Wednesday, May 3, 2017

POST CHRONIC ILLNESS

Having chronic illness and dying isn't as easy as you might think. I was to die a couple years ago now, but I'm still here enjoying my medical misery. My kids think I'm really doing a bad job of dying. They are probably right. The usual neglect and abuse isn't working like it used to. Even after taking a couple of my favorite pills away, the doctors keep giving plenty of others to take. But I don't think that's it. I think it's because I'm having difficulty in deciding how to die. There are just too many options.

These are a few of my considerations:

1. A hail of bullets where I take out at least a couple assassins before they get me. Something like on TV where the bad guys never can hit the main characters even with assault rifles.

2. A two to three day binge of everything I'm not allowed to eat like Cinnabons, milkshakes, orange slices, peanut butter pies and anything with lots of salt or fat.

3. Accidentally tramped by a herd of buffaloes while trying to photograph a baby white buffalo that meant that all would return to normal after Trump's one term.

4. Dying from a lack of oxygen because of the affects of climate change and an ill-advised trip over the Great Divide.

5. Killed by a falling Dale Chihuly glass chandelier on my first trip to the museum after making a miraculous recovery.

6. Returning to Vietnam and living in a village where I eat amazing pork, drink Beer 33, and die in an mine field of my choice.

7. Being killed in an accident where the state troopers said that I must of been driving the fastest Ford Explorer ever made.

8. From not following through with an email that may or may not have threatened death. But ultimately, my cynicism finally took its toll. 

9. Drowning. I spent a lot of time in my youth in water. I think it would somehow be rather comforting. Although, I really don't know that for sure.

10. From inhaling too many brush cleaner fumes after painting a masterpiece that I could never explain how I did it.

11. Heart failure from thinking about all five times I made love. Two of which I'm still questioning.


You can see why the choice is so hard to make. But chances are that my death will come with very little of my input.
But rest assured, I have what comes after that pretty well locked down. My heaven is a nice (actually quite big) cabin or stone house in the woods that has rooms for virgin nuns who have taken the vow of silence. It sits by a large lake where you have the option of taking a boat or walking on water to get to the other side. Nearby there is a racetrack where I can compete against Danica Patrick during the day in various types of road and oval cars. And a Cuban bar where I can talk with Ernest Hemingway in the evening over drinks and well prepared fish. ...Oh! And of course there's a Cinnabon's.

At one point, I was called "the miracle baby." I don't expect to be called "the miracle geriatric." I would be concerned about death if it weren't for the fact that so many have gone before me. I figure it is just one more of those paradoxes in life. 
Neil deGrasse Tyson is a good example of a human who is not going to change his mind. I'm another one. I've always liked the old song "How Big is God?" How big and wide his vast domain. But you don't really need to go to the furthest reach of the Cosmos to believe there is more going on than just the factual physical world. Without God, life is a crapshoot at best that easily divides life into winners, and losers, and in-betweeners. For me, the belief that life will be made right is a lot easier than a belief that life rewards the better and the best.
It's one thing to be leery of being compassionate when it could mean a threat but otherwise, is there really a good enough excuse for a government system where the rich become richer and the poor become poorer, where war is more important than drought and famine, where the size of the military is more important than health care and other basic needs, where a few can gut a nation of the money needed to improve life for everyone, or where a petty strongman can rise on the prejudices and fears of people who didn't believe that change could ever lead to the loss of rights and freedoms instead of the assurance of them that was promised. I would settle for a heaven that was a just a world that worked on making life better for all. That would be a post chronic illness that I could live with. 


BONUS PIC



Friday, January 27, 2017

PRESIDENT 45, WHERE ARE YOU?






THERE ARE WOMEN ON THE MARCH,
THE EU HAS BROKEN OUT IN FIGHTS,
THEY ARE REFUGEES AT THE BORDER,
AND ROCKETS IN GOLAN HEIGHTS.

SWEEPS WEEKS ARE ON THE WAY,
AND PUTIN'S ARRIVING AT JFK,

PRESIDENT 45, WHERE ARE YOU?



One might wonder if this sit-com will air for the four years of its contract, much less have any more episodes ordered. But if anything, we know by now that the inconceivable does happen. After all, President Obama was re-elected in a growing conservative environment and despite of the standard predictions of his imminent demise. I'm giddy with the daily comedic and entertaining giftedness of this administration, and I know others are horrified to the point of pledging resistance. But I'm not sure about his supporters and all of those who voted for him. I honestly would hope that they are more concerned with taxes, jobs, government spending, gridlock, legislator vote buying, and the ever widening economic gaps than symbolic gestures that are fueled by ignorance and prejudice. He may be a buffoon, but he's our buffoon. I do not want to see damage to our country just so some people can claim to be right.

As a pragmatic patriot, I can see there's enough red meat on the counter to delve into. But there are others who are much more qualified who will keep up the pressure and make the necessary exposes that I'm glad not to get into a point-by-point "discussion." But I might want to make some observations. Right now, there's not all that much that seems clear. The day-to-day changes, if not hour-to-hour changes, leave a bit confused, out focus and bemused. I never know exactly where he is. So until some pattern emerges, this all that I can say, but I'd like to say it in a little song I'm affectionately calling, "The Donald."

THE DONALD

I'd like to say a word in his behalf
The Donald makes me laugh
How do you solve a problem like The Donald?
How do you catch a manic and pin him down?
How do you find a word that means The Donald?
A flibbertijibbet! A will-o'-the wisp! A clown!
Many a thing you know you'd like to tell him
Many a thing he ought to understand
But how do you make him stay
And listen to all you say
How do you keep a wave upon the sand?
Oh, how do you solve a problem like The Donald?
How do you hold an EGO in your hand?

When I'm with him I'm confused
Out of focus and bemused
And I never know exactly where I am
Unpredictable as weather
He's as flighty as a feather
He's a darling! He's a demon! He's a lamb!
He'd out pester any pest
Drive a hornet from its nest
He could throw a whirling dervish out of whirl
He is gentle! He is wild!
He's a riddle! He's a child!
He's a headache! He's an angel!
He's just a mess!
How do you solve a problem like The Donald?
How do you catch a manic and pin him down?
How do you find a word that means The Donald?
A flibbertigibbet! A will-o'-the wisp! A clown!
Many a thing you know you'd like to tell him
Many a thing he ought to understand
But how do you make him stay
And listen to all you say
How do you keep a wave upon the sand?
Oh, how do you solve a problem like The Donald?
How do you hold an EGO in your hand?

I would hope to soon have something of note. But if not, I'll be content with the old standards.


CREDITS: Apologies to Maria Von Trapp and a nod to Rodgers and Hammerstein, and Car 54