Thursday, September 24, 2020

Mother Theresa

 

She was the famed Mother Theresa, but boy, what an asshole.

 

Don’t get me wrong, much respect to the great lady from Macedonia. And look, I know she made innumerable sacrifices and endured endless hardships. I’m merely suggesting that even the best people occasionally have an off day.

 

Her story, as I understand it, she left her homeland for Ireland at 18 years old to learn English. This would have been 1928. Why not send her to England to learn English, I don’t know, but anyway, it was Ireland where she met my mother. Incidentally, speaking of her sacrifices, she would never see her mom or sister again! Truth. How about that for commitment to one’s craft? Her father had already passed away when she was a young girl.

 

So my narrative begins here, 1928, with my mom. She was the same age as Mother Theresa and actively volunteered at the local church where Mother Theresa was now learning the language. She rode her bicycle there, my mother did, several times each week and lunched with this new girl. She was the teacher’s assistant, teaching by immersion, and the girls were playmates, if you will. Spending time together in this way they created a unique bond, the one person her age with whom she related in real life terms. Mother Theresa would later travel to India and points more exotic. Despite my early harsh assessment, to her credit, she made an effort to keep this unique friendship alive.

 

My mother married before the second Great War and left Ireland shortly thereafter. After World War II my parents moved to the United States. They’d had enough of war and there was too much for bad memories. Time to make a new go of it, was the thinking.

 

The two ladies keeping in touch I found odd, given her massive draw on a worldwide scale. Yet, to her credit, she seemed to reserve a special place for my mother, a harkening back to a simpler, younger time. The correspondence was sparse, but consistent. I still have the letters and postcards. Yes, she sometimes mailed postcards, I guess, when too busy to write a full letter. Although, most correspondence was letters. My favorite, though, is the postcard from 1983 after receiving her Order of Merit award from President Reagan. She commented that the president was very handsome and said he made a pass at her, something to that effect. I’m pretty sure she was joking, but funny to think this saintly person could think in such a way. So she had this redeeming quality despite the Pennsylvania debacle of 1976 which we’ll discuss.

 

She had received the Peace Price from Pope John Paul five years earlier. I forget which numbered John Paul, but John Paul nonetheless. The Nobel Peace Prize would be looming on her horizon. Yet she was a very widely known image across the globe even then, a fascination about her. Then here she comes to share the bask of her glow with her friend from years ago, my mom.

 

She was receiving this award at the University of Scranton in Pennsylvania, the La Storta Medal for Human Service.

Now keep in mind, she never had time to meet with her own mother or sister. But here we were, she found time to meet with my mom and me for a publicity stunt drumming up donations for her various leprosy hospices, her missionaries and charities. 

 

So it’s 1976, my mom was semi-retired and working part-time at the university in Scranton in a clerical capacity. Mother Theresa reached out through one of her handlers and arranged for a visit. This is where things took a turn for the worse, in my opinion. Look, to be fair to Mother Theresa, I can only imagine the stress, strains and pressures on her, valiantly waging war against poverty in India since the early ‘40s and such, but this is how our little get-together went.

 

We’ve all seen the images of the diminutive, graying, noble grandmotherly figure. But I tell you, that afternoon, lunching at the university cafeteria she was the tense personification of a bear trap waiting to trigger. It was awkward and very public with cameras all over. I was nervous, even though I was deep into my 30s by then. My mom had asked me to come with her because she too was nervous to be on camera alone with her friend from years ago.

 

Anyway, so, during the meal, I picked up a basket of buns to offer it to her, the first pick and get the meal underway. She picked one up and dropped it, accidental I’m sure, but still, it was clearly in her hands, unwashed before the meal, and there’s her bun rolling off the table and onto the ground. She tapped at it with her little black nun shoe, ostensibly trying to direct it back to me, but it was an errant connection sending it spiraling away from the table like a top. You know, the vintage 20thcentury child’s toy. She immediately turned her attention back to the basket and picked up a second bun.

 

Pick up that bun off the ground and eat it. Don’t you dare waste it. There are people starving in Calcutta who are dying for the likes of that precious food. You’ll eat it,” she said to me as she started buttering the fresh bun. It was so matter of fact, her exact words.

 

You dropped the bun, Theresa, you should eat that one. You’re handling and buttering my bun right now,” I fired back to her. She had to be careful of her reaction because of all the cameras, but if looks could kill, my insides would have been strewn all over those cheap wicker food court chairs. 

 

It’s Mother Theresa, you,” she said between clenched teeth before degenerating into unintelligible muttering and taking a bite of my buttered bun. Her use of the pejorative ‘you’ set off the alarms in my head. This is someone with whom not to dick around.

 

My mom and I looked at each other, she issued a barely perceptible head nod of assent. I got up out of my chair, picked up that battered bun off the ground and ate it. In one of the publicity photos you can see me in the background with that bun in my hand pressing it to my shirt. I was dusting it off. 

 

Another thing, she never once said my name. Clearly she didn’t remember it. And this was irritating, she didn’t speak to me directly. She would ask questions about me to my mom, like I was eight years old and unable to hold a conversation with an adult.

 

“Is the boy married?” “Does he have children?” “What does the boy do?” I wanted to wave my arms at her, ‘Hello, Mother Theresa, I’m right here. Talk to me.’ But I didn’t want to disrespect my mom, the true great lady at the table that afternoon.

 

Then this, and maybe I’m going too far. She must have enjoyed the milkshake she had with her lunch, because as the meal was winding down, she beckoned to a waitress, said something to her, kind of quiet, conducting business surreptitiously, then pointed at me. The waitress and I made eye contact, she smiled and left. A few minutes later she returned with another milkshake, Mother Theresa’s second of the afternoon, plus two chocolate chip cookies to go. Acting on the instructions of the celebrity, the waitress handed me the bill. I thought this was some kind of joke, but no.

 

We exchanged good byes and fake hugs, she stole my mom’s coat and scarf, then she walked away. I shit you not, she ordered the extras to go, then stiffed us. Walking away she took a big pull of her strawberry milkshake, held it up high looking over her shoulder as she’s walking away. She was probably reveling in her bounty. But yes, she stole mom’s coat and scarf.

 

The theft, she was so smooth as if she’d pulled this move many times before. Upon leaving, right after the fake hugs, and at this time I was over her, but the cameras were ever-present, so we were obligated to behave. Hugs for the camera, then she reached for and took, not kidding, she took my mom’s coat and scarf that were hanging over the back of my mom’s chair. I mean, really, are you kidding me? She could have had them, we’d have gladly given them, but no, she elected for the five-finger discount. They still kept in touch after that, but my mom let her initiate contact.

 

You know what’s funny? She’s living this life of deprivation so the coat and scarf must have lasted her for years. Again, that was 1976. Well, you’ll recall the 1985 Chernobyl nuclear plant explosion. Months afterward, there’s the saintly one visiting radiation victims wearing my mom’s coat! You can check it out on some old You Tube clips, she’s wearing it!

 

But wait, there’s more, as they say on those late night TV infomercials. Back to 1983, the Order of Merit with President Ronald Reagan. You know how the media loved President Reagan, the body of footage of him with Mother Theresa was ample. There was one sequence between her and Nancy Reagan and you see her, Mother Theresa, giving something to Nancy, an article of clothing. My mom’s scarf! I can only imagine how well worn the thing was by then. And there’s Nancy, with the grace of a saint, if you’ll pardon the irony, acting so thankful for the gift. So there you have it. My mom’s coat and scarf have traveled the world better than 99% of humanity.

 

I know this sounds like I’m raking her over the coals unnecessarily, and in truth, yes, it is unnecessary. I just want the truth to finally be known. Although, I will grant her this, she did a lot of good in the world, massive amounts of good. I don’t mean to detract from her life’s work. This is someone who clearly has more Ws in the Win column than Ls in the Loss column. I’m merely suggesting that even Saints have an occasional off day.

 

 

[This fictional post was inspired by Clifford Irving’s fake Howard Hughes autobiography entitled Autobiography of Howard Hughes. There is a sequence where fake Howard Hughes seeks out the famed Albert Schweitzer, a theologian, philosopher and humanitarian, and finds him to be an irascible bastard. wdk]

Friday, September 18, 2020

The COVID Chronicle, September 1-15, 2020

 

September 1 [Tuesday]

I’ve accidentally lost six pounds during Covid summer! Entirely unintentional and unwanted. [Wife Klem] said to me the other day that I looked thin. I eventually weighed in and she’s right, I’m down to 150! I’ll be working diligently to get those pounds back. My action plan is larger breakfasts plus adding a few hardboiled eggs to my lunches throughout the week. Additional measures to follow as needed.

         I’m not entirely befuddled but am surprised. My daily activities and meals have been remarkably consistent as it pertains to calorie intake and outflow because of Shelter In Place. An increase in outflow would seem unlikely, heck, I’m essentially homebound aside from the walks. The walks are an effective post-workday head-clearer, plus I’m still rocking the cardio machine four times weekly [30-minute sessions constructively justifying brainless amusement of streaming Netflix], but that matches the pre-Covid routine. Regardless the cause, I’ll work this out and right the ship before a wardrobe of thinner trousers is necessitated.

 

September 2 [Wednesday]

I had a semi-lucid dream last night. I must have been snoring because my throat was sore in the middle of the night. I was lying in bed thinking that I’d contracted Corona. While lying there semi-conscious I was planning out my first day of viral infection upon waking. I’d cancel my Ebay listings so I don’t have to handle merchandise or go to the post-office to mail sold items [odd first thought, but there it is]. I’d continue virtual working for my employer, pending the degree of illness, without time off for being sick because I’m already scheduled to back up the phones and emails of a colleague who will be out for the next two weeks. I might be isolated to the guest bedroom downstairs, or would that be futile? And heck, this’d spice up the blog posts! [Really, I thought of this blog. How ridiculous am I?] Anyway, I awoke a few hours later without affliction.

 

September 3 [Thursday]

The CDC announced that renters cannot be evicted for non-payment of rent. The next shoe to drop would be those landlords who cannot then afford to pay their mortgages. Is there a forthcoming mitigation for them? The cascade effect begins. [Note: there are a few hardship thresholds renters must meet to qualify. Also, rent is being said to still be due, but at some future time. The likeliness of being able to afford all the back rent is naively assumed.]

I understand the reasoning. If people are evicted they’ll likely end up moving in with family or friends enhancing the possible spread of Covid. Or they may become homeless. If the government feels strongly about protecting renters, then government should pay the bill. This action, however, puts the financial burden on landlords instead, many of whom are small business owners or individuals with income property. Who will pick up theirburden when this CDC plan proves financially fatal? Mortgage companies and lenders? Then what happens as they lay people off because they can’t afford to stay in business or maintain current staffing levels? Sure, I know, it’s easier to complain and say ‘This is not going to work’ than to lay out an alternate plan that will. This post is to document what’s going on and what I’m thinking. We’ll see what happens next.

 

September 5[Saturday]

This COVID summer with its lightened social obligations compared to pre-Covid has meant a bounty of reading time. I’ve spent many peaceful evenings sitting outside on the patio getting my reading done, while also contending with mosquitos. Along that vein, I’ve been enjoying the heck out of a book-selling website, www/bookbub.com. A work colleague turned me on to this back in April, it’s an aggregator that compiles lists of books that are on sale. I’ve bought 20+ Ebooks over these five months, read half of them, plus I’ve got another list of free Ebooks stacking up on another App. The free books are older tomes available in the public domain because the copyright infringements have termed out. Anyway, I’d like to talk more but I’m busy reading.

 

September 7 [Monday]

Kelly and I went to the Safehouse today for swimming! It’s been a very hot weekend exceeding 100F yesterday, today it’s dipped down into the 90Fs. We scheduled a playdate with [my brother and his two kids]. It’s been so long since I’ve seen them, since March, that my nephew’s voice has dropped an octave, audibly deeper. Good kids. Plus it was fun talking to my brother and dad while the kids swam. Social distancing was in effect and the subject was broached about how to restore parental hugging in the future while maintaining family members’ concept of reasonable compliance. No decisions reached but an open discussion is a good start.

 

September 8 [Tuesday]

We had a real National Geographic moment in the back yard this afternoon. The action took place in one of [Wife Klem]’s three above ground gardens. We watched a mocking bird pull a big green caterpillar off a tomato plant. It struggled with the big guy pulling it off the leaf, then battled with it on the ground before picking it up and dashing into the bushes for cover to finish the kill. That worm was really squirming.

 

September 9 [Wednesday]

I took our secondary car in for service today, the Toyota Highlander. This vehicle hasn’t gotten much driving during COVID, but its last oil change has been over a year ago, so it’s time.

         Meanwhile, at least one thing remains impervious to the effects of Covid, the annual Southern California fire season. It’s in full throes with heavy ash falling from the fires in the nearby Azusa foothills, ten miles away. The sky is dark this morning and the sun shines red from behind the smoke clouds. Ash is visibly falling on the patio like an inchoate snowstorm. Regardless, I breakfast outdoors under the patio umbrella enjoying the cool temperature while enduring the scent of the fire season. I’ve lived in Southern California my whole life, 53 years. This is the heaviest ash I recall experiencing.

 

September 11 [Friday]

I’d been taking the company car for its weekly drives, but a dashboard light came on last week and has remained, ‘Charging Service Station Now.’ I took it for a fix and will need to leave it through the weekend while it is diagnosed and repaired. It’s possibly related to insufficient driving, we’ll see what the professionals have to say. Meanwhile, as a company car it is a representation of the company and I wanted to be fair to my employer, so I rinsed off the abundant ash that had collected from the local fires over the past few days, plus the build-up of dust from inactivity since March. I’m in no hurry to get the car back, as my work has been entirely virtual since the afternoon of March 16, and will enjoy having the driveway unencumbered.

         [Update: The problem is the alternator, probably not related to sparse driving. The car will be gone for more than a week. I very conveniently do not need it so they can keep it as long as it takes.]


September 12 [Saturday]

A positive note about Covid, spoken in appropriately hushed tones, at least we didn’t have to endure the sloppy preamble of preseason football! The NFL season starts tomorrow.


September 13 [Sunday]

A big day at the Glendale Safehouse today, our 22ndWedding Anniversary, Kelly’s 16thbirthday and my mom’s birthday! We got together with my parents and brother’s family. Today was the first time we’d all been together since March! Really fun, felt like the Safehouse visits of old with the cousins having fun together. Plus I gorged on three ice cream desserts from the outdoor freezer. We stayed outside, masked and socially distanced.

 

September 15 [Tuesday]

I’ve been wearing a bandana like Billy the Kid since June as my Covid face covering. [Wife Klem] provided statistics that the bandana’s protection is deficient when compared to a mask, so I bought two masks from EBay and will commence their wearing effective tomorrow. The bandana remains [Wife Klem]-authorized for outdoors activities, not for entering stores.

-klem

 

Thursday, September 10, 2020

The COVID Chronicle, August 16-31, 2020

 

August 16 [Sunday]

Not eating in restaurants!

The idea of life post-Covid seems like a remotely distant future. That’s disappointing. I will say this, however, I don’t in the least missing eating in restaurants. I vastly prefer ordering meals online, or phoning it in, then driving for the meal’s retrieval. I do not miss the dining-in eating experience. So hey, there’s one positive Covid note.

 

August 17 [Monday]

I was reflecting back on my weekday lunches during the early days of Shelter In Place. Since Covid I’m home for lunch every weekday, in fact I’m home everyday, which is a nice treat compared to my occasional pre-Covid lunches while driving between work appointments. Lunches these days have me at the kitchen table reading an EBook while conducting my lunching. Here’s the point of reflection. At the beginning of Shelter In Place, back in late March, I was watching World War II-in-color streaming from Netflix. When I was lucky and overlapped lunch with [the boy]’s lunch, together we took in the joys of the Stalingrad siege, the Normandy Invasion and VJ-Day. Anyway, that was five months ago, still no end in sight, but I suspect I won’t run out of lunchtime EBooks even at my enhanced torrid Shelter In Place reading pace.

 

August 22 [Saturday]

A morning visit to my parents’, the Safehouse, a 35-minute drive. It’d been a month since our last visit. In the spirit of Covid-related precautions we have proven the heat cannot drive us to breaking safety protocol. We remained outside in the backyard despite a morning in the 80sF. We had the foresight for a morning visit to avoid the 90sF and an urge to step indoors for air conditioning. So, we’re still remaining outdoors and socially distancing and masks when visiting. An hour and a half marked by updates on the kids’ schooling [starts next week], the parents’ recent vacation [Pacific Grove] and the snacks [I knocked back an ice cream, two chocolate chip muffins, fruit, a macaroon and a soda. In my defense, I plead that it was my cheat day]. The question remains, at what point do we decide it’s OK to engage indoor visits with family? Then when for hugs? That discussion, a family-wide open forum, has not yet been addressed head on, but is building as we close out month five of Shelter In Place.

 

August 23 [Sunday]

It’s been five months and the four of us all still like each other . . . at least as far I know. I mean, I like the other three people with whom I’m doing time with Shelter In Place and I assume, I think, they’re also cool with me. But hey, that’d be rough stuff Sheltering solo. Or with people you don’t like! Holy Toledo I’m thankful.

 

August 24 [Monday]

The kids start school this week; [the boy’s] in his second year at Cal State Fullerton and [my daughter’s] a junior at Bonita High. All schooling will be online, at least to start. The close of last year’s online school term was lame in several respects. I sure as heck hope the instructors [mostly the high school teachers, plus one college professor better equipped to the 20thcentury] have used these last few months to step up their game on how to convey actual teaching. Coming months will tell.

I’m still working virtually from home sharing the internet with everyone. I do have a work-provided Wi-Fi tool. It’s not as good as the home network, but I’ll use the Wi-Fi tool and allow the piglets’ the bandwidth advantage of the home network. 

 

August 26 [Wednesday]

Today’s three NBA playoff basketball games were postponed as a show of solidarity after a black man, Jacob Blake, was shot seven times by a policeman and paralyzed after resisting arrest in Kenosha, Wisconsin on 8/23/2020. I support the players’ rights to protest and I respectfully disagree with them.

My beef with protesting police is that it absolves people of their own responsibilities. [I’m not referring to Mr. Blake, I refer to the collective people, the community.] Protesting police brutality and racial or social injustice is counterproductive. It’s asking someone else to make the change being sought. Meanwhile there are actual constructive and meaningful measures that are attainable [schooling, job opportunities, government policies that reward initiative rather than redistribute assets]. Rather than scapegoating one’s unhappiness and a life unfulfilled, I submit that people would do better to seek change where their own efforts and determination can result in its own bounty. Seek to cobble together constructive and practical decisions and take action to help one’s own cause. Empower themselves to make their equality, do not settle for someone else’s vision. That’s agency of change, taking control of one’s own life, not the perpetuation of the same, expecting one’s life to change based on the machinations of a governmental entity. 

I suspect we will not see a wave of restaurants or beauty salons also voluntarily closing their businesses in solidarity. They haven’t the luxury to behave in a temperamental manner. Regarding the basketballers, I hope they decide to cancel their season. I enjoy the voluntary self-destruction of luxury items.

[Note: the NBA resumed playing ball Saturday. In Major League Baseball, by vote of the players, seven of Thursday’s 15 baseball games were postponed, three more on Friday. Full play was resumed Saturday for both leagues.]

 

August 27 [Thursday]

A new game has emerged between me and [Wife Klem]. Our politics have diverged in recent years and the gap widens, especially with the approaching Presidential election. We try to be adults in our conversation but the banter sometimes gets sharp. The thing is, we generally agree on the end goal, the differences are on which path to take to get to that end. The game is entitled Seeking Common Ground. While disagreeing on which route to take, we will strive to identify the common ground we share and leave that as a positive lingering sentiment. I hope this works.

 

August 30 [Sunday]

I watched a baseball game today, my first of the abbreviated Covid season. This is a shortened 60-game season instead of the traditional 162. They’re playing the ball games, but there are no spectators in the stands, stadiums are empty. Crowd noise is ‘piped in’ when something exciting happens, plus there are hundreds of cardboard cut outs of people in the stands. It took a little getting used to, but the empty stands were not a hindrance to watching. Anyway, MLB.com was streaming all the games for free today. I watched my first place Cleveland Indigenous Peoples! But they did not win.

 

Friday, September 4, 2020

The COVID Chronicle, August 1-15, 2020

 

August 2 [Sunday]

We went to Newport Beach for pancakes and crepes this morning. It was a near aborted mission on account of forgotten masks. But we had stashed away emergency masks in the vehicle’s trunk weeks ago for just such an occasion. They were inelegant, the emergency masks, but fulfilled the requirement. Steffi ordered breakfast by phone while en route, upon arrival I walked in for its retrieval, and we ate outside safely distanced from other patrons and pedestrians. And then, a walk on the cloudy wonderfully overcast day at the beach, an almost chilly morning for a gracious break from the inland heat. 

 

August 3 [Monday] [Covid Summer vacation week – Day 1]

We went to the Safehouse [my parents’ abode] for swimming, while my people are away on vacation [Pacific Grove]. We brought lunch from Café Bravo in Glendale and ate by the pool. In addition to swimming I also took down two ice cream desserts from the garage freezer with no regrets. Kelly was unhappy because she’d rather have stayed home Minecrafting virtually with her friend. Meanwhile, Cade did stay home reveling in self-styled reclusion under the privilege of choice because he is of autonomous age [over 18].

 

August 4 [Tuesday] [Covid Summer vacation week – Day 2]

The four of us [including Cade, the autonomous one] took a day trip, a drive to coastal San Diego to visit the Cabrillo National Monument. A beautiful location overlooking the ocean, appropriate to honor a guy who arrived from across the ocean, in 1542 says the ledger of history. It was nicely overcast and lightly populated on this weekday. We were able to look down on the ocean hundreds of feet below from the monument and see dolphins, no joke. There’s been lots of statue toppling this summer. Cabrillo remains, at least of today.

Stop two was a tasty lunch break in La Jolla. More precisely, breakfast for lunch. Cade took the opportunity to reaffirm that he ‘hates breakfast.’ I suggested that’s harsh for breakfast, but he proved his point by ordering a burger while the remaining three dined luxuriously on breakfast entrees. We ate in the car due to insufficient socially distanced outdoor seating.

Ghost dog spent the day in doggy jail, Pet Smart. Dog jail Covid restrictions disallow him from being stowed away with his own dog toys. So, he bravely entered his cell with no possessions from home and endured.

         A favorable review of Shelter In Place, if I may be so allowed. Quarantine dating back to March 16 has worked absolute wonders for southern California traffic! We made the drive each way in under two hours, easily a three-hour drive each way under normal pre-Covid traffic patterns.

 

August 5 [Wednesday] [Covid Summer vacation week – Day 3]

Day 3 of stay-at-home vacation week is a scheduled day of rest. So, I occupied myself with a bicycle ride this morning. In the afternoon I made a batch of 15 waffles! 15! I added cinnamon to the batter and they smell delightful. That’ll keep me flush with breakfasts through next week. [I freeze them off and toast ‘em up each morning.] They constitute my base breakfast entrée to which I add accessories, the details of which I won’t trouble you. . . Well, all right, my daily breakfast accessories are a 6 oz. tub of yogurt, a cup of cereal to add to the yogurt for texture, banana, and a breakfast dessert [sometimes a single Pop-Tart, or a cookie . . . or two]. I’m enjoying vacation.

 

August 6 [Thursday] [Covid Summer vacation week – Day 4]

We went to Lotusland today, a beautiful 37-acre garden in Montecito. But I’ll call it Santa Barbara because it conjures images of my collegiate experience at UCSB those decades ago. Steffi says Lotusland has been proclaimed the 9thmost beautiful garden in the world! That is decidedly impressive! Personally, I don’t know about all that, mostly because I’m no horticulturalist, but I liked the place. I also liked the blueberry pancakes I got from the Sunshine Café on State St. in Santa Barbra for lunch before the two-hour drive home. [Covid note: again about the drastically lightened traffic. The 100+ miles was covered in under two hours! Inconceivable pre-Covid for this coastal stretch of the 101 also bisecting the 405 and 5 freeways.]

 

August 7 [Friday] [Covid Summer vacation week – Day 5]

Vacation week comes to a close with the Huntington Botanical Gardens in Pasadena. [It’s actually Huntington Library and Botanical Gardens, but the library was closed. And besides, who wants to visit a crummy library when on vacation, right?] The Covid precautions were to be expected: a temperature reading at the entrance by means of a hand-held contact-free devise aimed at the forehead, one-way walking paths to minimize pedestrian interaction allowing for social distancing, plus, of course, masks required despite being an outdoor venue. But I didn’t complain. A nice day.

 

August 11 [Tuesday]

Democratic Presidential candidate Joe Biden selected California Senator Kamala Harris as his Vice President teammate. Finally, voters have been awaiting the announced VP for too long. Steffi and I are very much looking forward to the presidential debates. Our diverging politics make for lively, but mostly respectful, discussion. 

         The two Presidential choices are frustrating. I explain this way. President Trump would not be welcome to Sunday dinner, yet I agree with most of the Trump Administration’s positions. Candidate Biden, on the other hand, would definitely be welcome to Sunday dinner, yet I find the bulk of his political positions disagreeable. So, onward to the debates with the utmost haste, please.

 

August 14 [Friday]

I took our secondary car for a seven-mile spin this morning. We’ve been doing much less driving since Shelter In Place and our primary vehicle gets almost all those miles. I’ve been taking the secondary vehicle, plus the company car, for weekly spins including five miles on the freeway to get their ‘hearts pumping.’ I’d rather take them for the occasional drive instead of letting them sit too long and possibly incur maintenance needs from inactivity.

-klem