Loving and hating in California

On a trip in California. San Francisco. Pacific Coast Highway. Los Angeles. Beautiful here on the other side of the country. And chilly. Lots of thoughts. Lots of loves and hates. Typed them into iPhone. Here they are: Hate: Typing into iPhone. All mays trying to correct my words and spelling. My spelling is horrible! Deal with it iPhone! You will just screen it up anywhere. Love: San Francisco. What a town. Friendliest people. Fog rolling in all the time. Cool museums. Breakfast places that serve smoked chicken apple sausage with eggs. I have found the address to Heaven.

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Termite tenting prep-o-rama

It’s only two days out of the house — two days that will be over with by the time you read this. But it already feels like an eternity … and we haven’t even left yet. We’re still packing to leave. It’s quite a process, prepping a house so the termite people can erect their grand circus tent of horrors. They’ll pump it full of gas, eradicating all those wood-eating critters who think my 100-year-old domicile is a McDonalds drive-thru. The termites have been coming out in little swarms, dancing about like drunken spring breakers. “Party-on, dudes,” I tell them. “Enjoy it while you can.”

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Pondering the REAL questions about extraterrestrial life

The new movie “Prometheus” — about man’s origins, spaceships and creatures that like to treat us like we’re chickens in a processing plant — has me pondering the existence of extraterrestrials. Whether there is life out in the stars — out amongst the great unknown. And what questions we would want answered by these intelligent beings. Unlike great scientists and philosophers, I have simpler mysteries I want solved. Like do they have any colors we don’t know about? Something you couldn’t get in a box of Crayola 64. What would it look like, that amazing, wonderful, never-seen-before discovery? Would it have a cool name like “jimpooza” or something simpler … like “stan?”

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Last flight of the kindergartner

She had to say it again. Her tone sounded … well, it sounded like she thought I was an imbecile: “Yes! TOMORROW is the last day of kindergarten.” OK, I am sort of an imbecile. We men don’t compute things until they’re laid out in front of us with neon and barbecue sauce slathered all over. We should pay better attention. We should listen once in a while, but that requires more brain cells than we have in the bank.

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The wretched son and the flower box failure

And now to sound like a horrible, awful, no-good son who says things like this: I should have bought my mother a Christmas present instead of agreeing to build her flower boxes. Yep, I said it. I’m a lout. An ungrateful sack of rotting kidney beans. I should have bought her socks or ear muffs or a gift certificate for plants. Something … anything! It would have been over and done with. Delivered on Christmas morning. Unwrapped, fawned over and forgotten.

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Searching for greatness … or just surviving Orlando in the summer

Muhammad Ali once said, “I hated every minute of training, but I said, ‘Don’t quit. Suffer now and live the rest of your life as a champion.’” I’ve been spending a lot of time thinking about quotes like that. Thinking about how great champions — heroes of the sports world! — pushed themselves to the limits … overcame obstacles … undertook grueling training to climb high atop pedestals of glory. I am on a similar quest. A similar training program that I hope will bring me greatness. It will push my body to the limits. Finely tune me so I’m ready for anything. No, not just anything. Just one thing — my single-minded focus — my Mt. Everest — my championship — MY glory!!!!

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A search for answers to my dog … if she is a dog

I’m just about ready to drop some money on a mystery: What kind of dog is my dog? Or is she even a dog? Because she’s quite peculiar. Not in a bad way. There’s peculiar bad — like what you say when you’re trying to be polite: “I must say, GULP!, this apple and sausage pie is, you know, peculiar!” And then there’s just plain peculiar … the true definition … like “what the hell is that thing?” That’s my dog, Lily.

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The tick, tick, tick of the summertime countdown clock

There are countdown clocks in my house. Lots of them. All over the place. They are a constant reminder that for two of the three members of the family, school is quickly coming to a close. My daughter’s first year of elementary school — she’s in kindergarten. My wife’s first year of school — she’s a pre-school assistant teacher. Soon they go into summer-time bliss. Semi-retirement. Partial shutdown. Or whatever it is you do when you have months at a time without school or work or anything imperative to do. Summer camps. Jobs around the house. Counting spider webs.

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Memories of senior prom on the cheap … with a coupon

I was trying to remember my high school prom the other morning: How I did my hair. What my makeup looked like. If I had dropped anywhere near $1,000. One-thousand dollars?!? On shoes. On a limo. On my nails. On a dinner in a fancy restaurant where other diners stared at me and wondered, “Is that socially-awkward dufus the future of America?” No, $1,000 was never in my prom budget. Probably closer to $32.50, thanks to a coupon.

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