WGN deja vu

I am only part way through The Black Dahlia; I started watching it late last evening, and I guess it is stretching it to call it evening – it was after 10 pm. The first part went along okay; I was alert . . . but watching the movie through blurred vision since I had applied facial cream a little too close to my eyes.

Then I noticed that there were times when I closed my eyes to let the tears wash them that I apparently didn’t hear what was happening in the movie. Before I would just follow the dialogue as a let my eyes water, but after a while I noticed that no one seemed to talk while I was resting my eyes. After a while, I thought, “Wait a minute here. Am I dozing?” After this happened several times and I found myself wondering about gaps in the storyline, I decided to admit the obvious and just stopped the DVD. Stopped – not paused.

I suppose I will have to look at scene selections and figure out where I should resume watching. It’s an easy method; I pick the earliest scene that elicits a “what the heck; I don’t remember this” moment from me and go from there.

It’s kind of bittersweet. When I used to stay up watching WGN late shows when we lived in Palatine, I would fall asleep because of the notoriously long commercial breaks. I would think that I would have no problem if  they just kept telling the story and didn’t take interruptions long enough to take a shower and cook a cheese sandwich. Well, now the DVD’s keep right on going, but my inner bunny needs some battery work. Think a connection is a little loose?

One thought on “WGN deja vu”

  1. My nephew would agree with you on the sheepdog. He is a sherpherd, keeps about 2,000 goats in line as they graze their way across the west, clearing the land of weeds etc. (He is whistlepig on Xanga and has pictures of his adventures). He says the dog has the best job.

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