Monthly Archives: May 2025

Immigration, Misspelled Inspiration and Soap Dispensers for SOCS, May 10, 2025

Immigration, Misspelled Inspiration and Soap Dispensers

"Southern Icons of the 20th Century" By Joni Mabe

“Southern Icons of the 20th Century” by Joni Mabe

"Travelers" By Larry Walker

“Travelers” By Larry Walker

When I saw that the SOCS prompt for today was “Soap,” I typed “Soap” into the search bar of my blog and found this post from 11 years ago. I couldn’t resist reblogging it:

Yesterday, I arose at 3 a.m. (after just 3 hours of sleep) to be driven by taxi to the Guadalajara airport to catch a plane to Dallas/Ft. Worth where I would catch a connecting flight on to St. Louis, MO. After visiting Mexican immigration at one end of the airport and pulling two heavy bags the length of the airport to wait in the American Airlines line for an hour, I discovered that bad weather in Dallas had caused them to cancel all flights, and would it be convenient for me to come back tomorrow? No, coming back tomorrow was not convenient! Not only was a friend waiting for me in St. Louis, but the additional two taxi fares would amount to my taxis costing more than my airline flight. American was able to schedule me onto a later Delta flight and so it is that at the hour when I should have arrived in St. Louis, I am instead in the Atlanta airport with three hours left before my flight leaves, sitting next to a man who snuffles like a pig every 30 seconds, held prisoner by the electric power strip providing juice to the loyal MacBook Air that is making it possible for me to tell you today’s story.

If you’ve ever gone through your customs and immigration check in Atlanta, you probably already know what I have discovered: that the Atlanta airport has the longest walk and most circuitous queue lines of any airport so far experienced, after which you arrive at an automatic passport check where you scan your own passport, pose for the most unflattering picture possible, then go through yet another maze that is nothing short of an endurance check/ordeal after which you wait in line forever along with 500 other travelers to again be sorted into lines by an immigration employee on the job for the first day (she told me so) who for some reason has a grudge against your line to the point that the other two lines are empty before she sees fit to select people from the pariah line to again get in line to see one of the 4 humans assigned to double check our worthiness to enter the U.S., walk for another 15 minutes to retrieve our luggage and then wait in yet another line for customs.

By the time I actually made it through customs and began my loooooooong trek to where I could catch a train to another concourse, I was as perspiration-soaked as if I had been through an hour-long workout at the gym. You will have guessed right if you are thinking that once I arrived on “B” concourse, I discovered that my gate was the last one on the concourse. Of course it was! There is, however, a fact that mitigates all of the frustration previously endured, for the corridors of the Atlanta airport leading from the plane to Immigration are lined with some of the best and most varied art I’ve ever seen in any airport exhibition and most art museums. Collage, wall sculpture and paintings made me wish the automatic walkways would stall to give me time enough to actually look at the art—with the result that I got off the moving walkway to walk back to do just that. With no hands free to record any of the names of artists, I’ll just have to leave it to Google or airport authorities to give you more specific information, but the art was whimsical, colorful, original, thought-provoking and sometimes naïf. (For certain of those outsider art pieces giving exhaustive social commentary, do not judge the artistic merit by the spelling.)

A $13 pulled-pork plate assuaged my appetite as at that time it had been 13 hours since I arose to drive to the airport and begin my long day’s journey. But it was a trip to the ladies room that assured me that I was in fact back in the good old U.S.A. Spotless cleanliness, two full toilet paper rolls, paper seat covers, a hook to hang my purse, enough room to store my carry-on rolling bag without having to squeeze myself into a corner to do so, a self-flushing toilet that actually flushed and the piéce de résistance—A SHELF TO PUT MY DRINK ON!!!! Upon my easy exit from the roomy stall, I enjoyed an automatic foam soap dispenser installed in the sink next to the warm water faucet, then found paper towels and trash can within easy reach. This of course made me remember (with no nostalgia) the new movie theater in Ajijic, Mexico—my home town for the past 13 years—where only one sink of the eight present actually works and is, of course, the one furthest away from the only towel dispenser. Ah, Atlanta airport. I forgive thee for all other sins.

The RDP prompt is “Soap.”

No Sympathy, for MVB, May 10, 2025

 

No Sympathy

I fear I’m barely lucid, for digestion dominates.
I’ve just had a sumptuous banquet of pork shank, rice and dates.
I know it’s fairly common to gorge and then complain,
yet I’m sure that the world’s hungry would gladly share our pain.

 

For MVB the prompt is Banquet.

Favorite Places for SOCS. May 10, 2025

Some Sacred Spaces

I asked women about their favorite places.  These Story Boxes are a reflection of what they told me.  Unfortunately, I forgot to take a picture of my favorite before I sold it.  It was The Artist’s Studio.  These Boxes are all 11.5″ X 8″.

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The Beauty Shop

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The Souvenir Shop

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The Kitchen

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Center Stage

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The Parlor: A chest of memories substitutes for life: a wedding veil, old love letters, pictures and a solitary bottle of champagne furnish her Saturday night company.

For SOCS the prompt is, “My Favorite Place.”

“School Reunion” for Writers Workshop, May 9, 2025

Class of 1965, Murdo, S.D. class reunion.

School Reunion

He’s an aging “Murdo Coyote” in his ancient football shirt––
remembering past  touchdowns while we’re dishing out the dirt.

Non-Trumper against Trumper, human rightist against bigot,
all the ways we’ve grown apart, gushing from the spigot.

When the debate gets heated, he brings about a shift,
repeating old glories until we get his drift

and switch our conversation way back to the past
to all those high school memories that thankfully still last

and that turn the party back to what it should have been:
turning old friends back to what they all were way back when.

For Writers Workshop, May 9, 2025

 

For Fibbing Friday, May 9, 2025

Iggy Pop

For Fibbing Friday, the words to redefine are:

1.   Poggers: Female members of Edgar Alan’s fan club.
2.   Simp: Bart’s father. (Bart is Simp son) 
3.   Bussin: What you be doing if you run out of money to buy gas for your car.
4.   Delulu: DeTubby’s little friend
5.   Gucci: The vital life force or flowing energy that makes one a successful mud-wrestler.
6.   Vibing: What Canadian geese are doing when they fly in formation.
7.   Rizz: What they eat with red beanzz in New Orleans.
8.   Cheugy: Nickname for a wrestler known for biting his opponents.
9.   Booed up: What they label a ghost who is all stoked up for Halloween.
10. Beige Flag: What be Mr. Pop’s banner. 

 

 

Going Spiral

 

Georgia O’Keeffe, A Piece of Wood I (1942), oil on canvas, Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, gift of The Burnett Foundation

Going Spiral

Few easily attain the goals that are their aspiration
without initial effort that requires perspiration.
Most of us must labor to gain what we desire,
but although we go in circles,  each circle spirals higher.

 

For dVerse Poets we were to write a poem based on a Georgia O’Keeffe painting.

Kissy Cat and the Wicker Stepmother

Kissy Cat and the Wicker Stepmother

     Once there was a house built up on stilts on the side of a mountain covered with redwood trees. There were so many redwood trees that squirrels used them like freeways, running along their long branches to jump from tree to tree. There were so many redwood trees, that when the deck for the house was built, they just built it around the redwood trees, so that three large trunks rose right through the deck. There were so many trees that no other houses could be seen from the house–just forest and sky and the mountains across the valley.

In the forest lived racoons and possums and deer. In the forest there were squirrels and blue jays. And also in the forest, there lived an unusual cat with long legs and a tail that was crooked into the shape of a “y”. Although her face and body shape were those of a Siamese cat, she was gray all over: coat , whiskers, nose. There was not a color on the cat that was not a shade of gray except for the eyes, which were chartreuse with a black inner lid. In the city, she would have been an alley cat, but here in the redwoods she was a wild cat who wanted the company of people but didn’t know it yet.

For years, this cat had given wide berth to the house because she knew that a fierce and loud dog lived there. From her hiding places in the woods, she could hear him growling and barking from the end of his very long chain. Like the deer and the racoons, she moved in a large circle around the house, never entering the domain of the dog. Then one day weeks before, she had stopped hearing the dog. Since then, she had watched the house, moving closer each day, still expecting the dog to lunge out at her if she moved too close, but for many days she had seen no sign of him.

Slowly, day by day, she moved closer to the house. Still, no dog appeared. Until finally, she could curl on the deck in the sun or sharpen her claws on the redwoods rising through the deck with no fear of a snarling, barking surprise.

The first time she saw the human unpacking boxes in the house the dog had left, she maiouwed like a high-pitched dial tone until the woman slid open the door and followed her a little way into the bushes. When she got to the hill, the woman stopped following.

On her second day in the house in the forest, the woman was working in the garden when she saw a flash of gray streaking between two trees. A short time later, she saw the cat sitting on the garden bench. When she approached, it darted away. But an hour later it was again sitting on the bench.

The cat was very thin. The woman fed her canned tuna for three days in a row and on the fourth day fed her potted shrimp so rich the cat had to come back twice to finish it. First, she had gently lapped up the thin salted liquid around the shrimp. Then she ate the shrimp one by one, very slowly––not because she didn’t like them as much as the tuna or because she wasn’t as hungry as before, but because she carefully examined each shrimp before eating it as though it were a new animal.

By the end of the first week, the cat had moved into the house. She was a muscular cat who stood on her hind legs and bucked her body up for a rub. She was a talkative cat who maiouwed frequently in a conversational manner. At night she sang.

Now, although only the woman lived in the house when the cat first decided to join her, she had a husband working in a city far away whom she missed very much. One day soon he would join her, but for now she was alone. And so by the time the husband came to live in the forest, the cat was sleeping at the foot of the bed at night, or curled up on the chest of the woman. The husband would shake the cat off when it lay on top of him; but the cat could count on remaining upon the woman, who had named the cat “Kissy Cat” because of her soft and fragrant fur, which invited burrowing and kissing.

Now, although the woman had no children of her own, when she married her husband she had acquired three stepchildren. She told them that they were called stepchildren because they were like stair steps–eight, seven and four. When they moved to the house in the forest, the children didn’t move with them, for they were living with their mother, but they would come visit on all the school vacations, for weeks at a time, and it was during one of these visits that the youngest child gave her her name. He was trying to kid her, but instead of calling her his “Wicked Stepmother,” he had called her his “Wicker Stepmother.” Since she loved baskets and wicker furniture, the house was full of both. And so the name stuck. And that is how she came to be called “The Wicker Stepmother.”

The husband of the Wicker Stepmother was called Bertie. All day long he worked in his garage studio carving wood. All day long his wife worked in her basement studio making jewelry. Kissy Cat didn’t like the sawdust or the loud machines in the garage, but she liked the warmth and quietness of the basement, where she spent most of her days curled up between the Wicker Stepmother’s back and the back of her chair. When the woman insisted on settling further into the chair, she would hop out and go to sleep in the corner, under the rod that held their spare clothes. And so a month passed.

One day the Wicker Stepmother and Bertie were eating lunch on the patio. It was mid-June and the sun was bright, the air was warm. Kissy Cat came up the stairs which led downstairs to the studio. When she jumped onto the chair between them, the Wicker Stepmother noticed that she was getting heavy. A few weeks later, they were both watching the cat, who now spent most of her time indoors. “I’ve figured it out,” said the Wicker Stepmother. “That cat isn’t just getting fat. She is going to have kittens!”

A few days later, the Wicker Stepmother entered her studio to find Kissy Cat on her chair. “You are going to be a Mama soon,”she said to the gray cat, “and you need a cozy place in which to have your kittens.” She ran up the stairs and returned with an armload of clean towels. These she formed into a nest on the floor under the hanging clothes. Just as she had gathered Kissy Cat into her arms, Bertie came clumping down the outside stairs and slid the sliding glass door open. And so he heard her tell Kissy Cat that this was the place she had made for her to have her kittens. And he had seen her take Kissy Cat over to show her the nest.

“That cat is not going to have her kittens in a place you pick out for her!” said Bertie, laughing. “She’s going to have them in my sock drawer–or more likely in a place hidden away where you’ll never see them until they’re weeks old.”

“Well, we’ll see,” said the Wicker Stepmother. Kissy Cat got up from the warm nest, stretched, and then sauntered out the open door.

As the days grew warmer, the cat grew eccentric. Once they found her curled up on the top shelf of the bookcase–up near the ceiling where it seemed impossible for her to climb. Once they found her asleep in the abandoned rabbit hutch on the trail near the garden. Another day they found her rolled up like a very large sock in Bertie’s sock drawer. In spite of the heat of July, she sought warm places–the trunk where they stored blankets–the sleeping loft made sauna-like by the sun beating on the roof above it.  Once, when the Wicker Stepmother was taking clothes from the dryer and left to answer the phone, she returned to find the cat curled contentedly among the still-warm clothes in the dryer.

It was weeks later and they were again eating lunch on the deck when Kissy Cat came up the steps. “Miaouw, miaouw,miaoooouw,” crooned the cat, in a loud and insistent voice.

“Are you hungry?” asked the Wicker Stepmother, pouring cat food in her bowl. But Kissy Cat ignored the food.

“Miaooooouw,” repeated the cat, in a yet louder voice.

“Do you need water?” asked the Wicker Stepmother, pouring water in a bowl. But Kissy Cat ignored the water.

“Are you ready to have your kittens?” said the Wicker Stepmother.

“Miaoooooouw,” confided Kissy Cat, and when the Wicker Stepmother opened the sliding glass doors, the cat ran past her. Her gray coat a blur, she ran across the living room and into the hall. She ran past the bookcase and the door to the bedroom and the sock drawer. She ran past the blanket trunk and the ladder to the loft. She ran down the basement stairs, past the cat door that led out to the garden and the rabbit hutch, into the studio, and directly to the nest the Wicker Stepmother had prepared for her.

“Well I’ll be,” said Bertie, arriving downstairs a minute after the cat and the Wicker Stepmother.

During the next hour, Kissy Cat gave birth to three tiny gray kittens who looked just like her. Except, their eyes were closed, their fur was matted and wet, and each had a different tail. One was crooked like her mother’s, but crooked in the opposite direction. The other had a zigzag tail–like a road with many sharp corner turns or a chain with lots of kinks in it. And the third had a tail that was very long and very straight, with no kinks at all.

The whole time that Kissy Cat was giving birth, she insisted that the Wicker Stepmother stay right by her side. When she tried to leave to go get a drink of water, Kissy Cat tried to follow her–so Bertie had to go get the drink and bring it down to her. Not that the Wicker Stepmother wanted to miss a moment of the births, for she had never seen anything being born before,and she thought it was a wonderful miracle.

After the kittens were born, the Wicker Stepmother lay on the floor near them for three hours––watching the mother cat lick them dry,watching the kittens find the teats for their first drinks of milk,watching them wriggle and writhe over each other.

For a week, if she wasn’t working in her studio, she still went to their nest to see them at least once every hour. She carried food and water down to the mother cat so she wouldn’t have to leave her kittens, and when the mother cat left them and went outside via the cat door, the Wicker Stepmother went over to the nest and watched over the kittens until she returned.

When the kittens’ eyes opened, they became more vocal and more active. Now they would venture a short distance away from the nest.  Now the Wicker Stepmother could hold and caress the kittens without the mother cat becoming distressed. Soon they were becoming so adventurous that the Wicker Stepmother decided to take them all upstairs. Very carefully, she carried them one at a time to a nest she’d prepared in the living room. As she was carrying up the last kitten, she met the mother cat on the stairs, carrying one of the kittens down again. Soon,the mother cat had seized each of the kittens by the ruff of its neck and carried it back down to its birth nest.

The next day, the Wicker Stepmother again tried to carry the kittens upstairs. With the same results.

On the third day, when the Wicker Stepmother went down to try to move the kittens upstairs, she discovered them all missing. She looked for them in the laundry room. In the hall. She looked in Bertie’s sock drawer. She looked behind the sofa. She looked in the lofts. But nowhere were the kittens to be found. With Bertie, she looked in the studios. She looked behind the television. She looked in all the closets. But nowhere were the kittens to be found.

Finally, she decided to go work in the garden. Grabbing her rake and her trowel, she descended the three flights of wooden stairs to the garden, far below. As her foot hit the landing that separated the porch steps and the last short flight of stairs down to the garden, she heard a small squeak. Then she heard another small squeak. They sounded like tiny high-pitched miaous. Getting down on her knees, she peeked through the boards beneath the porch. And there she saw the three wriggling shapes of the tiny kittens. In the background were Kissy Cat’s beautiful chartreuse eyes, shining out from the darkness.

“Okay, you win,” said the Wicker Stepmother. “You are the mother. You are the boss.” And she left them alone for the rest of the day.

The next morning, the Wicker Stepmother woke early and went out to peep beneath the porch for the kittens. But the space was empty. “Okay, you need your privacy,” she thought. And she climbed the stairs to the back of the house, entered her bedroom and put on her work clothes. She would have some breakfast and then work hard all day on a new jewelry order. But first, she would have some breakfast.

Pulling on her shoes, she left the bedroom and headed for the kitchen. But on the way to the kitchen, she found a big surprise, for as she entered the room that contained living room, dining room and kitchen all in one large space, she could see the mother cat sitting on her haunches staring out the dining room sliding glass doors. Outside was a huge gray stray cat with very long bushy hair. And, as she drew nearer, she could see between them, lined up in perfect order along the inside of the glass–the three kittens. When the large gray cat outside saw her, it ran quickly away. Then Kissy Cat turned and calmly walked away.

“So you brought them up to see their Poppa, did you?” said the Wicker Stepmother.

“Miaouuuw,” purred the mother cat contentedly, moving over to turn on her side to allow her kittens to nurse.

And from that day onward, the kittens roved throughout the living room and kitchen and t.v. room. They continued their explorations into the bedrooms and soon were large enough to crawl up and down the stairs on their own.

In the years to come, Kissy Cat and the kittens and the Wicker Stepmother would have many adventures. And never again did Kissy Cat hide them away.

 

Judy’s note: I just found this story tucked away in a corner of my computer. Bob’s youngest son, Dylan, really did call me his “Wicker Stepmother,” a pretty cute joke for a little boy.  The details of this story are all true, although the names have been changed to protect the guilty.  The wild cat I call Kissy Cat in the story did slowly move in with me in our “new” house in the redwoods of the San Lorenzo Valley   while Bob was still completing the school year teaching in Canyon Country, 300 miles away.  He came on weekends, but during the week, Kissy Cat and I made do. All the other details happened as described.

I am wondering if the story could make a children’s book, as-is, or if it is too adult-oriented. I’d appreciate your views on the matter.

As a further note, the mother cat I named Kiddo disappeared again shortly after the kittens were weaned and I never saw her again. Perhaps the neighborhood jaguar (really) got her, but I’m hoping she ran away to rejoin the father of the kittens, who was the Russian Blue who visited them from the other side of the sliding glass door that day when the mother finally moved them back into the house.

Name-Dropping Confession # 8

From Bruce Bishop

I was trying to think of a famous person(s) who I’ve met to add to your blog post, but only three came to mind from when I was in my 20s. I was a waiter in Toronto and served the singer k.d. lang; author Margaret Atwood; and British actor Michael York.
When I was in my last year of university in Halifax, I was the Arts Faculty representative. I booked ‘Mandrake the Magician’ to give the students and faculty a show…The poor man was so elderly and frail at the time, his performance was less than magical, and quite underwhelming, to say the least. That was in 1975!
Judy’s Note:  Leon Mandrake, a real-life magician, had been performing for well over ten years before Lee Falk introduced the comic strip character. Thus, he is sometimes thought to have been the source for the origin of the strip. Leon Mandrake, like the fictional Mandrake, was also known for his top hat, pencil-line mustache, and scarlet-lined cape. Ironically, Leon Mandrake had changed his stage name to Mandrake to match the popular strip and then legally changed his surname from Giglio to Mandrake later. The resemblance between the comic-strip hero and the real-life magician was close enough to allow Leon to at least passively allow the illusion that the strip was based on his stage persona.[7] Leon Mandrake was accompanied by Narda, his first wife and stage assistant, named after a similar character, who appears in the strip. Velvet, his replacement assistant and eventual lifetime partner, would also later make appearances in the strip along with his real-life side-kick, Lothar

Name-Dropping Confession #7 by Laurie Devine


Name-Dropping by:  Laurie Devine

This has been on my mind all week. Hope it qualifies, although we didn’t actually talk.Fergie & Me at Harrods.

This must have happened in mid 1980s when I was living in London writing a novel. One afternoon I was wandering around not really shopping but cruising Harrods, the legendary department store, trying to understand why it was so famous. I had always been a big shopper but excelled at sales, boutiques and street markets. Harrods seemed boring, staid and crazy expensive.I was in ladies hats, but making for lingerie when, across a wide table of ugly hats, I spied someone I knew.Sort of.Could that be Fergie? Sarah Ferguson!Married to Prince Andrew (who was not yet disgraced).I stopped, as they say, in my tracks.And I stared. Really, I stared at her like she was on wide screen tv, Lifesize.

She, like me, was young then. Good red hair. Not fat at all. Pretty. By herself.And what she was obviously doing was shopping for one of those big royalty hats they all wore.I stood and stared. Blue hat,  yellow, one of those goofy “fascinator” confections.She tried on every hat on the table, while I raptly watched. I mean, relentlessly stared. We must have been about ten feet away from one another, but I never relaxed that state, never made any human connection, just stared at the British princess.Of course she noticed.She got into the swing of it, began smiling and pretending to cry or get mad or flirt as she tried on each hat, obviously not happy with any but turning this speechless encounter with the staring stranger into a laugh.

This went on for awhile, as I stared, so captivated that it wasn’t until she finally tired of the hats, actually blew me a kiss, and walked away, that I realized what a dork I was. She had me totally spellbound. But she had been so naturally warm and funny and fun.In the years to come, with her divorce and scandals and breast cancer, I always smile when I remember that chance meeting with the likeable princess and Harrods hats. Blessings to her! Thanks for opportunity to share! –Laurie Devine

In and Out, May 5, 2025

In and Out

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The Lapdog

Dogs that stand outside and seek admittance to within
overlook the worth of what they’ve seen and where they’ve been.
Those of us sealed fast inside yearn to see the world
that we have been deprived of as we lie securely curled
in the safety of our houses, away from chasing cars
and other fun activities kept from us by bars.
We would feel such ecstasy racing after squirrels,
other dogs and cats and lizards, skunks and boys and girls.
We seek to flee the rules that those street dogs seem to flout.
We would have such wild adventures if we only could get out!!

 

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The Street Dog

Lucky little dogs with collars sit there looking out
as though they do not know what life for street curs is about.
We’d love to have their pampering and their daily feeding.
What they seek escape from is exactly what we’re needing!

 

Seeing Santiago’s new pup longing to get outside and my dogs yearning to get in put me in mind of these poems I wrote years ago so I had to add this last photo on to the poem and repost it.