things

September 18, 2004


"The time has come," the Walrus said, "To talk of many things:
Of shoes--and ships--and sealing-wax--
Of cabbages--and kings--
And why the sea is boiling hot--
And whether pigs have wings."

Too many things.

Isn't it intuitively obvious to the most casual observer that pigs have wings? How else do they fly?

I keep starting a long entry and deleting it. Which of the many things do I write about? Flying pigs? My new job? My new glasses? The non-Auntmobile's defective headlight? The weather? The Red Sox?

OK, the Red Sox. I stayed up too late last night listening to the Red Sox finally come back and defeat the pinstriped ones in New York after rain delays. Alas today I am very tired, too tired to cope with the sudden intrusion of an 800-lb. gorilla in the living room let alone an epidemic of flying pigs. I think the 800-lb. gorilla and the flying pigs may be related. But I'll get to that in a minute after I mention that the Red Sox lost big time this afternoon and Derek Lowe got knocked out of the game in the second inning with a comebacker to his ankle. The Fox TV announcers ever so helpfully nattered on and on about somebody with an undiagnosed hairline fracture who kept playing on it with disastrous results. So, being a victim of Red Sox mood disorder, especially when it's raining wildebeestes and loraxes out there, I'm feeling kind of grumpy.

The weather is even worse in Rhode Island. Hence, Nancy is not joining me for the Strut for the Strays. And it will be next week before she gets to see my new glasses, for which I have waited a month. People keep telling me I look good so the glasses must be having the subtle effect I desired: to look younger, hipper, less depressed, less workaholic. Also they are having the less subtle effect of reducing both the number of times my lenses pop out while I'm driving and the number of times I cut myself on the unraveling strands of picture wire holding the frames together. Yes, folks I have had these glasses for two whole days and they have not ended up in a tree by the Tisza River or behind a radiator in my bedroom. Will wonders never cease?

This astounding purchase of new glasses, which I have been needing for well over a year, has been brought about by my equally astounding return to gainful employment. It's weird getting used to being in a cubicle, but it's easy getting used to a regular paycheck. I haven't thought up a code name for the new employer yet, but when I do it will somehow encompass the fact that this job meets two very important requirements: it's not a startup and I'm not the boss of anyone. Film at 11:00.

Needless to say, I slept in today. Sometime shortly before I woke up I dreamt that Stacy (of cat shelter fame) had accidentally let out a huge gorilla that was staying in her house and I had gotten it to come back in and sit on the couch. The living room in the dream was neither Stacy's nor mine nor that of anyone I know. So the gorilla was sitting there on the couch looking serious and someone was interviewing Stacy about what it was like interviewing the gorilla on the couch. Stacy sounded more and more like Terry Gross with each answer. I was awake quite some time before I realized that I was hearing Terry Gross being interviewed on Weekend Edition Saturday.

Strange that metaphor should show up in my dream. As I was making my morning pot of coffee I had a phone call from a friend for whom the time had come to talk of something akin to admitting there has been an 800-lb. gorilla in his living room for the past year.

Years ago at Cosmodemonic Telecomm, I was dealing with a company whose status reports were sometimes less than credible. I used to pass them on to my boss incorporated in my status report rollup with one more item at the end: "All pigs fed and ready to fly." Just so my boss knew I was not being taken in by them. Somehow over the years I've lost a little of my edge in being alert and skeptical, especially when it's messy human frailty and not business. I guess I needed to be reminded not to take things at face value.

Today's Reading
Birds in the Bush by Bradford Torrey, Ballad of the Whiskey Robber by Julian Rubinstein, No Man's River by Farley Mowatt

This Year's Reading
2004 Booklist

Today's Starting Pitcher
Derek Lowe


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Copyright © 2004, Janet I. Egan