Vile Recurrence

Some hang on to grudges formed long ago. Parents were harsh or begrudging. Friends were duplicitous or disloyal. No one wants to be visited by the sour times from the past, but it seems that most often it’s the bad memories that come to call. Why is that? Is replaying the low moments filling a hunger? I’m not prone to this sort of pessimistic dwelling, but I know a few who are, and when they speak of ancient cruelties perpetrated upon them, my platitudes like “rise above” or “let it go” fall flat.

In an effort to understand the lingering resentments of others, I search for negative feelings that I might be holding on to. My mother was hypercritical and my father was moody. So what? They tried to be good parents and they had their own worries—their marriage was always troubled and they both had responsibilities outside our home. Overall, I figure they did the best they could. 

So, no protracted bitterness there. Then a familiar dark memory floats upward and bobs at the top. There is one umbrage that I have never been able to put from my mind, an act so audaciously vicious that it visits me while I sleep and while I drive. It crashes into my head during times of peace, making me wonder if my calmness offends, if my psyche craves discord. Seriously, my anger at this incident was so extreme at the time that years later just thinking about it makes my breath come faster and my heart pound harder in my chest.

Here it is:

When my oldest son, Curtis, was seven years old he went to a private boys’ school in Gerrard’s Cross, in the UK. One of his classmates, Thomas, had a twin, Teresa, and the two of them got out of school at the same time; and the school Teresa went to was in Beaconsfield, the village where we lived. As the girls’ school was near our home, Thomas’s mother, Lila, asked if I would mind picking Thomas up in Gerrard’s Cross and dropping him by her car at the girls’ school. As I understood her tricky situation and this didn’t sound like too huge an imposition, I agreed to help her out. 

But it did turn out to be an imposition. More often than not, Lila was late, leaving me in charge of her twins—in addition to my two boys, who were tired and wanting to get home. Also, as it was a peak time at the school, traffic was snarled and slow-moving throughout the neighborhood. It took ten minutes to get near the pickup point, and when we got there, Lila had still not arrived. So Teresa got in my car, I pulled to the side, and we waited. 

While this isn’t pertinent, but sort of is, Lila always looked noticeably, exaggeratedly great, as if she were on her way to a wedding—clothes stylish, accessories to match, jewelry draped, makeup flawless, hair perfect. On my part, petty resentment crept in. If she spent twenty minutes less on her face and hair, maybe she could be on time to meet her son and pick up her little girl. 

I was tactful when I pointed out that what should take one minute was taking half an hour, and that it would be better if she were on time. But careful wording is wasted on some, and she continued in her tardiness. This went on for a couple of months. I wanted to be liked and this kind of good deed was what I thought likeable people did, so I put up with it—until one afternoon, on the way from one school to the other, Curtis was uncharacteristically quiet. I didn’t find out what was wrong until we got home, at which point he cried miserably and told me that everybody in the class had been invited to Thomas’s birthday party except him. 

I was furious. I called Lila. 

“Is this true?” Voice trembling with rage.

“Well, Thomas doesn’t like Curtis,” she explained. “It seems that during playtime Curtis is always the bad guy.”

“That’s because he’s smart enough to know that in order to have a fun game of cowboys and Indians, someone has to be the Indian.”

“That may be true, but Thomas doesn’t understand that.”

“Then explain it to him.”

“I’m sorry. He simply doesn’t want your son at his party.”

“But I’ve been doing this helpful favor for you.”

“I don’t see what one thing has to do with the other.”

“I won’t be delivering Thomas to you anymore,” I said. And I hung up.

I’d been taken advantage of and my son had been hurt. It was the angriest I’ve ever been—and that intensity of emotion is something a person never gets over, which, I suppose, is why it’s stayed with me. If I have such an extreme physiological reaction to this single long-ago incident—the pounding heart, the rapid breathing—what must it be like for a person who holds on to a thousand of these injustices, bringing them out to be examined and endured again and again? It’s not healthy, I know that much. And in the face of this inability to transcend, I am helpless.

As a mini-epilogue, Thomas was asked to leave the school shortly after that. Lip-to-ear whispers had it that he simply couldn’t keep up with the work, which isn’t surprising as he was too stupid to understand that if you’re going to play good-guy/bad-guy someone needs to step up and be the bad guy.

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Cora the Betrayed

These days Cora works from home. Informational exchanges and the handing out of assignments occurs during online meetings. She has fun moving her laptop from place to place so the background changes. One morning the counters of the kitchen will shine behind her. The next day she’ll aim the screen out the front window, showcasing the tumbleweeds as they blow by. This is called being creative. 

After showing up at an office in a building for all her adult life, doing a job without actually going to a job has been an adjustment. At first it was frustrating because she had to learn new processes regarding communication by computer—and with her computer she has a love/hate relationship. But after she got beyond the tricky part, she found that not being constantly accountable was freeing in that she gave less time to picking out her wardrobe and she could breeze through the day on her own schedule. 

She works for the Caprock Chronicle, so it’s not like she’s been chained to a desk all these years. She’s been out conducting interviews and chasing stories over at the courthouse or at the various committee meetings, though having a desk and chair in a professional space made her feel more engaged than she does now. She misses the people she used to see every day. 

Notification of an email from work pops up in the corner of her screen. She clicks.

 Caprock Chronicle Staff,

The change in all our lifestyles over this last year has taught us that our newspaper is needed now more than ever. During this time of confusion, fear, and distress, the entire staff has been diligent in keeping our community informed and involved. As the pandemic winds down and we put away our masks, it is time to consider where we, as a company, stand. One adjustment that has proven to be successful has been our complete shift to online publishing. Because of this, the board has decided to permanently suspend paper copy. The printing presses will be put out to pasture and our downtown building will be put up for sale. In no way will this hinder our regular daily publication.

Yours most sincerely, 

Edward Burnham

Editor, Caprock Chronicle

Ed. Her ex-husband. What an asshole. She would never do to another human being what he did to her. 

In no way will this hinder our regular daily publication. 

Well no, she supposes it won’t. But she estimates that it’ll put at least thirty people out of work—maintenance, reception, the operations and distribution crew. Out of the thirty-seven people The Chronicle employs, only advertising and the writers will remain. That’s thirteen people. And what about their face-to-face gabfests? Will there be no reason for colleagues to get together anymore? No more interpreting body language? No more klatches in the breakroom? No more nuances that can only be picked up when you’re standing with someone, breathing the same air?

Ben, sports; Marilyn, society and events; Greg, commerce and business; and Cora, local government. They’ve worked together for years. They have picnics, see movies, and enjoy intellectual discussions about world issues. Now they’ll all cruise around town in their protective private vehicles, return to their private residences, type up their pieces in their home offices, and press send. 

And Larry, the gruff funny-smelling guy who designed and maintains the website, will have all the power. 

Ed’s group email is followed by another, this one only sent to her. 

What do you think? Did I strike the right tone? 

His vanity yearns for positive feedback on his written word. But he lost his right to her opinions when he decided that he’d rather quarantine with Bethany. Bethany with her strawberry hair, full lips, perky boobs, and twenty-five years younger than he is. 

Bizarrely, he doesn’t seem to understand why he no longer has Cora to turn to for support.

Cora puts a brake on her thoughts. If she allows the rage in, it will soon overtake.

Ten months ago she couldn’t communicate with him in anything other than a bitchy shriek. But she’s evolved. She deletes his email. Silence is also a form of communication. 

Her phone sings out—Ride of the Valkyries—and a picture of her mother appears on the screen. Mom checks in most mornings. 

“The paper’s going a hundred percent online,” Cora tells her—no greeting. 

“I haven’t touched a newspaper in years,” Mom says. “Yicky on my fingers.”

“It was bound to happen. End of an era.”

“How long is an era?” 

“A long time.” 

There’s cheering in the background. A gameshow channel. Cora glances at the clock. Nine-fifteen. Jeopardy. Mom’s eighty and she spends her days in front of the television. 

“You should go on one of those singles’ cruises,” Mom says. 

A cruise advertisement must’ve come on.

“They might call it a singles’ cruise,” Cora tells her. “But believe me, no one goes by themselves.”

“So find yourself a wingman.”

Who would be her wingman? Does Mom think she’s surrounded by friends? Some might presume Mom’s lost touch with reality because she’s getting older, but she’s always been this way—seeing what she wants to see, making a rosy picture out of a colorless one. 

“You doing okay?” from Cora.  

“What’s your plan for the day?”

“An interview with Johnny Cantu.” Johnny’s the mayor. “Speaking of which, I need to go brush my hair and slap on some lipstick.”

“A lackluster student,” Mom says. “Tell him hello from me.”

They say their byes and end the call. 

Johnny was in Mom’s AP English class. She says the bit about him being a lackluster student every time his name’s mentioned, as though she possesses a singular insight. He was a couple of years ahead of Cora at High Plains High, so she has no idea what kind of student he was, but slackers didn’t take advanced classes. She remembers thinking that he was a cutie. She had a crush. 

This won’t be an actual in-person conversation. It’ll be online, which is a source of angst because everybody she interviews uses a different server. Over the course of the last year she’s been forced to download all these different communication apps. At first it was overwhelming, but then it just became annoying. 

Preoccupied, she meanders back to the bedroom to get ready to face the day. 

Her thick hair went its own way when her hairdresser closed. By the time the salon reopened she’d gone gray and grown it long, which isn’t a bad look for her. These days all she does is give it a vigorous brushing and fasten it back. Though she’s in her fifties, her skin is clear and she’s got good cheek bones. Small wrinkles threaten, but for now she falls into the “looks good for her age” category. In preparation for the interview, she applies moisturizer, lipstick, and mascara, and puts on a colorful top. Studying the mirror, she tilts her head and tries a flirtatious smile. Her old interest in Johnny lingers. 

Then she returns to her kitchen table, arranges her laptop so that it gives a cheerful view of Bombolini, her cat, asleep on the couch, and contacts the mayor.

“Hey Cora,” he greets as his face appears. “Nice cat. Is it alive?”

Johnny’s been mayor for six years. He’s always well-groomed—every hair in place, the perfect amount of stubble shadowing his jaw, and sleeve creases starched. He is, however, noticeably short. The top of his head comes to her nose. In her opinion, he’s a perfect compact package. When visiting his office she’s noticed that his chair is adjusted to a high level. But this pretension is easy to ignore because his eyes are so compassionate and wise that they can turn the most immutable resolve into goo. 

He, too, has given thought to his background; but he’s quotidian in his efforts, setting himself up in front of a neatly arranged bookshelf with a few Yuval Harari titles prominent beyond his left ear. 

She sent him the questions yesterday, so he’s had time to prepare.

“Have you actually read Sapiens?” she asks.

“That question’s not on your list,” is his answer. 

“Answer it anyway. Your constituents want to know.”

“Off the record—yes, I’ve read it.”

“Why off the record?”

“Because the only book my constituents want to know I’ve read is the Bible.”

“Fair enough.”

They turn their attention to the topics. 

Masks, distancing, and vaccine requirements in school? He refers her to Ken March, head of the school board.

Plans for economic recovery? He refers her to Abigail Christopoulos, Commerce Chair. 

Vaccine mandate for city workers? Waiting for the Town Council to weigh in. 

Mom may have thought him an uninspired student, but he’s got a gift when it comes to delegating and deferring. 

About halfway through their conversation her phone gives a ding. She glances at the screen—a text from Ed. It only takes a second to read it.

You didn’t respond to my email.

This, too, she deletes. 

“How’re you doing?” she asks Johnny, switching to a concerned tone. 

His wife, Marylou, died of lymphoma about a year ago—come to think of it, around the same time Ed decided that he’d prefer to endure the lockdown with someone else.  

“Oh, you know.” Wistfully. “The kids keep tabs.”

He and Marylou had four children, two of them now minding his law practice. She imagines they’re close—and this makes her kind of sad because her kids live far away. 

“They bring me food,” he continues, “and they call every day and last week they hired someone to come mow and put out weed killer and fertilizer without even checking with me first. They’re making decisions for me like I’m a child.”

“They care about you.”

“It’s exhausting and intrusive. How’re your kids doing?”

“Same-same. Sally’s in Edinburg and Derek’s in San Francisco. They call every week or two.”

Sally took a college year in Scotland, married a guy named Hamish who looks like Jamie in The Outlander, and hasn’t been back to the states since. No kids yet. And Derek is moving up the corporate ladder in a financial consulting company. He’s living with someone, Lisa, who works for the same company, whom Cora likes but doesn’t know well. 

Since the divorce her conversations with the kids have become so stilted that she dreads their calls. Somehow Ed cheating on her with someone younger than they are translated into them no longer being able to talk freely with her. Maybe they’re afraid she’ll cry if they ask how she’s doing. Or maybe they feel guilty because they weren’t here to support her through the crisis. It’s fraught and they’ll have to navigate their own way. 

Shaking off the gloomy thoughts, she straightens and smiles. 

“Thanks for your time. Anything else I should know?”

He takes a few seconds to answer.

“Have you given thought to dating or is it too soon?” he asks.

The personal question is surprising. Is he looking for advice on the appropriate amount of time to mourn? This makes sense. In his position, the town is always watching and judging. 

“Are you worried about what people will think?”

“Not really, no.”

“Dating,” she says thoughtfully. “Realistically speaking, you had time to prepare, so you did some of your mourning before Marylou actually passed—but should time even be a factor?”

Passed is one of those euphemisms that she ordinarily hates, but in this circumstance she can’t bring herself to say straight out that his wife died. It’s too blunt, too harsh. 

“That’s one way to look at it. But I was asking about you dating, not me dating.”

“Oh, well our situations are different. You lost your wife in a tragic way that touches hearts, while I was publicly humiliated and I still work with my ex-husband and I run into his whore at the grocery store.”

Central Foods is a public hub, and though the vaccine has been out for a while, people are finding it difficult to let go of their fear; so best friends still squinch their eyes into smiles above their masks and wave at a distance. Last week she saw Bethany studying the bread. Her pink mask matched her pink yoga outfit. The sight of her made Cora furious and she headed to the cash register without several of the items on her list. The town’s just not big enough. 

“Bitter much?”

“I try not to be.”  

“Either way, both our marriages ended painfully.”

He must be lonely. 

“Nobody would think less of you if you started dating,” she tells him “The notion that a person should wait a year is archaic.”

“Okay, then. Will you go out to dinner with me tomorrow night?” 

A nervous flutter in her stomach, an anxious tightening in her chest. 

“I’d like that,” she tells him. 

“Excellent,” he says with a grin. “I’ll pick you up at seven.”

And he disappears from the screen.  

She has a date. She’s been asked out. 

It’s been ages since she’s worn anything but jeans. Going out in public for a meal was unheard of a couple of months ago. Oddly, though the covid spread in this area is the lowest it’s been in a year, public events and places like restaurants are still sticking with restrictions. It’ll be interesting to see how much progress has been made in getting things reopened. 

While she’s working on the article Ed texts three times, emails twice, and calls once, leaving a message—she deletes every one of his attempts at contact. He’s got this idea that they can be friends. He can be pretty stupid.   

When the doorbell rings she assumes he’s become desperate enough to drive over here, so she peeks out between the blinds in the dining room. 

But it’s not Ed, it’s Derek. She hasn’t heard from him in a couple of weeks; and here he is, slumped against the wall of the house with a disposable mask dangling from an ear. A rental car sits out by the curb. 

Pleased that he’s here, she moves quickly to let him in. 

She doesn’t have a second to look at him filling her doorway before he throws his arms around her and pulls her close. She returns the hug but is surprised because they’ve never been a demonstrative family and their embraces have always been perfunctory. But here he is, gripping tightly with his face tucked into her neck. 

And then she feels a tremor run through his body. 

Her grown son is crying in her arms. 

She pulls away and, pushing him to arms’ length, searches his face for a clue as to what’s brought him here. He’s red and snotty and his eyes are bloodshot and full of pain. Her boy is devastated. 

“Derek,” she says. “What’s the matter? What’s going on?”

“I just—” and he says no more. 

Brushing past her he shuffles down the few steps into the living room and collapses on the couch. She follows and, sitting next to him, waits for him to pull himself together.

“Lisa killed herself,” he tells her with a sniff. 

Her tears are immediate. 

They’d lived together for three years. She only met Lisa that one time when she and Ed flew out for a visit. She didn’t know her well enough to love her. But she planned to love her. She assumed marriage was in their future. 

“Oh hon, I’m so sorry.”

So many questions—how and why? Had she been depressed? If she was bipolar or something, Derek never mentioned it. Oh dear God, did he find her lifeless body? What had she been going through that would lead her to take her own life?

“I wasn’t enough,” he says, wiping his sleeve across his nose like a six-year-old.

He held his misery inside through the ride to the airport, the flight, the rental car counter—all so he could burst into tears on her shoulder. 

He needs some pampering. 

“Go take a hot shower,” she tells him. “Then wine and spaghetti.”

Comfort food at two o’clock in the afternoon. 

For a minute he stares at the floor. Then he rises with the stiffness of an old man and drags his feet toward the stairs.

My photographer sister-in-law, Betty Waldo, took this in the Grand Canyon. Isn't it lovely?

My photographer sister-in-law, Betty Waldo, took this in the Grand Canyon. Isn't it lovely?

Say Cheese!

Savannah is one of those people who puts her whole soul into everything she does. She took up yoga in the sixth grade and has been a devoted yogi ever since. As an adult she wasn’t satisfied to remain an instructor—she continued her education in the field by becoming a yoga therapist and studying human anatomy. 

And when she decided she wanted to learn to bake, within a year she’d become the go-to favorite when someone wanted to serve artisan bread to their dinner guests. For a while she sold her loaves and rolls at the local farmers’ markets, skipping from one town square to another on Saturdays. Her sour dough became so much in demand that it just seemed more efficient to sell from a specific venue—and that’s why now, here in Marble Falls, we have the House of Cheese! 

Petite and always wearing a big smile, Savannah was born in San Antonio. She moved to Marble Falls with her boyfriend, Meritt, four years ago. Meritt is from Marble Falls originally and graduated from the high school here—so a local guy going into business locally and selling locally supplied products. It doesn’t get more Americana than that!

Their shop is on Main Street, set into that new walkway that replaced the old police station. Because I sometimes like to showcase local businesses or events, I pay them a visit. 

Because the shelving is new, the interior smells pleasantly of fresh-cut lumber. Bottles of wine are tucked into cubbies on the right; a display of wine-and-cheese paraphernalia is arranged invitingly on a center table; and on the shelves to the left are snacks to go with the wine, more gadgets and gifts dedicated to imbibing and cheese-eating, and the lovely packaging of different types of olive oil. Every surface in here is immaculate and each item is arranged with a caring eye.

The focal point is the gleaming glassed-in collection of cheeses. The cabinet is impressive in size with a curved frontage that gives it an old-fashion appearance. Within is every kind of cheese imaginable. And placed enticingly across from the cheese case is a rack of Savannah’s famous bread.

“Almost everything in our shop is locally sourced,” Savannah tells me proudly. “And if someone comes in to buy only a small amount of one of our specialty cheeses, we can advise them about what wine to pair it with.” 

There are three cozy tables lined along the back wall and a couple of tables outside—with umbrellas because people enjoying their wine and cheese need to have comfortable shade!

“This is quite an undertaking,” I say. “What possessed you to take this on?”

“It’s always been our dream—a family-owned business where we’re in charge of every aspect. Eventually we can have our kids with us. We’ll be all about family and the community. Also, Meritt and I work well together and share the same vision.”

I try to imagine the life she has planned. David and I work well together, too, but only every once in a while and only when the situation demands it. Given my druthers, I’d rather he does his thing in his place and I do my thing in my place, and then we have something to talk about when we come together over our wine and cheese.

“Was it difficult getting the license to serve alcohol?” I ask, curious because a couple of restaurants in the area took ages to get their licenses. 

“It took months and it wasn’t easy,” she says, laughing. “Only when we were almost finished with the process did we learn that most establishments get a lawyer to take care of it.”

This whole time Meritt has been working and moving stuff around behind the counter. Yesterday was their soft opening, and from Savannah’s account they were busy-busy, so I assume he’s still in recovery mode. 

This has been an enlightening tour. I say thanks, then leave them to it. When I get home, I tell David all about the new wine and cheese shop in town. 

“Let’s grab some friends and go right now!” he says. 

Chances are I’m there right now!

Chances are I’m there right now!

Say cheese! Meritt and Savannah are excited about their new adventure. Sorry, this isn’t the best picture of the menu, but I assure you that the choices are delicious and the prices are reasonable.

Say cheese! Meritt and Savannah are excited about their new adventure. Sorry, this isn’t the best picture of the menu, but I assure you that the choices are delicious and the prices are reasonable.

A wall of wine.

A wall of wine.

Everything gleams and they’ve created a homey feel.

Everything gleams and they’ve created a homey feel.

This all looks so yummy.

This all looks so yummy.

Flutes, AHS, '76

Some have many friends. I can count my friends on one hand; and no matter how many years between visits or conversations, when we get together it’s like we were never apart. 

And that’s the way I feel about Becky and Diana. Flute players. Band friends. When you’re in the school band you spend a lot of time together. There was a ridiculous day in high school–I think it was called Friend’s Day—when everybody partnered up with someone, dressed alike, and spent the day together. In the box of memories stored along with my flute in the attic, there’s a picture of Diana and me wearing colorful overalls and big smiles—she was dark, I was blond; she had long bones and I, sadly, was stocky like my grandmother. And Becky and I—oh my—right under the band director’s baton, scribbling silly notes on our music folder. Sometimes we got to laughing so hard that tears ran and we couldn’t control our snorts.

These days Becky and her husband, Bob, live in Switzerland and plan to retire there. They’ve spent their teaching careers in international locations. In our overseas lives we met up with them occasionally—once, a dinner in Bangkok; and they visited us in Singapore a time or two. Bob teaches math and music, and Becky is a school counsellor. Every once in a while they come to the Texas Hill Country to visit family and I appreciate that they always make time to stop by. Since I’ve known her, Becky’s been in a constant state of evolution. Currently she’s vegan, has taken up running, and is learning French.    

Toward all this self-improvement, I’m ambivalent. How admirable. How exhausting. 

Diana shares her time between a home in San Antonio and a house on Lake LBJ. There was a twenty-five-year period when I had no idea where she lived or how her life was going—but when we met up again eight years ago, it was like we’d never been apart. It turned out she and I had followed similar paths—neither of us had pursued careers and we both had two sons of similar ages. We acknowledged that we were lucky. Few people on the planet get to spend their lives making their own schedules and pursuing good times. 

When Becky lets me know she’s coming, I plan a small reunion. Also invited are common friends, MaryAnn and Nonie. Nonie also went to Amarillo High but wasn’t in the band. I didn’t know him back then, though Becky did. Oddly, I became acquainted with him through my husband, David, as he’s a Waldo family friend. Small World. 

Anyway, seven of us are around the table and I am deeply content. True friends. If they’d move into the cul-de-sac and learn how to play Mahjong my life would be perfect. 

Mostly the dinner conversation is a combination of high school memories and what’s gone on since. Nonie’s a storyteller and he tells how, when he was fifteen, he got arrested over something stupid—a rambling wrong-place-wrong-time sort of deal that has us all laughing. I’m also a storyteller and I share the one about the woman in front of me in church who had a tiny spider making its way from her hair, along her shoulder, into the neckline of her dress, out again at her nape, up into her hair again, and back out. Believe me, I heard none of the sermon that day. The wine flows and the food’s great. We move out to the back deck for our pie and cognac.  

Later, after everyone’s gone and all in the house is quiet, I take time to think about how the years have changed us and how we’ve stayed the same. 

For one thing, it’s been years since Diana and I have touched our flutes. I exchanged mine for writing long ago. Becky still plays. She’s in their town band. 

Here’s a thing that hasn’t changed about Becky: A few years ago she showed up at our flat in Singapore with some random guy at her heels. There’s always been something about her that causes guys to follow her around—her attitude? Her smooth walk? Her sly snickery laugh? I never figured it out, but there’s no denying it. As to other qualities she possessed then that are with her still—she’s open-minded, big-hearted, and empathetic. I think, though, that she used to be someone who followed and now she makes her own decisions. 

Diana. Well, her journey’s been a spiritual one. Her plans were shattered due to a crushing and indefensible betrayal, and she’s having to deal with that. Digging for strength when you don’t have the energy to do so; achieving peace in solitude when you don’t want to be alone—well, it’s been hell and I pray for her daily. The thing about her that hasn’t changed is that she fits in everywhere and in all circumstances. Since David and I have moved to the area I’ve hosted many get-togethers filled with disparate, sometimes difficult guests, and no matter how offensive some can be, Diana is never offended and she never offends. The perfect guest, she easily begins conversations with strangers, which is uncomfortable for me but doesn’t faze her. It’s her gift. 

As for myself, I remember being annoyingly self-righteous during those high school years. I abhorred hypocrisy, rationalization, breaking rules, behind-the-back whispers, thoughtlessness, and cruel jokes. Yeah, I’m not like that anymore. I no longer get ruffled about things I can’t control—though I still have very little tolerance for stupidity. Like, if someone has lung cancer and as soon as the treatments are over they start smoking again. Or when someone believes that a nurse is injecting a microchip along with the vaccine. Or when someone deliberately hurts themselves just so they can post it on YouTube. Or when a driver is so unaware of where they are that they sit through a green light. Or when a mature human being barks at a dog. So I still enjoy a good rant now and then because there are lots of stupid people in the world.

As to old friends, they’ll always be my home. 

Here we are. Good times then, good times now.

Here we are. Good times then, good times now.