Wednesday, November 9, 2016

Trump's America: Day1 - Dealing with the Guilt





Just for the sake of clarity, Donald Trump was elected the 45th president of the United States last night.

When I was in Mississippi with the Red Cross after hurricane Katrina, I was encouraged to let clients in the shelter I worked at tell their stories. It was the best way for them to get their feelings under control and start learning to live with what happened.


Donald Trump was elected to be the 45th president of the United States last night.

So, that happened.

I honestly didn't believe it was possible. More fool I.


Good one reality.




I'm going to start with the silver linings:


  • We are having a mild Autumn in the Midwest, so I haven't had to heat the house yet.
  • I finally get the surgery I've been needing in just a few weeks.
  • I am more intelligent than the leader of the free world.

I stayed up most of the night following election results. I wasn't afraid until Trump got Florida. From there, I constantly tore down and rebuilt the model as more and more red filled the map like the dawn of the fabled zombie apocalypse.

I have an odd combination of panic, shame and survivor's guilt this morning.

I am a middle-aged, middle-class white male, for what that is worth. All of us are equally "Not Trump" in the Donald's eyes.

Unfortunately, he has confirmed that white hate is still a very real, surprisingly vital thing in this country. He and his supporters are the living equivalent of "my opinions are better than your facts."
For those who will object, these are some of those facts:
  • Trump has admitted to not paying income taxes for a protracted period of time. He verified this himself during the second presidential debate.
  • Trump does not respect a woman's body. Recordings exist of his descriptions of mistreatment of women. He does not dispute this.
  • Trump believes that modifying a contract after the other side has lived up to their end is just good business and defensible if one has the legal staff for it. (Let me know if you need verification on this)
Like I said, I am a middle-aged, middle-class white male. I personally have little to worry about on the surface, but I have many friends who are not MAMClaWhiM. Their freedoms are in danger. I hate it that I will be lumped into so many categories to which Trump belongs.

I am intending to hit this blog more regularly to document the next four years and to keep track of this journey down the rabbit hole. If nothing else, I want this to keep my feelings hot for the 2018 and 2020 election cycles.





Catchy? Yes? No?

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

A Moment of Silence

I’m waiting for two reviews and it’s making me a little crazy. I’ve never been big on the silence. This came to a head Saturday night. The show I co-star in “Things Being What They Are” ran last Friday, Saturday and Sunday and well, two out of three ain’t bad in that sense.
Obviously I’m not bending your eye to talk about the good performances.
For openers, our Saturday night performance had an audience of twelve. Well, eleven and a reviewer anyway.
SIDEBAR: There’s a thing you might not know about audiences. People have an inherent awareness of how obvious they are. All by themselves they tend to be quiet and unobtrusive. Normally this is a good thing. Riots spark when angry people happen in large numbers. There is an anonymity to the crowd that allows behaviors one might otherwise not indulge. Flipping police cars is one such behavior.
Laughter is another.
An audience of twelve makes it easier to see and highlight the actions of any one of its members. (“That woman in the second row snorts when she laughs.” Y’know what I mean?) In an audience of twelve, most are going to bite their tongues for fear of embarrassment.
Such was the audience last Saturday night.
SIDEBAR: I once performed a play to an entirely empty house. The author/lead had rented the theatre at a high personal cost (including a stipend for me, the supporting actor/director.) What he didn’t do was advertise. People stayed away in droves. Besides, he was going to videotape the performance. It was a strange thing to play to an empty house.
Saturday night was worse. When no one is there, a lack of laughter is no surprise. When you can hear them breathing out there, the lack of laughter is the only thing you can hear. It is louder than your co-star, louder than your own voice in your ears; louder than just about anything.
Just about.
We’re pounding away through the show, hoping like crazy that they are all smirking in quiet amusement, but there is a palpable distraction in struggling to gauge the audience reaction.
That was where I was at when I stumbled. My character had a lot of lines with repetitive wording and even more with repetitive intent. My character was the second fiddle through most of the play. I had a number of lines like “Uh-huh”, “Sure” and “Oh” that happen more than once. There are also a number of questions I ask to goad the other character along and theoretically, to keep him on track. They mostly boil down to, “And then what happened?”
Generally, they had more finesse and context. In one particular case, my co-star is explaining about some news that his ex-wife had shared with him. After a quick guess and rebuke on my characters part, I was supposed to re-prompt him with, “So, what was the news?”
I was so busy listening for a reaction from the audience that I dropped the specific words of my question. Instead, I ran with, you guessed it, “And then what happened?”
An argument could be made that one question was as good as another in this case. His answer would have flowed seamlessly to either. But I would not be making that argument. The author chose the words for a reason and we actors take our cues from specific words and inflections.
The net result of my “And then what happened?” was a joint seizure on the part of my co-star and myself.
The unresponsive crowd became totally silent. I would swear to you that they were not breathing. They might very well have been holding their collective breath; possibly in sympathy, but potentially in a shared mortal fear with those of us on stage (not to mention our director on the soundboard) that we would all never speak again and thus be trapped in the theatre forever.
I could feel my face burning. I could see my fellow actor glancing about futilely for anything that might give him direction.
An old stage trick is to take a step back and repeat a moment to recreate the correct cue. Unfortunately in my panic, I forgot what the hell we were talking about.
SIDEBAR: There is a veteran local actor whose last name has become a verb. For the purposes of this story, we will call him Bob Gumb. He does wonderful doddering old characters, but, in his autumn years, has begun to drop the occasional line. When this happens, he stares at other actors on the stage, announcing to all the audience that it was one of them whom is responsible for the miss. The direct recipient of his portentous glance will evermore understand what it means to be “Gumbed”.
I felt like I was “gumbing” my co-star, my partner, my one-time friend. The silence stretched on for what felt like seven years (though I suspect less than a minute). We were very nearly frozen, he and I, though we were running around our own minds screaming “What comes next!?”
Eventually, I remembered another line from the show that had a very obvious end cue and I went after it.
It worked. The audience began breathing again, though never got to a level where they felt safe laughing.
I didn’t go out for drinks that night because I did not know what would stop me once I got started.
The review for Saturday night could only be described as charitable. The offending silence was never mentioned though the overall review was not wildly favorable.
There were two reviewers there Friday night for a pretty good show with a freely laughing audience. Unfortunately, there were none for the Sunday matinee where we totally killed.
Still, I am waiting for two reviews and cocking an eyebrow as I look toward next weekend

Heaven help us all.

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Reasonable Guy 3: A Vote Not Wasted


I’ve heard it said that running for political office should disqualify one for the job. I subscribe to this notion, albeit from the cynical perspective that you’d have to be a fool to want most of those jobs on their own merits and a snake to want them with an agenda.

So where does that leave us? Like Diogenes looking for an honest man with a lantern in broad daylight? Could be.

With that in mind, let me tell you about my 2014 mid-term election experience.

There was a senate race in my state between a reactionary crackpot and a lazy opportunistic creep and a county attorney race where an arrogant two-fisted thief was running uncontested. I stared at them for a while and thought about smoking and necessary evils. I looked at the blanks underneath and smiled. I wrote myself in on both contests.

Did I throw away my votes? Possibly. But only because others, faced with the same unpalatable choice, were not doing the same thing.

So, here I am, offering an alternative to voting badly and wasting it entirely. I don’t want political office, but, if you can’t make a choice from the ballot, choose me. Do it by the hundreds and thousands. Say, with simple elegance that we need someone better, but we aren’t sitting home doing nothing.

PS. I am also looking for input. Does anyone know what the impact of a write-in winner would be? I don’t see how a machine could count hand-written replies, so I’m guessing it would require a manual recount. Then, if there is a clear winner, I would hope that a new election would be held for that office. I would further hope that anyone beaten under such circumstances would have the good grace not to run again.
Let me know what you know. Let me know what you think.


https://www.facebook.com/pages/Matthew-Alan-Moody-Write-In-Candidate/373093649515833?fref=nf

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

The Load

I was originally going to open with the classic line, “There are two kinds of People;”
                This is obviously a flawed idea as there are, of course, somewhere in the neighborhood of seven billion kinds of people. In any case, it’s the second line that gets to the point. So, for the sake of brevity apparently, I’ve just added a paragraph.
                The second sentence then:
                “People who carry their own load and those who allow it to be carried for them.”
                That’s really what I want to talk about, roundabout way notwithstanding.
                I like to think of myself as belonging to the former group. As such, I have ended up seemingly surrounded by people who fall into the latter. Don’t get me wrong. I’m not talking about my immediate family. My wife is firmly on this side, my Dad helps with the bills and does the dishes (he puts them away in strange places, so every time I cook it’s like an Easter egg hunt, but a great trade for not washing dishes), and the kids…well, they’re kids.
                I’ve had a few experiences recently with friends and extended family who seem content to be supported, to climb up on my wife’s and my backs and just ride there like a paid passenger.
                I’m a little tired of it. Unfortunately, the alternatives seem to be:
1.       Be a doormat (See what I did there?)
2.       Be a jerk and let someone else carry the load.

That’s an unfortunate truth to this kind of behavior. These other kind seem perfectly content to wait , so if I don’t help, I leave it for someone else.
I ruminate on the fact that for an extended period of time, when my kids were small, I lived on a diet of essentially hot dogs and apples. I walked or bicycled to work and back so my now ex-wife had the car available. As my wages got higher, my standard of living and diet approved, but I climbed every inch of that way.
I realize that I’m starting to sound like a FOX-News commentator and believe me; nothing could be farther from the truth. I spent a lot of time during that back and forth to work wondering what the hell it was all worth. Why was it important that I work that series of meaningless jobs? To take care of my family was an easy answer, but the world could easily get by without anyone doing many of the jobs I have had.
Money is at the root of this problem and I firmly believe that money is a training wheel that our developing species is at an age to outgrow.
I’m just spit-balling here, but if I had to guess, only about 10% of our population really needs to do anything to drive our global society forward. The remaining 90% could easily be fed, clothed and housed by that 10%. Probably half of the 90% might never be good for anything but taking up space. We deliberately do things inefficiently so as many people as possible can have a job.
Think about it. Most factory jobs can be done by machine and many of those never need done at all. Food production might possibly be a thorny issue, but there are those people out there who love that work.
That is the crux issue, I think. Would 10% of humanity be willing to work at necessary jobs to care for the 90%, allowing them a guiltless pursuit of happiness?
I think we might be surprised.
It would be interesting to see what would fill the power vacuum left by the absence of the wealthy. Would intellect become the new currency?
What would happen to the drug trade? Talk about a job that doesn’t need to be done.
“For the love of money is the root of all evil,” Timothy tells us and I think that is true. In the Christian-centered parts of the world, how else would you explain that the loaning of money at interest has gone from being a serious, if venal, sin to being culturally honored? They let bankers into churches now, for heaven’s sake.
But I’ve gone a little off topic, obviously.
If those people who belong to that non-contributory portion of the 90% were simply given what they needed, the rest of us could focus without their interference. We could be Farmers, Actors, Builders, Painters, Programmers, Teachers, Dancers, Fixers (This is my group. We know who we are.) and, at least in the short term, Administrators. Some would contribute the necessary skills and some would entertain those who do and the rest could watch Honey-Boo-Boo or something (although I think reality TV would die a quick death in my Brave, New World).

I know this sounds like communism, but there is something very philosophically attractive about eliminating both the haves and the have-nots.

Monday, February 10, 2014

A Thinking Man's God Part I


     I’ve been thinking about religion a lot lately, which is unusual for me. I believe in God, know a fair amount of the Bible, but I do not, as a general rule, go to a place where people congregate for shared ritual. I don’t know if that makes me a bad person or not, but I have an awareness of God and a sincere hope that I will one day get to know the answers to some of my questions. When I was young and hot headed, I used to tell myself that I would insist on those answers, demand them in fact, but I have mellowed a bit with age.

     A few months ago, I engaged in a lively discussion with some amateur scholars about, among other things, Leviticus 18:22. The King James translation gives this to us as:

“Thou shalt not lie with mankind, as with womankind: it is abomination.”

Even this wording is a little bit stilted; either that or it is stunningly progressive. Mankind, as I have been taught, is a word that, politically incorrectly perhaps, encompasses the whole human race. Identifying Womankind separately strikes me as odd, but I am sure this is a matter of interpretation.

In any case, this phrase is one commonly quoted by those who define homosexuality as immoral. This interpretation would run as follows:

“If you are a man, don’t have sex with men.”

That’s an interpretation of a translation. Also, the term abomination is an interesting word choice. Is it sinful? That would seem like a simpler word. Abomination, despite its impressive bearing as a word could mean something as simple as “societally frowned upon” or the more extreme “thing which could render you unclean.” At any rate, to put it in perspective, here are a few other things that have been placed under the header of abomination:

  • Eating pork
  • Lying
  • Cross-dressing
  • Usury – the loaning of money at interest.

Of the above list, Usury is one where the term abomination is used as a translation for the same term. Apparently homosexual men are no worse than bankers, if no better.

Please understand, I am not picking apart the original text, I am questioning translation and interpretation. For your consideration, I ran across an alternative translation which gives this little passage a significantly different meaning:

“And with a male, thou shalt not lie down in a woman's bed; it is an abomination.” (http://hoperemains.webs.com/leviticus1822.htm)

     It seems to say something similar, if not the same. However, the specific reference to “a woman’s bed” means something a little different today. We might to take it as a somewhat poetic metaphor for having heterosexual sex. However, when this was written, “a woman’s bed” was a very specific thing. A woman’s bed was her property and presumably the only place that a married man and woman lay together. I don’t think many of us would argue that having sex with someone else in your spouse’s bed is a pretty bad piece of behavior.

     It is also worth noting that this and other verses I have heard used to define homosexuality as taboo behavior in Christianity deal exclusively with male homosexuality. This could simply be gender bias of the time or simply an oversight, but a reading of the rest of Leviticus does not support this. There are some very specific portions on the proper method and content of burnt offerings. Moses seems very thorough, specific and not metaphoric.

     In any case, judgment belongs to God and no one else. From my semi-informed perspective, male homosexuality may or may not be explicitly frowned upon, but even if so, it is just that and not a sin. There is no commandment dealing with this.

     I have other issues regarding the organized practice of religion and what it motivates us to do and will hopefully be able to bend your ear about them in the future, but for now, I’d like to leave you with a paraphrase of George Carlin’s opinions about religion:

     Religion is sort of like a lift in your shoes. If it makes you feel better, fine. Just don't ask me to wear your shoes.”

Saturday, September 21, 2013

The Morning After the Morning After II: Friday

     The next day, I was up by 5:30 and hating myself. My head ached, my stomach was sour and even though I had the day off work, I had to log in and get some stuff done on my work computer. It was painfully slow. I pounded some tomato juice and a raw egg, the operative theory being this would rush the electrolytes I needed into my system I needed.
     Either that or I would puke. Either way, my stomach would feel better and I would be able to hit the ibuprofen and coffee.
     I held together and was soon mainlining Nsaids and caffeine. I staggered my way through my work tasks and got my stepson’s off to school so my wife could sleep in. Barry came in somewhere around 6 and helped me drink the pot of coffee. By now it was 8.
     “Breakfast?” Barry asked. He seemed to be doing a lot better than I was.
     “Yeah.”
     We drank so more coffee and thought about this.
     We were headed for a place called EATS. The restaurant had been owned by a relative of mine decades before and it had been through many names in the intervening years, but the sign always said EATS, presumably to avoid the embarrassment of people coming to do their laundry or buy exotic pets and the like.
     Barry and I had eaten there s few years before after a class reunion night at the riverfront that included bonus RAGBRAI riders arriving to dip their tires in the Mississippi. We’d had a dish called “The Mess” in the wee hours of the morning. That wonderful time where everything tastes good provided it’s loaded with carbs and starches and hot sauce. Even in my condition, I was looking forward to this.
     We drove down in my POS, my loose muffler rattling in time with the in town RPMs. Barry called Todd on the way and we had just agreed to meet at EATS. Barry and I arrived to find a small hand printed sign that read “Out of Business Effective August 31st.”
     I spent a moment in grim rumination on the passing of institutions and the ice sculpture nature of our shared pasts. I decided not to follow this line of thought because I didn’t know how I’d come back from it on this hung-over Friday the 13th.
     “Missed it by two weeks,” I said in my best Maxwell Smart. “Call Todd and tell him to meet us at the Riverview.”
     This was about a block away so I parked the car and we walked.
     We were smoking out front when Todd approached from the other direction.
     I think I was hanging lowest, but none of us was overly spry. We sat around the table and told stories of our civilian lives while gently ogling the PYW (pretty young waitress).
Todd had some great stories about his time in Africa. I told my stories about Hurricane Katrina. Barry covered a wide gamut and took it with humility when the PYW screwed up his order. We ate and mocked FOX NEWS on the big screen before heading out. Todd showed us his Dad’s excellent loft apartment that allows you to pee while staring out at the river and look down though a skylight into the downstairs bathroom among many fascinating design features.
We shook hands and took off our separate ways for the day.
As I mentioned before, we had apparently formed a plan for the evening, but I had left it in my other pants or something. I didn’t get a nap but spent some quality time with my wife and improved steadily throughout the day.
The days passed peaceably enough. Joby, Stacy and Lettie (perhaps with others) went to Hutch’s Aerie for rehabilitating exotic birds. No I didn’t make that up. It’s a real place. It’s called Iowa Parrot Rescue. You can Google it if I forget to add a hyperlink later.
I’m ashamed to admit it, but I live just a few miles away and have never been out to see the place. This day was no exception.
Anyway, evening rolled around, as it will and after a terrific dinner with my wife over at the local Thai restaurant, I realized that I needed to start adding curry to my tomato juice on mornings like this.
As 7 o’clock rolled closer, I headed over to the Strawberry Farm Bed and Breakfast. Lettie and Stacy were staying there and I knew there was some talk of gathering there. Barry was visiting Sondra in Cedar Rapids and I knew he was planning on hitting Kent’s wedding in Iowa City on his way back. Scott H texted me asking where things were going to happen. I answered as fully as I could while masking the fact that I wasn’t sure of the answer.
When I got to the farm, I found out Stacy and Lettie had gone to the wedding. By the way, one of you all will have to fill in the blanks on what happened there.
So, I got in the car and started driving. I figured I would go downtown and get a beer while I waited for something to happen.
I was saved from this by a call from Jennifer. She had just arrived with her sister Steph at Strawberry Farm and was likewise confused where everybody was. I headed back, figuring we should ride together wherever we were going.
This turned out to be the Pearl in the Hotel Muscatine, which has a nice veranda outside. Nice, in this case, meant you could drink and smoke at the same time. I got the first round of beers and ended up not having to buy another drink. Their cousin Andy joined us and I got some fascinating insights into their family which included a lot of talk about Christmas, Fire, Recovery, Pit Bulls and driving loops around a vomiting person on a four-wheeler. It was hard to keep straight, but very funny. Scott H joined us there and Lettie contacted us when they were on their way back from the wedding.
By this time, I had my sea legs back and was ready for another evening of "reminiscence."
When we got back to Strawberry Farm, Stacy and Lettie were already there along with Mickey, Brenda and Trojan. We gathered at a table on the back porch and started swapping stories over beer, Percocet and THC candies.
Trojan was well on his way to earning the prize for the highest level of chemical alteration.
There were pictures all over the table. Most featured Mark, of course and at least one other person in the room (and countless others, truth be told, many of whom I'd never met.) One absence I conspicuously noticed was myself. Deep down, I was a little butt-hurt at this, but I got over it quickly as I looked over the faces of old friends and strangers in familiar surroundings, all with their bags packed for their journey to that undiscovered county from whose born no traveler returns.
It was sweet pain to look at them. In particular, it dragged me back to a camping trip some of us had taken to Centerville. We set up a beachhead by the lake and drank and fished for three days. There was an epic moment where Zakrezwski was out fishing on his inflatable raft which was promptly sunk when Alice the pit bull swan out and sank it. There was roasted carp on a frog gig. There was that morning after with Mark and I sitting by the remains of the fire, cracking open beers by the noon`s early light.
Stacy, walking by, observed, "You look like Hawkeye and Trapper."
Kids, trust me on this, everybody should get to feel that cool, just once. Thanks Stacy.
When I told this story at the farm, Trojan, who apparently came dressed as a hobo, grumbled about being jealous of how close Mark and I were. I don't think this was especially true, but it was great to hear. Thanks Trojan, for giving me that feeling a second time in a lifetime.
(Incidentally, I apologize for calling you Trojan all the time, but this is really running long and I wanted to avoid too many explanations.)
After a while, Stacy broke out "Cards Against Humanity." This is the greatest card game in the world, but should probably be played with a slightly higher level of sobriety than we attempted.
Pictures were getting taken and laughed over. I was even in some of them, problem solved. Some were on Facebook while we were still drinking.
Barry pulled up while we were playing and joined in with the game and we tormented Nate`s parents (owners of strawberry farm) until the wee wee hours of the morning. I know it was still going when I left about one AM, so I'm making an assumption here.
This was the part where I was going to make a clever analogy between this group and "Cards Against Humanity." You know, how we were all funny people (ie. Cards) and how we all ran contrary to conventional societal norms, but the mechanics of the joke subtly eluded me.
Also, this was the night we discussed the hookups from last chapter. You should all be ashamed of yourselves. Me most of all, for everything I missed.

Peace all, next chapter, things get weird.

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

The Morning After the Morning After

(Disclaimer: Names will be used according to my judgment and might be changed situationally to protect the guilty.)

Prologue

I need a remedy.

I spent all last weekend in the company of old friends celebrating the life of the one who brought us all together. Along with all of the laughter, silly teen drama and hook-ups1 that we shared; we used to drink a lot.

As they say, some things never change. There was a lot of laughing, almost no hurt feelings and not a lot of screwing around2. But Jesus tap-dancing Christ do we all remember how to drink.

Thursday

We started on Thursday night, the night before we were scheduled. My old friend Barry drove an RV from Chicago that he parked in front of my house. We walked down to the bar which I thought was a reasonable precaution. Though all we were going to do was sort of map out the rest of the weekend with one or two other folks who blew into town early.

There were already six of us there, including our retired high school history teacher Hutch, sharing a few pitchers of Fat Tire. Nice and casual, I thought as I approached the table. There was this young guy sitting there and I remember thinking, Somebody brought their kid to the bar, weird.

The young guy stood up and looked at me with an awkward smile on his face. I smiled and nodded, equally unsure of the greeting protocols and we walked past each other. Something about him was too familiar.

I sat down at the table and poured a glass of beer. Nice, I thought. "Who's the kid?" I think I asked.

"That's Mark's son." Either Lettie or Stacy told me this. They had flown in separately, but were crashing at a local bed and breakfast.

Whoever it was that told me, a geriatric could have pushed me over with her pinky finger.

I bounced back up and approached him. We shook hands.

"My name is Matt."

"Joby," he said. He had a unique smile, easy and nervous at the same time. "I didn't know who to introduce myself to."

"I know how you feel."

His mother Mary is a member of the group who could not free up the time to come down. But, being as this gathering was being held in Mark's honor (Did I mention that? I'll get to it. The circumstances of the weekend may have subtly impaired my storytelling abilities.) Joby wanted to make the trip down (up) to meet his Dad's old friends. His stepdad Jim brought him3.

We all sat down and somebody had ordered a round of Jaeger shots. Not really my speed, but I didn't want to be a bummer and abstain. After I had successfully washed my mouth out with beer, I started telling Joby stories about his dad and all the stupid fun things we had done together. I didn't hold the floor by any means, everybody had something to contribute and the hours passed agreeably, but too quickly and the pitchers rose and fell like the tide.

Also, there was the tequila. This was also not my drink, but it was definitely Mark's. Given that this was true, I couldn't refuse to take one. I was far enough gone that I didn't even get a twinge.

Somewhere around here, my wife called. She later told me my efforts to sound lucid were very amusing.

I sat back down next to Joby and noticed he had a platter with about five shots sitting there. He was shaking his head.

Naturally, I couldn't let him go through that alone.

We ended the night eating at a local Italian restaurant that makes a pretty fine New York style pizza. Jennifer arranged this. It was absolutely the smartest thing that could've been done. Probably saved some lives.

In fact, it would have been a better place to start rather than to finish, but it is what it is. I ate a fair amount, pausing in the middle to help Stacy back to her car for a little nap.

Clearly, we were all out of shape.

If we ever made a plan for the next day, I don't remember what it was.

Barry and I walked back to my house. I had a giant bottle of Mead that Robby had home brewed. I told him I didn't want to drink it that night because my pallet was already polluted by beer, Jaeger and Tequila, but that left me with the need to make it home with this in hand. I imagine my efforts to make it look inconspicuous were pretty amusing.

1Apparently, just about everybody was getting a little with most everybody else. Except me, of course. I must have been wearing blinders. How could I not know?

2I guess I don't know why I would trust my observational skills now. I mean seriously, if everything you people were saying is true, I should have had hip waders for negotiating your various bodily fluids. Did I have BO?

3A word about Jim. This guy brought his stepson to a gathering of his stepson's old friends and took approximately .7 seconds to fit right in. I'm estimating, it had already happened by the time I arrived. He had a few great stories about Mark from the time Mark was in the military and told them with style. He is a mensch. More about him as the story progresses.