The restaurant name that says it all: “Animal, Vegetable, Mineral and Things”
Tag Archives: food
Thx
12192012 tercell at walmart. Ebone at pier one. Todd fuqua at arbys. Jenn and joe at kcdc. Cara at chilis. John at publix. Jody at riteaid.
12212012 katy g at gigi’s cupcakes. Jessica at Sonic. Linda at pier one. Elizabeth at Beauregards.
12222012 lauren at sees candies.
12232012 mapco. April at carliles restaurant.
The Old Man in the Cabin
When I walked into the sunlight to eat a banana as part of my daily ritual to get outside of the house at least once a day, the construction workers next door tended a small bonfire to burn scraps leftover from remodeling, mainly short pieces of wood.
A goldfinch in winter plumage hopped onto the tree limb near me and chirped away, expecting me to scoop up some birdseed and fill the feeder in the backyard.
The blue reflection of the sky domed me in, sunlight warming my pants and then my legs but not enough to take away the chill of freezing air around me.
When did I become this old man whose sympathy neurons were so overdeveloped from years of having to be on my toes, reacting to my father’s whims, his bursts of pent-up anger that seemed to come out of nowhere, that I don’t want to mingle with others because I have a bad habit of reading their movements in an attempt to gauge their thoughts in case they, too, would physically release their passive-aggressive volcano of internalised emotion-based thoughts or attack verbally?
I am a mischievous peacemaker, the devil’s advocate, whose raison d’être was to be constantly on the lookout for information to keep my father at bay, entertaining him while he was with me, paying attention to the conversations around us to steer people away from setting off my father.
I loved my father but to be with him, he who was the product of his parents’ and grandparents’ personality quirks, was to suppress my personality quirks that tended to set him off.
I look at myself and wonder how many of us are like me.
How many of us naturally respond to the behaviours of others just to avoid controversy?
I want to feel special, thinking I am the one and only me, but I know my set of states of energy is made of the same stuff as everybody else’s, sharing a large portion of subcultural as well as genetic traits with subsets, most especially those nearest me.
I am the two, three, four, x, y, z-dimensional intersection of subsets known and unknown.
My reaction to others is to immediately suppress my personality and figure out which subsets we have in common; then see if I can mentally predict the behaviours of the people around me not only in our conversation but also in events past and future.
The mischievous side of me sees what I’m doing, or what I know someone will do, and tries to stop it with a humourous interlude.
So many people take life too darn seriously when we know we’re all going to die.
I have grown into the old man in the cabin in the woods because I am now my father.
I ended up adopting his nonassertiveness when it comes to handling emotional responses to contradictory information from which I cannot pick or decide to choose a behaviour to exhibit in my repressed personality mode.
The most successful people, children AND adults, have spent many, many hours in training, learning from their mistakes and building upon their lessons.
Success itself is a rutted road, or the belief that one will keep one’s momentum pointed down the path of success, in whatever venture one seeks.
Habits, in other words.
My habits from early childhood were developed in response to my father, a man willing to use a belt or the back of his hand to serve justice immediately, with rarely a delay (my mother used the phrase “wait until your father gets home” sparingly).
When I was younger, I asked myself, “When do I get to be me?,” as if there was another person inside me wanting to get out.
At my workplace over the years, I attended a couple of assertiveness and anger management classes to get a better understanding of who people like me are.
I turned my assertiveness training into developing myself as a lead engineer, supervisor and then manager.
I learned that if I wanted to assert myself and was willing to face the consequences of my actions, no one would stop me because…you can guess where this is going…most of us are responding to others and repressing our personalities for the sake of the common good.
The secret to success is there is no secret to success.
All of us have habits that benefit some more than others, that’s all.
When I was an engineering manager, I wanted to hire an engineer who made more money than me. My boss and the human resources manager told me that the system doesn’t work that way. Either they had to increase my salary above that of the potential new hire or we couldn’t offer her a job unless it was at a lower salary.
Being a good midlevel manager not wanting to rock the boat, I extended a lower salary offer to the engineer and she declined after we couldn’t find any other negotiating points like a shorter workweek and/or flexible workday to make her hourly rate equivalent to what she was already making.
At that point in my career, I realised that I was on the wrong career track or perhaps working for the wrong company.
I never was a socioeconomic hierarchy climber.
I simply had my personal way of reading and reacting to the behaviour of others that made them feel good about themselves in the same way I treated my father, habits established in my formative years and refined as I got older.
I spent my whole life reacting, reacting, reacting and decided that if my only reward for reacting to others was to be given higher salaries and more people to manage, then I needed to stop reacting and become proactive, whatever that meant.
The only way to do that was to remove myself from social situations and place myself here in front of this electronic input device.
At least that’s what I keep telling myself.
Money buys me stuff but it never bought me prestige, it lifted me out of poverty and gave me enough luxury to satisfy my wants as well as my needs.
As we get older, our tastes change in relation to our age, societal status, family needs and reactions to a world full of overstimulating mass marketing.
At my age, the illusions now propagated by the Internet are as much a part of my life as physical realities.
My needs and wants are largely met by the reflected and beamed light of an LCD panel just as the needs and wants of the previous generation were largely met by the reflected and beamed light of a television tube, interrupted by paper-based books/magazines, breaking the monotony with retail shopping/eating therapy.
What will the next generation spend time doing in their old age after they’ve spent their youth and young adult years saying they aren’t like their parents but becoming them anyway?
How did your formative years train you for the success you’re experiencing right now?
How will your influence upon your children’s formative years feed their success?
How does this translate to subcultures, cultures, the global economy and civilisations over thousands of years?
That’s all for today — time to listen to the wind and see what its “personality” tells me will happen next in our society in some fuzzy way that comes out comically on these blog pages.
What else do you see when you look in the mirror?
Lee slipped into his disguise and entered the world of a subculture.
He was looking for the answer to a question: “Why do stories start with ‘A long time ago…,’ ‘In a galaxy far, far away…,’ etc.?”
He also wanted to know why subcultures store large number of weapons and never use them to protect themselves except in verbal defensive posturing positions (imagine two dominant members of a different species squaring off like peacocks strutting their feathers to prove their reproduction capabilities which have no value in defense against a hungry wolf) while their subcultures are slowly reduced by the onslaught of subcultures not like theirs, either intentionally or compressionally by the superiour sheer weight/size of neighbouring subcultures.
In modern parlance we call this détente, or mutually assured destruction when the weapons have seriously huge destructive capacity.
Lee looked at his disguise in the mirror but he didn’t feel like the character he was going to portray.
He needed to feel the character — the burning anger, the raging fear, the desire to grab the reins from polite, noncommitted leaders, refusing to negotiate their ongoing debate about the nuances of a truce with a perceived enemy, put the metal, the disguise, to the test and charge into battle.
The wind howled outside.
Water filled the trenches.
Battle-hardened foot soldiers looked at Lee wondering if he was the one to bare his chest to the enemy and dare them to light the fuse that would ignite the war the soldiers on both sides craved once more.
The courtiers and patsies of the king’s court had grown too soft living too long off the fat of the land and Lee knew they were outnumbered by the hungry and starving willing to die for a greater cause than feeding just another set of pigs running whatever version of Animal Farm they were selling to the highest bidder.
Lee adjusted the disguise.
Was it an actor’s costume? A uniform? The emperour’s new clothes?
With whom did Lee’s sympathies lie?
For whom would Lee lie, if necessary, to achieve the greater cause that made his efforts worth overthrowing yet another monarchy that cloaked itself in the power of the people, the tyranny of the majority, a supermajority of minorities this time?
The only way to know was to lose himself in the words and actions of the subculture.
Then, when completely immersed, lost in the crowd, rise up, climb the wall that separated the haves from the have-nots, and announce his intent.
Lee looked in the mirror.
He saw his parents’ and grandparents’ faces.
He saw the mannerisms and silent strength of his father, the wisdom of modest humbleness in his mother.
Lee walked to a hill behind his hut and practiced shouting, listening to the echoes around him.
He heard a few returned shouts as if they were mere reactions to his shouts but no echoing call for real battle.
Lee returned to the hut and contemplated what was next.
Many subcultures had claimed they saved, preserved and nurtured the links of civilisation for the next generation.
Several family members in Lee’s lineage had recorded their own facts that validated their rightful place, if modest, in the course of history.
Lee knew the judgment of his generation was not sufficient to determine if his future actions were justified.
Lee needed more, a longer view.
He called upon his advisors who used a variety of means to provide Lee cumulative wisdom upon which he could set a future course — supercomputers, online consensus of commentators both professional and amateur, crystal balls, ancient texts, divinations and mysterious methods shrouded from the light of day.
Lee pondered his advisors’ input.
Lee was a man of action.
Lee imagined he saw the impetus for the behaviour of his peers they could not fathom.
Lee not only dug deep within himself to feed a storyline, he also competed against his peers for the place of highest moral ground in history, knowing it would be civilisations hence, uncountable, unknowable, for whom he worked the puppet strings of characters in his lifetime.
Lee let the raw emotions of fear, love, hate, and compassion flow through his body unchecked.
Limbs flew across the yard, Lee unable to stop the wind.
Lee looked in the mirror, asking himself, “If I was the one who could stop the wind, what would I call this disguise I’m wearing?”
Flavour
I opened a can of soup — Publix brand chicken and sausage with rice, to be exact.
After cooking and eating the contents, I have only one statement to make:
I miss the taste of Bisphenol A.
Don’t you?
Thanks
Thanks to Christy at PETsMART; the cooks, Courtney S and the enthusiastic hostess with cool glasses at Tortora’s; Heavy Seas Loose Cannon beer; Mapco.
Gracias
Thanks to Stevester, Gregory, Damen, Megan and the pretty hostess at Blue Plate Cafe; Marsha for hosting a Stampin’ Up party with my wife; Wagon Wheel Liquors of Owens Cross Roads, Alabama; road construction crews working in bad weather; tea growers; coffee mug makers; TV remote control designers.
Contemporary Tempo
We have two ways to handle the situation but who’s counting?
Most importantly, you can choose to make your future or react to the past.
I choose the former.
Just like, right now, Monkeynaut chooses to ferment in my belly and tickle my tummy…
…making my ears ring hours after listening to the bells, chorus, Celtic band, organ and orchestra at an annual musical spectacle of a local worship centre called the Living Christmas Tree at First Baptist Church.
I could write a few hundred character sketches based on the people I show at tonight’s show but I won’t. I’m enjoying too much the aftereffects, the buzz, of a few gospel tunes, Celtic airs and choral harmonies…
Christmas music and beer — some traditions are just too difficult to overcome.
That’s why I long ago taught myself not to condemn others for their lifestyles.
Who’m I to judge what’s going through your thoughts as you struggle to live your life the best way you know how?
Old-fashioned or newfangled, we are who we are and mostly who we want to be.
I have some mischievous stories in my thoughts that I better not write while I’ve had a few to drink.
I know better than to regret later being the real me behind the layers of masks that masquerade for this show we call a universe within a blog.
Well, all right, if you insist…what’s one teensy, tiny story amongst friends, right?
Let’s listen in to the characters who are already in your future but you don’t know it yet…
Names worth mentioning
Thanks to Rick, Leslie, Bruce, Rich and the staff at Straight To Ale for serving the superb Unobtainium brew this evening; Nanci at Rite-Aid; Steve and Chris at Logan’s Steakhouse; Catherine, Debra, Joe and Harold at KCDC; psychiatric supporters of the families affected by the school shooting in Connecticut; those who face death and destruction every day in the name of freedom.
A special shout-out to Alex and Drew of .45 Surprise and the megaburger by the mobile gourmets No Brakes Bistro.
Gratitude, Attitude
Thanks to the following:
Jenn and Joe at KCDC; Shericka at Krispy Kreme; April, Hunter and Jonathan at Publix; Devante at Walmart; is that all I can remember right now? Wow, getting old has its privileges, including excusing one’s self for poor memory recall trick practice.
