Key to a crappy morning


Being locked out of one’s home is not the best way to get a Monday morning kicked off. This morning I took an abbreviated walk and discovered upon arriving home that I had no keys.

Now for the 11 months I have lived in this apartment, I have been quite paranoid about locking myself out. So much have I been concerned that I make sure my keys are in my hand or my pocket when I leave. The reason for my concern is exactly why my morning bit a big one. My landlord lives about 15 miles away and does not come running just because I am locked out. I called him about 9 a.m. and he said it would be about 11 a.m. before he could get by. I decided to call a locksmith.

That would have been relatively simple if a phone book or the Internet was handy. But, as you might recall, I was locked out of my damned apartment! I walked up the block and stopped at this insurance office. The guy was really nice and waited until I made my call before trying to sell me insurance. I thought I would ask him about purchasing some dumb-ass insurance but I thought the better of it.

One locksmith I called had his voice mail engaged and I did not want to have to wait to talk to someone about unlocking my place. Of course, I did. The locksmith that I called took forever and ever, almost an hour to call me back. By that time I had employed another locksmith who was pretty good at his word that he would be here in 20-30 minutes. This guy left his car running, zipped up the stairs, did a little magic and ta-da, it was open.

After paying the locksmith $45 for about two minutes work, I sought out my keys. And I sought and I sought and I sought some more. I couldn’t find my keys anywhere. I realized after sticking my hand in the pocket of my shorts that it had a hole. The hole didn’t really seem big enough that my keys could fall through. It’s also a bit puzzling that I didn’t feel, at least some air from motion, around the falling keys. But all I can figure is that my keys (and a pack of Rolaids) fell out of my pocket. I first drove the route I took on my walk. I didn’t see my keys. Then I retraced my steps. Well, I walked the same streets and sides of the street that I had walked earlier in the morning. Retracing steps sounds a bit like you’re walking on plaster casts of your footsteps. Whatever. The point is I didn’t see my keys.

The only spare I don’t have is for my mailbox and my landlord will bring me a copy eventually. Meanwhile, if you unearth a set of keys in the Old Town neighborhood of Beaumont, Texas, they might just be mine.

Back from a day at the VA


Wait. Wait. Wait some more. Then wait again. That about sums up my day at the Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Hospital in Houston. I rode a VA van there to and from Beaumont this morning, a 90-minute trip one way. Then I waited 90 minutes for my first appointment and 2 hours for my second one. There is a really funny story about my first appointment, but unfortunately, I am not quite brave enough to tell it yet. Maybe I will disclose it in “eight feet deep the book.”

I made my initial visit to the pain management clinic this afternoon. A couple of months ago, I was diagnosed with two bulging discs in the C-spine/T-1-spine. A subsequent visit to a specialist revealed that the doctors did not want to operate unless I developed some serious complications from the disc and stenosis. This is because I had two previous C-spine surgeries, the last being a fusion with a piece of my hip bone and metal plate screwed onto my spine. “There just wasn’t much to work with,” was how the specialist put it, referring to my condition being relatively inoperable.

So I was referred to a pain management specialist. What they propose doing is a procedure in which I will be given a nerve root block in my C-spine. They inject the nerves with cortisone after giving me some, hopefully, good drugs. The pain specialist said when the epidural steroid injections work, they usually last about three months. I guess I will do it. It doesn’t look like I have a whole lot of choices about it. Maybe I can get them to take pictures during the procedure and I will share it with you. There, you might see me with a death grip on some nurse’s arm when they shoot me in the neck with a syringe. You know, party photos.

Fear the monkey


I am not working today and I don’t particularly have anything to do. That isn’t to say there aren’t things I could do. I could do a lot of things, some of which would even count as constructive. But I’m just not up for constructive today. That is why I went on a bender of reading Steely Dan lyrics.

Walter Becker and Donald Fagen as Steely Dan — they once formed a band called “Leather Canary” — have put out a good number of albums over the years. So I did have to limit my lyrical bender to those works up to “Gaucho” in 1980. Still, they produced a plethora of mind-boggling lyrics during that period such as:

“I fear the monkey in your soul.” From “Monkey In Your Soul,” the album “Pretzel Logic,” 1974.

That line strikes terror in my inner mojo. For I fear monkeys in people’s souls as well. Also I fear, when I see a monkey up close, that it is going to fling some sort of bodily material at me.

Here is another SD favorite:

“Have you ever seen a squonk’s tears? Well, look at mine.” From “Any Major Dude,” the album “Pretzel Logic.”

Quite frankly, no I have never seen a squonk’s tears. I didn’t know that squonks cry. Hell, I didn’t even know what a squonk was until I looked it up on the site Steelydandictionary.com. Here is their definition:

“A mythical woodland creature, originating in Pennsylvania. Squonks spend much of their time crying due to their ugliness, and when captured, will dissolve into a puddle of tears. Also the subject of a song on the 1976 Genesis album A Trick of The Tail.”

Well what do you know? They do cry. But a mythical woodland creature from PENNSYLVANIA? Of course, one of my all-time favorite rhetorical questions is posed in this lyric from the title track of the 1980 album “Gaucho:”

“Who is the gaucho amigo
Why is he standing
In your spangled leather poncho
And your elevator shoes”

Just posing the question “who is the gaucho amigo” sounds a bit funny by itself. Perhaps it would not be particularly humorous to some one from Argentina or Uruguay. That is unless someone was making fun of a pseudo-gaucho, what we call a “drug store cowboy” here in Texas. But a gaucho wearing a spangled leather poncho and someone’s elevator shoes? I mean that is quite a freaky image, don’t you think?

Some SD lyrics are not as cryptic as others but still have something in them that leaps up and slaps me. An example:

“I’m a bookkeeper’s son
I don’t want to shoot no one” From “Don’t Take Me Alive,” the album “The Royal Scam,” 1976.

One has to ask: Would he want to shoot someone if he was a doctor’s son? The son of a Wal-Mart cashier? The son of a preacher man?

Finally, this from “Night by Night,” the album “Pretzel Logic,” 1974.

“Yes, I’m cashing in this ten-cent life
For another one”

Is he cashing in a ten-cent life for another ten-cent life? A five-cent life? An eight-cent life? Who knows. Always a great mystery (and great fun) listening to Steely Dan.

Oh by the way, Steely Dan is going on tour with former band member Michael McDonald beginning in July. I don’t know if I’ll get to see them on July 14 at the Cynthia Mitchell Woods Pavilion in Houston. But stranger things have happened. Check Steelydan.com for a listing of the shows they are playing.

Scotty's (almost) left the building


Scotty pulls the old hand-buzzer trick with GW.

Presidential Press Secretary Scott McClellan announced his resignation this morning. McClellan delivered the news to the press corps with his boss by his side. Said McClellan:

MR. McClellan: I quit.

Actually, he had a little more to say including a threat to tie up Helen Thomas and drag her behind Marine One.

I have heard a little speculation as to who will be Scotty’s replacement. John Cornyn’s Box Turtle at “In the Pink Texas” suggested the short list included “Baghdad Bob, Joe Isuzu and Robert Black.” By the latter name I suppose he means the flak Robert Black.

Doggone it, I’m going to miss old Scotty with his puppy-dog eyes and his ability to say absolutely nothing of substance. But life goes on. I am wondering if Scotty is going to work on his mother’s independent campaign for Texas governor. That mother would be none other than Carole Keeton McClellan Rylander Strayhorn Foghorn Leghorn. Stay tuned, lest you play offkey.

Congress returns to the pineywoods

It seems U.S. Rep. Kevin Brady, R-The Woodlands, is taking a page from the playbook of an old master. That old master would be Charlie Wilson. Brady, the five-term congressman whose district covers Deep East Texas, this week launched his new “Eighth District Mobile office.” It is a recreational vehicle that will carry his caseworkers to different communities throughout the district.

“The best service is convenient service. I want to make sure my staff and I are available to help people with their problems wherever they live,” said Brady, in a news release.”

Do the constituents get fries with that?

Charlie Wilson had a mobile office for a number of the 20-some-odd years he represented the same general area in Congress. I didn’t read that Brady will actually be traveling on the RV, but even so I don’t think Brady could hold a candle to Wilson when it comes to an entertaining RV trip. I once went on a short excursion in the mobile office with Wilson and, I tell you, that guy could tell some tales.

Wilson’s three-time Republican opponent during his last terms in office, an attractive, big-haired blonde named Donna Peterson of Orange, Texas, tried to make an issue out of the mobile office. Her campaign ran TV ads portraying the RV as a rolling party.

Maybe Brady, who recently was slapped on the wrist for a DUI in South Dakota, will turn the RV into a party on wheels. Hey, there’s nothing like constituent service.

Somehow though, I don’t think a movie will ever be made about Brady with Tom Hanks portraying him, as the actor will play Wilson in the upcoming film version of “Charlie Wilson’s War.”