Cats Puke on Humans Too

My mother requested I write a blog today.  She is the only person, other than my wife, who can request a blog and receive it.  (That’s not completely accurate.)

With my wife on vacation, and me being the most boring bachelor of the next millennium, mom called wondering how I was doing.  I said I was doing fine.  Fine is a natural synonym for “miserable”, “terrible”, “dreadful” or “dead”.  I was feeling all but the latter.  It was quite clear, when answering her phone call, I wasn’t dead.  That made her laugh. It is my genuine belief she wishes me to be alive.

She knew I was missing my wife and asked about our family.

Our family consists of two large dogs and an inherited cat I was hoping not to love when she strolled into our house.  Well, for some odd reason, now I love her.

After our cat was catting around outside last night, I was pacing around as if one of my children may be dead or working at an ice plant or teaching middle school for the rest of his or her life.  It was that stressful.  Eventually, she showed up, and since I am currently a bachelor, I attempted to give her the ninth degree without someone shaking me and telling me, “Ben, cats don’t speak your language!”

All being written, she was safe, and because of the sweltering weather conditions, we all slept on the downstair’s couch.  Lucy, our cat, hunkered in on my lap.  It was very cute until she puked on my chest.  Instead of getting angry, I thought of my mother who dealt with thirteen children doing the same thing for sixty years.  Mom was probably just happy when we made it home.  And, we all did.  Amen.

 

Shrimp and Kiss These Grits

When traveling anywhere, I examine the menus prior to ordering anything.   More importantly, I also recognize hospitality.  That being written, if I choose one item on any menu and receive proper hospitality, everyone receives a tip.

Shrimp & GritsIf you ever go to Kentucky, order the Shrimp and Grits from “Proof on Main” in Louisville.  You won’t regret the tip, the grits, nor the hospitality.

Tip Friendly.

 

Our Kentucky Derby

There is only one race for me before landing in Kentucky……and it was on an airplane.  In my former life, I was a part time gambler and full time loser.  Now, I just play one on a flight with my wife.

Seldomly betting much these days, and since the two of us weren’t planning to watch the ponies at a proper race track in Kentucky, we decided it would be fun to choose the names and numbers of the horses if we landed at Churchill Downs.   I will provide a fictional racing form and the odds.  You may choose your own horse….(or adventure).

1) HGH:   10/1 (this is her first race)

2) Prime Rib: 50/1  (a little heavy)

3) Speak Easy:  11/1 (six feet under ground)

4) Thousand Island:  8/1 (a good mudder, but his mother’s name was “Crouton”)

5) Perthes Disease: 100/1 (two years ago was his last win)

6) Ben’s Crush: 1973/1 (bet on this long shot)

7) Tooth Decay 16/1 (don’t count on this stallion……his mother was “Root Canal”)

8) Salad Night (off line….a clear favorite because it’s sire’s name was “Early Bird Special”)

9) Extra Innings: 9 and 1/2 to 1  (it’s a sleeper)

10) Craig’s List 49/1 (look at it before you bet on it)

As a young boy, when watching the Kentucky Derby, or venturing to our local track, “Playfair”, I would only bet according to the names of the horses.  The odds meant nothing to me.  As an older man, the odds still mean nothing to me.  The names remain the same.

Two minutes until post time:  Choose wisely.

 

 

Welcome to the Hit it Here Cabin (Journals from Lake Kokanee)

June, 18 2014

When you manage to get a hit in baseball, it actually feels like a home run, because it’s that difficult.  When you manage to properly use the key to your sister’s cabin, it feels as though you are committing a crime.  It’s that easy. (Actually, after not jiggling the key effectively, I made it easy by handing it over to my wife for a simple entrance.)

When my delusional sister provided a key allowing us access to her cabin and most precious of commodities, other than her husband and children of course, I felt as though the surreal became surreally cool.  The atmosphere is littered with the greatest of the five senses.  On the lake’s shore, I saw bald eagles swooping directly into my contact lenses.  Marveling at a father witnessing his son catch his first rainbow trout, I became increasingly hungry.  I touched the lake’s water and didn’t care if it was just above freezing before diving in it.  Smelling our dog’s waste, my nose crinkled with happiness when  stumbling upon it and gracefully disposing of it.  Hearing my wife beckoning for me to start the barbeque only means this spectacular day is rounding third base and heading home for the cuisine any person can provide from the lake or local grocery store.  At the “Hit it Here Cabin”, everything tastes great.

 

A Six Year Itch (The Scent of an Owl)

(Written with respect to the television show, “In Search Of”, narrated by Leonard Nimoy)

Some of us earthlings reach a certain time in our lives when we must be given the formidable task of searching for the chair which is most comfortable in the living and dying room.  Some wonder when the Early Bird Special price and time will drop, instead of rise, with inflation.  Some just wonder when.   Others search for an owl.  Now, that’s living.

Personally, I’ve given up the hope of finding a Sasquatch on T.V..  It’s not that I have little faith in seeing one on our color set.  Rather, it’s just that I have no faith whatsoever.  I believe that provides me the right to simply give up and search for something more fathomable, like a bigger t.v. set.  All I have to do is wait for the next tax refund to do so.

My sister, Anne, has asked not to be named in this simple story of exploration, perspiration, gallantry, mockery and photography.  She only wishes for me to send a truthful message to those doubting her for those six expensive, time consuming, and wet years of her life, searching for the elusive and alien like barred owl.

AnnesBarredOwl-1

Catch me if you can, B@#%h.

The barred owl is as intimidating as any winged and eerily taloned bird of prey.  Unlike the Sasquatch which is considered a “cryptid” (animals  believed to exist by those using narcotics, but never proven to exist in the sober world of science) the barred owl has been accepted by the scientific community, even if most of those scientists never actually observe them in the wild.  They are wildly difficult to spot, especially, like anything else, when one is specifically searching for it.  Armed with a kayak, paddle and a camera, my sister was determined to capture a picture of this shrewd marvel of aviation.

Kayaking, for my sister, began as exercise and continued to blossom, along with her well toned arms, into a blessing.  It was a blessing of outdoor beauty, a beauty some imagine only while watching the Discovery Channel, Jurassic Park, or Gilligan’s Island.  Waterfalls, sinister trees, hidden caverns, and birds……..yes…..those majestic birds.  Many of these birds she would witness on a daily basis, but there was one she heard too many times just before dawn and dusk.  The sound she heard became a dream for her and a nightmare for others.  Much to her husband’s dismay, she would hum the notes in her sleep.  Leaving her cabin each morning and evening in search of the barred owl, she was determined to find one sooner or much later.  The search was on.

Six years of building your muscles on a kayak, while failing to capture a picture of your bird of prey, can drive anyone insane.  For her, it became her Winged Whale.  My sister became a woman of prey.  It was enough to create skeptics amongst her Lake Cushman community.  She tried to ignore the naysayers when they’d whisper, “Poor Cao.  (Cao is her last name.) People have wasted their whole lives trying to find that bird only to spend their last remaining years in a nest eating mice and mimicking the notorious warning cries of the barred owl.”  Others were less discreet.  “Poor Cao, my talon!  She’s got Owl fever and she needs to get over it.  The whole lake is making fun of her.”  Each member of her family would look at her with concern.  Had this obsession gone too far?  Six long years of waking up at five in the morning to the hooting of this owl.  Six years of paddling away in her kayak while her family waved goodbye, wondering if she’d ever return.  Six years.

(Years in a bird’s nest):

Year one:  HoohooHOOaaw!  She hears it each morning, and most evenings, but no physical evidence.  Family and friends support her quest and commonly ask her if she has found it.  Encouraged by their interest, she explains how difficult it is to find one in the wild.  She looks forward to finding it by year two.

Year two: HoohooHOOaww!  No physical evidence.  Friends and family members continue to ask, enthusiastically, if she has finally captured a picture of her puffy headed woodland friend with large brown eyes.  Still, she only hears it.

Year three:  HoohooHOOaww!  The cry remains, but no physical evidence.  Because of its unique war cry, some people call it the “Al Pachino Owl” when it only can stammer a “Hooahh” stolen from the critically acclaimed movie, Scent of a Woman.  Some scientists interpret this cry by documenting the sound as reminding them of a question. “Who cooks for you?  Who cooks for you all?”  My sister takes this literally and responds while entering her kayak, “I cook for me!  I cook for them ALL!”   Her husband starts to believe she is crazy and begins taking longer shifts at his place of employment to avoid questions from neighbors.

Year four:  Still no physical evidence.  Quietly, she presses on.  People stop asking questions.  Even her own mother, living with her for support, begins to doubt her daughter’s quest.  But, as long as mother is fed and put to bed at the proper times,  mother simply resorts to prayer.  “Dear Heavenly Father, if you give a hoot, please allow my daughter to catch just one photo of this bird for crying out loud!  I’ll say AMEN when this happens.”

Year five:  Mom’s prayers have not been answered, yet her prayers are as consistent as her daughter’s daily voyage. The incessant hooting continues.  People in the community avoid the subject of wildlife all together when she is present.  This motivates her further.  She feels as if  she is catching a fifth and sixth wind beneath her paddles.

AnnesBarredOwl-2

Photo by Anne Cao

Year six:)  HOOHOOHOOAWW! HALLELUJAH!  Darkness was falling in late May 2014.  Her husband, fishing from a distance, calls for her to come back to the cabin.  She tells him to go to Hell.  (She didn’t, but wanted to.)  Although her heart was dancing, her body, every last bit but her hands, remained still.  Her dazzling blue eyes stared directly into those of the elusive barred owl.  One snap away from physical evidence.  One click away from completing her journey.  One iconic forefinger depression from proving her sanity to all those skeptics.  This was her purpose.  It was only a matter of when.

I’d like to tell you she tipped her kayak over while succumbing to shock and ruined her three thousand dollar camera in the process.  Her husband would like me to write that he saved her from the lake’s frigid waters while she shouted above his outstretched hands, “Look, he’s flying away,…….forget me…….get the camera!!!!”  But, I can’t.  She got her shot, and she took it.

When my sister gets an itch, she scratches it, even if it takes six years to relieve it.

Memorial Day Weekend Fallout (It’s Inevitable)

Rain and a three day weekend.  Those are the two inevitable forces we can’t avoid on Memorial Day Weekend.  We must embrace, accept, honor, respect, and remember these weekends……even if some turn out to be just plain silly.

The 2014 Memorial Day has passed, and I can truly say I will remember the rain outside and the soup I made inside.  Other than that, it was uneventful.  No doubt about it, this holiday is a melancholy one for many, but it is also a time to embrace the family members and friends you may only see one time a year on this weekend of remembrance. For me, every Memorial Day seemed to bring some form of peaceful happiness.  It also delivered an element of absurdity only a mother of thirteen can create.

Living in Spokane, Washington at the time, we were experiencing a terrible drought the week before one specific Memorial Day.  This was disconcerting, because we had grown accustom to that annual deluge keeping us indoors.  However, my brother, Tom, his son, Quinn, and I made an easy decision.  We decided, after an invitation from our sister, Anne, to travel five hours or so to the Mecca of rain, Seattle, Washington. We had visited Anne before, but having never driven there ourselves, we required directions.  My mother, choosing not to attend, provided my sister’s address.  Easy enough.  We get into the car with my brother, Tom, driving.   His son, Quinn, all of about four years old, would be the navigator, (so to speak) and I, just along for the ride.  My simple request was that we arrive safely at Anne and her husband, Minh’s house for a family rendezvous which included the best egg rolls west of Viet Nam.  Estimated time of travel: Depending on Quinn’s overactive bladder and Seattle traffic, four and a half to five hours.

Heading west on Interstate 90,  Quinn did a gallant job of keeping his Johnny in his jeans for the majority of the trip.  Only two rest stops were required, and one was a bluff.  After the first legitimate stop, he recognized even dilapidated rest areas maintained their vending machines.  Yes, his second reason for stopping was shrewd, but it would be his last.  We left him at the rest area.  (O.k., that’s not true at all)  Soon, we were over Snoqualmie Pass with no further delays, and we could almost hear the egg rolls cooking in Minh’s mid-day oil. Now, with the directions and address gripped firmly in his confident and sticky paws, we merely needed to let Quinn lead us to Anne and Minh’s.  (Readers may ask why a four year old is navigating the car instead of me, a twenty two year old.  That’s a legitimate question.  As the eldest, and the driver, Tom required someone other than him to navigate.  I was once lost in my own kitchen, and that was before we purchased a larger home.  Does that answer your question?)

After passing through the city limits, Quinn communicated, with a slight lisp, the directions precisely as written.  However, Tom and I both sensed something strange going on…….something was wrong.  Tom looked at me and asked if the area looked at all familiar.  He knew the thought had been crossing my mind when we entered the city of Redmond instead of Kent, Anne and Minh’s city of residence.

(as a disclaimer, I must admit only part of this next conversation properly took place. Although the subject, or meat and potatoes of the narrative is quite consistent, Quinn’s dialogue was the added gravy to an otherwise true story)

Me:  Where the hell are we?

Tom:  Quinn, where the hell are we?

Quinn:  (almost offended) Exactly where the directions say we are supposed to be!

Tom: (using the same tact and delicate diplomacy I’d grown accustom to over the years) See, Ben, you idiot!  My four year old son even knows where we are!

Me:  Tom, do you even know where we are?

Tom:  No.

Quinn:  Alright, knuckleheads, shut up and turn left here and follow the street to this address…..you two do know how to count, don’t you?

From years of playing cribbage, I had learned addition.  Therefore, I could provide some assistance.  Sure enough, we landed in the driveway with the proper numbers listed on its porch.  However, although many of the neighborhood’s houses were quite similar, something appeared odd as we stared at the house for a minute before Quinn piped up again.  “What are we waiting for?!” With squinted eyes and twisted upper lips, Tom and I looked at one another with abject puzzlement.  Without saying anything, upon Quinn’s orders, we exited the Ford Ranger and slowly walked to the door.  As if we were about to enter a haunted house, Tom looked at me and said, “Well?  Are you going to ring the doorbell or not?” Shrugging my shoulders, I stated with some confidence, “I don’t think this is the right house.”  But, I rang the doorbell anyway, and after five or so seconds, someone answered the door.  Yes, we did indeed find my sister’s house.  However, (and a big freaking however) it was the wrong house with the wrong sister.  Our dear old mother, after lovingly giving birth to six girls and seven boys, steered us to the wrong daughter’s home.  This was Patricia’s house.

Patricia:  Ben, Tom! What the heck are you doing here?

Tom:  Happy Memorial Day?

With a laugh, we cleared it up.  Fortunately, Patricia and Anne only lived about a half hour apart.  And, luckily for us, mom didn’t send us to see Teresa who was living in Spain or Dorothy who was living in California.  Maggie was in Florida, and Mary was living in a motorhome down by some river.   So, it definitely could have been worse.

When we finally arrived at Anne’s, she was merely shaking her head and laughing.  (Notice, I didn’t say in disbelief.  Stuff like this happens to our family all the time.  It’s just usually not mom’s fault.)  Before we could properly explain our Laurel and Hardy routine, we wished to get out of the inevitable rain, and stuff our mouths with a few hundred of Minh’s Memorial Day Weekend Egg Rolls, which were well worth the chaos.

Silencio!!!

Along with the history and piety of Rome, hypocrisy runs amuck with fervent vigor.  When entering a place of worship where cameras and mouths should remain quiet, the peaceful atmospheres are tainted by men in suits screaming, “shut up!”

Personally, I don’t carry a camera, and within the United States of Catholic America, I was never once told to be quiet when entering a place of worship.  Somehow, it was merely implied by a honed glance from a parental figure, or receiving the Holy Slap from one of your siblings.

When entering the Sistine Chapel, the men in suits, or armed guards, were allowed only one weapon:  A microphone.  The microphone kept you in line like a surly whip wishing it was on vacation.  My wife and I kept our respectful mouths and cameras to ourselves, but the other members of our unchosen flock did not acknowledge the signs prior to entrance.  As though written with a quiet smile, the signs read,  “Please, refrain from talking.  Thank you”.    Those oblivious to the signs clicked and talked away like they were at a Nascar track.  It was at these moments when a medium, dressed in a tie and sporting a loud speaker, would scream at the top of his Holy Lungs, as though he were God or Michelangelo, “SILENCIO!”

With no chance of resurrection, it scared us half to death.  After standing in line for two hours to enter the Chapel, it took only five minutes before were were silently running for the exits.

Next stop:  Gelato Land……our own camera and mouth friendly place of worship.

Amen

Mi Espeedo (My Speedo)

My wife and I are in Italy.  Other than sitting down to dine, or walking hand in hand for miles absorbing the cuisine and menu sightseeing, we really haven’t acknowledged one another.

Originally planning to update my daily Italian food blog, I have bumped into a few obstacles on this trip to Rome and other neighboring cities.  Gluttony, Sloth, Extreme Gluttony, Sloth, Premier Gluttony, Sloth and Epic Gluttony.  Behold, my seven Italian traveling sins.

After squeezing in a few extra morsels of anything that ends with a vowel movement, we additionally manage to crawl to the local Roman Colosseum, and Pantheon for some historical sightseeing.  They all make you think of your next meal, for it could be your last.  (Even though my wife is tagging along, since we are too busy to talk while eating and sleeping, she is merely a white Alfredo shadow sauce of myself.)

At this point of our journey, I can only explain my culinary exploits by means of a Speedo.  The Speedo salesmen around these parts are not profiting from the likes of me.  Shares in the Speedo market have plummeted twenty percent since my arrival.  Each time my wife asks me to finish her meal, that’s one more Speedo I won’t purchase simply since they don’t carry a “control top” variety.

Chow

 

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