The following post is 100% true

Dream the First:

I’m on a road trip with two geeky friends and Superman. We’re all in a rental car.

My friends and I keep pelting Supes with questions, like “If you’ve got X-Ray vision, can you see out the back of your own head?” Superman gets cranky because he’s supposed to be on vacation and relaxing, and we won’t stop pestering him.

We get lost, and can’t find our way back to the highway. We ask Superman to pick up the car and fly us back to the main highway. He refuses and sulks in the backseat.

Interlude: Smacky scratches at the window, wanting in. I wake up. I let him in, go check my email, get a drink of water, use the bathroom. I go back to sleep.

Dream the Second:

I’m following Ken around the building where I work. He’s trying to get stuff done, and all I want to do is tell him about this really cool and funny dream I had about going on a road trip with Superman.

Remembering

Bright colors and happy people in my neighborhood. I made a cute brunette with tats smile when I grabbed a sample cookie in the grocery store. Waited for the bus… Rode the bus to the bottom of the hill, Mount Scott. On top of there was Willamette National Cemetery.

Waited for the shuttle bus… Driver immediately took a 15-minute break. Decided to walk uphill instead.

Ate my carmel corn. It was all I had brought for lunch, along with a half-liter of water. Cars drove past. Warm day. Sting sang about being the King of Pain. I reached the gates to the cemetary.

I stepped over a mouse body, belly-up in death. I wondered if the mouse was a veteran.

Took my hat off in the heat. Glad I had the water. Cars drove past. The hill was steep.

People everywhere. Found mom’s gravesite with only a little effort. It was on the backside of the cemetery, with a view of Mt. St. Helens barely showing above the foothills.

She’s here, and not here. Everything that she was is in the ground here. There’s nothing left that I would recognize as my mom. It’s the same way I felt when I stood in the room with her dead body, only an hour or so after her death. She’s not there anymore. She’s not anywhere anymore.

I was sad, but I didn’t cry. I cried when she was alive.

A stick-thin and tall man with a woman’s reedy voice sat reading a book on top of a grave. Middle-aged women and men dragged teens and younger kids to view a spot on the ground where their ancestors lay.

It was at least a 30-minute walk back down the hill. I made my way past the fields of flags.

“Excuse me?” – an older Asian lady asked me to help her find her number. Of course I could. A laminated card with the name and a number and a section and directions. I walked back and forth and found the pattern and quickly located the gravestone.

“Here he is,” I said, not actually thinking he was there but realizing this place wasn’t for philosophical debates. I walked her over and showed her. She didn’t think it was right but then it clicked.

“Thank you,” I said, thanking her for the service, and for her devotion to this man, and for the opportunity to be of some small assistance to her.

“Thank you,” she said back. “God blessing you now.”

I smiled and again silently renewed my intention not to argue. If there is a God I’m sure He’s not too happy with my lack of belief. But I enjoy helping humans when I can. I put my hand on her shoulder, simple human contact, and left her to her visit.

The mouse’s body was still there on the way down.

Remembering

Happy Memorial Day. I’m just writing off the cuff, having just awakened (Smacky let me sleep in today) so I don’t have much profound to day beyond a hearty thank-you to all the veterans and those who supported them out there.

To my friends and family who have served, thank you.

Thanks especially to my dad, who served in both the Navy and Coast Guard, and told me early on that military service wasn’t worth what you’re asked to put in to it. Although it served him well; he learned a trade, electrician, and that trade carried him, my mom, and my sister and I through some tough times. Plus it gave him a lot of stories to tell… He was on hand to see a nuclear bomb test in the South Pacific. I’d often hoped that would be where I gained my mutant powers, but if it had any such effect, the powers have yet to materialize. Thank you, dad, for your service.

Dad was lucky (or smart) enough not to have to serve in any actual conflicts during his service. That wasn’t true for my uncle Lavere, who was a gunner in World War II. His plane was shot down and he was detained by Germany in a prisoner of war camp, an experience about which he never talked, at least to curious nephews like myself. Thank you for your service.

To my friends Ken and Merry and Jake and Starr – thank you for your service.

Even Taij – I wonder what ever happened to him? A sarcastic, caustic, scheming geek-y ex-Marine. What an odd friendship we had for a year or so, but, still – thank you for your service.

I’m likely not mentioning many more folk, but don’t think it means I’m not grateful. Thank you all for your service.

A pleasant lunch

“So, do you live alone?” she asked me.

She and I sat outside on a warmish Friday, sharing lunch and finding out about each other. I was having delicious Thai red curry, with a lake of coconut milk and spices bathing chunks of pineapple and chicken and an island of white rice. It was disappearing fast. She poked at a plate of pad Thai noodles.

Was she too nervous to eat, or did she not like pad Thai? I couldn’t tell, and in my own nervousness I disallowed the more flattering answer.

“Yes, just me and a grumpy black cat,” I said.

Her dark eyes sparkled and she laughed. “See? I knew you had kids, after all!” Her long straight Latina-black hair half-hid her face.

I paused, fork in mid-trip to my mouth, and considered Smacky. “Hmmm. I guess he is like a kid sometimes.”

A kid with teeth and fangs that brings home snakes to play with. I didn’t mention that part. First dates are no place to mention snakes.

Yay for teh internets!

Yay!Bad Religion has a new album coming out in July! It’s only their fourteenth studio release, according to Stereogum. You can listen to their single “Honest Goodbye”, here.

Yay! – BACON.

Yay! – The season finale of “Heroes” was an excellent end to the first volume, and it made me a little misty-eyed.

Yay!Bose-Einstein condensations of light-like particles! Not sure what they are, but they sound worth yay-ing about!

Yay!The Republicans can’t raise as much money as Democrats can!

Yay!Eva Longoria cures cancer with her bikini-clad ass!

Update

Fixed the link for the R’s vs. the D’s. h/t to Tracy!

Like butter

One of the best parts of getting a new jar of Adams natural peanut butter is licking off the big wooden spoon I use to stir it up.

Boing Boing had a post a while back about some kind of fancy crank for stirring your peanut butter.

I don’t mind doing it manually, though. Pushing the spoon down through the layer of oil on top, into the thicker part of the peanut butter. Lifting and twirling and scraping the sides, making sure to get the spoon down into the corners of the jar, the smell of peanuts filling my nose.

And when I’m done and it’s all mixed as good as I can mix it, I pull the spoon out, carefully, wiping the sides and edges off against the lip of the jar. I use a smaller metal spoon to scoop out the excess in the bowl of the wooden spoon – bonus! Now I have two spoons to lick off!

I saw almond butter at the store today. More expensive (this was about a dollar more than my jar of Adams’ and half the size), but it had fewer calories and less fat. I’ll try it next time.

Everybody Loves It

I was sitting at the main stage at the Acropolis. Again. I was wearing my new hat, a short-brimmed, tall crowned fedora, in a snappy gray glen plaid. It made me feel hip, not unlike drinking vodka drinks in a dive bar. Everybody loves my headwear.

It was Friday night at shift change.

A cute Hispanic girl, short-haired and compact, was packing up her music at the back of the stage, while the night shift dancers clumped down the stairs in their 9-inch heels and made their way, each of them, to their stage.

S., my all-time favorite, wearing what looked like a black one-piece bathing suit, walked past me towards the back of the bar. I waved my fingers at her; she almost didn’t notice (she had her game face on and wasn’t making eye contact with anyone, just scanning the tops of their heads and smiling) but I waved harder and she turned back and smiled.

“Hey! Yay!” she said. “Nice hat.”

“Thanks!” I raised it, half to show my now-bald head, half as a gesture of courtesy. “It keeps my head warm.”

She laughed, then smirked. “But now I can’t rub your head!”

I mock-glared. “It just means you have to ASK first.”

She laughed and clomped away on top of her stripper stilts – I mean, shoes.

Later, in the private area, I sat in the chair and looked up at her. Her face was barely visible below the line of the brim of my hat. She reached for it, stopped, asked “May I?”

I nodded. She lifted it off my head and plunked it down over her long straight reddish-brown hair. She posed and pouted into the mirror behind me. It looked surprisingly good on her – gave her a 1930s-esque noir-ish look. Of course, wearing the hat, her stripper shoes, and nothing else, while standing in the open V of my legs helped, too.

She started to put it back, and the music for this song started at the same moment. In mid-motion she changed her mind and set it on the table next to me. “You can not wear it when I’m dancing for you,” she declared, and then bent from the waist, and dragged her long hair over the top of my head. I’d been cold all night, and her hair was warm and soft, and I shivered from the feeling as my private dance began.

I must have missed my opportunity, if any, to hang out with S. outside the club. I didn’t get the impression that she was interested any longer – though to be honest, my instincts when it comes to reading other people’s body language are poor even on a good day. With someone whose job is to send confusing signals, I should probably abandon all hope. S. isn’t a bimbo, isn’t covered in tats or piercings, has small, natural breasts and a Roman nose.

I’ve noticed, though, that people like her, customers and dancers and bar staff alike. Other dancers will joke and flirt with her. The rail is nearly always full when she’s dancing. She may or may not be a good person (whatever that means) but she gives the best show of friendliness and… connection that I’ve ever seen.

Fuck. This girl gives me a case of the “if-onlies” of epic proportions.

I felt the maudlin-y feeling welling up in me when I watched her on stage, later, after I was done with private dances for a bit. Figured it was time to leave before I did or said something dumb. What would Humphrey Bogart do? How would Han Solo have handled this? Fly away, don’t come back, raise some hell.

When S. came over near me again, I leaned over. “I’m outta here, toots, and I’m taking the hat with me.”

“OK,” she smiled. She squatted down and collected the money in two fistfuls.

I stood up. “I wish we’d met somewhere else.” Just like that, something dumb snuck out of my mouth.

Her smile turned a bit sad. Her dark eyes grew a little darker. She reached across the rail and laid her hand, palm up, on the bar. When I didn’t move at first, she tapped it against the wood.

I put my hand in hers and she squeezed it. “I’m glad you came in tonight. I’m glad I got to see you” she said.

“Me, too,” I said and walked out and home.

Surprisingly it wasn’t raining. Still fuckin’ cold though.

Strange things are afoot at the Circle K

Sorry it’s been so quiet around here. I can’t even scrape together the time to slap a list together, like I’ve been doing.

There’s some events going on in the background that may not have an immediate effect on what you see on these pages, but will make a huge difference to me and my use of the site. I don’t want to give anything away. And, eventually, it will lead to a site redesign – and hopefully bring some of the other domains I currently own back to life. (Is that enough of a teaser?)

In the meantime, go say “congratulations” to Caleb, the proprietor of dante, the server on which Lunar Obverse runs. He freakin’ climbed a mountain last weekend.

Now I’ll go back to setting up my new computer… (Is that more of a teaser?)