Category Archives: Just Me – AmeliaJake

A beautiful day

Yesterday was sunny and, oh, maybe 70 degrees. It was the kind of day that does good things to the chemicals in  your brain. I spent it on lawn mowers . . . which, to my mind, was good. All alone out there in the day with the time to think long thoughts. And periods of not thinking.

Of course, my farmer’s tan is getting more pronounced – but then I don’t plan on being in a bikini anytime soon.

Wrath

Der Bingle drove up last night from the Ohio Redoubt and at a rest stop talked with Quentin thanks to Sprint . . . and they spoke about, according to Quentin, “The Wrath of Mom”.  I guess, when I spoke with him the night before,  I had made an impression on my son by launching into a litany of  grousing remarks about some circumstances – see, I am being circumspect here, but only for that one instance.

Now, I again am open and specific: I talked about becoming a serial killer and I quoted indignant remarks made to other people as I talked with him. It was sort of a a verbal St. Valentine’s Massacre redux. Maybe like an audiobook with the words read with passion; I imagine he was glad we were not video-chatting and so I could not re-enact my arm waving,  scowling faces and authentic AmeliaJake  putting on the Hex curses.

That conversation was Thursday night and last night, after he had warned his dad, we talked again and the conversation wound its way to whether or not my attorney should put me on the stand. At first, Quentin was of the opinion that he should not, believing I would erupt like Jack Nicholson in “A Few Good Men” and that would be disastrous. On the other hand, Q then thought that might not be bad and my attorney could use my crazy time on the stand to bolster an insanity plea. But then I would be Jack Nicholson in “One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest.”

So we don’t know.

I sense I should end this post now. Rose certainly has her work cut out for her.

 

A bumming

Yesterday, after mowing the lawn early to avoid the 90+ degree heat and stomping trash for pick-up day, I entered a period of being bummed.  It happens.

This morning it is raining and the high is supposed to be 79. I don’t think it stormed last night, but then I sleep through storms. Normally, I would make a jokelet about needing GPS the morning after a tornado, but given this year’s season, I’ll pass. (Although, I think I just stuck it in that last sentence.  My secondary consciousness is incorrigible.)

I suppose I should continue on my cleaning binge  . . . my enthusiasm has waned, however, and I am whining. I need super hero cleaning powers – the point and ZAP technique. I couldn’t be trusted with them, of course: I’d ZAP everything and everyone. ZAP!  ZAP! ZAP! ZAP! ZAP! ZAP! ZAP!

Say this is lifting my spirits. Oh, but it’s only pretend. Now that’s a bummer.

 

For all those “Uncle Jack’s”

16 minutes. 51 seconds.  A lot of people sitting in front of computers today will kind of go “Awwww, almost 17 minutes; I don’t have time for 17 minutes of old man time.”

16 minutes and 51 seconds watching an old B-17 navigator remember. And if 16 minutes and 51 seconds is a long time in techno-today with things waiting to be checked with a finger click, then certainly the early 1940’s were a really long time ago, right?

Well, I have a link to a short film – 16 minutes and 51 seconds – made by Sleeping Dog Productions for The Disabled American Veterans. So many men fought in WWII – almost all of us have a link to one of those now old men . . . or to maybe some man who didn’t come home to get old.

Gary Sinise’s Uncle Jack was one of them and because of the former’s connection with the DAV, he was able to give his uncle a chance to share his thoughts and memories and blend them with the present in a ride in a restored B-17.

It is 16 minutes and 51 seconds . . . I suppose that could seem like a long time when you’re sitting in a bomber crippled over Germany that is losing gas and trying to make it back to England on a couple of engines. I wonder how many segments of 16 minutes and 51 seconds there were in that trip? How many in all the other missions he flew?

We all need to take that quarter of an hour – for all the fliers, soldiers and sailors from a long time ago and . . . and all the time since and to come.

Here’s the LINK.

Rooster limping

A week ago when I was on the rider mower, I looked over and saw a rooster; I saw him while I was in my yard and he was too. It’s not as if I looked over the fence or over the hedge or over the road; I just glanced over about six feet from my mower seat and THERE HE WAS.

It was kind of surprising but, hey, once a big pig wandered over from a close farm and my mother had to hop right back into the car she had just gotten out of. I figured someone would round up the rooster guy sooner or later.

He was there today, just hanging around the yard close to the house. When I took an unexpected turn (as far as he was concerned) with the mower, he hopped quickly away with one of his  little chicken feet pulled up  under him. When he slowed down, he put both feet down and limped on slowly.

I just realized that was when I forgot about him. I don’t know if he was hovering in the background of my awareness or not after that. I may have started to take him for granted. Now, what kind of situation is that? Oh, yeah, there’s a rooster in my yard. How’s your rooster? If he is there the next time, I imagine he will become “the rooster”  – one step away from having a name.

I’ll bet Martha Stewart is jealous. Probably not. And come to think of it, she was a cooped up jailbird herself. Auuuugggghhh, that was so petty and mean. But, heck, I never liked her anyway. Well, I have to go chop my foldover into a semblance of a budding rose and put in on parsley.

 

Lawyers knew client was innocent

I was thinking this morning before I got up about how big news stories have their day and then, well, it’s on to something else. Sort of like the Mississippi flooding – aren’t communities still standing in water? All of a sudden my mind flipped back three years to the story about two attorneys who knew FOR 26 YEARS that their client was INNOCENT, yet let him stay in JAIL. (Bob Simon’s CBS report is HERE.)

In case my summary wasn’t clear, here’s the first paragraph:

This is a story about an innocent man who languished in prison for 26 years while two attorneys who knew he was innocent stayed silent. As correspondent Bob Simon reported earlier this year, they did so because they felt they had no choice.

Attorneys Dale Coventry and Jamie Kunz knew Logan . . .  innocent.

I don’t think this is a story that should be forgotten. Say what are you doing for the next 26 years?

Just like the Rose Parade

Every year when news reporters are talking to the people who are putting the floats together for the Rose Bowl Parade, the workers stress that the very next day they will be starting to plan for the next year. I didn’t know it was that way with The Dandelion Brigade, but sources tell me that LZP was this very afternoon cultivating his dandelion crop to enhance next years . . . oh, shall we say, spread?

INVASION is more like it. I suppose I need to get my Intelligence Unit going, but first I need a name for it – some cool sounding.