Colorado and reefer: A new reality or a flash in the (brownie) pan?

Never among life’s surprises did I ever expect to see marijuana legalized. I think I said that maybe three years ago. Well, it still is not legalized in the United States, at least within federal statutes. But many states are beginning to either decriminalize the drug or send it to a brave new world of legalization. Come Wednesday, pot becomes legal in Colorado.

Legalized weed does not mean that one may do what they please for a Rocky Mountain high. For instance, smoking pot in public is supposedly against the law. And though driving under the influence will be enforced, it will likely take a great deal of profiling — a smoke-clouded car with the driver and passenger eating an entire fried chicken for instance — to make any substantial impact on this type of DUI.

Make no mistake about it, the same wolf cries that have been heard for all our lifetimes will likely be howling louder. But meanwhile a greater body of study has emerged over the past century or so during which marijuana has been vilified by both the misinformed and the powerful.

Practically any argument about pot will likely bounce head-to-head among those who have a vested interest in a flourishing marijuana industry against those who seek the weed’s destruction.

Mass media already provides a wink and a nod for some celebrities who smoke weed almost openly. My hero, Willie Nelson, for example. Although I love his work on its merit, not because he smokes pot. I would be willing to guess that in 40 or more years dabbling in drug may have actually helped his creativity by smoking reefer than say getting s**t-faced on Wild Turkey.

You hear about so many athletes getting busted for pot, mainly because that’s what they do, just as the jocks did 10, 20 and 40 years ago. Some have even claimed that marijuana can help athletic ability. I don’t see how, though I’m no athlete. I would be interested in studies on marijuana and its effect on adrenal in. Many a stressful incident resulting in disaster are blamed on weed intoxication. But how many of those situations found people in the situations merely with pot ingredients in their system, and in which they seemed like a logical scapegoat?

There continues to be studies as to the medicinal effect pot has on a variety of illnesses. I can say with confidence, that if marijuana was legal I would use it for the chronic pain now treated with the powerful and powerfully-addicting methadone. I would find one of the sugar-free cookies or cake as a delivery system because, as an ex-smoker, I prefer not to smoking anything. There are various methods being developed which will use the drug’s properties for various maladies while not having the buzz that goes with it. That is well and good, but it’s kind of like drinking a Shirley Temple or near beer.

One thing for certain is we will read and hear more about marijuana than in history. I would say that people should use their own smarts to have an informed opinion. Unfortunately, I see too many people who like their news to fit their point of view. With that in mind, I have no guess as to whether the new reality of marijuana is here to stay, or it will be a flash in the pan.

I am sure for many of the Coloradans will for now abide by that sentiment from the band, Traffic, from some 40 years, that one should just “Light up and leave me alone.”

A picture tells a tale which memories enhance

Kind of a cool dreary Southeast Texas winter day lingers outside. If one had a reason to go outdoors a windbreaker or T-shirt and shirtsleeves would likely be comfortable until the dark of the day begins to appear when a more noticeable chill arrives. Inside, my thoughts turn to the countryside. In actuality I am thinking about the follow up picture to the one on the header of this blog.

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It is the one pictured here in the text. Say hello to “Casa del Loco!”

I have no idea exactly who came up with the name. It was likely Bruce. It could’ve been Suzie or Waldo. It might have been me. Whether it was named, imperfect or not, the Spanish translation will come out as “Home of the Madman,” “Home of the Crazy” or “Crazy House.” At certain times when I lived there and even when I didn’t, the translations fit.

The photograph isn’t the best. I took it with my point and shoot digital the closest I could behind the fence. Although a car appears to adorn the “front yard” as well as some furniture — that couldn’t be better but later on that matter — the house appears vacant.

I won’t go into the history of the place, other than that relating to my living there. My friend, Waldo, lived there for about eight months before he moved to Dallas. If we all knew that he would live only 16 more years before being felled by cancer, we probably would have partied a bit harder had that been humanly possible. I was still in that dual life as full-time fireman and full-time college student when I moved into the place in 1982. I would leave the place about to graduate and take another job about two years later. For a variety of reasons I left that “post-graduate” position, working for a regional council of governments in northeastern Texas, about a year later and would move back to this little house in the East Texas Pineywoods region. That is to say I only lived in the little house for some three years total. It seemed, though, like many more years than that.

This was the place where I honed my passion for solitude. Don’t get me wrong. The place would sometimes see around 200, mostly college students, out in the yard sucking up three kegs of beer simultaneously. Oh, and the furniture I mentioned: We burned it on bonfires.  That is why the yard as it appears today — still likely just a patch of occasionally mowed grass meeting unimproved pasture — would have been just right for the old days at Casa del Loco.

But some of my most favorite days were spent there with only three or four people, and mostly by myself. Oh, and two different dogs and a cat at different times of my occupancy. The white cat just appeared while Waldo lived there and I inherited it, as did I (re)inherit my small black dog Pedro. The funny little, supposed, black Lab and Irish setter mix eventually just went away and never came back. Same with Man, the cat. When I moved back there in 1985, I took in a much larger, half great Dane, half Doberman, named Cochise. This dog two would later be passed in custody to my friends who eventually moved to the Casa. Cochise would also do that “old Houdini” though from a different residence. He was a handful but like the other animals who shared my place, was a great companion.

I have written about the dogs and the parties and all the fun we had out there on the 200-acres “farm.” Really, it was mostly pasture for my landlord’s herd of cattle. Once a year, a passel of “cowboys” would appear on horses with dogs and herd the cattle all over the place, even next to my house. Then they would load up the ones they needed to and away they went. The cows were never pets for me although I spent a great amount of time watching them. There were the times that the cows would be right up to the yard chomping away on God-knows-what kind of flora with an egret or two perched somewhere on the unbothered bovine.

The days of solitude varied, my mind concerned with thoughts of my humanly connections: Loves lost, the deaths of my parents, money woes, joy, accomplishment. It seems the great outdoors provides one with a wide bulletin board with which to pin your pros, cons and otherwise.

Sometimes, though, I would just marvel on what was before me. A little spring not a long distance from the house had already eroded a Grand Canyon in the miniature. And I wondered how long it would take before that red clay to displace more of the farm before the landlord took some action toward this erosion. Knowing him, he probably never did.

Things like the toothache tree next to the house, or waking up to a rumble between someone’s dog and a doe deer in the pond were among the many natural puzzles for my mind to work when sitting around in the quiet. Though we didn’t see it, my friend Rick — who just visited on Christmas Day — and I were once drinking beer on the porch when some guy in some kind of auto failed to negotiate a curve on the nearby road. It turned out the driver had also been drinking beer. Maybe that’s what saved the guy from injury or death.

Were there a good reason for it, I think I might could become a pretty decent hermit. Life on the farm, while kind of laid back, was also a place where one might be alone and not worry what the world thinks about it. I have come to miss the country life. After all the years without it makes me wonder if it is something I should strive for again. Age and the situation one find themselves in all are characteristics of what guides your life at a certain period of time. We shall see what happens. Meanwhile, memories can be pretty sweet.

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Hidy Hi and hope you had a Merry Christmas or whatever you did in the many places of the world around this time of year.

My friend, Rick, from Nacogdoches, came down and we visited for awhile. We dined at the Iron Skillet down the road, it is the restaurant at the Petro Shopping Center truck stop. Everything one orders come in an iron skillet. Well, not milk or iced tea or coffee. I do remember stopping for chicken fried steak — back when eating one was burned off a lot faster — in, I think, Fort Stockton, Texas. The creamer pitchers were shaped like cows. That was on a trip to El Paso for a state firefighters’ union convention. My union brother and fellow firefighter, Bob, likes to tell that on the return journey, he and I got a case of Texas Pride and put it in the cooler. When we ran out is where we spent the night, he says. That is not really true, as care-free as it sounds. It was actually Olympia beer. Not the smooth version we got in the Philippines via Washington, but the kind that was made by Pearl or Lone Star or whomever.

I had to work today which kind of “ucks-say.” I mean work means money. But being off one day and that’s it. Not so good. Plus, I had to visit a bunch of crowded stores. The good news is I am off for three days. Yaaah! I think I will cut off all of my phones to help ensure no one will wake me.

None of this is probably entertaining. Well, sorry. Later “udes-day.”

 

 

 

“If not for Christmas … by New Year’s night”

Tony Russell “Charles” Brown grew up Galveston and taught chemistry at Carver High School in nearby Baytown, Texas, after receiving his degree from Prairie View A & M.  This was decades before integration and just as the U.S. went to World War II. Brown worked in a mustard gas plant in Arkansas and a Southern California shipyard before settling in Los Angeles. It was there Brown honed his skills as a pianist in blues bands and eventually recorded his music.

His Christmas blues standard “Please Come Home for Christmas” was a hit in 1960. It was popular enough through the various holidays that followed that it had sold 1 million records eight years later.

Brown was always more or less claimed as a “Southeast Texan.” Of course, he was Southeast Texan having grown up in Galveston but not “down home Southeast Texan” in the Beaumont-Port Arthur-Orange “Golden Triangle” in which Janis Joplin was a native. He was more a native in the ZZ Top style. The three band members played many time in the Beaumont area, especially before they made it big. With the Frank, Dusty and Billy being mostly a Houston band, they too were co-opted by those of the Beaumont area.

Brown died in 1999 and was buried in California.

It really doesn’t matter who is from where though. During the number of years I lived outside of Southeast Texas, I never really felt at home in the area when I visited for the holidays until I heard James Brown’s “Please Come Home for Christmas.” And as much as I like the Eagles version of the song sung by northeast Texan Don Henley, sometimes there is nothing like the original.

May you all have a Happy Christmas wherever you are or whatever you are.

 

 

 

Military intervention and friendship tend to change world awareness

For so long the many trouble spots in the world just seem to come and go through my psyche like an unexpected meteor shower in some unfamiliar locale. For example, some seven or eight years ago I briefly kept up with the saga of a military coup d’état in the South Pacific island nation of Fiji. The only reason I paid as little attention to it as I did was having visited the country’s capital, Suva, for some 17 hours when my Navy warship docked there in 1977.

Suva was an odd, but peaceful place back then. The presidential palace for the former British colony was guarded, at the time, with a lone soldier outfitted in a red uniform shirt and a white sari. He had a long weapon at his side. I was just looking at the Kodak Instamatic picture I took of him and, while I always remembered the soldier with a spear at his side, a look today at the photo has me leaning more toward something like an M-1 carbine. It was an English-speaking country but with the scant amount of time both officer and enlisted sailors ended up in what appeared to be the only nightclub open on a Suva Sunday night. It would not surprise many older salts and perhaps a good many of those in the present, but there were plentiful hangovers to go around at morning quarters the next day, just prior to getting underway.

It was only a few moments ago when scanning a Wikipedia page that the nation of Fiji had two previous coups between the time I visited and the one of which I write in 2006.

South Sudan President Salva Kiir Mayardit
South Sudan President Salva Kiir Mayardit

With that somewhat sordid background comes the news of the current conflict in South Sudan. I must confess that many of the uprisings in that part of the world must have something sufficiently mind-shaking for me to perk up and pay attention. I mean no disrespect nor lack of passion but the truth is that bad things happen all over the world, some closer to home than others. And I speak figuratively when I say “closer to home.” If our military becomes involved, my attention toward the story grows. Certainly, if someone I know or who is from my “neck of the woods” I will likewise tend to read a bit closer or listen somewhat more intently.

So across the oceans we go to South Sudan. First, I read of our military involvement — helping ensure the safe passage of Americans — although it is still difficult to determine just what in the hell is going on there. A bit on that later, but first we go to Facebook.

Sometimes I disinterest myself from Facebook for long periods of time. It keeps me from just completely dropping out — and from not just Facebook. So I check on an old FB friend, actually I first knew him when he was employed as an attorney to represent my media company and me in a defamation suit. And he was not just a run-of-the-mill lawyer. He was high-powered, D.C., First Amendment legal talent. The federal judge over the case threw the suit out into oblivion where it belongs.

I knew Michael, the attorney, was doing some pro bono work in the Balkans but as I said, I just kind of lost touch. The next thing I know, I look on his Facebook page and he is evacuating from South Sudan where he had been helping that brand new government take shape as a constitutional entity. Such noble endeavors in some often difficult circumstances are all part of the job for Michael, now part of a globe-trotting pro bono legal firm. I never knew that such an animal existed. But I am happy for the work my friend and his cohorts do. Most of all, and as I wrote on his Facebook page, I am happy he is back home and safe.

Just what is this whole conflict about in South Sudan? I’m still reading about that. There are tribal issues and, made clear by the fledgling nation’s head of state, President Salva Kiir Mayardit, more than a little cattle rustling. One doesn’t think of cattle rustling as a concern in a nation neighboring Ethiopia, Kenya and, of course, Sudan. That is until one sees an official photo of President Kiir in his ten-gallon hat that was given to him by none other than Cowboy George W. Bush.

Yes, I will continue to follow what happens in the South Sudan. Now, at least to me and at least for the time, not just another African hotspot.