Monday, March 25, 2013

864


What is 864?

That's the final post count to the RobBlog.

I started this thing almost six years ago because I didn't want to talk about divorce. Over the years, I got over that, I fell in love and got married again. Along the way, I've posted many adventures, from burning blue belly cream to a Billy Blanks whoop-ass. I even served soggy spaghetti.

My intent was to continue this thing for as long as I had something to say, cuz frankly, I've enjoyed saying something. You have been fun.

But now, the time has come, friends. A few in your ranks have advised that the readability isn't here any more and that it's best to go out on--well, before I dredge the bottom. As this comes from multiple sources and people I trust, I trust that it's a thought worth considering.

So I considered.

There were other thoughts worth considering too: I'm writing a book that I hope to sell. If this blog doesn't work for its readers, then I'm best writing something that will pay the bills and keep my wife happy, cuz I really do love my wife happy. I love her always, but happy is a preferable state. She has an amazing smile. So I'll concentrate on the work that works for the benefit of both of us. I'll call it an anniversary gift. She'll love it.

Other considerations: without readers, I'm blogging for vanity. And although I may not have been relevant, I'd like to say I stood against vanity. Not the singer, she was pretty cool. I'm against the furniture. I was attacked by a vanity once. Just once. It's in my blog somewhere...

But now that comes to an end. If anything I ever wrote touched you, made you think or laugh, then praise God; it is his work within me that made it possible. And in that, am grateful to have been a conduit. That consideration alone makes it difficult to leave. That, and I consider you all friends.

Goodbye.

Rob Boyd 3/26/13

Meme of the Last Days



Dreams of Ordinary Men

I love dreams.  Even when they’re bad, they can tell us so much if we listen. Oh, sure you should never read too much into dreams, but if you listen, you can  glean little lights from your psyche: who you are, who you think you are and who you think you should be—All available to those who look.

Take my dream last night.  Last night I lived in my old house and opened the front door when I heard a knock. The door stuck like it always did, and crack-poped when it released the jamb, just like I remembered it. Even the dirty aluminum security screen door was there, protecting me from whoever was outside.

In this dream, the people outside were five Scotsmen, of varying degrees of maturity.  How do I know they were Scots? They work kilts and spoke in brogues.

“You stole what’s ours,” the leader spoke in the aforementioned brogue.
“Uh, what?”  I said in my nondescript American English.
“Our birthright. You stole in. Now you pay.” He said, “you,” but “you” sounded like “yee” on his lips. Then as an expression of displeasure, all five spat on my door. It was dream, so real-life physics carried the phlegm no further than the aluminum mesh. It stopped, and dripped, turning brown, mingling with the dirt and dust that already settled there.

I was as grateful as could be expected.

They were as courteous as could be expected: the Scots spat and left.

In the mists of dream magic, and Scottish curses, my dream jumped forward.  I’m no longer standing in my living room staring at a spit screen. I’m standing in the street, staring at a foreclosure sign. The shift to the future hasn’t unsettled me, but the recent dream turn of events are a little too close to home. My house has been foreclosed, everything I own is missing, including all my unpublished fiction, and even my dog is gone.  It’s like a bad country song.

I’m dream-ported to a dark wood paneled one room apartment. It’s bare. Dream knowledge reveals that it’s where I live now.  I’m alone, because that’s how this dream has me. There is a knock at the door, so at least I have visitors.

I open the door. It’s the Scots. They’ve come to gloat. See, these bad things didn’t just happen, The Scots did it to me. They forced the foreclosure, they stole my stories and, as the little old short Scot holding a leash proves, they took my dog. Cosmo licks the old Scot and sits at his feet.

I explain to them that I don’t know why they’ve done this: I don’t have their heirloom, or birthright, or whatever they call it. They’ve taken everything, so, as they can see, I don’t have it.

“We can’t see that,” one said.

“What do you mean? You’ve left me with nothing!”

“We can’t see it. It’s invisible. You still hide it.”

“Uh…” dream me doesn’t know how to argue that logic.

“No matter. We’re not here for the birthright. We’re here for the revenge.”

They leave, taking my dog with them. There’s also a book on a shelf that I’ve been reading.  One of them grabs it as he leaves. No one spits.

The dream rushes forward again. I’m watching an entertainment show. The host is interviewing a family of five Scots who’ve written several books that are all now best sellers.  Sure enough, I recognize the Scots as quickly as I dream recognize the books. They’re my Scots and my books. The Scots edited the books, found agents and publishers and are now the next big Scottish thing since Fat Bastard, all because of what I wrote.

After raking in millions of dollars and riding the fame train as far as they can on what I’ve written, the Scots stop by again. They’re not sorry, but it was never their plan to become so rich off of my stuff. To make things even, they give me back my dog. And to remind me of what I stole from them, they give me a ghost, who hates me. Who puts me down whenever he can.

After this, I decide to find the Scotts’ invisible heirloom. I’ve got nothing else to do. After an epic dream quest with my dog and antagonist ghost, I find the thing.  I don’t know what it is: it’s invisible, but when I find it, I know that I have in fact had it all along—whatever it is. It’s magic. It gives a little bit of luck to it’s holder. Not great amounts, just little blessings, if you will. And like any other kind of magic heirloom, there is a always a side effect. The side effect of this invisible thing? The possessor is doomed to write unsellable stories.

After the revelation, I woke up. I was happy. Sure the dream was vague, but never read too much into vague dreams. Stick to the obvious. There, on the discernible surface, I found a meaning worth clutching to my heart: I’m gonna get my dog back.

I love dreams and I really love happy endings.

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Meme of the Day

Truth, for those of us just discovering the groundhog lied.

Jingling Change in Yoga Pants

I hate change.

You name it; I get settled in it, and then I’m like, “Why change it?” Routines, fast food orders, and underwear, these are all things that are more comfortable when you leave them alone.

One more thing: yoga pants.

Why yoga pants? I don’t know. Everybody else is talking about them. Why should I change that?  And why should Lululemon change my yoga pants? I knew they were sheer, that’s why I bought them.

Why change them now? Didn’t somebody at Lululemon notice that the pants were a bit revealing the first time Connie in accounting tried them on?

“Connie…not a natural blonde?”

Ok, they weren’t that sheer, but one would think Connie’s leg hair showing through would have said something.

“See me now?”

No. Lululemon waited.  Why? It costs more to pull them now than to quality control them first. Some are blaming quality control in the Asian mills where the pants are made. What’s it take to quality check yoga pants?

“They stretch?”
“Check.”

“They bend?”
“Check.”

“They don’t taste like lead paint?”
“Dang it! Charlie!”

I dunno it seems that somebody would have seen through this earlier. Then again, there’s another argument against sending manufacturing overseas: you get what you pay for.

Still, that’s how we do things now, and as I said, I don’t like change. So why is Lululemon changing them at the end of the first quarter? The timing is odd. Were they afraid the company wasn’t going to make their goals so they made it look like they were sabotaged rather than just inefficient?

That sounds like a lot of work just to shoot yourself through the Spandex and still point the finger of blame at yourself. Then again, some things never change.


That’s why I hate change. It’s usually a knee-jerk reaction to something that wasn’t broken to begin with.  Remember changing to Windows ME?

Not all change is for the better.

And now we’re talking about change in printers.  Have you seen these 3D printers?  They’ll print anything you program them to print. I don’t know about you, but in the age of terrorism, I find that a bit scary. 

Guns don’t kill people, printers do.

“It’s turning a little brave new world a little fast for my liking.”

Who said that?

Huxley?

No.  My grandmother, the first time she saw a microwave oven.

Great. In my inability to change, I’m changing into my Grandmother.  Somebody print me a cane. I’m gonna sausage case my legs into my see through yoga pants. I need to chase the kids off the lawn.

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Meme of the Day

Wordy meme to ponder.

360 Degrees of Kevin Bacon Cooked Brown Crisp and Tasty

Have you watched that new show of Fox, The Following? Creepy, and that’s not just the scripted parts. 

The Following is a serial killing drama of epic proportions.  Think Homer meets Clive Barker and Jackie Susann at a Nantucket beach house mixer: hilarity ensues. Okay, maybe not hilarity, unless you find unreasonable body counts funny, but there is a lot to swallow here, and it’s not just the cocktails.

It’s hard to imagine all the love triangles, quadrangles and sextangles you can fit into a weekly serial killer serial, but they do it: everywhere.  At least the bad guys and gals do. The good guys get pent up, broken and filled with churlish contempt.

This is the glitzy glory gory of turning to the dark side.  The Following is a cult. A group of outsiders looking to belong. They’ve found faith and understanding through an ex literature teacher turned convicted murderer with his romantic visions of Poe and death.

“Johnny, angry Johnny…I want to blow you…away…”

No, wrong Poe.

“Nevermore.”

There you go.

According to Nielsen, the show has a decent following of its own. Then again, with DVRs and the Internet, who listens to Nielsen anymore? They don’t have quite the following they used to have.

“Nevermore!”

Nielsen doesn’t believe that; they believe they have a relevant future in TV ratings. Like Fox Television, they’re looking for new ways to bring the believers in. Right now they’re looking at correlations. What’s like TV?

A cult?

Maybe, but they don’t want to go that far. They have noticed that ratings and Twitter go hand in hand. Shows that get Tweets during their airing, get watched during their airing. Nielsen found this so interesting, they wrote a report on it.

Networks, like Fox, followed. They looked for ways to bring cult-like devotion to their programming. Fox already had a cult. They just needed a following. To do that, they needed a way to recruit the outcasts, a way to make them feel like they belong to something secret and cool.

Last night, at the end of the episode, when the Warner Brothers logo came up, a voiceover announcement came too. Watch next weeks episode live, and tweet “#thefollowing” during the airing, and you will receive a special gift. Limited quantities, so first to belong, only to get love. Follow quickly or get left behind.

Wow! Gifts that bring a sense of belonging to a secret society and the special warmth that comes with no longer standing on the outside. It’s almost like belonging to a cult.

One that follows serial killers.

I’m more than a little creeped out.

“Nevermore!”

yah…


Shades of Color: