Thursday, November 14, 2019

Late Summer 2009

W
illiam McEwen was not quite feeling like himself. This is a common side effect that accompanies human involvement in a delayed wave-function collapse as defined by quantum physics. That is, it would be a common side effect if delays in the collapsing of wave functions involving humans were all that common. Luckily for most people, delayed wave-function collapses are not common. But, for William McEwen the common side effect of the uncommon event had him not quite feeling like himself. 
   Most people would feel a bit off in his situation, probably, because no more than twenty seconds earlier he had been sitting in his cubicle on the fourth floor of the Bangerter Rampton State Government Building in Salt Lake City, Utah, minding his own business. Actually, he had merely been trying to look like he was minding his own business in an I’m-working-hard sort of way. What he had in fact been doing was daydreaming, and his daydream had involved him in something other than sitting in a cubicle. 
   His daydream had also stolen his focus, so he was not sure exactly when or how it had happened, but for the last twenty seconds, or so, he had transitioned from sitting in his cubicle daydreaming to just standing there. The just standing part was interesting to him, because he didn’t remember getting up from his seat. But, the there where he was just standing is what had William feeling a bit off, because there was a whole new place altogether. There was a grassy knoll on his grandfather’s farm in Scotland. This presented an interesting problem for William, because William did not have any grandfathers that owned farms in Scotland. 
   Wait.
   On second thought, maybe he did have. Yes, he certainly did have. He didn’t have twenty-three seconds earlier, but now he did have. He shuddered, no, recoiled at the utter confusion of it. After all, William doesn’t usually suddenly have Scottish grandfathers. 
   William noticed another interesting problem: he now—along with a new “granda”—was the confused owner of two complete sets of memories. Sixty-eight years’ worth in total—two sets of thirty-four. Equally clear, equally detailed, equally full of persons, places, and things, but utterly separate memories.
   He clearly remembered, for instance, his life in Salt Lake City, Utah. He remembered daydreaming in his cubicle twenty-six seconds ago. He remembered his lovely wife; Virginia was her name—Ginny for short. He remembered his four children—two boys and two girls. He remembered his home on the corner of Graces Circle and West Afton Street. 
   He also remembered his wife and two daughters—not the same wife and daughters he had just been thinking about, but a different lovely woman and two other girls—who were at that moment moving quickly toward him on the knoll. He was also from there: Perth, Scotland. Well, technically, there was a farm somewhere between Strathallan Castle and Crieff, a half-hour’s drive south and west of Perth. But, where he happened to be standing at that moment did not change where he was from, which was, for the last thirty seconds, Perth…and Salt Lake City.
   He sat down, right there on a knob on the knoll. It smelled of grass and dirt and maybe sheep. William attempted to scan the scene, but the beauty of Granda’s knoll was almost overpowering. He was glad to be sitting, because the splendor surrounding him literally took his breath. The involuntary exhale caused by his breath’s sudden, unplanned evacuation forced him to vocalize something like, “Oontpf.” His vocalization caused him to drool a bit; he wiped the spittle off of his chin with the shoulder part of his sleeve. 
   Surveying his surroundings again, he tried to make some sense of where he was suddenly located and what he was suddenly doing. In his confusion, he asked himself a couple of quick, clarifying questions: where the Sam Hill? and how in the Dickens? Other questions came out half formed: what the… and how the…? The most shocking revelation from this self-inquiry was that, due to his new set of memories, he already knew an uncomfortable number of the answers. He knew indeed, for example, where the Sam Hill he was. He quickly realized that the what the…, and Dickens-related questions were unanswerable. 
   William turned his attention back to his surroundings, Granda’s farm. Perhaps if he investigated his location or conducted some type of analysis, he might discover an answer or two. Neither he nor he—the two sets of memories apparently occupying the same space—was a particularly analytical person, but it seemed like the thing a smart person would do in this particular situation, and being a smart person felt like it might help.
   Instinctively, and without looking down, he dug his fingers into the grass and wiggled them until they penetrated the thatch and pushed about three-quarters of an inch, or two centimeters, into the nearly black soil. He gripped the grass. Then, with both hands, pulled, tearing chunks of thatch, roots and all, from the earth. He held them up to his face and inspected the random crisscrossing patterns of the root systems. The scent of the loam was vaguely familiar. 
   He wasn’t looking for anything in particular; maybe he was just attempting to kinesthetically connect himself to this place. Not quite a minute-and-a-half ago his life, lifes—with an f—actually, had been comfortably mundane, but now he wasn’t so sure. 
   He looked for words to describe his surroundings—maybe, if he could just find some blasted words! 
   The following words, had they been available to him in his confusion, are accurate descriptors for the knoll, but even then they would not have been sufficient: striking, stunning, exquisite, otherworldly, charming, fertile. At last, one word came to his mind, and he whispered it to himself(s), “green.” 
   As the word passed his lips, he realized that this was not the kind of green that William McEwen of Salt Lake City, Utah, was used to; this green was from a completely different color wheel. William began to realize that Granda’s knoll was not something one filed a description for, but this was a place to be experienced. Indescribable, he thought—he really could not describe it, which, he realized, is what indescribable means.
   “Are ya ready, then?” panted the lovely, slightly winded woman, his wife, Tina. Their outing to Granda’s farm was at an end. Granda McEwan had long ago passed on, but the family still held the title to the relatively modest parcel of land. Granda had scrapped and scraped and scrimped and scrumped and faced legal challenges to be able to own that land; they would not sell it. 
   The family leased the parcel to a local conglomerate of barley and cereal farmers, which resulted in a relatively modest monthly stipend that the family split six ways as there were six remaining blood relatives; eight, if his daughters were counted—they weren’t as yet. The family lovingly referred to the stipend as “Granda’s meal ticket.” Out of nostalgia they would take an occasional trek to the “homestead,” and that is why William, Tina, and the girls were there on this particular day. 
   “Aye, ready,” he replied to Tina’s inquiry. Half of him was shocked by his fairly thick Scottish accent. William was to himself both familiar and foreign. He was also both an American and a Scot, a Mormon and a member of the Kirk—the Church of Scotland, he explained to himself. He also was not a fan of soccer but was a fan of football—the European kind of football, which went without saying to half of him.
   “Da, you look flummoxed,” said one of the girls. Her name was Margaret. The other girl was Lily. Oddly, these names, Lily and Margaret, were the same names as his other two, American, daughters but in reverse birth order. Almost the same names, that is, because Scottish Margaret went by Mysie while American Margaret was Maggie. And Scottish Lily was actually named Lilith, while American Lily, was just Lily. Sure, Margaret and Lily were reasonably common names both in the UK and in the US, but this coincidence stirred in him a similar feeling to déjà vu. Actually, trying to reconcile two sets of memories was a lot like déjà vu, an exceptionally lot like brain-wrinkling, vertigo-inducing déjà vu. He shook his head like a boxer trying to clear the cobwebs after a particularly well-connected blow.
   “I suppose I am a might flummoxed,” William mumbled, “I’m not exactly myself.” He stood. He was thinner than half of him remembered, stronger, and maybe shorter. No, not shorter. Whatever the case, he knew that half of him was not in its usual living space. Tina noticed his puzzlement and interpreted it as weariness.
   “Are ye ready for the knacker’s yard, Numpty?” Numpty was her pet name for him. It means idiot. In fact, one translation of her question is, are you so tired that you should be made into glue, idiot? From Tina it wasn’t hurtful, at least not to the part of him that knew her. The other part of him didn’t know her and may have been offended if he had known what knacker or numpty meant.
   “Nae. I’m well enough.” He shook his head again and walked toward the car.

*  *  *  *  *

   While driving the little family back to their home in Perth, and while fighting the compulsion to move to the right side of the road, William asked Tina, “You ever know anyone in America?”
   Tina looked at him, “are you a daftie? Who would I know in America?”
William shrugged, “Jus’ curious.”
   Tina asked, “How lon’ hae we been married?” 
   Six years, thought William—two years fewer than he and his American wife’s eight years. 
   “An’ now ye’re ‘jus’ curious’ ‘bout who I have stashed away in America, are ye?”
   He shrugged again. Tina laughed. To the half of William that was familiar with it, her laugh felt like home. The half not familiar with Tina’s laughter recognized the contentment that came to his new set of memories. Her laughter was somewhat like the tinkle of a crystalline bell, which is a wonderful thing for laughter to be like. His American self relaxed ever so slightly. 
   Slightly relaxing allowed William to pay attention to what he was otherwise feeling, and paying attention to what he was otherwise feeling caused William to realize that he had been experiencing quite a lot of stress over the last few minutes. He also noticed that the back of his head hurt at the base just above the neck. It was a familiar pain—to both sets of memories—that usually accompanies stress. 
   He scanned the rest of the body he occupied to see if other areas were feeling the effects. His inventory revealed that his shoulders, neck, back, and calves were flexed tight and that his stomach was knotted. He rolled his head around in a couple of semicircles in an attempt to loosen the tensing muscles. It seemed to help.
   Tina’s laughter had a calming effect on him, and he was attracted to it in almost the same way that he was attracted to his other wife Ginny’s distinctive laughter. All of William smiled. He glanced at Tina. At least that was his intention, to glance, but he found that once he turned his eyes to look at her he couldn’t pull them back, his glance turned into a gaze, just shy of a gawk. 
   The angle of the setting sun illuminated her auburn hair and bathed her left temple and cheek in dusk’s luminous honey. William was struck by her soft glow. She was cherubic or angelic or heavenly or some other term reserved for describing the divine. Her facial expression was serious, but soft. Her lips’ natural position was in a slight pout. Not an angry pout, but the kind that is often employed to cover amusement, which caused William to wonder if she was on the verge of more crystalline laughter. He wondered if she would, at any moment, twist her pout into a smirk that, given time, would become a full-fledged smile. And, he wondered what would happen if her smile became full-fledged. He wondered if it were dangerous—in the best possible way. She was beautiful. 
   He wanted to examine her figure but remembered that he was looking through the eyes of her husband, or maybe they were his eyes and her husband was the guest. Whatever the case, he thought better of ogling the wife of his new host, or was it ogling his wife while a stranger looked on. His life was confusing. 
   Tina’s eyes were on the road, “Stay to the left would ye?” she said, “I’d like to get home still breathin’, wouldn’t I?” 
   William yanked the metallic-blue, box-like car he drove back onto the right side of the road, which was, in this case, the left side of the road. Shocked back to reality, such as it was, William realized that he needed a less-consuming distraction to occupy his mind. 
   “Anyone care tae take a go at a Bobby Burns tune?” William’s Scottish self suggested to the little family. Although his American self hadn’t the first clue what exactly would constitute a “Bobby Burns tune,” he sensed that “taking a go” at one would sufficiently distract him from his growing uncertainty and keep him able to concentrate on driving. Mysie, the oldest of his Scottish daughters led out from the back seat with a strong and charming five-year-old voice. The others, including little Lily, joined in.

   O my love’s like a red, red rose,
   That’s newly sprung in June;
   O my love’s like the melody
   That’s sweetly sung in tune.

   As fair art thou, my bonnie lass
   So deep in love am I;
   And I will love thee still, my dear,
   Till a’ the seas gang dry.

   Till a’ the seas gang dry, my dear,
   And the rocks melt wi’ the sun;
   And I will love thee still, my dear,
   While the sand o’ life shall run.

   And fare-thee-weel, my only love!
   And fare-thee-weel, a while!
   And I will come again, my love, 
   Tho’ ‘twere ten thousand mile!

   Staying on the correct side of the road, William McEwen sang every word and every note of a song that half of him had never heard. He did his best not to panic as he drove one of his cars containing one of his families to one of his homes.      

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

WWJD?

Hey,

You may or may not know this about me, but I am not a fan of political parties (I prefer parties that are off the chain, dawg!).  I don't particularly like the Democrats, the Republicans, the Libertarians, the Greens, the Nazis, the media, or the social media at the moment.

I engage in politics similarly to the way I consume the NFL.  I prefer players to teams.  If I like a particular player, I'll watch him, follow him, maybe vote for him, but I'm not going to get all caught up in the team he plays for.  I understand when folks fall in love with a team, but that's not me.  Because, what if my team just ends up stinking and gets all filled up with murderers and domestic violence perpetrators (the way all teams in the NFL have)?  What then?  Am I stuck?  Do I have to defend my team or look the other way because it is my team?  Why would I do that?

So, anyhoo, I saw this picture yesterday and I felt like it needed some commentary:




Image may contain: 2 people, text

Notwithstanding the sweet headband, assault rifle, and stack of cash; I think it's a fake republican jesus (I'm using lower-case here to avoid confusion with the real, unaffiliated Jesus (i.e.,Creator, Savior of mankind)).  The best proof that this is a fake republican jesus is on the GOP sign he gently holds--it has a sticky note on it that says "1 percent."  Republicans don't like dealing in that small of a number--they drink either whole or skim.  Either they want the milk fat as nature intended, whole, or they don't want milk fat at all--middle ground is contemptible.

I guess I could also quibble with the use of "Greedy Oligarch Puppet" on the GOP sign instead of "Grand Ol' Party,"  but what's a grand ol' party without greedy oligarch puppets? 


The more I look at the republican jesus photo--it's a photo, right?--the more I wonder if this photo got mixed up with other photos of various jesuses.  I think this might be a Democrat jesus.  He's obviously not comfortable with that gun that he meekly wrested from Charleton Heston's cold, dead hands; also, he's about to mildly hand out a stack of cash for no real reason with no apparent accountability.


The meme is very clear about what republican jesus would do. Obviously, he'd blamelessly do at least the following:

1. Cut food stamps (food stamps stretch further when you cut them, but they still taste the same; I don't like eating stamps--even the food kind)
2. Gut affordable healthcare (republicans love to pay a lot for healthcare--especially healthcare for your gut)
3. Demonize the homeless (demons do better in the homeless than in swine)
4. Block equality rights (blocking two equality rights doesn't make a wrong!)

I'm pretty sure republican jesus would also tenderly do the following:

5. Act like a spoiled child when he doesn't get his way
6. Be a hypocrite saying and doing one thing when out of power and another thing when in power
7. Own an assault rifle, and fantasize about shooting someone, and then actually shoot someone


So, what would Democrat jesus justly do?

1. Not believe in real Jesus--except for using Him as a tool to justify anything
2. Be disturbed to the point of hysterics by anything presented from the "other side"
3. Lose a bunch of recent elections
4. Eat at trendy restaurants and kill babies
5. Watch (and maybe appear in) Portlandia
6. Talk about feeding the poor; try to make other people give money to large, non-profit groups that feed the poor; and feel outraged when large, non-profit groups turn out to be taking most of the money (substitute "care for the sick" and "shelter the homeless")
7. Use equality as a way to divide.
8. Make a music video telling everyone that they should vote (but he won't say for whom you should vote--that's private--but it should be a democrat)

Don't even get me started on what Libertarian and Green party jesuses would meekly and mildly do.


Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Often (frequently) Orphaned (a person who has lost his parents)

Mom died a year ago, today. I wish she hadn't.

Dad died eleven-and-a-half years before that. Although not technically true, I liked to say that Dad's death left me a bastard child, and now Mom's departure has left me an orphan.  Thirty-nine-year-old orphans have very little chance of being adopted.  They won't even consider my application for Wednesday's child.

Luckily, I've been able to avoid the cops well enough to not have to go to an orphanage.  But, living on the streets has taken its toll.  My cap is just about worn out and once it's gone, I'm not sure how I'm going to be able to collect the shillings that people give me to stay alive.  I might have to join with other orphans--I do have seven siblings, all of which are also orphans--and orchestrate elaborate pick-pocketing schemes.  I used to have eight siblings, but my brother Jack was given the sweet release of death, which allowed him to avoid orphan-hood altogether, the lucky bastard!

I might be able to get on at the Trib as a newsie, which would mean I'd go around selling papes.  We call them papes because we're too lazy to say paper.  That second syllable takes a lot out of you. There is this kid that I'd be working with, who uses a crutch to help him walk.  We call him Crutchy because we're very creative.  I think the nickname is either based on his use of kindness and humor as an emotional crutch or because of the crutch he uses.

A dog started following me around a while back.  He's has light, brownish-tan fur, almost the color of sand.  Like sand you'd find at the beach--sandy colored, I guess you'd say .  I named him Beachy. Some dog catchers were after him, so I hid him while he was on the lamb.  The lamb didn't stand a chance against Beachy.  We all ate really well that night.  Mmmm....mutton, which is what we call stuff we find in the dumpsters behind restaurants.

My wife and kids, who are not orphans, are helpful in keeping me fed and clothed.  Maybe they will adopt me one day. If only I could get on the radio and sing about tomorrow.

In other news: I miss Mom and Dad.

Thursday, April 9, 2015

Religious Exception

I know I said I wasn't writing about religion on this blog anymore, but last week was General Conference for all Mormondom, and I helped.

If you watched the Women's Meeting (recently defined as the first session of General Conference) on the Saturday before the first Sunday in April (yes, I do have to phrase it that way for when the first Sunday of April is on April Fool's, sucka!) you may have seen this:




It's a video featuring some lovely families, one of which is mine.  You will see how perfect we are, right down to the two-year-old Toby and his munchkinness.  It was a great experience for us.  They called on a Tuesday, we went into a recording studio on Thursday to record the singing.  Buffy was under the weather with a case of laryngitis, so they had an acquaintance of ours sing her part (yes, we are thinking of changing Lady Buffington's name to Milli Vanilli).  Then, on Friday, we went to the LDS Conference Center in down town Salt Lake City, where they took us to the roof, which evidently has a weed field for pretend pic nics and had us film our part.

As you can see from the video, we were perfect.  By that I mean the editors must be perfect because the shoot was a big ol' chaotic mess.  Toby was screeming the entire time--with the exception of the approximately 0.25 seconds that he's featured on the video.  At one point in the video he's pulling on my hand.  His face is not in the shot, if it were you would have seen him screeming, "Get up! Get up!"  Later they set up another shot where all three of the singing families were to stand together and sing the song.  Toby did not allow any of that scene to make it to the final video.  He arched his back, beat me over the head with a string cheese, punched me in the face, stole my glasses and hucked them, twice!

Of course, Toby's bad behavior had an effect on the others.  Ike could not help himself; he was mad, and it showed.  He sang along to the track with a scowl of pure disgust.  Between takes he'd mumble about how Toby was ruining everything, and how we should have left Toby home, or better yet, never had him to begin with.  Luckily, something about his face just works on camera.  I've seen him practicing smiling for pictures in front of a mirror, and what looks like a fake and, dare I say, stupid facial expression in real life, looks perfect on camera.  Plus his singing voice which is highlighted in the beginning of the song is really pretty.

Mimi and Kitty couldn't stop giggling.

Cubby spent one full take unbuttoning my shirt.  I, not wanting to ruin the take, was powerless to stop him.

We will forever treasure the experience.  And thank goodness they didn't ask us to sing the second verse, which everyone knows is the most sexist of the verses.



The next week I got to sing with a men's choral group from BYU for the priesthood session.  I was really more or less a seat filler.  They didn't have enough students to fill all of the choir seats, so they invited some alumni along to fill out the numbers.  Watch here:






Did you see me?  By my count, I made as many appearances as President Monson in this conference! If they had credits, I would be listed as a featured player.  Also, isn't the arrangement for Master the Tempest is Raging excellent?

Amen.

Other Blogs I Have

A while ago, I decided to stop writing religious things on this 'blog.  Mostly because this 'blog is for public consumption, and silly things.  And, as you know, much of the public died of consumption in the 1800's, and even though religion is sometimes silly, the truth is I didn't love the juxtaposition of silly and religious in this space.   So, if you are interested in reading my religious thoughts, I've moved them to a forum housed here.

That's all.

Monday, February 9, 2015

knock, knock...

We moved, some time ago, into an older, slightly larger home.  It was built in the late 1960s, so you know it's groovy, baby!

Also, the first owner was an electrical engineer, so there are tons of electrical outlets, and electronic switches and specialty wiring  all over the place.  And, there are switches that are wired into a knob that allows you to turn off all of the lights in the basement from upstairs--it only took us a year to figure that out.  And, you can turn on your Christmas lights from inside the house.  And, there are four switches that we think do nothing, but we're sure do something.

In other words, the adventure is just beginning!

Then there is the doorbell.  It's one of those novelty, electronic doorbells circa 1985 that plays tunes like Big Ben's chimes or Beethoven's fifth in sterile electronic bleeps a bloops.

The control box and speaker for this technological advancement is located above the entrance to the kitchen, and it has a little door that, when opened, reveals some switches and buttons.  Several of the buttons are lined up like a piano keyboard, and if you mash on them, you will learn that, in fact, they are tuned to be the notes of a scale!  This, of course, implies that one is able to program one's favorite tune to play when someone comes ringing at the door.  

I thought it might be funny to program the doorbell to play a specialized tune for our family.  So, I began to program the bell to play "We Thank Thee O God for a Prophet," a Mormon tune that would be equal parts cute and annoying to my family and to all that dared visit.  Unfortunately, my abilities with mid-eighties technology is not what it once was, and all I was able to accomplish was to stop the doorbell playing the clock-chime song.

Actually, I'm being modest, stopping the chime song was not all I was able to accomplish.  I also was able to convince the doorbell to replace the clock-chime song.

Here is where it gets a little hard to explain.

It turns out that this doorbell held within it's rudimentary 80's memory banks a few measures of every song in the great American song book.  So, whatever I did when trying to reprogram the doorbell, caused the doorbell to play a new song each time someone rang at our door.  Sometimes it was America the Beautiful, sometimes it was O Christmas Tree, (this was during Christmas time so the few times Christmas songs played kind of made sense), and sometimes it was Here Comes the Bride (there are surprisingly few instances in which it is appropriate to play, Here Comes the Bride, when someone comes to your door)

What's worse is I couldn't fix it.  I tried.  I didn't have the know how.  So, for several weeks we endured what the Russians call, doorbell roulette.

One day, I couldn't take it anymore, so I reopened the little door on the doorbell box determined to reclaim our first impressions.

I switched and mashed and mashed and switched.  And by golly, I got that thing to stop playing random songs.

It now plays just one song, and it plays that same one song every time.

If you come to our house, and if you ring our doorbell, you will hear ...


          ... The Yellow Rose of Texas.


Thursday, January 29, 2015

Where've you been?"

Hey,

It's been almost a full year since the last time I posted anything on this weblog. I've thought about it, but have just been out of the habit.  I'd like to write more, and maybe I will (i.e.,I probably won't).

After a year, I must admit, I'm a little rusty.  I think I'll need to warm up before I can post anything of substance.

Maybe a list of random things could be a good warm up.

1. Margot Kidder
2. Beach towels
3. Turtles
4. Lyle Alzado
5. Crayon sharpeners
6. Milk mustaches
7. Lando Calrissian
8. Potato, cheese, and broccoli soup
9. Oxford comma
10. Happenstance (the word not the phenomenon)

Okay.  Good warm up.  Very random.  Some good stuff in there.  Let's try something a little more challenging:

A list of made-up, full names.

1. Nelly Jeanne Killburn
2. Samuel H. Benzlequist
3. Ulysses Ben Holepunch
4. Cragon Lowell Crust
5. Nelson J. Nielsen
6. Scott-scott Ascott
7. Technisam Wren Lickwild
8. Brunch Dunch Linner
9. Ed Peterson
10. Pouderheinz Stubbletoe

Man, that is way harder than you'd think.  Okay, I think I'm ready to write something real...

Put your suggestions in the comments below.