

Science fiction, fantasy, mystery and what-not
Woo-hoo. Welcome to Sunday, September 12, 2021, National Video Games Day! Yes, today is set aside as a day of observance and remembrance to the video games we loved and played. Yeah. A popular social media device is to ask you what your favorite video game was a child. I think mine was Etch-A-Sketch. Does that qualify? I do remember when Pong came out and we all played it for about twenty minutes. Ah, the seventies. What a period for video games.
Sunrise was 6:44 AM today. Sunrise cometh at 7:27 PM as daylight hours accordion down. AQI is moderate, mid seventies, and the high today will be in the low 80s F here in Ashland, southern Oregon.
I’ve already dated myself with my video game recollections. So, nothing to lose. I awoke with “25 or 6 to4” by the Chicago Transit Authority playing in the mental music stream. Its emergence for here and now isn’t clear. What is clear is that it’s stuck and must be shared to be removed. Chicago later dropped the last two words of its name. Its style changed, too. But, that’s how it goes with music.
So here it is, from pre-Internet, pre-worldwide web, pre-video games. Why I listened to this song on vinyl. Then tape. Now I listen to it on digits. Remember, stay positive, test negative, wear a mask, and get the vax. Now go play a video game while I get coffee. Cheers
Heat fed memories click on. Summertime in Pittsburgh, PA. The Good Humor truck. A race to get money for ice cream. The weight of decisions. Buying for little sisters.
Outside all day. Popping bubbles that rise in the asphalt. Riding bikes. Pedaling as fast as childishly possible to get the wind running your hair back. Playing with Matchbox cars in someone’s shady side yard. Trekking to the creek. Attempting to construct dams. Baseball, softball. Sometimes swimming at a public pool. Chlorine up your nostrils. Red eyes and wrinkled fingers. Walking around. Sweating. Fanning ourselves. Seeking Popsicles. Grinning as we drip with watermelon juice running down our chins. Sunscreen? Suntan lotion was used — at the beach or pool. Never anywhere else.
But…don’t ever recall a hundred degree heat. When ninety was encountered, oh my gosh, is it hot. I’m melting. Ninety now…give me ninety all day. We’re talking 113. 118. Sitting inside by the ‘puter. Or reading. Watching the cats melt.
Same planet. Different world.
Hello, world. Saturday, April 3, 2021 is or has arrived, depending on where you are when you read this. It could also already be gone by the time this post crosses your path.
The timestamp shows that Sol showed up in Ashland at 6:50 AM Pacific Time. She’s gonna cut out again at 7:39 PM. Meanwhile, she is warming us a bit, so we’re expecting a high temp in the low seventies F.
Today’s music is “Kodachrome”, brought to you by Paul Simon back in 1973. Over on Facebook, Mom shared a series of photos showing four to six young cousins from, the offspring of three different sisters, cuddling and playing in a chair at her house. These would be grandnieces and grandnephews to me. The oldest was ten and the ages dropped off to two. All are caught smiling and laughing. The photos were taken a few years ago.
It reminded me of going home at times. Home was always where mom or my mother-in-law lived. They always asked, “When are you coming home?” I may have left those homes when I was a teenager, establishing homes for me and my wife around the world, but our mothers always asked, “When are you coming home?”
Part of being back home was discovering the old family photos. As older relatives, boxes and envelopes of old photographs arrived. Time was spent studying these things. Sometime notes, dates, or memories established what we were seeing, but many times, we were left with questions of who, when, where?

Thinking of these digital photographs, caught on phones, transferred to computers, displayed on FB, I wondered what it’ll be like in fifty years for these children. Will FB be there to display the photos and remind them of who put it on the net? Or will they be processing through some machine on some night when their mind is restless, put in the right information and stumble across the photos by themselves? Will they remind that date, that chair, those cousins? Will they all still be tight as friends?
Stay positive, test negative, wear a mask, get the vax, and build some memories. Here’s the music, released back when I was a kid. Cheers
A wide selection of remembered dreams fill me this morning. Two acquired prominent positions so I’ll relate them.
The first was about a foot race. Younger, I was gathered along with about twenty other young men. I’d hazard that we were in our late teens/early twenties. We’d just run qualifying races that were one lap (don’t know the distance). Now we were to run the real race of five laps. For some reason, a staggered start was employed. Basically, I was required to wait for my name to be called, then put on my shoes and start running.
Young women of about the same age were in bleachers to watch and cheer us on. Hearing my name, I slammed on black running shoes and took off. I ran hard without breathing hard or breaking a sweat, passing competitors with impressive ease. Finishing, I was surprised, thinking, “Already? That was it?” Thinking that I’d won, or at least finished in the top three – hard to say because the staggered stop meant that we were being judged on time, not track position — I sought the results but couldn’t find anyone willing to give official results.
The next dream found me visiting the parents of childhood friends. I was a young adult; they were of the age they were when I knew them. I snuck into their brick two story house because I’d heard they had a boat in their basement, and I wanted to see their boat. Getting down there, I discovered, yes, they’d constructed a large sail boat in their basement. Admiring its white and blue hull, I circled the boat, astonished by their accomplishment, and perplexed about why they’d build a boat in their basement.
I realized I needed to get home. It was already late evening. The sun had set and I had several miles to go. I didn’t want to walk in the dark. Going upstairs, I found friends from my current life. I asked if I could get a ride with them. One answered, “Yeah, I have my car. You can ride with us.” His car, I knew, was a dark green 1970 Ford LTD. “But you need to wait,” he told me. “It’ll just be a little longer, then we’ll be done.” They were playing with Excel spreadsheets. I began playing with them, too, but didn’t know what I was looking at, and became bored. That’s when the dream ended.
Today is January 22, 2021. Sunrise is 7:33 AM and sunset is 5:13 PM in Ashland, Oregon, moving us closer to ten hours of sunlit. Our temperature is 37 F. Choppy layers of clouds, like pieces of clothing being sorted and stretched, are moving as the weather finds itself. A storm is shyly crowding in. We might have snow next week. We’ll definitely have colder weather.
Hammerin’ Hank Aaron passed away. Hammerin’ Hank broke Babe Ruth’s MLB home run record in 1974. I graduated high school and joined the military that year, so that’s childhood’s end for me.
When I think of my childhood, Hank Aaron and baseball were a large part of it, almost as big as music and politics. Music was defined by its growing presence on television and the increasing number of festivals and stadium shows. Other things from that era include the Doomsday Clock and the chance of the U.S. and U.S.S.R. using nukes, the Vietnam War and the peace talks, Watergate, student protests and riots in the 1960s, the oil embargo and gas shortages, and the explosive spread of cable television. Reasoner, Smith, Rather, Brinkley, and Hunt gave us the news at night. We were sending rockets with men in them to the moon and talking about the future of computers where everyone would have one in their home. The EPA had been created and the ERA was still a possibility, acronyms which were regularly discussed in school and on talk show panels.
It’s nice having President Biden in the White House. Nice not waking up to see what madness Biden’s predecessor was saying. Been a while since I read about a Karen employing privilege to insult and attack others. Coincidence? No.
Today’s song comes after another busy dream night. In one dream, I and others sometimes say, “There she goes,” in response to someone we’re looking for. In the course of thinking about that dream and phrase, the LA’s 1991 song, “There She Goes”, jumped into the thoughts. I guess my mind thought that would be helpful. It wasn’t.
Anyway, “There She Goes” is a strange song to me. It feels and sounds like something that should have been a hit in the early seventies or late sixties due its simple structure and sound. It’s also a brief song, under three minutes. Growing up with pop/rock, songs on the radio were typically three to four minutes long, so this song is ending just when you expect it to explode with something more. It doesn’t, leaving me asking, “Was that it?”
Here we go. Stay positive, test negative, wear a mask, and get vaccinated. Cheers
Out trudging our surrounding vales and hills yesterday, doing a mile in the afternoon, pushing for some cardio. Though a wintry sense hovered in the air, an inspiring freshness imbued it. Rain seemed headed my way from smell and look and the sun was taking a slow dive through purple and red scales. Such an atmosphere kicked in a well-remembered walking song, “Ramble On”, by Led Zeppelin (1969).
When I was young, my mother always told me, “You have two legs. Walk.” She also regaled us with her youthful walks. She lived in a tiny town, Turin, Iowa, on the floodplain’s edge. Her walk to school wasn’t far. Walking was the normal means of getting about town, and the town was made for walking. I know, because after hearing from her, I visited Turin one year, and walked around it. It’s just a few blocks square.
Her insistence that I have two legs and can walk kicked in a walking habit for me. Walking is mode of transportation, alone time, and a meditative process. It invigorates my writing efforts. Naturally, it also fuels memories. Playing into memories comes music. I always played some in my head when walking.
I had transistor radios when I was young. They were cheap and broke easily. Didn’t help that I would drop them. Battery-operated, new batteries was a constant issue. So, the music had to come from my head. “Ramble On” quickly became a walking fave. Its guitars, drums, and vocals, found an eager fan in my thirteen-year-old self. That thirteen year old seems to still be alive inside.
Stay positive. Test negative. Etc.
I’d been writing and reading yesterday. Returning to this world was like being a ball and having all my air slowly released. I felt disconnected and out of sync, and wanted to return to the book worlds.
There were things to do. Eating, errands, housework. When I drift off into the writing/reading world like this, my wife seems to grow annoyed. I suspect she wants me to do more around the house, be more social, talk more. This is how she defines humans and husbands, so I end up being short on both scales. I’m happy but she’s resentful. Or so it feels.
A song from my youth answered my thoughts. “Eight Miles High” by the Byrds came out in 1966. I was ten. Its psychedelic sound appealed to me back then. So did the lyrics, which come into play with my feelings.
Eight miles high, and when you touch down
You’ll find that it’s stranger than known
h/t to Genius.com
Yeah, I felt like I’d touched down, and it all seemed strange.
Great grandma McCune always talked in a cracking, laughing voice. My five year old eyes padded her age to the neighborhood of a hundred. Mom corrected me later. We just called her Grandma or Grandma McCune, if clarification was required about which woman was being referenced. Great grandma McCune was just eighty-six when she died, a petite woman with bright eyes and red lipstick who smelled like an unidentified powder and barely stood taller than me. That’s why I liked her. Despite her age, she was almost my height, never issued the usual adult intonations, and always canned and offered the best sugar plums around.
Walking down the cracked sidewalk in front of her Pittsburgh brownstone one June day, she seized my hand without a word. Such an action alarmed me. Mom always grabbed my hand to protect me. Moving closer to Grandma McCune’s blowing white apron, I looked for the danger around the tree shaded street.
“Do you feel that?” she asked.
I didn’t know what she meant.
“Feel the air. Smell it!”
Her commands kept me lost. Beginning to think she might be the threat, I edged back.
She was smiling. I never saw her not smiling. Mom said that was an act for the children. Betsy McCune, Mom told us, was a drinker, gambler, and cardshark. She loved playing games and betting on the outcome, especially poker and pinochle, but she was known to throw dice.
Great grandma McCune bent down to me, a small effort. “This is an All Day, a day when all the seasons are there. It’s special, magical. Don’t you smell the air? Can’t you smell the winter? Doesn’t it smell like it’s about to snow? This is a special day that sometimes happens, when your mind knows it’s supposed to be summer and it’s summer sunny but the wind feels like fall and the air smells like a snowy winter but all around you are the full blossoms and greenery that only spring gives us.”
I didn’t know what she spoke of, being too young to understand her differences, but her comments marked my consciousness. Her voiced words rose in me as I walked today. “It’s a special day,” she’d said, “when all the weather is present, even if you don’t know it. That makes it magical. Close your eyes, turn in a circle and make a wish and your wish will come true.”
Back then, I did as told, wishing for her sugar plums. I told her that after I’d finished the ritual. Laughing, she seized my hand anew, tugging me forward. “Then let’s make that dream come true.”
I would’ve wished for something more then but nothing came to my young mind. I didn’t seem to have dreams. War raged around the world and Mom and Dad were separated. Protected by Mom and the family, I didn’t know those things and didn’t know I should wish for them, didn’t know that the woman with me that day would be dead a month later, didn’t know her sweet little dog, Brownie, would die a week after her, all things that I might have wished against.
Smelling the air today with its tingle of snow in my nose and fall’s feel in the wind despite the summer sun and the spring surroundings, I thought of many All Day wishes I could make. Having never heard of All Day since my great grandmother told me about it on that early summer day, I thought I’d Google it.
The words had barely been typed in when I found myself on the street. A powder fragrance teased my nose before a fall wind blew it away. Struggling with orientation, I looked up and around as fabrics moved beside me. “Did you make a wish?”
The female voice was high, old, and close. Jerking as I heard, I whirled to see great grandma McCune. She took my hand. “Yes,” I said. “I wished for sugar plums.” How did I get here? I wanted to ask.
Grandma McCune laughed. “Then let’s make that dream come true.”
A few minutes later, we finished the climb up the crumbling cement steps and across her narrow porch with its swinging chair. Brownie arfed a greeting as she scrabbled down the hall. The outside screen door creaked protest as Grandma McCune opened it and she told Brownie to get down and behave. Feet thumping on the wooden floor, we stepped into the cool front hall where the air smelled of dust. Framed photographic portraits hung on the wall above my head, photos I’d seen many times but would never see again. Her husband, who I’d never met, a police offer who died of a heart attack, was in the largest portrait, encircled by the rest.
“Let’s get you those sugar plums,” Grandma McCune said.
Excited, I ran ahead of her into her tiny sunsplashed yellow kitchen with Brownie at my heels. I knew where the glass jars were kept in the pantry but knew I was not to touch them, for Grandma McCune feared I’d drop it. Stopping at the white door, I held still and looked back at her.
“Can you get a jar for me?” she asked. “Do you think you’re big enough?”
I nodded an answer.
“Okay, then, get me a jar but please be careful. Get back, Brownie, give him some room.”
Using utmost caution, I opened the door. The handle was a reach for my short arm and the tarnished brass handle dwarfed my chubby fingers. Pulling it open was an elaborate ritual of hanging on and backing up until I achieved enough clearance to push the door further back.
Ahead were the shiny, dusty Ball jars of stewed tomatoes, green beans, bread and butter pickles and sugar plums. Finding one of the last, I hauled the quart jar carefully forward, wrapping my arms around it and bringing its cool surface into my chest to safeguard the treasure.
“Good,” my great grandmother said. “Take it over to the table.”
I did, precariously managing to push it up and onto the surface. Grandma McCune took over, opening the jar, telling me about how she’d learned to can sugar plums when she was a little girl, learning at her grandmother’s elbow. Finding spoons and bowls, she gave us each a serving. “Sit down and eat it,” she said.
I did, relishing the taste as I spooned it into my mouth —
“Hello?”
Blinking, I looked up and around the noisy coffee shop. Jim was grinning down at me. “Where was your mind? I’ve been standing here for about three minutes.”
I looked at the Google page on m computer screen. No results found. “I was just remembering something,” I said.
“Well, whatever it was, you were deep in thought.” He touched the side of his grinning mouth. “You have a little something on your face.”
Putting my hand up, I found something wet, pulled my fingers away and stared at the little juicy fragment on my finger tip.
“What is that?” Jim asked.
Smiling, I replied, “It’s a little taste of magic.” I put it in my mouth, holding it on my tongue before swallowing. “Just some sugar plums I had earlier.”
“Sugar plums, huh? I haven’t had one of those in years. Well, see you later. Go back to your memory.”
Jim wandered off, leaving me to gaze out the window.
Some days really are magical.
– originally published June, 2014.
Had entertaining dreams last night that energized and inspired me. As I shaved and thought about them this AM, I thought, “That’s the way I like it.”
That thought inspired my brain to start singing “That’s the Way (I Like It)” by KC & The Sunshine Band. Released in 1975, the song was major background music to my young adulthood. My wife graduated from high school that year, and we married. I was in the military and experienced my first permanent duty assignment at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (WPAFB) where I worked in the AF Logistics Command in the Command Post. The next year, I was reassigned to the 3rd Tactical Fighter Wing, Clark Air Base, in the Philippines.
This song was played everywhere in those years, and was a song that drew everyone to the dance floor. Good times.