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BERJAYA

The Board of Directors Here at Spo-reflections and I met the other day for my annual employee evaluation.  This is supposed to occur on a yearly basis but actually happens more like every 2-3 years and sometimes in spurts of every other month. Being archetypes they don’t have a great grasp of Time. Indeed I sometimes show and they have forgotten about the appointment; sometimes they can’t recall even who I am.

My blogging contract is as endless as the Eddas minus its charms. It’s full up with words and terms like ‘suzerain’ and ‘stipulation’ and such. Truth is they haven’t a clue what most of it means let alone who wrote it. It’s been continually edited since 2006 and no one has bothered to rewrite it. There is no Word document in the Time of Legends.

I have been on an improvement plan since the get-go that never seems to improve but I’ve learned not to worry about it. They do enjoy ceremony and making threats and reminding me just because they wear the tunics doesn’t mean that I wear the pants.  After sufficient bellowing and sword shaking they keep renewing my contract to keep on blogging and then we all go to Heorot Johnsons II for a catered lunch. The dears.

Regularity:  A-  The contract states I am supposed to post daily which is about 90% met.  Once again Time is not their forte so this is good enough.

Accuracy: A   Then again what do they know. I allow myself one or two small evocations in nearly anything I write . If he read them Someone would give me an F grade most of the time. Oh the embarrassment.

Comment baiting:  C   Not surprised at this one. TBDHSR is a giant black hole of endless emotional needs and they live for comments. They prefer quantity over quality and no amount suffices.  No amount appeases them.

Danish literature:  B+   I would have gotten an A but for my bungle reciting the saga of Grettir the Strong. The harpist and I tend to go off into different keys.

Hand to hand combat:  C which is an actual average of D for no good at anything but A+ for managing to run away and stay alive.

Humor:  B+   TBDHSR  and I don’t find the same things funny. They don’t appreciate my Attic wit. They prefer crude humor as seen in a Roman comedy theatre.  I cut/pasted many ‘thumbs up’ comments from the Spo-fans to show they think I have humor.  Always the pragmatists they upped the grade a bit.

Interesting facts: A +   It’s always my strongest suit. 

Rolling down grass hills:   n/a this year.   They were divided whether or not I met the goal as someone spilled something on the contract blotting out the numbers.

Timeliness:  A   Our shared Nordic genetics keep us regular and on time – pretty good for The Time of Legends which lacks clocks and Alexa devices.

Tortures:  B   The blogging categories “Walking  the dog” and “Home life” count for torture as do many of my “Notes from the office”.

Uther tortures:  B   Whatever that is they never tell me.

Very nasty tortures:   C  “Poetry” counts here.

X-cert tortures:   n/a  as another stain is blotting out what I am supposed to be doing.

Yelling:  F   My sonorous prosody is a complete dud compared to my bosses who wouldn’t know how to whisper if their lives depended on it.

Zoo (sorry couldn’t think of anything else):  A   By now they have lost interest and are just filling in the blanks as lunch is ready.

BERJAYA

I woke up at 430AM with ‘there’s-work-to-be-done’ matters on my mind. Last night while driving Someone home from his work we decided to have a Thanksgiving dinner albeit a modest one.* This meant going to the grocery store toot suite [that means pronto] Shopping at Uncle Albertsons on the Saturday before Thanksgiving is almost a sooner-I’d-eat-rats-at-Tewkesbury event but it needs to be done. It turned out it wasn’t too bad at 8AM. I got us a modest bird of 12lb which is enough.**

One of the grocery items was an edam cheese, something Spos eat with their pie at Thanksgiving. This is one of those funny traditions family members do without stopping to think ‘why’ other than it is custom. This morning I texted Uncle David to ask him why do we do this. It turns out my grandfather loved that stuff so that’s what he got for Thanksgiving Small Chocolate Cone. These cheeses were imported from Holland and were the size of a cantaloupe which he always cut open not longitudinally but horizontally at the Arctic Circle. After the oh and ah from the audience he then ceremonially scooped out cheese bits with a silver cheese gouger.*** My edam cheese is a modest one, made in China probably, the size of a squashed tomato. All the same I will eat it with relish and think of Grandfather.

Another reason I woke so early was there was a thunderstorm. I cannot remember when we last had one. July perhaps. What a delight to hear! While Someone slept I tided up the kitchen and started the laundry (after all what are Saturdays for?) and while I folded clothes I got on the phone and called half a dozen people just to say hello and a few of them answered. One of my 2024 new years resolutions is to make more phone calls to loved ones to tell them I am thinking of them. One call was started when I got a text from a friend saying “Can I call you later” which I responded ‘how about now” and we did. He thought I was calling him; no, I was calling him back. Turns out his watch somehow instigated this on his part and we had a chuckle and then a pleasant chinwag with a promise to do so again. Technology isn’t all bad.

The Board of Directors Here at Spo-reflections last night sent an email informing me it’s time for my annual employee evaluation and please make an appointment to go over it. Oh the horror. How these go depends a great deal on what mood they are in that day, so I’ve learned to do these after lunch and always send a bottle of wine beforehand and arrive on time heavily armed. I am sure to write on this after it happens. If Spo-reflections should suddenly disappear assume the worst and send in the calvary or someone like them.

What are you doing this weekend? Up to no good that’s certain.

*This year the menu is definitely Midwest-oriented. Nothing will be fancy. No gourmet cooking but an open the boxes and jars sort of menu. It shouldn’t be much work. I remember the year I spent an entire day making a pumpkin pie from sugar pumpkins and homemade crust only to have my relations turn their collective noses up at it as ‘not proper’. Stirges.

**After spending countless hours watching ‘how to cook a turkey’ I am basically putting it in the oven and that’s it. If it turns out dry well that’s what the gravy is for – which is from a jar. Thems who say otherwise are itching for a fight.

***Hot puppies! I just had a look-see. I have a cheese gouger! I wonder if it was his? I don’t think I’ve ever used it.

I am learning three languages at the same time. I am trying to enhance my basic Spanish and reviewing my German all while attempting to learn French.* The sensible part of me says this is stupid; I should focus on getting my tongue wrapped around just one of them to the point I can actually converse and understand it. However another part of me thinks the moon will go blue with cold before that happens so I might as well have some fun dabbling in a few of them. Jumping from one language to the other fits my hummingbird-brain mind anyway.

Spanish has the advantages I’ve done over 1600 days of lessons and at work I am around folks who speak it. They are polite not to laugh when I try mine out no them. Interesting that I work with folks from Mexico, from Cuba, and from Guatemala all with different patois and idioms who discreetly correct me their way is the right way. I started learning Spanish as spoken in Madrid (taught by a couple of Scots can you imagine?) but quickly abandoned it as no one at work could deduce what the hell was I trying to say. Spanish has a few rules not obvious like saying two ‘L’ is a ‘Y” but otherwise what you see is how you say it. Placing the adjectives after the nouns is different and there are two ‘the’ (masculine and feminine) so you have a 50% chance of getting that right. Esta bien.

German is easier than Spanish as it resembles English (being both Germanic languages) and it is even better than Spanishwhat you see is how it’s pronounced. I am whizzing through the Duolingo starter lessons which places me as the top scorer, much to the dismay of thems below me who are struggling actually learning the language. German has a handful of new words since I studied it in the 80s but these are easy to grasp – mostly because they are just borrowed from Engligh. On the negative German has three articles masculine, feminine, and neutral and they change some depending on the accusative or dative. This is quite maddening to remember. Another downside to learning German there isn’t any Deutchen in a radius of hundreds of miles to speak with, so it’s all academic.

The new kid on the block is French. There is nothing practical about this one either but if I have to seek asylum in Canada next year it is good to be prepared to speak French as all good Canadians do. I sense the French I am learning is the type spoken in Paris, France and may not be exactly how thems in Quebec speak. Unlike German The French do not believe in consonants. What is written no way helps you figure out how to say it. My experience is folks who speak Spanish or German are amused and a bit charmed by my lousy attempts to speak but they are just as eager to speak English back to me. Rumor has it thems who speak French (in France anyway) have little patience with half-attempts at French.

The German, French, and Spanish words for pizza is pizza. That’s handy

There is no logic to articles. In German cat is feminine while in French and Spanish cat is feminine. A young woman is feminine in French and Spanish but in German she’s a neutral ‘it’.

The worse part of learning three languages is my brain tends to lump them together into the common category “not English” and fills in the blanks with whatever word comes to mind. The other day I translated ‘the dog and the cat’ as “el Hund y la Katze” getting a zero in Spanish and German simultaneously.

All this app learning isn’t going to get me anywhere unless I find some French and German speakers well over four feet willing to listen to my senseless ramblings. Better yet just lock me up with une bien homme for a week for intensive immersive lessons. Mon seul regret est d’en avoir a peine vu la couleur.

What languages to you speak?

*I took French in junior high school and I was very good at it. However there was no French taught in my high school so my counselor suggested I try German. I took four years of Deutsch with some follow up courses in college. Needless to say I don’t remember much if any French other than a few nouns.

BERJAYA

“Where everybody knows your name” – Cheers

I recently read a treatise on a sociological concept called ‘The third place’. This is a literal place where you go for regularly other than home and work (which are the first and second places). In the third place people know you and you know them. Third places come in different types such as a neighborhood bar or a church or a club. It turns out third places are not only good for the individual they correlate with making a good community. In Third Places you get to know your neighbors and folks in various occupations. They in turn have contacts and can help you get things done. Also they keep people on their toes at their professions. If you are a clerk at the local city government you don’t want to be bad at your job if next week you are meeting these same folks at the Lions meeting or the neighborhood book club or at the bowling league.

I’ve been fortunate that in my life time I’ve had many third places; some of my favorite memories come from them. My church youth group comes to mind, and later in life the bell choir at St. Francis. A bar in town named Kobalt served as my ‘Cheers’ as the bartenders knew Someone and I and the others that appeared on Fridays for happy hour or Saturday night for “Broadway’ were the same faces from last time. Back in the 90s when I lived in Chicago every Monday after work was volunteering at The Howard Brown Clinic. I so looked forward to this weekly get-together knowing I’d see Kevin and Anthony and the others.* Whether church, bar, or clinic when I walked into one I felt was back I was among people who cared for me. There wasn’t much if any socializing outside of the third place boundaries – some but no a lot. The bonds were within certain walls.

Alas, Babylon! My third places are gone; I don’t have any more. I haven’ been to mass in years and when I went I felt alone sitting in a vast congregation of strangers. The staff at Kobalt have come and gone and the patrons I once knew now tend to stay home on Fridays than go out. It feels lonely sitting in a bar with people not talking to each other, served obsequiously by the bartender who does not feign to talk.

It would be nice to have an old-fashioned type of Third place again. The trouble is everyone is on line and/or prefer to stay home. In Phoenix everything is a long drive to get somewhere, further discouraging going to anything.

The treatise states by being in a third place provides us a great deal of good. When you look at the long livers they are quite involved with neighbors. Third places may be vital for our survival as a community.

This raises the question does blogging count as a Third Place? I think it does, at least for me. When I make rounds on my blogger buddies I feel I am dropping in on friends I know and who know me and hopefully care for me as I care for them. Curious some of them I have never actually meant – so do they count? I like to think so. I wonder though if I have developed an illusion of a third place. Some of my blog reads are one-sided viz. I read theirs but I don’t sense they read mine. With those bloggers the relationship is more parasocial than a two-way connection. I wish it were more two-way for some of them.

I think one of my resolutions for 2024 will be to find a new third place and if I can’t find one perhaps I will make one. I miss them. I need one.

Tell me about your Third Place(s).

Do you consider the blog community a Third Place in itself?

*I am still in touch with Kevin through my daily good morning memes.

BERJAYA

What’s top of my mind:  A backpack. Someone’s birthday is next month and I want to get him a splendid birthday prize. A few years ago he asked for and received from his Spo Secret Santa a backpack. He has used it so much it is falling apart; it is rawther past its prime. Unfortunately there is no label to tell me the manufacturer, and the SSS doesn’t recall where she purchased it. My searches online have so far been futile. I decided to post a photo hoping someone among the Spo-fans could tell me where is comes from. No harm trying.

BERJAYA

Can anyone identify this backpack?

Where I’ve been:  The streets of Phoenix. Last Sunday’s half-marathon took place downtown in a funny loop-to-loop around the buildings which gave me an opportunity to see the sights many I hadn’t seen before. I made note of some restaurants that looked charming and I found the mining museum (I’ve never been there).

Where I’m going: Back to the gym. I’ve put a lot of time into walking and I’ve neglected going to the gym for weights. I hope to focus on that now.

What I’m watching:  The Aztec Gods. The Tube of Yous likes to send me ‘if you might like this” links to educational videos. I recently watched one on the gods of the Aztec. On the whole they are a nasty bunch, blood thirsty, and with unpronounceable names – like my men. Every culture gets the gods it deserves and one wonders (at least I do) why the Aztecs had such a pissed-off pantheon. If anyone can explain this I would be most grateful provided no blood is shed in the process.

What I’m reading: The same three books. “A high wind in Jamaica”; “Babel-17″; The color books of fairy tales”. None of these are page turners. AHWIJ has exquisite prose and B17 is quite convoluted with sci-fi mumbo-jumbo making both novels slow reading. Worse, I am reading at bed time and drifting off before I get too far with any of them. The fairy tales are nice each one is a separate story. Unfortunately they are somewhat repetitious in their tropes. There are no lack of childless monarchs, evil stepmothers (never stepfathers), nasty fairy villains stealing or enchanting the children – that sort of thing. I’ve learned to give food and coin to beggars and talking animals as they tend to do good things for you in return.

What I’m listening to: The hum of the microwave. I don’t remember if I have mentioned La Casa de Spo has been bereft of a microwave for over a year. Dame Fortune recently smiled on our horrible first-world problem that The [ex]Boss before she left bought a new microwave for the MESA office making the old one up for grabs. It’s a simple one but that’s all I need in a microwave: heating and thawing things. It’s nice to have one for quick action to melt butter and warm up the leftovers.

What I’m eating: Beef Stroganoff. I wrote the other day about recipes on index cards. One of them is a recipe for beef stroganoff. It’s a simple Midwestern recipe consisting of ground beef, cream of mushroom soup, noodles and not much else. I went on line to find a better one one with a bit more ‘umph’ to it. Since then I’ve been bombarded with links to videos titled ‘How to make beef stroganoff’ each extoling its version as ‘right’ and ‘proper’ and ‘better’. People get awfully queer about cooking and quickly get into ructions if you add the wrong ingredient or use a substitute something. The cuisine I grew up eating wasn’t haute cuisine nor spicy but they were practical meals done impromptu by Midwestern housewives looking to use up whatever was at hand. I got some mirth from the chefs in the videos emphasizing how to use a chef knife. In my decades of watching the women in my family chop things none of them ever used the technique extoled in the videos as the proper way and they never cut themselves. I would like to see one of these know-it-alls try to teach my aunts how to cut.

BERJAYA

Who needs a good slap: Someone at Microsoft.

Lately I’ve been getting periodic pop ups telling me the computer is going to shut down and restart in five minutes. At least the villains tell me about it. I don’t know why this is happening – I’ve never seen it before – nor can I figure out how to tell the stupid bastards to mind their own business. When I see the red warning sign I shut things down and go make a cup of tea or trip to the loo while the damn thing does its dirty deed and then go back to work. Again if anyone can help me out here I would be most grateful.

On my 1-5 scale, I give pop ups in general three slaps.

Who gets a fist bump:  Someone. Someone (the dear!) last December put some money into a CD for as a means to keep away some money for the property taxes. The CD expires just as the bill is due. We get some interest for doing this, not much but enough for a small chocolate cone or a good snort of scotch. How thoughtful of him to do this.

What I’m planning: Thanksgiving – maybe. There’s been no talk yet about having a Thanksgiving dinner. I’m guessing neither one of us really wants to cook a lavish dinner for just two people who will take a few bites of each dish and then face massive tidy up and leftovers to contend. I’m for making a big bowl of pasta, something I’ve not have in ages and I miss it so. I may do that for if Someone ends up working that day, as is his wont.

Are you planning a dinner?

What’s making me smile:  A check from The Overlords (or someone like them). A few weeks ago I received in the post a cheque for one thousand dollars courtesy of The Overlords. Someone and I both had the same emotions of wariness and suspicion: why? Someone didn’t want to deposit it only to find out later it was a mistake and we have to give it back. It took me awhile to wade through the morass of telephone options to get to a person to explain it. Yes, it was legitimate. Apparently I put away too much into my at-work savings and they were refunding me the excess of some sort of limit. Father would see this as a negative viz. I gave away money that I shouldn’t have. I see it as a fortuitous surprise soon after the car repair bill for 3500$. This unexpected money assuaged some of the deficit in our ersatz budget.

#78: Always book an extra day off after a holiday.

Modern society forgets not too long ago Christmas wasn’t a day but a season starting 25 December and going for twelve days A.K.A. The twelve days of Christmas. My Nordic ancestors were sensible it was the dead of winter without much light or work to be done other than tending the animals. Might as well party for awhile and if you ate and drank too much well no harm really. Nowadays we compact twelve days of merriment into 24 hours and you better show up to work the next day on time sober or lose your situation. Bah Humbug indeed.

Every year about now the patients come in looking like their cat died to tell me they are supposed to be in three places at once on Christmas Eve and Day and it’s just too tiresome and stressful. This wouldn’t be so bad if we stretched out the ho ho hoing some. I hear rumors of people and businesses that shut down for a whole week of Christmas and good for them! Americans need to learn the world doesn’t stop spinning and the money stops coming in for not working 24/7.

Booking an extra day after a holiday to unwind and sober up (if that’s what was happening) makes good sense. Whenever I travel I try to arrange it so I have some time at home to unwind prior to going back to work. I despise the ‘get in Sunday late only to go to work the next morning’ travel plans and try not to even if it means more money for flights.

I would go further to suggest not only should you take a day off after a holiday you should takes holidays to begin with. I wish I had a shilling for each time I tell a Type A patient who hasn’t taken a vacation in years doing so would be good for their mental health. They look at me as if I propose they vote the opposite of their party line. Then there are the other no time off types – I call them The Jacob Marleys – who haven’t had a holiday in ages because their bosses or corporations won’t let them. “But if I get a few years in I get two weeks off a year!” Both types fear if they take time off a) everyone will discover they aren’t that vital and with that realization b) might as well fire them for wanting time off.*

I just had a look-see at the calendar. Happily this year 25 December falls on a Monday so there is the weekend beforehand to wrap prizes, bake cookies, and put out porridge for the Tomtes or whatever suits your cryptids. This will make XMAS a less stressful at least for me. Someone will still work his butt off ushering countless “Nutcrackers” and have no time before Christmas and no desire for it come 24 December.

When you travel, do you add an extra day at the end?

Are you taking time off from work in general?

*By now Spo-fans outside of The USA are either puzzled or appalled by the lack of vacation time (or wanting it) here in The States. As Anna Russell used to say “I’m not making this up you know”. Before The Overlords I could take as much time off as I wanted – but I wouldn’t get paid and I still had to check in daily for phone matters and to renew prescriptions. I should look into the policy of The Overlords if now I am officially allowed a specific amount like two weeks a year. I will be very peeved if this is so.

Well today was the day: the Arizona 10K walk. I’ve been training for this since end of August to do it. My goals today were simple ones: Finish it and not lose my bowels or my dignity. Most of the attendees were running this or a marathon or something like it. They started at 7AM while we walking-types started at 8AM. It’s been decades since I attended one of these things. We arrived early as Someone was worried about parking. It gave us time to walk around the booths, which consisted mostly of new-agey snacks and devices. Someone was giving out free bananas.

On the whole runners/walkers are a fit-looking lot on the younger side. I was one of the chubbier ones. There weren’t too many oldsters and the ones I saw looked like beanpoles with the skin of someone who has spent most of the life out of doors.

The course wasn’t a straight but consisted of many three-sides of square streets in downtown Phoenix. It included a loop making the route resemble a large bow on a Christmas prize. Curious that the runners and the walker used the same route so I was often passed by thems running a marathon even though they started an hour ago. It resembled a caucus race minus the song. I worried about taking a wrong turn but there were signs and cones to keep us on the right roads. Mostly I followed the others.

BERJAYA

As I looped around downtown Phoenix I got to see some sights I haven’t seen before including the governmental buildings. Mostly I saw the backs of everyone passing me many who were over four feet and had very nice backsides but they didn’t stay long in my view. There was even a Gorgeous George sighting and as always he didn’t have a shirt on. I wonder how he gets his time recorded at the end.

Although it is a 5K or 10K track (depending on which route you took) the distance markings are all in miles. This got a bit confusing as I would pass the 9 mile marker only to realize that was for the marathon runners.

I finally finished listening to my three hour lecture in prostate cancer.

I was pleased as Punch to realize a the 5 mile marker I hadn’t died but had some ‘umph’ still in me. I connected the dots perhaps medical lectures weren’t the best to inspire movement so I switched to music and picked up the pace. Why hadn’t I thought of this earlier? Caro Emerald pushed me along that I crossed the finish line looking like I had kept good form and pace all the while.

After you cross the finish line fair maidens give you a bottle of water, the dears.

According to my app I finished the 10K in 1:57:25 at a 18:20 min/mile pace which is faster than I usually do so I can be proud of myself – not just for today but I did it at all. I hope to keep up walking.

Afterwards Someone and I had bagels. He had butter on his and mine had Vegemite.

Oh, beside the bottle when you cross the finish line you are handed a king-size-titanic-unsinkable-molly-brown medal. I plan to hang mine in the closet where I dress to remind me what I accomplished.

BERJAYA

When I was in Nova Scotia (Land of Norms) I visited a military museum in which was recreated a trench from WWI – minus the mud, lice, and rain. As you walked around trying to imagine the boards of the trench had written on them the names of the men who had died in the war. Taken as a whole these faceless names were mere data without stories without lives. I decided to make one of them more than that. I took a random photo of one of them. His name was William Elderkin.

BERJAYA

I come from a long line of genealogists so it wasn’t too difficult to do the research. I think I wrote to a few places in Nova Scotia; I don’t quite remember now what I did.

William Arthur Elderkin was only 26 years old when he died. Here is the telegram:

BERJAYA

Can you imagine receiving such?

Later I got more about him via find a grave:

BERJAYA

He looks a handsome fellow. I like piece of information the most as it gives a face to the name on the wooden board at the museum. He was the only son. Oh the anguish to his family. I haven’t pursued if there are any descendants of his via his sisters and if there are do they remember their great uncle who was killed at Ypres. I wonder what he was like really. Was he a brave boy who fully believed in the cause or was he frightened and did his duty regardless? What his death due to stupidity on someone’s part? What were his hopes and dreams upon returning to Canada? It seems a waste.

On Veterans Day we are supposed to remember ‘The Veterans’ which is often too abstract and vast a term for me to appreciate fully. Having fatefully pulled his name off a plank and getting to know something about him helps me in my gratitude towards men and women who served in wars regardless of the wars merit.

Someday if ever I am in Belgium I would like to visit his grave and tell William I remember him.

BERJAYA

I received a text the other day from Susan C. She and her family lived down the street from us during my childhood. The Cs and the Spos were on friendly terms; Susan sometimes babysat us kids. She texted to show she found an index card with a recipe for a Rice Krispie-based dessert my mother wrote out in longhand she gave to her mother. I have no recollection of Mother making this item for us or for anyone. I didn’t even know peanut butter-flavored Captain Crunch existed.* I passed on the photo to my brothers and asked them if they have any recollection of the recipe and none of them remember it either. This raises the question what was Mother up to she shared a recipe she never made? Mother and Susan’s mother are dead so the mystery won’t be solved.

BERJAYA

I have a collection of recipes written on index cards residing in a tin recipe box that was my grandmother’s. When she died my mother got it and I took in turn when she died. The cards are fascinating not just the contents but the form: they are in various handwriting, some I recognize as my mother’s and my grandmother’s but there are a few I don’t. Were they relations? Perhaps lady friends from church wrote these. Like mother’s Rice Krispie dessert many of these recipes I have no memory of having. My intuition is the beldames of my family exchanged recipes to ‘someday make’ and never got around to them. Perhaps the recipes were taken out of politeness. If that was the case why hang onto them?

When I inherited my grandmothers’ and mother’s boxes of index card recipes I sorted out the ones that weren’t special (example: basic recipe for beef stroganoff) or unappetizing (lime Jell-O marshmallow cottage cheese surprise come to mind). I kept the ones I remembered actually having like Grandmother’s recipe for hamburger soup and the ones that sounded interesting to someday make like mandarin orange chicken.** I pulled them out the other day to have a look-see the Rice Krispie treat recipe was among them but it wasn’t there. The ones that were there seemed to say in chorus ‘remember you were going to make us someday?’. Funny that some of these recipes were probably passed down from generation to generation and have never have been made.

“Who was the woman who who made all of Julia Child’s recipes” I asked Someone. He’s learned to pause before responding carefully to these sorts of inquiries. He answered and then asked why did I ask (translation: what zany notion are you scheming). I announced I was thinking for doing something similar: make every recipe on these index cards. What my ancestors and what Ms. Child cooked are worlds apart. Apparently spices were not held in high regard but canned ingredients were. Rice Krispie Peanut Butter Captain Crunch Surprise is as good place to start as any. Anyone for a second serving of mandarin orange chicken?

Do you have a collection of recipes on index cards, written in longhand by your relations?

Do you actually make them?

BERJAYA

*I had to look this up to see if peanut butter Captain Crunch still exists or was a it a mad scientist-like invention of the 70s that came and went with Tang? It looks like it is still being made. I remember eating Captain Crunch but it had small pink balls in it which had the consistency of styrofoam and probably tasted like it too. It’s a wonder how we survived childhood eating these sorts of thing.

**In each of collection some of index cards consist of clippings from newspapers glued to the card or held in place with scotch tape. I imagine my ancestors reading the newspaper and carefully cutting out the recipe as a ‘this sounds good I will try it some day”. With few exceptions I didn’t keep these as they were not ‘family heirloom recipes’. I did keep the mandarin orange chicken recipe as the newspaper article says your man will thank you for it. No harm trying anyway.

Note: I wrote this one when I was feeling pensive and perhaps a little hopeless about things. Spo

All great truths begin as blasphemies – Shaw

One of Mankind’s the greatest tragedies is humans are capable of believing things which go against the evidence of their sense and intellect. Not only can we believe nonsense and falsities we often prefer such. It is the foundation of countless miseries and the source of nearly all bad decisions throughout Time. It’s easy to see the folly in someone else, along the line of ‘what on earth were you thinking? but not so easy in ourselves. This worsens in group thinking. It is hard for someone in a group to stand up and say to the others the emperor has no clothes without being ostracized.

On the whole we’ve become more aware of this bias but so far we haven’t yet applied the insight towards better decision making. How naïf we were to think the internet would spread information to all and uplift us into a unified higher consciousness based on reason and evidence. We were stupid to think people would give up cherished dogmas for facts.

Recently with covid and vaccines Medicine made the same old error to think if patients were presented with facts and data this would change people to better health outcomes. We forgot even doctors when presented with facts that challenge their practices and assumptions tend not to change but to double down and keep doing what they think is right. Doctors (you would think ought to know better) had/have to be dragged kicking and screaming to better ways. This isn’t a new phenomenon. There was quite the backlash against data suggesting doctors should wash their hands between patients to cut down on infection or stop doing lobotomies as they don’t do any good.

Changing the beliefs of a system or a society usually happens slowly (unless there is a revolution) and there is always some backlash. It’s a journey that never goes always forward. A more recent example is seat belts. Once upon a time few wore them and when they became mandatory people bristled their personal freedoms were being suppressed. Now Thems who won’t wear a seatbelt are the rare birds and are looked upon as foolish.

In order to survive we as a species need to learn to live with uncertainty and complexity – two things we never liked and still don’t feel comfortable with. To avoid them, we make things up or hand power over to narcissistic psychopaths who promise they are certain and will provide simple clear truths. Whether we can do this metamorphosis before it is too late is not certain at this time.

I try to take hope in a Terry Pratchett book in which the character of Death tells his granddaughter you have to believe in the little lies like the tooth fairy in order to believe in the big lies like Truth, Mercy, and Justice. How else will they be? Some people (including myself) see current scenarios as hopeless to change but it wasn’t too long ago people firmly believed in the divine right of kings and that churches were all-knowing and blood letting was the panacea of all ills yet these so-called truths toppled like Ozymandias. May all falsehoods in time go that route. May we come to see the Emperor as what he is: truly naked and fooling nobody.

BERJAYA


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