Belle Gunness – my mother’s interested

My mother read an article about Belle Gunness and suggested I look her up on the Internet; seems she’s a serial killer that died in a fire in La Porte; no, wait, it might be that she faked her death and moved to California where she did a few more deadly deeds. So, I looked her up and found THIS, which takes the story up to the fire. I need more information, so I’m taking a deep breath and diving into the Google pool.

Gasp, gasp. Another LINK and they are both with a black background – this one has a line of dripping blood. And, then there is the Wikipedia entry –  stuff about Belle Gunness including the fact that a rock band in the Netherlands was named after her . . . and the lyrics to a folk song:

In old Indiana, not far from LaPorte,
There once lived a woman, a home lovin’ sort.
Belle wanted a husband, she wanted one bad,
She placed in the papers a lonely hearts ad.
Men came to Belle Gunness to share food and bed,
Not knowing that soon they’d be knocked in the head.
But while they were sleeping, she’d lift the door latch.
She’d kill them and plant them in her tater patch.

Well, I’ll have things to tell Mother tonight, not the least of which is that DNA testing is being planned for the Belle in the fire and the one in California.

Eat less, live longer

I was watching a show a couple of nights ago; I don’t remember what it was, because I wasn’t really watching. The TV was on. Now, I think it was this show that had a segment about a French caver lost in a maze of caves and the things his brain automatically did to allow him to survive. Probably, I realize now, this was something on the Discovery Channel . . . the phrase “human limits” is tickling my memory.

It doesn’t matter where I heard it, and actually I am now worrying that I can’t remember what my primary activity was when the show was on. Rats, another senior moment. I’m been typing aimlessly here – although I tried to get you to assume there was a purpose – because I have delaying facing the dilemma of my lament about life being short and my overweight status. This comes right after I blogged about actually living better and actually losing ten pounds as well.

AAAAUUUUUUUUUUUGGGGGGHHHHHHHH.

I was sidetracked, but I didn’t forget

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So, do you remember I was taking note of the ornaments on my special sitting room tree? Well, I didn’t forget; I just wandered off in other areas for awhile. This little embroidered material is from many decades ago. I did it while sitting on the enclosed front porch of our house in LaGrange County – in the little village of Scott – with my grandmother sitting beside me doing her own piece, something with French knots, I think.

That would have been in the fifties; yes, I decided to go ahead and get graphic with the numbers. The porch is, for the most part, the same as it was then, and often my mother and I sit out there and read or do sudokus. I did a lot of embroidery over the years and then my fingers started to tingle when I would hold the needle and so I finished up the project I was on and didn’t do another.

I was going to say a few things about Grandma, but I got sidetracked again. She was born in 1881 in Lima, Indiana (now Howe) to Wesley Wisler and Martha Fowler Wisler. My mother wasn’t born until 1926, so I had a pretty direct link to the real horse and buggy days. I remember the way she smelled – clean and starched – and it does seem odd that someone I knew so well and loved so dearly is a complete stranger to those in my life now, with the exception of my mother.

Heavens, I didn’t mention her name. It was Jessie Ethel Wisler. I used to giggle at the the Ethel part. She was named after her father’s brother Jesse who moved to Mancelona, Michigan and started a business. She was first married to Harry Huff and had two children, Lucile Elizabeth and Stanley Malcolm. Harry died of Bright’s Disease and some years later she married my grandfather, John Michael Shimp.

Grandpa had been married before also and his wife had died following a miscarriage; she had been all right when he left the hospital, but when he got home, they called with the message she had bled to death. (I didn’t feel like spelling hemorrhaged, but then felt I was being a chicken so here it is.) It changed him, this event. They say he withdrew into himself. He died when I was 10 and they found he had one of my school pictures in his wallet. I remember hearing Grandma say, “He must have picked it up off the table.”

I have some pictures of him in his youth. In one he is sitting on a thresher, I think in a coat, tie and hat; I know that at one time he traveled out to the Dakotas with a crew, harvesting grain. I’ll have to scan them into my computer, along with my grandmother’s graduation photo.

But back to the embroidery. I don’t think we ever framed it; I think I just kept it folded up in some drawer or box or maybe both at one time or another. At any rate, I found it in my thirties, stuck it in a hoop and hung it on a nail. Then we moved and I stuck it in a drawer. When this tree went up and I was looking for stuff to put on it, I thought, “Why not.”

I close my eyes and I can be on that porch again in one of the summers when my age was still in the single digits. And it is a nice thing to have tucked away in my memory box.

Dropping eggs

My granddaughter has to drop an egg from a third story window in a device that will keep it from breaking. Well, I, the grandmother, talked to the grandfather, who saw on the internet a fellow dropping an egg in a water-filled surgical glove, which was itself cushioned by newspaper. I tried it and the egg cracked and then I added partially inflated balloons and we had a success. So she comes home and tells me my box won’t fit through the window. What kind of windows to they have at this school?

She cuts a cube of Styrofoam in half and hollows out an egg spot, puts it back together and taped bubble wrap around it. (Woo – cool tense change mid-sentence, but I think it works. It’s the vernacular, don’tcha know.) We went to the second floor and dropped it, but of course we had no idea what had happened until she ran down to the driveway and painstakingly removed all the tape. The egg made it. Then, carrying it in the house, she clicked it on the vestibule door and that was all she wrote.

I’m a little shaky on Breaking Bad

So Walt is a competent fellow, handling Tuco and managing to make blue meth and doing this while on chemotherapy. Somewhere along the line, Walt lost his “I can’t believe this humor”. He does not lose his pants; he does not pull money out of his pool and put it in a dryer; he no longer teaches chemistry to high-schoolers. Yes, I realize he purchased not your usual ski masks for the robbery and, yes, he and Jesse did take the opportunity to wrap rope around the port-a-potty the security guard had entered – with magazine. It wasn’t funny – to me – because I knew Walt was not going to have to do anything to make this work. The writers, who I guess came back from being on strike with fewer brain cells, give it the Obi Wan Kenobi treatment . . . Everything will be just fine and they will get away with a barrel of the chemical they need; you don’t need to look for anything clever in what is happening.

So what is happening? Well, Walt and Jesse are making a lot of meth and Walt is having conversations with Hank about what is legal and what is not. He killed  a couple of people, but that was back in earlier episodes, and now he is talking in terms of prohibition. Walt, I don’t think so. Don’t rationalize; just say, “Hey, I woke up a little late to the fact that shit happens and so you might as well take what you can get – no holds barred.”

But, Walt, you’re so damned good at it. I’m sitting here thinking that you’re making a lot of money because you are smart and are tapping into unrecognized aspects of that intelligence. I’m sitting here thinking, “Hey, I wish I were as smart as Walt.”

And I’m not sure this is how it is supposed to work out with this show.

Oh, my gosh: Waurika Annual Rattlesnake Hunt

I first wrote this when I learned of the 2008 hunt, but guess what? It’s time for them to do it again. This year the hunt is scheduled for April 10-12 and information is at the site cited below. (Cool homophone – ing, huh?)

Don’t want to read further down? Well, here it is again – THE SITE.

Featured again this year are:

James White & the Outlaw Handlers– Grandbury, Texas — Performing Feats Daring and Courageous in a pit filled with LIVE Rattlesnakes.

They were at at the 2008 show and I rambled a bit about therm:

I saw that James White and the Outlaw Handlers were going to be putting on a show – a “continuous” show. He sounds interesting and I guess he has been doing this snake business for a number of years – as in decades. I found one article about a Sharon Springs roundup in which he appeared, although then the group was known as the Fangs and Rattlers. I don’t know much about what they do, but I think he puts a lot of snake tails in his mouth . . . and the rest of the snake is attached to each tail. I think I would be too nervous to watch.

Well . . . They’re back.

Then also, when you go from link to link about snake hunting, you stumble on things, maybe like walking across the prairie without looking where you step. I landed on a site about a 15 second Film Festival somewhere and one of the clips was of a beating rattlesnake heart – after it had been taken out of the snake. Hey, I am not going to provide a link because I don’t want to cause problems for you. I didn’t realize what I was going to see and I didn’t push replay. Yes, though, the snake’s heart can be stripped out and still keep beating – They may be Snakex , like Timex, for those of you who remember John Cameron Swayze.

However, the Snakehunt site itself is HERE and they have been doing it for 46 years and on April 11-13, they will do it again! Now, I must go do the Indian Dance for no rattlesnake dreams.

And here’s some right good news from last year:

According to the Waurika hometown paper, it was a big success and the concession stand actually could have sold twice as much snake snacks. And I guess no one was bitten.

Plak Man (Plakman) and The Gospel Station

I happened upon this website, The Gospel Station, yesterday and saw an ad for Plak Man plak-man.jpg

I looked it up and it referred me back to The Gospel Station, and here is WIKI PAGE about the station, but you don’t have to go there, I’ll just reference the paragraph:

“THE GOSPEL STATION” is a part of The Gospel Station Network…a ministry founded to provide a radio alternative for the whole family, Christ centered Gospel music Radio. We play the best of the New and the Old of Southern and Country Gospel Music.

Our mission is to lift up Jesus Christ through music…spreading the Gospel one song at a time. We have a vision to put this format on radio stations all over America.

Randall Christy (pictured) is the founder of The Gospel Station Network, which owns and operates 4 FM radio stations in Oklahoma, and www.thegospelstation.com

But, if you want to read more, you can click HERE. This doesn’t tell me any more about Plak Man, though. I think I could use a bunch of Plak Men in my arteries, chomping my cholesterol and plaque – I guess it is sort of like Pac Man. Go, little guys, go.

UPDATE: Here’s the link for Plak Man info (I clicked the picture of the ad, duh) and here’s my favorite part of the ingredients:

Wild Blueberry Extract, Red Raspberry Fruit Extract, Red Raspberry Seed Extract, Cranberry Extract, Prune Extract, Tart Cherry Extract, Wild Billberry Extract, Strawberry Extract, Green Tea Extract,Pine Bark Extract, Broccoli Extract, Tomato Extract, Carrot Extract, Spinach Extract, Kale Extract, Brussel Sprout Extract. I have crossed out the parts I am not fond of.

Seriously, I am not poking fun at this product; I am a great believer in the power of natural herbs and medical knowledge gleaned from the study of them. After all, aspirin is willow bark and digitalis is foxglove. I just like the mental image of those little Plak Man guys scurrying through arteries after the bad guys.

First school morning on DST

It’s dark. Oh, yeah, It’s dark.

Well, it’s not going to change until we let nature happen, so I’ll shut up.

Oh, not much to say if I’m not complaining and muttering; since I don’t have Andy Rooney’s job, that doesn’t work out either.

Silence . . . silence . . . I must have SOME positive, upbeat words to greet the new day?
Okay. Hi there, day. How are you doing? Think your sun will shine or are you putting on clouds.

I guess some people are destined to be glum boxes. I have no talent for this cheery stuff.

I have known this for a long time. A lot of people have heard my first grade story, but I’m repeating it. Ahem:
When I was in first grade, another girl – one who was always smiling and well-liked – and I did something nice for someone else. I have no memory of what it was, but the teacher gave us a compliment and a pat on the head. I thought to myself, “I should have received two pats on the head because it doesn’t come naturally to me.”

I emailed the governor (aka) Mitch Daniels (aka) “that boy”

Fool that I am, I emailed the governor about our distaste for Daylight Savings Time for the State of Indiana. Oh, it would be okay if we were on Central Time, but we are not.

We are pseudoEasterners. Ew!

I do not believe we will get any answer other than a form letter, but at least we are letting “that boy” know that some things just don’t go away for his constituency – especially the 81 year old one who was born in LaGrange County, whose mother was born in LaGrange County in 1881, whose grandmother was born in 1848 right across the state line in Michigan, and whose great-grandmother walked out here from New York.

Mother lived through the Depression here in LaGrange County; she sat in the Scott High School gym and listened to Roosevelt address the nation on December 8, 1941. Maybe Governor Daniels, you could take a take a moment to email, “Well, Ma’am, I have my reasons and I’m sorry you don’t agree with them.”

Say, anyone else want to email him? This is his page and this is his address: www.in.gov/gov/2310.htm

You can tell him Sarah and AmeliaJake say “Hey”.

UPDATE: Already the first phase of the response:

Thank you for emailing Governor Mitch Daniels.  The Governor appreciates
that you took the time to contact his office and play an active role in
the discussion about making Indiana a better place to live, work, and
raise a family.

Your email will be shared with the appropriate staff for a response.

Again, thank you for contacting Governor Daniels’ Office.

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