March 26

Losing the war against inanimate objects since 1979.

To be perfectly clear.

National Weather Service style: The quantity of pollen grains in the air for Wednesday will remain relatively stable in the very high range. No change doesn’t mean no pollen, it just means that pollen producing plants are delivering pollen at a steady pace.


So confusing.

There’s a new TV show called Lost Monster Files. Three words, so many questions.

  • How long have monsters been keeping files?
  • Were these card files, paper files, or has everything been moved to the cloud?
  • What kinds of information do monsters have to keep, anyway?
  • How did the monsters lose the files, anyway? Theft? Deterioration? Sloppiness? Fire? All at once, or over a period of time?
  • Or does ‘lost’ modify monster and not files, that is we have the files but no monster?
  • Are these all now cold case files, or are there any ongoing investigations? And who will be responsible for maintaining the files, including storage fees, while the monsters are missing?

O.G. Streaming.

Unless something intrudes, mornings are spent reading and writing, listening to the radio, and making sure Belle the Collaborator Cat has a comfortable lap to nap in.

I mention this because of a post by Jeff Goins about coming off sabbatical (a month-long holiday or break).

At one point, Jeff mentions listening to records as part of his calming routine. Although I generally like the old school nature of things, having to get up and flip a record every twenty minutes or so harshes the mellow.

Instead, we listen to the radio. It plays music of a type that we like (classical), and while there are a suitable number of recognizable songs (5th Symphony or Bolero, anyone?), there are a number of pleasant surprises as well, and of course ‘melodies’ that reinforce our beliefs of what is not good or likable (is it too late to get some professional help for John Cage?).

While listening, I wondered if radio is really the original gangster music streaming service. Are we really ahead of the ‘early adopter’ music scene?


About those radio streams.

or, creepy realizations.

There are just under 90 broadcast radio stations in the Hampton Roads area where I live. talk. hip hop. sports. smooth jazz. rock. country. religious. Even though we only listen to two or three, all those other stations cheerfully continue broadcasting, sending their signals everywhere, including not only into radio receivers but also all through me.

Very unnerving, thinking about all those jazz solos and gospel chairs coursing all through my body. I’m most creeped out by the thought of all those obnoxious, angry talk show hosts and rappers bouncing anger and hate into my systems.

Also John Cage.

Now I have a new worry. What if all those waves are sending tiny tendrils drilling deep into my DNA, the very essence and substance of my being? Something that sets my nerve endings to jangling and my teeth to chattering. I don’t know about the DNA, but definitely collateral damage elsewhere.

Today’s earworm.

(Theme from) The Monkees

So tired and over it.

I am over buying fruits and vegetables that are rotting from the inside. First it was apples; then potatoes, now pears. Not nice, vegetable people.


Two notes on A.I.

I know I promised no more, but…

Note 1:
Recently Chinese software engineers announced they had developed an artificial intelligence engine for less money and with fewer people than their Western ‘competitors like OpenAI.
OpenAI founder Sam Altman declared that the Chinese had built their program on OpenAI, effectively ‘stealing’ it.
Which is rich, considering OpenAI was developed by ‘scraping’ (i.e., stealing) billions of sentences and pictures from the internet and web, much of it copyrighted.
Note 2:
One of the concerns people have is that AI will kill artistic forms of expression. I doubt it. Being creative is built into our systems.
History confirms this. Photography didn’t kill painting. Movies didn’t kill theater. And on and on.

Young felons?

From the MSN: Thousands of baby turtles released in Brazil.

I wonder what they did to be incarcerated at such a young age.


Was that an affirmative ‘moo?’

So much cattle news, coming so fast and furiously. From the BBC: Cow researchers find meanings behind moos.

The scientists are not quite content with this startling revelation, but also, according to The A Register, In a major breakthrough in bovine linguistic research, experts have confirmed that cows moo with accents distinct to their herd.

Frankly, I did not even know of the existence of the field of ‘bovine linguistic research.’ Yeah, I knew that scholars had done some translations of the musings of Elsie, but I was not aware that research had progressed this far (actually, had progressed at all).

I’m sure it’s only a matter of time and additional research before we see classes in beginning and intermediate Cow on forward-looking university course listings.


Welcome back, Popular Mechanics!

It’s been a while since we’ve heard from Popular Mechanics, but it appears the gang of lovable rogues just took a break to readjust their tinfoil hats. It was worth the wait, as they now tell us Aliens Are Breaking the Laws of Physics to Visit Us on Earth, New Theory Claims.

I gotta ask: Aliens, are we really that interesting that we’re worth your getting a ticket or two from the physics police? Those fines are brutal!

Those of you who are old enough to remember when magazines were printed on paper will no doubt remember Popular Mechanics was the mag responsible for stories claiming we were all going to be living in floating cities and owning personal helicopters by now. Maybe those stories were based on the same scientific rigor and peerless prognosticating as their current crop of breathless journalism seems to be.

Although to be fair, the Popular Mechanics stuff is no more banana-wacky than some more mainstream theories like black holes and dark matter.


W.o.W.

anapest

So how…?

One of the rules at the very exclusive San Vincente Club prohibits ‘uninvited engagement’ with members or guests you do not know.

I wonder—are there signs or pins that indicate the member is open to contact? Are there Talking/No Talking zones? And are members responsible for providing the signs or pins, or does the club provide them? And do both members need to have such a sign or pin? Maybe this would be a good use for those ‘Hello! My name is _______’ stickers, with ‘you can engage with me’ on the bottom.

Racing to the bottom.

I’ve mentioned before how much I dislike the whole ‘you’re doing it wrong’ meme. So negative! Now it’s being joined by new negativity, as seen in Jolly Ranchers Don’t All Taste The Same. Here’s The Worst Flavor.

I don’t know how many flavors of Jolly Rancher there are, but being a top-down kind of guy, I’d start the list with the best flavor, so I know which ones to pick out and eat first.

Sort of like picking the red M&Ms out of the bowl.


from (Poet)


In spring

In spring
a time of abundance
of fecundity
of joy
we are told to 
stop
and 
smell 
the
roses.
Would that I could.
No matter how inviting
that rose 
just inches from my nose
might be
it may as well be an oil painting
appealing only to the eye.
in spring
all the explosions
all the fecundity
triggers an awakening 
in my sinuses,
suddenly clogged by an abundance
of pollen from grass, cedar, maple
and oak,
limiting any interactions
with the lovely rose 
to dripping snot
on its crimson petals.

March 2025


Saturday Morning Poem

As the cat leads me
to the couch in the front room
I wonder if she 
is walking the twisted path
or if I am the one
weaving.

March 2025


 

Quotation(s)

If you don’t know where you are going, you might wind up someplace else.

-Yogi Berra


Sarcasm keeps me from crying —Rat

--Rat


Either define the moment or the moment will define you.

-Walt Whitman

 
 

Last Week

It is to make noises of guffawing.

March 19

Alas, a quiet St. Patrick’s Day. Celebrations were confined to opening a new bar of Irish Spring bath soap, and watching it rain all morning. So very Irish.

Reflections on the eclipse.

Last Friday, we had a total lunar eclipse, with total darkness about 2:30 AM.

I missed it. Intentionally, if ‘being asleep’ is intentional.

Now, there was a time when I would have been really excited and begged my parents to let me stay up to see it. I had a small 10X telescope, and would have viewed the event through that. But I don’t recall that ever happening.

But now, it’s sort of a yawn (apologies to the pun-sensitive members of the audience). If I see it, I see it, but I’m not going far out of my way. Why?

  • It’s past my bedtime. Except for solar eclipses, which we’re not supposed to look at anyway, all these events happen at night.
  • Intervening flora. We’ve got lots of trees around the house, making finding a convenient vantage point a bit of a problem.
  • Intervening meteorology. It seems every time there’s an event, somebody orders up cloud cover to hide the whole thing. This time there was also some fog.
  • Light pollution. OK, I grant you I’d probably be able to see a lunar eclipse even in the middle of a big city, it still tales something away.
  • So predictable, so no big whoop. In an age of science, when we know what’s going on, and when the next one is, a lot of the awe and wonder have been stripped away.

In our case, the correct answer (I am told) was c-meteorology, a double dose of clouds and fog.

What I’d really like is to be transported back to one of those times and places where eclipses meant something and portended great, terrifying events, tears in the fabric of the universe, where people believed the moon was being consumed by a dragon, but if they made a lot if noise by banging drums and cymbals (aided by prayer) they could chase the dragon away and restore the moon to its former magnificence.

Love the interactivity.


The time, she move so quick-like

I just made my first appointment for 2026.


Keeping everybody happy(?)

Disney has revealed that the remake of their 1937 classic will be called Snow White and the Seven Magical Creatures.

No not really, but they may as well have. Disney is caught between a woke rock and a ‘death to pc’ hard place, a battle they ain’t never gonna win.


Another rock, another hard place.

In spite of having declared ‘fromacomfychair’ both a Trump-free and Musk-free space, we just had to: according to The BBC, Musk’s Tesla raises concern over Trump tariffs.


Sudden realization.

I’ve mentioned before my irritation with many of the shows about archaeology, particularly the ones that ascribe all accomplishments to visitors from other planets. A close second are those archeologists who complain when an otherwise advanced ancient civilization neglected to develop writing and leave us a chronicle of their life. No matter that we might not be able to read what the a.c. wrote, the archeologists get all pouty like–Bad civilization! Why don’t you like us? Why do you make us guess about these things? You get back here and leave some written records!

Lazy archeologists!

But I was just sitting here, doing something totally unrelated, when a sudden burst of understanding fell upon me (good news–only minor cuts and bruises) like a ray of sunshine streaming through a gap in the clouds. Here’s the bottom line:

Lacking a frame of reference, the archaeologists in question are imposing their current reality on the old-timey artifacts.

So if you’ve just gone through a 293-hour Star Trek marathon, those three-fingered ‘humans’ are not the result of Thak, the lead cave painter, letting his six-year-old son Ugguru, who is just learning to hold a brush, paint on the wall during an early ‘take your son to work day’ but depictions of aliens who dropped out of the sky. What else could they be? Likewise, archeologists who claim any significant structure from antiquity was intended for religious purposes may be coming from a background of studying every medieval cathedral in Europe. It’s big, it’s stone, it’s been carved. Must be a temple. Or a burial site.

Of course, there’s always my favorite supposition, that some pranksters said, ‘hey, let’s just put some meaningless doodles and squiggles here to mess with the heads of people who find this place 5,000 years from now. Hey! Anyone got an iron knife they’ll be willing to give up for the goody basket?’


They just had to go there.

The American Songwriter promises to reveal The Higher Meaning Behind Brewer & Shipley’s ‘One Toke Over The Line.’

Frankly, they didn’t really deliver. If you know the meaning of ‘toke’ (and c’mon, anyone who was awake when the song came out in 1970 knew what a toke was) the song is pretty much self-explanatory if you read the lyrics.


A banner day approaches.

I am so looking forward to May 20, not because in Virginia it is Alien Abduction Day, but because, presuming one new customer gained per advertisement (if I am calculating correctly), Consumer Cellular will stop advertising because everybody on the planet will be using Consumer Cellular as their mobile service.

But is it more comfortable?

The Wall Street Journal tells us S&P 500 slips into a correction.

The WSJ doesn’t specify if it’s sweatpants or a soft, clingy, lacy number. I guess we'll just have to. use our imaginations.


Today’s earworm.

Jump (for your love)

Pointer Sisters

Promises, Promises.

Over at Futurism, revelations keep popping out like molasses from a jar: Scientists Say If We’re Extremely Lucky, This Asteroid May Put Us Out of Our Misery.

The misery may end in 2032, with scientists giving odds of 1-in-32 of the collision happening.

But I’m miserable NOW! Can’t y’all make it happen sooner? I can’t handle Survivor or The Bachelor going into triple digit seasons! And how much will eggs cost by then? NOW!

Regressions in science.

Wall Street Journal says Scientists study use of plants in battery power.

So basically they’ve rediscovered the potato clock?