July 1, 2006
 As I Was Saying . . . .
Filed in All About Moi

OK, so it's been four months and  spare change since the nimble fingers of yours truly, Mr. G.P.Blogs, raconteur to the dwindled masses, skulking biographer of the D-list stars, champion of Ballerina_133 free speech so long as he's doing the talking, lightly choreographed the fragile ballet of fingers across his velvet keyboard in search of the perfect thought.

Having come up empty, he shut the dance troupe down and absconded with the ticket money.

But now he's back. Richer for the experience, yet  poorer. Sadder for the abyss of posts from February through July, but wiser. Searching for a third cliche to complete the Comic Rule of Three, but failing.

S'how'vey'all been?

The Three of You™, voluntary slaves to my wry, Keillorian tales have been on my mind of late. Have you been well? Have you been content? Have you never been mellow?

I woke up this day from a months-long hibernation that exceeded my intent by thirty-seven minutes. That will teach me for counting on a battery-powered alarm.

You may all, The Three of You®, my merry band of mercurial minstrels, rest easy. Toss out the beer gut, You On The Left. Relax and breathe deeply, You On The Right. Keyboard_22_1Let loose that sigh you've been storing for just such a moment, intractable Ms. Center.

I have nothing of import to impart. No gems of value to mine. And again—no third metaphor to bring full circle The Comic Rule of Three.

I am as bereft of ideas as an . . . as an . . . idea-less ideologue in Idaho. Why do you think I've been in hiding? The well had gone dry. The cup 9/10 empty. The . . . . . . . . . . . . well, you get the idea.

But, like Nixon in 1980, I'm tanned, rested, and ready for a comeback.

Starting tomorrow.

Right now I could use a nap.


November 21, 2005
 Separated at Birth?
Filed in All About Moi

I was eating lunch one day at a Carl's Jr. near Universal Studios in Southern California. Two polite young men approached as I was attempting to emulate the commercials by getting the condiments all over the table, floor and, of course, my pants. One of the teenagers asked respectfully, "Excuse me, sir . . . but are you (gulp) George Lucas?"Mike_212m_1

September 10, 2005
 Turning 50 Aint For Sissies, The Final Saga
Filed in All About Moi

No doubt about it. I was currently mired smack in the middle of a serious run of bad luck.

She-Who-Is-Better-Versed-Than-I-In-The-Verses-Contained-In-The-Bible contends there is no such thing as luck–that all instances of providence are part of God’s plan. We have spirited discussions over this topic as I believe the manner in which a football bounces after a punt does not generally concern our Creator. Whether it lands on its side or an end, factoring in the precise amount of air pumped into the Walkerpigskin, whether or not the weight of the laces sewn into the ball are just a fraction of a fraction different that the 999 balls manufactured before it–this is all factored into which way the ball is going to bounce when it hits the ground. While giving God all the credit in the world for His amazing creation of the world, I just can’t see Him pre-ordaining the direction or distance of the bounce on every fourth down kick in the professional, college, amateur, youth, and even sandlot ranks. I believe some of those bounces–maybe even most of them–are the direct result of luck–random chance–whether good or bad.

I can, however, wrap my mind around something said by Branch Rickey, general manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers, among other teams.

“Luck is the residue of design.”

You see, I’d been having a rather difficult time since turning fifty. My physician-diagnosed hernia had morphed into a kidney stone and I had experienced more pain in one twenty-four hour period than perhaps in my entire life. But my luck, as luck would have it, was about to change.

A few days after my scheduled CT-scan I was back in Dr. Sparky’s office to discuss the results.

“I have good news and bad news for you. First the bad news. You’re going to die. Someday. Just not now. The good news is that it won’t be from a kidney stone. You passed it because the scan shows no trace of one whatsoever.”

Well. Anytime a doctor has to be the one to tell you that you’ve passed a kidney stone–and it’s a suprise to you–has to be one of the luckiest days of your life. Generally speaking, you don’t need another human being to deliver this news. You just know. That I had to be informed of this event meant I had been spared some enormous pain.

I use the term “luck” but I believe, in this case, my good fortune was the residue of provident design. Funny thing about such providence. You never know exactly when it’s going to occur and often aren’t even sure if God’s had His hand in events after they’ve happened.

A case in point.

I was sitting in my car, minding my own business. I had just dropped off The Ten Year Old at soccer camp and had stopped off with The Toddler in tow to mail six large packages at the US Snail Mail Office. Pulling out of the parking lot I noticed a friend I hadn’t seen for a while riding his bicycle across the street. Seeing he was crossing my way I decided to pull over and wait.

So I was just sitting there.

Parked by the side of the road.

In a legal parking spot.

Minding my own business.

When I unhooked my seatbelt and leaned across the passenger seat to roll down the window.

Did I mention I was minding my own business?

My friend John rode by on the sidewalk and I waved out the window, calling his name. Not sure who had shouted, but clearly cognizant someone was no longer minding his own business, John stopped, then shuffled his bicycle backwards. A glint of recognition was all the facial acknowledgement I needed to know he was glad to see me. And pleased even, perhaps, that I was way past minding my own business.

He opened his mouth to speak. Perhaps he would have said, “What ho, young Blogs,” for to a man in his seventies I, a newly-minted fiftigenarian, might look deceptively young. Maybe a short “Lovely weather we’re having” might have offered an appropriate entree to further discussion. I’m sure if he’d have chided, “So if you’re not minding your own business, do you mind telling me just who bloody well is?” I would be taken aback for a moment, no doubt. But I’d have sustained the shock and moved on with my life.

Sadly, John offered none of these conversational gambits. I can only wish he’d thought to mention, “It might be timely to reaffirm your seat belt, my friend, for a large, recent model rental car driven by a man of Middle Eastern extraction who has no driver’s license, no vehicle registration, and no proof of insurance, is about to plow into the rear end of your fine family van rendering it completely worthless for all uses–except as a really good paperweight.”

Yes, I wish John had warned me of this impending Kodak moment. I might not have bounced so realistically like a pinball off its bumpers, rattling to and fro off the dashboard, the roof, the passenger seat, the door. That I happened to score a free game was of little comfort. But because I was unable to predict this seminal event in my otherwise dashboard kissing-free existence, I simulated all of the actions as described.

As I gathered my wits, strewn about the van like Raisonettes on the sticky floor of a second run theater, I realized I had just blown the perfect opportunity to meet my Maker. Clearly, I conceded while stumbling from the vehicle in Mr. Goodwrenching pain, my Maker was playing it coy in His quest for significant face time with me.

I made my way around to the passenger door, which I rolled open to find out the condition of The Toddler. She was crying. It was not a bellow of pain I heard but the sullen whimper of a scared child. She called out to me.

“Papa… Papa…” she cried.

Many child-rearing experts eschew the familiarity of this salutation, but I have never been one to have my children address me as “Mr. Blogs.” This is the one chink in my sentimental suit of armor. I find it sufficient that Mrs. Blogs has yet to step over this line of formality.

It appeared The Toddler was fine. The restraints in her car seat likely prevented an egregious “Tilt,” or worse, “Game over.”. I held her close and wept, “Daddy Blogs is here for you.” Somehow that made everything better as we sat in the van together, waiting for help to arrive.

John was negotiating for information from the young man who had just hijacked my neck and back. He had no documentation to offer, explaining he had left everything pertinent to this accident at the fictitious address he was only too happy to provide.

John asked him to use his cell phone to call an ambulance. While we never actually saw him make the call, the guy assured us he had. He waited around for about ten minutes. When a good Samaritan happened to pass by our little incidnt, she was thrilled, being a Samaritan, to find a group of strangers in need of good-deed-doing. She offered to call the police on her cell phone. The young man, showing more concern when hearing the words “cell” and “police” than he had for my van or child, began edging toward his own damaged car. Fondling his keys a bit more than a Baptist might think proper, he told us that he needed to go pick up his mother who was only two blocks away and that he would be right back.

John and I looked at each other and, seeing the wrinkles chiseled into the other’s face, realized neither of us was born yesterday. We also had not just fallen off a turnip truck although my body was certainly beginning to believe otherwise.

“You stay here and wait for the police,” offered John. “I’ll ride down and tell your mother what’s happened.”

“She doesn’t speak English,” the man pleaded.

We explained that leaving the scene of an accident could bring him a world of hurt as a hit and run driver. He smiled and comforted us. He would be right back. We would see. We could trust him.

Considering neither John or I were in any condition to tackle the man, who had given his name as Jabib Jones, we watched him drive away. Actually, “drive” is too strong a verb for his getaway. As he pulled into traffic the front end of his car emitted an unearthly, grating sound that no steering mechanism was ever likely to recover from, but which I immediately recognized as the intro to an obscure Motley Crue song. The noise continue unabated as his vehicle reached speeds upward of two miles per hour. John and I looked at each other sentimentally, knowing this guy must really love his poor MaMa to run what was left of his car so completely into the ground. Perhaps we had misjudged the bloke.

The police, who were just arriving with fire department and paramedics on hand, would later that day discover the man’s abandoned vehicle a few blocks from the accident. John and I hoped his mom had survived the ordeal of having to walk home. But then we consoled each other with realization this good son likely carried his mom home on his back whistling, “Me and Mrs. Jones.”

The paramedics questioned me for what seemed like ten minutes but was actually nine minutes and thirty seconds. The Toddler regaled the firemen with her impish grin and puckish charm. John gave the police the facts. Just the facts.

It seemed we all had our appointed jobs for the occasion and mine just happened to be laying prone while six burly firemen affixed a neck brace, then rolling me onto a stiff board. I had never ridden in an ambulance before. The little boy in me asked if I could have the siren.

“Sir,” the driver responded, “we don’t do that. Could you please keep your inner child in check?”

I’d like to say that I was met at the hospital by a team of twelve doctors and six nurses; that they used every tool in their vast arsenal to bring my body back from the edge of eternity. But being wheeled into the hospital on your back really isn’t as exciting as you might think.

They took extensive X-rays and gave me some Vicodin for the pain. The Toddler, who had ridden with me, was regaling the staff with her impish grin and puckish charm. I’m guessing she’s going to find a way to make some money off of that one of these days. My family and some dear friends arrived on the scene and showered me with a grat deal of love, concern, and prayer.

With no broken bones, nor blood to be found anywhere–just an extremely sooore neck and a very paaaainful back–I was released from the hospital into the custody of those I love.

So what have I learned form all this?

Well, I’ve learned that if I ever want to go searching for my heart’s desire that I don’t really have to go any further than my own…no, wait–that’s another ending. I learned that I make a better father than a pinball machine.

I believe God’s protection was really on The Toddler and I that day and that Allstate’s got nothing on him when it comes to Good Hands. Not in some abstract, God-is-watching-us-from-a-distance kind of way, but up close and personal. And I’m most grateful through my aches and pains that The Toddler was utterly spared injury more than a good scare. If there ever were a time to take to heart the words “I will never leave you or forsake you,” it was that day on Laurel Canyon Blvd. in North Hollywood, California. I learned personally that luck really is the residue of design and that I had good design taking care of me every step of the way.

Oh, and I learned one more thing which I feel duty-bound to pass along. And you can take this one to the bank: Turning fifty, lads and lassies, aint for sissies.

August 27, 2005
 Turning Fifty Aint For Sissies, Part IV
Filed in All About Moi

So there I was in the doctor’s reception room, doubled over like a lawn chair in storage. I began rocking and groaning. Groaning and rocking. The involuntary cries brought a great many eyes my direction. Could it be Donna Summer had an appointment with Dr. Stark? But, no, just some overweight guy with bad hair in shorts doing “Dying to the Oldies”Raft2_3 exercises.

Mrs. B. lovingly filled out the paper work and shoved it under my nose for a signature. I’m not sure, but I think it may have been a five million dollar life insurance policy. (Not that my life is worth five mil, mind you, but any company willing to fork over that much is entitled to a discount.) I didn’t care. Let her have the poodle washing business in Bel Air and miniature golf course in the Mohave. After years of faithful service she was entitled to live her dreams. I just wanted to be cured or evaporate like those folks in the Jerry Jenkins novels. And right now I didn’t care which.

As we migrated to the next waiting room the most intense nausea I have ever experienced settled in. My intestinal systems, with alarms blaring to a John Phillips Souza march, were beginning their countdown to Chernobyl. I asked She-Who-Doesn’t-Do-Florence-Nightingale-All-That-Well to swab my sweating brow with wet paper towels which she did graciously, pausing only twice to read some fine print and exclusionary clauses on the policy. Seems if I died in a doctor’s office it was his bad—not theirs.

And then, when it seemed I would have to finally use the profound words I’d prepared as my deathbed utterance (“Buy low, sell high.” Well, it cracked me up) . . . the pain completely stopped and Dr. Stark walked in.

“What seems to be the problem?” he asked.

“Well, actually, at the moment . . . uhhhhhhh . . . nothing.”

I recounted the details of the past twenty-four hours. The kidnapping. The church that is no longer a church. The horsy ride at Joe’s. The Gene Kelly shower. Breakfast with Dr. Strangeglove. The swinging hunchback. The long, bumpy ride home. The phone call from Dr. Heckle and Mrs. Hide. The death scene from Camille played out on his waiting room floor. Then . . . tranquility and harmony as he entered the room. I asked if he were The Promised One and could I touch the hem of his lab coat.

“Well you’ve had yourself quite a day, Mr. Blogs,” mused Dr. Stark, refusing to recognize my messiah complex. “Where was the pain?”

“Well, it’s been jumping around quite a bit.”

Although I will spare The Three of You the biological details, suffice to say I pointed to areas you usually don’t mention in a family blog.

Just then a light bulb blinked on above his head. He turned it off to conserve electricity. “I want you to give me a urine sample.”

“Well, I don’t happen to have one on me right now,” I deadpanned, patting me side and breast pockets.

“That’s a good one,” he deadpanned right back like two dueling comics meeting on the barren streets of Dodge. “I’ll have to remember that when I enter Last Doctor Standing.

He handed me the specimen cup and sent me to a private room. Now normally I have no problem in this area. I mean, Niagara falls in the Spring comes to mind. But this urine on demand concept was more than a little intimidating.

Stone_1I have to say, though, these guys really knew how to help a fella out. The nurse handed me a two liter bottle of a Perrier knockoff called “Le Wa Wa,” an abused copy of Field and Stream, and insinuated I’d know what do. While these diversions were helpful, I’m pretty sure it was the looped video of the Colorado Rapids playing in the darkened bathroom that eventually helped me reach the promised land.

Fifteen minutes later the doctor came back with my test results. “You don’t have a hernia, Mr. Blogs. You have kidney stones. We found traces of blood in your urine along with a significant sampling of Le Wa Wa.

Boy, was I relieved.

If it was only kidney stones then all I had to do to end this misery was the equivalent of the biblical passing a camel through the eye of a needle.

He ordered a CT-scan of my urinary tract to see what kind of stone we were dealing with and left humming “Bridge Over Troubled Water.” I didn’t know whether to be happy or scared. On one hand, I had dodged the surgeon’s scalpel. On the other hand, watermelons and garden hoses began figuring prominently in my dreams . . .

Stay tuned for part five in this three part series- Deep Stone II: This time It's Painful!

August 15, 2005
 Turning 50 Aint For Sissies, Part Three
Filed in All About Moi

When we left our intrepid hero he was semi-consciously speeding down the 101 freeway en route to the Family Blogs Secret Lair, somewhere deep in the bowels of Los Angeles. We'd give you the exact location, but then we'd have to . . . you know . . .

Mrs. B. had pedal pressed to the metal and was attempting to create her own unique siren call to clear all lanes of traffic. It went something like "A-Rooooooooooo . . . A-Rooooooooooo . . . A-Roooooo-oo-oo-oo-oo-oo-oo!" While I deeply appreciated her passion for the moment and her commitment to spirit me home before whatever was wrong inside my lower torso exploded, it was also comforting to know she could be counted on to attract wild game in a pinch if we were ever stranded together in a place where signs of life were fleeting and nothing appeared to be edible—say, Bakersfield.Pez

Before she could say "Don't die on me now, Honey" (which she would never ever do because she abhors pet names that involve food—don't you my little Twinkie?), I waddled from the car like Burgess Meredith after some bad chile, used the Secret Lair secret stare in the Home Optical Recognition System, and entered our house like a man who didn't know whether  he'd eaten his last Swedish Pancake. (And once a man has eaten his last Swedish pancake it likely is time for the last roundup because it just may be life is not worth living in a Swedish Pancakeless world.)

The pain had subsided. But the fear of its return was enormous. She-Who-Is-Cool-And-Collected-During-A-Crisis-That-Does-Not-Involve-Childbirth logically began dialing nurses and doctors we know to suck their brains dry of any and all information hernia-related. I think she'd seen this maneuver performed once in a 60s sci-fi movie.

I took some pills I believed to be Ibuprofen but may actually have been orange flavored Pez for all the pain they were masking. We finally raised my doctor, or more precisely a doctor whose turn it was to be bothered by patients she’d never met on this, her only day off in twelve years. She was fairly patient and kind while explaining to me the worst thing I could do right now, besides calling her, was to take any Ibuprofen or Pez.

 

“These would mask your pain. Especially the orange Pez. I don’t know why, but the grape ones are fine. You don’t want to cover up the symptoms because you need to know if something in your body is on the verge of exploding. If nothing explodes—you’re OK until tomorrow. Then you want to get in and see a doctor who isn’t me.”

I thanked the doctor for her pithy advice and she thanked me for interrupting her golf tournament on the 17th tee.

Once I flushed all the Pez from my system I lay myself down on our king-sized bed and drifted away from consciousness like that feather in Forrest Gump. In a day or so I’d see my doctor, or at least somebody in his office who drew the short straw, and we’d get a read on whether this was a hernia, a groin pull, or some intense organ timed to detonate soon.

It seemed at though I’d been through so much in such a very short time. As it turned out, pain was merely wooing me. We were going to become intimate in the weeks ahead.

Stay tuned for part four in this already way-too-long series. Collect 'em all! Or don't . . .

August 8, 2005
 Turning 50 Aint For Sissies, Part Deux
Filed in All About Moi

90mDespite the mass protestations which I fully expect to fill the comments box and clog up the internet for a day or two, I will leave the next seven hours and twenty-three minutes to your fertile imaginations. Suffice to say Mrs. B. and I slipped into our night clothes, nibbled on dessert that had been delivered to our room, and settled in for the second half of O Brother, Where Art Thou?" Nothing like the Cohen Brothers and their whacked sense of humor to get you in the mood for whatever it might be you're hoping everyone in the room might, indeed, be in the mood for. Chess, Yahtzee . . . you name it.

Seven hours and twenty-three minutes later I was enjoying a rinse in one of the finest showers I've ever had the pleasure being exposed to. The shower was almost entirely made of stone, laid by hand by the owner of this fine establishment. There was the usual shower head, of course. But there was also an old fashioned one directly overhead. One could choose to turn a handle and presto--you felt as though you were back in the 1940s with a rainstorm directly overhead and Gene Kelley dancing on the smooth cobblestones. Of course, how I was going to explain Gene Kelly in my shower to the intoxicating Mrs. B. was a dilemma I was ill-prepared for. So I flipped the handle again and took my normal morning-after-checkers shower.

As I stepped from the stony enclave I felt a tug in the area of my groin. Actually it was less of a tug and more of a Hunchback-of-Notre-Dame-hanging-from-the-tower-bell kind of ache. I didn't exactly know what was happening, but I did know one thing. I wanted to get that hunchback off that rope--and pronto! I sat down for a moment on the only seat in the place and nearly fell in. Why women always leave the toilet seat up I have no idea. After a few moments, the tension eased and I made my way back to our room to get dressed.

Breakfast was a delightful affair with Swedish Pancakes as the main entree. Yum, these were fantastic. Conversation around the table was guarded at first. But then, as we realized there were likely no stringers for the National Enquirer present we began to open up a bit. There was a doctor and his wife. A nurse and her friend. A husband and wife who arrived late and nearly missed the meal. And us. The doctor shared stories of how he'd sometimes been called upon in the strangest situations to aid his fellow man. One story about how a man passed away and the stewardess, knowing if the man was dead would have to turn the flight back, asked the doctor if he wouldn't mind tending to the dead man as if he were still alive. Once they reached a certain mileage regulations allowed for no turning back and he could then be pronounced as dead as he'd been a half hour before. As the doctor had a meeting in a few hours that couldn't be missed, he gladly obliged.

I managed to mention I was excited about going to see the Giants and Dodgers play later on at Dodger Stadium. This begat a few baseball stories all around and soon it was time for us to leave. Only I had the darnedest time getting up out of my seat. That old hunchback was at it again.

Somehow I managed to say goodbye to all as we made our way back to the room to pack. It wasn't long before discomfort became agony and agony morphed into wishing I had no lower torso. She-Who-Is-Uncommonly-Wise-At-Times suggested she go get the doctor before he left. I informed her I would rather die than face the humiliation of being examined by a guest at a bed and breakfast inn. Just then the pain came around again and I dropped to the bed, writhing and moaning. All of a sudden I had no pride. I felt no shame. I just wanted to pay a sniper to pick off the hunchback.

The concerned Mrs. Blogs left abruptly. She returned with the good doctor in tow. "What seems to be the problem here, G.P," he asked in his rehearsed tone.

Hb

"It's the hunchback! The hunchback is killing me! You've got to get the hunchback off the rope before the bell falls off."

"Well, why don't you lower your pants and let's take a look-see."

A look-see? A LOOK-SEE ??????? Was he kidding?. This is a man I had not fifteen minutes earlier asked to pass the breakfast rolls. Now he was going to be using those same hands to become more intimate with me than any man since . . . well, ever.

After poking around the premises for what seemed like two hours and thirty-seven minutes but was actually forty-five seconds the good doctor gave a preliminary diagnosis: "Looks like you've got a hernia. Just lay there for about thirty minutes (Don't worry, I'm not going anywhere) and then gravity will probably have its way."

At last, a reason to praise Sir Isaac Newton. I thanked the doctor for his generosity of spirit and told him how embarrassed I was. "Oh, don't be," he pshawed, "I've seen much worse." As he left the room, my Fruit of the Looms and trousers bunched around my ankles, I began wondering what exactly he had meant by that remark.

But the pain was receding, my pride was in tatters, and I was sprawled in a Victorian church in a way I would never have guessed possible. One thing was for sure. The ball game was off. I needed to muster all my strength to get dressed and navigate an old staircase. No way could I climb and descend a mile of concrete steps while walking funny.

Now if we could only get back to Los Angeles and see a doctor Monday morning. I'd gone fifty years without a broken bone or an operation. But, as we made our way back down the coast I gazed out over the waves to the morning clouds melting in the late morning sun. Surgery seemed to be looming on the horizon . . .

Stay Tuned for Part Three in this breathless series. Collect 'em all and trade with your friends.

August 7, 2005
 Turning 50 Aint For Sissies, Part Uno
Filed in All About Moi

Let me tell you sumpin', lasses and laddies. Turnin' 50 aint for sissies . . .

Remember a fortnight or so ago I was mentioning how my beloved, She-Who-Can-Almost-Do-No-Wrong, was about to kidnap and whisk me away for the weekend of my sweet, geriatric dreams? Remember the anticipation The Three of You felt when promised a blow by blow account when we landed in our pastoral hideaway by the sea? Or the smoke signals I'd send from high atop Mt. Killamockingbird?

Well, the trip didn't go exactly as planned. Actually, nothing I've done here in the shallow end of my second half century has given me much hope I'll make it to my third. And therein lies the tale.

Blinded by love and the chance to experience it outside the proximity of certain precious minors, Mrs. Blogs and I pointed our trustworthy vehicle, Old Blue Fred (the women in my house have an annoying habbit of naming their transportation), north on the 101. Little did I know at the time my bride of eighteen years was stealing me away to a little church in Ventura, California.

She-of-the-Leaded-Foot delivered us to our destination in record time, pausing only twice to clean the bugs from our otherwise pristeen teeth. Turns out this was not just any church, but a quaint old wedding chapel which now housed a bed and breakfast inn.

Sipping wine and tasting cheese was the first order of business upon landing. I missed these opening festivities with handshakes exchanged all around, owing to a previous appointment with a certain pillow that knows my face better than my I do.

The Victorian Rose exceeded expectations. She was a grand old dame who made up in colorful character what she lacked in youth. I could tell immediately we had much in common.

Upon waking we had plenty of host recommendations to pick from for a five star dinner at three star prices. ButHorsey Joe's Crab Shack was calling and it was my birthday celebration after all. Although She-Who-Bit-Her-Lip-When-I-Said-Let's-Eat-At-Joe's was a good sport, I could tell she was a bit disappointed in my choice of romantic dining spots by the way she told the waitress it was my birthday and she had better darn well grab a trio of waiters and embarrass me musically if she wanted any kind of reasonable tip.

Five minutes later I was standing under a cowboy hat, astride a stick pony with instructions from Joe's loyal employees to ride Old Paint around the dining room while listening to a western version of a happy birthday song. Modesty forbids me from detailing the Joe's record I set while falling off only once.

We walked about a mile back to the VR and talked all the way. This reminded old GP of an earlier day with the same girl when he was more loaded down with dreams and promise than crabcakes and fries.

But I digest . . .

Stay Tuned for Part Two in this breathless series. Collect 'em all and trade with your friends.

July 16, 2005
 Destination Unknown
Filed in All About Moi

Today at noon the lovely Mrs. Blogs, otherwise known as She Who is From Venus, is whisking me away to parts unknown for an overnight stay somewhere, I believe, north of the equator.

Works for me.

This has the potential to fulfill at least four of the top ten fantasies I've held since age thirteen. Although our excursion is unlikely to address #7, playing center field for the SF Giants, I'll report on the results, however coyly, upon my return.

My loyal readers, The Three of You, have a right to know.

July 15, 2005
 A Brief Explanation on My Lengthy Disappearance
Filed in All About Moi

4wd40family
Now that I've made a mysterious reappearance from that Black Hole of Nothingness Beyond the Abyss, The Three of You are probably wondering "What's up with the four month Rosemary Woods-size gap in the GP Blogs writing schedule?"

It's a fair question that deserves an honest answer.

Although I'm not at liberty to divulge the full extent of my involvement, I have received clearance to share that my absence from this forum has been in direct correlation to the following items:

1. A roll of duct tape.

2. Previously unreleased encryptions of Beatles recordings played sideways which reveal, "Paul is darn near the only one of us left alive."

3. One case of WD-40.

4. A second roll of duct tape.

5. A letter from Col. Oliver North; that letter being "J."

6. Detailed instructions on how to starve a cold and feed a fever.

7. One half-used jar of Vaseline.

8. Detailed instructions on how to feed a cold and starve a fever. Just in case.

9. A seven and a half minute phone conversation with Karl Rove. 'nuff said.

10. A poison-filled hollow "tooth" which at this writing remains intact but has become absessed.


I'll let The Three of You piece this together. My lips are zipped. Homeland Security and all.

I'd tell you more.

But then I'd have to kill you.Vaselinejelly_2

July 15, 2005
 The View From 50
Filed in All About Moi

Disneyland50thanniversary

Fifty years ago on July 15, 1955 "the happiest place on earth" opened its doors. This was a momentous occasion for our culture I think we can all agree. Approximately nine hours before Uncle Walt cut the ribbon an equally historic, though less sensational, event occurred at 1:15 AM when Dorothy O'Connor of Sacramento gave birth to her first child, a son by the name of Michael Francis. Ever since it's been an E-ticket ride all the way. (Older readers--and you know who you are--will glean that reference right away.)

So, if you think of it, hoist a tall glass of your favorite beverage tonight in honor of that little red-haired freckle-faced boy and his younger brother, Disneyland.