I’m Dreaming of a White Halloween

Things are pretty glum around our house as the kids sit and stare out the window at snow on the ground–on Halloween!

“Can we go trick or treating?” Skipper, our eight-year-old asks.

“‘Fraid not, Skip,” I say, patting him on the back.  “It’s too dangerous with the street lights out.”

“We’ll take flashlights,” his ten-year-old brother Scooter offers.

“Sorry kiddo,” I say as I survey the damage from the worst–in fact the only–October snow storm I’ve ever seen.  “There’s ice on the streets and downed power lines.”

They both groan so I offer them a little consolation.  “That means we won’t have any trick-or-treaters either, so you can eat the candy we bought.”

That cheers them up a bit, and they go to the front door and grab a handful out of the festive pumpkin-shaped bowl.

“Has Halloween ever been cancelled before?” Skipper asks.

“Not in my lifetime,” I say.

“So that’s like back to the 20th century?” Scooter asks.  He makes it sound like ancient history.

“Actually, going all the way back to the founding of Massachusetts,” I say, giving them a little bit of the colonial history that is so rarely taught in our local schools.  “Back when there used to be real witches on Halloween, and not just the phony-baloney kind you get at The Party Store for your front yard.”

“Were they really real?” Skipper asks, his eyes as big as Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups.

“Of course not, Skip,” I say, tousling his hair a bit.  “They were just crazy old ladies who owned property that somebody else wanted, so their neighbors accused them of being witches.”

“Is that fair?” Skip asks.  As the younger of the two, he’s been subjected to more than his share of injustice.

“No, Skip, it’s not–but it’s perfectly legal.”

“It is?” Scooter asks, his eyes brightening.

“You betcha,” I say. “Under the Supreme Court’s decision in Kelo vs. City of New London, they can take your home away from you for just about any reason at all, so it makes about as much sense as burning people alive to get another half-acre of pasture.”


Scary!

“. . . or crushing them with humongous rocks!” Scooter adds with enthusiasm.  He loves history, and hasn’t forgotten one of the niftier details from our visit to the Salem, Mass. Witchcraft Museum.

“Was it the mean conservative judges who did that?” Skipper asks.  He reads the comics in The Boston Globe and has absorbed the Doonesbury world view by osmosis.

“Actually, no,” I say, hoping to provide them with some sense of how complicated life is, how the world can’t be divided neatly into Manichaean halves.  “It was sympathetic, sensitive liberal judges.”

“I thought the world was getting warmer,” Scooter says, still down in the dumps even though he’s on his third box of Junior Mints.

“It is,” I say, not wanting to undermine his faith in Emily Mangel-Wurzel, his science teacher who’s a weekend Wiccan.  “Global warming is a fact that all decent people believe in, it’s just that global warming can only do so much to fight global cooling.”

“What’s global cooling?” Scooter asks.

“Back in the 70′s, all the smart people said we were on the verge of a new Ice Age,” I say.

“You mean like mastodons and wooly mammoths?” Skipper asks.


See Spot run.  Run, Spot, run!

“Right.”

“So which one do you think is winning?” Skipper asks.

“I think global cooling is,” I say.  “Look out the window right now, and remember how I had to crawl out the garage and shovel snow away from the windows last winter.  That had never happened before either.”

“So every day would be a snow day?” Scooter asks, barely able to contain his excitement.

“Pretty much so,” I say.

“Yay!” Skipper shouts.  “That would be so ill!”  Unfortunately, he’s started to pick up some of the more outre slang he hears from the junior high kids.

“Now Skip,” I caution, “you’ll find in life that even the best things come with some problems.”

“Like what?”

“Well, we might have to live in a cave, and the pizza man might not be able to make deliveries to our house because of all the snow.”

“What would we do then?” Scooter asks.

“What everybody does when that happens.”

“What’s that?”

“Resort to cannibalism.”


“Before you do anything crazy, could you at least see if there’s a last bag of complimentary peanuts?”

“You mean . . . eat each other?” Skipper asks, eyeing his brother fearfully.

“Sure.  That’s what the Uruguayan rugby team did when their plane crashed in the Andes.”

“They did?” Scooter asks, looking a little queasy.

“Yep.  That’s why mom and I don’t let you play rugby with Uruguayans.”

I see Skipper’s face start to cloud up, and a second later he’s in full meltdown mode, bawling his eyes out.

“I don’t want Scooter to eat me!”

“There, there,” I say giving him a big hug.  “I’m the oldest, so I’d let you and mom eat me first.”

“You would?” Scooter asks.  He reads a lot of boys’ books, and is enamored of the idea of self-sacrifice–on the part of others.

“Sure I would.  I’ve had a long, reasonably fulfilling if often frustrating life–I’m ready to go at any time.”

“You’d sacrifice . . . yourself . . . so we could live?” Skipper asks as he gets his tears under control.

“Of course I would, kiddo.  Daddy loves you both more than anything in the world.”

Even Scooter’s moved by this display of selflessness.  “Gee, thanks, Dad” he says as he throws his arms around me.

“Dad?” Skipper asks as he snuggles into my armpit, seeking the comfort and security that only a father’s love can provide in times of trouble–unless he’s sick, in which case he knows to ask mom since she handles the medications in our house.

“What Skip?”

“When we eat you . . .”

“Yes?”

“Can I have cheese on mine?”

Tricksters Resisting Healthier Treats This Halloween

WELLESLEY FALLS, Massachusetts. Janet Disalvo is, by her own admission, an unreformed hippie.


Hippie turned suburban mom.

The mother of three lets the grass in her front yard grow wild, creating a sharp contrast with the well-manicured lawns of the homes on either side of hers. “I don’t really fit in,” she says, “but we moved here for the schools,” whose students regularly score in the top one percent of districts in the state.  She grows vegetables out back, and there are solar panels on her roof.

“Basically, what you get with me is the full counter-culture package, plunked down in white-bread suburbia,” she says with a self-deprecating laugh.


The garden out back.

As Halloween approaches, Janet spends hours creating a “haunted house” atmosphere for trick-or-treaters, stringing spider webs across her front porch and placing illuminated ghosts and goblins in her yard. “I do everything I can to create a fun atmosphere,” she says with a tone of disappointment, “and yet every year vandals seem to single us out.”


Spooky!

Janet leads this reporter into her kitchen, where she is finishing homemade treats for the youngsters who will begin to show up at her front doorstep in a few minutes. “I was really one of the pioneers of the ‘wholesome treat’ movement,” a claim that is borne out by the cookie sheets that cover every square inch of counter space.

 

 
Soy-carrot congo bars:  Yum, sort of.

“We have zucchini-carob cookies, and soy-carrot congo bars over there,” she says as she places the nutritious snacks in colorful baskets lined with festive black and orange napkins. “I grew everything in my garden. Ooo!  I almost forgot the seaweed-apple fritters,” she says with alarm as she scoots around the counter and turns off her oven.

 

 
Boo!

Within minutes the first trick-or-treaters arrive. It’s the seven-year old Armstrong twins from down the street; Justin is dressed in camouflage while Allison has on a nurse’s outfit. “Hi, Janet,” their mother, Karen, says after the children sing out their “trick-or-treats.”

“Well, well–what do we have here?  Let’s see,” she says as she looks Justin over. “You must be some sort of paramilitary death squad commando forcing American imperialism down the throats of an impoverished third-world country.  And you,” she says as she examines his sister, “have been sexually stereotyped into a low-wage, subservient position within America’s inequitable and inefficient for-profit healthcare industry.” After she catches her breath, Janet hands each of the children a lentil and molasses cookie with a cheerful “Here you go-there’s your treat!”


Food, or dooty?

Justin offers a perfunctory “Thank you,” but Allison holds the cookie up for inspection. “It’s a dog dooty!” she says as she tries to drop it into her mother’s Kate Spade handbag.

“Allison,” her mother Karen says sternly with a tone of reproach. “What do you say?”

“Thank you,” the little girl says without enthusiasm as she turns to move on to the next house.

“She’s tired,” Karen says, apologizing for her daughter. “They all get so whooped up about Halloween and then they just crash!”

“I know!” Janet says, shaking her head. “It’s become so commercial!”

“Right,” Karen says and, as her voice trails off, turns to leave. “Well, see you up at the school!”

“Okay-bye now!”


Fright night.

No sooner have the Armstrongs left than another group of children approaches. They are a little older than the twins, and without adult accompaniment.

“Trick or treat!” the kids yell with enthusiasm when they see the various baskets of goodies.

“Oh, my goodness–you really threw a scare into me!” Janet says with mock fright. “Take your pick–whatever strikes your fancy!”

The kids mill about and look through the natural snacks, holding them up to their noses and, once they smell them, putting them back.

“You’re not hungry?” Janet asks with surprise.

“Uh, no,” says a girl dressed as a witch. “I have trick-or-treat for UNICEF, though.” The girl holds up an orange box.


Trick or treat for Ban Ki-moon!

“I’ve got some money in my pocket.” Janet digs down deep and pulls out a dollar. “Here,” she says as she slips the bill through the slot. “You send this to Ban Ki-moon and tell him to take his U.N. troops to the Middle East and kick the Americans way the hell out of there.”

“I think it’s just for children.”

“Just don’t let them use it to extend American hegemony over the Middle East in the service of their Zionist puppet-masters,” Janet says.

“We just hand the money in to our teacher.”

“Whatever.”


A little too old.

The children leave and Janet hears the sounds of teenage boys yelling in the street. Three boys chase each other into her yard, where they quiet down a bit as they approach her door.

“Trick or treat,” they say, a bit sheepishly.

“Aren’t you boys a little old to be trick-or-treating?” she asks them.

The boys suppress laughs, and one of them says “I’m twelve.”

“I guess that’s all right. Still, you should be helping out in the community. You could be crossing guards at busy intersections, or make treats for underprivileged children, or hold a fund-raiser to pay for a bi-lingual teacher . . .”

The boy who spoke previously interrupts her. “Uh–since I’m only twelve, I have to be in bed pretty soon if you don’t mind.”

“All right–just making a few suggestions. Help yourself to the treats-I’ve got plenty left for some reason.”

The boys poke at the alleged goodies for a moment, before one of them speaks up.

“Don’t you have any like, Airheads, or Snickers, or Daffy Taffy, or something like that?”

 

 
Air Heads–the literal kind.

“Goodness no–and take all the fun out of a traditional, old-style Halloween with sugary junk that will make you hyperactive and rot your teeth?”

“Well, yeah,” one of them says. “That’s sort of the point.”

“Not around here it’s not. Your moms and dads will be thankful that I was thoughtful enough to care about their children’s health. If you don’t like the snacks, I’ve got some punch inside.”

“What’s it made out of?” a boy dressed as Darth Vader asks through his mask.

 

 
“Resistance is futile!”

“Camomile tea, pomegranate juice and honey.”

“Uh, sure, sounds good,” the boy says as his friends appear to stifle coughs.

“Sounds like you two could use something for your throats with all that yelling you were doing!”

“Sure,” one of the others says.

“I’ll be right back,” Janet says.  She goes into the house, pours three cups of punch and puts them on a tray.  As she emerges from the house she is splattered with eggs that the boys throw before running off, laughing as they go.

“It’s like this every year,” Janet exclaims as she wipes herself off. “The harder I try, the worse they treat me!”

Eurozone Deal Gives Merkel Greek Salads for Life

ATHENS.  The agreement reached yesterday to save Greece from insolvency gave stock markets a boost world-wide but drew criticism from the nation’s citizens that they and future generations would be on the hook for obligations to other European Union nations.


Merkel:  ” . . . and just a little raspberry vinaigrette on the side, thanks.”

“Why I got to give Andrea Merkel a Greek salad, huh?” asked Pete Dionasopolis, Jr., owner of the Olympia Cafe.  “She no pay me nothing!”

 
Dionasopolis:  “No Coke–Pepsi.”

Under the terms of the arrangement 50% of Greece’s sovereign debt will be written off and in exchange German Chancellor Andrea Merkel will be entitled to free Greek salads for life.  Greece will retain many of its classical assets including the Acropolis, pop musician Yanni and a Cliff Notes summary of Plato’s “Republic,” but will relinquish the tragedies of Sophocles.  “Nobody was reading him anyway,” said Greek teen Katerina Papadopoulos.  “Sleeping with your mother is kind of childish.”


Yanni:  All that classical civilization came down to this?

Greece has suffered from a bloated public sector of 750,000 government employees whose jobs are guaranteed for life.  “Why is that so bad?” asked Katerina Patiniotis.  “If I only got one life to live, I might as well live it at the Post Office.”

Greek was widely viewed as the “weak sister” of the European economic zone at the onset of the world-wide financial crisis of 2008, and its political leaders lashed out at “Anglo-Saxon capitalism” and “high-handed economic imperialism” before running out of inverted commas and acceding to the demands of more fiscally conservative of the European Economic Community. 


Gyro-scope

“You go out to dinner with the Greeks and they want to go to a diner,” said French Prime Minister Nicolas Sarkozy.  “Personally, I thought a gyro was a something you found in a physics lab.”

Consistent with the custom followed by Greek diner owners in America, Greece will tape the first Euro of aid it receives to the walls of the presidential palace here.  “I love this country so much!” exulted Dr. Karolos Papoulias, the President of Greece.  When informed that the eurozone is an economic and monetary union composed of seventeen member states and not a country in itself, Papoulias appeared to reconsider his position, then smiled and shouted “In that case–let’s party like it’s 1999 B.C.!”

Happy R&B Halloween to All the Souls in Purgatory

As I walk down the streets of my neighborhood and look at the Halloween displays that decorate the lawns and porches, I’m struck by how trite and predictable everything appears.  Tombstones angled crookedly out of the ground; cobwebs spread over shrubbery; skeletons, witches and ghosts.  Forget about the hazards to trick or treaters from silent but deadly hybrid cars speeding down darkened streets; it’s a wonder the kids don’t die of boredom. 

At our house, by contrast, it’s an entirely different scene.  Instead of the ticky-tacky products of the holiday-industrial complex, the kids will walk through a highly original tableau; scenes of death and violence from rhythm ‘n blues.


The Ghost of Jackie Wilson

Down by the mailbox there’s a grisly effigy of Tupac Shakur, his body riddled with bullet holes.  Walk up the driveway and you’ll see Marvin Gaye, shot to death by his father.  There’s Jackie Wilson, who suffered a massive heart attack while singing his hit “Lonely Teardrops” at a Dick Clark show in Cherry Hill, New Jersey.  His brow is bloodied with ketchup to recreate the damage produced by a head-first fall to the stage.

I’ve recreated these scenes for the kids in order to educate them about the many great black  singers who laid the foundation for the crappy white pap they listen to on their iPods.  I got the inspiration a few years back when a little boy and girl came to the door, she with eyebrow-pencil scratches on her face, he wearing a fright wig.  “You look like James Brown,” I said to the boy.  “And you look like his wife, Tomi Rae Brown!”

“Who’s Tomi Rae Brown?” the girl asked.  It was all I could do to stifle a snort of disgust.  “What are they teaching you kids in school these days?” I said with barely-disguised contempt.  If their dad hadn’t been standing on our driveway with a flashlight, I would have made them come inside and listen to “Star Time,” the definitive 4-CD collection of the Godfather of Soul’s Greatest Hits.  No wonder the kids in Singapore are always cleaning our clocks on standardized tests!

I decided that Halloween Night that I would henceforth decorate our house in a tasteful but edifying fashion to convey to the kids of today the roots of the blues, America’s greatest gift to the world.  Besides the Kitchen Magician and Durward Kirby, I mean. 

 
Durward Kirby:  Obscure for a reason.

I also swore that each year I’d dress up like a famous figure from R&B history and re-enact a scene from its tumultuous past.  Not for me the goofy-looking witch’s hat or the bowls of peeled grapes that pass for eyeballs in our neighborhood.  No–I was out to educate the kids.  Nothing wrong with spoiling a fun holiday with a little pedagogy.

This year, I’d decided that I’d dress up as Al Green, who underwent a life-changing experience in 1974 when a 29-year-old woman named Mary Woodson threw a pan of hot grits on him as he sat in a bathtub.


Al Green, Mary Woodson:  Hold the grits!

Green took the incident as a sign, like the burning bush that Moses saw, to do something.  The burning bush told Moses that he was to lead the Israelites out of Egypt; the burning grits told Green that he would be the leader of the Full Gospel Tabernacle church in Memphis, and give up songs of sex for gospel music.  Same story, slightly different scale.

We’ve set up a play stove on the front porch and the grits are cookin’ as our first little goblin makes her way up the path.  It’s Gaura Pandit, ten-year-old daughter of Balreev Pandit, a high-tech entrepreneur who lives down the street.

“Trick or treat!” she exclaims.

“What have we here!” I ask in mock horror.

“You don’t have to be scared–I’m a princess!” she replies.

“Okay, then.  Do you want some candy or do you want to play a game first?”

The girl looks back at her father, who indicates by a nod of his head that she should humor me.

“Uh, play a game–I guess.”

“Okay!  Grab that little pan”–she does as instructed–”now fling it on me.”

The girl is unsure whether to follow my instructions, and looks at her dad again.  “Go ahead, Gaura,” he says.

She rears back and, with a remarkably vigorous motion, thrusts the pan forward, spraying the hot corn and milk mixture over my bare torso.

“Arrgh!” I scream and hit the ground.  Her father comes rushing up the front stairs to help me.

“You told her to do it, I heard you!” he screams, afraid I’m going to sue him.

“No, really, I’m fine,” I say as I shoo him away.

“Why did you have her do that?” he exclaims in his somewhat-stilted British accent.

“It’s a valuable lesson about the forgotten religious overtones of the season,” I say as I wipe the grits off with a Bounty paper towel while the little girl looks on.  “Next week is All Souls Day, when Christians used to pray for the poor people burning in Purgatory.”

“I don’t see the connection,” the highly-educated engineer says with a puzzled look on his face.

“It’s part of the Communion of Saints–one of the weirder doctrines of the Catholic faith, and one that’s usually worth twenty bonus points on an exam,” I say.  I know whereof I speak, having taken home the plastic statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary awarded annually to the highest score in Catechism three years in a row during one particulary intense period of study at Sacred Heart Grade School during the early 1960′s.  Sort of like the Gretzky-era Edmonton Oilers of the 1980s.

“This is most impressive,” Pandit says.  “So you take your pain–offer it up to your god . . .”

The God,” I correct him.

” . . . whatever–and it helps somebody get out of a hot spot?” he asks, incredulous.

“Yep,” I say.  “Just like the guys who throw themselves under the juggernaut in your country.  Pretty neat, isn’t it.”

I look down at little Gaura, who’s taking care of business filling her bag with Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups.

Her father looks me over, and I sense that he thinks I’m–what’s the word I’m searching for–eccentric.

“You know,” he says after a while, “it’s funny.”  He begins to speak, but his voice trails off.

“What?” I ask.

He pauses–perhaps uncomfortable because rhythm ‘n blues is still new to him.

“I came to this country to get away from religious kooks.”

Two Hurt as Boston’s Running of the Brides Turns Deadly

BOSTON.  Among the most visited sites in this city full of tourist attractions is Filene’s Basement, the off-price retailer where men’s and women’s clothes that other stores can’t sell are displayed without ceremony and sold at deep discounts.  “It appeals to a New Englander’s sense of thrift,” says Omar Hayes, a professor of history at Brandeis University.  “‘Thrift’ is code for ‘cheap,’” he adds.


Glamorous entrance, down the stairs of a subway stop.

But “The Basement”, as it is known to locals, closed its flagship downtown location in 2007 for a stalled renovation project, forcing its annual “Running of the Brides” sale to move to the Hynes Convention Center on Boylston Street, which is also the finish line of the Boston Marathon.


“I saw him first!”

That confluence of running and bridal wear inspired wedding planner Desmond Hathaway to approach the Basement and suggest a make-over for the event, at which women race to grab gowns marked down by 50% or more.  “I thought we could turn it into a fund-raiser for my charity, the ‘Left-at-the-Altar Foundation,’” which he says re-locates brides and grooms who are stood up on their wedding days to a different town where they can start over.  “You have no idea how it can stigmatize you to be left at the altar,” he says, his eyes glistening as he fights back tears.  “Also, the father of the bride will sometimes try and stiff me, and the foundation has been very supportive of me, my work, and my need to get away from Boston to someplace warm in the winter.”


“Okay–I’m sorry I didn’t call!”

He modeled the re-branded event on the Running of the Bulls in Pamplona, Spain, challenging Boston’s bachelors to take to the streets to see if they could outrun women whom they have dated and then dropped or disappointed in one way or another over the years.  “It’s for a good cause,” says Tim Hampy, last year’s first-place finisher.  “The guy who makes it to a singles bar in Quincy Market first without being caught wins the pot, net of Twinkle-Toe’s expenses,” he explains, nodding his head in Hathaway’s direction.


They’re off!

Among the bachelors who have paid the $75 entry fee are Jim Ornwald, a graduate student working on his third masters degree, and Hampy, a roue who has cut a wide swath through the downtown “yuppie” scene.  “I try very hard to let women down easy,” he says with a look of manufactured sympathy on his face.  “If I run into them at a club when I’m with another woman, I always remember to say ‘I’m sorry I’ve been neglecting our friendship’ or something quasi-sensitive like that.”


“You hold him, I’ll hit him!”

After the women have chosen their gowns, they line up at the top of the stairs on Summer Street with the men twenty yards ahead of them.  Margie Tabor, who was unceremoniously dumped by Hampy after she developed a pimple on her chin in 2009, works her way to the front of the crowd like an Ethiopian marathoner, intent on breaking a world record.

“He can run, but he can’t hide,” she says, her well-toned calves peeking out from under the hem of her tulle and crinoline outfit.  “I’ve been training for six months to run him down like a dog.”

Ornwald, on the other hand, would like to be caught.  “I find it hard to meet women,” the self-described introvert says.  “I need to carry 3 x 5″ index cards with me wherever I go, in case I think of something I could use in my dissertation someday.  Those little file boxes, as handy as they are, don’t project a very romantic image.”


His constant companion

The starter calls out “On your mark–get set” and shoots off his pistol, sending the men around the corner to Washington Street with the women in hot pursuit.  Ornwald slows to a trot, hoping he will be overrun and crushed beneath a cloud of Vera Wang perfume, but the women, sensing his desperation, stride past him in the hope of catching a man with a lower student loan balance to pay off.  He stumbles as Julie Furman, a management trainee at Lord & Taylor, bumps into him, and sprawls to the ground.

“I’m sorry,” she says, and a flood of sympathy causes her to overlook his unfashionable outfit; blue jeans, black Converse All-Star low-cut sneakers and a ripped “Star Wars” t-shirt.  She dabs at a cut on his head with an Elizabeth Grady moisturizing pad that she takes from her purse.  “You know, you have nice skin, but you need to take better care of it.”

Meanwhile, Hampy has escaped down Milk Street and turns onto Congress Street.  He has only two blocks to go to the finish line at Clarke’s, a singles bar, and he has a fifty-yard lead on the pack of female runners.  “This is a day at the beach,” he says to himself before he is blindsided by Tabor, who knows a long-abandoned cut-through from her days working for a large mutual fund.

She takes him down with the brutal efficiency of a linebacker and drags him back into an alley, where he cowers beneath her as she pulls down his pants.

“Wh-what are you going to do to me?” he asks, a look of abject fear on his face.

“The worst thing I can imagine,” she says with a bitter smile.  “Brazilian bikini wax.”

Available in print and Kindle formats on amazon.com as part of the collection “Boston Baroques.”

Betrayed, for Thirty Pieces of Copper

A class action settlement would give a credit of $3.25 to consumers who were overcharged 30¢ for 99¢ iTunes.  Lawyers would receive $2,117,500.

Legal notice

It comes to this; I who had
been deliriously happy to find
Johnny “Guitar” Watson’s
“I Don’t Want to Be President”

and Walter “Wolfman” Washington’s
“You Can Stay But That Noise Has Got to Go”
now find that I was betrayed,
like a small-time Christ,

for thirty pieces of copper.
Well—time to lawyer up,
even though I would have gladly paid
more than a measly $1.29

for those deathless chansons
and the Fantastic Johnny C’s
“Boogaloo Down Broadway.”
Freddie Hughes’ off-key

version of “What About My Love?”
is another matter entirely, however.
it is nowhere near as lovely as the
Johnny Taylor version, which

I used to croon in Chicago, and which
is unavailable on iTunes.
For that, you should be mulcted in
damages and made to pay through the ear;

“It’s not the money,” I say through tears
as I hold up my check for three twenty-five.
Less forty-four cents postage, I clear a cool
$2.81–that’ll teach you greedy bastards!

“The law does not bother with trifles”
was once the rule;
the lawyers will bother with trifles for a couple
million and change—they’re no fools.

With Robert Frost, at Wal-Mart

Derry, New Hampshire town officials are considering zoning changes that would permit strip malls, fast-food outlets and big-box stores to be built a short distance from Robert Frost’s farm.

                                                                 The Boston Globe

 
Frost

It’s Thursday, the day I check in on my fellow rustic poet, old man Frost, who lives down the road less travelled.  He’s a cranky old cuss, but you would be too if you’d fallen as far as he has.  In 1960, he was America’s most revered poet and spoke at Kennedy’s inauguration.  Today, he’s seen his star eclipsed by a surety bond lawyer, Wallace Stevens, whose poetry Frost dismisses as “bric-a-brac.”  You’ve got to love the old fart.  Frost, that is, not Stevens, who’s an unloveable old fart.


Wallace Stevens, going out for ice cream.

I stop at Frost’s mailbox.  A few flyers, an oil and lube job offer from the local tire and battery store, an expiration notice from plangent voices, the quarterly journal of avant-garde poetry edited by my former lover, elena gotchko. 


“my love is like a red, red rose, that’s somehow stuck inside my nose.”

elena and I had parted ways when she showed up at our little apartment with a skunk-streak dyed into her hair a few years back to announce that she’d had the capital letters removed from her name–and was leaving me.

“you stultify me,” she had said, eschewing the upper case as she spoke with emotion not yet recollected in tranquility.  “you’re holding me back–you with your insistence on meter and rhyme.”  Fine, I said, and I’d never regretted it.  How she ever roped Frost into subscribing was a mystery to me, although he was a sucker for those Publisher’s Clearing House come-ons.


“This Frost guy’s apparently gone for a walk in woods.  Who’s next on the list?”

I knock on the door and Frost opens it up right away–he’s always eager for a little company and to get out of the house.  It must be lonely out here, living all by himself with nothing but the sound of cars rushing by.

“I’m ready,” he says, the cheap polyester “gimme” hat already on his head.  I don’t know what it is with old men and free baseball caps–they can’t resist them.

“Hey, Bob,” I say as I try to straighten his cockeyed hat a bit.  “I got your mail.”

He looks at it without interest and, as usual, launches into perfectly-formed verse:

 

A hushed October morning mild,
with leaves as frail as Kleenex tissue;
tomorrow’s mail, if it be wild
would bring, perhaps, a swimsuit issue.

I allow myself a little laugh.  There are two things about being an old man I’m looking forward to: one, you can wear just about anything you want; and two, you can be a complete lecher, and say just about anything you want to women, and no one seems to mind.

“No, that won’t come until February,” I say to him.

“Okay,” he says after he absorbs this information.  He turns to close the door and his cat, an orange tabby named Demiurge, stakes out a wary watch on the threshold.

“I shan’t be gone long,” he says to the cat.  “You come too.”

“Bob, we’ve gone over this before,” I say with repressed exasperation.  “You can’t bring a cat into McDonald’s.”


Senior citizen coffee at McDonald’s

The thought of the golden arches causes him to lose interest in his cat.  I can see by the far-away look in his eyes he’s thinking of the Senior Citizens coffee special and again, he can’t deny his muse.

I’m going to get my elderly java
  by riding with you over dales and hills.
It tastes like ash and is hot as lava
  but I can’t resist those free refills.

We head out towards State Highway 28 with the more distinguished poet in the car staring out the passenger side window at the bright fall colors; the orange of Home Depot, the red of Staples, the yellow Walmart smiley face on a billboard.

“Turn here,” Frost says sharply.

“Don’t you want to get something to eat first?”

“Depends.”

“Depends on what?  Your only choice is fast food.”

“No–I need some Depends.”

Dawn breaks on Marblehead, as we say in New England.

“Okay,” I say, a little chagrined that I’ve forced him to disclose the one aspect of growing old I’m really not looking forward to.

We make our way through the parking lot and enter the store where we are met by one of the chain’s ever-present greeters, a white-haired old man in a blue vest festooned with inoffensive buttons.  I try to avoid eye contact and accelerate past him when I hear Frost’s voice boom out–to the extent that he’s capable of producing such a sound, even metaphorically–”Well if it isn’t The Emperor of Ice Cream–Wallace Stevens!”

Stevens’ face registers the shock of recognition that Herman Melville spoke of, when a man of letters comes face to face with one of his rivals while working a minimum-wage job to make ends meet.  Being the darling of the academy doesn’t do you much good if you have to mix wet cat food and pinto beans to make chili.

“Hello, Frost,” Stevens says in a frosty tone.  “How’s the poet of–subjects.”  He says this last word with a sneer.

“Fine,” says Frost.  “Tell me, since you must know–down which aisle would I find–bric-a-brac?”

Stevens draws himself up to his full six feet, seven inches, looks down at Frost as if from Olympus, and begins to speak:

I placed a Hummel figurine,
Down to your left, in aisle three.
‘Twas much too tacky for myself
But not too gauche for one like thee.

I can tell that Frost is pissed, but he’s trying hard not to let it show.

“C’mon Bob–we haven’t got time for this nonsense,” I say as I take him by the elbow.  “We’ve got miles to go, and . . . “

He cuts me off and glares at Stevens, not about to back off in this mano-a-mano poetry throwdown.

He squares his shoulders and even I can’t believe the fearful symmetry of what comes out of his mouth next:

Two aisles diverged ‘neath a yellow face,
that bore a sickly, foolish grin.  And I–
I took the one marked “Incontinence,”
and that has made all the difference.

*  *  *  *  *

Available in print and Kindle format on amazon.com as part of the collection “poetry is kind of important.”

Things Better Left Unsaid

Your wildest dreams and your acid trip
that left you thinking you had holes in your head;
Don’t expatiate, please get a grip,
These are things better left unsaid.

Your high school team, and how well they did
when you went to Homecoming, and wore colors of red,
and shouted “Boolah, boolah!” and felt like a kid,
Both are things better left unsaid.

Your numerous conquests of the opposite sex
both in and out of your water bed;
your appetite for black beans and foods Tex-Mex–
please leave them to my imagination instead.

If I were you, which of course I’m not,
I’d put a lid upon it.
I don’t mean to seem an unpleasant snot,
but I can’t seem to focus on it.

That time you decided to cross-dress,
and painted your lips a fire-engine red,
and how you bamboozled the IRS–
two more things better left unsaid.

The terribly important deals that you do,
the time you said the Jets would beat the spread;
various and sundry suckers you’ve screwed–
I think these are things better left unsaid.

The joints you smoked, and the fun you had
the seventeenth time you saw the Grateful Dead;
I’m sure at the time it didn’t seem so bad
but years have passed, it was clearly a fad,
and some things are better left unsaid.

My Mute TV Intervention

This is, without a doubt, the best time of the year for me, and not just because of the cool, crisp autumn air and New England fall foliage.  The NFL season is in full swing.  The World Series is on, and the Cardinals, the team of my boyhood, are in it.  The professional hockey season has started and I’m following two college football teams–I’m not even thinking about the NBA lockout my plate’s so full.  Yes, October is a veritable cornucopia of a smorgasbord of a goulash for sports fans.

And so it was that I sat down yesterday in front of a big screen TV last weekend.  I hit the “mute” button on the channel changer and loaded my six-CD changer with a selection of music that would last me through four-and-a-half hours of televised sports.  A little Bud Powell, some Jacky Terrasson, some Michel Petrucciani; delicate stuff, I know, but the perfect counterpoint when you’re watching some steroid-infused slugger pound a helpless little white ball off a light tower, or 300-pound human sides of beef crash into each other.


Jacky Terrasson, Michel Petrucciani

Mid-afternoon the doorbell rang–an unusual sound for a Sunday in our neighborhood.  Must be the Seventh Day Adventists, I thought.  Anybody else would have entered the modern world and texted me.


The Watchtower:  Salvation’s at your front door!

I got up and went to the back door, where I saw my next-door neighbor through the glass.

“Hey Rob,” I said.  “What’s up?”

“I . . . uh . . . just thought I’d come watch the game at your house.  My TV’s on the fritz.”

“Sure,” I said, but I didn’t mean it.  If I wanted company, I would have asked for it.

We had no more than sat down on the couch when I heard the doorbell ring again, this time at the front.  “Help yourself to a beer,” I said as I got up to respond to a second unexpected intrusion on my Sunday quiet time.

Through the glass I saw Ed, Mike and Tom, three guys from the neighborhood who I’d wave to when I passed, or see at cocktail parties, but for whom–to put it bluntly–I have no special affection.

“Hey, guys, how’re you doing?”

“Fine, fine,” Ed said.  “Say, we were just about to watch the game when we discovered that our remote needed some new batteries.”

“What size?”

“Uh, triple D,” Tom said, not sounding very sure of himself.

“You guys wait here,” I said, and I scurried down into the basement to check our supply.  Nope–no triple D’s.  I walked back up the stairs to tell them the bad news.

“Sorry, guys,” I said, even though I wasn’t.  “We don’t have any triple D’s.”

“No problem,” Michael said.  “We’ll just watch the game here,” and before I could throw a block on them they were past me on their way into the family room.  When I caught up with them, I saw not just four uninvited guests, but a whole room full of them, along with my wife, whose eyes were red and who was trying unsuccessfully to keep herself from sobbing.

“What the . . . ” I began, but Rob ended my confusion swiftly and abruptly.

“This is an intervention, pal,” he said, his face dripping with altruistic severity.

“An inter-what?”

It was my wife’s turn to speak.

“I’m sorry, honey,” she said, choking back the tears.  “But I couldn’t take it any longer.”


“We’re here to talk about why you won’t turn the sound on.”

I looked around the room–I was outnumbered, and there was no use resisting.  I sat down on a foot stool, resigned to whatever it was they had planned for me.

Mike came over, got down on one knee, and announced the charges against me.

“She tells us you watch TV with the sound off.”

I was, quite frankly, stunned.  Like many who suffer from a harmful dependency, I was oblivious to–or unwilling to face–my personal demon.

“Yeah, well, so what?” I asked defensively.

“This is going to be more difficult than I thought,” Tom said to my wife

“The first step towards recovery is to admit you have a problem,” Rob said.  “There’s over 220 million people in America who watch TV with the sound on.  There’s three, maybe five guys who watch with the sound off.”

“And one of them’s an old man in Otterville, Missouri, whose TV broke before he lost his hearing,” Ed added.

“So he doesn’t count,” Mike said.

I took a deep breath and looked up at the ceiling.  “I’m . . . I’m sorry guys,” I said when I’d recovered my composure.  “Just because I’m in the distinct minority doesn’t mean I’m wrong.”

If I could have had a nickel for every rolled eye in my family room just then, I’d have bought a 16 oz. jar of Planter’s Honey Roasted Peanuts, and damn the calories.

It was Tom who spoke–or should I say snorted–first.  “Are you all right?” he asked dubiously, “or is the world all wrong?”

I gave him my best slit-eyed, hard-boiled look.  “I’m right,” I said firmly, “and I can prove it.”

The assembled group gave each other sidewise glances, unsure of where I was going to take them.  “Listen, you can never have a Super Bowl party in your house unless you turn the sound on,” Ed said.

“Who gives a rat’s rear-end about that?” I shot right back.  “If I want to go to a Super Bowl party, I’ll come over to your house.  I turn the sound off to keep my mind from rotting from exposure to the black mental mold that you can get from listening to TV–like this!”

I grabbed the remote and hit the mute button.  It was the work of a nanosecond for one of the announcers to say something incredibly stupid.

“That was a good run,” Phil Simms said.  “A gain of one yard.”

I turned the sound off again.  “A good run of one yard,” I said with a mirthless little laugh.  “Anybody want to double down on that bet?” I asked, one eyebrow arched skeptically.

There was silence for a moment, then a guy named Bob, who claims to win money betting on football, took up the challenge.  “That was lucky,” he said.  “I’ll bet you three to one Sam Adams Light Beers he don’t say nothin’ stupid for . . . let’s say another minute.”

“You’re on,” I said gleefully.  “Starting”–I glanced up at the clock–”now!”

I put the TV sound back on, pressed the “Pause” button on the stereo, and before you could say “D’Brickashaw Ferguson,” Simms had stepped in it again.  “The Dolphins game plan is to put more points on the board today than the Broncos.”  Duh.  “Now listen to this,” I said as I reversed the electronic order of things.


Bud Powell

Out of my stereo speakers came the sounds of Terrasson whirling through Bud Powell’s “Parisian Thoroughfare,” one of the most evocative jazz compositions ever written.  Terrasson’s take was a thing of beauty, as delicate as a doily in your grandmother’s parlor, and yet vigorous–almost athletic.

“Geez,” Bob said, a bit chagrined.  “I guess you’re right.  I always thought of Phil Simms as some kind of genius.  Now–I’m not so sure.”

“Is that enough evidence,” I asked, perhaps a little smugly, “or would you like me to subject you to Tim McCarver?”


McCarver:  Don’t make me do it to you.

“So–there’s a method to your madness?” Tom asked, the scales having fallen from his ears.

“You bet your life there is.  And it’s not just sports.  Take American Idol, for example.”

“But that’s a singing program,” Tom said.  “You wouldn’t turn off the sound to that, would you?”

“Sure I would,” I said.  “That program is slowly but inexorably destroying the classic, restrained vocal style developed by jazz singers as they interpreted the Great American Songbook.  The only way to watch it is with the sound off.”


American Idol:  Better with the sound off.

I had them now, and I knew it.

“So you’re saying . . . that some shows are actually better without sound?” Rob asked, incredulous.  “What about something like The View, which doesn’t have music?”

I had to tread carefully now, as I could reasonably assume that the popular ABC daytime show was a favorite of the wives of many of the men present.

“That’s a special case,” I said, proceeding thoughtfully.  “The only way to make that show better is to turn off your TV entirely.”

To a Prolific (and Prurient) Authoress of Flash Fiction

Sweetie, believe me, we’re all getting sick
of reading about your boyfriend’s dick.
I’m sure the thing can spring to glory
but must you include it in every story?

If your intent is to shock and awe
by revealing the thing that he likes to paw,
frankly, my dear, I find it a bore.
I’ve seen its like many times before
each morn as I stroll through the locker room-
hence my air of cranky gloom.

Take the word of this poor bard–
darling, you’re trying much too hard,
and if that advice has a punnish sound
consider the company you’re hanging around.

In sum, in my mind there is no doubt
you’ve better things to write about.
You’ve made his organ of generation
the singular object of your veneration.
You make me feel like a party crasher
and I get the sense you both are flashers.

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Theme: Esquire by Matthew Buchanan.

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