Category Archives: General

Gameday

Oklahoma State drubbed Kansas and won a slice of the Big 12 crown on Saturday. Wonderful! Go Pokes!

I don’t know any other Harry Potter fans to go with me, but I’d really like to go see the new movie of the first half of the last book. Not so sure I want to fight the first weekend crowd of little kids all by myself to do that, though. I’m conflicted.

I’m really confused by Republican opposition to ratification of the START Treaty since it’s a continuation of Reagan-era policies of “trust, but verify” and is backed by a line of Republican former secretaries of state. Then, I haven’t understood Republicans for some years now.

Spent a fairly quiet week and my main occupation was working on an AA related project as part of a month-long commitment I made. Maybe the biggest personal news for me is that I nicked myself shaving and have a little beard because I got mad about the hard parts of my face to shave and just stopped shaving there. It’s so white that you can hardly tell I’ve got one unless you look close up and I’ve been growing it for a week now. I wouldn’t exactly call it “becoming” but, then, it’s still becoming.

The way both Sinatra and I have jacked up appetites and are putting on weight, I’m expecting a cold winter right around the corner.

This full moon has me a little bit crazy, so if you see me, handle with care ’cause I might ‘splode.

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more movie madness

Just a quick note: did myself a favor to start this cold and rainy week on Sunday night and watched Anthony Quinn in Zorba the Greek and Ferris Beuller’s Day Off. It’s made the week a lot easier to take. A special note to my friend, Oz: “The whole catastrophe!” (It’s his favorite line.) Personally for me, it’s “sometimes you have to take off your belt and go looking for trouble,” but your mileage may vary, as MCARP reminds us. Also read a little about the Renaissance writer, Montaigne, who similarly said rather famously, “Que sais-je?” (What do I know?). Well, mid-week, try to weather the weather, my friends.
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“The Grifters” followed, btw, and it’s a bit more grim I’d say.

An obsession of the mind …

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Get off my lawn!

This week, my heart goes out to Miami, FL. My deep and sincere wishes for a speedy recovery speeds with prayers eastward. Meanwhile, my mind delights in hearing that a cougar is born in Arizona. What wonderful news! My thoughts go westward, ho.
I went for dinner Friday with Soartstar and ran into all my old buds: Oz, Debster, The Gary, John X, Bob O and Bookemdano. I really like those people and it was great to see the whole crew. They were headed to Red Dot at IAO and I’d given much to be able to go with them, but by the time we caught up with each other at Lido, I was redlined and headed home to get horizontal. Getting off opiates has been very physically challenging for me — the three worst days of this whole ordeal. Don’t ever take opiates for a long time, kids. Don’t try this at home. On top of withdrawals, my pain levels are back up in the stratosphere. I’ll survive, one prayer at a time.

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Both my Oklahoma teams won this Saturday and nothing is more satisfying than OSU drubbing the Longhorns to take the undisputed lead in the Big 12 South. Go Pokes! (for a couple more weeks, anyway)

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I watched a couple of really good movies this week. Last Tango in Paris and Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid for two. Both hang together and hold up really well, even after all these years. I tried one more time to tolerate Tom Cruise as the vampire Lestat in Interview with the Vampire, but failed again.

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Rep. Eric Cantor, R-batshit crazy, crossed a line this week to the detriment of the entire nation, in my opinion. Americans have respected the shoreline barrier to partisan bickering for two centuries — we don’t let our differences cross our borders and the president is the nation’s ONLY spokesman in matters of foreign policy. Unfortunately, Rep. Cantor not only held a private meeting with the PM of Israel, not only PROMISED to oppose our president’s policies, but BRAGGED about it to the press. Just as I believe the Republican Party support for torture is treasonous, I believe this behavior is treasonous. Feel free to disagree, but this seems unacceptable to me, wrong on many levels. I believe this behavior by Rep. Cantor is unprecedented in American politics and history. Consider that our Secretary of State and other diplomats were, at the time, in the field working towards a Palestinian accord and that Rep. Cantor interfered directly. I’m nonplussed. I guess I could understand if it had been some wild Tea Party back bencher, but Cantor is House Republican Party #2 behind almost-Speaker John Boehner. It’s an outrage!

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I bought one of those outdoor “firepits”. Big circle of metal with legs and a domed screen on top, you know what I mean? Well, I smell — perhaps stink is the better word — of wood smoke from head to toe. A foolish and expensive indulgence for a man who isn’t working and has no income, but what the hell. I’m home all the time and have to do something.

Get off my lawn

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November 7, 2010

Dear young mom,
You haven’t been able to fit into that short skirt for a year and a half and you’re really happy to be able to go to church today with your husband and infant. Afterward, for a little relaxation and maybe to see if the current Vanity Fair is in, you go to Barnes and Noble in the SUV you insisted on having because it made you feel secure. As you are leaving, you are putting your little one into the super-duper baby carrier in the back seat because you are a good mommy, but he/she is a little fussy and it takes a few minutes.

About 30 of us in the coffee shop are staring at your white, lace-clad ass. Considering your recent pregnancy, it’s pretty good. Considering how long it takes you to get the kid strapped in, we get a long look. You may wish to reconsider the short skirts you wore when you and your husband had no children and you were clubbing with your sorority sisters.

Pro Tip for husbands: if your wife is wearing a skirt that’s mid thigh to mid knee — and don’t tell me you didn’t notice — help put the baby in the car seat, even if it’s her turn.

Pro Tip for husbands II: If you’re in Barnes and Nobles with your spouse and you see a young wife’s white lace clad ass, your significant other will notice if your mouth remains open after about the count of 10. Don’t look over to see if you’re busted, because you are. If you are still spilling coffee on the table after the count of 20, what will happen when you get home is gonna leave a mark.

I thought there was gonna be a testosterone riot with shots fired. Guys lined up on the sidewalk to stare. Women stared. The windows filled with gawkers rubbernecking. And, hell yes I stared, too.

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November 6, 2010 updated

I know. You expect me to write some long screed about the elections last Tuesday.
Here’s what I’ve got to say:
The most important thing that happened, the real and long term downside of Tuesday’s elections for Democrats, was not in the headlines. Flipping the U.S. House of Representatives was a cake baked about February or March ’09 and even though it was worse than I expected, it wasn’t completely unexpected. The thing that will leave a mark is a story that was back by the classifieds and not at all on the front page. Republicans “flipped” about 680 state legislative seats and that’s what’s gonna be the real bad news for people who think like me. The next state legislature in all the states will do redistricting off the 2010 census. And, states in the Midwest will lose congressmen and states in the south will gain. We saw in Texas a couple of years ago when Tom Delay was still “The Hammer” that this is a very hardball political process. Democratic voters will be disenfranchised by the gerrymandering that necessarily goes with redistricting. The fact that the Republicans elected to all those legislative seats are as nutball as Christine O’Donnell and/or Sharron Angle (both of whom were defeated) really doesn’t amount to much. The fact that they are partisan to the core will matter and for the next decade, it will be that much more difficult for a Democrat, even a conservative one, to get elected to Congress. That’s the election result that will really leave a mark because it has the greatest long-term effect.

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Get off my lawn!

One of the things I like about being a bachelor is that I like to watch movies, I get on “jags” and I don’t have to explain or share or compromise or worry about keeping someone up late with the loud television. Yes, I’m that petty and selfish. So, this week’s theme (and thus the bachelor reference) was romantic comedies. His Girl Friday with Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell (a remake of Ben Hecht’s “Front Page”), crackles with slapstick laughs; Woody Allen gets Oscars deservedly for Annie Hall; who can resist Bull Durham?; Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan in Sleepless in Seattle; Billy Chrystal and Meg Ryan in When Harry Met Sally; and, Cinderella meets Henry Higgins in Pretty Woman with Richard Gere and Julia Roberts. Wonderful films, really wonderful, in my opinion. My personal favorite of them is When Harry Met Sally because I love Nora Ephron’s script, which I think is just as funny as His Girl Friday but much more sophisticated and true to the bone, because I like that Billy Chrystal is a not-that-good-looking nebbish who gets the gorgeous goyisha Meg Ryan, and because I think it was a solidly directed Rob Reiner film with some really iconic scenes (who can forget Reiner’s mother observing Meg’s fake orgasm and the line: “I’ll have what she’s having”?). If you pick one of the others, you won’t get an argument from me; Annie Hall, for example, is a perfect little gem of a movie and maybe one of the best movies of all time in any genre, IMHO.

This week, the one that affected me the most was Sleepless in Seattle. The reason for that is explicit in the movie’s (Norah and Delia Ephron) script; Rosie O’Donnell has a line where she tells Meg Ryan: “You don’t want to be in love. You want to be in love in the movies.” In fact, the whole film is about how films affect our notions of love. The plot is that Meg Ryan tries to recreate the Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr film “An Affair to Remember” and its climactic and iconic scene where the two lovers are to meet on top of the Empire State Building. Over and over the film talks about how two people meet and it’s “magic”. People meet their “soulmate” and “you just know”. WE WANT THAT! At least, I do. I want to think I’m so special and perfect that I’ll have the perfect love in which neither of us ever have a zit or cellulite and there’s enough money and time to do nothing but wonderful things together and it’ll always be just like the night when we got engaged. And I always resent it when it’s not that way. Often, I’ve blamed perfectly lovely women who cared about me greatly because I wasn’t in that movie I have in the back of my mind. For once, the movie got into my head and I saw myself.

Of course, just to increase the silliness that goes on in my head, I also want to be the hero who has iconic things to say and takes direct physical action to save the damsel in distress and yadda yadda yadda, just like in the movies.

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P.S. Between the OSU/Baylor blowout and tonight’s OU/TxA&M game I saw something that’s really something. I saw the absolutely, positively worst music gig in all of America. The nadir of all music gigs of all time. Some old guy with artificially blackened hair and a tonsure bald spot playing solo keyboards at Buy 4 Less discount grocery on Northwest Highway in Oklahoma City, OK, on a Saturday afternoon game day. Wow. Maybe better than no gig at all, but wow. I’m guessing the tips don’t cover minimum wage for the set up time. I wish I’d taken a picture.

October 30, 2010 updated

There was a weird moment for me this week when I walked out onto my front driveway and noticed the block was like a scene from the 1959 movie “On the Beach”. There was absolutely no one around. No mowers, hedge trimmers or leaf blowers; the roofers had all done their jobs and the gutter hangers had also moved on. The grown ups were at work and the children were at school. A couple of dozen homes, tens of thousands of square feet of residential housing filled with flat screens and Posturpedic mattresses and there likely wasn’t more than half a dozen live souls on the block, and all of us elderly and invalid and rarely out of the house. I hate it when my sense of alienation and isolation turns out to be true and not just some bullshit I’m telling myself. I went inside, got dressed and went to Beverly’s for a bite to eat, some coffee and some light banter with not-so-good-looking waitresses, but I didn’t care because they were at least breathing. Gives me the shivers just thinking about it.

* * *

I’ve resigned myself to the notion that the GOP will register tremendous numbers of victories next week. All the pollsters who are worth the name have come to a consensus that Republicans will gain about 50-55 seats in the House of Representatives, far more than the 39 they need to get a majority. The GOP is not likely to get a majority in the Senate, but are likely to gain 6-8 new seats.
this should be good

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The Republicans don’t seem to be able to do much wrong when about-to-be Speaker John Boehner feels free to campaign for the nutball who dresses in Nazi SS uniforms. My consolation is this: I look forward to watching the meltdowns. Being in Congress isn’t quite as easy as it sounds. There’s constituents who need help with the bureaucracy. You’ve got to raise about $100,000 a day in campaign money. You are expected to attend subcommittee hearings and vote based on expertise you gain in the area. As a former journalist I can tell you absolutely that there are very few things more boring than fundraising dinners and subcommittee hearings. Not just that, but also winning an argument in Congress isn’t the same as blustering and waving a copy of the Constitution and out-yelling someone at a dinner table. The congressman you’re talking to is likely to have their own copy of the Constitution and may even believe that God is on his side, just like you. Incumbents, unlike candidates, are likely to find themselves being on camera most all the time and you can’t just burst into screaming meltdown profanity without seeing yourself on the evening news. Having seen government budgets, let me assure you that there are no line items that say “waste” or “mismanagement”. Keeping that campaign promise to sweep away such things just isn’t the magic wave a wand easy thing to do one might think. You might campaign on eliminating the Department of Education, but someone in Congress is likely to remind you that you’d be voting to cut Pell Grants and Student Loans and Aid to Special Education and that such cuts just maybe won’t be quite as popular back home as they were just a few days ago. Anyway, if I can get through Tuesday without cutting someone’s wrists, it ought to be interesting to watch next year.

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I watched the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear. I know it made the wingers scream to have the former Cat Stevens there, but there was something wonderfully nostalgic about hearing him singing “Peace Train” on the Mall and the Ozzie Osborne contrapuntal made me laugh. I haven’t had a chance to read the spin, but I thought Stewart and Colbert took down the “media” and its pundits fairly effectively.

* * *

Congratulations to OSU, OU beat Colorado and can you believe Texas lost to BAYLOR?

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Get off my lawn!

October 23, 2010 updated

This week’s Republican wingnuttery is provided by a congressional candidate in Texas who says the Republicans must win because the alternative is Armed Insurrection. I can’t make this stuff up. He’s not the first, mind you. Sharron Angle in Nevada rather famously (infamously?) discussed “2d Amendment remedies” in the absence of government that pleases the extreme right wing. See, if angry white southern males are in control, it’s democracy; if blacks, Hispanics, Asians, women and/or poor people win, then it’s voter fraud/Socialist/Communist/Progressive/New Black Panther Party/ACORN tyranny. So, that’s the reason why we have to have fully automatic AR-15 assault rifles. Otherwise, how can we kill all you Libtards? You have the freedom to vote for extreme right Republicans but otherwise it’s democracy at the point of a gun. Very constitutional, don’t you know.

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I hate it that I have another death to report in my life. This time, it’s Tom Alder who shot himself last weekend. This one is pretty close to the bone. He was a lawyer who left the law, a recovering alcoholic and obviously a fellow sufferer of depression. It wasn’t all that surprising in the sense that he’d tried drinking antifreeze a couple of times the past two years. He leaves a daughter and grandchild and I know for a fact that he adored them both.

So, I’ve been thinking about heaven. I have this notion of all my buddies going over on a Wednesday to DNA Oz’s double wide on the outskirts of town for a little get-together. I think it has to be Wednesday because I am not all that sure about the whole Friday vs. Sunday shabbat thing. Anyway, we all take a break from choir practice and get together and then what? There aren’t any mysteries. There aren’t any problems. No obstacles to overcome. What do you talk about? Did you get an A ticket so you could get into meet Jesus and Buddha or do you have a D ticket and a Mozart live concert was the best you could do this time? Did you really tell St. Paul he was a misogynist old queer? Wow. Woulda liked to be there for that one. I’m not personally so sure how heavenly it will be if there are no adventures in heaven and how can there be adventures if there are no mysteries and your heel never strikes a rock? Heaven is worse than Falls Creek because there’s no sneaking behind the bushes and snogging some gurl from Dew-rant.

* * *

Oklahoma plays Missouri tonight and OSU plays Nebraska this afternoon. Should be a couple of good games, but I’m very jumpy about the state’s teams’ chances. OU isn’t at its best on the road and the Pokes have a dismal record against the Huskers. I’d like to see the state teams be undefeated going into the Bedlam game and I’ll be cheering on both of ‘em. Update: Big 12 South slagged; OU, OSU and TX lose.

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I’m treating Sinatra for fleas and that means keeping him inside. I hoped he wouldn’t get too bent out of shape since the weather hasn’t been that good, but he’s completely pissed. He did watch a little of the movie last night with me, but apparently he’s no fan of Harry Potter. He was far more interested in my Hideaway Big Country pizza.

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Speaking of the weather not being all that good, the rainy cold is making my right side feel like it’s on fire. It’s Ghouls Gone Wild parade of the 1000 Flaming Skeletons tonight, but I just don’t see me standing out in the cold for a couple of hours, as much fun as the parade and afterparties have been in the past.

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Get off my lawn!

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October 16, 2010

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Who's this guy?

Well, college football. Both Oklahoma teams won and the No. 1 ranked Ohio State lost as did the No. 5 ranked Nebraska so that OU, ranked No. 7, is likely to move up. Just like old times, the second team played almost all the fourth quarter in OU’s 52-0 shellacking of Iowa State. It’ll be all the talk around the watercooler on Monday, no doubt.

In politics, another Tea Party whack job is outed, this time in Florida where a guy with a legit chance to win a congressional race turns out to be a part of the Outlaws Motorcycle gang — and since the bikers are indicted for a RICO conspiracy of murder and drugs it’s correct to call them a gang. The politician uses them for “security” for his political events. In whacko polling news, it looks like a majority of voters polled by Gallup thinks it’s possible for the feds to cut the deficit, cut taxes and not cut Social Security or Medicare. Well, we can go to the moon, can’t we?

None of the rest of you are likely to have known Justice Marian Opala, who died last week, but I knew him and he was a little short guy from Poland and a legal genius. A skirt chaser, he was only about 5 feet tall and loved to drop Latin legal phrases into his opinions. He was in the Resistance and fought the Nazis as a child and then came to America. A very interesting guy.

Closer to home, photographer Tom Lee died at age 53. He was the guy who hauled a church from Nova Scotia to Paseo and turned it into a gallery and photo studio. He also made his home in a converted church in Norman, where he lived with his wife, Mary Katherine. She was a college classmate of mine and although there’s no relation, her maiden name was Long and we always joked that we were cousins. Tom was the quad everyone saw going around in a wheelchair around Paseo and was a longtime pres. of the artist group and arts fest. Big loss to the community in my opinion.

I’m not fond of the idea that guys I know younger than me are dying. I’m maudlin enough as it is.

I’m so close to being at the end of my law practice that I can taste it. I’ll be in court for my own bankruptcy this month, I think. If I owe you money, just tell me and I’ll add you to the list of folks who will get stiffed. It’ll help with your taxes, I’m told. Be glad when that’s done, too.

Looks like the start of 2011 will be a fresh start for me. I’ll be on Social Security disability, have my debts washed out by the bankruptcy and be done with the practice of law. Maybe I’ll be another divorced misogynist hanging around the coffee shop dispensing faux philosophy, but at least I won’t be the bitter drunk at the end of the bar. Since I’m starting to have more good days than bad days, I hope that maybe by early next year I’ll be pain free and off the Lortabs completely and I’d welcome that. This seems to me to be such a wonderful opportunity to shape a new life for myself. My aspiration is to do some volunteer work for AA and maybe also for cancer support groups. I don’t know what else, but I’m capable of just about anything. I’d still like to see Paris someday, but I may have to settle for something closer if I’m going to travel. Look for a blue 1994 Ford Ranger at an inconvenient time near you.

Get off my lawn, you whippersnappers!

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October 9, 2010

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Everything's coming up roses at my house

I spend my mornings these days out on my back patio and I’m often rewarded with the extended song of a mockingbird along with the cooler but sunny days. Recently, some pruning I did on the rose bush paid off with these buds, further enhancing the beauty in my back yard that greets me as I drink my morning coffee and watch Sinatra playing predator in the still tall and still green grass. Every morning, I count my blessings and try to express my gratitude for the abundance in my life.

Politics confuses and confounds me still. I read that the Republicans are somewhat likely to pick up more than 50 seats in the House of Representatives and anywhere upwards of six U.S. Senate seats. Meanwhile, their candidates just get more whacky. Today’s news is that a GOP candidate in Ohio has an unusual hobby: he likes to dress up as a Nazi and is interested in the military history of a WWII Nazi unit that was singled out for the war crime of murdering 700 Ukrainian Jews while in Russia. His especial hero in this unit? Why, a medic by the name of Josef Mengele, of course. Yes, THAT Dr. Mengele, the Dr. Death of the camps who fled to Argentina. In Arizona, state Republican legislative leaders are endorsing Sen. Harry Reid over Sharron Angle because she was an “ineffective” legislator. Also, she went “all in” on the whole “commies are polluting our precious bodily fluids with flouride in our water” John Birch conspiracy theory. Don’t forget that Christine O’Donnell is not a witch and Rand Paul doesn’t really propose a $2,000 Medicare deductible, the videotapes nonwithstanding. Since I gave up on understanding politics this year, it’s really become a lot more entertaining.

Plazafest and MestaFesta this weekend on top of football game days. What a great time of the year!

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October 1, 2010

I do a lot of whining on this blog. I do it to get it off my chest and so I don’t have to do it face to face with my friends and associates. But, my whole world isn’t filled with lament and craptacular events. Sometimes, I have good days and good things happen and all is well with my world.

Yesterday was one of those days. I pampered the hell out of myself Thursday. I spent money I didn’t really have to do things that I’d put off for too long.

Number one on this list was getting a haircut.

I’d worn my hair somewhat long before, but when I started dating the lovely Juliet, my hair grew out at her insistence. By the way, the lovely Juliet has moved to the Seattle/Olympia, Washington, area to pursue a college degree in photography. We’ll miss her. Juliet was a good influence in my life in many ways and I’ll always be grateful for the fact that because of her I can list “professional male model” on my resume. She opened a door for a lot of fun in my life.

So my hair stayed pretty long even after Juliet moved on to greener pastures and younger men and when I became ill this year, it was longer than usual because I was about 6 weeks out from a haircut and in need of another when I went into the hospital. One thing and another, a surgery here and there and by yesterday, I’d not had my hair cut for more than six months. It was very long. Here’s a “before” picture:

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look at those curls!


It took a long time for that hair to dry when I washed it and it generally was in my face, tickling my ears and looking like crap almost all the time. I posted before that I’d seen some “crazy man” movies and The Aviator made me feel that I was starting to look (and act) like Howard Hughes. I haven’t felt much like getting out over the past few months and one just get used to how you look when you’re mostly alone and there’s no one to tell you how bad your hair is. So, I tried to make an appointment with my long-time stylist, DariaDoesMyHair, but she’s gone legit and taken a real job. I hate change, but what’s a guy to do.

So, I’m on Twitter and one of my Tweeps led me to follow @Trichology salon and it’s up on North May just north of the Barnes and Nobles on Memorial and reading the Tweets, it seemed like a fun place and you could book an appointment online and I gave ‘em a shot. After some initial confusion about just what day and when my appointment was to be, I went in yesterday at 4 p.m. to have my hair attended by one of their stars, a woman named Ashley Buie. She’s a tall drink of water, by the way. In all events, after about 3/4ths of an hour, here’s how I look:

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Who's this guy?


Wow. What a difference a day makes, huh? I don’t think I’ve had my hair this short in a coon’s age. So far, I like it, but I haven’t had to struggle with it yet, other than the ordinary itches guys have along their collar line after a cut. Sure did lower my ears, though. Anyway, be prepared for a shock if you see me this weekend because I don’t look like the same guy at all.

The haircut wasn’t my only pampering. I also got my fingernails did. I wouldn’t ordinarily mention cutting my fingernails, but I had to get my best watch a new battery and went to B.C. Clark’s at Penn Square Mall to get that errand done. It was going to take a few minutes because I was back in line, so I decided to go for a manicure there at the mall. First thing off the bat, I see BookEmDano out for his mall walk. Haven’t seen Danny for awhile and he’s lost some weight and we were glad to catch up a little. Neither one of us has won the lottery yet. So, I went on for my manicure at this place next to Dillard’s on the upper floor. Best darn manicure I’ve ever had. Totally worth it. Wax and hand massage with fragrant oils and buffed out and relaxing music. I’ve been to a bunch of the little shops around my house — there are about four of them within walking distance of my house — and this one was the same price and MUCH better treatment and ambiance than I’d received in my past experiences. I will go back. They earned a loyal customer. Thanks, Tami!

I topped off my day with dinner out. Went for a Gyros platter at Zorba’s around the corner from the house. I don’t much like eating alone, but it’s my lot in life nowadays and I ate my tabouli and pita bread and yogurt dressing happily since it had never been frozen or microwaved, which would have been my fate otherwise.

On my way home, I had to drop by Walgreen’s to get some shaving razors and they had the widescreen DVD of The Watchmen, the graphic novel filmed and out last year as I recall. It was just $4, so I took a flyer so I’d have something new to watch once I got home and I’d enjoyed the movie for what it is when I went to see it in first run.

When I got home, some Swiss gnome had broken into my home and like the tooth fairy left some cash. In fact, left just about the right amount of cash to cover my day of pampering.

I postponed my movie experience to watch a little of the black shirted Okla. State Cowboys game. A nail-biting finish FTW!

All of this under clear skies and with cool to warm moderate temperatures that could make a guy love Fall best of all.

See, a whole post without a single whine. It was a great day, I’m grateful for it and I enjoyed every minute.

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