Sunday, June 29, 2008

Mumps, Mother Love and "Catlow"







Mumps, Mother Love and Catlow




I grew up understanding that I was not my mother’s favorite child. She loved me, but it was an exasperated love, distracted, what was leftover at the end of every exhausting day.

I learned early not to ask for much, to eat hominy and beef liver without a fuss, to play quietly on the floor on her side of my parents’ bed while she lay reading, one of her hands straying occasionally to stroke my hair. “You had so much hair when you were born," she would say. "You were so small. Thirteen inches. I could hold you in one hand. You were so dark with a great big head the size of a grapefruit. But you were beautiful. Just perfect. Your hands. You wouldn’t uncurl those toes. I looked at your little face and I couldn’t give you away.”

It was okay. I took what I could get.

When I was in second grade, I caught the mumps from a girl down the street whose father used to kiss her on the mouth. I came in complaining of a sore neck and my mother took one look at me and said, “Oh, shit. You have the mumps.” She was so angry, that I thought I’d done something wrong, but her hand was cool and soft when she laid it against my swollen jaw. She made my little brother sleep in the bed with me that night in the hopes that he would be infected and quickly get his bout over with. It didn’t work--at least not the way she hoped. He came home with a swollen face a week later, setting the pattern for my other siblings, each falling ill, one after the other, one week after the last was declared well enough to return to school.

I didn’t mind the mumps. It didn’t hurt after the first day and I got to have cream of wheat for dinner. Even better, I had my mother to myself for several days. She fed me soup and baby aspirin and held hot, folded washcloths to my jaw while we watched Japanese soap operas. We visited the library and went to the park. She read a book at a concrete picnic table and I lay spread-eagled in the tall, wind whipped grass, staring at the blue and white sky, imagining that I could feel the Earth spin beneath me.

One morning we drove to the naval base to look at the ships. My mother wore white pedal pushers, a lime-colored sleeveless top and a shoulder-length wig that parted down the middle and flipped up at the ends. She held my hand and laughed at the sailors from behind her large, round sunglasses. We raced home and cooked chili for dinner like we’d been there all day.

On my last day home, my mother sat at the table reading the newspaper. I could already feel her pulling away from me and I clenched my jaw against the ache in my heart. I felt a twinge in the glands beneath my ears.

Just then, my mother looked up from the paper and grinned. “A movie with Yul Brenner and Leonard Nimoy. My favorites,” she said. “And it’s a western, too. We’ll go to the matinee.”

We stopped at the Base Exchange on the way to buy a Baby Ruth for her and a Butterfinger for me. I don’t remember much about the movie other than how menacing Nimoy’s character was and how my mother and I giggled and peeked through our fingers at the naked fight scene.

I do remember, that as the lights went down, my mother squeezed my hand and kissed each of my knuckles with a loud smacking sound. I laughed and shivered with glee. She smiled and took another bite from her Baby Ruth.

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Vulcans Are Cool


Aint he purty?

Monday, June 23, 2008

Damn, George...


Our last best defense against pre-packaged, trademarked, singularly banal douchebags like Dane Cook.

This is hella funny!



Thanks Adams. Y'all are getting way too down on Lake St.!

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Gnarly



Yes! Yes! I'm writing! "Prodigal Soul" coming soon.

Truth is, monkies, I got caught up in season 4 of "Mission: Impossible" and how cool and hot Peter Graves was. He's all strapping Minnesota farm boy sexy in his cool-ass apartment with his silver hair and black turtlenecks and pointy ankle boots.

He looks like he has a lot of...stamina.

Anyway, while you're waiting for me to actually post a Star Trek story about Spock, groove to Gnarls Barkley.

Sunday, June 08, 2008

Dig Sesame Street



This is why I donate to public television. Can you believe it? Stevie Wonder jamming on "Superstition", live, for almost seven minutes on Sesame Street. Put that in your reality show and suck it.

Check out the kid on the landing. She (he?) is feeling the music.

*thanks amorphous*

Friday, June 06, 2008

Wednesday, June 04, 2008

The Most Romantic Song Ever



"I See Your Face Before Me", sung by the great Johnny Hartman.

My Grandmother Watches From Heaven...



My granny Mudea watches from heaven, eyes narrowed, her hands on her hips.

Shirley Chisholm laughs and dances. "Do you see?" she asks, pointing down at America.

Mudea purses her lips. "Hmm. We'll see," she says.

"Yes! But do you see?"

Monday, June 02, 2008

Myanmar

So, the Myanmar junta keeps refusing aid from Outworlders, the US in particular. They're all like, "Fuck you, United States. We don't want shit from you because you gonna come all up in our koolaid, handing shit out, and being all big-ass American savior and shit, like you do--even though we've endured cyclones for years without your help (back when we used to ask for it)--,and all the while what you really want is to gank our oil. Thanks. No thanks. Ok, we'll take a little bit of that rice and some bandaids but you need to keep the fuck steppin'. We don't need your help to crush the souls of our people, fuck you very much."

Seriously. That's what they said. Just like that.

And another thing: Hillary, go home. It's o-ver, honey. I called the whole RFK assignation thing two weeks before it got out and now I'm calling the Clinton Divorce Within Six Months After the Convention thing. Mark my words.

Oh, and send your pannies to Burma. Who knew?

Sunday, June 01, 2008

Obama/Spock '08

Dr. Henry Jenkins of MIT and Aca/Fan has this to say about Spock and Obama:

"In that sense Star Trek looks ahead to the society we live in today, where so many people are mixed race, mixed cultural background,. And I’ve been thinking about that a lot lately, looking at Barack Obama. There’s something in the [Obama] mythology that seems to echo our assumption about Spock — that he’s someone able to bridge worlds. And he’s indebted to Vulcan philosophy of IDIC, the Vulcan philosophy of infinite diversity and infinite combination. Someone who is of mixed race is seen as being capable of understanding both races."

Obama '08 and prosper.

Robert Justman 1926-2008

I'm so sad. Bob Justman, a producer on TOS, died from complications due to Parkinson's.