Author: Skeptifist

  • Tracking a Monday

    Tracking a Monday

    Tracking a Monday

    • Here we are. 
    • 1
    • 2
    • I’m having a Monday, folks. 
    • Sometimes, I feel I neglect my mandate. 
    • Boost morale. 
    • How am I supposed to boost your morale when can’t boost my own? 
    • Hmmm? 
    • This a chicken-and-egg situation? 
    • I’m trying to music my way out of it. 
    • As I sit here sweating in my too-warm office. 
    • 3
    • Youtube’s serving up the music this morning. 
    • I only clicked on the first one. 
    • 4
    • Buy the ticket, take the ride. 
    • Was an old movie weekend. 
    • That’s what I do when I’m riding the headache wave. 
    • Watched Smokey and the Bandit, which was one of my favorite movies as a kid. 
    • Because Trans Am. 
    • Oof. 
    • Those jokes have not aged well. 
    • It was interesting to consider it from a cultural snapshot. 
    • Add that to ConvoyThe Dukes of Hazard, and that sort of outlaw country music movement … Maybe BJ and the Bear.  
    • All the CB talk.  
    • The last charge of the folk hero? 
    • Who are our counterculture icons now?  
    • 5
    • (It’s not the Twenty-one Pilots, I don’t think.) 
    • Anyway, Smokey and the Bandit.
    • I’m good for the rest of my life on that one. 
    • Also in the old movie rotation: Ocean’s Eleven and The Matrix.  
    • Mostly those two hold up. 
    • Brad Pitt eating makes me laugh every time. 
    • Twenty-one Pilots trivia: Someone told me that their last three albums stitch together to tell a story. 
    • 6
    • It occurs to me you can measure the amount of time it took me to write this list by the music links. 
    • Sometimes this goes really fast. 
    • Others, not so much. 
    • Some of the gaps between the songs are when I zone out and think about what to type next. 
    • For instance, I just noticed the subtitles for one of the lyrics of this one said, “Upbeat Music.” 
    • That needs better writing. 
    • 7
    • Every time I hear this song (“Sail,” by AWOLNATION), I think about that video clip with the cat on the balcony. 
    • I can’t believe there are still official videos for these things. 
    • Where do they show them?  
    • They just hope everyone watches on YouTube? 
    • That’s awfully optimistic? 
    • (I say that, but apparently this video has 2m views.) 
    • (What do I know?) 
    • (Obviously.) 
    • Used to be, I think all you really needed was one top-10 hit and you were set for life as a band/performer. 
    • Constant residuals. 
    • Remembered forever on lists of songs from whatever year your hit was in. 
    • Eternal (so far). 
    • Immortal (for now). 
    • The poor pay of the streaming services to artists probably put that to pasture.
    • 8
    • I do not know who Chet Faker is. 
    • I have never heard this song. 
    • Kinda dig it. 
    • There is a girl roller skating in the video. 
    • Huh. 
    • We also watched Sugar on AppleTV. 
    • So far so good. 
    • At least I don’t have it figured out yet. 
    • We didn’t sit on the couch the entire weekend. 
    • I know it sounds like it. 
    • It was just media heavy. 
    • Did a cool hike at Turkey. 
    • The old red trail has been graveled and turned into a walking path. 
    • Felt like enchanted woods. 
    • 9
    • (I’m pasting the links as they pop up.) 
    • I would like to be in California with my toes in the sand right now. 
    • Need some water therapy.  
    • Slow mornings, the sound of waves, a coffee and some fresh fruit. 
    • When I think of vacations these days, they always involve being near the water and doing as little as possible. 
    • I still have that drive to visit some of the great cities of the world, but … the thought of a sight-seeing itinerary makes me twitchy. 
    • I want out of the stimulation and pace. 
    • I have to purposefully do that to myself. 
    • Because my brain is overclocked. 
    • I gotta wrap this up because it looks like the next song is Sleep Token, and I’m not sure any of us are prepared for that. 
    • Are? Is? Feels like that might’ve been an is instead. 
    • Singular vs. plural with collective pronouns.  
    • Had a prof in college try to trip us up with one of those. 
    • (The commercials between songs are intolerable.) 
    • 10
    • Didn’t make it, and I’m not going to sanitize it for you. 
    • My algorithm is messed up.  
    • Okay, the riff in that song makes my metalhead heart happy. 
    • One person’s catharsis is another’s torment. 
    • Everyone have their glasses ready for the giant shadow? 
    • Have a magical Monday, folks.
  • Less Traveled (edited)

    Less Traveled (edited)

    Calvin, in a downpour, in the dark, outdrove his headlights. If an animal wandered into the road, he would have zero seconds to avoid splattering it across the pavement. The wipers provided a slideshow, and his eyes strained, tracing the broken line of yellow rectangles.

    He’d forgone passing a semi so he could watch its taillights and know when the turns on the narrow road were coming. He made himself blink and rolled his shoulders.

    He looked out the side window. Past the tops of whatever dead and dried crop populated the fields, right at the edge of the light, the dark was absolute. It made him uneasy.

    “That’s the kind of blackness that made us afraid of the dark,” he said.

    “Hmm,” she said, not looking up from her phone.

    “Look.”

    “What?”

    “Look how dark it is.”

    The rain lessened as they talked. She lowered the phone. “Are we lost?”

    To his ears, it sounded a bit accusatory. “I’m just going where the nice lady on the phone tells me.”

    The truck lights, further away than the last time he’d looked, vanished around a turn.

    “Jesus. You can’t see anything at all,” she said.

    “You can sorta see water in the ditches.”

    “Those aren’t ditches. That’s a swamp. Where are we again?”

    “Mississippi?”

    “See. Swamps.” She said it like Bubba said “Shrimps” in Forrest Gump.

    They lapsed into silence, and he, squinting into the dark and light and rain, accelerated trying to catch the truck. The needle crept toward 70.

    She screamed. He tensed, the wheel jerked, and the SUV swerved on the slick road.

    “Em, what the …”

    “That was a goddamn clown!”

    He nodded, because he’d seen something out of the corner of his eye, white-and-red headed with blues below. More a blur than anything. “Probably a scarecrow, don’t you think?”

    “Yeah, maybe,” she said. Then, “No.”

    “No?”

    “Its head turned.”

    “You’re imagining things.”

    “I saw it move. I saw it.” Her voice had a bit of hysteria, high and wavering, so he clamped down on what he’d been about to say, waited a breath.

    “I mean, no way. Even as a sick joke, that’s extreme. There’s nothing out here,” he said, gesturing to the dark. “We haven’t passed a house or farm or anything in half an hour. Who would do that?”

    The next clown materialized in the middle of the road as though by magic. Calvin had time to think, there’s an actual clown in the road as his reflexes cranked the wheel left and mashed the brakes. At 70, and never a nimble beast, the Xterra shot off the road, motor screaming from lack of resistance, flew over the ditch and into the swampy crops. It bounced once, then the front end caught, standing the SUV up on its nose. Airbags punched them in the face. Then it pirouetted and slammed to the ground, headlights streaming back in the direction they’d come.

    He tried not to hyperventilate. His face hurt. The sharp bite of gas and oil tweaked his nose. And expanding ring filled his ears. He looked toward Emma. “You okay?”

    He pushed the airbag away, unbuckled his seatbelt, and leaned toward her. “Em?” He heard her then, her breaths short, more in than out. Her nose bled onto her lip, blood black in the dim light, but her eyes stared back at the road. He ran his hand across the side of her cheek, tucked a strand of brown hair behind her ear.

    “You saw it that time, right?”

    He nodded.

    “Where did it go?”

    He looked back toward the road. No clown. Back to her. “You okay?”

    She blinked, slow, then moved her limbs, one after the other, systems check. She touched her face, hissed.

    “No, but yeah.” Her gaze went back to the road. “Are we stuck? We need to get out of here.”

    He looked back at the road, then down at the dash. He started to turn the key … “Wait. If the engine’s in the water and I start it …” He opened the door and peered down, black water undulating below the bottom of the car.

    “What did you say?”

    He realized he’d been mumbling. “We’re stuck. We need to get out.”

    “Fuck that.”

    “We can’t sit here.”

    “Call 911.”

    “I don’t even know … ” He stopped. Right. Map app. He fished his phone out of his pocket, unlocked it with this thumb. The light made him squint. He expected no service, but it showed a bar and a half. The network wasn’t AT&T, but MTBC, which was weird. The app, still in navigation mode, showed a blue dot indicating their location.

    He made a note of it, dialed 911. It rang more too many times before the dispatcher answered.

    “What is your emergency?”

    “We’ve been in a car accident.”

    “What is your name?”

    He told her, then gave her his phone number. No, no one appeared to be seriously injured. No, no other cars were involved. She asked for their location.

    “Somewhere off Highway 12 between Hollandale and Belzoni, I think. The dot on my map keeps moving.”

    “I see.”

    And then the dispatcher said nothing, which he thought was odd.

    “Hello?” He waited.

    Emma said, “What are they doing?”

    He shrugged.

    She crawled between the seats, bumping his shoulder with her hip.

    “What are you doing?”

    “Getting a bottle of water.”

    The phone squelched in his ear.

    “Sir?”

    “Yeah. We’re still here.”

    “Are your lights off?”

    “What?”

    “Your headlights. Are they off?”

    “No.”

    “Turn them off now, please.”

    The hell? He turned off the headlights.

    “What was the cause of your accident? Did you fall asleep at the wheel? Did someone run you off the road? Did you hydroplane?”

    “Someone was standing in the road.”

    “Did you collide with this person?”

    “No, ma’am.”

    “Are you certain?”

    “Pretty sure.”

    “Was it a clown?”

    A wave of sensation cascaded from the top of his head, along his spine and arms, and into his bladder. “Yes.”

    “Do you have any weapons?”

    “Uh, a pocket knife?”

    More silence.

    Emma stopped moving in the back seat. He flicked his eyes to the rearview mirror, met hers. “She asked if it was a clown and whether we had any weapons.”

    “The fuck?” She looked out the front window. “It is so dark out there, I can’t even see the road.” She glanced at him. “What the hell are they doing,” pointing toward the phone with her chin.

    He shrugged again.

    “I’m not sitting in this box in the dark and waiting for some psycho in a clown costume to find me.” She turned and leaned over the back seats. He checked her backside out in the mirror.

    “Sir?”

    “Yes.”

    “We need you to stay put. We have officers en route. Would you like to stay on the line until they arrive?”

    “No, that’s okay. Do we need to be worried?”

    “Can you see the clown now?”

    “No.”

    “Good. That’s good.”

    “Good?”

    “If the officers haven’t arrived in 20 minutes, get back to the road and continue in the direction you were previously heading.”

    “On foot? This thing isn’t getting out of here without a wrecker. And didn’t you just tell me to stay in the vehicle?”

    “Would you like to stay on the line until the officers arrive?”

    “Sure?”

    He thumbed the phone to speaker, then pressed mute and set it on the dash. Emma climbed into the front, pulling her black backpack. She settled in the seat, clutched the bag to her chest, and resumed staring out the window.

    “We’re holding on the line until the officers arrive. The dispatcher seemed to know about the clown.”

    Clowns,” she said, drawing out the S at the end.

    “What?”

    “There’s no way the second clown was the same as the first. Not unless it’s a magic teleporting clown. Two clowns.” She held up two fingers.

    “Jesus.”

    “Yeah.”

    They stared out into the night. After a bit, she said, “How long has it been?”

    He woke up the phone. “We’ve been on the phone for 18 minutes.” He tapped the volume rocker several times, cranking up the sound. They could hear keyboard clicks and squawks from radios in the background.

    “Sir, are you still there?”

    He unmuted, said, “Yes, we’re still here.”

    “Have you seen a patrol car?”

    “No, ma’am.”

    “Are you sure you’re on Highway 12?”

    He switched apps. “That’s what the app says.”

    “We have had four officers searching Highway 12 between Hollandale and Belzoni. They have not found you.”

    “You had us turn the lights off.”

    “And that’s for your protection. You have not seen any traffic on the road? No patrol cars?”

    “Nothing.”

    “We need to get you moving. Do you have a flashlight?”

    He nodded in the dark.

    “Sir?”

    “Oh, yeah. Sorry. We have a flashlight.”

    “What about water? Food?”

    “Yes.”

    “If you have a tire tool in the back of your vehicle, I would take it. I wish you had a firearm.”

    Emma looked at him, eyes wide. He waited.

    “You need to get back up on the road and start walking East. If you can get to Belzoni, you’ll be safe.”

    “What the hell kind of advice is that?” Emma said. “You’re supposed to be coming to help us.”

    “We’re doing everything we can, ma’am. Get walking. Good luck, and God willing, we’ll see you in Belzoni.”

    The dispatcher disconnected.

    “What the fuck.”

    He nodded.

    “Get your backpack,” she said.

    He nodded again, climbed through the seats and gathered his gear. He wished he had a gun. His brother always traveled with a gun in the car. A Glock of some kind. Kept it stuck between the seats. He grabbed two bottles of water from the cooler, crammed them into the pack. Then he took the beef jerky and a Ziploc full of Oreos. He zipped up the pack, opened the left rear door and stepped down into the muck. The mud and water filled his shoes, pulling at each as he walked to the back of the SUV. He opened the hatch, dug into the tire kit and took out the scratched black tire wrench.

    Emma said, “You get the Oreos?”

    He walked around to her side of the Xterra, toes up when he stepped so as not to lose a shoe. He opened her door. She reached back across the car and took the keys out of the ignition, hopped out, slammed the door, then beeped on the security system, the sound shrill and loud in the dark.

    They slogged their way to the road.

    Emma said, “Where do you think it went?”

    “I dunno.”

    “It is creepy as hell. If it shows up, I’m going to kick its balls up into its head.”

    He laughed. “If it has balls.”

    He thumbed on his phone and redid the navigation to show how much time it would take to walk to Belzoni. He opted not to tell Emma. They trudged in the mist and rain for another couple of miles before they saw the search beacon, its blue beam circling through the night like a lighthouse.

    “Did you hear that?”

    “Hear what?” He said, only then realizing Emma had stopped walking.

    “Bells.”

    “Bells? Like church bells?”

    “No, like fucking clown bells.”

    Calvin spun a slow circle, squinting into the gloom as though squinting would make his eyes take in more light. Emma stood for a good minute before resuming her walk.

    He said, “You think the light is a house?”

    “Might be. Why the searchlight? Tractors going to crash into its rocky pasture?”

    “Airfield?”

    He heard the bells then, behind them and faint. “I heard them that time.”

    She nodded. “Give me the tire tool.”

    “Why?”

    “You have a knife.”

    He handed over the tire tool.

    “I think it’s behind us.”

    The bells jingled again, slightly louder and faster, along with the rasp of a shoe sole. She grabbed his sleeve, started backing down the road. For half an hour, they walked backward down the road, risking glances over their shoulders until they drew even with a driveway. He tugged her to a stop.

    A two-track gravel drive curled away above the swampy crops to a house and what looked like a couple of barns. The searchlight rotated three times. No lights in windows, no security light.No dogs. The place looked abandoned.

    He started to say something to Emma when the clown showed up, maybe fifty yards down the road. He couldn’t make out its colors, just broad alternating stripes on its legs. He thumbed on the phone light, shined it at the clown. Its eyes glowed like a cat’s.

    Emma hefted the tire iron. “Get the hell out of here,” she yelled. The clown smiled, a half-moon gleam in the murk.

    They heard a jingle behind them. Calvin spun. He could make out the outline of a person, a bit farther out than the first.

    “There another one?”

    “Yes.”

    “Maybe we should rush one.”

    “They haven’t done anything yet. They could be a couple of annoying kids.”

    “Annoying kids that ran us off the fucking road.”

    He pulled her onto the drive toward the oscillating light and buildings. Their footsteps crunched. He strained to listen for bells.

    “This is stupid,” she said. “They’re down at the mouth of the driveway, watching us. This is exactly where they want us to go. We are being herded. This is how stupid people die in horror movies.” She shook his hand off her arm. “You should’ve let me brain one of them while they were apart.”

    Calvin kept moving, letting her rant away her nervousness. A farm house with a small concrete porch with four steps sharpened out of the dark. Three unbroken black windows faced out. A swing set with two swings sat in the yard, each seat twisting slightly on its chains. He wondered how hard it really was to kick in a door.

    The beacon splayed over the yard like a slow strobe. Emma stood on her tiptoes, then she said, “I don’t see them.”

    They crossed the yard, skirting the edge of the swings, climbed the porch. Calvin knocked on the door, the raps echoing and loud. He winced at the sound. The light crawled past twice, then he banged on the door again. He cupped his hands to the sides of his eyes, peeked in through one of the door’s four glass panes. He looked at Emma, shrugged his shoulders.

    He tried the knob. Locked. A black rubber mat sat in front of the threshold. He kicked it over with the muddy toes of his shoes. No key. He stepped back to cop show stomp the door.

    She said, “What’re you doing?”

    He pointed at the door. She rolled her eyes, stepped to the door, knocked out the pane closest to the handle, reached in and unlocked the door.

    He said, “Hey, you think …” Her brows furrowed. “… one of us should stay on the porch to watch for the clowns?”

    “Okay, I’ll stay out here with the tire iron. You go look for a shotgun.”

    “Shotgun?”

    “All farms have guns. Yell if you need me.”

    Calvin pulled out his phone, thumbed on the flashlight and went in. It reminded him of a circus version of his grandmother’s. Wide-striped wallpaper, alternating in light and dark, plastered the walls and ceiling. Polka-dotted doilies shrouded the end tables and coffee tables. Thick spirals adorned the couch cushions.

    He checked each room. No weapons. No clubs. A set more than a home.

    “Calvin!” His pulse jumped and he raced back through the house, out onto the porch.

    “What?”

    Emma pointed with the tire iron.

    A line of mowed grass separated the yard from the cropland between the road and the house. Three clowns stood at the edge of the yard, dry, reedy cornstalks coming to their waists.

    Calvin took Emma’s hand, led her off the porch and around to the back of the house. He almost ran them into a natural gas fuel tank, thought, maybe we can blow them up. Behind the house, a huge barn squatted beneath the searchlight tower. Two long buildings with low, almost flat roofs stood back and to the left of the barn.

    “Those look like chicken houses,” she said. “We head for the barn. Gotta be an axe or something you could kill a clown with in there.”

    “You didn’t see the inside of the house.”

    “Tell me while we walk. I liked it better when I could see those assholes.” She strode off for the big barn door. He watched her, found himself smiling, then jogged to catch up. She stopped outside the door, “There’d better be a tractor in here. Something with a motor. The hell kind of farm is this?”

    She opened the barn. The dark inside made Calvin want to whimper. He didn’t want to go in. Now they were close, metal grinded on metal as the big blue light rotated. He didn’t like the sound. Or the smell coming out of the barn.

    Emily sniffed. “Dead body,” she said, matter of fact.

    “You watch too many procedurals,” he said, aiming for glib.

    “I wish I had some of that stuff they put under their noses.” They stood shoulder to shoulder, staring into the barn. “How’s your phone battery?”

    “Almost gone,” he said.

    “You get to go then. We need one phone to call for help.” She laughed.

    He glanced at the face, battery at 10 percent. He thumbed on the flashlight app, shined it through the door, stepped inside. The ground crunched under his feet in a way that made him not want to shine the light at the ground. He moved the light around, expecting to see farm things. Hay. Shovels. He didn’t know what to look for, or where. He’d never been in a barn. But again, as with the house, nothing looked like he expected.

    He would not have imagined the dark splatters covering the walls, nor the giant meat hooks hanging from chains high overhead. The vast floor of the barn was clear, no boxes or tools. No tractors. No beat-up trucks. He made himself walk to the side and peered into what he assumed had been a horse stall. The splatters covered almost every space. A pile of something occupied the back corner. Maybe it was a dead animal. His stomach clenched at the smell.

    He felt the air move, heard a rustle, a jingle, and something landed on his head. He dropped his phone and reached up like he’d walked through a spider web. His hands found something soft and warm, and it jingled when he pawed it. He grabbed and pulled, then screamed as sharp points of pain bloomed around his scalp. He tugged and the pain dropped him to his knees, sharp as it tightened. He turned to run, smashed his face into the wall and dropped.

    He sat up slow, felt his head. He pulled down part of whatever it was … a flap of leather, bell on the end. A jester’s hat? He felt a stream of something run down his forehead, over his eye and down onto his cheek. He wiped at it with the back of his hand, then took a couple deep breaths, only then thinking to look up.

    When he did, he noticed more detail in the space. Maybe his eyes were adjusting. He wished they hadn’t as he glanced around, thinking he was standing in the middle of an abattoir. He grabbed his phone. The screen had cracked. Part of the cap flopped forward and jingled.

    “Calvin!”

    He blinked. Oh, right. Emma.

    “Calvin! Dammit, get out here. I think I saw another one!”

    He trudged toward the door, exhausted. He stepped out into the mist.

    “What the fuck? What happened? Jesus Christ, Calvin. You’re covered in blood.” She reached toward his head.

    “No!” His voice reverberated off the buildings.

    She jerked her hand back. He didn’t like the look on her face.

    “Sorry. It won’t come off. I tried. It feels like it just digs in deeper.” He had a headache coming on, could hear his heartbeat like a drum.

    She stepped closer, wiped off his forehead with the heels of her hand. “You okay?”

    He nodded. “You saw another one?” And then, without looking where she pointed, he knew there were seven in a loose circle, and others, watching. He could’ve pointed to them, even though he couldn’t see any.

    “What do you think?”

    He realized she’d been talking. “Sure,” he said, brain catching up. “Let’s go check.” He took her hand and she lead him to the first of the chicken houses. He didn’t look for clowns because he knew they weren’t moving. Something made him look toward the road. The beacon grinded around, adding color to the landscape. He thought he heard something that wasn’t a jingle.

    “You hear that?”

    She paused with her hand on the door handle, shook her head. “No. What is it?”

    “Not sure. Maybe a motor?”

    “It’s probably a goddamn clown car.”

    He laughed, and a tightness in his chest loosened. He pulled her into a hug. The moment stretched. He leaned in to kiss her. She put her hand to his chest.

    “Not with that thing on your head.” She reached up, tugged on it. He hissed in pain. “You look like the jester at the Red Wedding. Let’s get inside.”

    He kissed her cheek, then pulled open the door. He got a whiff of the same metallic rot from the big barn. “Em, we might not want to …” But she’d already started, her phone light ahead of her. She froze, half in, half out of the building.

    Row after row, line by line, stood clowns. Tall and short, wide and thin, their eyes reflecting back red . They did not move, but shifted in their spots, as though on the verge of action. Then, they smiled at Calvin and Emma.

    Calvin smiled, too, though it felt like it was someone else’s mouth. Emma back peddled, knocking into him, both of them to the ground. He landed on his back, Em on his chest, his hands on her hips. He inhaled the scent of her. She smelled good, like prey.

    Emma thrashed in his arms, kicked the door closed. “Holyshitholyshitholyshit,” she said.

    “You smell fantastic,” he said.

    She rolled off him and onto her feet. “What the hell,” she yelled, smacking him in the chest. “Calvin? What’s the matter with you?”

    His eyes flickered toward the chicken house. “They’re waking.”

    She looked from him to the door and back, then stepped away. He smiled. She said, “Don’t you fucking smile at me, Calvin. It’s creepy!”

    “I’m not trying to smile at you!”

    She raised the tire iron like baseball bat, two hands at the bottom, left elbow pointing at Calvin’s heart. He heard the sound from the road again, and this time, turned toward it. The big beam of light swung by, and out on the road, maybe a mile off, he saw headlights. He pointed.

    “Em, do you see it?”

    She stepped back, looked at him, then turned her head to the road. Part of his mind thought, now.

    “See what?”

    “There’s a car.”

    She shifted on her feet, raised up on her toes, looked to the road. “I don’t see anything.”

    He knew, though he could not say how he knew, that were he to touch her, she could see. He stepped closer. “Let me show you.”

    She put more space between them.

    “Calvin, I love you, but you’re freaking me out. And stop fucking smiling!

    He felt a tear form in his eye, roll down his cheek. “I am not trying to smile at you. There is a police car out on that road looking for us. If you just let me touch your shoulder, I can show you.”

    “Calvin, you are not making any sense.” And he could see tears in her eyes.

    He stepped closer, offered her his hand, which looked brighter even in the wan light. “Take my hand, please.” Out in the dark, he could feel the seven watchers, though they did not move. Nor did the legion inside the chicken house. He could, if he concentrated, hear them. “Please, Em.”

    She lowered the tool, said, “Goddammit, Calvin. What the hell is going on?”

    He left his hand outstretched, but kept watching the car. He felt her move, felt the warmth of her fingers as they wrapped around his hand.

    “You’re so cold,” she said, then “ooooh,” and he knew she’d seen the car down on the road.

    “We’re going to have to run for it,” he said.

    “Okay.”

    “Stay with me. Do not let go. I’ll get you to that car,” and he didn’t know why he was saying it, but it felt like the right thing to say. And wrong. They protested in his head.

    He started toward the gravel drive. They walked, then increased their speed. He felt the seven begin to move. “Here they come,” he said, and then one appeared in front of them as though from a jump cut in an old movie. One breath, the drive was clear, the next …

    Calvin lowered his shoulder and barreled into it, pushing it back and away from Emily. He heard her growl, something almost feral, then heard the wet smack of the tire iron. He kept moving, she still had his hand. They closed the distance to the road. Calvin thought the timing would be close. If they missed it … If only the driver could just see.

    Another clown appeared, this one on its hands and knees. Calvin didn’t sense it, tripped over it headlong, dragging Emily with him, crashing into the dirt. He rolled over, bridged up to his hands and feet and crabbed backward, bumping into Emily who was starting to push up on her knees.

    The six clowns stood in a circle around them. Calvin expected to feel terror, but he did not. He felt calm, in control, and an urge to join the circle.

    “Calvin …” Emma said, voice quiet as she threaded her fingers through his. “Get up.”

    She crawled to her feet, tugging him with her. The beacon’s beam passed them again, color of the world strobing. Calvin heard the roll of tread on the road behind him. His brain felt slow to process. He realized he’d turned to face Emma’s back but didn’t remember doing so, and wrapped his forearm around her neck. He heard her say his name, felt them approve.

    His thoughts tumbled, vision flipping from his eyes to a view from the others. He could see himself standing there, Emma trapped in his grasp.

    The beacon came around again, and just as Emma said his name for a third time, this one in anger, he said, “hold on,” and then they blinked, twice, and found themselves standing on the far side of the road. The police car slid to a stop in front of them, spotlight flashing their way, blinding their eyes.

    Calvin held tight to Emma, leaned in, kissed her neck and said, “Stay in his light.” The officer stepped out of the car. Calvin watched him with both sets of eyes. The man drew a gun, pointed at them.

    “Let her go!”

    He did not. He watched the beam circle in its tower, knew how much time was left. He lowered his arm from Emma’s neck, hugged her. He inhaled the scent of her hair, the one that made him feel he was home. He kissed the back of her head, the bells of his cap jingling slightly.

    The light of the beacon rolled over them, and as it passed, he felt himself go with it, catching one last glimpse of the scene from the eyes of the circle. He pushed her, and she stumbled forward until her hands landed on the white hood of the car. The officer swore.

    Calvin was not there anymore. He stood across the road with the seven in the gravel drive, watching the officer and Emily. The man ran around the front of the car, put himself between Emma and the far side of the road, the only place his brain probably told him Calvin could’ve gone.

    Emma looked across the space, met Calvin’s eyes, because she could still see him. He tried to memorize her face, which alternated colors in the lights of the patrol car. Her dark damp hair hung around her head. Her skin seemed luminous.

    One by one the six vanished around him until he stood alone. He wondered what he looked like to her. He raised his hand to wave as he felt a pull in his stomach, as though his molecules were being granulated and pulled through a straw. Emma turned grainy, like the screen of an old television between channels.

    And then Calvin saw only absolute darkness.

    ***

    He stood in the dark beside the road. Two jumps away. The water felt cold, but he didn’t mind. Nor did he mind the bugs in the air, or the worms he could hear squirming beneath the water and soil, safe underground. A thought of a woman, lithe with dark hair and eyes passed through his mind, and he felt … loss and sadness.

    But he smiled and waited. Another would come and he could fulfill his purpose. He smiled into the night, into the fog and rain and mud, and he waited.

  • The Black Book of Lists

    The Black Book of Lists

    • The things that annoy a person.
    • I have a List.
    • Which, I know, is shocking to you.
    • It’s not like I keep little notebooks of lists.
    • Okay, yeah, I do.
    • Those small Field Notes notebooks.
    • (Which, if I’m being honest, do not have the best paper.)
    • Mostly, they contain grocery lists.
    • I don’t have like, a Black Book​.
    • Full of grievances.
    • But …
    • I can make a list if need be at any moment.
    • Like in High Fidelity, only not in any particular order.
    • Making Top 5 lists requires mental gymnastics that threaten to derail the whole endeavor.
    • “So what now, Mr. Editor Guy?” you’re thinking.”What are you annoyed by?”
    • Nevermind that.
    • I saw this thing on Instagram this morning.
    • This cheesy quote thing about Paris.
    • It had the commas outside the quotation marks.
    • Which made my eye twitch.
    • My good eye.
    • Grammar matters, people.
    • The grammar goeth before the Fall.
    • I have firm ideas about written communication.
    • Theories and laws.
    • The first being, what is its purpose?
    • To Communicate.
    • It isn’t to show off how smart you are.
    • It’s to convey an idea or piece of information.
    • That should be done as simply as possible.
    • You’re trying to get two people to come together in understanding.
    • Don’t get me wrong, there’s a place to use .25-cent words.
    • Probably.
    • There’s value in learning new words, expanding your vocabulary.
    • Words are awesome.
    • But remember why you’re there.
    • Who. What. When. Where. WHY. How.
    • Don’t be a communicative gatekeeper.
    • You want them to remember you, or remember what you’re trying to say?
    • With great power comes great responsibility.
    • Complaining about grammar and then complaining about not keeping it accessible seem to be ideas at odds.
    • I never claimed to be consistent.
    • I also don’t claim to speak for anyone but myselves.
    • What you should be doing right now is asking, “Editor, why in the world were you on social media in the morning?”
    • That is the more important question.
    • I have a problem?
    • BTW, I let the Teenager read Monday’s list, and she said, “Dumbphones? Are those a thing? Can I have one? What are they like? Do they still have Google?”
    • I also ate a strawberry poptart, so, you know, my issues run deep.
    • Poptarts are thinner than they used to be, just FYI.
    • Shrinkflation is everywhere.
    • Also, Poptarts are not real food.
    • Neither is ramen.
    • Or cereal.
    • Sure, they’re all calories.
    • I’m stopping.
    • That’s not my subject area.
    • I do get caught up watching all these cooking videos.
    • I have hundreds of recipes saved on the various social platforms, though I’ve made almost none of them.
    • There was this one honey mustard chicken salad thing that was amazing.
    • And I’m currently infusing rum with all the pink and red Starburst.
    • Sugar spirits infused with more sugar.
    • Remember the Friday Summer Cocktails plan?
    • I’d just drink things neat, but the Wife requires fruity.
    • Anyway. Food videos. I have a lot saved.
    • But only if they have the name of the dish in the post.
    • If they just have a picture and say something trite, “This is the best thing I have ever put into my mouth in the last 10 minutes!” without telling me what the picture is …
    • No clicks for you.
    • Because the internet is a wretched hive of scum and villainy.
    • I’m both over it and hopelessly addicted.
    • Food videos make me crave pasta and want to class up my ramen.
    • I’m not even supposed to eat ramen anymore.
    • Express train to higher blood pressure.
    • This is why I can’t have nice things.
    • Overthinking.
    • It is the worst.
    • I’m working myself up to cooking steak on the Blackstone.
    • Still haven’t had the guts to try.
    • Maybe this weekend.
    • Maybe I’ll make it for myself on Father’s Day.
    • Not sure why the food talk today.
    • I had a bagel.
    • Media:
    • The Ted Lasso finale stuck the landing.
    • Was it a bit ham-handed?
    • Sure.
    • But then the entire show was less than subtle.
    • Across the Spider-verse is one of the best comic book movies ever made.
    • Friday’s episode of Silo was on the slow side.
    • Aaaaaand with that, I bid you adieu.
  • Be Careful What You Book For

    Be Careful What You Book For

    Jerry considered himself more of a dessert reader. 

    No serious literature. No nonfiction. Whatever fantastic escapist thing he could get his hands on, he devoured. Shelves of paperbacks and hardbacks wrapped the living room of his one-bedroom apartment. Books sat on end tables. Books propped up his computer monitors. Books took up any space not already occupied by something else. 

    He even kept one or two in his green nylon backpack, just in case he had time to read during the day. Sure, he could’ve bought one of those e-readers and saved money and space, but then he wouldn’t get to smell the books. To inhale the scent of paper and ink right into his bones. 

    It wasn’t just the smell, obviously. 

    He liked to get lost in the stories. Reading was an out-of-body experience, a religious experience to him. Because Jerry’s truth, the one deep down in his chest, locked away in a box behind his heart, was that he didn’t want to be here. 

    Not dead, mind you. But not here. On earth. Now.  

    Because it was so boring. And horrifying. In the real world, he had to talk to people. To interact.  

    “What’re you reading, Jerry?” 

    Jerry looked up from his book, Neverwhere, one of Gaiman’s best. It was Mitch, the assistant director of his department. Mitch and his perfect hair and perfect posture. One of those extroverts. “Oh, nothing.” 

    Mitch nodded. “What’re you doing for Halloween this year? Monday, right? Going to any parties this weekend?” 

    Jerry shook his head. Oh, right, Halloween. He’d always loved Halloween as a kid. The RavenThe Legend of Sleepy HollowIt’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown. It used to be his favorite holiday, getting to pretend to be something else. 

    “Jerry, bro? Earth to Jerry.” 

    Jerry blinked, came back to the breakroom. He met Mitch’s eyes for a moment, averted to the windows. The sky bore the promise of a storm, big dark clouds a backdrop for fast moving wispy white ones. He imagined the wind through the trees. Jerry noted in the background the sounds of Mitch making coffee in the Keurig, which made Jerry imagine a robot being squeezed of its fluids. And then his mind slipped back to London Below.  

    “Well, hey, have a good weekend if I don’t talk to you.” And then Mitch was blessedly gone.  

    Jerry sighed, looked at his watch. Not enough time to get back into the story before the end of lunch hour, so he thumbed on his phone, doom scrolled a bit of Facebook, tried to ignore the ads for underwear and colon cleansers.  

    And then one caught his eye. An ad, not a colon cleanser. It was a hand-drawn picture of a book, the effect made to emulate an early 20th century newspaper ad, black lines, serifed words and brown-tinted newsprint. 

    Book Your Escape

    Tired of your boring life? Ever wanted to be in a story? 
    Now you can. You imagine it, the Book makes it happen. 
    $69.99. Click to order. Fast delivery. 

    Jerry clicked. His phone auto-filled the blanks fast enough he barely registered going through the order process. He sighed when he finished, checked his watch. Back to work. 

    *** 

    He ordered pizza that night for dinner. Delivered no-contact to his apartment door. As usual, Jerry stretched out on his faux leather couch, the arm of the reading lamp holding its yellow light above the pages. The pizza sat within easy reach on the glass coffee table, a stainless-steel tumbler on the floor full of Dr. Pepper and ice. He followed the exploits of Richard and Door as they maneuvered through the plot-driven challenges thrown at them by Neil, careful not to get pizza grease on any of the pages. He had a moment of sadness at the end as Richard got what Jerry had always craved. He closed the book, sat it on his chest. 

    The front door rattled with a knock. Jerry flinched. The book flew from his body, bounced off the edge of the pizza box, and fell, knocking over the soda. He snatched it up, but brown liquid dripped from the pages.  

    He swore. A lot. In his head. And some aloud. He dropped the book on the pizza box lid, retrieved paper and cleanser wipes from the kitchen and methodically mopped up the spill. 

    Another knock at the door. 

    Jerry froze like a prey animal. Had they heard him moving? Who could it be? Was it one of the neighbors? He waited for them to say something, counted to 100 in his head. Then he stood up slowly, joints popping, and creeped his way to the front door. He peered through the peephole. No one.  

    He opened the door, glanced up and down the hall, and finally, to the ground where he noticed a small brown box. Jerry bent down, picked it up. The box bore his name and address in perfect black block letters written right on the surface. Other than that, the box was blank. 

    He closed the door, walked back to the couch and sat down, turning the box over and over in his hands. He tried to cut through the tape sealing the ends with his thumbnail, which didn’t work. As usual. Another trip to the kitchen. A serrated steak knife. An open box. 

    A book slid out into his hand, its soft black leather cover wrapped with a sheet of paper. Jerry unfolded the paper:  

    Instructions:  
    Place the Book under your pillow. Sleep well.  
    Tomorrow your adventure begins!

    Jerry checked his watch. Sighed. Decided it was as good a time as any to go to sleep. He headed for his bedroom, tossed the book onto the unmade bed then conducted his pre-sleep bathroom ritual as he had every other night for however long.  

    He hopped under the sheets, pulled up the covers, and snatched up the book. He opened it, flipped through the blank pages.  

    “Ridiculous.” 

    Still, Jerry stuck the book beneath his pillow, pulled the metal chain on his bedside lamp, and went to sleep.  

    *** 

    Jerry awoke to the keening, deafening screech of a storm klaxon. He thrashed the covers off himself, flipped to his belly, and dove to the floor. He blinked in the wan light, eyes adjusting. Was it a tornado? Had there been extreme weather in the forecast? He army crawled to the window, pulled himself to his knees and peered out. 

    A tall man in a dark, billowing cloak stood in the middle of the parking lot. He clutched a staff in both hands, its end planted into the shiny black surface of the parking lot as though to keep the man in place. Wind howled. Water pelted the window. Lightning flashed, and Jerry watched as the bolt crashed into a shimmering globe around the tall man.  

    The man raised a fist at the sky and yelled. The fist glowed from within, and Jerry swore he could see the man’s bones silhouetted in the blinding white. The man drew back his arm, then hurled it forward as if pitching a baseball. A ball of white flame blasted into the night.  Jerry heard a crash from the end of the block. The walls rattled around him. He may have screamed.  

    The man’s head whipped in Jerry’s direction. Their eyes met. The man reached toward Jerry with the same hand he had just used to throw fire. He made a grasping motion, and Jerry felt pressure around his body, and then he was pulled through the wall, glass and siding shattering all around him. He flew through the air, landed in a heap on the grass next to the sidewalk. His ribs hurt. He couldn’t feel his left hand. Something gummed up his left eye, and he thought it was probably blood.  

    A roar from the storm answered the man’s challenge. 

    A boot appeared in front of his face. “Are you all right?” 

    Jerry groaned. 

    The man reached down, grabbed Jerry through the armpits, and stood him on his feet.  

    “You cannot remain here.” 

    Jerry nodded at the understatement, even as the rest of his brain tried to make sense of what was happening. He tried a shortcut. “What is happening?” 

    The man opened his mouth to respond, and then the lightning struck. Jerry screamed, tried to blink away the blindness. When he could see, all that remained of the man was a charred stick and pile of black debris.  

    Jerry did the only sensible thing. He ran. When he stopped running and regained some bit of sense, he was beneath an overpass. The wind roared around him. The rain pummeled the road, steady enough to sound like white noise. His wet clothes clung to his body and he wrapped his arms around his knees, knees to his chest, and whimpered until fatigue claimed him. 

    *** 

    Jerry woke to the bleating of his alarm, which he didn’t set on weekends. He opened his eyes, saw the white popcorned ceiling of his bedroom. He looked at his watch, which said, 7:01 a.m., Oct. 31, 2022.  

    “What the …” 

    He sat up, reached under the pillow and pulled out the book. He flipped it open, and read from the first page. 

    Jerry considered himself more of a dessert reader.

    “No serious literature. No nonfiction. Whatever fantastic escapist thing he could get his hands on, he devoured. Shelves of paperbacks and hardbacks wrapped the living room of his one-bedroom apartment. Books sat on end tables. Books propped up his computer monitors. Books took up any space not already occupied by something else.

    He even kept one or two in his green nylon backpack, just in case he had time to read during the day. Sure, he could’ve bought one of those e-readers and saved money and space, but then he wouldn’t get to smell the books. To inhale the scent of paper and ink right into his bones.

    It wasn’t just the smell, obviously.

    He liked to get lost in the stories. Reading was an out-of-body experience, a religious experience to him. Because Jerry’s truth, the one deep down in his chest, locked away in a box behind his heart, was that he didn’t want to be here.

    Not dead, mind you. But here. On earth. Now. 

    Because it was so boring. And horrifying. In the real world, he had to talk to people. To interact. 

    “What’re you reading, Jerry?”

    Jerry stopped reading. He dressed in jeans, a Tool concert shirt, and his black Chucks. He packed his green backpack with a change of clothes, a couple of books, his meds, and a handful of Clif bars. He pulled on his hooded black leather jacket, grabbed his keys, his wallet, the Book, a box of wooden matches and the small bottle of lighter fluid he kept for using the community grill. 

    He left his apartment without locking the door. He ran down the stairs two, three at a time, and out to the sidewalk. He tossed the Book on the ground, sprayed it with the lighter fluid, and lit a match, which he watched melodramatically flare to life. 

    He dropped it toward the Book.  

    It blew out. 

    He rolled his eyes at himself, squatted next to the Book, and lit another match. He held the flame to the exposed pages until it caught alight. He nodded, then walked to his car. He tossed his backpack into the passenger seat, started the car and turned on the radio. 

    A radio voice said, “It looks like it’s going to be an unseasonably warm Halloween. Kiddos might not even need their jackets. And Jerry. Do us a favor. Don’t try to burn the Book again. We just want you to have the best story possible. After all, you didn’t want to be there, did you?” 

    Jerry looked down, and in the passenger seat, next to his bag, sat the Book. 

  • Trivial Pursuits

    Trivial Pursuits

    • If you didn’t do the Believe trivia event last night, you missed out.
    • On getting crushed by External Affairs of the Heart.
    • Mwahahaha. Ha.
    • (I didn’t do the crushing.)
    • As it turns out, I may be awful at trivia.
    • I think I answered, three, maybe four questions the whole evening.
    • I thought my head was full of random debris, and maybe it is, but maybe not the right kind.
    • However, I talk some decent smack and was a benefit to team morale.
    • (That’s what I’m telling myself this morning, anyway.)
    • What I’m really saying is … Thank you, Jeff.
    • Jeff, who for those of you who don’t know, works in Grants, which means his job is vitally important to the whole College.
    • Jeff has also appeared on Jeopardy.
    • And you can read about that in the upcoming issue of Community magazine when it drops in May.
    • Thanks to all the other teams for participating.
    • You did goodish.
    • Heh.
    • This is what’s called being a poor winner.
    • Last year, we lost to Dr. Stone’s team by one point.
    • It didn’t sit well.
    • Like an eyelash in the eye, more like.
    • Poor losing, as well, it seems.
    • I tried to talk the Teenager into attending with me.
    • Had too much homework.
    • A bunch of geometry, some sort of Spanish worksheet, and then an essay on a passage from Othello.
    • (Kid has basically been in pre-College for the past two years; they even use MLA for their essays.)
    • Which was more effective, Shakespeare’s original language, or a modern translation?
    • Modern translation.
    • Heresy, more like.
    • I know I’m a nerd, but I loved Shakespeare.
    • Went to the touristy rebuild of The Globe when I visited London.
    • I have not, yet, watched the new MacBeth with Denzel.
    • It’s on the list.
    • Anyway, she had me read her essay to make sure it was “okay,” with the caveat that it “wasn’t as good as usual because she was tired.”
    • Yeah, kid, I feel that.
    • It was fine, obviously. She’s a good writer, and I’m happy to see she’s honing that “cranking out paragraphs while exhausted” skill she’ll need in College.
    • Trivia hangover.
    • I fell asleep last night with a rough outline of what I was going to write about this morning.
    • Should’ve maybe stayed up and written it instead.
    • I had some good stuff.
    • I think.
    • No, I do not keep a notebook by the bed.
    • Nor a pen.
    • Nor a tablet.
    • There’ll be no Coleridgean nocturnal poems sprung whole from my dreams.
    • Guy did a lot of drugs, didn’t he?
    • Embarrassing story:
    • In junior high, I learned of Rime of the Ancient Mariner not from my English teachers, but from the Iron Maiden song of the same name.
    • As idle as a painted ship, upon a painted ocean.
    • When we finally covered that poem in class in Junior AP English, I told Ms. Simmons about the Maiden song.
    • She had me bring the … cassette … in, and we listened to it.
    • That song’s like … almost 14 minutes long​.
    • We listened to the whole thing.
    • I became acutely aware that a) the song was really long, b) not everyone’s cup of tea, and c) possibly awful.
    • I sat there and squirmed, scooting lower and lower in my unpadded public school chair wishing I could be invisible for having inflicted that upon my classmates.
    • Moral of the story: Iron Maiden is not for sharing.
    • Have a weekend.
  • The Lost City of Ice Cream Men

    The Lost City of Ice Cream Men

    The Lost City of Ice Cream Men

    • Sunday evening, we were talking about going to see The Lost City, and I suggested if the Teenager had no homework on Monday night, we could go then.
    • She didn’t. We did.
    • It was alright. Not as funny as I expected. Sorta by the numbers toward the end. But I’d still watch most Sandra Bullock movies sight unseen.
    • She’s been consistently good her whole career.
    • Anyway, we had our post-game conversation on the way home, and it went … astray.
    • The (W)ife: “I liked it, but I always like those adventure movies where they’re searching for something.”
    • (M)e: “I thought Daniel Radcliffe was really good in it. Not a trace of Harry Potter.”
    • The (T)eenager: “What’s that mean?”
    • M: “Well, if he’s going to get back into big movies, he has to not be seen as Harry Potter, otherwise he’s just Mark Hamill.”
    • T: “Who?”
    • M: “None of those Harry Potter kids ever has to do anything again if they don’t want to.”
    • W: “You got that right.”
    • T: “Why?”
    • W: “They made crazy money acting in those movies.”
    • M: “Did you know Rupert has an ice cream truck he just drives around and gives out free ice cream?”
    • T: “Who?”
    • W: “Ron.”
    • T: “Oooh, Rupert. That’s weird.”
    • W: “That’s creepy.”
    • T: “Why is that creepy?”
    • W: “I don’t know. Grown men driving around in vans selling ice cream to children. It’s just creepy.”
    • (You’ll remember they’re into reading Muuuuuuurder books right now.)
    • W, to the Teenager: “Maybe that can be our first book. The ice cream man murderer.”
    • M: “But what if he’s not creepy, just misunderstood. He’s just a lonely dude driving around in his rickety ice cream truck and no one will take his ice cream.” And then I thought about a picture book with a lonely ice cream man driving around in his truck unable to find any kids to buy his ice cream.
    • Maybe some Dr. Suess-style illustration
    • W: “Because he’s a creepy dude in an ice cream truck.”
    • And then they sort of said a flurry of things about ice cream truck murderers I didn’t follow because I’m half-deaf and was trying to drive.
    • Thing is, it made me kinda sad, because some of the happiest moments in my childhood revolved around tearing through the house trying to find enough loose change to buy an ice cream sandwich.
    • You’d hear the music and feel an instant blast of panic and elation.
    • Was it too late? Did you miss him? OMG ICE CREAM.
    • And the Doppler effect made it seem like he was both close, but far.
    • Sure, as a grown up, I can see the whole creepy clown music/pied piper angle to it all.
    • But as a kid … those were the best ice cream sandwiches ever.
    • Still are, according to my addled memory and a healthy dose of nostalgia.
    • Prior to the whole ice cream murderer bit, the Teenager admonished me for not telling her the movie had credits-scenes like a Marvel flick.
    • T: “You’re supposed to tell me these things!”
    • M: “Why? How would I know a non-Marvel movie has credit scenes.”
    • T: “Lots of movies do it now! They’re copiers!”
    • M: “Imitation is the greatest form of flattery, right?”
    • T: “It’s your job to tell me!”
    • M: “No, now it’s your job. You have to look these things up.”
    • T: “Noooooo.”
    • So we’re a little weird, is what I’m saying.
    • As an experience, was really kind of fun going to the movies on a school night.
    • Crowds weren’t bad, and it was a nice cap to the end of a Monday.
    • Always good to mix things up, right?
    • Have a Wednesday.
  • Disclaimer About the Lists

    Disclaimer About the Lists

    • The Category might be a clue, but I write these for my work audience, which is basically a silo, and thereby geographically limited.
    • Some of the stuff won’t make sense if you don’t live here, or work here.
    • I mean, nothing I can do about it I suppose.
    • Weird trying to cultivate a blog audience based on something readers can’t really be a part of.
    • Consider it a weird social observation experiment on your part.
    • For the record, I work at a community college in Oklahoma that has about 2400 employees.
    • Ish.
    • Depends on how you’re doing the math.
    • Anyway, there’s some context for you in case you needed it.
    • I’m going to keep posting them anyway, because it’s writing and it’s writing meant for sharing.
    • The sharing’s the thing.
    • I’m working on a writing project with the aim of … publishing it in some form or another.
    • And I’ve had this recurring conversation with a friend who thinks that the act of doing the thing should be enough, that I should not beat myself up if it doesn’t get published.
    • But writing, to me, and especially that project, is not meant to be kept in a notebook and filed away in a box in a closet when the notebook’s full.
    • I barely remember writing those things.
    • The point of creating a story is to share it, to hopefully have it make an impact on a reader, or at least give unto them a fond memory of having read it.
    • Don’t get me wrong, there’s also the external validation of the thing.
    • It feels good to know someone read something you wrote and they had a positive experience doing so.
    • It validates the time you spent making the thing in someway.
    • It fulfills an author’s need in some way.
    • I wonder, are we not supposed to say that?
    • That in addition to wanting to tell a story, there are selfish reasons for doing so?
    • That need to know that something you created matters? Or mattered?
    • I’m sure the reasons people write are as myriad as the people who write them.
    • But I wonder if that’s not true of all writers.
    • That human need to not be inconsequential.
    • Didn’t mean to write these today.
    • I just noticed that some of the stuff on the other list I threw up (heh) earlier has little context if you don’t live here.
    • Thanks for stopping by.
  • Behold, Serp-Serp!

    Behold, Serp-Serp!

    • Back during The Daily days, I’d always include a cartoon or meme or something to get, at the very least, a wry grin out of you.
    • I mean, I hoped.
    • Humor’s subjective.
    • I sat there behind my keyboard imagining wry grins on faces.
    • These lists came out of that goal.
    • Obviously, your mileage may vary.
    • But along the way, I found a few new internet comics I really like.
    • Strange Planet ruled for a bit, but kind of got old.
    • Poorly Drawn Lines, however …
    • It’s dumb.
    • And ridiculous.
    • A bit absurd.
    • (And sometimes NSFW.)
    • But I get a kick out of it, so I still put one in every issue of The Week.
    • The one from this week’s is Serp Serp (*see above).
    • Which, no joke, makes me laugh (or at least smile) every time I see it.
    • Serp Serp. Hahahaha
    • (If you tell anyone I admitted to laughing and smiling, I’ll deny it.)
    • There’s a Poorly Drawn Lines cartoon on FX now, but I haven’t watched it yet.
    • Makes me feel like a bad fan.
    • Fan guilt.
    • There’s probably therapy for that.
    • My profile picture on TCC Today is Mouse from Poorly Drawn Lines with his hands up in fighting position.
    • Of course, there’s a t-shirt.
    • I’m going to buy it on payday.
    • Gotta take your joy where you find it.
    • I received a lecture, a “talkin’ to” recently about something related to that.
    • Something like, “if you spend all your time giving of yourself, but do nothing to replenish yourself, you’re gonna have a bad time.”
    • Everyone has a lot of responsibilities these days.
    • Job responsibilities.
    • Responsibilities to our families, real or acquired.
    • Remember you also have responsibilities to yourself.
    • Take care of you. Do not run on empty.
    • Or something.
    • I dunno, man. I just work here.
    • Where was I?
    • Oh, I know.
    • Once again falling prey to Facebook advertising …
    • Over the weekend I saw this ad for Alice in Wonderland escape room-style experience in downtown Tulsa.
    • The ad came with a 50 percent off coupon, so it was a whopping $40 for a team of six to play.
    • It could totally be dumb, but … signed up on the spot.
    • You remember me talking about The Game, right?
    • Heck, yeah, I signed up.
    • It’s allegedly taking place Oct. 1.
    • (I’ll add the link if I find it.)
    • Found it.
    • Also, the discount code: TAKE50
    • I’ll inform the Teenager about it at some time in the future.
    • She may outgrow me by Oct. 1.
    • “Dad, that sounds super lame.”
    • (She does not call me Dad. That’s how I’ll know.)
    • Okay, lastly, before I go. Any you mountain bikers out there?
    • Rode all the new trails on Turkey last weekend and they are spectacularly fun.
    • I’m still stiff and sore from riding all the new trails at Turkey last weekend.
    • Worth it.
    • Have a Wednesday.
    • Wait. One more thing.
    • Keanu as Batman.
  • Rogue Blue Notes

    Rogue Blue Notes

    • Last Friday, I found a blue post-it note on my desk.
    • It said, “Due March 8,” in thin cursive, and had a smiley face beneath the words.
    • It was not attached to anything, though it did have some white paper melded into the sticky strip along its back.
    • Clearly, it had belonged to something at some point.
    • My first thought was, “OMG, what have I forgotten?”
    • Because I don’t have anything with that specific due date on my to-do list …
    • My “To-Due” list.
    • Anyway, after digging around on my desk, which isn’t strictly mess, but neither is it neat, I gave up and messaged the boss.
    • “You around?”
    • Got an immediate Teams call.
    • (I love Teams, btw. If you ever need to reach me, that is by far the fastest, most efficient way to do so.)
    • “Hey, ah, I found this note on my desk with a due date on it, and I have no idea what it is for.”
    • That, btw, is not something you want to say to your supervisor, but … always better to own it and move forward.
    • And then we went through this dance where I held the post-it in front of the camera and moved it back-and-forth until it came into focus.
    • She said, “Nope, not my handwriting.”
    • Which was awesome.
    • I stuck it back on my desk and put it toward the back of my mind.
    • “I must not fear. Fear is the mind-killer.”
    • This weekend, whilst hanging the drywall in the living room, I noticed my Blind Date with a Book laying on the coffee table and it clicked.
    • That little blue post-it note had been on that book.
    • I could see it clear as day in my head.
    • (The white paper melded to the post-it was not part of the book, so you can rest easy there. It had been on the wrapping paper.)
    • Which means it has to go in inter-office mail TODAY.
    • So thank you librarians for 30 minutes of panic on a Friday afternoon, is what I’m saying.
    • Mostly, I’m old-school on my to-do list.
    • I have a gridded, soft-cover Moleskine notebook that I sort of Bullet Journal with.
    • Bullet journaling has a symbol-based to-do system, where different dots indicate different things.
    • The fault in this system, as always, is human error.
    • I use the notebook in conjunction with my Outlook calendar.
    • If something is not on one of those two things, it may as well not exist.
    • I haven’t yet gotten into the habit of putting tasks on my calendar; it’s all meetings.
    • I like writing with my hand, I guess.
    • There are studies that show taking notes by hand does a better job of settling information into your memory than typing.
    • I’m following Science, is what I’m saying.
    • (Though those claims are still undergoing peer-review.)
    • Mmmm, peer review.
    • Dude.
    • This is the Mondayist list ever.
    • Good grief.
    • May you not find any rogue post-it notes upon your desk.
  • The Length of Harvard

    The Length of Harvard

    • How do you do a recap a calamitous morning without sounding like you’re whining?
    • I mean, you can’t, right?
    • You just don’t tell the story.
    • I will tell a little.
    • This morning, I drove up and down the length of Harvard twice.
    • First time to take the Teenager to school.
    • Second to take the Teenager her glasses, without which she basically can’t see the whiteboards.
    • (Whiteboards, not blackboards. Old.)
    • I’m uncertain how the two of us did not realize she didn’t have her glasses on.
    • That’s what happens when you try to leave in a hurry.
    • Co-editor Snacks and Emmy the Psychodog are downstairs doing their caterwauling. Sorry, howling.
    • I feel you, dogs.
    • (But not you, Emmy, not after you whined literally all night.)
    • What I’m saying is Harvard is the worst morning commute driving experience in Tulsa.
    • The worst.
    • It could be the main reason I’ve been clenching my jaws so much.
    • And there are a couple more things I could tack on here, but … It’s Friday.
    • Sorry. Friyay.
    • Don’t want to harsh your vibe.
    • 😀
    • Hi, guys. What’s happenin’.
    • Everyone enjoying Employee Appreciation Day?
    • Got your cool swag yesterday, right?
    • I snagged one of those giant Otis Spunkmeyer blueberry muffins, then scurried back to my office cave to eat it.
    • Then I looked at the label … 440 calories.
    • Calorie guilt set in.
    • Didn’t eat it.
    • Brought it home with me.
    • Am eating it now because it’s Friday and the guilt don’t scare me anymore.
    • Or something.
    • I dunno, man. This is what happens when the dog tortures me all night and then they make me do two laps on Harvard.
    • “They.”
    • I have this plastic Batman hanging from a rope, at the end of which is a suction cup with the Batsignal on it.
    • I’ve had it since my senior year of high school, and it’s gone from car to car to car ever since.
    • (One of my best friends has one, too. Pretty sure his is still hanging in his car.)
    • Right now, mine’s not hanging in the car for some weird reason.
    • The point here is I’ve been a bit of a Batman fan for a while.
    • But the movies … hit and miss, right? Been some good ones, been some bad ones.
    • The Dark Knight? One of the best superhero movies ever made.
    • Batman Forever. Well, that’s all we really need to say about that, isn’t it?
    • I’m cautiously optimistic about the new one that opened today.
    • Not sure if we’ll go see it in the theaters.
    • Funny how the pandemic changed that.
    • I have a great TV and a great sound system. I don’t really need to go to the theatre anymore, other than for that delicious, delicious overpriced popcorn.
    • But you really don’t need to go to an actual movie to get that. Just go in, get your corns and leave.
    • Get your popcorn and leave this weekend. You’re the boss of you.