“Smooth?” for SOCS

Smooth?

I suppose I was once “Smooth.” Most probably smoothest during that era when “Copacetic” was an oft-used descriptive term. My friends George and Laurie used it alot and I, freshly living in South California having recently departed Cheyenne, Wyoming, fell into line. Tom Waits was on the menu, as were doobies in place of three nights a week at the Corner Bar, trying to keep up my consumption of rum and Cokes to keep pace with my hard-drinking fellow-teacher friends in Wyoming.  At one point, my principal demanded,”If you are going to go out drinking all night and then come to school fresh from breakfast at the State Line (the only restaurant open at 3 A.M. when bars closed down) please at least go home first and shower, change clothes and brush your teeth! Don’t bring the aroma of your night’s adventures here to school with you.”

Due to an earlier fire bombing of the upper floors of the high school by protesting students, we were using only one floor of the school and had also commandeered the elementary school across the street to teach split-sessions from 6 A.M. to noon, noon to 6 P.M. and it seems all of my hard-drinking friends and I were on the early shift.

We were all good teachers, in spite of our drinking habits, and that was perhaps why our principal cushioned his proclamation a bit. In truth, it was only once that we came to school directly from the State Line, but once was enough. My career in that little Wyoming town lasted 7 years until I decided to move to the West Coast to write the great American novel and to become “smooth” California style.

That smoothness may have continued during my migrations ever northward from Huntington Beach to Los Angeles to Boulder Creek, in the redwoods near Santa Cruz. The town I moved to there was still giving birth to hippies and I guess I fell in line, a good bit later than the rest of them.  I never returned to heavy drinking and since my husband imbibed hardly ever in alcohol and never in pot, I depended mainly on eating and smoking (tobacco) to chill me out. Then, partially due to his hatred of the smoke and a line I happened to see in his journal “I guess Judy is just going to keep gaining weight,” I quit both. Quit smoking cold turkey and eating pretty much the same.  Lost an amount of weight equal to the weight of a six-year-old child and my body, at least, smoothed out from the bumps and lumps it had acquired over a few years of marriage.

Our life for the next 14 years consisted of long drives over smooth roads to art and craft shows, 11 hour setups and 4 hour tear downs at shows,  visits and live-ins from his kids, maintaining a house and 2 acres of property and 7 art studios–but still it seemed smooth-sailing, somehow, as we were doing exactly what we wanted to do. Writing. Creating art. Enjoying his kids and our friends and beautiful environment.

But 25 years ago, the smoothness of my life developed some rough bumps.  Bob passed away with little warning, days before we were to head down to our new life in Mexico.  Two months later, I was driving our fully-packed van over bumpy cobblestones, living in a place where I barely knew the language and knew no one. Our house––furnitureless, applianceless, I nonetheless adapted to, filled the house up, fixed the leaky pool, made friends.  I did not manage to smooth out the cobblestones, but I did manage to smooth out myself.

Until, at least, the past year or so as the whole world seems to be getting bumpy.  The burnings of banks and buildings and stores and buses and cars over the last week in Mexico are echoed on the world stage with our government killing its own citizens, invading other countries, robbing the poor to reward the rich. I have failed in my efforts to keep my own life copacetic. There are too many projects––books, home-repairs, medical appointments, lessons to plan, rights to my book to try to regain, two years of taxes that i have perhaps not paid and a tax preparer who refuses to communicate with me. But worst of all are the changes in procedure in every aspect of my online life. I cannot understand how to switch to Jet-Pac to get my stats on my phone, cannot understand my email or Amazon or most of my former smooth-sailing sites. They seem to be initiating change for change’s sake. Siri keeps breaking in to what I am doing to ask, “Siri, do you have a boyfriend?” Or “Want to hear a joke?” No, Siri….I want to write my blog and even if I wanted to hear a joke, I know from past experience that your jokes are lame. And am  I dumb enough to think you’d have a boyfriend, let alone care if you had?  And why are you asking yourself the question???? Time and time again, what I am doing is interrupted by some query about whether I want to buy this or that new app. Messages pop up from 5 different sources where I can now receive messages, when I was perfectly content with email and a phone where I decided when to call.  Life was better before WhatsApp and Teams and three different messengers and. and..and.

You might have detected that I am at the end of my rope and when I let go, I know it isn’t gonna be smooth down there. Maybe I’m just getting old, but aside from physical problems that we all face, I can’t remember my mother having all these bumps in her life. She had a TV and a telephone and books. A nice place to live. A daughter and son-in-law in the same town who cared. Another daughter who visited and cared from a distance. No cobblestones. No daily list of things to be done. Meals-on-wheels delivered her meals as she had declared when she was about the age I am now that she had “forgotten how to cook.” Yes, my mother hit bumps. Broke her hip, but, determined not to live in one of “those places,” turned down the use of a walker, walked for a short time with a cane, returned to daily water aerobics and within the year was like new…Well, like her former self before her fall. She once told me, “I never told my mother anything that would make her feel bad,” and so we didn’t.

In short, once we were all gone from home, I think my mother had the smooth life that I sometimes envy, but then I realize that I’ve chosen my bumps—with the exception of Trump, that is. Did not ever choose that man or the world he has created. But I have created mine, and as frustrated as I often am, I am so lucky in the problems I have––almost all of them being of my own choice. And so, if you are still with me after this loooooooong diatribe and chance to ask me, “So how are you?” I guess I am shamed into answering, “Copacetic!”

 

As you must know by now, the SOCS prompt for the day is “Smooth.” Bet you are sorry you asked.

Dinner at Uncle Zack’s

 

DSC00991 How a hamburger and fries should look!

                                                           Dinner at Uncle Zack’s

It’s hard to believe that someone has had a presentiment of disaster after it has happened, but since I am the one who had the premonition, I’m going to remain true to myself and admit that I had a feeling of disaster the minute we walked into the restaurant. It wasn’t our first choice, or even our second, but we knew the first choice was closed and when we arrived at the second, although it seemed full of people having some kind of a meeting, the sign on the door said, “Closed.” I was all for stopping by McDonald’s for a fast hamburger, but my friend said she didn’t like fast food, so we settled on our third or fourth alternative, depending on which of us was making the choice. We opted for Uncle Zack’s.

It was a stark room with two other tables of diners and a table near the kitchen that sported a big chunk of prime rib that someone must have been carving on since lunch time, since when my friend asked if they had any rare, the owner, overhearing, came and said that they had carved away all the rare meat. Hard to believe, since one would think the rare meat would be in the middle, but I judged her to be lucky not to be eating any meat that must have been sitting there most of the afternoon. It was 5 o’clock, we were fresh out of seeing the movie “Blue Jasmine,” a bit depressed and pretty hungry for a dinner that would lift our mood.

Right.

Our adventure began when my friend asked the waiter if they could serve her a Cosmo. “Well, I don’t know what that is, but I could probably figure out how to mix you one,” he admitted, without too much enthusiasm.

My friend opted for water, unsure of whether she wanted a barman/waiter who had never heard of a Cosmo to mix her one.

“Well, to me alcohol is just something you clean out a wound with,” he admitted, as he hurried off for her water and my Diet Coke. I swear to God he said this.

Our drinks arrived in tall glasses with plenty of ice and a lemon slice. Her water was fine.   My Coke was flat and tasted of disinfectant.

When the waiter came back for our orders, my friend was unsure of what she wanted to order. I told the waiter about the Diet Coke and asked for a glass of water and a hamburger, well-done with fries.

A very very very long time later, our waiter returned, apologizing by saying he had been attending to my last complaint. By that I took it that they were washing the disinfectant off the soda dispenser and aerating it, yet he offered me no new glass of Coke, and I had no intention of ordering another one.

My friend asked if the turkey Reuben was fresh turkey or luncheon meat. After a trip to the kitchen, he admitted it was luncheon meat but then in a flash of inspiration, admitted they might be able to use the turkey they were cutting off the same steam table that contained the bones of the Prime Rib.

In the interim between the time we ordered and the time we finally got our meals, I experienced a few additional sights that made me regret our decision to eat with Uncle Zack. The first was the sight of the other waiter picking pieces off the prime rib and eating them. The other was the sight of him scratching his nostril soon after and making no hasty exit to the sink to wash his hands.

I knew if I mentioned this to my friend, that we would be out of there. He was not our waiter, we hadn’t ordered the prime rib, so I remained mute. It was her hometown. I didn’t want to embarrass her, and to be truthful, I didn’t want to embarrass myself by appearing to be a difficult customer. Hindsight. Only in hindsight did I gain the knowledge that we should have left then.

Our meals arrived some time later. I bit into a fry enthusiastically, only to discover that it was soggy on the outside, raw on the inside. When I commented, my friend slid the only crisp French Fry out of the stack and pronounced it fine. I then handed her one of the limp others, which she agreed was still raw. I bit into the hamburger, which sort of rebounded off my teeth. It was the consistency of rubber—slightly resistant to chewing. When I tried to cut it, I had to saw at it as thought I was trying to slice a rubber ball. I took a bite. Tasteless. I cut it in half horizontally, thinking it might help and that I could at least eat the cheese and bacon, but they were equally tasteless.

My friend ate most of her Reuben, which she pronounced as tasteless as the hamburger, if not as difficult to masticate.

At the end of our meal, the young man waiter asked if I wanted a doggy bag for my hamburger and fries. No. I did not. When he brought the check, he asked if we had enjoyed our meals. No. We had not. I suggested that he instruct the cook to actually cook the fries and that the hamburger had a rubber consistency reminiscent of meat left in the freezer too long. “Oh,” he said.

“I’m now going to McDonald’s to get a real hamburger and fries” I said. We paid the bill, left a 20 % tip to let him know we weren’t just trying to stiff the establishment and the waiter, and drove to McDonald’s, where in place of an order of fries (I was totally “off” hamburgers at that point) and a Diet Coke, we were served a regular Coke and a Diet Coke instead.

As we sat at the drive-up window waiting for our correct order, my friend told me that when the people in the booth next to us were served their prime rib, she heard the waiter apologize and say, “The next time you come, we’ll give you a bigger serving. We sorta ran out of prime rib tonight.” Will they be back? Will we?

Sometimes, eating at home is the better alternative!

Note: The name of the restaurant has been changed to protect the guilty.  Perhaps it was just an off-day?

For Weekly Prompts, the prompt is “Alternative.”

Derrick J. Knight Reviews Prairie Moths

 

I want to thank Derrick J. Knight for his wonderful review of my book, Prairie Moths.  You can see his review HERE on his blog. 

For Fibbing Friday

For Fibbing Friday, today’s assignment is:

1. Mad as a dieter on a bathroom scale the day after Thanksgiving.
2. It’ll all come out your nose. (Answer to the question , what happens to the drink of bubbly wine you just tried to swallow as someone told a funny joke?)
3. Two’s company, three’s less pie for me.
4.  Hi hog prices means more expensive bacon.
5.  Every cloud has rained on me lately.
6.  Sticks and stones, in great enough numbers, can build a house.
7.  In for a penny is no longer a possibility in the U.S.
8.  Don’t count your birthdays after 70.
9.  Let sleeping dogs stay off my bed on rainy days.
10. Hands, knees and nostrils. (Name three body parts.)

Recent Activity in Mexico

For those of you wondering how close I am to the recent Cartel activity in Jalisco, the closest car fires and burning of banks and Oxxo stores occurred 6 miles to the west of me and 12 miles to the east of me.  The roads were totally closed by blockades of burning buses or cars in El Molina, and Ixtlahuacan, towns a bit farther to the east and west where the toll road and main highway to the airport and Guadalajara began. I happened to be in Chapala before we knew the full extent of what was happening and by time I got on the road home we only saw one or two cars on a road that is usually bumper-to-bumper on weekends and many times during the week. All restaurants and stores were closed and only a few people walking in sight. We gave a ride to one woman, then went home and stayed!!! One of the friends staying with me flew out just  before the assaults started. Another, who was to arrive yesterday, cancelled her trip here and another got back to Oaxaca three days late after staying here two extra nights, cancelling two trips to the airport and having to spend the night at the airport hotel to catch a flight out today. Today things seems to be getting back to near normal. Scary times.

“Party Excesses” For dVerse Poets

For dVerse Poets, we were to write a poem using the first line of someone else’s poem as the last line in our own. My last line is from I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith.

Party Excesses

The day my husband went to the clink,
I dressed up in my fanciest pink
fancy dress and donned my mink,
but found the party rinky-dink.
My patience at its very brink,
went to the kitchen for a drink,
fell victim to a cute guy’s wink
and party to his certain kink.
Was it too much, do you think?
I write this sitting in the kitchen sink.

for dVerse Poets  Illustration created using AI.

Jan. 6 Rioter Tells Her Story

Click on link below to hear this statement by a Jan. 6 Capitol participant who rejected Trump’s pardon.

https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1E7XZiQz8w/?mibextid=wwXIfr

The Numbers Game #113. Please Play Along. Feb 23, 2026

Welcome to “The Numbers Game #113. Today’s number is 235. To play along, go to your  photos file folder and type the number 235 into the search bar. Then post a selection of the photos you find that include that number and post a link to your blog in my Numbers Game blog of the day. If instead of numbers, you have changed the identifiers of all your photos into words, pick a word or words to use instead, and show us a variety of photos that contain that word in the titleThis prompt will repeat each Monday with a new number. If you want to play along, please put a link to your blog in comments below. 

Click on photos to enlarge.

“Night Casting” for The Sunday Whirl

 

Night Casting

When the sun puts on its midnight shroud,
we cease to air our thoughts aloud.
Moonlight trails across our bed,
leaving tracks within our head,
creating symbols that rock our dreams
’til brought to light with morning’s beams.
Then words remembered from the night
are ones we claim as we recite,
promising they are our own,
captured by that spear we hone
to probe the waters of the night
for words like fish that cross our sight
and thus are brought to light of day
by means of stories that we say
are our creation, although it seems
they’re really thoughts stolen from dreams.

For The Sunday Whirl Wordle, prompt words are:
shroud symbols water rock sun tracks spear stolen cross promise moon trail. Photos created with AI.

Juxtaposition for Lens Artists Challenge

 

Cat vs. dog plus front vs. back/a tiny bird juxtaposed against a vast far off environment? front vs. back, tall vs.short / contrasting flowers regarding color and shape.

For Lens Artists Challenge 386, the prompt is Juxtaposition.