Thursday, April 21, 2022

Moody Monkey

Nope. Absolutely not. This will not be tolerated. Monkey was seated on the aircraft with his family, a vacation. He good-naturedly wore the beautiful crown made by his vivacious monkey daughter in celebration of her first airplane ride. Then this, and he was not going to have it. He wouldn't. 


He turned off his Kindle, replaced the folding tray back up into the seat in front of him, scratched under his ample chin, took a deep breath to keep calm, closed his eyes, counted to ten, then unbuckled his seat belt and made to get up.


"Honey, please just let it go," pleaded his pretty monkey wife. She was truly wonderful and he'd be lost without her.


"It's the shoes," he responded.


"I saw it. Can we let it go this once," offering what she knew was a futile request.


He stepped out into the aisle.


A nearby passenger had taken off his shoes. No joke. He'd taken his shoes off while sitting in a closely confined seating arrangement issuing total disregard for his neighbors' olfactory safety! The sneakers were sitting there for all to see. Neatly tucked up under the seat in front, side by side, laces askew.


The shoeless passenger sat there in his stockinged feet. He was peaceably writing in some kind of journal oblivious to the brewing commotion. Then he looked up. A monkey stood before him and did not look pleased. He was magnificently crowned, but no pleased. Then he spoke . . . 



[Inspired by the above artwork in a recent Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine. The periodical is not known for its artistic quality, but that item caught my imagination in a fine mood. Plus, I'm the uncouth bastard who has occasionally been known to remove his shoes during flight.]


Sunday, January 23, 2022

Send In the Clowns


He was an angry man. Hollow inside with a crummy and rough exterior. Plus he had an unpleasant ambient stink to him, not just in the olfactory sense. An empty shell of what he once was, a passionate young thespian with big dreams. Those dreams, though, had long ago been conclusively dashed like a glass vase in a concrete storm drain. Broken shards of a wasted life.


He had once been a performer of considerable promise, until things went sideways and the promise forgotten. There was the clash with a play director, plus the late appearances naively thinking he was bigger than the show, he was not, followed by additional self-induced work-related mishaps that spoiled each subsequent opportunity. He regressed from there spreading much of the same in a sordid, oblique path from whence he had intended. His route had gone gritty, but he stuck with it, much like a gambling addict with no cash or credit to his name so he pawns his car keys because there's no self-control left in the tank. 'I've already gone too far, so why stop now?' went the errant thinking. A tribute to his self-destructive stubbornness completely on display in his current iteration. But not a tribute to his self-awareness as that remained vacant.


Tonight, though, at least he had work. Sadly, just another lost evening backstage in a poorly lit entertainment venue of ill repute. He stared into the streaked mirror of the dank, dirty dressing room applying his low-quality face make up over his ruddy semi-shaven cheeks. He was one in a troop, an acting group of sorts, and none of them was pleasant. Not even in the remotest sense. Not here while working, not on the outside when on their own, or while eating a sandwich or watching a ballgame with hot dog and beverage in hand. They were an unpleasant lot. Yet here they were, at hand to carry out their duties, final touches of preparation while awaiting the summoning.


This was nobody's aspiration, to end up like this. Theater of this sort hardly counted as theater at all. Each clown, however, had arrived at this point in their lives by their own crummy combination of buffoonish decisions. The lead clown and his long expired aspiration for classical theater. His wonderful stentorian voice and its early glowing premonitions. None of it to fruition. He’d spent years of his hopeful youth developing the voice, training and practicing. But not for this, the magnificent waste being dispensed with as if it were nothing more than so much ballast dunnage on a dangerously decrepit ship. It finally came to one lazy Saturday morning some years ago.


"Hey, bozo, you want a job. A children's party. They need a mime or some such bullshit. You want it? Because it looks like you need it."


"Sit and spin. I'm an actor, not a fucking mime," he replied with blind arrogance in his best Shakespearian theater voice.


"Awful proud for a guy who's a month late on rent, no job prospects and you haven't left the apartment in a week. Being a mime might be a step up."


He took the job, applied white face and mascara, then moped over to the furnished address. The paycheck was disappointing, but not as disappointing as his life had become. So, he accepted the next offer of the same. One degradation led to another and he ended up here. Live dinner theater performing jackassery like juggling and riding unicycles.


A loud voice from a microphone could be heard from behind the closed door coming from the entertainment arena. “Send in the clowns." Applause followed.


The door opened dramatically with a loud bang as it slammed into his dressing area. The acting troop was addressed by a cacophonously hostile voice. “Come on you idiots, it’s your time,” the message was demeaningly relayed.


They were clowns, not idiots. Well, yes, they were idiots, but they were clowns. An acting troop of clowns, of all the rotten things. In their younger years they had all wanted to be performers in some capacity, but hell, not like this. Yet, this is how it turned out for them, none of it as planned, all of it degrading. Each with their own story of wrong turns, poor decisions, foulings and soiled opportunities. They clung together preferring to sink together than sink alone, but they were all unmistakably on the descent.


Send in the clowns, was the instruction. Something about the beckoning. It bothered him, even more than the underling calling them idiots. Why couldn't they just say 'Bring in the clowns?' It rubbed him wrong and stoked his ample temper. They were the expendables. Nobody cared about them. Fact is, they barely cared about themselves or each other.


“All right men, let’s go,” said their clown chief jabbing a grimy finger into the chest of their caller as he walked out the door. Each clown issuing their own degenerative retribution as they passed.


“Idiots,” the caller spoke under his breathe after the last of them passed, careful to get in the last word without inspiring any further rebuttal.


A brief pause before they made their performance entrance. The clowns stood lining the entryway in the formation ingrained by the innumerable prior humiliations. They knew what was expected of them. There would be no generating of self-worth at the end of this performance. Like so many other nights' shows, a personal regression awaited the conclusion of the evening. So goes the option for those who are out of options. You end up with what’s offered you rather than building on something of your own design. Humiliation and indignity awaited, both to be absorbed in their entirety.


Then he raised his well-trained smile, but there was no good humor behind it, only professional subterfuge. There was purpose, the earning of a paycheck which would allow him to while away the balance of the night with a cheap bottle of hooch. And here came the clowns.


It was a theater in the round with a 5-foot wall circumnavigating the performing area. An avant-garde dining experience. Spectators, 50 or so, raised in a stadium-like seating arrangement as if overlooking a diminutive bullfighting ring. These patrons of the low-grade arts had dined, wined and been served dessert. Now came their emotional release. They were eerily silent as the clowns entered. Tension mounted.


The lighting was such that the clowns entered into a well lit center stage. The audience, though, was seated in the dark as if behind a one-way mirror, was the lighting so cleverly arranged. No movement could be detected in the shadows. As the clown chief commenced with the opening lines, a spoken word portion of the program, he was nailed in the belly with the first projectile. A water balloon. His outfit was soaked from the crotch and thighs. It always started like this. A single toss in the opening sequence of his spoken word. Then an audience pause as if to see what would happen next. He also paused, and looked out into the darkness unable to tell from whence the balloon had originated. At that vary moment multiple arms were cocked with balloons ready to toss, still held in check by the clown's probing and searching eyeballs. Then he started again, eyes still searching, but now, this time, it was too much. The deluge began. The humiliation. They took it. Standing in place, heads slightly bent downward to protect from direct hits to the face. The rage welled up in them, the clowns, but it would be suppressed. Suppressed due to their training and acceptance of their position, their caste. They would take it because they understood it was their obligation to take it.


The white face, mascara and rouge ran thick that night as the projectiles seemingly never stopped. The water balloons had been distributed, a dozen per person were included with the price of the meal. For a nominal fee, another dozen. One patron had paid the nominal fee for all attendees to be equipped with the additional dozen balloons. The missives would eventually stop. Depletion would win the night. 



[Inspired by a record title at a used vinyl shop in Atwater Village, Send In the Clowns. It sounded haunting and I could not easily shake it from my head.]


Thursday, January 6, 2022

The COVID Chronicle, December 2021


December 7 [Tuesday]

As Christmas approaches all my siblings are planning a Safehouse visit. [A visit to our parents' house.] The visits will be staggered, not simultaneous, with some overlapping. Thoughts arise as to who's vaccinated including the booster shots? How worried do we need to be of exposure and transmission to our parents? Well, I'll be over there too, in and out over the coming weeks as some siblings arrive and others depart. I'm lucky enough to be only 30 miles away from my parents' home to make visits convenient, pending Los Angeles freeway traffic patterns.


December 8 [Wednesday]

The Pfizer booster shot was approved for 16 year olds. [My daughter] now qualifies! This is good. She works at a local cafe and the booster will enhance her safety.


December 9 [Thursday]

I was at a live-action off-site work meeting today in Burbank. It was an opportunity to meet a number of agents with whom I work. It was a good time, felt so novel and festive being amongst people. But it's going to take some getting used to, being up close and lunching with a big group of people. I anticipate more work-related engagements will be coming next year.


December 10 [Friday]

Another live-action off-site work meeting today, me and my direct teammates! Our first live team meeting since December 2019! Fun times seeing my colleagues. This is a good group of people. The message from my employer is clear. We have field jobs and the expectation is that 2022 will be a return to us conducting our field duties. This is perfectly reasonable, although I was selfishly hoping to imbibe further of the convenient luxury of virtual work. But so, my action plan for the new year will include field tasks. 


December 16 [Thursday]

I have two sore toes, one on each foot. [Wife Klem] says I have Covid toes, that fun bug. Then I find out it's an actual thing, so says the internet. She's just spoofing me, though, I haven't got Covid toes. Meanwhile, I temper the 'Covid toe' discomfort when wearing shoes by placing a small piece of tape across the front of each sore toe at the point of discomfort. This immediately alleviates the friction-induced discomfort.


December 17 [Friday]

Covid is wreaking some major havoc in the NFL. A Cleveland Browns football game was postponed 48 hours due to an outbreak of positive tests on the their team.


December 18 [Saturday]

I took a Covid Rapid test this morning. [Wife Klem] offered and I thought it'd be fun. Turns out it's not so fun what with the swabbing way up deep into my nostril cavities. Unpleasant, but I tested negative. Then I drove off to see a chum visiting from Singapore. Also, my Covid toes are feeling much better. Maybe they were just cold and letting me know they don't appreciate walking around the house in my bare feet amidst the winter chill.

My cousin Jenny and her family were scheduled to visit my parents. Stay a few days while taking their piglets to Disneyland. But she had a Covid exposure and so is delayed a few days. Her initial test proved negative and is awaiting a follow up test before visiting. She's a delightfully courteous one, my cousin.


December 21 [Tuesday]

One of [the boy's] roommates tested positive for Covid, he and his girlfriend. [The boy] and his two other roommates are negative so far. Meanwhile he is feeling fine and not overly concerned about the Covid close call.


December 22 [Wednesday]

Covid numbers with the Omicron variant are high and increasing. Meanwhile it's a busy Christmas season with airline travel across the U.S. It seems many people are trying to be courteous, as evidenced by the scarcity of Rapid tests at local pharmacies. But the draw of seeing family is too great, especially after many people cancelled Christmas visits last year. [Wife Klem] tried buying Rapid tests today but they're unavailable at most local retail sources.


December 23 [Thursday]

[Wife Klem] found a retail store with Covid Rapid tests in inventory. She and [the boy] went out and bought two. There was a limit, only one test per customer. Clutch acquisition for a few tests to be administered before the Safehouse Christmas.


December 25 [Saturday]

Rapid tests for all of us this morning! And we all test negative! Merry Christmas! Then we're off to the Safehouse for a whole Klem-family Christmas at my parents'. The fun reigned down in a deluge of pleasant chaos.


December 29 [Wednesday]

My employer has postponed the resuming of field tasks for me and my field colleagues. A minor delay of three weeks before getting back to field work due to Omicron concerns. The thinking seems to be, let's wait for the Christmas visit-contagion to take effect and run its course, then let's get back in the field. Is good thinking and I appreciate the consideration.


December 31 [Friday]

This concludes my Covid Chronicle. I started this as a place to vent my frustration with virus handling by the government, frustration with economic shut downs and businesses going under, then the riots. This was a place where I could document my concerns and sentiments for posterity. Or if at some future time I wanted to reflect back on what I was thinking 'back in Covid times,' what we were doing as a family, and then, eventually, what would it be like as it waned and we reverted back to life after Covid. As Covid and its related precautions became accepted in our daily lives this became more of a daily journal. I don't find this elongation of Covid safety precautions to be as compelling as what I was feeling during the full force and apex, or nadir, of the early days of Shelter In Place, cancellation of live-action school and Work From Home. Early on I was curious how this might one day end. A glorious bang with a cure or fix? But no, seems it's just going to be a lingering concern with a withering trail marked by occasional spikes and spooky variant names. So, I leave the documenting at this point. We have life to live, so let's be safe about it. 


Have a wonderful 2022!


Friday, December 24, 2021

A Klem Family Christmas Eve, circa 2012


When the kids were young we often took video and audio recordings at Christmas to document the excitement. The attached is from 2012, an annual listen on Christmas Eve at dinner time. [The boy] was 11 years old at the time and [my daughter] was 8. It's ridiculous and silly . . . and this audio file is truly one of my favorite things ranking all the way up there with dogs, pizza pies and pancakes. I look forward to it every year and, for the first time ever, it is shared here for your amusement.


[https://www.spreaker.com/user/15886508/christmas-eve-2012]



Merry Christmas from Team Klem!





Saturday, December 11, 2021

Klem's Goals for 2022

It's important to have a game plan to help a guy stay on course. Well, here's my plan for the new year.



[1] Get a new garage door opener installed. We've been horsing around with our current one, operable periods book-ended steeply with inoperability requiring manual open and close. Enough.


[2] Read War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy [1,225 pages]. This tome has been on my to-do list for too long. I suppose if I write it down I'll finally get it tackled. So, here we go.


While I'm at it, also read Great Expectations by Charles Dickens [568 pages] to put that to rest, too.


[3] Complete the enumeration of my ‘101 Rules to Live By.’ Values and goals I propose for leading a good life.


[4] Get my high-end sports cards professionally graded.


[5] Paint the rear gate.


[6] Have my knees perused by a professional. This is an extension from my 2021 Goals because we zeroed out our Flexible Medical Reimbursement account before I got to this. [Well, at least that's my excuse.] Anyway, these things, both knees, have been the source of mild unpleasantness for two decades. With an eyeball looking toward the future quality of life, this is the year I seek a professional’s assessment. Can they be improved or is this it?


[7] Start Two Guys comic. This will be an online comic with two cartoons posted monthly. The attempted humor will take place here: [https://twoguyscomic.blogspot.com].


[8] Bake a ham.


Wednesday, December 1, 2021

The COVID Chronicle, November 2021


November 1 [Monday]

[My daughter] became a licensed driver! She's a senior in high school and passed her behind-the-wheel driving test, her second attempt. No Covid note, just documenting a significant event. Bummer about the forthcoming increase in Auto insurance premium, but a big deal for the budding independence of this wildcat.


November 7 [Sunday]

A visit to IHOP this morning to retrieve pancake combos for pickup. International House of Pancakes requires a mask for entrance, naturally. I didn't recall if I had one or not, I didn't remember stuffing a mask into my pocket. But in my time of need there it was, stuffed into my front left pocket because that's where I place the thing upon exiting home. A rote victory. Then onward to my pal Emmett's for delivery and consumption. We ate indoors like civilized humans because we are all vaccinated. I'd visited a few times last year and we dined outdoors on the patio. We were then at the height of Covid concern.


November 9 [Tuesday]

Covid is receiving plenty of notoriety this football season. There are Covid protocols and a bunch of players are missing games. Players are tested weekly and if diagnosed as positive then they are put on the injured list and miss a game. A Covid-positive is cleared after two negative tests in successive days, the players may then return to action. My Browns will miss two running backs this coming Sunday due to Covid. I sure hope their back-up remains clean.


November 12 [Friday]

[Wife Klem] got her booster vaccine shot, Pfizer! A minor side-effect of drowsiness induced a brief afternoon nap.


November 13 [Saturday]

I got my vaccine booster shot this morning, Pfizer. I was jealous of [Wife Klem's] afternoon nap yesterday, so I did the same to assuage a beachhead of drowsiness.


November 17 [Wednesday]

My employer [in the category of 100+ employees] advised that all employees must be either vaccinated or test weekly for Covid. This action plan is intended to be compliant with the federal OSHA [Occupational Safety and Health Administration] Nov. 5 mandate applicable to employers of 100+.


November 18 [Thursday]

There must have been some kind of internal challenge to my employer's Covid vaccine / testing mandate. Federal requirement or not, the employee requirement is being put on hold in the name of respecting individuals' privacy. No additional details provided.


November 20 [Saturday]

Covid social hour. [The boy] and I walked to the pharmacy down the street and he got his booster shot. Pfizer. Then we saw a few friends, parents we knew from the grade school years, Team Piras. The mom got in line for her booster. We said hello then talked of footballs and our sons with the dad.


November 21 [Sunday]

Dad's cousin passed away a year ago during Covid, though not because of Covid. A funeral service was disallowed during Shelter In Place, so a year afterward, this weekend, the memorial service took place. I drove Mom, Dad and Uncle Joe. A nice get together.


November 25 [Thursday]

Happy Thanksgiving! Mom says it's her last one. I think she means that it's the last one she's cooking, not that she's expecting to sign off in the next year. In the past we've occasionally ordered out for Thanksgiving, or was that Mothers Day, and will seek to do that for future feasting holidays. Of course, when Mom hears that we're going to order out at future family dinners, she'll probably feel guilty and bake a ham.


Saturday, November 6, 2021

Suicide By Pandemic

 

The guy was truly a jackass. He was a hateful, hateable guy. He led a miserable life playing whim to his every emotion and want, each of which was of consistently sordid intent. Like an animal, there was no restraint, no self-control. The difference, however, is that an animal can at least be tamed. Even domesticated in some species. This guy, though, just a stubborn mule dominated by his feral instincts.

 

He was in his mid twenties. He communicated regularly with his parents, which was commendable. It usually ended poorly in tension and drama, which was not commendable. His shortfalls were easy enough to understand from any reasonable outsider looking in. He was of adult age, yet an adolescent’s capacity for adult conversation and thought. Queries pertaining to “What have you been doing lately” or “How has work been” were often the start of the conversation’s descent because he was incapable of constructive behavior.

 

He had friends. They too were miscreants more inclined to an angry verbal exchange rather than respond to such sensible questions. The likes of these fellows had it in their minds that if they were the first to become upset in a human exchange then they had successfully made themselves victims and the others the aggressors. Thus triggering self-defense behavior. The truth was, the boys, as they were not really men, were indeed victims. They were victims of their own ineptitude and joyless dereliction. Their ability to cobble together many poor decisions one after the other assured that they would eventually wallow in their own waste. All of them wading through their own abundant emptiness.

 

Our guy was a derelict. He struggled monthly accumulating money enough to pay rent. It’s not that he lacked work, he was employed. Compared to many of his friends he was top of the line compared to their own circumstances. On paper anyway, there was money enough to pay rent and recurring bills. Practical existence, though, did not reflect this. Returning to his desires, he spent unwisely. Late fees accumulated generously from late payment, when any payment had been proffered at all. Grocery shopping and cooking, even a can of chili or macaroni and cheese, were deemed too much trouble, so he often ate out, damn the budget. Parking tickets and traffic violations were bountiful, but only when he had cash enough to pump in a few gallons of fuel to allow for driving. Rarely did he fill up the tank. ‘What am I, rich,’ he thought as he’d settle for $10 or $20 of gas per stop. So went his mentality. A disappointing frame of mind for the personification of disappointment.

 

He was done. I don’t want this anymore, he figured. Life is a hassle. An endless stream of inconveniences and hurdles and I’ve had enough.

 

On this point, to his partial credit, he was right. Life can be a hassle. The point, on which he fell short, is that life offers two choices. First, life is an endless stream of hurdles and they are too much trouble to overcome. The second choice is that life is an endless stream of goals for which to strive, each one requiring an action plan by which it was to be attained, before then leveling up to the next goal and proceeding to the next action plan.

 

Our derelict errantly chose hurdles, the first choice. In so doing he relegated himself to a person living out as only a minor character in his own life. The other choice would have furnished him control over his life. Leading man material. But in this he was not. Rather than choosing the path in which he was in control as his life unfolded, he lived in a manner simply watching it unfold before him. He was a loser and had finally, on this soggy, rain be-soaked weekday afternoon decided to resign from this life. It was in the aftermath of this decision he heard the news report from the TV.

 

There was a virus of some sort resulting in a kind of global pandemic. He’d been mildly aware of it and paid no attention. His state was in lockdown effective immediately. If you must go out, wear a mask and keep your distance from others. This illness had been percolating throughout the globe for some months now. He cared not because he had not for which to care. But these escalated precautions did bring rise to an idea. 

 

He decided that ending life was preferred to living it. But he lacked gumption and the capacity for follow through. He would like to be concluded, without having to actually do it himself. As the news in the background caught his attention his mind wandered to the pandemic. Suicide by pandemic.

 

“How about if I just catch this virus?” he said aloud to nobody.

 

The government was implementing safety mandates unto its denizens. The Federal level had recommendations, the state had requirements and the county also put down some of its own. Our guy was not much of a rule follower so he was a little shaky on what was required, when and by whom. The mask, however, easy enough to understand, so he wore it when required.

 

He began to hear of volunteer opportunities to assist people incapable of getting out, or were deemed health risks. This awareness neatly coincided with a Federal stimulus check. So in an unusual moment of inspiration he used the free Federal money to fix his car and buy a tank of fuel. With that, he was in a better way to go about engaging the infected landscape and challenge the virus. Going one step further, in a rare moment of initiative, possibly brought on with a now smoothly operating vehicle, he volunteered to deliver meals and groceries to the oldsters at the local assisted living facility.

 

A point of clarification here. Our guy was not motivated by the charitable cause. His doing good through volunteerism was a pleasant byproduct of his darker drive. Just something to do while he’s waiting to catch the virus, a way to increase his exposure.

 

His first day was simple enough. “Pick up these orders at this address. The bags will all be labeled. Then, just, make the deliveries and report back.”

 

Order and abiding authorities were not amongst his strong suits. But, with orders as simple as this, and the authorities not standing between him and his goal, he could easily continue this at least until his end goal is attained. Affliction. If only his gas money were sustainable.

 

As if the world responded to his good deeds, regardless of motivation, he was handed a subsequent governmental gift. A Federal-level rent payment excusal. If he experienced financial difficulty due to the pandemic he would be excused from his rental obligation for several months. He did, so he was. He didn’t have much money, but without the squeeze to pay rent he’d be better able to continue his fuel-heavy volunteerism.

 

But still, gas wasn’t cheap. He was driving much more than he had before and he needed a cushion for fuel funds. He’d been at his parents’ house recently and a meal delivery service retrieved the meal from the restaurant and delivered it directly to their front door. He was already doing this, delivery service for the old people in the facility. The delivery work was easy enough and he considered himself good at it. The first time in a long time he considered himself to be good at anything. Well, other than cheating at cards and foulmouthing at the slightest provocation. So heck, he signed up with a meal delivery service and started earning additional pocket cash. This could fulfill his gas money needs as he continued with operation suicide. But, dammit, he thought, this was taking longer than he expected.

 

The months rolled on. Governmental rental postponement was extended. He chuckled to himself. He didn’t care. Rent was no longer his issue. Not his problem. Not anymore.

 

His driving continued. It was mostly recurring volunteer pick ups and deliveries to the old people facility. In fact, the charitable cause had expanded their outreach and he volunteered for additional routes.

 

Sometime around this point a change had begun to occur in him and he didn’t even notice. He involuntarily started remembering the names of the oldsters. He no longer approached them with furled brow and a countenance of impatience. He sometimes now even smiled and offered a greeting under his breath. Truth is, he didn’t even realize he was doing it.

 

He got a call one night from a pal. They hadn’t seen each other in a while. A few people were getting together to blow off some steam and push back against the government’s social gathering mandates. Beers, burgers, then probably followed by a bar fight like pre-pandemic days. Without even a thought he declined because he had deliveries. Good byes and a hang up.

 

With his hand still on the phone, “What the hell am I doing? Turn down beers to deliver groceries,” flummoxed at this internal development. But he carried on. There were people who needed him and he would ease their inconveniences by taking it on himself.

 

There was another incident two weeks later. He was at the grocery store ready for pick up, but there was a hold up awaiting payment. 

 

“Hold on, please. These haven’t been paid for yet,” said the grocery store clerk.

 

“Dude, these are going to old people. They need help. What’s the store doing charging them,” replied our guy.

 

“Look, man, I just work here. Let me ask my supervisor if payment’s been received yet. Gimme two minutes,” offered the grocery clerk before hustling away.

 

“Fuck you guys. My grannies are getting their grub,” he muttered under his breath then swiping the grocery bags and driving away.

 

Theft was absolutely not above him. Although, it was unusual that he was not the beneficiary of his own misdeed. This would have been totally out of character for him only four months ago, this benevolent thievery. Patience could have allowed an opportunity for an amiable resolution. And, of course, theft was wrong. But still, the miscreant had experienced a most unexpected growth. 

 

He returned to the non-profit and was called into the office.

 

“What the hell, man. Did you take those bags? They weren’t paid for yet.”

 

“I’m just helping my grannies.”

 

“Not like that you’re not. The grocery store will stop working with us if it happens again.”

 

“OK, but food was delivered. Everyone’s good over there.”

 

“All right, but hey. No more of that. Besides, payment went through shortly afterwards.

 

The weeks rolled by. The pandemic remained in force. A surge, in fact, was scrolling across the country starting with the largest cities and spinning out in concentric circles as consistently as equidistant ripples from a stone thrown into a pond. But he was totally into it. He’d found purpose. And with that he’d been gradually shedding layers of degradation. It had been six months since he slept in until noon. He’d become a regular for dinner at his parents’ house. He’d become almost agreeable with them, even fielding an occasional question about his circumstances and intentions. He even brought an anniversary gift for them several weeks prior. Tonight he brought flowers for his mom’s birthday. After supper his parents looked at each other and dad said, “Who the hell was that? Sure not our son. What’s going on with him?”

 

What’s going on was that he’d found his cause. He’d discovered, quite by nefarious intent, that proverbial thing that would get him out of bed each day. A call to serve. He would serve a cause greater than himself.

 

He was seeing his existence in a grander more respectable way. He made a couple partial rent payments despite the continued Federal Rent Relief program. He even started to do his laundry more regularly. Not often enough, but still a vast improvement. Then the pandemic’s next wave arrived in his community. 

 

 

It started with an incessant sneeze. Four or five blasts in quick succession, a brief pause, then a few more. He went to bed early and woke up the next morning to an achy body. All his joints and particularly his back. He would stretch and be met with an explosion of pain throughout. Then came the headache. Then the realization, “Oh shit, this is it!”

 

He called the non-profit and they arranged for his test. It came back positive. He got medication and stayed home to rest. The days rolled by and his condition worsened. The deterioration was unimpeded after two weeks. His kitchen table was full of Get Well cards from his grannies. But he didn’t get well. He wouldn’t.

 

Before long he was almost done, lying in a hospital bed hooked up to a ventilator and an IV. Access was restricted from visitors due to the facile transfer of the virus. His parents were weeping on the phone with him. His doctor had frankly instructed them that it was time to say good-bye.

 

“I don’t want to die,” he wept. He hadn’t cried since he was eight and the family dog died. “I don’t want to die. There’s more I want to do. I’m not ready to die.”

 

The nurse changed the IV and he would soon go to sleep for the last time. With that, it was done. He’d maneuvered his action plan to a victorious end. The life he wanted to end, indeed, did end. So, too, did the life he wanted to live.

 



Tuesday, November 2, 2021

The COVID Chronicle, October 2021

 

October 1 [Friday]

Governor Newsom laid out his mandatory vaccination plan for public school students 12+ years. This would be effective sometime in 2022. I’m conflicted. I want the children to be safe, but I’m also in favor of making information available, then advocating for people to make their own decisions. So, I resolve my internal conflict by agreeing with the mandate and keep the kids safe. But I want the disagreeing adults to have the freedom to remain unvaccinated. Anyway, I suspect there will be an uptick in California’s home schooling next year.

 

October 3 [Sunday]

[The boy] finally drove his new car back to Cal State Fullerton. It was living in our driveway in San Dimas for a month waiting for its license plate. [He didn’t want to buy an on-campus parking pass without plates, then later need to update the permit, so he waited.] Well, he drove away this evening. There’s no Covid angle. I’m just documenting a significant event. Maybe it’s just the symbolism. He drove away, himself at the helm in charge of his destiny. It felt like we’ve done our jobs, [Wife Klem] and I, and he’s now off leash into the world.

 

October 4 [Monday]

Virtual work continues for me, but today was a one-day reprieve. With my employer’s go-ahead I went to the Long Beach Convention Center today for a restaurant / mobile food truck convention with an associate with whom I work. His office had a booth at the convention representing my employer and I assisted in manning the booth. I had requested approval of my employer to attend, it was granted. The convention was not jam packed like I imagined it would have been in pre-Covid years. This event was postponed from last year due to Covid concerns. This was a productive day. Masks were required, though not enforced. I wore mine because [Wife Klem] is vigilant and I like her.

The traffic in the morning and drive home in the late afternoon seemed pre-Covid thick. The talk radio was just as angst-inducing as I remember from pre-Covid, back when I spent several hours each week driving for work and listening to talk radio. I do not miss them, the traffic or talk radio.

 

October 7 [Thursday]

A tankless water heater and water softener were installed today. This has been three months in waiting due to supply delays with the softener. Again with the microprocessors, bottlenecks in worldwide parts supplies and a backlog of cargo ships at the local ports off the coast here in Los Angeles. The anticipation had been a long time brewing and today was a relief seeing the task to completion.

 

October 11 [Monday]

The days of strictly virtual work are winding down, even if only in the slightest manner. We have been advised that we may recommence our field work when we feel comfortable. I’ll milk this for a few more weeks, then free up a day to get back in the field, at least once to get the proverbial virtual monkey off my back.

 

October 12 [Tuesday]

An evening of playoff baseball made its return after last year’s Covid cancellation. I get together annually with a few friends at a restaurant laden heavily with big-screen TVs. We watch a playoff baseball game while talking nonsense and off-gassing about work and life. We watched the Dodgers beat the Giants in the Division Playoff Series!

 

October 21 [Thursday]

I lunched with a friend today, a pal from college. He’s got three kids, same age range as ours. It helps getting together periodically torealize these parenting trifles are not just mine, everyone’s juggling the same.

On a Covid note, we ate indoors because their former Covid-era outdoor patio dining area had been dismantled, only indoor dining remains. I take this as Covid being incorporated into the normalcy of every day life for the intermediate future. As if, ‘It’s here, not going away. Let’s carry on with sensible precautions, but we’re going to keep moving forward.’

 

October 25 [Monday]

Today confirmed that strictly virtual work is winding to a close. A colleague of mine has been out doing a handful of field work this month. Well shoot, with this development I must prepare myself to vacate this cozy virtual cocoon of comfort and return to some modicum of field activity. 

 

October 26 [Tuesday]

I often read from Kiplinger’s Personal Finance magazine over breakfast. I read an article this morning about vaccinations and how they will likely affect the cost of Health insurance in the very near future. Not for 2022, but probably by 2023. For example, Health insurance questionnaires and enrollment applications ask if the applicant is a tobacco user. The answer affects the premium. The same kind of question will likely be added pertaining to the Covid vaccine. The unvaccinated may see an increase in their Health insurance premiums. Plus, studies are in progress to see if people who have had Covid are more prone to develop subsequent health problems.

 

October 27 [Wednesday]

Strictly virtual work comes to an official close in December. We will have an off-site Live team lunch meeting. I haven’t seen my colleagues, other than Skype, since December 2019. I work with a good group and look forward to the festive-feeling of a live-action get together. Although I have mixed feelings about disbanding from my cozy obligation of strictly virtual work. But really, I knew it couldn’t last forever, and it lived on much longer than I had expected.

 

October 28 [Thursday]

The battle over vaccine mandates is heating up. There is at least one state [Florida] suing the Biden administration over a mandate for government contractors. Large corporations are weighing whether or not to mandate. A large number of employees are purportedly prepared to quit work and find other employment if their employer requires vaccinations or weekly testing. The discussion also rages on for school children with parents concerned about lack of research about possible long-term effects of the vaccine. And of course, much of this political. The WSJ statistics suggest that 90% of Democrats have been vaccinated compared to 71% of Republicans. As Covid seems to have a smaller daily impact on my life personally, this thing is clearly going to be raging on with its impact felt for years to come.

 

October 29 [Friday]

I was in the field today conducting work for the first time since March 2020. I drove to the High-Desert and it reminded me of the lost opportunity time for all the behind-the-wheel drive time. Two hours driving there and back means two hours in lost productivity. I don’t miss the driving, but is part of the job. I anticipate being in the field a few days per month in the coming months.


Friday, October 22, 2021

First Date

 

1993 Northern California

 

Coursing heavily of excitement and adrenaline he backed the car out of the carport hoving slightly too far portside. The beautiful young lady in the passenger seat proved to be too much on his mind resulting in a momentary lapse of focus. She was his date, their first. This lack of concentration, adversely affecting his driving skills, was subsequently disrupted by a collision. Not the vehicle’s chassis, but an appendage, the driver’s side mirror had been lopped off. It had been torn asunder by the carport’s vertical support pole. Hundreds of times he’d come and gone safely maneuvering the troublesome support pole, then this error at a most inopportune moment. 

 

Wanting the first impression not to be sullied by this silly blunder, he feigned cool. He stopped the car, popped the trunk, picked the shorn mirror fixture up off the ground and tossed it nonchalantly into the trunk, then returned to the helm.

 

“If you see any more of those difficult to avoid stationary poles, please let me know,” he offered weakly. This was met with courtesy laughter signaling that the date was not yet ruined but he’d better step up his game.

 

He loved the car, a Ford Mustang, even without the mirror, but more so with it. This was no baseline Mustang. The thing was amply juiced and was not for the tame of heart. He’d sometimes give the gas pedal a little tap just to hear the roar of the engine, feel the torque rumbling through the vehicle. He equated it to his own professional aspiration. Capable and aggressive. He was not willing to wait for his professional achievements to come to him, he’d go out there and get it. He reveled in this symbiotic relationship. 

 

The drive continued, dinner awaited, casual conversation was in force cobbling together rapport. As the mood turned to playful banter, they approached an intersection of tree-lined surface streets with a romantic dusk setting up nicely. 

 

The intersection ahead, a left turn on the approach to the main thoroughfare. Dozens of little birds, finches probably, in the street picking fruit off the asphalt from the bountiful branches above. He thought it might be fun to accelerate into the turn and send the cute little birds all aflutter. Maybe add excitement to the sparking that was brewing in the vehicle. Only, dammit, it didn’t happen as envisioned.

 

He accelerated into the turn followed immediately by a half dozen tiny bumps under the tires as if he’d run over several tennis balls.

 

‘What the hell,’ he played out in his head. ‘How many times have I approached a stretch of road with birds on the ground and they always scatter? I’ve never run over a bird before. Never. Now tonight, when it’s most problematic I knock off a bunch of inconvenient cute little avian carcasses.’

 

“Should I take you home now,” he offered playfully, smiling sheepishly hoping for a declination. He’d do it without argument if requested, but wanted not for the offer to be accepted.

 

She paused before answering. The expression on her face indicated shock. He panicked internally struggling to maintain his cool, but maintain he would by shear force of will. His armpits would soon be blown out if this were not quickly favorably rectified. No words yet spoken. Then she smiled and punched him in the shoulder with a closed fist.

 

He liked that she didn’t give him a dainty tap on the shoulder, too light and timid to signify sincerity. He liked also that she didn’t wind up and deliver a contusion-inducing blast. No. More like a shark in open water giving an initial contact before deciding the next course of action. Game on.

 

With that, he thankfully continued driving to the restaurant for a tasty meal. Having survived that asphalt massacre his confidence swelled, not that it needed a bump.

 

“Let’s eat.”

 

 

[Based on the dating experience of a pal, Adornato. He was awarded a second date. -klem]

Friday, October 8, 2021

San Dimas Bobcat

 

Wife Klem and I have lived in San Dimas for 20 years. We’ve heard rumors of bobcats in the area, but I thought this was mostly wishful thinking. No more. Visual confirmation was attained last week.

 

I take an evening walk every day. It’s helpful in mentally toggling from work to play at the end of the workday, especially in this time of continued Covid-induced work from home.

 

This evening walk took me to a local residential association in our neighborhood south of Via Verde. I saw what initially registered as a regular old housecat, but as I walked by I noticed its unique markings. Then I paused, then stared. Just sitting there in someone’s yard. As I maneuvered for a better look, this feline moved unlike any housecat I’d ever seen, eerily making me feel as if I were the prey. With that as my motivation I took the below photo from 15 feet away. Then skedaddled.

 


Saturday, October 2, 2021

The COVID Chronicle, September 16-30, 2021

 

September 17 [Friday]

I took the day off, just because I have too many vacation days. [I know, nice problem!] [Wife Klem] and I went out for breakfast, then we walked around the Claremont college campuses. Just the two of us, neither of the piglets. A pleasant treat. School was in session, but it did not seem overly thick with students. Maybe they’re extending some virtual college courses into this fall semester. There were several tents set up throughout the campuses for classes to meet without the confines of inside restrictions and abide by social distancing precautions. A nice walk.

 

September 18 [Saturday]

Mom’s birthday celebration weekend in Santa Barbara with her girls; [my sister, sisters in law, cousins, niece]. They were all vaccinated, masked up and sensible. Life goes on. 

Meanwhile, [my oldest brother] was at the Safehouse, visiting from Massachusetts! The six of us, including [another brother, nephew, Dad and uncle] went to dinner at Lancers. I understand eating out in a restaurant is frowned upon by some circles in this age of Covid. The number of ambient diners was sparse, or maybe that was just because we ate dinner at 4:00. Well, all right, 4:00 was probably the reason. Dad was granted the honor of paying the bill, the good sport.

 

September 20 [Monday]

An example of Covid-era courtesy. A neighbor and I are consistently walking our dogs at the same time in the morning. At least twice weekly we’re both walking up the same stretch of street at the same time. This morning we were all making our final approach home, before Ghost and I crossed the street to take the lead, as a courtesy so she wouldn’t have to walk in my wake, breathing my used air, Ghost and I paused waiting for her and her dog to go ahead. “You can go ahead, he’s taking his time,” she said to me from across the street referring to her dog snuffling around in the ground cover. We did. Good morning to you, neighbor. Until next time.

 

 

Thursday, September 23, 2021

Skeeter Feeder

 

It was the proverbial tropical wonderland. The ocean was crystal clear with consistently excellent sets of waves rolling in, one after the other. The temperature was never too hot and was almost always t-shirts, shorts and sandals weather. The place was truly a beauty. Though a long way from idyllic. The job market was not set with career jobs. These were mostly transient jobs that seasonally chased tourists.

 

The young man loved his homeland and wanted to make a go of it. He wanted to be one of the few locals fortunate enough to find professional work, a job that would support him and a future family. Not that he was married, he wasn’t, nor kids, he hadn’t. Not even a girlfriend yet, but he had plans.

 

There was industry on the island that boasted of such jobs. Well, one industry. Research. Permanent well paying work was scarcely available on the island, but what there was went through the research lab and it was constantly flush with work.

 

He was in the local college studying Biology. His grand idea hinged on a job in the research laboratory. That would be a major victory. A job that paid well enough to support a family and maybe even buy a home. A home on the island where his backyard was the ocean. Such a thing would be an anomaly. Those kinds of jobs went to the mainlanders. This one, though, he had a good deal of determination matching up with his action plan.

 

He already had work in the lab, but it was not a salaried position. It was hourly wage work cleaning test tubes, plus other janitorial type laboratory work. This was not the white lab coat-type work he envisioned for his future. But he wanted more. Needed more.

 

He was well liked and thought there was a possibility of attaining his goal. Something more permanent to keep him employed after graduation. That’s when the job posting went up for the mosquito lab that would be starting up soon. Construction had been recently completed and the mosquito-specific research build-out completed. Then the teasing commenced from his professional-grade colleagues, those mainlanders.

 

“Hey, you’ve seen the new job post? You going for it? Could lead to something more, you know.”

 

“I hope you put in for the new mosquito research. We all like you, I’m sure the ‘skeeters will, too.”

 

He didn’t fully understand the job posting. It was short saying only ‘Help needed to feed the mosquitos. Pays well.’ What did mosquitos eat other than blood? What would the labs feed them? With the encouragement of his fellow lab workers he put in for the job. To his eventual delight, with his sights on future permanent employ, he got the job!

 

 

He arrived at his new post and was greeted with an enthusiastic tour of the research lab.

 

“The work we’re doing here is important research. So many of the locals here, plus elsewhere in tropical climates and worldwide, are ravaged every year by mosquitos and the diseases they spread,” explained the lab director never breaking stride.

 

“The research in this lab involves malaria and dengue fever. These have been major problems for tropical islanders and many parts of the world going back as far as documents go. Before then even. And next door they’re researching West Nile virus and Zika.”

 

They entered the next room through double doors into an impressive pristine white room. Containers lined both walls. Each bin about the size of a small refrigerator. Each had a glass front and was adorned with a hole covered with rubber.

 

“And here you’ll see our residents. Each container has 100 or so mosquitos. I may say, bravo to you putting in for the position of feeding the mosquitos. I know this seems unconventional, our feeding process, but I assure you, all these mosquitos are tested and they are disease free. They are bred under the highest standards. You are not at risk of contracting any illness at this post,” pausing to let that sink in as the new lab technician wondered what exactly he’d been employed to do. Then the lab director continued. 

 

“OK, so with that preamble, if you’ll please roll up your sleeve and stick your arm through, all the way to your torso, your armpit, if you will. That’ll seal the hole flush and prevent any escapees. Stick your arm in, leave it for ten minutes. When the bell dings, you’ll carefully and very slowly retract your arm. The movement should encourage the mosquitos to detach. Else, some minor flexing or wiggling of your forearm will also help, if needed. Then, move on the next container of which there are twenty. You may choose to alternate arms with each feeding. So, if you will, please,” motioning for the young man to step toward the containers and begin the feeding process.

 

The young man did not step up. He stood fast with a quizzically raised eyebrow. “I anticipated the feeding process to be more regimented, not so immersive as this.”

 

“Yes, well, I assure you, you are at no risk of illness. You may feel a minor sting, very minor, but they don’t drink much blood. You won’t experience any wooziness, if that’s the cause of your hesitation. And afterwards, we have a salve to apply to your arms,” advised the director matter of factly. “Plus you can help yourself to an orange juice in the community refrigerator afterwards.”

 

“This was not explained in the job post, the details of the feeding process.”

 

“Right, you’re entirely correct. The one-page flyer allowed for only so much space negating the opportunity to be verbose. In fact, I’m glad you’re here now. I wanted to be present the first time to make sure this is done correctly. Each container receives one feeding in the morning, then again in the afternoon. We have a back up feeder for weekends or if you are ill.”

 

The young man continued to hold his ground. Uncertainty swirled in his head.

 

“They’re ready for you. They’re hungry. And if you’re good here, I understand an upcoming research project opening in a month is going to need a spider feeder. I’ll gladly put in a good word for you. So, if you will, please,” again motioning for the young man to step forward to the first mosquito container.

 

He stared blankly at the black rubber cover where he was expected to insert his bare arm all the way in. He stared at it with the precautionary concern as if it were the gaping entry hole of a tree trimmer’s stump grinder.

 

The clock ticked. Talk behind them from the researchers started to rise.

 

“What’s going on?”

 

“He’s the ‘skeeter feeder.”