The Day After

"So, back in the attic I go, eh?"

     It's November 1st.  The day after Halloween.  Youthful extortion for all manner of tasty goodies has come and gone.

    Although I'm sad to report that we only had one trick-or-treater last evening.  Numbers of little urchins knocking on my door have been dwindling over the past several years, but last night was a new low. Perhaps next year I won't even bother getting candy...?

    Oh, hell, who am I kidding?   When October 31st, 2026 arrives, I'll still have a bowl of candy in case anyone comes a-knocking.  I just won't rush home from work to do so.

    Still, the dearth of little superheroes, ghostly critters, and, yes, Blue Man Group impersonators has left me sad.  I guess it's a sign of the times and a possible shift in our culture.  Don't have to like it, but there it is.

    On the bright side?

Leftover candy is mine.  All mine.

 Bonus blog bit:

Since I went to Catholic School (aka "Penguin Academy")...

"I never liked that term.
Knuckles if ye please, cheeky boyo."

my brothers, sister, and I could sleep in the next day, All Saints Day.  To those “in the club” (so to speak), November 1st was a “Holy Day of Obligation” and so, was a day off from school (a point rendered moot if it fell on the weekend.  In that case, we groused that we were ripped off by Jesus).

NOTE:  I'm not sure if it still is a Holy Day of Obligation.  Or, if so, Catholic School inmates students still have the day off.
Since today is a Saturday, I guess that means they can suck it, though.

    This meant we could shove candy down our throats when we got home until we passed out, woke up, ate some Sugar Smacks, inhaled more Three Musketeers, watched cartoons, and made fun of the public school kids as they trudged off to class.

     This was the best part of having the day off because the public school kids were beating us up the rest of the year.   Even the girls.

Those public-school kids really had no sense of humor.


Next:  I'll begin my "Argentina Travelogue."

 

 


Just Got Back

 From two weeks in Argentina.

 I plan on writing a bit of a travelogue about the experience.  Just not tonight.


But, I'll leave you with this...


There were no pictures of Eva Peron.  I hear she's dead.


Madonna played her in a movie.


I suspect Eva Peron still looks better, though.

A Halloween Tale

"Any Snickers?"

   The following is a true story.

Mostly.

     The young wife pulled her sweater tight.  Sure was starting to get cold.   

    Glancing down at the half empty candy jar, she was thankful she’d bought enough goodies for the hordes of trick-or-treaters which continued to rampage through her neighborhood. 

    With only an hour to go, she breathed a sigh of relief, confident she wouldn’t have to break into last year’s stash of petrified candy corn.  Or, worse, ketchup packets.  

She doubted the kids would buy her story that they were nature's candy.

    So, her house was safe from ravages wrought by pint-sized wrecking crews denied their sugar fixes.

    With a break in the action, she picked up a Fun-Size Snickers bar and popped it deftly into her mouth.  Check that.  TWO fun-size Snickers bars.  

"More fun that way."

    Her mouth full of chocolaty, peanutty (probably not a real word) caramel goodness, she plopped into the chair set by her open door.

    No sooner had she sat down then four miniature super heroes-Batman, Spiderman, and the unfortunately-named Captain Incontinence and his sidekick, Wet Nap Boy, came trooping up her driveway.

    Quickly stashing the empty candy wrappers into the pocket of her jeans, she stood to greet her visitors.  They looked harmless enough, although the good captain kept jumping from one leg to another.

    Greeted by a cheery chorus of “Trick or Treats,” she smiled and extended the candy jar to the tiny defenders of truth, justice, the American way, 

and proper hygiene.

    Their needs sated, the junior crimefighters scampered excitedly across the lawn towards her neighbor’s house.  Thankful her home continued to be spared, she spotted a solitary figure standing at the end of her driveway.

"I was wondering when I'd get into the action."  

    Her visitor was fairly large.  She figured he was one of those kids from the middle school who refused to let go of their youth.  Usually they just grabbed a pillowcase from their beds and headed door-to-door, their menace masked only by a surly, “I’m an egg-thrower” when asked what their costumes were.

    This kid was dressed up, but he gave her the willies.  He was sporting blue jeans and a brown flannel shirt, which were innocuous enough.  But, what creeped her out was that hockey mask he wore and...was that a knife in his right hand? 

    He looked just like that...Freddy?  Michael?  No, he looked like Jason from those Friday the 13th movies.  Yikes!

"Hey, I can be pretty scary too, ya know."

    With a trembling hand, she offered the candy jar to the motionless figure.  “Hi, do you want some candy?” 

    No answer.

    Hmm, not too crazy about this, she thought.  Why doesn’t he just toss toilet paper in my trees and be done with it?

Hey, one rainstorm...now you're talking a real horror story.

    She closed her door, desperately trying to figure out what to do.

    At that moment, her husband’s car pulled into the driveway.

    “Oh, look,” he thought as he switched off the ignition, “one of those Halloween trick-or-treaters.  Hmmm...kinda big, though.”

    He got out of his car and jauntily called out to the kid, “Hey, howzit goin’?”

    Nothing.

    “That’s weird,” he thought.

    Quickly running away, he stepped through the side-door and saw his wife, who looked a little freaked-out.  “Hey, you see that nut out there?  What’s going on?”

    Wide-eyed, she shrugged her shoulders and whispered, “You got me.  He’s just been standing there for a few minutes.  Uh...I think he’s holding a knife or something.”

    His eyes went wide and he stepped to the door.  Peering through the blinds, he said, “Yeah, it sure looks like one.  Man, I don’t like this.  I’m turning off the light.”

"That will make Jason go away!"

"No, it won't."

    Casting the porch in darkness, the two gathered at their curtains and peered at the motionless form bathed in the light of the streetlamp.

    “Maybe he’ll get the idea we’re done for the night,” she hoped.

"No, I won't."

    “Yeah, I-hey! He’s starting to walk this way!”

    His wife shrieked and dropped to the kitchen floor.  “Oh, my goodness!  What’re we going to do!?”


For entertainment use only.
But, pretty close.

    He joined her.  “I don’t know.  I’d better call the cops!”

    They heard shuffling footsteps as their visitor slowly scraped along the loose gravel of their driveway.

    Starting to lose it, she begged, “No, don’t leave me!”  She clamped her hands to her ears and tightly squeezed her eyes shut.

    Her husband scrambled to the kitchen island.  Maybe he’d find a knife or....ladle!!??  What the-that won’t do!  He frantically rifled through the drawer.  Cheese grater...turkey baster... garlic press...ah, here’s something!

    As he turned toward his almost-catatonic wife, he heard the footsteps suddenly stop.

    And the doorbell ring.

    Quickly joining his wife on the floor, he urged her to shuffle to the door on her knees.  Cautiously raising their heads, they peeked through the bottom window pane.

    To see the hockey mask bouncing up and down in laughter.

    Standing bolt upright, the husband flung open the door, and shouted, “You idiot!  You coulda given us both heart attacks!”

 

    The Moral of the Story:  It’s a good thing my brother has a sense of humor.  Otherwise, I mighta got stabbed with a potato peeler that night.

                               

Goodbye Columbus

"I'm not going to tell you again!  
If you don't sit down, I'm gonna turn this shit around!" 

 

    October, my favorite month, gives us a chance to celebrate the exploits of a band of explorers who set sail from Barcelona in search of a western route to the fabulous wealth of the East (yeah, going west to get east doesn’t make a whole lot of sense to me, either).

Indeed

    In other words, the tenth month gives us a chance to bemoan the rape and pillage of a pristine wilderness by evil, white, European males who wouldn’t know a bar of soap if it smacked them in the heads.

"I say we go say 'hi.'  What's the worst that could happen?"

    So, in recognition of their accomplishments, mailmen get the day off and stores trot out their very best Columbus Day displays of bed linen (“Just imagine how comfy the Santa Maria would have been if Chris and the boys only had these sheets!!”).

    As a holiday, though, Columbus Day really doesn’t rank up there with the Big Four of Hanukkah, Christmas, New Years, and Boxing Day.  It doesn’t draw in the romantics like Valentines Day, the patriots like the 4th of July, or even the corned beef and Guinness crowd like St. Patrick’s Day.

"Erin go bbuuuurrrrrpppppppp....!"

    More times than not, we hardly know it’s happened until the evening news greets us with, “Happy Columbus Day!  Too bad you hadda go to work!  Ha, ha, ha!”

    My family has for many years celebrated each holiday, no matter how innocuous.  For example, on Presidents’ Day, we used to dress up as our favorite Commanders in Chief until my brother spoiled it for everyone when, dressed as Joe Biden, he fell up the stairs and picked a fight with the laundry.

    For some reason, though, we never did much to celebrate the day in 1492 when Ferdinand and Isabella’s favorite Genoan set foot in the New World and proclaimed, “What the frik you mean this isn’t China!?"

Everyone knows this is china
  


  In order to make it easier for everyone to properly observe one of the most significant accomplishments in world history (behind invention of “The Clapper”), might I offer the following ways to celebrate Columbus Day:

10.  Slash the tires of those obnoxious, know-it-all “Vikings were here first!” punks at the Leif Eiriksson Community Center.

Although, to be fair, Northern Indians were
more badass than the Caribbean ones.

9.   Try to convince anyone that parrots, monkeys, and coconuts are just as valuable as jewels, gold, and silk.

8.   Go to the local tribal casino, extend a heartfelt apology, drop a bundle at the craps table.

7.   Put on a wrinkled raincoat, chew on a cigar, try to figure out who put the poison in Miss Van Dyver’s highball...oh, I’m sorry, that’s how to celebrate COLUMBO Day.

6.   Grab some library books, draw moustaches on pictures of Amerigo Vespucci.

"That's right. America.  What do you have? 
Some city in Ohio?  Suck it."

5.   Bring Christianity to your neighbors at the point of a gun before selling them into slavery, claim your street for your family, pass out blankets riddled with smallpox to the homeless, and shake down passers-by, insisting they tell you where their gold is.

4.   Go to a Chinese restaurant dressed as Columbus, walk in, and shout, “So, HERE’s where you people were all hiding!”

"Hey! Who let white people in kitchen?"

3.   Forward a petition to the city council demanding equal time with Labor Day.

2.   With your friends, build a scaled-down replica of Columbus’s fleet, drift aimlessly on the town pond, claim YWCA summer camp for Spain.

1.   Once more dressed as Columbus, visit a deforested national park (or strip mine), issue “Ooops, my bad!” statement to the press.

    There now, I hope this list inspires you to do something other than complain when you can’t use the drive-up window at the bank. 

    But, if it’ll make you feel better, go get yourself a cannoli.

    Chris would’ve wanted it that way.

 ********

  To my good friends north of the border:  Happy Canadian Thanksgiving!  May your harvest tables be blessed with bountiful feasts and happily free of moose and Celine Dion lookalikes.

As Martin Frobisher would have said, "Sure, it makes more sense than eating outside in November in frikkin' Massachusetts, but that four day weekend for American Thanksgiving would be wicked sweet, eh?"


    

 

Read the Label






    Okay, this is old.  Much like me.  But, I thought I'd republish it because it made me chuckle.
   
    And I realized I'm out of lotion.

Shana Tova!

 


    To those of the Jewish faith or those who live with someone of the Jewish faith or to those who just want any excuse to celebrate a holiday, Happy New Year as we bid farewell to the lunar year of 5785 and sashay (or mosey.  I won't judge) our merry way into the year 5786.

   I know, right?  Seems like only yesterday it was 5756.  My, how time flies!

  Rosh Hashanah is a solemn way to remember the years past and hope to build upon them for a better tomorrow.  Not for nothin', we could use all the good thoughts that come our way.  Things have really sucked lately.

    The new year involves prayer, apples, honey, and the blowing of the shofar.

And, frankly, is Herschel Shofar's favorite day of the year

    Much love and hope to you all.

    Just remember to get back to work tomorrow.

Politically Correct Christmas

The Day After

"So, back in the attic I go, eh?"       It's November 1st.  The day after Halloween.  Youthful extortion for all manner of tas...