Dang, but I’m hooked on this song! Heard for the first time on our recent return trip from Minneapolis as background music in a chicken-sandwich restaurant in Fairplay, Colorado. I now play it all the time, putting it on continuous replay as I work on the computer or sit around vacant-minded on the backyard deck.
It’s one of those times when a song blows right past the thinking part of my brain without stopping for a moment and implants itself in whatever primitive corner in there that is always awake and hungry for things to chew on. I’ve read through the lyrics and … okay … there’s something pleasantly metaphoric there. But then there’s the chorus popping up with “You’ll never walk alone,” which I find distracting.

But, no matter … I love it.
It’s from early Pink Floyd, before they became “The Dark Side of the Moon,” and “The Wall” famous. It’s not the first time something like this has happened to me. There is a pantheon of tunes which preceded it that are lined up in those dark cerebral catacombs and all it takes is hearing a few notes or a phrase to wake one up and put it on the turntable (a metaphoric one, since I got rid of my real turntable decades ago).
Each of them is in its turn like those crushes that I had on one girl or another along my way to adulthood. Passionate and without borders for a time, then gently and lovingly retired.
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Each year as I approach the storage limit on WordPress I have to make a choice whether to ante up quite a bit more cash for a larger perch or to trim away enough to make room for what I want to write tomorrow. I always opt for prudence and parsimony. Because, let’s face it, although some of those older posts pleased me very much at the time, they are not deathless prose. Not War and Peace, not even Steal This Book.
You’ve heard the tale, I’m sure, about Emily Dickinson who kept her poetry pretty much to herself and asked that her sister destroy it all upon Emily’s death. When I first heard the story I thought it such an odd request, something on the order of a man who asks that his dog be euthanized on the man’s passing, because “he just wouldn’t be happy without me.” Or, in a more macabre reference, the not-rare story of the depressed parent who decides to end it all, but then takes their family with them, without their assent. Perhaps for the same reason as the dog owner’s, who knows?
But my heirs will not have that problem, because I go through and delete posts without mercy. Everything beyond two years ago disappears. There are enough words being saved for the world to deal with, it doesn’t need my musings added to the stack.
And Emily? I think she secretly wanted everything to be published, but wouldn’t admit it to herself.
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This gets my vote for best pinback button of the week! I saw it on Substack and stole the image for my personal use.
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This was also on Substack, on the same day. I tried to read it to Robin but kept breaking into nearly paralytic laughter each time. Finally had to give it up.
I have such low tastes in humor that it often embarrasses even me.

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A rain, finally! Thursday afternoon Robin and I had back to back doctor appointments, and it was 84 degrees and sunny when we entered the building. We exited an hour later into a steady rain and 60 degrees. But hooray for a bit of personal shivering sogginess!
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This is for Jonnie and those of us who knew him well.













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