#31 Retired

31 Retired.png

After I stuck out my tongue and said, “aaaah,” my doctor told me that I had a bad tooth in the back that would probably need to be extracted.  I told her that I would have it done as soon as possible, but I knew that wouldn’t be until after I cashed my annual annuity check in late September.  So, I forgot about it, until the tooth started to hurt, but that was about a month ago and I still had 3 weeks before the check came in.

So, I went to Plan B – shots of Jack Daniels with a Tylenol chaser.  That worked, and I forgot about the tooth again, even after the check came in.  Then last Thursday night it started to throb again, so I decided it was high time I made an appointment with the dentist.  By the time I got there on Friday, though, the Dentist office was closed, but the liquor store was still open and Dr. Jack was there waiting for me.  That got me through Friday night and Saturday, but by Sunday an infection set in.  Nothing helped, so I was at the dentist early on Monday morning.

They took x-rays, gave me an exam and the dentist said, “That tooth in the back, #31, needs to come out.

“Gee, I thought so.  When can you extract it?”

“We’ll do it right now, if you’re ready.”

“I’m ready,” I said, smiling for the first time in days.

“Are you on any medication?

“Oh yeah, blood pressure meds, cholesterol meds, Lasix, baby aspirin, and Plavix.”

“That’s a problem.”

“Problem,” I said, losing the smile.  “What kind of problem?”

“If you’re on blood thinner medication, I need your doctor’s approval before I can do any kind of oral surgery.”

“No problem.  My doctor is two blocks away, and she told me that the tooth should be extracted.”  So, I took the form that needed to be signed and hustled over to my doctor.  The receptionist took the form, looked at it, and said, “We’ll call you when you can pick it up.”

“Any idea how long that will be?

“A week to 10 days.”

“I can’t wait that long.  I’m in pain.  Surely, you can expedite it somehow.”

The receptionist took pity on me, and called the doctor.  She turned to me and said, “She’s at lunch now, but I’ll give her the form as soon as she returns, and I’ll call you when it’s ready.”

“Fine.”  I went home, waited an hour, and went back.”

“I told you that I would call you when it was ready,” the receptionist said.

“That’s okay.  I don’t have anything better to do.  I’ll just wait here.”  The Tylenol was kicking in, so the pain was subsiding, put I tried to keep my severe toothache face on, hoping that would speed up things.

After an hour went by, she went back to the doctor’s office to see if the form was ready.  It wasn’t.  After another hour slowly ticked by, I asked her to check with the doctor again.  She called my doctor, who told her that she was busy with patients and that she would handle it in the morning.

I snapped.  It didn’t help.  The squeaky wheel wasn’t getting any grease today.  I went home fuming.

The next morning, I got a call from the doctor’s office.  The form was ready.  I hustled over there and took it straight to the dentist.  The receptionist read it and in the details section my doctor had written that if the dentist preferred, I could come off Plavix for 7 days.  I told her that I wasn’t waiting 7 days.  She went to talk to the dentist.  The dentist said that as long as my doctor had signed the release form that was good enough for him.  I got an appointment 1 hour later.

A young man who just passed the bar did the prep work.  He’s also working on a screenplay, so we had a lot to talk about while he held a Q-tip dipped in a local anesthetic on the tooth.  When the tooth was numb, the dentist came in.

“Now, I’ll give you a shot to really make you numb.  You’ll feel a little pinch.”

He was right.  I felt a little pinch as he gave me some shots of what I assume was Novocain.  We waited a bit for it to kick in and he said that he would now give me a shot of something even stronger, because of the infection.

“No problem,” I mumbled.  My mouth was fairly numb.

“This is really gonna hurt,” he said, “because of the infection.”

“Bring it,” I said boldly, feeling that I already had enough Novocain in my system to neutralize any pain.

“Okay.”

He was right again.  It hurt like hell.

We waited a little bit longer and he said that he was now going to perform the extraction.  He said that because of the infection it was really going to hurt.

“As much as that last shot?”

“No, more.  This is going to feel like you’re giving birth.”

I didn’t believe him, even though he had been totally honest with me about everything else.

“Are you ready,” he asked.

“Just a second,” I joked.  “I’m still trying to think of a name for the baby.”

He chuckled and went to work.

The pain was excruciating, and my eyes pleaded with him to stop.

He tried to encourage me to hang on just a bit longer.  “It’s crowning.”

I wondered how any woman ever allowed herself to get pregnant a second time, as he continued to wrench away at the tooth.

“I can see the head.”

“Get it out,” I wanted to scream but my mouth was full of dental tools and dentist fingers.

“Here come the feet.”

“Get it out,” was my only thought.

Then, plop.  “It’s a boy,” he said, as he cast the offending tooth into the garbage.

“I think I’ll call him Hitler,” I managed to mutter.  “Now, please don’t tell me I’m having twins.”

An x-ray showed that there was no part of baby Hitler remaining.  So they packed the wound, gave me instructions to just sit quietly for the rest of the day, and sent me home.

I went home, propped myself in bed, and listened to a stack of audio books.  8 cd’s later I was asleep.

I woke up this morning feeling good.  The pain is gone.  The swelling is going down.  Good bye #31.  You served me faithfully for 60 plus years, but I’m not going to miss you.

Peace & Love, and all of the above,

Earl

Book Him, Danno

books

Since I dropped my contract with Comcast, I’ve been a regular at the Duke Street Library.  I usually go there 4-5 times a week to use the WiFi.  I spend my time in the Gerald S. Lestz Reading Room, a section of the library where the quiet rule is strictly enforced.  If you want to have a conversation, or talk on your cell phone, you have to leave the room and go to another section of the library.  It’s so quiet that if somebody sneezes, nobody even says “Bless you.”

I don’t go there for the quiet.  I go for the big desks, the free WiFi, and the numerous electrical outlets to power my laptops.  I bring both of my laptops – one to download racing results, e-mail, etc. and one just for entertainment, as I catch up on episodes of The Daily Show and my other favorite shows.  I’m not the only regular, as there are about a dozen of us who appear almost daily.  There is one guy who always sits at the microfiche reader in the room.  I don’t know his name, but I get the feeling that he must work for a local newspaper.  There are two guys who usually appear with him, but they don’t go on the microfiche reader.  They sit at one of the tables and work on whatever they’re working on.  Then, there is another guy who must be trying to read every book in the library.  He’s almost always there reading a book.  His name is Dave.  I know this because one day the microfiche guy called him over to show him something on the screen that he thought Dave would find interesting.

There are a couple other guys who usually have their noses in a book.  One is well-built young black guy who I’ve never spoke to, but we nod at each other as a form of greeting.  The other is a slightly built older white guy who looks to me like an old-time barber.  He sits there with his right hand inside his shirt like Napoleon.

Then there are the other laptop guys.  I don’t know what they’re into.  There are 3 or 4 older guys who read every newspaper every day.  Then, there is the crew I call the Water Street Irregulars.  I’m fairly sure that they are temporary residents of the Water Street mission.  They come in to charge their cell phones.  The librarian usually has to tell them a few times to be quiet.  They pretend to be reading but I never see them turn the page.

So, there we were, all doing our thing, and there were two newcomers sitting together at one of the computers available exclusively for research and job searches.  (If you want to play video games you have to use one of the computers on the main floor of the library.)  The woman was doing the typing and the man was commenting quiet loudly.  One of the librarians came in to tell him he had to be quiet in the reading room.  As soon as she left he got louder.  Then he made a phone call and was even louder.  I heard him say his name was Fred, even though I was across the room wearing headphones listening to the races at the Delaware Ohio Fair.

Another librarian came in to tell Fred that he had to be quiet in the reading room.  As soon as she left he got even louder, and a few minutes later a male librarian came in to ask him to be quiet.  Fred got even louder, as soon as he left.  Then Dave closed his book and went over to him and asked him to be quiet.  That set Fred off and he told Dave, quite menacingly, to mind his own business.  It looked like he might hit Dave, and I jumped up to back-up Dave, even though I was sure that Fred would have no problem kicking both of our asses.  He was a big strong guy, about half my age and twice my size.  I was hoping that the microfiche guy might stand up, too, but he didn’t.  I guess he wasn’t as good a friend of Dave’s as I thought he was.  Then, Dave sat back down, I sat down, and Fred continued to run his mouth, mocking Dave.

Then I saw two of Lancaster’s Finest walk into the library, and I knew that Fred wouldn’t be able to ignore them.  Lancaster police are all quite large and imposing.  They told Fred that he would have to be quiet or leave the library.  Fred started arguing with them.  He yelled that he was an Air Force vet who served 12 years and he had a library card, and he was using the computer to try to find a job, so he could do whatever he wanted to do.  The cops told him that he had to be quiet or they would arrest him for disturbing the peace.

A couple thoughts went through my mind.  Why do you get out of the service after 12 years, just 8 years away from a pension?  I’m thinking that with his attitude, it probably wasn’t Fred’s decision.  I’m also thinking that Fred is not going to suddenly wise up and shut up.  I turned out to be right about that.

Fred argued loudly with the cops, repeating that he had a library card and that he could therefore do whatever he wanted to do.  The cops decided that it was time to physically remove Fred from the library.  They told him to put his hands behind his back and, to my surprise, he calmly and quietly put his hands behind his back.  One of the cops fumbled with his handcuffs, and it took him a while to cuff Fred, even though Fred was not resisting one bit.  I thought about my niece who is Lieutenant with the NY Police Department and famous for slapping cuffs on a perp at the speed of lightning.  She could have given these cops a few pointers on how to slap on a pair of handcuffs.

Anyway, they finally got Fred cuffed and as soon as they started leading him to the door, his mouth started working again.  “This is how they treat a black man in America,” he screamed over and over again as they led him out.  The people who were not in the reading room, had no idea what had taken place, but I’m sure that they thought it must have been race-related incident.  I’m sure that was Fred’s intention.

So, I’m back in the library today to watch the Little Brown Jug and the other races from Delaware, Ohio.  None of the other regulars are here.  I wonder if they were worried that Fred might be back and looking for revenge.  Me, I’m not worried, but I did bring pepper spray, just in case.

Peace & Love, and all of the above,

Earl

Watching The Wheels

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I’m just sitting here watching the wheels go round and round I really love to watch them roll No longer riding on the merry-go-round I just had to let it go.

-Watching The Wheels, John Lennon

Tonight is the Barnstormer’s last home game of 2016.  They didn’t make the playoffs, so this is my last chance to see them play this year.  Clipper Magazine Stadium will be dark until Spring.

I grew up a baseball fan, but I’ve always been a fan of Roller Derby, too.  Where I grew up in South Ozone Park, NY, we even played Roller Derby in the street.  We sometimes had to skate around parked cars on our “track,” and occasionally we had to skate around moving cars too, when some drivers felt like they had “dibs” on the road, and that we should be skating on the sidewalk.

I was a pretty good skater, but not nearly as good as my friend Vinny Nizza, whose nickname was Great Balls of Fire, and sparks could actually be seen coming from his skates when he skidded on a turn.  That was back before anyone had shoe skates with rubber or plastic wheels.  We had the old-fashioned kind of skates with metal wheels that clamped right onto your street shoes.  You tightened them onto your shoes using a skate key, like the one Melanie sang about when she sang, “I’ve got a brand new pair of roller skates.  You’ve got a brand new key.”

So, with the baseball season drawing to a close, I was looking forward to seeing the Women’s Roller Derby matches on September 10th, hoping to see my favorite Dutchland Rollers skater, #29, Vanitti, who pound-for-pound must be the best skater in Lancaster.  I say that because she probably only weights about 100 pounds soaking wet, which is about half of what some of the other girls weigh.  She looks more suited to be a thoroughbred jockey than a rock ‘em sock ‘em Roller Derby star.

IMG_1904_3Vanitti was in the starting line-up, so I wasn’t disappointed, but I did wind up conflicted before the night was over.  Lancaster’s opponents, The Harrisburg Area Roller Derby (H.A.R.D.) had some pretty good skaters, too, and I couldn’t help but cheer for #63, Holden Grudges, whenever she put on the jammers helmet.  She was awesome, not just pound-for-pound awesome, but sheer awesome.

In case you didn’t know this, a point is scored in Roller Derby whenever a jammer laps an opponent on the track.  Whenever Holden Grudges put on the jammer’s helmet, three of the Dutchland team members would wait at the rear of the pack for her to come around trying to lap them, and then they would gang up on her.  Actually, I should say that they would attempt to gang up on her.  It reminded me of a line in a Jack Reacher novel.  “There were three of them and only one of him.  It wasn’t going to be a fair fight, but that was their problem.”  The confrontation almost always ended with the same result – three Dutchland Rollers skaters splattered on the track and three more points on the board for Harrisburg.  Actually, Holden Grudges didn’t stop with just three points.  She’d skate around the track again and pass the fallen Rollers again, as they struggled to clear the cobwebs from their brains and get back on their feet.  In one jam, she scored 12 points.

Fortunately for the locals, all that skating leaves a jammer winded, so they usually have to sit out a jam or two while they catch their breath, and the locals managed to score many of their points whenever #63 was taking a breather.  In the end the Dutchland team emerged victorious 187 to 163.  Go Rollers.

Once, when I was extolling the pleasure of watching The Lancaster Barnstormers baseball games, my nephew asked mockingly, “Yeah, but what do you do in Lancaster when it’s not baseball season?”  The Barnstormer’s season is just about over, so I guess it’s time to answer that question.  First, I’d like to thank the Lancaster Barnstormers for all the joy they brought me this season, especially on $2 beer nights.  Enjoy the off season, guys.  In the meanwhile, I’ll just sit here watching the wheels go round and round.  I really love to watch them roll.

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Go Vanitti.  Go Holden Grudges.  Go Rollers.  See you in the Spring, Barnstormers.

roller-derby-stars

Peace & Love, and all of the above,

Earl

 

 

 

 

 

Going Batty

 

Bat Boy

Bat Signal

Super Fisher=Paulsons

 

I was looking for a computer book for my sister-in-law.  It seems that she doesn’t know how to use her laptop computer and no one in her family has the patience to sit with her and teach her.  When I told her that she needed to read Computers for Dummies, she got very insulted.  I tried to explain that “For Dummies” is just a brand name for a series of books about just about everything.  “They’re designed for beginners and they’re really good books,” I said.  She thought I was just trying to talk my way out of the grave I was digging for myself.

So, with her birthday coming up, I went to the bookstore at the local library to pick up a copy.  They didn’t have any computer books for sale, but the saleslady told me that I should be able to pick up a copy at Winding Way Books on Chestnut Street.  It was an omen.

My brother Kevin and his family of Super Heroes live on Winding Way in San Francisco in a house they purposely painted in Batman Blue, as they are all big Batman and Superman fans.

[Side story.  When their neighbor saw the color they were painting their house, he asked them if they got the paint for free.  He couldn’t think of any other reason why anyone would paint their house that color.]

I went to Winding Way Books and asked the saleslady to direct me to the computer section.  She informed me that they didn’t have a computer section.  I turned to leave, and then turned back around deciding to browse through the store to see what kind of books they did have.  It was a second-hand bookstore and they had pretty much everything – except computer books.  I decided to pick up a paperback book for reading on the bus.

At home, I like to read hard cover, large print books, but for the road I like something that takes up less room in my knapsack.  I picked up The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown, a sequel to The Da Vinci Code and Angels and Demons.  I loved The Da Vinci Code, and I loved the first 90% of Angels and Demons.  I hated the ending in that book and was pleasantly surprised when Ron Howard fixed it in the movie.  So, I figured that I’d give The Lost Symbol a shot.

Later that evening, I decided to plop myself down in my recliner chair and get a start on the 639-page book.  By page 30 I realize that I had read it before, but forgotten how it ended.  (A frequent occurrence for me.)  Still, I was caught up in the story and wanted to continue.  Then, the overhead light started flickering, and I started cursing.  I have a high ceiling in my living room and can’t reach the light fixture even while standing on a chair.  I would have to go get the step ladder.

I looked up at the accursed light fixture and saw there was nothing wrong with the bulbs.  The light was flickering because there was a small bat flying around it like a moth to the flame.  I jumped up and went running for a broom (since I don’t have a tennis racquet).  When I returned, the bat was gone.  I tapped everything in every room with the broom, but could not find the bat.  I told myself that he must have left the same way he got in.  I told myself that, but I didn’t believe me.

I don’t have air conditioning, because I don’t like to be cold.  I spent a year in Adak, Alaska and really learned to despise the cold.  So, it has been at least 80 degrees in my apartment for the past month.  That night it was 82, but I slept under a thick comforter, just in case the bat was still in my apartment and looking for something to bite.  On the positive side, I got on the scale the next day and found that I had sweated off two pounds.  I searched the house again and could find no sign of the bat (or “Bat Signals” as they are known in DC Comics).  That evening I was in the kitchen and I suddenly saw the bat flying around the living room.  I prepared for battle.  I put on long pants, my winter coat, and wrapped towels around my head for protection.  I would have donned oven mitts and my batting helmet, but I told myself that it was only a small bat and that I really should “man up,” at least a little.  I opened the front and back doors, hoping that my opponent would flee the scene before the fighting got too intense (or even began).  Then I grabbed the broom and charged onto the battlefield.  I felt like John Candy and Dan Aykroyd in the Bat Scene from the movie The Great Outdoors.

The Great Outdoors - Bat Scene

It’s already too late to make this long story short, but I will leave out the gory details of the battle.  Suffice it to say that my opponent chose fight over flight, and my broom was flying faster than Harry Potter’s.  Two lamps got knocked over and a mirror got knocked off the wall before I finally emerged victorious.  The bat is now in a body bag, and I, the great white hunter, can safely go back to my recliner and continue reading.  Plus, I’ll be able to sleep tonight without sweating my ass off.

Peace & Love, and all of the above,

Earl

 

Who Let the Dogs Out?

68 is not old

Here’s something that probably none of you know, and probably none of you care to know, but I’m going to tell you anyway, because that’s the way I roll.  The area of a racetrack that takes the most pounding is the area closest to the rail, because the shortest trip to the finish line is the trip that skims along the rail.  Calvin Burrell won a few Kentucky Derbies by taking his horse on a path that skimmed the rail the entire mile and a quarter.  If you watched those Derbies, you knew that.  What you didn’t know is that racetracks take special precautions to prevent excessive wear and tear on the inside portion of the racetrack during morning workouts.  They put traffic cones on the track to keep horses away from the rail.   When Racing Form clockers report the times of these workouts, they let the racing fans know that the horse was not allowed to skim the rail because “the dogs were out.”  That means, there were traffic cones on the track to prevent the horses from getting too close to the precious rail area.  I have no idea if the Baha men knew this terminology when they wrote their one hit, “Who let the dogs out,” but I’m just passing this information along to my readers to keep them well informed.

 On my birthday last week, Jose Canseco made a guest appearance at Clipper Magazine Stadium in a home run hitting contest against five local amateurs.  Since the five local guys were not major league caliber they put the dogs out.  Traffic cones were placed in the outfield and any ball hit past the cones was considered a home run.  Spoiler alert!  Jose won the contest easily.  Almost every one of his shots went further than the cones, but he only hit a few balls that actually cleared the walls and went out of the park.  Here I should note that it was a humid evening and the ball was just not travelling well.  Jose won the contest, but he was upset that he didn’t show off his power, and man oh man does he have power.  I was only 50 feet away from him, and he looked more like the dinosaur in centerfield than he looked like the other participants.  He was Huge.  I don’t think that he is still doing steroids, but he obviously spends more time in the gym than the library.  So, when the contest was over, he still wanted to hit.  Naturally, they let him.  He just kept hitting until he had whacked enough balls into the stratosphere to make himself happy.

Jose Canseco

They also had the local Women’s Roller Derby stars from the Dutchland Rollers skating around the stadium and I got a picture with my favorite, Vanitti.  

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So, that was a good start to my birthday celebration, but it got better.  It was $2 beer night from 6:30 until 8 o’clock.  My activity tracker showed a lot of activity that night between 6:30 and 8, as I raced back and forth from my seat to the beer concession numerous times.

Normally, you can just sit wherever you like, because the stadium is half empty (or half full if you’re an optimist) but not on that night.  In addition to Jose Canseco, and $2 beers, they also gave away complete sets of Barnstormer bubble gum cards, and there were fireworks after the game.  The weather was nice, so the stadium was jammed with the highest attendance they ever had.  Not bad for a team in last place, 10 games out of First Place.

My seat was right in the middle of the row and the family on my right never once complained about having to get up every 15 minutes while I replenished my beer supply.  They didn’t even complain when I got drunk and started messing with them.  The more beers I had the more the guy on the end of the row looked like Danny Glover.  So I kept pointing my camera phone at him asking him to repeat Danny Glover’s signature line from the Lethal Weapon movie, “I’m too old for this shit.”  I took a picture just so you can see the resemblance.  They look very upset in the picture, but that’s just because I caught them by surprise.  They were actually very friendly and nice, and never once called for Security to restrain me.

Put the camera away

 The guy immediately on my right did his absolute best to ignore me as I got drunk and started joking loudly about everything and everyone in the area.  I kept taking pictures of the giant head that was protruding from the seat right in front of me.  I had a great seat, right behind home plate, about 6 rows back, but I was right behind the largest man in Lancaster.  I kept taking pictures of the back of his head trying to make the fellow on my right laugh.  It took a while but James finally cracked up and we joked together for the rest of the ballgame.

The team is still in last place, but there are advantages to that.  They are adding more giveaways and entertainment.  Last night they had Chad the Mad, from Venice, California, who juggled 3 running chainsaws in between innings.  They also had fireworks after the game and after that the premier of a show that will be airing on Fox this Fall called “Pitch.”  The show is about the first woman player in Major League Baseball.  I really enjoyed the commercial-free premier of the show.  I also enjoyed another $2 beer night, and the Barnstormers won big, so it was a great night.

Oh, and before the game, they let the dogs out again.  Well, it was just one dog, Percy, the Frisbee catching wonder dog, who is a fan favorite and a local legend.  Woof Woof.

Go Stormers.

Peace & Love, and all of the above,

Earl

 

 

The Curse is Foiled Again

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In my family we grew up knowing that no male Paulson made it to 68 years old.  Most died exactly at 67, with a few who met their demise earlier mostly due to accidents.  For this reason, my Dad retired early at 62 so that he could enjoy 5 years of retirement.  I don’t know if his early retirement made the difference, but he survived well into his 90’s.  The curse was broken – but not forgotten.  My brothers and I all felt that our Dad was the exception to the rule, and that the sword of Damocles still hung over us.

I have a few cousins who, if they’re still alive, have recently joined my Dad in the small group that survived past 67, and today I joined the club.  Today is my 68th birthday.  So, in the immortal words of Rocky Balboa, “Yo Adrian.  We did it.”  The curse is officially broken, at least as far as I’m concerned.  Will I make it to my 90’s like my Dad?  I doubt it.  I partied a lot harder than he ever did, but then again, I didn’t have the strain he had of raising three hyperactive boys, so maybe I’ve got a shot.

Today I’m going to drink a toast to the two people who provided me with the genes to make it this far.  Thanks Mom and Dad.  I also have to thank Dr. Barry Kaplan and the staff at Long Island Jewish Hospital especially Janet Hyland for the stents they placed in me back in 2009.  I have to thank Dr. Paula Schlossberg at the VA clinic in East Meadow, Dr. Loren at the VA Hospital in Manhattan, who put in another stent.  Add the good people at Southeast Lancaster Health Services, Amy Vandergrift and Kathleen Brumbach, the cardiologists at the Heart Group in Lancaster, the doctors and nurses at Lancaster General Hospital, my physical Therapists, Susan Harroun in New York and Brittany in Lancaster, Dr. Jackson at the VA clinic in Lancaster, and my cardiologist at the VA Hospital in Lebanon, PA, Dr. Shankar.  They say that it takes a village to raise a child.  In my case it took a slew of doctors, nurses, and therapists to get that child to a ripe old age.

Thanks to all for getting me here.  Cheers!

Now, I’m counting on my siblings, Brother X and Kevin, to break the curse too.  As the Vulcan’s say, “Live long and prosper.”

Peace & Love, and all of the above,

Earl

Letting My Freak Flag Fly

Bret HartEarl The Hitman HartDoc BrownGeiko Caveman20160812_171157

 

I just finished rereading a short story that was written by William Goldman many years ago.  It was called DaVinci, and it was about a cranky old barber, who wasn’t good at making friends but who gave the best haircuts ever.  The man was an artist, and all he really cared about was the craft of cutting hair.  The problem was that he was such a perfectionist that it took him over an hour to give a haircut.

Last year I was sitting in the barber’s chair at the local barber school and one of the pupils was doing his best to give me my $3 worth.  He clipped away for almost an hour, probably only cutting one or two strands of hair at a clip.  We got to talking and he told me that he was fresh out of prison and that he was determined never to go back.  So, he immersed himself in the craft of haircutting, and hoped that it would be his salvation.  He explained some of the things he learned in barber school and one of those things was that dandruff is plaque.  He explained this as he broke the news to me that I had dandruff.  He was as serious as a doctor telling me that I had a deadly disease, and only had weeks to live.

I told him that I knew I had dandruff, since I had it all my life.  He asked me what I was doing about it.  I told him that I used Head N Shoulders shampoo, but it obviously didn’t seem to help very much.  That’s when he told me about dandruff being plaque, and suggested that before showering I should pour a capful of Listerine on my hair and let it sit for 30 seconds before rinsing it off.

His sincerity impressed me and I decided to try it.  To my astonishment it worked.  I also noticed that I was now losing less hair.  I’ve always had short hair, partly because it was easier to manage, but mostly because my hair just wouldn’t grow long.  It fell out long before it grew too long.

Now, the way my hair was growing, I was curious to see how long it could get before I started to shed again.  I haven’t had my hair cut in a year now, and I think it looks great, as long as it’s still wet.  It kind of looks like the hairstyle made famous by the wrestler Bret “The Hitman” Hart.  When it dries out, though, I look more like a cross between The Geiko Caveman and Doc Brown after he got struck by lightning in the clock tower trying to jump start the Flux Capacitor.

No matter what, good hair day or bad hair day, I’m enjoying my hairy experiment and letting my freak flag fly.  Plus, I love going outside in the rain without a hat and getting my hair wet.  I only have one regret.  I just hope that young barber-in-training, who gave me the good advice, wasn’t counting on my monthly contributions of $3 to keep him in business and out of jail.

Peace & Love, and all of the above,

Earl

 

Happy LANniversary to Me

“Washington is not a place to live in.  The rents are high, the food is bad, the dust is disgusting and the morals are deplorable.  Go West, young man, go West and grow up with the country.”

Horace Greeley, 1865

Back in 1865, when Horace Greeley wrote about going West, he was talking about Pennsylvania.   Three years ago today I traveled west and got off the Amtrak train in Lancaster, Pa.  I checked into a motel on the outskirts of town and started my apartment search the following day.  I didn’t find a place until October, but, when I did, I found a place right in the heart of town that was perfect for me.  Everything was close-by and I had a Senior Citizens Free Bus pass that could take me anyplace that wasn’t within walking distance.

In the past 3 years I enjoyed dozens of baseball games.  I even took batting practice with the team and threw out the honorary first pitch once.

I went to about a dozen plays at local venues.  I even took an acting class at the Fulton Theatre.

I’ve enjoyed quite a few pints of local brews on local barstools.

And recently I completed two Excel courses at the local library.  So, my education continues, too…LOL.

Since moving here, I found out that Lancaster has a woman’s Roller Derby team.  Even New York doesn’t have a Roller Derby team of its own anymore.  The Flat-track version of Roller Derby is dull compared to the exciting matches of the San Francisco Bay Bombers vs The New York Chiefs, back in the day, but watching 12 athletic women skate merrily along, is still good for the old ticker.

Best of all, I lost weight here, 25 lbs.  It hasn’t been gradual.  Most of the weight loss came in the last few months, after I completed a deluxe sweater and linen cabinet I designed out of empty 5-liter wine boxes.  Who knew that drinking a few liters of wine a day was the reason I wasn’t losing weight before?  I thought it was part of the much ballyhooed Mediterranean Diet.  Oh well, live and learn.

For the last 25 years or so in New York, my New Year’s resolution had been to lose weight.  It never worked, so I switched resolutions when I got here.  Now, I just wish for every year to be even more fun than the one before it.  That’s been working out pretty well.  I’m having fun and now losing weight.  It’s been a good 3 years here in Lancaster and I look forward to making the next 3 years even better.

Peace & Love, and all of the above,

Earl

A Perfect Storm

Last week was the annual Farm Show at Clipper Magazine Stadium.  As if that wasn’t enough to get you to pile the kids in the turnip truck, the Atlantic League Minor League All-Star game was also scheduled.

The game was to start at 7:00 p.m.  Usually they open the gates an hour before that, but because of the farm show the gates opened at 5:00 p.m.  The skies opened up just shortly before then.  They say rain is the farmer’s friend, but not here it wasn’t.  It looked like the entire event might be cancelled.  I only live 10 minutes from the stadium, so I decided to wait out the rain at home.  If it stopped raining by 6:50, I’d go to the game.  Otherwise I’d just skip it.  It was still raining at 7:00 p.m. but I still couldn’t abandoned all hope.  At 7:45 it was still raining, but it looked like it was gonna clear up.  I put on my rain gear and headed for the stadium.

By the time I got there, the weather was beautiful.  Usually when I go to games I sit in section 17.  It’s right behind home plate, has a great view of the entire field, and is protected from flying objects by screening.  So I went up to the ticket window.  I’d like a seat in section 17…

“No seats.”

“What does that mean, ‘no seats’?”

“All the seats are sold out.  Lawn tickets only.”

“Sold out.  I never heard of that in my three years living here and going to Barnstormer games.  What can I do with a Lawn ticket?”

“You can sit on the lawn, or you can walk around.”

Well, walking around sounded like a great idea.  I wear an activity tracker and all it ever tells me is that I don’t walk enough.  So, this will be a way for me to enjoy the game and keep the activity tracker happy.  I can walk and have fun at the same time.  When I was a kid I did it all the time.  Now, on a good day, I can even walk, have a good time, and chew gum at the same time.

I bought my lawn ticket for the very reasonable price of $7 and headed for the lawn past the outfield.  I never realized that there was a path that went entirely around the ballfield.  For some reason I expected barriers separating different sections.  I decided to go around the entire field clockwise and see what was going on.  The first thing I noticed was that there was a lot more to the kiddy park than just the merry-go-round.  They even had hand-powered trains that the kids sat in and rode on tracks that had some pretty sharp turns.  I was amazed, watching little kids navigate the turns.  I was actually expecting most of them to hit the turn too quickly, run off the rails, and crash, but these kids all stayed on track.  Call Amtrak, I think we’ve found an answer to your problems here.

There were multiple Petting stations with cows, alpacas, sheep, goats, and something I don’t remember what it was called, but it looked like a cute short camel with a Beatle haircut.

It was like Woodstock without the drugs, (if you don’t count what I had been smoking at home.)  There were Amish folk mixed in with city folk, Barnstormer fans, and fans of the other nearby teams.  All eight team mascots were there to encourage the crowd to cheer for the representatives from their teams.

I continued walking and out past centerfield there was a big hydraulically-operated Jurassic Park type dinosaur.  A few of us were grabbing spaces along the rail there, as every available bit of rail space in the ballpark was quickly disappearing.  I had a great spot right behind Dino, and I watched him go through his hydraulic act several times.  When I was ready to continue my travels around the park, I held my nose as I quickly walked away and said, “I think the dinosaur farted.”

Before the game they had Percy, the Frisbee Catching Wonder Dog.  Percy used to appear between innings, but one time they couldn’t get him to leave the field, and nobody could catch him.  So now, he only appears before the games.

In between every inning they had something entertaining going on.  Alpaca races, chicken tosses, big glove fights, and t-shirts cannons shooting souvenirs to the fans.

In between one of the innings ,a guy who looked like Max Yasgur spoke out for Agriculture, “the 5th largest industry in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.”  The ranking didn’t surprise me.  There are farms all over the place here, but I kept wondering why he kept referring to Pennsylvania as “The Commonwealth” instead of as “The State.”  I guess I’ll have to live here a few more years before I find out what that’s all about.

By this time, I was tired of walking around, so I took one of the seats left unused because many people who bought tickets ahead of time thought the game was going to be rained out and didn’t show up.  The weather was working in my favor.  Fireworks were also on the agenda for the evening, but a local noise ordinance prohibits them from shooting off fireworks after 10:30 p.m., and the game had gotten a late start.  So, at 10:15, the game was only in the 7th inning.  We sang “Take Me Out To The Ballgame,” and they halted the game, so that they could put on the fireworks display for the children in attendance.  After 15 minutes of great fireworks the game resumed.

The entertainment continued too.  There was an actual cow-milking contest.  They pitted an Amish girl against one of the Barnstormer cheerleaders.  They each had 30 seconds.  The Barnstormer Cheerleader was reluctant to even grab the cow’s teat, and she got zero milk in 30 seconds.  The Amish girl, meanwhile, squeezed out a gallon of milk and I think she also churned a quarter pound of butter.  I noticed that the cheerleader’s football-captain boyfriend tried to leave with the Amish girl.

Meanwhile in the All-Star Game, the Barnstormers made up for their shortstop Kevin Ahren’s run-allowing error in the first inning by doing what they always do in such situations, “Keep calm, and Storm on.”  They drove in two runs in the Freedom League’s 3-1 victory over the Liberty League All Stars, and Barnstormer Charlie Cutler sparkled on defense when he tagged a guy out in an exciting close-play at home plate.  The Stormer’s Caleb Gindl hit the only homerun of the game.  He was later named All-Star Game MVP.

One of my favorite motivational speakers, Zig Zigler, used to say, “Don’t judge the day by the weather.”  I’m glad I didn’t.  It was a fantastic event, and I’m glad I went.  This rainy day turned out to be a “Perfect Storm.”  I’m just sorry I didn’t bring my camera.

Peace & Love, and all of the above,

Earl

Eyesight to the Blind

 

 

 

You talk about your woman, I wish you could see mine,

Every time she starts to lovin’ she brings eyesight to the blind.

-The Who

 

I just spent another weekend in New York, and, as usual, I partied.  I went to a Mavericks concert at the Beacon Theater with my friend Maria, who must be the band’s #1 fan.  I went to a Country Dance with my friend Joan.  I didn’t do any dancing, as I just enjoyed the music and kept Anna, the barmaid, very busy.

I did do something completely different this weekend, though.  I was an umpire at a Beeper Softball Game.  I never heard of Beeper Ball before, but Brother X schooled me on the finer points of the game.  He also informed me that our Dad helped invent the game.  My Dad was legally blind the last few years of his life, and he used his telephone company contacts to get some people at Western Electric to develop a beeping ball, so that blind people could play ball sports.  They made the first beeper ball out of a softball and some parts from a Princess phone.

Brother X and his wife are both former presidents of their local Lions Club.  I knew that the Lions were involved in charity work, but, now, I found out that they are really all about charity work, especially helping the blind.  Last year my brother’s chapter was able to purchase a seeing-eye dog for one of their town’s residents.  Thanks to owning the dog, he was able to participate more fully in life, and even joined a Beeper Ball team.

The ball beeps so that the blind batters and fielders know where it is.  The bases also emit signals so that the batters know where to run when they hit the ball.  There are only two bases, which are both in foul territory to avoid collisions with runners and fielders.  They are located 90 feet from home plate, about 10 feet outside the foul line.  There is no second base, because there is no need for one, and the batter can run to either of the two bases after hitting the ball, so there is no advantage for left-handed batters.  If the batter gets to the base before a fielder comes up with the ball, it is the equivalent of a home run.  If a fielder comes up with the ball before the batter reaches a base, it is an out.

As a base umpire, it was my job to raise my hand when the runner reached the base.  The field umpire raised his hand when a fielder came up with the ball.  So, if my hand went up first, the team scored a run.  If the field umpire’s hand went up first, it was an out.  The players all wear blindfolds so that the “legally blind” and the 100% blind are all 100% blind.  The only ones who don’t wear blindfolds ate the pitchers and catchers, who are sighted.  The pitchers are on the same side as the team at bat, so they’re not trying to strike anyone out.  They’re trying to serve up good pitches, and they yell “Ball” when they release the ball so that the batter knows the ball is on the way.  Then they listen for the beeping and swing at it.

There were officials keeping track of everything, but I don’t know the final score.  It didn’t matter to me.  The players were all winners.  It showed in all their faces.  They were happy to finally be able to participate in a game they loved.

My Dad’s little idea to help the blind participate in ball sports has really taken off and there are now beeper softball, basketball, and soccer leagues.  My brother and sister-in-law’s efforts with the Lions Club has also done much to help the blind.  Now, I had a little chance to help the cause, too, by waiting at first base and raising my hand when the runners got there.  Like John Milton said in his poem, On His Blindness, “They also serve who only stand and wait.”

Peace & Love, and all of the above,

Earl