The Hobbesian Horoscope, 6/1/12

Happy Friday and yeah, I know, I’m late. Here is, once again, another chance to catch up with your own personal astrological future. Your upcoming week will be poor, nasty, brutish, and short – but don’t let it get you down! Read on!

AriesAries (The Ram): This is a good week for your new gastronomic pastimes, but I’m still not eating that bushmeat. Touch it! Touch the monkey!

TaurusTaurus (The Bull): You are a highly political animal, and your ideas about forming a Subcommittee for Subcommittee Formation Oversight will be met with thunderous applause this week. Your high-risk disease this week: Chickenpox.

Gemini Gemini (The Twins): This is your week to rest up and catch up before your weeks move into complete crazy mode. Enjoy it while you can; it won’t last.

Cancer Cancer (The Crab): The chess match you agreed to last week is coming up. You might want to rethink your “kill the queen at all costs” strategy, since your opponent plays with her knights. If she offers to beat your bishop, go for it. Your high-risk disease this week: Rhodococcus.

LeoLeo (The Lion): You were born in 1899, and you still look younger than springtime. This week, your great-grandchild will find the bodies of all those chickens you’ve sacrificed over the years – tell her you’re making a feather bed for her dolls and you wanted to surprise her.

Virgo Virgo (The Virgin): You will be surrounded by song this week, but the bluebird of happiness outside your window carries avian influenza. Regardless, your high-risk disease this week is actually Adenovirus 55.

LibraLibra (The Scale): The scales of justice will fall squarely in your favor this week, but you won’t notice it until it’s too late to claim your prize.

ScorpioScorpio (The Scorpion): You will have a chance to travel this week, but you won’t go. You will examine each brick closely while looking for that wall they were talking about. Put your glasses on. Your high-risk disease this week: Meningococcal Meningitis.

Sagittarius Sagittarius (The Archer): This is a good week for kicking back. No, really – if someone kicks you, kick ’em back. Right in the nuts, that’s what I say.

CapricornCapricorn (The Sea-Goat): This week, you will finally start seeing the fnords. Be afraid. Your high-risk disease this week: Scrapie.

AquariusAquarius (The Water Bearer): You’re living a Yahtzee life in a Monopoly world, and you’re about to roll doubles. You can’t get out of jail for free anymore – it’s been a long time since you were 18.

PiscesPisces (The Fish): There will be a few dozen people demonstrating outside your house this week. Unfortunately, they’re demonstrating how to install new gas lines in the sewers and streets; the noise is just a bonus. Good luck sleeping, sucker! Your high-risk disease this week: Viroid Apple Skin Scar.

The Hobbesian Horoscope, 5/25/12

Happy Friday!  Here is, once again, another chance to catch up with your own personal astrological future. Your upcoming week will be poor, nasty, brutish, and short – but don’t let it get you down! Read on!

AriesAries (The Ram):   This week you will let loose your inner dragon.  Shame you cancelled collision coverage on that car…  Your high-risk disease this week:  Candidatus Neoehrlichia Mikurensis.

TaurusTaurus (The Bull):    This coming Tuesday, you will encounter an old gypsy, who will tell you your fortune.  She will be correct in every detail.  I’m so very sorry.

Gemini Gemini (The Twins):   Your week will be consumed with cooking many things and eating almost none of them – shame about all the medication you’re on suppressing your appetite.  You’ll get yours, though – just wait.  Your high-risk disease this week:  Cadang-cadang.

Cancer Cancer (The Crab):   You will journey this week, to the center of all things.  Mostly you will find the center of all things includes a 7-11 with Slurpee’s you can’t afford, an 84 Mustang convertible, and more sand than you can possibly count.

LeoLeo (The Lion):  On Monday your mind will be excited, your spirit will be elated, your ego will be inflated, and your access will be deleted.  It’s going to be one of those weeks.  Buy yourself a Guy Fawkes mask, you’re going to need it.  Your high-risk disease this week:  Mycoplasma Infection.

Virgo Virgo (The Virgin):    Your heart rate will climb!  This week will see much gushing and great excitement in your house!  Too bad it’s about the plumbing. 

LibraLibra (The Scale):   On Sunday, they will say you are going, and that they’ll miss your bright eyes and sweet smile.  On Monday, bail outta there and take the sunshine with you.  Your high-risk disease this week:  Ross River Virus.

ScorpioScorpio (The Scorpion):    You have been tested, tried, troubled, and travailed.  This week, an all too brief respite.  Gather your strength.

Sagittarius Sagittarius (The Archer):  You are back, baby, and with a vengeance.  You’re going to impress them all, even if you know you’re faking it.  By Wednesday, you’ll even believe your own hype.  It’ll be totally awesome, just like the song says.  Your high-risk disease this week:  Golden Cyst Nematodes.

CapricornCapricorn (The Sea-Goat):    They’re going to find you one of these days.  You can’t hide forever. 

AquariusAquarius (The Water Bearer):   You will consider a new career this week.  Getting into the iron and steel business might seem like a good idea, but you’ll never get away with it.  Your high-risk disease this week:  Q Fever.

PiscesPisces (The Fish):    It’s a good week to relax.  Nothing bad will happen this week.  Mostly.  Except the bit about the blood, but don’t worry about that.  It’s probably not human blood.  Well, most of it.  Anyway, it’ll be fine.  No need to call the police.

 

Big Balls and Braces and Wires, Oh My!

I used to enjoy playing Doctor when I was younger.  As a parent, playing doctor takes on a whole new meaning, and usually involves more blood than I remember from my youth.  This past weekend, though, I had a new experience – I got to play Dentist.

Now, the Reigning Queen of Pink has her share of medical issues, by which I mean that her file is larger than mine and she’s had tests and surgeries and whatnot that I’d never heard of, and among these many and varied conditions she happens to be missing a few teeth here and there, by which I mean most of them.  In an effort to correct this, over the course of many years and thousands of dollars, she currently has braces on her top teeth, with springs to move them around her head like tiny masticating bumper cars. 

Or she did, until Sunday when one of the damn things came loose, teeth I mean, and fell out.  The Reigning Queen of Pink reports for the record that having a tooth that is no longer connected to your mouth, yet still anchored in place by your braces, is not comfortable.  And by “not comfortable,” she meant, “please call the emergency orthodontist number Right NOW.”   Calling the 17 numbers needed to get to a human on a weekend, I was finally offered this sage advice:  “Well, can you cut the wire?”

Wut?  I’m sorry, first, don’t you have to go to school for something like 6 years for that?  And second, didn’t we just pay for that wire?  I thought they were expensive or something.   Nevertheless, there I was sterilizing my massive boltcutters and needle-nosed pliers and laying her under the big lights, Open Up and Say Ah.

The wire on the far side was straightforward, if hard to see.  The second cut was to the wire on the front side, easier to see but with a big spring coiled up on it.  I clipped the wire not knowing how much tension was on the spring.  I was NOT prepared for the wire – tooth and all – to bounce off up at me and go flying across the room; with the bloody stump of the tooth and the wire and spring attached, it looked like something out of Steven King’s The Dentist

The Tooth Fairy agreed that since she only has 12 teeth in her whole head, they ought to be pro-rated, and that having the Flying Loose Tooth Of Doom was a lot to deal with, and so they settled on a new bathing suit.  

So today when I called home to see what the actual orthodontist said or did, they were still out with the followup Tooth Fairy visit (which bodes well for how it went), and I got to speak to the 13-yr-old Human Tape Recorder.  She let me know that SOBUMD and the RQoP were still out, and then announced:  “I was listening to AC/DC in 5th period today!”

BUMD:  What?  Why were they playing AC/DC in school?
HTR:  No, just on my headphones.
BUMD:  You found the 5th period lecture to be, perhaps, less than scintillating?
HTR:  No, we had speech arts, and we didn’t have a studio, and so I had nothing better to do.
BUMD:  I doubt that, but we’ll let that slide.  Do I want to know which song?
HTR:  Oh, it was great!  I put it on a random selection from a random album, and it was called “Big Balls!”  I was rolling on the floor laughing, and I wondered if anyone else could hear it…  It goes like this…
BUMD:  No, no, thank you, I remember *very well* how it goes, thank you.  I’ll talk to you when I get home…

We hung up, with her still humming snatches of Big Balls, some of which are held for charity, and some for fancy dress, as I’m sure you, too, Gentle Reader, remember all too well.  AC/DC, still corrupting the youth of America 36 years later.   She’ll be humming that for weeks.  Rock on! 
 

 

The Hobbesian Horoscope, 5/18/12

Happy Friday!  Here is, once again, another chance to catch up with your own personal astrological future. Your upcoming week will be poor, nasty, brutish, and short – but don’t let it get you down! Read on!

AriesAries (The Ram):   By Wednesday, the noise from your computer will drive you to such distraction that you will totally flip and turn it off with your 9mm.  The good news:  HR will decide not to fire you.  The bad news:  your entire office will call you Elvis as long as you work there.

TaurusTaurus (The Bull):    You’ll have your hair done up right and you’ll look your best, but you’re still going to look like an idiot standing there with 63 eggplants and a beet in the checkout line.  When the cashier asks you what the heck you’re doing, tell her it’s a math problem.  Your high-risk disease this week:  Angiostrongylus Cantonensis.

Gemini Gemini (The Twins):  On Tuesday, you’ll get a chance to pulverize your enemy, your worst nightmare.  Too bad that your enemy is a kidney stone the size of a VW bug.    

Cancer Cancer (The Crab):   You will be taking over for your parents sooner than you think.  Remember the song about the palindrome?  It won’t be nearly as funny then, will it Bob?  Your high-risk disease this week:  Psittacosis.

LeoLeo (The Lion):  Your week will be filled with magic, wonder, and a vague sense of longing and despair.

Virgo Virgo (The Virgin):    You are a wonderful, generous person and your friends are about to completely take advantage of that, probably in mid- to late June.   You can teach anyone anything, but this week an old dog will test your new tricks.  Your high-risk disease this week:  Newcastle Disease.

LibraLibra (The Scale):   You will need to start a charcoal fire later this week, but you can’t start a fire without a spark.  You will need a match, but you’re matchless.  Serves you right.

ScorpioScorpio (The Scorpion):    This week you will be tested to within an inch of your life.  You can pray to Sol, the sun god, for illumination, but you will only dream of breaking tip after tip off your number two pencil.  Lead, lead, they’re spelled the same.  Your high-risk disease this week:  Vibrio Fluvailis.

Sagittarius Sagittarius (The Archer):   Some people have to run away to Canada.  What will you do if you’re already there?  This week, find out.  When in doubt, let it ride.

CapricornCapricorn (The Sea-Goat):    You are the entertainer in your house, but your piano will crap out this week, and your voice with it.  Tickle the ivories with your coattails, it’s to no avail.   Your high-risk disease this week:  Roundworm.

AquariusAquarius (The Water Bearer):   You’ve heard people say that you have a photographer’s eye, and you know it’s true.  He’s coming back this week, though, and if you don’t turn yourself in, the riot squad will finish this, you sick fuck.

PiscesPisces (The Fish):    The stars say that you’ll take a few days off this week.  Your boss says you’ll probably answer most of your email, and your officemates have a pool betting that you can’t go more than 3 hours without responding to your mail.  Your high-risk disease this week:  Infectious Salmon Anemia.

 

Road Trips, Mall Rats, Highways, and Evolution

I’ve put 500 miles on the Blackfish this week, just going to meetings. That’ll happen when your meeting on Wednesday morning is just south of Richmond and your meeting Thursday morning is just south of Delaware. Wednesday morning I woke at 0430 and drove to Ft. Lee, VA, meeting the cohort at the predetermined rendezvous point at the appointed time with military precision. It’s the same cohort I usually travel with to Huntsville, and so by meeting at the appointed time with military precision, I mean they were half an hour late. By the predetermined rendezvous point, I mean, of course, Waffle House. There is something greasily satisfying about Waffle House that makes it the perfect road food.

Ft. Lee is just down the way from the Petersburg National Battlefield, where Gen. Ulysses S. Grant cut off Petersburg’s supply lines, leading to the fall of Richmond and Gen. Robert E. Lee’s surrender shortly thereafter. Since the Civil War has come up in about a dozen conversations in the past few months, and I was done studying earned value management and zombies, I decided early this week that I’d finally pick up The Killer Angels, Michael Shaara’s famous book about the battle of Gettysburg. It had been on my to-read shelf for more than 10 years, but I always assumed it was a somewhat dry rendition of the facts of the battle, and found something else to do.

If you haven’t read it, it’s NOT a dry recitation of facts and history. It’s a well told, well crafted story with engaging, tragic, larger than life characters and fascinating dialogues and internal monologues. Within the first 15 pages, I was hooked, and I asked SOBUMD with her amazing library-foo to see if it was an audiobook somewhere. She brought it home the next day, and I’ve been listening to it for 5 hours to and from Ft. Lee and now today 4 hours to and from Aberdeen, MD. It’s a great story – I can’t wait to see how it ends, so if you’ve read it already, don’t tell me!

This morning I awoke again at 0430 and drove, this time, to Aberdeen, MD, arriving in time to find, no, yes, wait for it – a Waffle House. I can’t get enough of their greasy lovely food, nor into my older pants. Aberdeen is prettier than I expected, and the meetings there went well.

I took I-95 to Aberdeen, but I took the smaller Rt 40 most of the way back, at least into Baltimore. The interstates are fine for getting places quickly, but that’s about the only thing they really have going for them. On the slower, older, blue highways, as William Least Heat-Moon calls them, you can see the older America. It has stoplights. Some of them are at the intersection of the Past and the Future, where a simple car repair shop has a distinct carport right next to the highway and suspiciously Greco-Roman architecture, and you realize that this was once a filling station for highway traffic, 60 years ago, before the interstate came through and left this piece of road as a Left Turn to Nowhere.

The interstate, were you to open your windows while driving it, which is not always a great thing to do at 80 miles an hour, smells of diesel fuel and stress. The 20 miles of Rt. 40 I drove this afternoon smelled predominately of honeysuckle, and I left my windows down for all of it.

On the older roads, too, you can sometimes find those places where men of industry have started businesses next to icons, the features of the landscape that stick in the imagination, natural mnemonics that ensure you’ll remember their restaurant or gas station because it’s next to the Biggest Rock In Town or something. Mind you, once you’ve made that Left Turn to Nowhere, sometimes the true entrepreneur needs to create their own mnemonic, their own unforgettable icon to ensure you come back and tell your friends.

Chicken On The Roof

Chicken On The Roof

To wit, the Chicken On The Roof Grill. Don’t have a handy natural outcropping or memorable piece of landscape? Put a 20-foot plastic chicken on your roof and name your shop after that!

I didn’t stop. It was on the other side of the road (why did the Chicken On The Roof Grill cross the road?), and I wasn’t hungry. A spot of internet searching reveals that most reviews are along the lines of “take the Beltway, the food sucks,” so perhaps it was for the best.

Arriving home, I found I was in time to pick up the younger of the three lunatic children from school, and so fitting plan to deed I did that. This is always interesting, since right after school is about the only time they’ll both talk about their day. (I think they clear cache after about 10 minutes.) It turned out, on questioning, that the Reigning Queen of Pink had a bad day. This involved food that she’s not allowed to eat being substituted with other food she’s not allowed to eat, plus boys yelling at her. Number One Son asked, “Why were they yelling?”

BUMD: “They’re probably yelling because they’re 3rd grade boys, and 3rd grade boys are stupid.”
Reigning Queen of Pink: “All boys are stupid, and you [Number One Son], meaning no offense, are no exception. No offense, you understand, but you’re one of them.”
Number One Son: “How could I be offended at a true fact?”

These are the future leaders of our country.

Speaking of the future leaders of our country, because driving 500 miles in the last 36 hours wasn’t enough, I then this evening went downtown to Pentagon City Mall for a dinner meeting with a group from my company. The dinner was excellent, but of course the best part was before going in, I took the opportunity to circumnavigate the mall and notice the people, the sounds and the sights and scents and the sense of the place.

I almost wished I hadn’t. There, then, below me, were the quivering masses of humanity, walking and falling and running around in Spring Field Trip Season. Every other person was wearing a school logo or name tee-shirt, I suspect to help identify them to the leaders. It looked like there had been a mass breakout from the Sing Sing or Rikers Island Juvenile Detention Center, and all the escaped juvies had decided to go to the mall, yo. One group stood out in “Class of ” shirts, and instead of the year, they listed the names of everyone in the graduating class – the whole class. (You can do that in a small town. My graduating class would have needed the front and back of Hagrid’s dress robes to fit us all.) Those were the shirts; the young boys were otherwise in their best brown baggies and sporting their Bieber cuts.

The food court at a large mall may be 80 percent of what’s wrong with this country. Starting with the lack of Scotch dispensers. Smoke from the indoor BBQ joint clouded the upper levels, the sweet smell of charcoal, grease, and co-pays pungent in the air. I saw a fat man pay a thin man for a massage, in an open-air massage parlor – very likely the only physical human contact he gets all day.

There are no happy endings here.

Under the roar of it all, the songs of birds, struggling to hear each other inside this glassed-in urban forest they’ve adopted as home. Darwin would be proud; in 10 short years, these sparrows have evolved into flying mall rats, perfectly suited to life under the glass bubble. I noticed that they seem to instinctively flock toward younger children – genetic selection and experience has taught them that a 3-yr-old is more likely to drop the pretzel than an 8-yr-old. Mind you, the kids probably drop the pretzel out of surprise at seeing a bird in the mall. It makes you wonder if the pretzel shop lets the birds in, to drum up business by getting overstressed parents to buy new twisted baked goods to calm irate prepubescent consumers. No happy endings.

Like the like the open-air masseuse, like the Chicken On The Roof, like Longstreet and Lee at Gettysburg, there are no happy endings here. All I can tell you is that if you’re going to put 500 miles on your car in one week, make them good miles. Look out the window. Roll it down if you can. Skip the Interstate, skip the mall. Turn left next to nowhere, and explore the small spaces. You might find something neat, you might wonder how it got there, and you might wonder how the hell you’re going to find your way back to the road, but you’ll be glad you did. Tell ‘em the Big Ugly Man Doll sent you.