Mike and I jammed a lot during the 90s and I improved immensely, playing mainly blues and R&R. I even took a beginner’s class along with the world-renown harmonica player, John Nemeth, taught by the late great Norton Buffalo. But, as I always tell friends, John and I went in different directions. He REALLY took it seriously and while he was still in high school and super guy, he had his own band, Fat John and the Three Slims. They were a minor sensation in Boise, playing illegally at local bars. Meanwhile, I jammed with Mike, anywhere and everywhere and whenever we could. We played at churches, bar mitzvahs, picnics, and birthday parties, christenings, etc. usually conning them into thinking we were good. And free.  Actually, we weren’t bad.

    Sometime toward the end of the 90s, several things of significance happened. One, while blissfully wailing away to some cassette, with eyes closed, I was pulled over by a cop. I was never sure how he caught me because he was three cars ahead of me while we were both waiting in the left turn lane for the light. Perplexed, when I rolled my window down, he said,

    “Did I or did I not see you playing a harmonica back at that light?”

    “Yes,” I said. “That is correct, officer. But, as you know, we were fully stopped waiting for the light to change. The only time I practice in the car is when I am completely stopped. No different than blowing your nose at a stoplight. How did you see me, anyway? You were a football field ahead of me.”

    “That’s irrelevant,” he said. “As a cop we need to be aware of anything out of the ordinary and harmonica playing while driving is definitely out of the ordinary. In fact, I thought only kids played the screechy things. This area is my beat and if I catch you playing and driving again, I’m going to ticket you. Whether you are at a dead stop doesn’t make any difference. Besides, do you really think any of those unfortunate enough to be within hearing distance of you are going to be pounding their steering wheel in pedal-stomping glee? I don’t think so.” And with that, he strode away. I had lied about only playing when fully stopped. I practiced all the time while driving on the road. On the interstate, during snowstorms, with the daughters unbuckled in the car, etc. I never got in an accident, but I was passed by both my wife and sister-in-law on Boise streets and didn’t notice them screaming and gesturing at me through closed windows. Their shock always reminded me of my favorite movie, Planes, Trains and Automobiles when John Candy and Steve Martin were tooling down the freeway going the wrong direction. A couple yelled at them, going the correct direction, from the other side of divider, “You’re going the wrong way, you’re going to kill somebody.” John and Steve just laughed at them.

    The second event happened when I joined the band, Code Blue with Mike, as I mentioned in the introduction. Mikw had auditioned for the lead singer and guitarist with Code Blue and got the job. Once he was secure, he got me into the band. We played together for about two years and had a tremendous amount of fun but never made any money. If we made $25 per member per gig that was good night.

     I vividly remember one summer night we played at the local Annual Rocky Mountain Oyster Feed. Oysters are bull’s balls, floured and fried in deep fat. They are actually quite good. For $16 you could eat unlimited balls and quaff enough Curs, to make you hurl, which we saw a lot of, into bushes, on the dance floor, etc. Allegedly, oysters cause your testosterone level to redline, thus increasing your potential for copulating for weeks without a break. I ate as many as I could tolerate but don’t remember any significant results. That wasn’t the case with the main clientele, cowboys, and their cowgirls. This was made very apparent later in the evening that the oysters, plus the Curs, had a positive impact on both the bulls and the cows.

    The feed was held outside, the area enclosed with a chain link fence, and we played on an old flatbed truck. It ended abruptly at 10 p.m. and I do mean abruptly. We had to stop mid-song while playing Brown Eyed Girl. The crowd booed because the drunk cowgirls had requested that we play that particular song about a dozen times. “Play that fucker again,” they slurred, banging on the flatbed. “We love to dance to that motherfucker.” It was obvious why they stopped the event at 10. Not one of the dancers in front of us could move without falling over. One cowboy in front of me was grinding away with his cowgirl with her dress hiked up and with his one hand feeling her ass and the other hand her breast. Not quite dancing but not totally disgusting either. As we were breaking down our equipment, I was helping the drummer disassemble his drum kit and the same cowboy pinned his cowgirl up against the truck bed between me and the drummer and started screwing her standing up. I just remember her with her head bouncing off the bed and screaming, either from pain or ecstasy or both. It wasn’t easy to pack up our gear with the truck shaking.

    It was made further obvious why they ended at 10 when the cowboy shitkicker pickups rolled out onto the highway. There were several accidents and cop cars blinking red and blue, and chaos and dust filling the hot night air. Trucks were randomly peeling off across the dry fields trying to escape the cops.  In the organizer’s belated wisdom, they changed the rules the next year and still allowed as many balls as you could hold but reduced the Curs Lite to ten- sixteen oz. cups. We were not invited back presumably because we had been too judgmental of crowd behavior. I’ll never forget our drummer, in his deep, gravelly voice, say after the gig, “I wouldn’t do that again if they gave me the fucking national mint.”

    For a short period of time after Code Blue disbanded, I played with a long-standing local blues group called the Bitterbrush Blues Band (BBB). The harmonica player, a friend of mine, became deaf so he recommended that I replace him, which I gladly did because BBB was a good and popular band. At our last gig before disbanding, we played at the annual fundraiser for the Rocky Mountain Bighorn Sheep Society. We were told we were going to play for at least an hour before and during the dinner. We did neither. We played for about 15 minutes before dinner as people drifted around making bids, after which time we were told our musical services were no longer needed; dinner was being served. This was after two hours of setting up. The auctioneer was our BBB leader so we couldn’t play afterward.

    The auction involved two items which sent our wives to the restroom with their coats and then straight home. The first item was a huge homemade Bowie knife that looked more like a sword than a knife. It was being gifted to the youngest person in the crowd. Made sense. It would certainly make cutting your Barbie doll’s hair easier. The Society president brought the house down with his comment that it was too bad there wasn’t a pregnant woman in the house. What? If so, was he planning on performing a C-section? I think some little boy won that one. The second item was a lady’s pink assault rifle, scaled down for the tiny lady’s smaller statue. An AK-something. It could have been a rocket launcher for all I knew. A 12-year-old girl won. While the girl and her proud parents were beaming for the cameras, our last wife threw down her napkin and went to the bathroom, never to be seen again. BBB was never paid for the three songs or the auctioneering. Our leader said as we were packing up, “Well boys, that’s the last time we play for those cocksuckers.”

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    Sometime in the 90s while I was working for the State of Idaho, a co-worker asked me to play with their church band during an outdoor summer service. It was in July, the hottest month of the year in Idaho. Kurt, who belonged to a small evangelical church, mentioned that the band was going to practice once before the Sunday gig. We got together mid-week in their chapel for the practice, and they were bad. Very bad. I remember it being a chaotic practice where we never actually completed a song. I do remember that Amazing Grace was one of the songs, of course, and I knew and loved playing harmonica to Amazing Grace. I was nervous because the rest of the mainly hymns, , I didn’t know at all but my friend, the guitarist, kept saying that it would be fine and not to worry about it. Well, I did worry about it. The lead female vocalist was a 15-year-old girl with a weak voice whom I couldn’t hear.

    We played at high noon in the open on bleachers. The sound system was horrendous, but my mike was working well, too well. I was drowning out everyone, and I couldn’t turn the volume down. Furthermore, only Kurt, the lead singer and guitarist, and in front of me by a good ten feet which basically meant I couldn’t hear him. Actually, I couldn’t hear any of them, so the songs were unrecognizable to me, even Amazing Grace. They had told me the keys of the songs at practice, but it quickly became apparent that they had changed the keys since practice and had forgotten to tell me. I could hear myself coming through the PA system above everything else, loud, and clear, usually in the wrong key. It was the nightmare to end all nightmares. We all were standing directly in the sun, and it had to be 100 degrees in the shade. Since it was a church and I had worn a sports coat, I was sweating like a pig in heat. I just played and prayed for it to be over.

After each song, the congregation smiled and clapped very politely. No wild screaming or standing ovations or throwing of underwear. When it was over, I was hoping to exit without being seen but that wasn’t going to be the case. My friend immediately rushed up to me and said,

    “You sounded awesome. Everybody loved you. They thought you were a great addition to the band.”

     “You’ve got to be shitting me, Kurt,” I said. “I sounded like I was playing from Mars. A passing cement truck probably sounded better than me. I could hear myself on the PA and while you guys were playing one song, I was playing another.”

    “Nonsense,” he said. “Come meet the congregation and my family and have some punch and a cookie.” Members came up and sweetly complimented my playing, and I kept thinking what’s in that punch? Ecstasy? What is this church really into?” As soon as I could make my exit I did and went home and had a few beers and goofy pills. After that, I didn’t feel guilty at all that it was Sunday and I’d just played at a sweet little church.

**********

    From 2007 – 2011, Sandy and I were in the Peace Corps in Queretaro, Mexico, when I played with a Mexican blues band at coffee shop. The owner, who played the harmonica, invited me to play with this band when he found out I played blues. He said he wasn’t good enough. I called the band leader about getting together and practicing before the gig and he said, “Why? This is Mexico. Just wing it and it will go fine.”

     I said, “I just thought it would be a good idea since I haven’t met you guys or know what songs you are playing.”

     He responded, something like, “What do you need to know? Blues are blues.” But he reluctantly arranged a jam session for 5 p.m. at his house.

    I showed up right a five, which again, was not normal in Mexico. At 6:30, after everyone had straggled in except the lead female singer, she came waltzing in and we practiced until 7. Punctually at 7, a whole pack of musicians arrived, and they began their Ska band practice, and I went home. We sounded shockingly good at the gig. Toward the end I was wailing away with my eyes closed and I heard some very strange music coming from the other side of the stage. When I opened my eyes, I saw the coffee shop owner with his harmonica playing like he was possessed, but in the wrong key. It sounded horrible so I stopped and let him finish the song with the band. Everyone clapped, including the band members as if nothing had happened, and he bowed and walked off stage. The band said that I added a lot and promised to invite me back for more gigs. That was the last I ever heard from them.

**********

Probably nothing I’ve done throughout my life has brought me consistently more joy than the harmonica. I’ve played for 73 years. It got me one of my best friends ever and we’ve been playing together for almost 30 years. It got me through midlife crisis. It got me into two bands and on stage maybe 100 times or more. That little 4” instrument continues to give me pure bliss virtually every time I play it. It taught me patience, it taught me how to work with others to try to produce a work of art, however bad, and showed me that jamming and playing for an audience are two of my greatest pleasures in life. And it has taught me a lot about music even though I had played piano, trumpet, and guitar for brief periods in my life, and a wife who taught piano for years. I can’t thank that little instrument enough. To this day, all I have to do is pick one up whether it’s in the car (at a dead stop, of course) or in my man cave, or with Mike or whoever at an open mic, it brings a smile to my lips. Blues is great therapy for the blues. And in seconds, I’m J.B. in the Happy Harmonica, or playing at the Butt Darts Bar. What’s more, I can put it in my pocket.  

Greegorspeak Journal

Self Portrait of Author at Christmas

February 3, 2022. 9:40 a.m.  After reading Heather Cox Richardson’s posts for the last few days, I am wondering what would happen if some liberal gang from the Streets New York were to carry out a plot to further derange Mr. Orange Hair Orange Face Orangutan (MOFO for short) by removing his cubic millimeter sized brain. I’m not suggesting it, I’m just raising a hypothetical scenario. There are many ways this could be done but I would recommend the following method, by steps:

  1. Capture him using a pronghorn antelope net.
  2. Silently stuff him into the boot of a Bolt or Volt, whichever is least expense to a castle in Transylvania.
  3. Once there, if conditions are right (e.g. castle high on a hill, dark stormy night with lots of lightning bolts [no relation to the car]) lighting up the gargoyles on the castle, take MOFO to the laboratory (stress the “bor” part like Dracula) deep in the bowels of unidentified castle.
  4. Once in the lab, strap him to the operating table with the same leather straps he used to strap down Stormy Daniels so she would be forced to do things with his micro-willy.
  5. Insert a micro-needle into his cubic millimeter of vanilla-pudding-like micro-brain to extract it. The place it aside in a mouse’s petri dish.
  6. Be sure to exaggerate the incision on the forehead with lots of ugly stitches.
  7. Release him into the storm with a seeing eye orangutan so he will be accompanied with one of his own. Take note: at that point, and even before the operation, the orangutan was definitely smarter than MOFO.
  8. The orangutan can take him to Tivoli Gardens where he should be able to find gainful employment as a sideshow Geek for the rest of his days.

LISTEN UP 1. I do NOT recommend anything more drastic because one could get executed for doing so. Would this act result in Civil War II in this once-great country of ours or would it cause both sides to start weeping, praying forgiveness and all hold hands on the way to a nonpartisan rally in front of a non-denomination church or synagogue or temple. Stay tuned.

LISTEN UP 2. This has been, as will be the others to follow, a textbook example of stream-of-consciousness writing. Tell your students.

February 5, 2022. 7:20 a.m.  I watched the news pretty carefully this week. I’m getting better at that because this time in U.S. history and world history could be at some pretty big tipping points. Precarious is to put it mildly. As I’ve said before, I’m an ignorant observer trying to get less ignorant. I have paid attention to the climate change situation but not so much to politics. Having begun to read Heather Cox Richardson (HCR) and listening very carefully (self-preservation issue) to my wife, I’m starting to pay attention. Real attention.

I have a conservative Republican friend from high school with whom I have been corresponding by email with for several years now. He is a college graduate and has written several novels on the settling of the American West. Neither of us have been able to get the other to budge in our position one inch. Pretty standard these days. After reading HCR this morning and following the antics of the G.O.P. and the RNC for the past week or so, I want to say to my Republican friend, up close and personal,    

    “WHAT THE FUCK IS WRONG WITH YOUR HEAD?!!!!!!! What the fuck is wrong with any of your Republican pals’ heads? How can you live with yourself? How can you kiss your grandchildren at night and then sleep peacefully yourself? You have written several books on American history, which makes you somewhat of a historian, and you are still a Republican.” Please help me understand.”

As a friend of mine who was once heavily into Republican politics and left the party a few years ago in disgust, wrote yesterday on Facebook:

    “The Republican Party is now officially a terrorist organization dedicated to and sanctioning    the overthrow of the legitimate government of the United States. The Republican National Committee should all be arrested and charged with treason. What has happened to the political party to which I was a member for more than 50 years?”

Yesterday, the New York Times reported that the RNC censured Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger and the GOP declared the January 6 attack, “Legitimate Political Discourse.” They went further to slam Ms. Cheney and Mr. Kinzinger for taking part in the House investigation of the assault, saying they were participating in “persecution of ordinary citizens engaged in legitimate political discourse.”

What are the Republicans smoking? Rat poison? Have they all injected themselves with bleach? Popped Ecstasy? Eaten some toe jam on crackers? At this juncture in history, Hell will be too good for them.

Facebook entry 2/5/22 as a substitute for the previous final, not so subtle paragraph above. Perhaps it is a better ending. Who cares?

Post made to Greegorspeak Journal today. In order to not catalyze further polarization in our already hummingbird egg fragile country, I have made a few diplomatic substitutions in my last BRIEF paragraph as follows:

What are the blessed ones smoking? Rat poison? Have they all injected themselves with bleach? Popped 100 Ecstasy pills? Eaten some Amanita on crackers? Toe jam sandwiches and blue doodoo chips for lunch? At this juncture in history, that extraterrestrial place with lots of fire and guys in red suits running around with tridents would be a good retirement location for them.”

February 7, 2022. 6:40 a.m. Again, I woke at around 4 a.m. this morning, probably due to some heavy drinking last night. One beer, but it was the pint size instead of my usual 12-ouncer, which must explain my hangover this morning. I was feeling bold and chanced the additional four ounces. I’m a risk taker by nature. So, I started reading Collapse: How Societies Fail or Succeed, published in 2005by Jared Diamond. I had just checked out the electronic version yesterday to test out my new Christmas tablet. I was most interested in what he had to say about our society, even though he wrote it in 2005, and also that of the Maya. We’re going back to the Yucatan next November so I wanted to be as up to date as I could be on the Mayan civilization, which is fascinating. I will have to re-read everything I read now about the Maya, probably several times before we leave. My once sharper than a tack memory is somewhat reduced as gather momentum on my journey toward 100.

I had started Diamond’s Guns, Germs and Steel years ago but quickly became overwhelmed and quit. I have Collapse out for 2 weeks and I noticed that it was over 1000 pages on my tablet. I did some quick math and realized that at my current reading rate, I will finish Collapse after the U.S. collapses. I’m not sure what my age will be but probably in the vicinity of 120, plus or minus 10 years.

Diamond must have a mind not unlike Tony Doerr’s, capable of gathering, storing, remembering and capable of instantaneously recalling 16 zillion zillion facts in front of an audience of 15,000 about our world and our galaxy and 22 other galaxies. And then writing about in 32 lb. books. After I read two pages of Collapsein his chapter about modern societies, which is maybe 50 to 100 pages long, minus any photographs, sketches, or cartoons, I collapsed and fell asleep until 6. As an ecologist I had read his article about the demise of the Easter Island people and really enjoyed it. But that was an article, not the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Question: why the mind of a Tony Doerr or a Jared Diamond so drastically different from mine. Granted, I’m 79 but Diamond is 85. What the fuck! And Tony Doerr is an infant of 48 so he still has a steel trap mind but I’m happy as a pig in shit to remember either or their names or the names of their books or the information on the page that I read 2 hours befor! God or Allah or Zeus just didn’t deal the cards fairly. In my case, he gave me a deck of 32 cards and in Doerr’s and Diamond’s cases, he (her, she, it – NOT she sheeeit!) are playing with 10 decks and counting cards.

February 9, 2022. 6:20 a.m. I’m currently reading a book by Kristin Hannah, entitled The Four Winds, written in 2020 about a woman trying to raise two children on a Texas farm during the Dust Bowl. I should add that the Dust Bowl began in 1930 and lasted about a decade, during the Great Depression from 1929 to 1933. These little tidbits are for those of you who forgot 5th grade history, which of course I did not. I did not need to peak at the internet for that information. Trust me. I was very young during both, but I do remember they were not fun times. The family in Ms. Hannah’s book gets the opportunity to experience, firsthand, everything going to hell around them as the lands dry out as relentless dust storms ravage everything, and as friends leave in buckboards and rattle trap cars loaded with the kitchen sink. Keep in mind this exciting period in American history was bookended by two wars.

This is not a book you want to read if you are prone to depression. If you do, you should get rid of all means of inflicting self-harm or doing something inappropriate to your loved ones. Like murder. Already this book reminds me of my musings over the past few years about sacrifice. It also caused me to think about Tom Brokaw’s 1998 book, which I have not read, entitled The Greatest Generation. But I know what his point was in writing it. I don’t think he was looking for evidence that we have surpassed that gang that lived through wars, dust bowls and a depression. Given that Brokaw wrote it when he did, I doubt that he got into any serious discussion about what wimps we have become, especially obvious since the pandemic began.

If Tom Brokaw wrote a sequel today, he would need to have bucket beside his desk in which to periodically puke as he wrote. Asking the current crop of babies that won’t wear masks or get vaccinations, knowing they likely caused the death of fellow citizens, is as if you were asking them to allow you to remove their eyeballs with an axe, or systematically slowly break each finger with a sledgehammer. If the wimps refused those options, you could offer to tear out their entrails with a fork.

It blows me away how selfish people have become. It’s my right to own six AK-47s and take them all, each strapped to a family member, including Baby Bonny, to church. It’s my right to drive my 4-wheeler or dirt bike around the campground all night long. Or better yet, lead our club around the loop and rev our engines in front of your tent.

In the 1830s after visiting America, Alexis de Tocqueville wrote Democracy in America, which covers lots of topics about society, politics, etc. in two big ass volumes. I think I tried to read volume I years ago and made it through page 2 before flushing it down the toilet. Tocqueville was not the James Patterson of the 1830s. It is said that he had some doubts about our emphasis on the individual as opposed to the common good. He was only here for nine months. Hmmmm……..maybe…….hmmmm…….perhaps…….hmmmm…… Is he still alive? Is he writing from a warehouse in Afghanistan? Somalia? Either he has set the world age record at 217 or he had a crystal ball business on the side.

To put you out of your misery, my final thought is this: how are we, especially the crybaby component of our pampered society, going to handle the unfolding scenario of a climate changing future? We aren’t quite batting 500 regarding the pandemic, thanks to our crybabies. I’m thinking that I need to start beer-thirty right now (8 a.m.) rather that my usual 11 a.m. today after writing this upbeat piece. I know where my wife hides the tequila. The family doesn’t call me Little Davie Downer for nothing.

February 10, 2022. 5:45 a.m. Up again at the crotch of dawn. Hmmm. I don’t know where that description of dawn comes from, but it seems really apropos. It had to have come from someone famous or I wouldn’t use it. FDR? I’ve been thinking about him lately as I read further into The Four Winds and the good times of 1930s. It could have been Winnie. Nope, the Brits don’t see dawn the same way we crude Americans do. If they do, they suck it up and don’t tell anyone. They just another round of tea and crumpets. Maybe my mother. She could be very crude at times. She told another old lady in their rest home dining room who had told Mom to get fucked, Mom responded, from her wheelchair, “No, Isabelle, YOU go fuck yourself.” I was really proud of her.

After reading The Four Winds late into the night and reading the yesterday’s Heather Cox Richardson (HCR) mainly about the productive activities of members of the Republican Party, I came to one healthy difference between politicians of the 1930s and today, regardless party affiliation, they, especially Republicans, eat, drink and shit lies. I was just a teenage hunk in the 1930s so I was always spending my time trying to score some bullseyes, but I don’t think any of them as habitual, chronic liars. I don’t really know, and I refuse to research it, but Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz and Donald Trump and Marjorie Taylor Green and the entire Fox News lads and lasses must tell their kids every morning when they come down for their Fruit Loops,

    “Hey, Marybelle and Willard, did you see the moon last night?”

     “No,” they say, crunching away on Captain Crunch (or Fruit Loops, but something packed with protein), “Why?”

    “Well, Marybelle and Willard, you missed it, it was made of green cheese. I shit you not, kids.” And then Marco goes off in his scaled down version of the Starship Enterprise to his mistress’s condo, who is the 14-yr-old daughter of Ron DeSantis, before going for 2 martinis and then to the Dirksen Building where he will play with himself of some aide for the rest of the day.

Meanwhile, in some broken down warehouse in Ward 8 (nasty, nasty area in D.C.) Marjorie Taylor Greene, will have just finished injecting herself with d-Con. Somewhere else in D.C., Mitch McConnell will have just dried himself off after swimming in his wife’s turtle tank. He will turn to his wife, Kung Fu, and asked her how the turkeys were doing. “Are they gobbling OK?” he would ask Fu. He’d hope to join them for a martini that evening.

If Joe Biden calls me today, which is highly likely, and says, “Dave, what is going on? What am I doing wrong?” I would have to be totally candid with him and say,

“Joe, what are our chances of colonizing Mars or the Moon or even Venus or the Sun, before 2024?” Joe would probably say that he needed to check with his space exploration team, Jeff, Richard, and Elon, but he thought pretty good. I suggested that he might want to call Michael Strahan, too. He’s had 10 minutes of experience, and a keen understanding of conditions on the Sun and Venus. Mike discretely told me once that he thought the Sun and Venus were pretty hot. He very, very quietly then added, looking over his shoulder, “While, it may be a tad cool, Uranus might be better.” I beat the shit out him.

Monday, February 14, 2022. 6:30 a.m. Today is the one day of the year we are compelled to think about LOVE. The day I like to call VD Day to get a laugh, but I rarely do because people don’t know usually what the hell VD is. We used the term all the time when I was a young stud on the prowl, roaming the streets of Mexican border towns, but for the last 49 years, I’ve been a good boy.  And I honestly can’t see my wife getting up in the middle of the night while I’m sawing away, belching, drooling, and farting with mouth agape, and donning a pink leather mini and stilettos, to roam the bars of Boise.

I understand why Hallmark created Valentine’s Day. A wise friend told me that it was to make money, and love was just a convenient vehicle to the bank. But I think he was wrong because Cupid was around a long time before Hallmark was. My fact checkers found that Cupid was possibly one of the twelve Disciples or three Wise Men, but they are not sure which.  Cupid was definitely a male, we know that much because he had a beer belly and a tiny, stubby little winkle. Cupid could have also been mentioned in the Book of Mormon or the Torah, but my fact team would only research heavy religious books for an hour.

Anyway, back to thinking about love. After today, we have 364 days to recuperate until we have to think about it again. Meanwhile, today you will need my help as the Love Doctor in avoiding costly decisions, so I give you this:

The Love Doctor’s Hierarchy of Love

  1. Self. You have to begin with love of self. For me that’s a no-brainer: 375 days of the year, with ten extra days for good measure in case I have an altruistic day.
  • Family.  How far removed you consider “family” has a lot to do with how much time you want to continuously be looking over your shoulder if you forget VD. Ask yourself this question: who would be most likely to not call 911 if you had severed a major artery and were going to bleed out in 15 minutes, if I didn’t at least tell them that you loved them. That’s easy for me. Three. The Wife (a.k.a., The Leeetle Wooman or She-Who-Must-Be-Obeyed) + The Daughters.  Only one daughter has immediate access to my body, the other lives in Seattle. Both expect me to get a heart-shaped box of Lee’s chocolates. The distant one has an insatiable sweet tooth, so one measly box of candy is just a 5 min. warm-up for her. The one here in town is worrisome, she already dropped the hint several times yesterday, “The wind was on the LEEward side, let’s all watch Charlie and the CHOCOLATE factory, etc.). All three keep the stretching rack in the garage oiled, a fetid water supply available for the waterboard in the basement, a razor-sharp axe in my workshop, and knives everywhere.  Whips and mirrors not anymore. No guns. No bows & arrows, or crossbows. Then there’s the sisters, naaaahh. All three live in Ohio. No retaliation worries. Distant cousins don’t give a shit. Most of them think I’m dead.
  • Friends. I love my friends, but I normally don’t tell them that unless I’m drunk. So, if you just sign your next email to them, “Luv Ya,” you should be covered. I’m taking care of my obligation to the now. Luv Ya, friends!
  • Earth. Skip over community, county, state, nation, etc., and go directly to Mutha Earth. To personally express love for everything and everyone on Earth is a stretch. There are people and things that I don’t particularly love. I’m not Jesus Christ or Mahatma Gandhi or the Dalai Lama. I’m not going to start naming them but, as a teaser, I will only mention one group: Republicans in Congress and in the Idaho State Legislature. Republicans. Period. Moreso the Koch Bros. I should have compassion for them because they were born without a brain.

I think the best way for me to express, in general, my love for Earth is to simply say as Sammy Sosa once said, “Earth has been berry, berry good to me.” Earth has been altruistically good to me for almost 80 years without ever asking for anything in return. And I know for a fact that we have been treating Earth like shit and until, maybe the 21st century, Earth took it without complaining. Those days are gone and gone for some time well into the future. Long past my time on this whirling Mega Blue& Green Marble (for future usage: MB&GM). But that doesn’t mean I can become complacent and shag the dog. Speaking of dogs, and honestly, I quit shagging them years ago, I’m not just expressing love for humans. As a biologist all my life, the loss of totally innocent species and ecosystems is beyond sad. It is a crime of the highest order. I do love the natural world with all my heart and would like to tell every lizard or frog or koala bear or elephant whom we murder and drive toward extinction, that I love them. They probably won’t throw their sharp claws or slimy mitts or trunk around me in thanks, but I would like them to know, whether they give a rat’s ass or not, that I do weep for them. Every time I go down to the Boise River or the Sonoran Desert or the Great Maya Reef or just the backyard, I feel their loss.

I’ll put you out of your misery with this one, incredible, very wise, unsaid-ever-before-in-history, mega-pearl of wisdom: GET OFF THY ASS AND DO SOME LOVIN’!!! As they say, everything comes down to one word when your girlfriend cuts the limburger at the concert: MOVE! LOVE, of course; it’s what’s for dinner.

Saturday, February 19, 2022. 8 a.m. I’ve been feeling horrible for about three weeks now. My daughter, my wife and I came down with Covid. We tried to pass the blame back and forth and then we decided we didn’t have the energy. All three had been fully perforated with needles, but we failed to ingest or inject bleach nor did we take invermectin, or mega-doses of vitamin D. Some of Idaho’s politicians, including our own Lt. Governor, Janice McGeachin, who has gained national recognition as one of Idaho’s most recent pre-hominid politicians who rose to the top by AK-47ing her opponents in their backs. Not to forget Dr. Ryan Cole, recently appointed to the Idaho Central District Health, by mailing in more Wheaties boxtops than any of the other candidates. Gov McGeachin and Marjorie Taylor Greene were both home-schooled on Planet Lobotomy and were beamed into their current jobs without anyone knowing how they got there. Janet likes to play governor when the real governor, Do Little, is indisposed and she is free to make decisions based on advice provided by her panel of Barbie dolls.

Marjorie Taylor Greene got her KKK hood taken away at the House door, she claimed she thought it was Halloween. She said, and I quote, “You flaming, spewing assholes will let the Capitol Gazpachos wear their football helmets and carry willy clubs, but nooooooo…., I can’t wear my SNL Conehead for Day of the Dead.” 

Flushogate. One final thought about Trump flushing boxes of critical papers down the porcelain beast. I understand completely. I did not read the details, but did he try to flush filing cabinets or just carboard boxes? Was he being rushed by Melanie claiming she had just sharted, and badly needed to use the beast or use the sink? “I have on my thong,” she said.

I know one thing for sure: I wouldn’t have that problem of ridding documents of importance unless they were unpaid speeding tickets. No, the most important paper I flush down that Hole to Hell is TP. If it had my signature on it, it might be worth your while to get down the treatment plant and try to salvage some, dry ‘em with a hairdryer and sell ‘em on Craig’s List. Big money to be had.

Tuesday, March 1, 2022. 6:30 a.m. While on the one hand, it gives me goosebumps to see the support for a struggling democracy, Ukraine, it would be nice to see the same level of support for our own struggling democracy. We’re thousands of miles from a battle that is costing the Ukrainians the ultimate sacrifice, human life. A stone’s throw away, someone in a monster truck is exhibiting their idea of patriotism by sporting a giant Stars & Stripes. These same “patriots” squeal like stuck pigs that wearing a mask is akin to taking a bullet in the head. Too many Idahoans believe that patriotism is a bumper sticker and sacrifice is not being able to carry their AK-17 into a grade school. Hiding behind those weapons and threatening to use them against anyone who doesn’t genuflect to their warped concept of citizenry is an act of cowardice and bullying. There is zero risk. We live in a peaceful country. Would these same individuals put their lives on the line in a war-ravaged country such as Ukraine when the opposition can fire back?

Monday, April 18, 2022. 6:30 a.m. These seem to be times, at least for a super-nostalgist such as me, when I need a massive dose of Eutopia time travel back to an earlier period of my youth. Reality is unloading both barrels on us all. Consequently, I have reverted to our old friend, the BBC and PBS for hard core escapism. Two of the gooiest trips back to the pre- and post- WW 2 era and into the 1960s are Call the Midwife and All Creatures Great and Small. A tough Alaskan friend in his 90s, when asked whether or not he liked Call the Midwife, responded, “Too many babies.” I am sure he would say the same about All Creatures with too many calves and piglets.

    “Well, Millicent, you have a brand new, healthy looking, baby boy,” said Dr. Turner. “Trixie, can you help Mrs. Frobisher wash up and make herself presentable before her husband gets here.” Absolutely,” says Trixie. Millicent started blubbering incoherently thanking Dr. Turner and Trixie for staying the course. The newborn looked as roasted as any other of the million babies the midwives have delivered over 11 seasons of Call the Midwife, produced by BBC and aired in this country by the PBS network. As the seasons progressed from the 1950s into the 1960s, the babies got more political colorful as East London became more cosmopolitan (actually filmed primarily in Kent). Without exception, every episode, and we have watched them all, has aspects of pain and suffering, but always leaves the viewers with warm feelings of neighborhood gatherings and the R&R feel-good music of that era, almost always love songs of Frankie Avalon, Dion, and Bobby Vee.

    “Now, Tricki, Uncle James thinks you should cut down on you love affair with caviar. He thinks you are getting a little too rolly-polly.” Thus says Mrs. Pumphrey to her seriously pampered Pekinese, Tricki Woo in All Creatures Great and Small, a story of a group of veterinarians, now into its second decade with all different actors after a highly successful, highly nostalgic series in the 1970s. As a family with small daughters, we loved it then as much as we love it now. Filmed in the picturesque Dales of northern England, the vets riding from farm to farm in beat-up old cars.

    Even though I spent my totally idyllic boyhood as a WASP in the ‘burbs in central Ohio in the 1950s, with a lakeside family cabin in upper Michigan, I am not totally blind to the fact that it was not as it appears in hindsight and programs like Call the Midwife and All Creatures Great and Small don’t help matters any. But so what? We had standards and lines then that we do not have now. We live in a free-for-all time, and I think it is manifesting itself in a deterioration from a time when we respected individualism, but we also respected community values, such as group activities and events, equally.