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Only When I Laugh

July 11, 2014

Here’’s how it was supposed to happen:

The doctor would call my wife and I into his office, which I imagined would be a wood-paneled room lined with books. He would rest his elbows on his desk and fold his hands, and, quietly and soberly, say, ““Mr. Waldrop, I’m afraid you have cancer.””

And I would say, “I’d like a second opinion.”

At this point I expect he’d start looking through a list and saying something about referrals, and I’’d have to stop him and say, ““Doc, you’’re supposed to say, ‘‘And you need a haircut.'”’” And I would have to explain to him who Henny Youngman is, because they don’’t teach the important things in medical school.

Here’’s how it did happen:

I’’d been in for an appointment about an ongoing pain in my leg. This had lasted a couple of months, and I was tired of it waking me up at night. While he was telling me to turn my head and cough my doctor noticed some other things that concerned him, so he ordered some tests, including an ultrasound and a CT scan. Some other doctors might not have taken the time or been concerned, but he didn’’t see any need for delay. My wife and I were on our way home from those tests when the doctor called my wife’’s cell phone. In fact we were two blocks away.

““Chris needs to be taken to the emergency room right away. He has a blood clot in his leg. Also he has testicular cancer.””

I know that if he could have had the sober wood-paneled office meeting he would have, but while cancer is slow blood clots have a tendency to cause sudden death. And my diagnosis would play a part in my treatment over the longest three days of my life.

So we turned around and went to the emergency room, where we managed to find a couple of chairs together in a corner. This was a Tuesday, and I would later be told that emergency rooms are busiest early in the week, maybe because it takes sick people a while to recover from their hangovers. After about twenty minutes I was called back by a nurse. We sat on opposite sides of a desk and I was subjected to a routine interrogation. It included taking my blood pressure, and being asked the following questions:

“”Are you allergic to anything?””

““No.””

““Are you taking any prescription medications or drugs?””

““No.””

““Do you have any religious or cultural sensitivities we should be aware of?””

““No.””

I made the mistake of thinking this was progress. Instead I was sent back to the waiting room where, after five minutes, I was prepared to offer my spot in line, or at least cash, to anyone who could figure out how to change the television to any show not set in a hospital. Ten minutes later I was called back by another nurse. Progress! She took my blood pressure and asked me some strangely familiar questions.

““Are you allergic to anything?””

““No.””

““Are you taking any prescription medications or drugs?””

““No.””

““Do you have any religious or cultural sensitivities we should be aware of?””

““No.””

And it was back to the waiting room where a kid with green-tinted hair and bright green skin sat listening to a pair of bright red headphones. His problem seemed more urgent than mine, but he was still waiting when I was called back again. This time I was led to an oversized closet with a bed. I was given a gown to change into and a pair of socks with sticky pads on the feet. A few minutes later a nurse came in to take my blood pressure and ask a surprising series of questions.

““Are you allergic to anything?””

““Belgians.””

““Are you taking any prescription medications or drugs?””

““Just baby aspirin and PCP.””

““Do you have any religious or cultural sensitivities we should be aware of?””

““As a Mayan I believe the world ended in 2012.””

I’’m pretty sure the word “”smartass”” is now a permanent part of my medical records.

My chest and stomach were then covered with stickers attached to wires that went to a machine that measured my breathing, heart rate, eye color, measurements, pet peeves, favorite television station, turn-ons, turn-offs–—everything, in fact, except my blood pressure, which a nurse would have to come and check every four hours.

Since I was staying in a teaching hospital I was also visited by groups of approximately twenty-seven people in lab coats, all of whom politely asked if they could examine me, which meant hiking up my gown and acting like it was our third date. I haven’’t been naked in the presence of so many people since high school gym class, but I didn’’t complain. Unlike dodgeball I knew I had a good chance of beating this cancer, and Dr. Coldfinger and Co. were stepping up to be part of my team. I was going to make their job as easy as possible. Maybe I got a little too comfortable. Every time the door opened I hiked up my gown, only to have one person say, “”Whoops, wrong room!””

Apparently “if you’’ve seen one you’’ve seen ‘‘em all” doesn’’t apply for certain regions.

I was also visited by a nice young doctor who asked me if I wanted to be listed as DNR–—Do Not Resuscitate. The question set me back a bit. I was certain of my answer. If it was an option I wanted to be Do Resuscitate, Please! It was just the reality settling in. I hadn’’t been in a hospital as a patient in thirty-nine years, when I was treated for a condition that, ironically, was a risk factor for the cancer I now had. I’’d known I was going to end up in the hospital again eventually. I just didn’’t expect to be facing questions of life and death quite so soon, or so suddenly.

That evening I was taken for a spin around the hospital by a nice orderly named Leonard. He was taking me for another ultrasound at eleven thirty at night, and I’m pretty sure he was taking me around the entire hospital just for fun.

In a strange and half-lit room I was gooped up and given another ultrasound in search of the deadly blood clot, which declined to make an appearance, then sent back to the closet for a shot of blood thinner, which the nurse assured me would be “just like a mosquito bite”. She meant one of those prehistoric mosquitoes, with a schnozz like an elephant. And then I managed to sleep, waking only to hike up my gown whenever the door opened, even though the nurses kept telling me they’’d use my arm to take my blood pressure.

Later that evening I’d get up out of my hospital bed and go to the bathroom next door. For some reason the emergency room bathroom didn’t have a lock, so as I was sitting there trying to relieve myself the door opened. “Occupied!” I yelled. The doctor who’d opened the door was talking to someone–obviously his need wasn’t that urgent–so he didn’t hear me. He just stood there, one hand on the doorknob, with me exposed to the world. This would be the only time I’d have my gown hiked up that I felt genuinely embarrassed. Finally he turned around, said, “Oh!” and closed the door. I’ll never know who you were, doc, but thanks for the look-in.

In the morning I woke with heartburn, probably because I hadn’’t eaten anything in nearly eighteen hours. I thought this meant I needed an antacid and maybe some breakfast. The staff thought it meant I needed an EKG, which meant adhering more wires to my chest. Two weeks later I’’d still be washing off sticker residue.

““We don’t want to alarm you,” said the nurse, “”but you could be having a heart attack.””

The only thing I found alarming was that the way she put it could give me a heart attack. Fortunately it turned out that what I needed was an antacid and some breakfast. This was followed by another shot of blood thinner from a slightly smaller mosquito, and then I was told I was being scheduled for surgery. The original plan had been to perform a biopsy, but the doctors decided that since the source of the trouble was in an easily accessible spot between my legs they’’d cut out the middleman–—or rather the manufacturer.

Surgery meant being moved upstairs to a luxury suite the size of a double-wide trailer, complete with a private bathroom, shower, sitting area, refrigerator, and, right across the hall, a pantry stuffed with all kinds of snacks and drinks, from chocolate milk and sodas to yogurt, cheese, and crackers. And a nurse who was professional, courteous, efficient, and who, when she was done with all her tasks, sprawled at the end of my bed and told us how much she was looking forward to going home and having a beer with her country singer boyfriend. I would have loved a beer myself, but, almost as good was having someone come in and talk to me as a person rather than a patient.

Then she left. My wife left too. My wife had been the best source of comfort and stability I could have hoped for, and more. She had gone above and beyond necessity to take care of me, but I now I needed her to take care of herself. I needed her to take care of the dogs. And I needed to crank up “Take The Skinheads Bowling” by Camper Van Beethoven and dance around the room, which I can’’t do in the presence of other people.

A week after my orchiectomy I would learn I had an embryonal some-kind-of-noma, with an excellent chance of being completely cured. And half of it was a yolk sac, which made it sound even more like an alien parasite. It was fitting. Whenever the subject of astrology came up a college friend of mine liked to say, “”I’’m a Cancer, sign of the crab. I’’m two diseases nobody wants.”” This made me wonder what cancer had to do with crabs, so I looked it up. Ancient doctors found that tumors, when cut, spread sideways, like a crab. Cancer is of the body, but behaves like an invader.

The prognosis was in the future, though. Alone the night before my surgery I wandered down the hall to a spot the nurse had shown me earlier. My room had everything except a window to the outside. It had been twenty-four hours since I’d seen the sky. I’’d been wired up but disconnected from the world. At the end of the hall was a window that looks over a section of Twenty-First Avenue I knew well. I could see the bar where I knew someone was playing pool. I could see the coffee shop where I knew someone was eating red velvet cake and laughing with friends. I could just make out the indie theater where I knew someone had escaped into the silvery darkness of a movie. The avenue itself was an artery pulsing with red and white lights, people illuminating the future. I had been all of them. I was all of them. I don’’t want to be the heroic survivor who inspires others. I simply want to live.

The darkness deepened over the world below, but the lights brightened. I wondered if, in the months to come, I would still be as brave as I felt, if I would keep my sense of humor. I knew things would get worse before they’’d get better, but I knew they would get better. The first most crucial step was taken because my doctor had been on the ball.

My Summer Vacation

June 13, 2014

It was really the museum’s fault.

The clouds were piled and hanging low, like macroscopic versions of the oyster shells that littered the path we walked up to the old manor house. There were several cars parked in the driveway, so I figured it had to be open. We walked up to the door. Michael bent down and looked at the sign.

"Closed Tuesdays and Thursdays. We came al this way for nothing."

"What are all the cars doing here then?" That’s when I noticed they were all black and dark blue high-end cars, even a couple of limos. A guy in a suit sat in the front seat of one sleeping. "Maybe it’s a typo. Maybe they changed the schedule and didn’t update the sign." I pulled on the door and it opened.

"Hey, we can go in."

"Maybe it’s a special event," said Michael. "Come on, let’s go."

I stepped inside. "Come on. I’ll pay your admission fee." I don’t think Michael knew there was no admission fee. They only asked for donations, but I stopped and put a five in the wooden box by the door.

It’s the oldest house on the island, built in the 19th century. The style is described as "American Victorian". More like American gothic. Some people said it was the house that inspired Edward Hopper’s "House By The Railroad", which in turn inspired the design of the Bates house in "Psycho", but there’s no record that either Hopper or Hitchcock ever came here. It’s survived hurricanes, floods, even a fire. It’s even survived being made into a museum and hundreds, well, dozens of tourists tramping in and out throughout the year. At one time it was used for scientific research. Now they’ve moved all the research to the sea lab, a big concrete building next to the manor, where students still go to do graduate work.

All this wasn’t really Michael’s thing, though. He was hanging back.

"Come on," I said, starting up the main staircase. "They have some cool old art, and you should see the view you can get of the island from the upstairs windows. They even let you go up in the attic!"

"Get back down here!" hissed Michael.

"Why?"

"Because I don’t think we’re supposed to be here right now."

I walked along the balcony. "Check this out. Here’s a picture of Maria Van Der Meer. She’s the one who built this place."

Michael came and stood next to me.

"Not by herself," I went on. "I mean, really, she just paid for it." We considered the picture for a moment. "You know, I never noticed before how much she looks like Margaret Dumont."

"What are you two doing?"

The voice was shrill and came up the stairs to us. We went to the railing and looked down, and I swear it was Lady Dame What’s-Her-Name, from all those English historical dramas. Right there in the flesh. She was even walking with a cane, like she does in that show.

"Are you with catering?" she asked. "You should have come in the back door to the kitchen."

I thought that shrill voice she did was just an act, but it’s not.

"This is so cool!" I whispered to Michael. "Do you know who that is?"

"We really should leave!" he whispered back.

"I mean it, because I can’t remember her name."

A man in a suit joined Lady Dame What’s-Her-Name. I didn’t recognize him. Maybe he’s never been in any of those historical dramas. "Gentlemen, you shouldn’t be here. The museum is closed today. I have to ask you to leave." I guess hanging out with someone who pretends to be British royalty made him think he could give orders. I was going to argue, but Michael started down the stairs, so I followed him.

"I’m really sorry," he said, walking by them. I was going to ask Lady Dame What’s-Her-Name if I could get her autograph, but she was already headed back into the back part of the house. The man turned and followed her as Michael opened the door.

"Come on," I said to him. "This way." I moved to the basement stairs.

"Stop it! We’ve got to leave! They said so!"

"What are they gonna do, call the cops? A hundred people live on this island. What do you think the jail looks like?"

"I don’t want to find out!"

"This is so cool, us being the only ones here."

"We’re not the only ones here!" Michael was following me down the stairs now. "There’s a fundraiser or function or something going on! We have to leave!"

"We can’t leave without seeing the basement first. This place was used for scientific research for a while. They have biological specimens down here. Some of them are more than a century old!" The basement was unlit except for the gray, gloomy light coming in through the windows. It cast long shadows through the shelves of specimens. I stopped to look at a ghostly looking jellyfish in a jar. "Cnidaria fluorensis." I read the yellowed, faded label at the base of the jar. "Interesting. I wonder if this was collected right out there in the bay. Makes you think twice about going swimming, doesn’t it?"

"We need to leave!"

I picked it up. "Do you think if I shake it It’ll light up like a glow stick?"

"Put it down now!" Michael almost yelled.

I moved on. "Check out this weird looking crab."

There were footsteps on the stairs and I heard the voice of the man we’d seen earlier.

"Who’s down there? I thought I told you two to leave!"

Michael grabbed my arm. "What else do you need? Let’s go now!"

"Fine, fine." I headed toward a door at the far end of the basement.

"Where are you going? Why don’t we go out the way we came in?"

"Why not go this way? It says ‘Exit’."

"It also says ‘Employees Only’."

"When no one’s working anybody can use it. Don’t you know that rule?"

"That’s not a rule. You’re making that up."

"Come on." I pressed the bar that opened the door. We stepped out into a courtyard surrounded by a high wooden fence. The wind had picked up and a light rain started to fall. I turned around. The door had closed and automatically locked behind us.

I looked around. A crane standing out in the yard looked back at us. Then it spread its wings and took off. As it flew up it went past an upstairs window of the sea lab. There was a man up there pointing in our direction and talking.

"What’s he saying?" I asked.

"It looks like he’s telling us to stay where we are and he’ll be down in a minute."

"Finally, it’s about time we got some service in this place."

"What’s wrong with you?"

There was a door into the sea lab directly across from us that looked promising, so I started walking over to it. Michael followed, hissing and muttering something to me. The door opened, and I went in, and held it open for Michael. It led us into a narrow cinderblock corridor. There were doors to the left and right. The fluorescent lights buzzed.

"Left or right?" I felt like I’d left Michael out of the decision process, so I thought I’d give him a chance, but then the door to our right opened. A young guy with a knitted cap wearing jeans and a t-shirt came in. He ambled by us and said, "’Sup."

"Good," I said. He continued on to the door on the left, so I turned and grabbed the door he’d just come through before it could close. We came out into a combination den and kitchen, with some couches on one side and a refrigerator, stove, and a small table on the other. There were several people, young, in their early twenties maybe, sitting around. They looked a little bit stunned by our entrance.

"Hi!" I said. "We took a wrong turn." Which way’s the way out?"

A guy sitting at the table pointed to a corridor past the stove.

"Oh, thanks, duh, I should have seen the sign that said ‘Exit’." I turned to Michael. "Next time we’re paying for the complete tour package."

The corridor led us to the front door and we found our way out. The wind had died down and the sun was starting to come out. We’d parked at the public beach a mile and a half away, but with the weather turning it was a pleasant walk. Still Michael complained the whole time, saying he doesn’t understand why he lets me get him into these things. I don’t know what he meant. If it was anybody’s fault it was Lady Dame What’s-Her-Name’s.

Life’s Fair

June 6, 2014

"Life isn’t fair." A lot of us have heard that and probably even said it. Most of us have heard it at some point from our parents, who use it as a quick and convenient way to shut down an argument when what they really mean is "It’s complicated, and I don’t have the time and/or energy and need you to drop it" Or they mean "I screwed up, but it’s complicated and I don’t have the time and/or energy and really need you to drop this shit right now before I do something worse."

Sometimes, though, people will use "Life isn’t fair" as an excuse. Some people will use it as an excuse to be mean spirited. They might see someone in a difficult situation they’ve been through, and they could help, but why should they? No one helped them, as if that’s an excuse. More often, though, "Life isn’t fair" is something people will say because they’re lazy, because it’s an easy way to get out of helping another person doing something difficult. Or sometimes it’s just a default position. Let me tell you about my algebra teacher my junior year in high school, Mr. Buldey. Mr. Buldey’s class was supposed to be paced for students like me who were a step above remedial math-I know that two plus two equals 4.1415926 – but weren’t great at it either. Mr. Buldey wanted to teach the advanced math class, but the school administrators had decided that job should go to another teacher who, unlike Mr. Buldey, was actually qualified. Mr. Buldey didn’t care, and decided to teach the class I was in as though it was the advanced class, assigning a chapter a day. He didn’t spend much time even teaching. He just told us to open our books and get to it. If we couldn’t keep up it was our fault.

In contrast to the speed at which he covered the material Mr. Buldey himself was a human narcotic. He would sit on the edge of his desk and talk in a low, deep voice, slurring his S’s and Z’s. "Studentssss," he would say, "today we will take a quizzzz on chaptersss sssixteen and ssseventeen." Algebra was first period, and it was hard enough to stay awake at ssseven in the morning, but Mr. Buldey could cure insomnia. The evening the school had an open house so parents could meet the teachers. Mr. Buldey put half the adults to sleep.

He also never wrote anything on the blackboard. In fact I never saw him write anything, except the big red "F" he put on most of my papers. He even signed our report cards with a rubber stamp. I suspect he was illiterate.

In the final six weeks of the semester I along with half the class was moved out of Mr. Buldey’s class. We were put in Mr. Charles’s class. Mr. Charles wasn’t much better as a teacher, but I think that was because this was his first teaching job. At least that was part of it. He was also an excellent singer and did a couple of very stirring songs at the school talent show. When I asked him why he went into teaching instead of trying to make it as a singer he said, "Because I like a steady paycheck."

It wasn’t exactly an inspiring message.

"Hey, doc, before you perform the delicate operation to remove this malignant tumor next to my spine, I was wondering why you chose a career in medicine."

"Gotta pay the bills somehow."

At the end of the semester when we had to take the final exams I worked very hard at the one in Mr. Charles’s class, but somehow didn’t have time to finish. I asked if I could come back during lunch and hopefully finish the remaining questions. He said, "Sure," but when I came back at lunch he said, "You know, it just wouldn’t be fair to the other students to let you have more time to take the test."

Since there were five other refugees from Mr. Buldey’s class standing with me who’d made the same request there were "other students". And we weren’t asking to be allowed to bring Albert Einstein in to answer the questions for us. We just wanted an extra half hour, something any student in the class could have asked for. What would have been unfair about that? And if we were talking about what was fair versus what wasn’t, how fair was it that we’d been stuck in Mr. Buldey’s classs for three monthsss? How fair was it that, even though Mr. Charles was about four chapters behind where we’d been in the other class, we were still trying to make up for what we’d missed? How fair was it that we’d been told we could use our lunch break to finish a few extra questions and then told we couldn’t?

I have to admit that Mr. Buldey and Mr. Charles did teach me an important lesson: that "fair" is like the value of x or y on a Cartesian plane. It varies. Sometimes life isn’t fair, and there’s nothing we can do about it. Some people will eat quinoa and kale three times a day and still get cancer. And sometimes life could be fair, but the people who have the power choose to let unfairness stand. They abide by arbitrary rules, either out of apathy, as was the case with Mr. Charles, and sometimes out of pure pettiness, as was the case with Mr. Buldey, who felt it wasn’t fair that he couldn’t teach advanced calculus. I did, by the way, pass with a low C average the period I was in Mr. Charles’s class, although I’d failed so badly under Mr. Buldey’s tutelage that I had to re-take the first semester of junior algebra my senior year. My second time around wasn’t so bad. I had a completely different teacher, Mrs. Havely. Her classroom was on the opposite side of the hall from Mr. Buldey’s, which was fitting, because she was the exact opposite of Mr. Buldey. She went over advanced concepts carefully, drilled us on the quadratic formula, and stood alongside us at the blackboard as we worked through problems. The only time I aced math in high school was when I was in her class. And she took a personal interest in her students too. There was a guy in the class who always wore black jeans with a chain, and Metallica, Megadeath, and Nana Mouskouri t-shirts. One day she asked him, "Trevor, are you a devil worshipper?"

It sounds like a dumb question, but consider the context. This was the late eighties, not long before the "Satanic panic" in which some psychologists led clients to believe they’d been victims of horrific abuse by their parents – sometimes resulting in accusations and even false imprisonment. It was a time when I loved going to bookstores and picking up The Satanic Bible by Anton Levay, not because I had any interest in it, but because I found it funny. There was a picture of him on the cover – a bald, scowling man who looked like Ming The Merciless, complete with the long moustache. And then on the first page was the dedication: "For Diane." Isn’t that sweet? It was a time when some heavy metal artists cultivated the idea that they were Satanists, not necessarily because they really were, but because it helped them create that aura of rebelliousness that, following the Sex Pistols, was getting harder and harder to maintain. It was a time when Ozzy Osborne was someone your parents wanted you to stay away from rather than someone your parents wanted to be. There was no judgment in the way Mrs. Havely asked the question, though. She just sounded curious. I think, like many of us, she’d heard of Satanists but never actually met one, and didn’t want to judge them unfairly.

The Huntsman’s Tale

May 30, 2014

So the rest of the staff has been pretty mad at me since the wedding. They were before they took off, anyway. At least Snow White kept them around long enough to take care of the wedding and the party afterward, but, you know, Prince Charming already has his own staff, and there’s not enough money to support two of everybody, so she just let everybody go. I thought they’d be glad after the mess of the party. Oh, you haven’t heard? I’m surprised you weren’t invited. You made the whole thing possible.

Well, let me start at the beginning, or at least what I know happened. It started when the Queen got this funny idea that Snow White was more beautiful than she was. The old Queen always did have funny ideas, maybe from talking to herself all the time. I’d go to see her and while I was waiting in the antechamber I’d hear her chatting away like she was really talking to someone, and then when I was allowed in it would just be her and that big mirror she always had with her. She asked me if I thought Snow White was more beautiful than her. I said beauty’s in the eye of the beholder, but that didn’t sit too well with her. I guess I never knew before that she was seriously crazy until she told me to take Snow White out riding and kill her. I really didn’t want to, but you know how the job market is right now. I didn’t want to do it, but I couldn’t exactly refuse either.

So that afternoon I took Snow White out riding in the forest. That’s not unusual. We did it all the time. And she didn’t see anything strange about me bringing my crossbow and having it cocked and ready. That’s not unusual either. I always carried it. I never needed it, but the woods can be dangerous. I’d taught Snow White that since she was little, when I taught her wood lore. There she was riding right in front of me with her back to me. We would go on pretty long rides and explore most of the woods, so she didn’t think it was strange when I started giving her directions. I was leading her to a place she’d never been before. It’s a place we hunters try to avoid anyway, up the mountain, through mist, then into a glen filled with rushes. I’ve heard stories about strange voices singing there. Oh, you know about that? Really? Okay, mystery solved. I didn’t like taking her there, but I thought I was doing my duty since I thought I was as good as killing her by leaving her. I told her too. She had a right to know what the Queen had ordered me to do. She freaked out. No surprise, I guess. I made sure she knew I couldn’t do exactly as I’d been told. I gave her the food and water I’d brought. She hadn’t noticed I’d brought extra. I told her to run. I told her she’d be fine. I didn’t believe it, and maybe she didn’t either, but the Queen scared both of us. I tore a piece of her dress away, then I took our horses. I didn’t look back. I didn’t see which way she went.

On the way back to the castle I found a deer. This is how good a hunter I am. I got to within ten paces of it and fired a shot right through the neck. The blood trail was short. I cut it in pieces. I wrapped the heart in the piece of Snow White’s dress and buried the rest. I hated to waste the meat, but I couldn’t risk anyone finding the evidence. It was late, after dark, before I got back. The Queen thought I’d been so long because I couldn’t do it. Half right, I guess. Then she laughed and called me sentimental. Then she sent the heart to the kitchen. Later she told me how good it had been. Said it tasted like venison. Things were quiet after that, for a couple of weeks at least. Then one day I heard her screaming in her bedroom. Well, you know, Snow White was still alive. How she found out I don’t know. I cleared out. I hid out in the forest, but I’d sneak up to the castle at night and talk to one of the cooks. I heard that the Queen got really bizarre then. She put ashes in her hair to make it gray, and used something to make her face all wrinkly. They saw her headed to the orchard, and then she disappeared until the next day. She looked normal again. And things got quiet again. The cook even said I might be able to get my job back. I even thought about asking, until it all went down.

Snow White showed up with Prince Charming. The Queen, I heard, wasn’t happy, but she pretended to be happy. She offered to let them use the castle for the wedding, and did all the planning and was matron of honor and everything. Then there was the reception. I know everybody’d been drinking, but everybody says the same thing. It was late, and the fire had been going, and Snow White pulled out these red hot iron shoes and made the Queen dance in them until she was dead. I know they’ve tried to spin it that she fell off a cliff, but the real story is that they made her dance in those shoes and then threw the body over a cliff. It must have been a hell of a party. Snow White offered me a job in Prince Charming’s castle, but I really didn’t want to work for her after that. I mean, would you? I always thought she was the nice one. Anyway, I did hear what she did for you, and that’s why I’ve worked out this whole new business model. What I’m offering is all free range, organic, locally sourced meats. The best in the kingdom. It’s a small operation. We get it, dress it, butcher it, and deliver it right to your door. Game, fish, fowl, you name it. We’re starting as a coop, but if I can get any of the old gang to speak to me I’d like to start doing custom work. You guys, all seven of you, you’re all professional miners, right? You don’t have a lot of time to do your own shopping. Let me take care of it for you. We might even be offering prepared meals. We may even branch out into housecleaning. So, can I sign you up?

Aesop Updated.

May 16, 2014

The Tortoise & The Hare Return

The tortoise and the hare agreed to have another race. This time, instead of stopping in the middle of the race to take a nap the hare lapped back and forth between the start and the finish six times before the tortoise even made it to the halfway mark. The hare proudly told his friends that he’d won the race. His friends laughed and said, "Yeah, dude, but you still lost that one time to a tortoise!"

Moral: It’s only funny when it happens to someone else.

The Dog In The Manger

A cow went to eat some of the hay that was placed in the manger. There was a dog in the manger, and snapped and growled at the cow, preventing it from getting close. The cow said, "You selfish creature. This hay does not do you any good, and yet you won’t let those who want it have any."

Moral: Some people are jerks. Suck it up buttercup.

The Dog & The Manger

A dog liked to spend the hottest parts of the day sleeping in a manger filled with sweet, cool hay. One day it couldn’t because the cow was standing there eating all the hay. The dog said, "Well, this sucks. Guess I have to find some other place to sleep."

Moral: It all depends on who’s telling the story.

The Two Frogs

Two frogs were living in a pond that dried up. They went in search of a new home, and soon found a deep, cool well. "We could live here," said one of them. "Yes," said the other frog, "but if it should dry up how will we get out again?"

Moral: Something about not taking the first place you see, or maybe it’s about subprime mortgages.

The Travelers

A train leaves Grand Central Station headed East at 55 miles per hour at 9:00am EDT. A motorcyclist leaves Winnipesaukee at 6:00am EDT travelling at 70 miles per hour, but stops every four hours for fifteen minutes at rest stops. The train is non-stop, but does have to make one one-hour refueling stop in Pittsburgh. Which will reach Chicago first?

Moral: [Write your answer here]

The Octopus & The Eel

An octopus was swimming happily through the ocean. Suddenly it was grabbed by an eel which had been hiding in the coral. The octopus struggled, but the eel had a tight grip on one arm. Finally the octopus was able to tear its own arm off and swim away. The eel ate the arm and was satisfied. Later the octopus would regrow its arm.

Moral: You think you’re tough? Well? Do you?

My 2014 Speech to the Graduates

May 9, 2014

This year the commencement speech of the University of Catalpa was scheduled to be given by the assistant deputy undersecretary of the Fish & Wildlife Department of Rhode Island. Due to an unfortunate cancellation I was called in at the last minute. What follows is a transcript of a speech I mostly made up at the podium.

Ladies and gentlemen of the class of 2014, I’m glad none of you tried to get out of this by calling in a fake bomb threat.

Every year I hear at least one story about a student calling in a fake bomb threat to get out of taking a test. It’s not something I would recommend, or that I can even condone, but I can understand where it comes from. Tests put a lot of pressure on students, especially really big tests. The possibility of failure is treated as a threat, so the student who responds with a threat is merely applying the lesson learned, but in a really bad way. Threats are counterproductive, and yet they’re still a cornerstone of the educational system. Besides, even though it’s bad to call in a bomb threat, even a fake one, students who resort to such extreme means must know that at best they’re just delaying the inevitable. Eventually they’re still going to have to take the test. I assume they’re just trying to get more time to study. It’s the wrong thing to do, but done for the right reason.

I never look into the details, but I wouldn’t be surprised if in at least one of these cases the student who called in the threat was about to take either the SAT or ACT. Almost everyone who goes to college in the United States has to take one of these tests, and how well you do can be a major factor in which college you go to, which, in turn, can affect the rest of your life. So the possibility of not doing well becomes a huge threat. Maybe you faced those tests suffering under a large and unnecessary amount of stress, not realizing or just forgetting that these tests are one of a myriad of factors colleges look at, and that your future success or failure is going to be determined by a lot more than who signed your diploma.

Almost all of you, I’m sure, took either the SAT or the ACT. Many of you took both tests. I did. First I took the SAT and did pretty well on it, although it’s hard to not do pretty well on a test that automatically gives you three thousand points just for spelling your name correctly. You’d be surprised how many people I went to school with blew that part, or maybe you wouldn’t if you knew some of the people I went to school with. My parents thought it would be a good idea for me to take the ACT as well, maybe because it’s a more accurate representation of life for most of us, since it starts you off with negative fifteen points. After taking both the SAT and the ACT I felt DOA, tried to get an MRI, ended up going AWOL, got hit by an SUV driven by someone who was DUI, called AAA, and briefly played for the NCAA before my parents reported me to the DEA, but that’s another story. The worst thing I remember about the SAT and ACT is being told that these tests could determine my entire future. Imagine your entire promising career being wrecked by something as simple as accidentally using a number three pencil. The pressure was enormous, at least for those of us who cared about our future and who weren’t mature and worldly enough to recognize that a single test would not determine our destiny. In fact I think that was the real lesson of the SAT and ACT: try to do well, but there’s much more to life than filling in empty circles. Telling young people their whole future could be determined by a single test is like putting them in front of a big pit full of spikes, and saying, “Before you graduate you have to jump over this. Good luck. Hopefully we’ll see you on the other side.” The best and brightest will be the ones who say “This is bullshit” and walk around the pit.

Some of you may be naïve enough to think you’re done with tests now that you’re leaving school. Except, of course, those of you who are going on to graduate school, where you’ll sometimes be the ones assigning the tests. This is because while you’re working toward your Ph.D. you’ll be working as the assistant of a professor who should have retired ten years ago, and who died three years ago, but, because he’s got tenure, still comes in and takes naps in his office.

For those of you who think you’re done with tests I have bad news. Life itself is a series of tests. The good news is most of life’s tests won’t be like the tests you take in school.

Something I hear about a lot these days is the makeup test, the chance to retake a test you’ve failed or just done badly on. Are makeup tests real? Have you ever taken a makeup test?

[Pause]

Hello?

[Pause]

Okay, I guess you weren’t expecting audience participation at a graduation ceremony, and the people behind me are getting antsy, so I’ll move on.

I like the term “makeup test”, because it’s exactly like makeup. If you were aiming to look like a supermodel and instead it’s Bozo The Clown staring back at you in the mirror you can wipe it off and start over. I don’t think we had makeup tests when I was a student. Or maybe we did and I just didn’t know it. I was a senior in college before I learned that you could call up the reference desk at the library and ask simple questions, or get help in searching for answers to questions. I didn’t realize that librarians could do more than just tell me to be quiet. They did ask how I got a pizza up to the third floor. I didn’t know at the time I could ask them questions too. If I needed to know when Orson Welles died for a paper I was writing I thought I had to go to the card catalogue—that’s what we called “computers” back then—and hope that there was a biography that had been written well enough after 1985 to give me the exact date. Once I learned that librarians were there to answer questions, though, I took full advantage of the service, until one of them screamed at me that unless it was information I really needed he had better things to do than try to figure out how much pudding it would take to fill the Luxor pyramid in Las Vegas.

There are those who say that makeup tests shouldn’t be allowed, that they encourage students to be lazy, or not prepare. Sure, some lazy people are going to try and game the system, that’s going to happen no matter what. Some people are going to want to re-take a test they’ve done badly on because they’re diligent, hard-working, and determined to improve themselves. Chances are once you cross this stage and pick up your diploma you’re never going to need to know the quadratic formula ever again, but that diligence and willingness to keep trying are qualities that will be rewarded is something you should have learned, and, going forward, apply in every aspect of life.

The mere existence of makeup tests, even in school, where so many things are presented as either pass or fail, is really a more accurate reflection of what you’ll find as you go out into the real world. Very few of your future experiences will present themselves as a pass-or-fail test, unless you’re being made to jump over a pit full of spikes. Whatever job you’re in you may screw something up, and, while it’s possible you’ll get fired, it’s also possible there’s a way to fix the mistake, and even if there’s not you might just get a warning not to let it happen again. If you do get fired there are other jobs. And in life, outside of whatever you gotta do to pay the bills, situations where you have a choice between just one path or another are going to be very rare. You’ve probably had to read the Robert Frost poem about how taking the road less traveled made all the difference at least a dozen times, but what did he know? He picked one path and stuck to it. Or did he? The older you’ll get the more you’ll understand the wisdom of the immortal words of Led Zeppelin: there are two paths you can go by but in the long run there’s still time to change the road you’re on. Life itself will be a series of tests, but the difference between the tests you take in school and the ones you face in life is that most of the tests you face in life won’t have simple right or wrong answers. Most of the time they’ll be multiple choice tests, but you have to figure out what the choices are yourself, and A and C may be right, but for completely different reasons, or B might seem right, but in three years you’ll find it was the wrong answer. And you won’t be graded by someone else. In most of life’s tests you won’t get a grade at all.

And you have to accept that sometimes you’re going to make mistakes. Sometimes, no matter who you are, you’re going to fail. When it comes to the things that are really worth doing, the things that really matter, most of us don’t get them right on the first try. There are some exceptional individuals who will excel at something, but don’t be fooled into thinking that things automatically come easy for them. Mozart was playing the violin at the age of four, but his father started making him practice while he was still breastfeeding. But I’m also not going to tell you that failure is a good thing. It’s become popular among adults to say “Embrace failure”. This line is being fed to us by the same pop psychologists who, in five years, will be telling us, “Hate failure! Knock failure down! Kick it in the teeth! Kill! Kill! Kill!” and then they’ll be dragged away by legitimate psychologists. Telling you to embrace failure is like telling you to jump right into a pit full of spikes. What I will tell you is that you shouldn’t look at failure as a threat. Accept that failure is part of life. Accept that you can and should move on. Life is a test, but it’s not about getting the right answers, but how you react when the results come in.

Thank you, and good luck.

Last Call For Alcohol

May 2, 2014

A Brief History of Drinking:

Babylon:

“Cut me off a hunk of beer.”

Ancient Rome:

“I’m on my lunch break from building a temple, so just give me a flagon of wine and water, with some lead sprinkled in it.”

Medieval Europe:

“I’m about to go into battle, so bring me a flagon of wine!”
“I’m about to go pillaging, so bring me a flagon of mead!”
“I’m on a lunch break from building a cathedral, so just give me a quart of ale.”

Victorian England

“A sherry, please, followed by a witty bon mot.”

Prohibition (United States only):

“Sloe gin.”
“Fast gin.”
“Bathtub gin.”
“Furniture gin.”
“Nice place you’ve got here. It would be a shame if something happened to it.”

Prohibition (everywhere else):

“I’ll have a gin.”
“I’ll have a whiskey.”
“I’m on my lunch break from rebuilding the cathedral, so I’ll just have a pint of ale.”

The Fifties:

“Bourbon.”
“Rye and a cigar.”
“I quit drinking, so just bring me a beer.”

The Sixties:

“Gin and tonic.”
“Scotch and soda.”
“I’m on my lunch break from the advertising agency, so I’ll just have a couple of martinis.”

The Seventies:

“Bloody Mary.”
“Harvey Wallbanger.”
“Brandy Alexander.”
“Spiro Agnew.”
“Martini. And put one of those paper umbrellas in it.”

The Eighties:

“Blue whale.”
“White Russian.”
“Black velvet.”
“Red red wine.”
“Technicolor yawn.”

The Nineties:

“I’ll have a Fuzzy Navel.”
“I’ll have a Slippery Nipple.”
“I’ll have a Sex On The Beach.”
“I’ll have a Blowjob In The Back of An El Camino.”
“I’ll have a Sweaty Nutsack.” (Local version: espresso, Kahlua, Malibu rum, topped with whipped cream dusted with salt. Served with half a banana.)

On Spring Break:

“Jell-o shots and a navel to suck ‘em out of! Whoo!”

Summer in Florida:

“Strawberry daiquiri.”
“Margarita.”
“Pina colada.”

Summer in Wisconsin:

“Strawberry daiquiri from a premade mix.”
“Margarita from a can.”
“Reconstituted freeze-dried pina colada.”

Upscale downtown bar:

“I’ll have two fingers of single malt scotch, with a tablespoon of mineral water to open up the flavor.”

“A Cosmopolitan made with Blue Ash Limited Edition Excel Vodka, with the garnish made from a free-range, fair trade lemon.”

“A Manhattan, but only if you have Pereline bitters.”

“I’d like to see your list of high gravity local microbrews.”

“Absinthe is legal now? Bring me a trough of that!”

Chain Italian restaurant:

“Chardonnay.”
“Merlot.”
“What have you got in a Pinot Grigio under $10?”
“I’ll try this pumpkin cinnamon double bock pale ale originally made by a microbrewery now owned by a multi-national conglomerate.”
“Iced tea.”
“I’m on my lunch break backing up the server, so keep the coffee coming..”

In your eighties:

“What is this? Tapioca? I asked for a rye and a cigar!”

The future:

“I’m on my lunch break from the clone farm, so I’ll just have a beer, and give my Arcturan friend here a distillate of benzene chromate, with a supplemental infusion of pure ammonia. Shaken, not stirred.”

Put It On My Bill

April 25, 2014

There’s a special providence in the fall of a sparrow.
-Hamlet, Act V, sc.2

A sparrow flew into the basement. It was a beautiful spring day outside, so why it thought a cinderblock cave with fluorescent lighting was where it wanted to be is beyond me. I didn’t want to be in there, but I’d been putting chicken necks through a meat grinder, which should have been a warning to the sparrow. I wasn’t sure what to do. If I left it in there I knew it would die. I’d found other animals, mostly mice, that had died trapped in the basement. Mice shouldn’t have any trouble finding their way in and out of a basement, but maybe they got caught under the shovel when it fell. I’m not sure. I only know I’ve found their dried corpses. But I was afraid of the sparrow. When I was a kid a sparrow had built a nest in my parents’ garage. Once as I was coming down the stairs it hovered in the air, shrieking at me. My mother said it was protecting its nest and I was lucky I didn’t get my eyes pecked out, so I didn’t spend a lot of time in the basement until I was sure it and its family had flown the coop. Even though I could have closed the basement door and not gone back down there for a couple of days, until the sparrow starved or became dehydrated or, by some miracle, found its way out, I couldn’t do that. Maybe I would have done it anyway, but I was thinking of Fluffy.

For my sixth birthday I told my grandparents I wanted a parakeet. After checking with my parents they brought me one. My grandfather had named him "Bill", which I didn’t realize at the time was pretty funny. Bill’s cage was put in my room, and he was my pet parakeet for less than twenty-four hours. I was sitting at the kitchen table having lunch when my mother, who was by the stairs to my room, screamed and then started crying. And I started crying, even though I had no idea. The family Dachshund, Gretchen, had somehow gotten Bill, and brought him down in her mouth, like a feathered dog toy. Since I hadn’t opened Bill’s cage, and I don’t think anyone else did either, how he got out is a mystery. Maybe the door of his cage was just loose. We made a quick trip to the pet store, and I came home with Fluffy, who would be my pet parakeet for more than a year, surviving my next birthday and making it to the following spring.

My father had a modest collection of Playboy magazines. From what I’ve heard this isn’t unusual, although I seemed to be the only kid in the neighborhood whose father did. I’m pretty sure this wasn’t something I was supposed to know, and I don’t know why I opened the cabinet in the den and found them, but there they were. And they were interesting. Hey, what kid wouldn’t be interested in an interview with Norman Mailer? I would sneak an occasional peek if it was safe, but mostly left them alone. I preferred Sesame Street. My mistake was telling my best friend Trent about them. Looking back I realize Trent was my "best friend" for only two reasons: our houses were close together and we were the same age, except for a brief two-month period each year when I was older. After my friend Chuck, who also lived nearby, moved away Trent was the only kid I had to play with. We didn’t have much in common, but then it didn’t matter. We rode our Big Wheels together, and had Star Wars adventures. It says a lot about how different we were–or maybe just how different I was–that Trent always wanted to be Luke Skywalker or Han Solo, and I really dug being C-3PO. Or we’d kick a ball around, or make up our own weird games on the fly. Most of the time things were fine.

When we were bored, though, Trent’s mind would inevitably turn to my father’s Playboy collection. I didn’t get it. We’d found a time or two to flip through each one, and once that was done I thought we could move on. There were times, though, when getting one and going through it page by page was all Trent could think about. He’d concoct elaborate schemes for getting one out of the house. Well, maybe "elaborate" is the wrong word.

"You could just bring one out."
"My mom’s in the kitchen."
"Sneak it by her."
"How?"
"Put it in a paper bag."
"What if she asks what’s in it?"

At this point Trent’s scheme would break down. I’d suggest we hunt for bugs in the vacant lot or build a cabin out of sticks in the backyard. Trent would sigh and stare vacantly and say he was thinking of going home. And at times like that I didn’t mind. If he wasn’t interested in doing something fun and that wouldn’t get me in trouble–hey, I didn’t mind getting both of us in trouble, like the time I found a box of matches and shared with him the joy of burning leaves in the drainage ditch–I could play by myself for a while.

If everyone in my family was outside, though, Trent would inevitably ask why couldn’t we go inside and peruse a Playboy or two. I had counter-arguments, but they were weaker. The possibility of getting in trouble was lower. Usually I could stall until something like lunch or my parents finishing whatever they were doing outside took the pressure off, but Trent’s obsession was staggering in its power. His single-mindedness could wear down the pyramids if there was a possibility of seeing a naked woman inside. And on one beautiful spring day when my parents were digging flower beds in the front yard, I finally broke down. We went inside, into the den, with Trent’s little brother Terry tagging along. Terry always tagged along. I think Terry and I both hung out with Trent because there was nothing better for us to do.

I opened the cabinet, Trent selected an issue, placed it on the floor, and we started peeling back the pages. Where was Terry? I assumed he was in the den with us, although I know he was wandering around, not yet being mature enough to have much of an interest in the droll cartoons of Don Addis and Gahan Wilson. I wasn’t paying much attention to Terry. I won’t say I was reading the articles, but my mind wasn’t entirely on the garden of earthly delights spread out in front of me and Trent either. Maybe that’s why I noticed Gretchen barking while Trent wouldn’t have noticed an atomic bomb. I made Trent put the Playboy away, which he did, reluctantly, and I ran upstairs. Fluffy was out of his cage, beating his wings against my window. It’s amazing how high Dachshunds can leap, and Gretchen was on my bed jumping and snapping. I still don’t know why I didn’t grab Gretchen and drag her away. It would have been so easy to do that and close my door and then get my parents, but I was in a panic. I ran outside. I came back in with my parents just as Gretchen was coming down the stairs with Fluffy in her mouth.

My mother was suspicious. Why had we been in the den? What were we even doing in the house? Had we been watching Terry the whole time? Yes, we both said, we’d been watching Terry. He’d never left the den. We were sure of that. What were we doing? All I could say was "I don’t know."

Parents: when you ask one of your larvae a seemingly obvious question and they give an answer like "I don’t know" you may be surprised to learn that even though it sounds like a lie, and a stupid one, it may be a completely honest answer. I didn’t know what I was doing in the house. I really wanted to be outside. I’m pretty sure there wasn’t a single time that entire day that I wanted to be inside. From one perspective "I don’t know" was a lie of omission. From another it was the truth.

There would be no trip to the pet store that day, or any other day. I wouldn’t get another parakeet, which was fine. Yes, I’d learned that parakeets were pretty boring pets, but really I knew I didn’t deserve one. I was responsible for Fluffy’s death. It seems obvious that Terry had gone to my room and opened the cage, but he was four, and Trent and I should have been watching him. We shouldn’t have even been in the house. Gretchen did the actual killing, but dogs will do what they do. Trent convinced me to go in the house in the first place, but I could have said no. What was he going to do? His only weapon was "I won’t be your friend" and he’d used it so many times I knew it was an empty threat. It was a regular pattern of our relationship. We’d fall out over something, and an hour later, after some apologies, Luke and C-3PO would be saving the galaxy again.

So, edging my way carefully around the basement to the toolbox, I put on a pair of safety goggles, then put my body between the back wall and the sparrow. Moving forward I guided it to the door. It turned, saw the sunny day outside, and flew out and away. I don’t believe in fate or karma, although, as an honest skeptic, I have to admit that everything’s possible. Maybe there is a great cosmic tally sheet where our actions, whether they make the world worse or better, are treated as debits and credits. Even if Fluffy had lived happily and passed away of natural causes, or at least in his sleep, since being taken down by a predator is pretty natural too, I still would have done everything I could to save that sparrow. But I also hope this squares my account with the birds.

This May Be The End.

From: The Walt Disney Corporation

To: Christopher Allen Waldrop

Subject: Winnie The Pooh

Dear Mr. Waldrop,

Last week you published a “humorous” essay on the subject of Winnie The Pooh(tm). Since you mentioned The Walt Disney Corporation in your essay you must be aware that Winnie The Pooh(tm) and all associated characters, as well as all motion pictures, including but not limited to theatrical

releases, television shows, and direct-to-video productions, as well as all toys, board games, or other products and merchandise bearing the names or likenesses of Winnie The Pooh(tm) and all associated characters, and all written materials about Winnie The Pooh(tm) and all associated characters are the sole property of The Walt Disney Corporation. Any use of or reference to Winnie The Pooh(tm) and all associated characters and settings, including but not limited to the childhood home of Christopher

“Robin” Milne, son of A.A. Milne, and The Hundred Acre Wood(r) is forbidden without the express permission of The Walt Disney Corporation. This includes any and all quotations as well as parodies, which are not covered by the statute of Fair Use, as determined by summary legal judgment (cf. Disney v. Keaton, Disney v. Ellison, Disney v. Fleischer, Disney v. Thames Television, etc.).

I am aware that you may attempt to reply to this notice by citing, paraphrasing, or plagiarizing a letter from Julius “Groucho” Marx to the Warner Brothers Film Studio, sent when said film studio objected to the Marx Brothers’ use of the name “Casablanca” in the title of their film “A Night In Casablanca”. I realize that Mr. Marx’s reply included, among other things, an implied threat of a countersuit because the Marxes had been brothers before the Warners. I know you are familiar with this letter because you checked out the book Life With Groucho by Arthur Marx from a local academic library on August 25th, 1996, at 12:24PM CDT. You subsequently returned said book on September 17th, 1996, at 6:48AM CDT. At both times you declined to pay $0.40 in fines which you owed for a previous book (The Bedbug & Selected Poems by Vladimir Mayakovsky) which you had checked out but did not read. I am also aware that you have described Mr. Marx’s correspondence with Warner Brothers in reference to stories of allegedly ludicrous or egregious copyright infringement suits on blogs where you comment under the pseudonym “Spunky The Wonder Squid”.

It is my duty to inform you that The Walt Disney Corporation has acquired The Marx Brothers, including, but not limited to, all motion pictures, television appearances, and written materials, as well as assorted paraphernalia or any likeness of said Brothers (cf. Disney v. Menkman Bros., producers of a “fake schnozz” with mustache and glasses). I must therefore ask that you cease and desist quoting from or paraphrasing Mr. Marx’s letter, as well as any other quotes, actual or attributed, or making any references to The Marx Brothers(c) herewith without the express permission of The Walt Disney Corporation.

Regarding your use of the name “Spunky The Wonder Squid” I must also inform you that The Walt Disney Corporation has acquired the entire television series “Night Flight”, which ran on the USA Network as well as in syndication from 1981 to 1988. This acquisition included the eight-episode parody series “Dynaman”, later repackaged, with additional or replacement sequences, but with all humor and music by the B-52’s removed, as “The Mighty Morphin Power Rangers”, subsequently “Power Rangers”. I must therefore ask that you cease all use of the name “Spunky The Wonder Squid” without the express permission of The Walt Disney Corporation.

In addition I must further inform you that The Walt Disney Corporation has acquired or has always had ownership of the following: The Muppets, Star Wars, Looney Tunes, the complete works of Jules Verne, Star Trek, Dangermouse, the complete works of Theodore Geisel (AKA “Dr. Seuss”),

Forbidden Planet (1956), The Twilight Zone (TV series), The Twilight Zone (song, acquired with the complete catalog of Golden Earring), The Rocky Horror Picture Show, as well as its sequel and all related materials including but not limited to the stage production, The Creature From The Black Lagoon and all subsequent sequels and remakes, Little Shop of Horrors (1960), Little Shop of Horrors (1986), the complete works of Kurt Vonnegut, the complete works of Eleanor Cameron, Monty Python’s Flying Circus and all productions of Python (Monty), Ltd., Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956), Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978), Body Snatchers (1993), The Invasion (2007), the complete works of Arthur C. Clarke, the entire country of Sri Lanka, the following TV series not previously listed: The Kids In The Hall, You Can’t Do That On Television, M*A*S*H*, Cheers, Jeopardy, Doctor Who, the complete filmography of Stanley Kubrick, the complete filmography of Peter Lorre, the complete filmography of Mel Brooks, the complete works of Virginia Woolf, and “Freckles”, the neighborhood Springer Spaniel whom you played with from ages four through thirteen, and who was the sire of your dog “Friskie” (patent pending). Since there is a chance, albeit small, that you will respond to this letter with Tom Petty’s song “I Won’t Back Down”, I must warn you that several years ago Mr. Petty signed a contract giving ownership of his soul to Hell, Ltd., in exchange for becoming a “triple threat” (singer/musician/animated character). As a result of a 1995 merger The Walt Disney Corporation acquired all property and individuals owned at the time by Hell, Ltd., as well as several relevant personnel. (Mr. Beelzebub, a former CEO of Hell, Ltd., is now The Walt Disney Corporation’s Vice President in charge of Human Resources.) Quoting from Mr. Petty’s song, including use of the phrase “I won’t back down” is not allowed without the express permission of The Walt Disney Corporation.

The Walt Disney Corporation is now also the sole owner and licensor of the following: the epic of Gilgamesh, the Egyptian Book of The Dead, the Illiad and Odyssey by “Homer”, the complete works of William Shakespeare, Samuel Clemens, Emily Dickinson, Jules Verne, Publius Ovidius Naso, and other materials previously considered to have been available as part of the public domain. This acquisition occurred as part of recent legislation passed as an addendum as provided by a codicil in the 1998 Copyright Extension Act, section 42, subsection L, which specifically provided The Walt Disney Corporation authority to extend all copyrights past, present, and future to infinity and beyond. These items are owned in toto, as is the dog Toto, as part of The Walt Disney Corporation’s acquisition of all print and motion picture versions of The Wizard of Oz, as well as all related materials, sequels, remakes, etc. The Walt Disney Corporation also owns the band Toto. However as your inability to sing in any key renders the song “Africa” unrecognizable to anyone but yourself we do not feel it is necessary at this time to request that you cease and desist singing it in the shower.

Finally, due to what our legal department has deemed “an uncanny resemblance” to the character “Gepetto” as drawn by Walt Disney himself the Walt Disney Corporation has acquired sole rights to the brother of your paternal grandfather Mr. Allen Jackson Waldrop, AKA “Uncle Jack”.

I must therefore ask that you cease and desist quoting from, paraphrasing, or referring to any material licensed and owned by The Walt Disney Corporation without prior express permission granted in writing. Failure to do so will result in a minimum fine of $25,000.00 per infringement as well as imprisonment in an undisclosed location (known forthwith as “the unhappiest place on Earth”) for no less than five years. As The Walt Disney Corporation has just acquired the complete works of Franz Kafka our legal department has determined that such requests may, in themselves, be determined to constitute infringement if they mention by name any character, personage, or item owned by The Walt Disney Corporation.

Respectfully,

Smedley Force, The Walt Disney Corporation

Department of Legal Affairs, Copyright Infringement

Division of Written Materials (spec. Talking Animals)

Throwback Thursday

April 11, 2014

Recently I had a fit of nostalgia and went back, way back, to my childhood, all the way to Winnie The Pooh, who I guess technically predates my childhood. My parents named me after Christopher Robin, although my middle name is Allen, because I’m also named after my Uncle Jack. At the time my mother picked it "Christopher" wasn’t a very common name, but it would experience a resurgence, just as Winnie The Pooh experienced kind of a renaissance, both with the first Disney animated version, and books like like Benjamin Hoff’s The Tao of Pooh, which was later followed by The Te of Piglet, the Socratic Tigger, and, of course, Also Sprach Winnie The Pooh, which opens with the bear emerging from hibernation to survey the Hundred Acre Wood from a high crag to announce that Christopher Robin is dead.

I thought of A.A. Milne’s stories as completely idyllic, childish stories-sort of like the Teletubbies, but without as much sex and violence, so it was kind of surprising to find that reading Winnie The Pooh as an adult is kind of like watching Bugs Bunny cartoons as an adult.

I know I’m not the first to pick up on this, but it’s still easy to forget just how subtly twisted the Winnie The Pooh stories are, mainly because of the overly sweet Disney adaptations that get "updated" every few years, stripping away more and more of what made the original stories interesting. The most recent Disney film, "Winnie The Pooh’s Neato Fun Spectacular Awesomeness Time" was supposed to be twenty minutes of a CGI Pooh jumping on a trampoline, but this was changed to him just jiggling in one place, out of fears that trampolines might promote gang activity.

And I have to admit that the name "Winnie The Pooh" kind of gets on my nerves. It did even when I was a kid. I don’t mind the "Winnie" part, even though I don’t know any guys named Winnie. Actually I don’t know any women named Winnie, either, although I’ve heard it’s short for Winifred. There is a Winifred in Disney’s adaptation of The Jungle Book-she’s Colonel Hathi’s wife-although she doesn’t appear in the original, since Kipling was another author Disney played fast and loose with, but that’s another story. And in a world where there are girls named Chris I have no problem with a guy named Winnie, but why is he a "Pooh"? He’s a bear, and originally he was called Edward Bear, but maybe he was given the new name to throw Edwardian-era parents off the scent. Winnie The Pooh has a deeply subversive streak. The "bear of very little brain" is really smarter than he seems, and kind of a badass.

In his first adventure he tries to get to a bees’ nest full of honey high up in a tree by getting Christopher Robin to blow up a balloon so he can float up. Having a friend who can exhale helium is pretty clever. And he also asks for a blue balloon, to blend in with the sky, and rolls in mud to disguise himself as a cloud. It’s a remarkable degree of planning, so it’s a buzzkill that the bees don’t go for it. And the one thing he didn’t plan was how to get down again. Maybe that wasn’t that smart of him, or maybe he just knows what the protagonists realize at the climax of the Harry Potter series: planning is overrated, because you can’t expect the unexpected. Preparedness is a virtue, but it’s eclipsed by adaptability. Fortunately Christopher Robin had the foresight to bring his gun, because it’s always a good idea to be armed when you’re going into woods where there are bears around. Aiming at the balloon he managed to hit it on his second try. Pooh reportedly later described the first shot as just a flesh wound.

What remains most relevant, though, is something I don’t think any critics have ever picked up on. Pooh’s circle of friends consists of a pig, an owl, a rabbit, and a depressed donkey decades before "diversity" and "multiculturalism" became buzzwords. In the first book they’re also joined by Kanga and her soon Roo. Even though Rabbit objects a little bit to this foreigner and her weird foreign ways (he doesn’t keep any of his family members in his pockets) his scheme to kidnap Roo has nothing to do with getting Kanga to leave and everything to do with getting to know her better. And think about it: she’s a single mom raising a child in a foreign country. The neighborhood becomes even more diverse in The House At Pooh Corner with the arrival of Tigger. The fact that all these different species get along and even live as complete equals is never really even treated as something unusual, except in an early draft of "In Which Tigger Is Unbounced" in which some unemployed vultures come through the neighborhood talking about sending Tigger "back where he came from".

Almost every critic starts by saying how A.A. Milne and his son longed for an earlier simpler time. But it’s hard to see what time exactly he was imagining. It seems more like Milne, who was so traumatized by the horrors of World War I he said writing about it in his autobiography made him physically sick, was hoping for a peaceful future where barriers of class and ethnicity no longer exist, where everyone lives alongside each other as equals and helps each other. He also knows such a future, if it’s even possible, is a long way off. At the end of The House At Pooh Corner Christopher Robin says goodbye to his friends. He and Pooh go off to an enchanted part of the forest, "the only place in the Forest where you could sit down carelessly, without getting up again almost at once and looking for somewhere else." They have a long final talk in an enchanted part of the forest about knights, kings, "factors", and other countries. For Christopher Robin growing up means an end to the egalitarian world like the one that Pooh, Piglet, Rabbit, Owl, Kanga, Roo, and Tigger have created, although he’s not sure why, and he never fully leaves Pooh behind.

And the animals themselves seem to realize that in a peaceful world it’s easy to lose focus, so maybe that’s why, when they all meet to say goodbye to Christopher Robin it’s Eeyore who gets nudged forward as the leader of the group. Everyone thinks Eeyore as merely depressed, but his mood is defensive rather than congenital. Eeyore knows the power of negative thinking. He assumes the worst will happen so he’s never disappointed. In the depths of his depression he also takes pleasure in little things. In one story he’s lost his house so he’s out freezing in the snow, but, he says, "we haven’t had an earthquake lately". Maybe that’s why I always liked Eeyore best. Ever since I was very young I’ve tended to think of fictional characters as real. I imagine what their hidden backstories are, and what it would be like to hang out with them. Maybe this started with Eeyore, who I still think would be fun to hang out with. And I don’t think he was always the depressed donkey. He’s come to live in the Hundred Acre Wood because he’s fleeing demons he can never fully escape. When he’s introduced in the Pooh stories it’s because he’s lost his tail, but he loses it because it’s not attached securely. Somewhere, back when he lived somewhere else, maybe when he was hauling a wagon full of ale or working as a longshoreman, his tail was amputated and he had to have his ass pierced to have it reattached. There’s a story there, and plenty more where that came from. Loosen him up with a couple of beers and I bet Eeyore is a riot.