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Dispatches From Dystopia

~ "What man by worrying can add one cubit to his span of years?"

Dispatches From Dystopia

Monthly Archives: March 2019

Grammar Police

06 Wednesday Mar 2019

Posted by David in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

I just opened an e-mail from my alma mater, The University of Virginia, telling me about the crackerjack professors they just hired. And there in the newsletter is a grammatical error that should have been caught before some bozo hit the send button. Maybe they left it in there so we’ll think they really can’t do without us (and our money).

“Free At Last…”

05 Tuesday Mar 2019

Posted by David in Uncategorized

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A large nonfunctioning microwave oven took up precious counter space in our galley kitchen, the kind of kitchen where open work surfaces and functionality reign. So after four months of sitting there, haunting me in its techno-morbid state, J and I took it to Best Buy, from whence it will go to the old electronic devices graveyard. It’s a relief and more space will be freed up by its removal. When I relocate an antique glass flour canister, I will fill it with bread flour from an old coffee can, repurposed to hold said flour. This opens space in a cabinet. Our kitchen is really just a big three dimensional puzzle.

Awake, Sort Of

05 Tuesday Mar 2019

Posted by David in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

I am retired. I can go to bed anytime I want to. I can wake up anytime I want to. I can have a chili dog and a bag of chips (crisps, to you Brits) for breakfast. You get the picture.

But today, I woke up after what proved to be an inadequate amount if sleep 6 hours, had coffee, a chocolate biscotti, and a cup of porridge made with McCann’s steel cut oats, with a bit of cinnamon, heavy cream and sugar. As I sit, allowing my brain to get the message from my stomach that it is full and satisfied, I contemplate going back to bed. I’m tired again. I want a wake-up do-over. I want to sleep a little more, awaken again, and revel in the knowledge I can go back to sleep again should I so choose.

Maybe I will seek the Democratic nomination for President after all. Everybody else is.

I think human beings have an unlimited capacity for loving other people. That doesn’t mean they should have sex with someone, or any one, just to express their love for them. Seems kind of obvious, but then again, it isn’t for an awful lot of folks. And I have the divorces to prove it.

I can’t remember what it was that would upset me 20 years ago. I guess we should all accelerate the letting go process, even though I know for many people this is difficult, if not impossible. That’s OK, too.

Going back to bed.

Later, loves. 💘

David-Unplugged

04 Monday Mar 2019

Posted by David in food, Sport

≈ Leave a comment

Not that kind. I have a bad case of media overload, and not just from politics. I went to lunch today and there on all 5,000 TV monitors at Glory Days Grill was baseball, basketball, reports from the NFL scouting combines. And nothing broadcast was in any way important.

The sports guys “debate” questions like “Will the Clippers eclipse The Lakers in the LA market?”. We know how starved for topics we are, if they are reduced to debating this burning issue. I suppose that issue is important to somebody, who precisely, I don’t know. Maybe compulsive gamblers. Maybe thirteen year old boys.

The restaurant’s Monday $5.99 hamburger special isn’t worth this sensory bombardment. When the Cartoon Network’s Tom and Jerry cartoons are the island of tranquility in this media maelstrom, that show indicates how news/sports saturated we’ve become. I’m back home serenely watching the trains. I must also get to work culling the clothes pile on my bed, my Lenten project. Then again Lent has yet to start. And it lasts 40 days.

4 March 1944/1994/2019 A Wedding And Two Anniversaries

04 Monday Mar 2019

Posted by David in Family, World War II

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

marriage

4 March 1944 was the day my parents married. They were married at Third Presbyterian Church at the corner of 26th & Broad Streets in Richmond, VA. It is in the heart of the neighborhood known as Church Hill. The eponymous Church in question isn’t Third but St John’s Church, an Episcopal parish, where in March 1775, Patrick Henry made his “Liberty or Death” speech. I’m afraid this is not taught in the schools any longer, so one day I will post about it.

However, I digress. My Dad was a newly commissioned Second Lieutenant of Marines. They started married life seeing each other on weekends when he had liberty from The Basic School and the field artillery course at Quantico, about 75 miles up U.S. 1 from Richmond. Mother was working as a secretary to an executive at Reynolds Metals, a business that relocated to Richmond in the late 1930’s. Mother got a job because she could type. She also was fluent in Spanish and could translate foreign correspondence.

The War progressed. My Dad was assigned to the 15th Marine Regiment of the Sixth Marine Division. The division was headed to Okinawa where a grim and bloody land campaign was fought. After occupation duty in Japan and Tsingtao, China, Dad came home. He stayed in the Reserve and he split his time between his accounting practice and his military duty. As a result, we had no family vacations at the beach or anywhere else until we were adults. Then our vacations included us children and grandchildren at the beach house my father had built. It was the happiest of times for us all. Dad and Mother loved their grandchildren deeply

Life went on, with all the drama an Adult Child of an Alcoholic (my mother) could bring to the table. Mother herself didn’t drink. You might say she was a carrier of the disease. I think it’s a miracle only one of us four children (me) developed alcoholism and even more of a miracle I found recovery,

Mother’s physical health was always a bit precarious with hypertension, obesity, diabetes, gynecological issues. She had a quintuple bypass at age 69 in the summer of 1988, at the time we adopted my younger son.

When 1994 came around we wanted to do something special for our parents’ Golden Anniversary. I made a video of all the houses my parents alone or with the family lived in. We planned a party for that day March 4th. The day before, my mother fell. It wasn’t just a fall. Unbeknownst to us, she had had a stroke. Twenty-five years ago, first response knowledge of what to do after a suspected stroke wasn’t what it is now. Mother’s stroke was serious, debilitating. She had to use a wheelchair. She lost most of her ability to speak, even though she understood conversations.

Labour Day Weekend, 1995, Mom died. She was 76. Dad was a widower, who remarried Valentine’s Day 2000. He and my stepmother were together until August 2011, when he died aged ninety.

Around the time of the anniversary, I started antidepressant medication (Prozac). I started feeling good and decided that living with an active alcoholic wasn’t good for me, I made a decision to do an intervention on my alcoholic wife. Ultimately I got honest about my own drinking and cannabis use and got sober myself. My wife went to treatment on 6 July 1994, (Mother’s birthday coincidentally). I quit drinking 10 July 1994. Our marriage ended shortly after. I guess my ex-wife stayed sober most of that time. She stopped speaking to me in 2013. In 2015, she died, without telling me she was terminally ill.

In 2001, I remarried, converted to Catholicism in 2010. My elder brother died in December, 2014 at age 65. I had surgery in 2015 that ended my working career. I am a Stay At Home Husband. I blog, manage my health, swim, go to AA and Mass whenever I can.

It will be 4 March 2019 in about 92 minutes. My elder son now lives a few blocks from the building where his grandparents were married, in a more or less gentrified neighborhood. The Church itself moved about sixty two years ago.

This is a time of gratitude that my parents made that commitment to each other that brought my two brothers, my sister and me into this world. I have the life I have, for better or worse, for that decision they made seventy-five years ago.

I love you Dad. I love you Mom. I miss you both. We all turned out OK. You loved each other enough to risk everything for a life together. Thank you. We owe everything to you.

Kleider Machen Leute Or Clothes Make The Man

04 Monday Mar 2019

Posted by David in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Today I feel like crap. Seems like the bronchitis isn’t over and my Friday/ Saturday sleep deprivation did not help.

So today has been a necessary re-set. That doesn’t mean I am happy about that. I want to be swimming. I am so tired I can’t even have a good fantasy.

J and I ended up going to Bob Evans for a late lunch. I had a turkey sandwich. We were reticent to spend the money for Maggiano’s when we were both too tired to even enjoy the experience.

A little while ago, I piled up a lot of my clothes tee-shirts, logo tee’s (mostly from Ebbett’s Field Flannels), long sleeve tee-shirts, underwear (both briefs and boxers), dress shirts, cotton sweaters, and pyjamas.I haven’t started on jeans, trousers, the shirts on hangers in my closet. I also don’t know what fits and what doesn’t. It is daunting. Most of this represents good money spent.

A lot of this clothes buying represents me trying to create a character for myself. I can make a fashion statement, instead of doing hard work like writing or losing weight or swimming. In other words, doing stuff that matters more.

Note To Self: Forgive Yourself (it ain’t booze or dope n which you spent the money.)

This needs to be done. It’s like an enema for the house.

Passing Trains

03 Sunday Mar 2019

Posted by David in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

I just saw two Amtrak trains pass each other going through Ashland, Northbound #92 Silver Star and Southbound #79 Carolinian. I had a double whammy to take a train trip.

Journey Part IV

03 Sunday Mar 2019

Posted by David in Erotic Writing

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#massage

NSFW. Erotic Fiction. May Include Spanking & Other Kinky Stuff.

Six

Flor blew her nose on the proffered tissue. The Captain applied the arnica gel on her bruised buttocks. He acted as if rebellion and resistance were all part of these explorations. And acceptance of the behavior came with the territory. At heart, he wasn’t interested in the pushback. It was far more important to Flor than it was to him.

The kink dragons unleashed by the spankings weren’t all rapacious monsters. They were also playful little buggers. So when he finished with her aftercare, he told Flor,

“Looks like Greta is at the gym now, Beryl will take you back to the house.”

“Great,” she thought. “More players in on the game.”

The Captain opened the door, called her name and the Symphony In Flannel that was the gardener, that leering gardener, came inside.

“Flor needs some body work. Can you help out in Greta’s absence?”

“Sure. It would be my pleasure.”

The word sounded simultaneously innocuous and creepy.

Seven.

The walk back to the house was absent of tension or menace. It was down right relaxing.

“Let’s stop in the kitchen and get some cold bottled water.”

Beryl told Flor she was the trainer for her college softball team after her playing career ended and that she knew how to work with bodies strained by exertion and tension. Instead of the bedroom, Beryl took Flor to what was a training room, with the type of stainless steel whirlpool bath found in training rooms and body work tables. Through the glass partition, she could see the weight room where Greta and the chauffeur Barrows were working out.

“Let’s get you in the whirlpool for a while before I work on you.”

Matter of factly, she helped Flor into the tub and started the jets working.

“I’ll set the timer and be back in a short.”

When she returned, Beryl wore just her tee-shirt and spandex bike shorts. Flor immediately appreciated the muscled body, one of those female gym rat bodies that looked unattainable to pedestrian wretches like her.

Beryl helped her out of the bath, wrapped her in a large towel, took her to a massage table. There was a face cradle for Flor to place her head. Flor welcomed the relaxation and Beryl’s expert work.

As the tension vanished from her back, Beryl commanded, “Turn over” Flor turned over, her breasts, belly, her bare mound and vulva opened to Beryl’s view. She wondered if Beryl would want more, would take her as if she were another conquest, a stripe on her Butch sleeve. The suspense excited her.

Beryl worked on her thigh muscles, avoiding Flor’s lady bits, at least for the time being, then she moved to Flor’s pectorals and the massage caused Flor’s nipples to harden.

“Crap, she knows I’m liking this.”

Silently Beryl pulled on nitrile gloves, then took out a bottle of lube. Flor wanted to look, but she surrendered to the feeling, not caring really what Beryl would do. Then when her hand entered Flor, she sighed a slow and heartfelt Yes.

No one had touched her, claimed her, caressed her, used her, captured her like this. Intuitively Beryl’s tempo was exactly what Flor wanted. The tension came to a crescendo and Beryl’s gloved hand brought about the squirting Flor read about in Cosmopolitan and what other women whispered about, but didn’t think would happen to her. O-R-G-A-S-M. In Technicolor.

More release. At the hands of a stranger. And a little more of what she held inside came out.

A Long Ramble That May Have A Point.

02 Saturday Mar 2019

Posted by David in Modernism

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

#Yellow Vest #Edward_Bernays

Today, I went to my medieval philosophy discussion group. (Yawns erupt among readers.)

So what’s that about? We discuss questions of aesthetics and virtue. At the heart is the debate of whether reason springs from faith or if faith derives from what reason reveals. (another collective yawn.) I guess you had to have been there. Not to worry, the medieval thinkers themselves were engaged in similar questions.

I am increasingly engaged with why and how the underpinnings of our culture today came to be. Do we understand how Marx, Darwin, Nietzsche, and Freud influence our world today?

One example, seemingly tangential, but actually central to our understanding of the current modernist, consumer-driven world is the work of Edward Bernays. He was the nephew of Sigmund Freud and he put Freud’s ideas of subconscious motives into his own field of public relations, and from public relations to advertising.

One afternoon in 1923, he had three women light up cigarettes on Park Avenue, New York City, and smoke. It was publicized, as it was intended to be. Women smoking openly, back then when women didn’t, was a statement of equality between the sexes. After that little staged event, more and more women smoked. Critical to understanding public relations, as demonstrated by what we now view as this egregious stunt by Bernays, is that public relations and propaganda were considered to be synonymous. Bernays wanted to direct how you think and your decisions. That is exactly what Josef Goebbels did.

My point is that it didn’t just happen. We live in a world where much of what we hear has been tested out on focus groups before we ever hear it. The opinion makers want to know how we will respond so they can adjust their messages, and ultimately lead us toward their way of thinking. There isn’t supposed to be pushback.

The Yellow Vest Uprising in France should not be taking place. The citizens of France were not supposed to have grumbled about a new tax on fossil fuels and taken to the streets. The tax was intended to discourage fossil fuel use and thus decrease greenhouse emissions. The problem is that French workers can’t afford to live in the cities where their jobs are, e.g. Paris. So they need gasoline to drive from home to work and back. French citizens are not acquiesing to this carbon tax as an affirmation of their global citizenship. There seem to be fewer and fewer people wanting to venture into the Brave New World dictated to them.

Preview Of Coming Attraction

01 Friday Mar 2019

Posted by David in Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

Here they are folks, blooming in Richmond, VA

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