(Originally posted on the website Heron Flight)
Maybe giving me a cell phone with a camera wasn’t such a good idea.


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(Originally posted on the website Heron Flight)


(Originally posted on the website Heron Flight)
This is in a bar nearby.
I think every bar should have urinals equipped with handles. I’m tired of long nights of drinking that cause me to pee with such force that I knock myself down. Although, since I only have one hand to spare, how am I going to hold onto both handles? There is the fault in the design. If I only hold one I’ll just end up spinning myself around. Anyone waiting in line behind me isn’t going to be happy. Maybe they need to add a harness that straps around your waist. Or just one handle across the top. Or stirrups. (What?)


(Originally posted on the website Heron Flight)
Down from the sky in swooping madness descends THE MOTH, that foul fuzzy demon of the nighttime environs, compulsively and endlessly drawn to the light… for the sole purpose of terrorizing and disgusting the human folk.
Why? Why, shaggy lunar beast, must you be seen even in the day? Why with your under girth displayed through our window, fiendishly clinging to sheer glass by your infernal moth magic, do you bring your fearful specters to our waking hours? Is it not enough to badger us with flitting flights around our porch lights and stealthy enterings into our kitchens?
Two of my children, grown children no less, have an inordinate fear of moths, and most other insects. But their fear of moths, especially, is comical to me. Just let a moth flit in their direction and they are ducking and covering, running and screaming, reaching for weapons of moth destruction. Both the girl and the BOY display such responses to these harmless night butterflies. It makes no difference, mid-conversation, mid-dinner preparations, mid-carrying a newborn baby, they are tossing their arms in a panic and diving for cover. It’s only a fuzzy moth! Save the dramatics for the day scorpions fly.
Recently, I asked my daughter, “Why are you so afraid of moths? They don’t bite. They don’t sting. They don’t hunt you. They are pretty much like butterflies.”
Her response: “I don’t care much for butterflies either. But moths are creepy. They have BEARDS. ALL OVER!”
I pointed to my chin saying, “Hey! What’s wrong with beards?” adding, “That’s a cleverly creative way to describe these creatures. I’m going to use that one day.”
There. I did.
Bugs don’t freak me out. They and I have a Don’t-Bug-Me-And-I-Won’t-But-You policy. If you aren’t evil or poisonous, if you don’t bite or sting, I will usually assume you have good intentions and leave you alone. If you happen to wander into my house, I will escort you out and set you free 9 times out of 10.
Now, I am no hero. There are a few insects that are executed on sight, no warning, no fair trial, just SQUASH. Heading the list in this regard is the disgusting, filthy, hideous centipede, of whom I am insanely terrified. Once, one charged me as I sat barefoot on the edge of my bed. It tore across the carpet at top speed. I yelled, jumped and bashed the living daylights out of the evil-legged worm with a shoe repeatedly.
One of my daughters, startled, ran into the room asking, “What’s wrong?! What’s wrong?!”
I, crazy-eyed, shoe in hand, breathlessly answered, “Centipede!” as a hundred legs scattered about my bare feet still twitched.
So what’s my point? I don’t know. That centipedes suck but moths aren’t so bad? That we all have our phobias?
No, the moral of this story is that beards are cool, even if you happen to have them all over.
(The moth in the photo was on a window at my office this afternoon. See, moths are cool. This one gave me inspiration.)
(Originally posted on the website Heron Flight)
I feel lousy today.
“Lousy.” What a word.
According to The Merriam-Webster Dictionary, “The Words You Need Today” and “Over 35 Million Sold!”, and currently sandwiched between The Roget’s 21st Century Thesaurus and The 17th Century King James Version of the Bible on my desk, “lousy” means:
1. infested with lice;
2. POOR, INFERIOR (yes, in capital letters);
3. amply supplied (~ with money).
Guess which one describes how I feel.
No, not #1. Although, I would not complain about #1 if I could have #3 also.
Using our mighty powers of deduction, that leaves me feeling like #2. Yes, I feel like #2, a big ol’ doodie. An inferior doodie, if you will. A poor piece of shit. My bank account attests to the fact, as does my mental and physical states. (The last item probably having something to do with the evil tendency I wrote about yesterday.)
But which is worse? To be “lousy” or “loutish”?
Merriam? Webster?
“Lout” – a stupid awkward fellow.
Poor? Yes. Inferior? Probably. Infested with lice? If need be.
Stupid and Awkward? Never.
And now I found a new Power Insult: “You LOUSY LOUT!” I gotta go walk around the office and find someone to try it out on. NOW!