Friday, May 1, 2020

May 2020: Seven Weeks Vacation, Ratt Rules And Civilians Suck, "Faggot Security Guards," "Are You Looking For A Baby Goat?"

     "The faith is what makes it possible to live with uncertainty...  Fundamentalists would rather have a God that is cruel than have a world that is out of control.  They invariably subordinate God's love to God's power.  These people believe in God, Adam Smith, and George Patton...all merged together."
     More important, evil signs in the world may not [indicate] the "end time" at all, but mere "seismic shiftings," "shadowy reminders" of the possible.  "If we lie around weeping...  It is not enough, not human. We were called upon to do more in the world than weep about the state of affairs.  With that stance, there is no impulse to resist Armageddon."  In short, Armageddon is overrated.
     ...a papal decree forbidding further elective political activity.  ...Pope John [Paul II] had become increasingly disturbed about the political involvement of priests in Latin American revolutions...and wished to send a symbolic warning...  ...in the past the church had associated itself with the upper class, now it is identifying with the poor.  "There will be more situations like Nicaragua, where the church will promote political liberty and economic freedom.  The Catholic Church does not stand aside...  Inevitably you're going to have political revolutions.  ...if there is no relief...  That's okay, if the Nicaraguan model is followed.  Nobody wants a Communist state or heavy Cuban influence.  There is no one model for the future.  But all over the continent, priests are telling people, "Cry for justice!"
     "Discord is not going to decrease.  Time will come when you have to take up the sword against your neighbor or flee to a few havens in the world where there are solid communities to promote peace."  ...seek to live a saintly life in the midst of turmoil and with the expectation of war.  "No one should rejoice in war, but it is part of the prophetic future."
     ...his big dream...deemed by many as the perfect marriage of religion and Hollywood.  An autographed photograph of John Wayne...near one of Billy Graham and the snapshot...with the Pope.  Sitting in his office...gazing out on the freeways and office buildings and the hot plain where [he] says 500,000 "hurting" people hunger for spiritual upliftment.  I feel as if I am with the hotel magnate who started out with a simple root beer stand.  ...this message...his "theology of self-esteem."  And it sells.  "In the latter part of the twentieth century we are experiencing nothing less than a theological reformation as deep and abiding as the event in the sixteenth century.,"...alluding to the Protestant Reformation.  "Self-esteem is the central verity, the north star, the central mark of the emotionally healthy person."  - OMNI Magazine, 12/1981

     Herb...Caen lived and breathed the city.  ...he was always trying to find the city's heart.  ...he always imagined he was writing...for a simple housewife...  And, to the dismay of his high-society friends, he raised a ruckus over the massive high-rise developments that were beginning to overshadow the gleaming white skyline he fell in love with as a boy.  Sometimes it's necessary [of] the city's business class, the columnist later remarked, to remind them that a city...is more than just a real estate opportunity - it's "a precious, special, fragile place."  Caen was the city's convivial conscience...  - Talbot

     If there are two hours in my three years and three days at United Artists that remain in memory as pure unambiguous pleasure, they are these two.  (...the movie's title appears only as the blinking neon sign of the Manhattan Hotel)…  The defensive, neurotic behavior, the angst - real or imagined - of those overeducated overachievers...  ...the movie is about...faithlessness...from urban lyricism to sentiment.  What I found in these two hours...too cynical to expect anymore: some kind of enchantment.  I left the screening room...down a nearly deserted Sixth Avenue.  The skyscraping piles of steel and glass that in daylight seemed so forbidding and faceless navigated with city lights.  I could hear Gershwin...or thought that I could [among] the empty street and..purple sky, I remembered all the reasons I had always wanted to be in the movie business.  - Bach

     Day 39.  It's a hot day, and I'm out on my bike.  With the exception of the loss of thousands of human lives, all would be right with the world.  In spite of a rather steamy late Spring.  I can't torture my broken bike anymore, it needs to be repaired, or else I need another.  I do have its predecessor in the basement.  This other one hasn't been right since I attempted to pass a young Caucasian pedestrian couple on a sidewalk.  In an attempt to get onto the grass, I didn't anticipate the raised edge of ground to be so tough, and the horse threw me.  I was fine.  The bike suffered a rear rim warped in two places.  It still rides, but the rear rim scrapes.  And both sets of brake shoes need replacing.  But this one has real suspension.  I notice the easier ride as soon as I climb on it.  I'm proud of a rear reflector which I jury rigged out of a handful of spare parts.  The original rear reflector is on the original seat, which I switched out for this softer one.  The bike I ride to work is the standard 28 inch wheel base.  The broken one is 29 inches.  This one is 26 inches, and I had to raise the seat post dangerously high.  But the shifters are in fine shape, like night and day between this and the broken bike.  All it needs is air in the tires and I'm off.  It's out to grab a soda from my restaurant friend before I head to the park for the lunch I brought with.  Then it's back over to the downtown supermarket for a couple of items before I head back home.  Along the way, I stop at a 7-Eleven for another soda.  Inside, I spot a ginormous Mother's Day cards.  I no longer purchase for my own mom, who is no longer with us.  But I know someone special with a son.  The trick is figuring out how to secure it to the bike rack with a single short bungee cord.  But, I'm good at this.  If a single bungee cord is good enough to take my mom's walker to the rec center, I should be able to decipher this puzzle.  And secure it is.  I don't recall if the tires on this bike are road-hazard-resistant.  I don't get any flats and it's clearly a smoother ride.  And in spite of a rattling back rack, this ride is much quieter than the loud, grinding one of the broken bike.
     Day 41.  A Facebook friend mentions that today is Nude Hiking Day.  I'm headed west to stop by the sister's place, to drop off some supermarket coupons.  Along the way, I'm coming down a residential street.  An SUV is stopped in the middle of the street, in front of an intersection.  A handful of young adults are huddled close around the car.  One young adult guy is lying on his back in the opposite lane.  A young woman carried a skateboard around the front of the vehicle, past the guy on his back and over to the sidewalk.  A second SUV is stopped at the intersection, on the intersecting street.  At first glance, it may appear as if these two vehicles were part of an accident.  But this does not appear to be the case.  In fact, I don't see any other vehicle which appears to be involved.  Someone in the other SUV asks the group if the guy on his back is okay.  I don't hear any answer.  The other SUV drives off.  An oncoming SUV slowly passes the one stopped in the street.  No one appears to be offering the kid in the street any immediate assistance.
     Day 42.  Beginning yesterday, judging from the increase in traffic, many have decided to accept the mayor's original invitation to return to work on the 1st of this month rather than the 8th.  I don't quite ride the distance today I otherwise would, all the way to work and back.  But I have an overdue appointment at the copy place, and more to do than I have time to ride today.  I first stop at the post office.  I was there yesterday.  I wasn't sure if they were open, but I have a giant Mother's Day card to mail.  I planned on dropping it in their postal box.  I have a small postal scale at home and used what I believed were enough stamps.  It turns out that it's too big to fit through any slot.  I checked the front door and discover that they are open Monday through Saturday.  An unwashed guy with scraggly hair is perched on a bus bench in front of the building.  He looks like a TV character from the 1970s.  So I must return today.  I'm in the copy place before any other customers.  It fills up shortly thereafter.  I'm working at one machine, which appears to be the only self-service machine upon which all cylinders are firing.  One old guy is waiting and waiting for the single fax machine to either send or to receive.  Every so often, he quietly says out loud, "Jesus Christ."  Another old guy comes in, or is it the same one?  He just needs a couple of copies and can't get the other copier to work.  A guy comes in with his young kid.  To make copies he wants to know, "Do I put them face down?"  I get my business taken care of. and I'm headed next door to the supermarket for a skinny hot chocolate.  In line at for the barista, I can hear a clerk wiping down shopping carts.  She's telling customers without face masks that they must have one on to do their shopping here.  A young woman come loping inside.  Her mustard colored stretch jeans slung low, the sides of her head are shaved and she has dreadlocks down to her butt.  She gets turned around and comes loping back with her mask.  One guy sneaks past unnoticed, with shoulder-length grey hair.  I grab my beverage and spot the guy checking out.  I'm curious what will happen to him.  I mention that he slipped past to another clerk and discreetly identify him checking out.
     Day 43.  Cinco de Mayo.  I'm headed over to a supermarket next to the copy place, where I was yesterday.  It's the same chain as the one up north, which has the single product my regular supermarket doesn't carry.  After I grab said product, I'm headed across the avenue...  I found a closer yogurt place!  And, they've reopened.  I will still need to make the 30 mile ride to get my brand of sunblock, but this place is on the way to work.  When I return to work.  And they have their toppings out for use, which the other yogurt place doesn't have.  This place is still take out only, but I see people sitting at the tables outside.  The other place is located in a different municipality, which may have a different timeline for fully reopening.  Reopening.  Another word with a new meaning.  Today, I do go all the way past work, to see my pal at the restaurant.  He tells me that it has been decreed: tomorrow, masks will become mandatory for everyone inside of a business.  I remind him that I would never know any of this unless I come here and he tells me. He says he should be charging me for his information.   He also tells me, they hope to be open for dine in business beginning this Monday.  I do a kind of loop, heading home the way I would from work.  I stop and the downtown supermarket for a few things along the way.  Along the way home, I pass a kid outside of his home.  He's washing the seat of what appears to be a kitchen chair with soap and water.  Is he sequestered at home from school and his mom is inventing things for him to do?  I turn a corner and see a motorcycle with a Mexican flag on the back.  I see the occasional American flag on a truck or mounted outside the odd home.  But with gatherings cancelled, a lone rider literally shows the flag.  Home again, I put away the food and go out to check the mailbox.  At the apartments directly across the street, a couple of the young Mormon missionary residents are returning home themselves.  They are identically dressed, except for one kid.  His wardrobe includes a thin navy sweater, and a ten gallon cowboy hat.  I don't know how they roll next door in Utah, but I believe this is the very first sweater and ten gallon hat I've ever seen.

     My then network was an echo-chamber...  ...woke, progressive, social justice-driven...  I...read about...Andrew Yang...who proposed The Freedom Dividend, a universal basic income (UBI) of $1,000 per month...a response to the automation of...jobs across the US...  His wife was beautiful...supportive and well spoken.  His boys brought positivity...for future generations.  The entire package represents the modern American Dream.  ...the candidate with it all...  [Myself and another Yang supporter] canvassed the 16th Street Mall together...and packed hundreds of sack lunches for the homeless...  - Asian Avenue, 3/2020

     "...the Uber drivers and the restaurants and the hotels and the museums, the art and culture and the retail...we need these people."
     Her experience has led...to trust the homeless, the disenfranchised and the poor more than the rich, the government, service providers and especially the police.  …"yuppies"...give her anxiety.  "People don't want to use the same bathrooms as us; they don't want to be seen around us.  Homeless people are being looked at as the virus."  ...many people have been left on the streets, or rounded up into the new consolidated shelters at the National Western Center and the Denver Coliseum.
     "You could see the skyline.  There was nothing but tracks and Union Station.  That was seventeen years ago."  ...he documents the city's communities that are being pushed toward extinction by predatory development.  "A lot of the new buildings are going up in places where eighty-year-old homes stood."  ..what they call "digital gentrification" - the way communities are pushed out of a city, not just...priced out...but also by being ignored in the photographic record shared by urban boosters online.  "When I go to L.A....they have no idea that there's a lowriding scene here.  ...that this place is full of Chicanos who have been here for generations.  Over the past decade...photographer Armando Geneyro...has documented the west side's working-class Chicano community, indigenous dancers, lowrider clubs, poets, artists, parks, activists and more.
     [My boulevard's Business Improvement District] is the smallest in Denver...stretching only [for five blocks.]  ...most federal, state, and city relief funds have been funneled through banks, and if business owners don't have close relationships or loan officers, or if the paperwork and application process prove too confusing, their shut off from the possibility of economic aid.  "...many of these minority- and women-owned small businesses"...lack the resources to get the word out that they're still open through social media or advertising...  - Westword, 5/7-13/2020

     ...a Denver Division of Public Safety cadet, helps set up a library inside the makeshift shelter for unhoused men at the National Western Center.  - Washington Park Profile, 5/2020

     ...washing...hands...  I'm coming clean...  ...gee whiz people, are we taking this too far?  The odds of getting run over by a bus are really close to biting the dust at the hands of the coronavirus...  ...has anyone ever cancelled a sporting event - or a sock hop, or an ice cream social - because of the flu?  Has the flu otherwise taken a healthy economy and chopped it off at the knees?  ...does this craze reek of ratings and political positioning?  ...tell the truth...  I wouldn't want to cash a check if it was given to me for creating global pandemonium.  - Mile High Sports, 4/2020

     Even before the pandemic hit, rents were skyrocketing in the Baker neighborhood and business was slow...  Plenty of surrounding businesses had already boarded up.  "It made it kind of harder, so things were a little thinner.  But it was still survivable and I still wanted to be able to sell it and walk away from my investment with something.  But that's not what happened."  ...he envisioned...something like the CBGB of the West, a spot that could encourage a local music scene and bands touring the country in their vans.  ...the spot...was for sale...  ...the timing of opening...was pretty amazing, as both the area and the music scene were on an upswing.  "We got in at a really good time and had great local support and great neighbors.  It couldn't have been any better.  I just wish it didn't end the way it did."  ...a lot of bar and restaurant owners...complain about turnover, and we just didn't have that.  We had good solid people."  ...he has no idea what will happen to the space...  "There's going to be a real estate issue.  That thing could sit for who knows how long."  - Westword, 5/21-27/2020

     Day 44.  I'm on my way home from a last quick trip to the copy place, a stop for more yogurt, and another visit to my pal.  I'm headed for my avenue when I meet another cyclist at a corner.  It's a young and cute Caucasian mom.  She's in a pink Polo shirt and pastel blue shorts, and she's pulling a bike trailer with her child inside.  I compliment her bike.  She's the first mom I can recall giving her child a ride with her bike and trailer.  I suspect that this will be the summer of the Caucasians.  Speaking of which, the following day, in my mailbox appears a mailer advertising homes for sale.  These homes are located in the neighborhood adjacent to my own.  Day 45.  It's another ridiculous 100 mile bike ride.  And I even forgot to pick up more sunscreen, which was the reason for the long trip to begin with.  However, I did get some last minute copying done.  And along the way home, I had an early dinner at a big park with a lake.  The sun sparkling off ripples, and a clear blue sky.  When I get home, I have a couple of messages from my boss.  When I reach him, he tells me that he can't remember what he wanted.
     Day 45.  It's back toward the one pharmacy in the greater metro area which has my sunscreen.  Along the trail, I turn off at a strip mall.  I stop into a giant Target for a snack.  Then back down the trail.  I exit the trailhead just before I enter a ritzy neighborhood.  Since I've been riding this way again last month, I've various mansions along the way are forever having remodeling done inside, or having carpets cleaned, or some such van is parked out front.  One tall bush next to a front door has a red "Make America Great Again" cap on its peak.  I remember the Christmases of 2015 and 2016, when I worked at this shopping center with the yogurt place and the pharmacy.  I would ride home through here in the dark.  Everyone would had their Christmas lights up.  The yogurt place is a bakery which also makes sandwiches.  When I worked down here, the original owners sold it to new owners, because they wanted to spend more time with their kids as they grew up.  Now the bakery has a new sign on the door.  The current owners are themselves looking for new buyers for the same reason.  I head home up the boulevard rather than the trail.  When I get a couple of city blocks north, I turn down a street to scout out a path back west.  Then BAM!  I recognize this route.  Was it the summer of 2015?  I spent it working at another location for the company.  And I crossed this boulevard and came down this very street on the way home.  I've stumbled onto yet another previous route I used to ride to and from work.  Eastman Street.  And late in the afternoon I'm retracing familiar twists and turns.  I forgot this neighborhood had attractive women out and about, as it does today.  Another long ride, and I'm home again.
     Day 46.  In the morning, I do a short ride out to a supermarket where I pick up the single product I can find only at this chain.  It's early evening when I get another call from the general manager where I work.  He wants me to meet with he and the owner at our plant on Monday.  WE are to discuss the details, but the plan has come down: we are reopening all our stores on Wednesday.  God.  The time has flown by.  I suspected as much would happen.  Day 47.  I head out to refill some vitamins and grab a skinny hot chocolate for desert.  With whipped cream.  And peppermint.  I'm at the supermarket where the guy snuck in without a mask on.  Posted on the front doors are notices requiring customers to wear masks inside the store.  There's another customer in the checkout line.  He has a mask hanging off one ear.  A clerk tells him he must wear it inside the store.  The customer replies that he's fine wearing the mask, but he expects all customers to be told.  I don't see any other customer not wearing a mask.  I'm out of the hizzy and up to my friend's restaurant.  I thought they were open on Sundays during the sequester.  They ain't.  I'm outta there and stop to take a quick look at my store, scheduled to reopen on Wednesday.  There's a new plant just inside the door.  I head over to my gym, where there is one new posting on the door.  It says everyone coming inside must wear a mask.  No new info on when they will open.  Curious talismans abound.  And I ain't seen nothin' yet. I head for the trail from downtown back home, but I turn west instead of south, toward the sister's place.  She called to tell me that her husband made me a face shield to use over my mask.  I haven't heard about these yet, but I may as well pick it up in case it materializes that I'm suddenly expected to use one. So, I'm coming down a street I've never taken.  I'm walking the bike up a steep hill.  near the crest, I see a shirtless middle-aged homeless guy in jeans and work boots.  He has a camp with a blanket and an easy chair.  He's scooping something up in a snow shovel.  He has filthy blonde hair to his shoulders and love beads around his neck.  He's listening to his phone.  He greets me by letting me know he's listening to a documentary about an old band called Ratt.  He's cradling the shovel as he asks me if I saw a dumpster behind the corner of the building I just passed.  "I just can't handle the glass the civilians leave behind," he tells me.  (Civilians?)  I didn't notice any dumpster, and he joins me in my hike up the hill.  He compliments my bike and tells me he had one like it.  Someone stole his "tires and cables."  He doesn't say if it was the brake or the shifter cables.  He's engrossed in his phone's documentary.  Ratt's 1983 album cost over $100,000 to make, he says.  I crest the hill and cross my boulevard before I'm across a bridge over a highway.  I turn through a park.  Strewn across the trail is an overturned shopping cart.  It appears to have rolled down a steep embankment and tipped over.  Most of it's contents are still inside.  A couple turns the corner of the trail on their bikes.  The mom is pulling a bike trailer.  I tell her to "Watch out for the odd shopping cart."

     I explained that the...physical universe is essentially crystalline.  ...music also...crystalline...constitutes an important "seam" between the spiritual and the material worlds.  ...a longer or a more vital life comes to those who...find the crystalline harmonies undergirding the "whole" of Nature.  "The volcanoes surrounding us...they're 'frozen music'...  The entire physical universe is God's dream...inscribed as a secret crystalline music.  You and I are parts of the dream that have awakened.  We must awaken the rest.  We must draw the music of God's thought out of the physical..."  - "Vox Olympica", by M. Bishop

     Day 48.  I'm out the door and headed for a dentist appointment.  I'm across my boulevard, all the way past the park, and coming up on a steep downhill.  Around a corner comes a baby animal which I believe I recognize right away.  I don't comprehend as quickly as I should, because I'm not used to seeing farm animals roaming the streets of either my neighborhood, or among the rest of the greater metro area.  When it makes a noise, then I get it.  A lamb is going "Baaa" as it steps along the sidewalk.  Just then, an SUV blows through the stop sign and comes to a halt.  We're facing the opposite direction from each other, stopped dead center of the residential intersection.  A young mom is at the wheel and her window is down.  I ask her if she's looking for a baby goat.  "It's mine," she replies.  One of her young daughters jumps out and chases after it.  My comprehension continues to lag behind my recognition.  Is a 4 way stop sign intersection being blocked by both an SUV and my bike?  Did I, for the first time in my life, even during the 12 years I lived in Oklahoma or the 2 1/2 I lived in Kansas, just ask the driver of an SUV if she is looking for a lamb?  And is a young girl chasing a lamb down the street?  The girl is chasing the lamb, the SUV takes off after the girl, and a police cruiser pulls up to the stop sign on the street perpendicular to us.  Don't look at me, I'm going to the dentist.  As often as I'm at the dentist these days, it's a familiar crosstown ride.  I'm in and out in an hour and a half, with a new temporary crown and clean teeth.  ...and it's raining.  First I'm in the middle of a lamb chase in front of the police, and now it's raining.  I should mention that I didn't bring my poncho.  Fortunately, it's not bad and I'm home in plenty of time to eat a quick lunch, before my meeting with the owner and general manager where I work.  It's not a long ride to our plant.  I arrive just as the owner shows up.  He says we don't need the manager to let me know that I can return to work as soon as tomorrow.  And he's giving me full time.  Through his own intrepid and tireless efforts, he has qualified for and secured a business loan.  Allowing him to rehire me and open his stores, with the purpose of jump starting the business again.  The only thing is, I will being working at a store a bit further.  But it's the store he purchased from the guy I used to work for, and the store where I worked for just about two years.  So...  So ends the first furlough during my working career.  I've enjoyed the time off, but it's good to be working again.  I can't believe that my days were filled with things to do.  This must be a good sign for my eventual retirement.  But I'm getting ahead of myself.  Way ahead...
     I'm done with this "Day" followed by a number stuff.  Some have lost their jobs.  It's the middle of the month, and I'm doing the same ride to work now that I was doing occasionally over the previous two months.  It's 25 or 30 miles one way.  On Tuesday, my first day back to work, I remember doing the ride in as little as an hour and fifteen minutes.  This morning, I'm hauling groceries with me to stock up the fridge.  I'm dismayed when I arrive some 13 minutes late.  Wednesday, I give myself more than two hours to do the ride.  Today I'm carrying canned beverages.  It takes me a solid two hours. And this isn't all.  My furlough together with my doctor check up has allowed me to reorganize my diet.  Working six days a week, my entire schedule has changed.  I have to figure out when to both grocery shop and prepare meals for the week.  And I'm starting my shift either two or three hours earlier and having to set my alarm clock (depending on the day of the week) for the first time five years.  I somehow knew my beloved afternoon shift couldn't last.  This could last for four months according to the owner.  Who can tell?  I've written about this particular store elsewhere here in this blog.  It's been more than a decade since it's loved manager Mrs. Lilliana Castaneda passed away from Lupus.  Inside of two months.  Leaving behind a six-year-old and a husband, and who knows how many friends.  Just last summer I visited her grave.  She worked under a previous owner.  I've written about the following owner, the madness of his tenure, and my 2 1/3 years at this store while he owned it.  I worked here Saturday, 8/23/2017.  The following day, the general manager called me to say that 1) the company was closed, and 2) I had a new job waiting for me the next day at the owner's store way up in Northwest Denver.  That following Monday, 8/25/2017 began another 1 1/3 year adventure.  Until the owner admitted that he had that store on the market.  Which precipitated my first job search in almost 14 years, my efforts to update my resume and searching the businesses in expanding radii around my home, before I found my first ever job online.
     On Thursday, I'm locking the door after we close when I see a guy I know.  He works at the restaurant a few doors down.  I give him the short version of the above story.  He tells me he bought the restaurant with his daughter, and they open on June 1st.  It begins to rain and I put on my brand new poncho.  By the time I get to the trailhead, I'm riding in pouring rain with the sun out.  Only in Colorado.  I've been grabbing some groceries on the way home, including the single product I can get only at a particular grocer.  The trail will eventually take me close to one.  I' headed inside with a customer who has no mask.  A couple of employees stop him and mention the policy.  "I was in here yesterday without a mask," he replies.  Then it's back on the ride home. Yesterday, the Chinese place across the street from home opened for take out, for the first time in a couple of months.  I'm across the street from there now, and a couple of police cruisers are parked next to each other, blocking the entrance from my avenue.  An office has one of his passenger side doors open, and he's holding a skinny handcuffed guy with tattoos on his face.  I don't know what the guy's story is, but I notice he has no mask.
     Friday.  For the first time in five years, instead of sleeping at 4:30 AM I'm shaving and then working out, with cinder blocks, until the rec centers open again.  And I don't expect to be back at my old rec center as long as I'm working where I am.  After procrastinating for the first quarter of this year, I finally bought an annual pass to the gym there.  A few days later, they closed down for the sequester.  I'm out the door to work some time after 5.  I'm cruising past the bus stop across the street.  In the shelter are a trio of homeless.  Two women sit on the bench as a guy stands.  He's wearing neon yellow camouflaged pants.  I have this ride to work down now to an hour and forty minutes.  I roll into the shopping center and over to a Starbucks, for a skinny hot chocolate.  When my drink is ready, a young woman pulls up and gets out of her car.  She's in a crop top and instead of abs, she's gone for a successfully sculpted stomach.  But the striking thing about her is the virtual digital seamlessness of her even tan.  She could pass for a loaf of wheat brad from an Easy Bake oven.  Fridays and Mondays are scheduled as nine-hour days.  After I arrive home, I run out to water the flowers and run back inside, before I run out again to grab food from the Chinese place.  Standing on someone else's porch is the son of one of my Vietnamese neighbors.  It's the wacky son who walks around the parking lot slowly and panhandles at said Chinese place.  The porch belongs to another Vietnamese family.  He having a smoke.
     Saturday.  My bike is low on brake fluid once again.  I need to retrieve the extra brake fluid I left at my old store downtown.  After work, I'm through the old money neighborhood and down the trail.  I'm headed past the waterpark.  I called yesterday and spoke to my old rec center when I worked down here.  They also sell the season passes to the waterpark.  They tell me...they may in fact open sometime this summer.  If I'm working down here through the summer...I could go swimming every day.  Once again.  A man can dream.  I turn off the trail and head for the train.  The transit system has suspended it's fares until further notice.  This is the first time I've been on it in a couple of months.  A train comes along in jig time and whips me to another station where I grab a train into downtown.  I ride to my old store, grab the brake fluid, and stop across the street at the Muslim pizza place for takeout fish and onion rings.  Then I'm off the park next to my old rec center to eat it.  Late in the afternoon, I'm sitting in the park and watching who I suspect are some of the young residents of the new condos nearby.  There are three guys and a young woman tossing around a football.  She's beautiful in her simple cropped shirt, shorts, and hair in a single braid under her ball cap.

     Writing is personal, but it also builds a connection with people...  "For some, it's a way of self-expression."  ...a free course for people who have recently experienced or are currently experiencing poverty, addiction, homelessness...and free workshops for essential workers "designed to help nurture personal insight and emotional grounding."  …"students...they're willing to write about everything in their lives."  - Washington Park Profile, 5/2020

     I had read and approved the script of..."Manhattan"...  [I was invited] to Michael's Pub on Third Avenue, where Woody and his friends played Dixieland jazz on Monday nights.  I...took along with me a list of the allusions peppering the "Manhattan" script...fearful that some of them were too esoteric...dependent on some degree of literacy.  …"Jokes"...unlikely to roll them in the aisles of Des Moines.  The list read: "Strindberg, Mahler, Jung, Dinsen, Fitzgerald (Scott and Zelda), Kafka, Cezanne, Flaubert, Mozart, Nabokov, Whitman, Coward, Boll, Brecht, O'Neill."  Michael's Pub was bouncing.  The concentration of energy on the music seemed an attempt to efface both the room and his own star celebrity...  ...Woody scrambled down to meet us at the table.  Woody was finally reprieved by the intrusion of a tourist, a German woman who...thrust into his face a copy of "Der Spiegel," containing a good review of his book...  He was gracious and modest...when she ordered him, in a...Teutonic accent...to keep the magazine.  ...I fought...out onto the sidewalk...in the hot evening air heavy with the smell of melting asphalt.  I spotted in line a young couple I knew.  ...as representative of the general public as anyone was likely to meet that night.  I...read...my list of names.  The only one they didn't know immediately was Heinrich Boll...
     Six days later The Polo Lounge at the Beverly Hills Hotel [knows Michael] Cimino...  [The Lounge] attracts a conspicuously Guccied and Cartiered crowd, drawn by...the sun-dappled atmosphere...under the leaves on the patio outside.  Cimino's choice [of restaurant] seemed...curiously establishment (the younger crowd...calls it the Polio Lounge)…  Cimino may be a maverick, I thought, but clearly not a rebel.
     [I] might be undercut by...Dino De Laurentiis...in his impeccable silk tailoring and that whatever personal glory I had been spinning webs to ensure might be swept away in a flourishing gesture of that fine Italian hand.  Dino...turned the conversation to...promotion [of his film.  United Artists president] Albeck deftly turned aside any commitments for expenditures until his "boys" (distribution) had seen it and estimated its grosses.  Dismay lifted Italian eyebrows.  "How can you estimate grosses without knowing what you will spend for marketing?" De Laurentiis asked.  He swiftly began spinning success around the picture like linguine with a fork.  De Laurentiis method was always to assert that he was inches away from a deal with Paramount, Universal, whatever...  Albeck wasn't playing the game...  I wanted to applaud the performance and kill the performer.   - Bach

     Monday.  I'm on my way this morning to a physical exam with my primary care physician.  From home, I cross the street to the bus stop where I toss some trash in the can.  A guy on the bench tells me, "That was a good drop off."  In jig time, I'm at a major train hub.  A train pulls up and a homeless guy gets off.  He lifts the lid from a trash can with his fingers and flips it through the air.  It lands on the concrete.  he walks off.  I replace it on the can.  That was not a good drop off.  Some eight hours later, I'm riding home through an old-money neighborhood.  It's late afternoon.  I see more than one dad sitting in his back yard, on a patio lounge chair.  They are both in shorts.  One has his kids nearby.  I turn onto a horse trail.  Back yards appear behind trees lining the trail.  I pass one middle-aged woman watering foliage.  On the trail and onto the connecting trail, I'm close to exiting this trail.  I'm approaching an underpass when I'm passed by a homeless guy.  He's on a bike pulling a "trailer" rigged from a wheelchair.  Wednesday.  I'm off work and have just turned into an old money neighborhood.  Right behind me are a trio of Caucasian guys on ten-speeds.  We're all in black cycling shorts.  The trio have the complete outfit, including patterned cycling shirts.  They've passed me and we all cruise past a new mansion, under the finishing touches of construction.  The guys working on the home are all in Carhartt gear, and I hear them conversing in Spanish.  One of the trio says to the others, "When I get my home built, I want...(blah blah blah)."   Saturday.  I'm up earlier these days.  Around 4 AM, I hear what sounds like someone emptying the magazine of a handgun.  Some four hours later, I'm unlocking the door at work.  A couple is slowly walking their dog past me.  The guy is speaking to the lady, and I believe that he is discussing when the local pools will open.  He mentions the date of July 1st.

"Get A Real Job, Faggot Security Guards!"
     Sunday is the day before Memorial Day.  I run down to the supermarket and return before the first rain comes down.  Stores are reopening.  My camera place is open again.  They are not open today, but they claim to be open tomorrow.  That's a longer crosstown ride and back.  Today, instead I decide to run over to the local hardware place.  I'm out of weed killer.  Rain is forecast, but I neglect to take my poncho.  Not only this, I'm convinced that it's somehow a bit warmer when noon comes around.  So I'm out of the door in a T-shirt and windbreaker.  It's 60 degrees F.  I stop along the way to grab a quick lunch, and I take it to a bus shelter to eat it.  I have the shelter to myself.  Some rain is coming down now and it's as good  a shelter as I can hope for.  It's on a busy avenue, and behind the shelter is a big empty lot which stretches from the street to a concrete wall.  The wall has murals of stylized urban views.  Against the wall is a perpetual homeless tent and bicycle camp.  From my perch in the shelter, I watch one guy riding down the sidewalk coming from under a train bridge, headed my direction.  He has his left hand on the handlebars, and with the right, he's holding the frame of another bike.  This frame has a single wheel, which is rolling on the ground as he holds it.  The rider crosses an off ramp for the interstate and begins to cross the avenue.  He has a red light, because the traffic he's crossing through have both a green left turn light and a green light.  They honk but wait for him.  He returns back from across the avenue with only the frame which has the single wheel.  He left his bicycle somewhere on the other side of the street.
     Past the shelter comes a handful of cyclists, followed by a pair of homeless riders pulling their own homemade bike trailers.  The first of this pair of homeless sojournants has a long sign attached to his rig. It announces his efforts to clean up the street corners where he stops.  His trailer contains a rake for leaves among yard other tools.  I passed him parked on the bridge over the interstate.  The second homeless, trailer-hauling rider I also passed along the way here.  He walks his rig past the bus shelter.  He's younger and doing the dreadlock thing.  His own sign is on the rear of the trailer, where a license plate would otherwise be.  I can't recall what it reads.  He heads across the off ramp from the interstate and holds up from the rain on the sidewalk under the train bridge.  Then I watch as a police cruiser comes off the interstate and slowly pulls into the lot with the homeless camp.  A female officer steps out and speaks with the guy rolling the one-wheeled bike frame.  The officer is shortly speaking next with a homeless female.  I watch the officer, who appears to be checking on the residents of the tents.  The rain has let up.  I approach the corner where I will cross the avenue to the shopping center, with the hardware place and a supermarket with a Starbucks...which has a skinny hot chocolate.  I can tell a derelict is walking through the intersection.  Then I can tell he's been rousted from somewhere in the shopping center by security guards, from a pair of parked vehicles.  The guards are trading words with the derelict, who is telling them to fuck off.  I cross the avenue when I hear a second derelict across the street yelling, "Fuck you faggot security guards!  Get a real job faggot security guards!"  I get my skinny hot chocolate and make my way to the hardware place.  There's a tiny line to get in.  The guy ahead of me is asking the security guy at the door, why are there so much security in the shopping center?  I'm inside and find the weed killer, and I almost get a pair of Wonder Woman gardening gloves.  When I come out of the place, the rain is coming down.  I decide to wait out the worst of it.  It will turn into a nice rain for the rest of the afternoon.  As I wait for it to receede, I watch a pickup truck do doughnuts on a section of the wet parking lot.  It doesn't look as if it will quit, and I decide to make the soggy trek home.  I'm quickly soaked, and the drops thrown up by my front rim are high enough, they hit me in the face.  I also have rain in my eyes.  When I get home, my outdoor thermometer reads 40 degrees F.

"Sure darlin'"
     Memorial Day.  I'm off to the camera store with a couple of rolls of film to drop off, and a pair of new rolls to purchase.  It turns out that they reopened on the 8th of this month.  I'm ready for more black and white photos.  I stop in to the supermarket next door for a quick lunch.  Across the street is a Staples, where I pick up a storage case.  Then it's up the street to hook up with the bike trail which will take me downtown to my old store, where I use the restroom and grab a homemade ball of soap I left behind there.  I head out toward the park, but I run into the downtown grocery, to see if the Starbucks there will make me a skinny hot chocolate.  They still don't, because there is a walk-up and drive-through Starbucks across the street, which does provide this beverage.  There is yet another Starbucks a couple of blocks the opposite direction, which is closed down for the time being.  I make my way across a thoroughfare to the open one.  Their walk-up window was closed.  It turns out that they are open for mobile order only.  I take a chance and pull my bike up to the drive-through window.  I lie and tell them I don't have a mobile device.  The guy at the window keeps referring to me as "darlin'."  He agrees to take my order.  I ask him if he wants me to pick it up on the other side of the building, at the mobile order window.  "Sure, darlin'."  I spot a charge machine on the ledge, and the window at the opposite end of the building is unreachable.  I ask him if he wants me to pay here.  "Sure, darlin'.  Do you want half and half, or all six pumps?"  Why would I want any fewer pumps than the price allows?  "Dos it matter what kind of milk?"  Well, if he has fat free...  Then I make the half-circumference of the establishment.  Someone else pokes their head through this window.  "Are you picking up a mobile order?"  "I ordered at the other window."  He retreats inside.  My beverage comes out.  It needs a stopper for the hole.  I'm on a bike.  I wait until a third guy sticks his head through the window.  "What's happening?"  "I need a stopper."  I get my stopper.
     Then it's off to the park next to my old rec center.  My old store, my old rec center.  As long as I'm working where I am, I don't expect to be coming around this skinny hot chocolate desert.  I'm going to miss this little rec center.  I wonder how Christie is doing.  She the one-woman crew keeping the place operating.  And this park is a nice place to eat on the way home, if you happen to be furloughed.  Or on Memorial day.  At one picnic table is a homeless guy with his stuff overflowing.  he's soon joined by another.  At the next table is a Caucasian family gathered in the park for the holiday.  The brand new condos across the street, at the south end of the park, have banners up announcing that the hour is late to get in on the ground floor of the last available units.  I wonder if this is where these white couples and families are coming from.  Across the street on the east end are homes from the turn of the previous century.  This dichotomy extends the three blocks south until this street ends.  I spend my holiday reading about San Francisco half a decade ago, eating some chicken nuggets, drinking diet iced tea from an old plastic canteen, and polishing off the festive meal with my hard earned beverage, complete with stopper.  Then it's down the street with divide's each side into separate centuries, up over a long bridge to an entrance to the bike trail.  Under a tree is a grimy-skinned young guy with a copious growth of black hair and beard.  He sits cross-legged in dark pants and a dark buttoned down shirt.  He's in contrast to the colorfully adorned cyclists populate this trail.  I exit the trail not far beyond.  Shortly thereafter, I'm passed by four oncoming Caucasian ten speed cyclists, then by another Caucasian couple from behind.  I short while after, I reach my street and go a couple homes beyond to see if an old friend and previous coworker is out on her porch.  So she is.  I stop and catch up on her own furlough, mostly in Spanish.  She's back at work, only a couple of days a week.  I mention that the extended neighborhood is turning white.  She confirms that she sees the changes in spades.
     Tuesday.  I ride a broken bike to work, and after work I take it to my newfound bike shop on the way home from where I work now.  When I get there, I realize that I forgot they are closed on Tuesdays.  The following day, it's the same drill.  When I get back there after work, it's only today that I notice a second sign on the door.  They were closed on Monday, on Tuesday as usual, and they are giving their employees an extra day off today.  The sign claims that the shop will be open tomorrow.  After I get home today, the phone rings.  It's the Republican National Committee.  They address me by my first name.  At first, I assume they have mistaken me with a donor on a list.  They have not.  I don't ask, and they don not reveal why, but they decided that I am a potential donor.  Further evidence of a changing neighborhood?  The following day, I am indeed able to step inside of the bike shop.  Powerful testimony.  (What is now one of a pair of my) standby bike(s) is now in the hands of this newly discovered shop.  I was here for the first time the previous week.  I thought I tasted an ideological flavor to one tech's answer, when I mentioned to him I had a bike which needed work.  A bike from the department store.  I first heard the phrase "department-store quality" some fifteen years ago, at a shop with an owner who refused to work on such a bike.  He appeared to be about 40 years old and had frosted hair.  Upon this afternoon, the tech takes a glance at my bike and mentions a potential "liability issue."  The right side of the crankcase sits at an angle...which it ain't supposed to do.  The crankcase connects the crankarms, each of which have a pedal at one end.  He may have to rethread it, which may be a problem because the metal on this bike is "medium-grade."  Well, I don't know from liability, and I don't know from grades of metal.  I do know that this bike is a good ride when the parts work (and when the shop is open.  The two are related.)  He tells me he will do his best.  He may have to keep it for a couple weeks.  Not a problem.  I know that bike shops are swamped.  I like to think that I'm understanding, if not a purist metal grade convert.  We shall see how long my patience holds out.  I also ask for new brake pads.  He notices my seat is broken, which I've never even heard of.  But it explains why my butt keeps slipping off the back.  My visit here last week was to have them look at my good bike, which I ride to work.  The owner of where I work has been full on fixing this bike himself.  He identified a brake fluid leak and suggested I have a bike shop look at it, and he originally suggested I get a rebuild kit for the brake.  He even came back to ask me if I had ordered it yet.  He's rarin' to get to work on it.  He's an amazing guy.  The shop actually suggested a new brake.  When I told my owner, he's undeterred.
     Friday.  I'm on the trail to work, on one of two days of the week when we open earlier than the others.  My guess is, it's just about straight up 7 AM when I'm rounding a long corner.  On the east side is a big recycling plant.  On the west side is the Platte River, open for the second week now to swimmers, kayakers, and fishermen.  But I've never seen anything like the group I'm about to roll up on.  About twenty young men are lined up along the edge of the trail with the plant behind them.  Each is in a red Polo shirt and black shorts.  Not a one is six feet apart from the other, and none have a mask.  On the west edge is an older guy in the same gear.  he does have a mask.  To his right is a guy in a black T-shirt and shorts.  As I cruise between the twenty and the pair, each of the twenty says to me, "Good morning sir."  I assume they are greeting every runner, cyclist, and pedestrian.  Sunday is the end of the month.  I look out at my outdoor thermometer  It's at 60 degrees F.  It only seems like minutes until I take another look, and it's jumped 10 degrees.  Yesterday was the first day I left behind my long pants and windbreaker, gloves and balaclava, the last of any cold weather gear.  I stopped into a deathburger on the way to a dentist appointment before work.  Their lobby is open for takeout.  Last Sunday, I went into a favorite restaurant on the way to the supermarket.  They reopened for take out.  Early this afternoon, I go back there for another take out order.  They plan on reopening for dining in a week from today.  I take my lunch to the park in the neighborhood next to my own.  I return home and decide to see if the lady who cuts my hair has her shop open.  She does!  I didn't know how long it would be (down to my shoulders?) before I could get into her shop.  As she uses her clippers, I ask her how her business is doing.  She matter-of-factly tells me, "Oh, I'm in debt."  I ask if she got one of the federal loans for restarting businesses.  "Nope," she tells me, "those are only for the big guys."  When she's finished with my hair, she stoically sweeps up with one hand before she floats over to her register.  At the risk of sounding like Peter Fonda, commenting on the commune in Easy Rider, I think she'll make it.  When early evening rolls around I head over to the Vietnamese place, open for takeout.  They plan on opening for dining inside two weeks from tomorrow.  Today, one of the managers or the Vietnamese owner takes my order.  I notice he has an automatic handgun tucked into his pants.  I ask him if someone walked up and tried to hold him up.  He says he hasn't, he's being careful.  He also lets me know he has a permit.  It's almost as if the city wants to greet the equinox with an offering of goods and services.  Let this be a season of consumption.


















Wednesday, April 1, 2020

April 2020, Riding To Work Without A Job, Viral Immunity For Property Taxes, Random Road, "WATCH OUT!", Papa Willie, and "Give The Man Six Feet, Baby."

     Overdose victims clawed at phantoms in the air...  The air was thick with marijuana, incense, and a rank mix of body odor and patchouli.  Another drug patient was prancing nude through the waiting room.  The Haight was actually more like Calcutta, with its hordes of beggars in brightly colored rags and its stew of human misery.  The Free Clinic staff treated a bizarre spectrum of infections and aggravations that Summer of Love...more commonly associated with Third World slums than prosperous, American tourist destinations.  ...pneumonia, hepatitis, venereal disease, illegal abortion complications, skin infections, gum diseases, malnourishment, and intestinal disorders from eating rotten food.  - Talbot

     A lot of cannabis and arts couplings are fun.  Taking people on a RiNo graffiti art tour after they get nice and stoned is always really popular.  - Westword, 4/16-22/2020

     ...the ripe Disney dream of homecoming, the ravenous ear of an information-hungry global economy.  A constant stream of raw data goes pulsing home to Earth, a flood of rumors, whispers, hints of transgalactic traffic.  - "Hinterlands", by W. Gibson, OMNI Magazine, 10/1981

     Day 10.  And I thought, without a job, I wouldn't have anything to write about.  Yesterday I had my long overdue check up with my PCP.  Everything look great...except she wants me to keep riding my bike, at least as much as a round trip to and from work.  So today, I'm on my way to a restaurant a block from work.  Essentially, I'm on my way to work while not currently working.  At the entrance to my parking lot, city workers are doing some kind of work on my street.  They have one lane of the avenue blocked off for a few yards.  A car pulls up to the barricade.  The passenger wears a mask and speaks through the open window.  It isn't clear how much English he speaks.  He asks one of the workers, "Sir," as he gestures at the barricade.  The worker responds with, "I can't understand what you're saying."  A truck pulls up from behind the car and passes it in the open lane.  The car then follows the truck.  I cross my avenue and proceed to ride my route to work.  I stop into the eatery, pick up a delicious Greek salad, and head back the way I just came...without having worked an eight-hour day.  On the way home I scout out the lightrail station.  The restaurant, like the others, are take out only, and I'm looking for a bench upon which to pretend to wait for a bus or train while actually eating lunch in the cold damp.  Of the two shelters, one is occupied by a trio of homeless.  The lone female is yelling at one or both of the others.  The other has a transit system security car parked across the street, and I don't know if they are savvy to anyone with a plan such as mine.  I scout out the train platform.  All the benches are wet.  I ride over to another shelter out on a boulevard not far away.  I take some bites of my salad before a bus approaches.  I get up and move away until it passes.  I sit back down and have a few more bites before another bus approaches.  It does not appear to even notice me as it doesn't stop.  That's the first time in my almost 30 years in this town that I'm glad that happened.  With a warning from my intrepid doctor to get my butt back on my diet, I stop into the nearby supermarket to collect some salad ingredients before heading home.
     Day 11.  Today, I'm headed for our plant.  Our drop off stores are closed, but our plant is open to process clothes picked up from individual customers.  I take with me the cookies and potato chips which I bought the day before my doctor's appointment.  My doctor wondered why my blood pressure was headed up.  She noticed I've gained 10 pounds since my last visit.  I mention my attempt to add the aforementioned snacks to my diet.  She got a laugh out of that one.  This morning I take said snacks with me to the plant.  The plant manager is there.  She's happy for the snacks.  With the drop in business, the clothes being picked up require only her and the general manager.  Between the two of them, they can handle cleaning and pressing everything coming in right now.  I ask her if I can use the plant as a destination for my doctor-ordered cardio exercise.  She tells me she would like the company.  No, there isn't anything going on between us.
     Day 13.  I didn't go see the plant manager yesterday.  I didn't go anywhere, too much to do around the house. I haven't spent nearly as much time at home as I am now for the past several years.  Today however, I am on my way to one particular supermarket.  It's one of only a couple chains who carry one particular product which I can't find at my usual supermarket.  This other store is some thirty blocks north of me.  It should satisfy my doctor's desire that I maintain my cardio exercise.  I think it was yesterday or the day before that my mortgage company sent me an email.  It's an animated video with numerical figures, and a voice of a woman young enough to be my granddaughter.  She cheerfully explains that, long story short, my escrow account for my property taxes has a shortfall.  The shortfall needs to be met...by me.  Otherwise known, more commonly in the healthcare system, as "out of pocket."  My monthly mortgage payment fluctuates every year, as my property tax estimate collides with the actual amount.  The projected estimate for the next year then determines that year's monthly payment.  So a fluctuating monthly payment is part of the process.  This time, chaos has caught up with the projection, and the result is a miscalculation.  Or so I assumed.  Some time during the past 2 weeks, I left a message with my mortgage company, as the line was going to voicemail.  Before their most recent email, they sent me a prior one, suggesting that I give them a call to inquire about what they have to offer customers who are currently on furlough from their jobs.  The day before they sent me their most recent email, they returned my message.  The most they can do is suspend payments, but those payments will come do either in short order or at the end of the loan.  So, they called me to let me know that I wasn't off the hook for any monthly payments, and the following day send me an email to cheerfully that my monthly payments are going up.  And they won't rise quite as much...provided I send them a check before next month.
     So I gave them a call to get some more details about payment.  In the process, they informed me that the reason for the escrow account shortfall is that my property value has jumped 20%.  It did this during a pandemic in which tens of thousands are dying.  I didn't know property could do that during a pandemic.  The final two dots to connect are that the increase in value is the reason for the increase in taxes.  I have this in mind during my bike ride north to the supermarket.  My own side of the municipal equator is, for the most part, not yet a patchwork of bungalows from the middle of the previous century and brand spanking new wrought iron, glass, and steel condominiums.  There are some steep hills between my place and the westside lightrail line.  Lightrail stops are magnets for new residential development, and if I had to guess, these new condos ain't cheap.  Even though they appear to be smaller than the enormous new complexes I've seen in other neighborhoods.  North of this lightrail line, I'm headed through the end of a neighborhood who's demolition is creeping south.  It's known as Highlands, a name which sounds innocuous enough.  Just as soon as my wheels are over the tracks, I'm climbing a steep hill past a construction zone on one side of the street, and completed condos on the other.  It already feels different.  The lightrail runs along the north side of a creek, with park space and bike trails along each side.
     Across the tracks, it already feels like a different place.  The park and trails are full of young Caucasian couples.  They are riding bikes or walking dogs.  In spite of media warnings about this being the peak of virus infections, and with some in the occasional face mask, it's a beautiful afternoon in the 60s F.  I'm pedaling past new four or five story dwellings and new landscaping.  Behind me, at the top of a hill, is a beautiful view to the south, with the southern end of the Rockies coming around from the west.  To the east, almost within reach; downtown with both it's newest office towers and others under construction.  I've landed in a bohemian enclave, seasoned with progressive expectations.  At the supermarket are young couples in denim cutoffs and groovy scarves around their faces.  I run into a checker I knew at least 13 years ago, from a supermarket in another neighborhood where I used to live.  The store in that neighborhood is no longer there.  On the way back toward the lightrail line, I ride past young Caucasian women in sunglasses out on their balconies.  I immediately feel as though it's 35 years ago, and I'm back in college.  In fact, I'm coming down one street.  There's one new condo in between older bungalows.  I can almost smell new caulk.  In the driveway is a young blonde-haired guy.  He's sitting cross-legged in shorts, his own sunglasses, a scarf around his neck and a college sweatshirt.  He could have stepped right out of 1985.  One of his neighbors is out on his front lawn, a few doors down.  He's turning something with a spatula on the grill for his family.  Mexican music is wafting from his speakers.  And his little house, for all of its unannounced sweat equity, lacks the condo's spit and polish.  Across the tracks, I'm back among homes of older brick and siding.  I'm climbing yet another hill when I pass one of the largest homes on the street.  Two young couples are all conversing out by a car parked in the street.  Someone appears to be holding a clipboard.  Was the purchase of this place just transacted?  Among this group appear to be three different races.  None are Hispanic.
     I'm back in my neighborhood now.  My newly purchased single grocery item is in the fridge.  Later in the afternoon, I must make another journey to my usual supermarket.  My doctor should be thrilled with all my biking.  Inconvenience translates to a happy internal medicine specialist.  My usual supermarket has low-carb milk.  The supermarket 40 or 50 blocks north of the other one, from which I have just returned, does not carry low-carb milk.  And I'm out of low-carb milk.  This trip is not as far.  Inside, at the deli counter, is a young guy and his young lady.  He's talking to her like he may be a gangsta.  Instead of a mask over his nose and mouth, he's wearing a black hood.  He looks like a Zapatista in jeans.  He spots me eying the cold chicken wings and says to his lady, "Give the man six feet, baby.  Give the man six feet."  I'm in and out of the store.  I have milk and a quick dinner, and I find a seat on a bus bench.  I'm not waiting for a bus, but I hope I look like it as I eat and read the book I brought with me.  Another couple comes along with a suitcase on wheels.  The woman disappears.  The guy is in a jersey and looks in the trash can.  On the busy avenue, a white car pulls up to the light.  The shape of its body appears as if it may be a nod to the old Lamborghini.  The driver, customary to these streets, has his left arm resting outside his open window.  The guy in the jersey acknowledges his approval of the vehicle.  At the green light, it makes a U-turn and accelerates the opposite direction.  More approval from the guy.

     He made it his personal mission to defeat the Hearst newspaper empire, which he regarded as "something evil," preying on the ignorance and fear of the "Catholic, lunchbox...working man" with its "yellow peril" sensationalism, right-wing demagoguery...  - Talbot

     ...ego is a healthy, sometimes inspired creative confidence that gets where it's going with drive, steel, and integrity.  ...not...egomania, which bears the same relationship to creativity that Nero did to urban planning.  Egomania is uncertainty's bluff, anxiety's mask, and its lack of discipline is ultimately self-defeating...
     ...she trashed the conglomerates...that owned the movie companies.  "Part of what changed American life in the past decade is the change in book publishing and in magazines and newspapers and in the movies as they have passed out of the control  of those lives were bound up in them and into the control of [those] who treat them as ordinary commodities."  Perhaps perfectly true, but not much help.  ...her sweeping denunciations seemed unlikely to lighten the mood at a meeting I had hoped would remain tactful.  Transamerica's chairman...had plaques and scrolls testifying to his contributions to American life, not to his derangement of it.
     "There is a tradition that creative people like to feel a part of.  Whether it's sentimental or even romantic, it's real.  "What effect will it have on business?"  "...of selling or...of attracting talent?"  "Marketing, I prefer to call it marketing.  That's where our emphasis should be.  I know how...emotional Hollywood people can be.  God knows they're up here fast enough to complain...every time they don't like 'your' attitude.  But we depend on you to handle the creative people."  He looked into the clouds over San Francisco...  "Gosh," he said..."the reason we bought the darn company in the first place was we hoped it would have some effect on [our] stock, and it never has."  - Final Cut, by S. Bach, 1985, 1999

     Day 14.  My street has been having construction work.  Yesterday afternoon, brown water began coming through my plumbing.  Later this afternoon, it appears to have cleared up.  In the morning, I ride back out to our plant, where plant manager, general manager, and owner are hard at work.  On the way back, I stop and have lunch in the park down the street from where I live.  And a little reading.  A few yards away, an instructor leads a private Tai Chi class.  Day 15.  I'm headed back up to the supermarket where I purchase my single product.  The days are in the 60s F. and it's the first day this year I put on the sleeveless shirt.  Along the way I stop in a park not far from my neighborhood and eat some lunch.  I watch a skinny guy with hair past his shoulders.  He's in a tie-dyed shirt and out for walk while on his phone.  Another guy is out with his dog.  Off its leash, it rushes a flock of geese and spooks them into a pond.  I have a nice little micro-picnic before I'm through the park and over the highway.  Up here, it's up and down more than one steep hill.  With the exertion I'm putting out, my doctor had better be jumping for joy.  I'm coming down one of those hills when I recognize a homeless guy.  He's climbing with his cane, and it appears as if he's wearing a blonde wig.  Either he got a beautiful honey bleach job or he's disguised an a local television anchor. in faded camouflaged pants.  Across the lightrail tracks, and I'm back in the "re -planned" neighborhood.  Young women out walking with significant others or raking leaves.  I climb past two brand new condos with two tiny bungalows sandwiched in-between.  One of the bungalows has a realtor's sing in the front yard.

     He called the town "Baghdad by the Bay"...conjuring the exotic wonders of ancient Babylon.  But...more like Oz, Wonderland, and Gotham City all rolled together.  ...a fizzy drink of a city, full of witty and beautiful people and equally amusing scoundrels.  It was a shining metropolis with enlightened values and wide-open sensibilities...  - Talbot

     Day 15.  The day begins with my decision I decide that I want yogurt.  To make the trip worth my doctor's edict, I head out to the shopping center where I worked three years ago.  I have an hour and fifteen minute ride ahead of me just to get there.  And that's a conservative ETA, from back when I had to be there on time.  Perhaps halfway there, I riding along an open stretch of the Platte River.  A junkyard is on the east bank and a gravel quarry on the west one.  I have memories of coming home this way after work, the moon over the water in winter.  A  motorcycle officer comes over the hill on the trail.  His yellow flashers are on.  Five-oh in the hizzy.  He's past me and up a gravel exit ramp.  I have memories of this route.  Just over the hill and right after the underpass, I turn onto a bridge over the river.  I'm through several parks and past the waterpark.  I hope I get to swim there this summer.  Past the trailhead, around a corner and through a ritzy residential neighborhood, and I'm there.  I used to have lunch at the fish place across the boulevard.  Or I would eat at an Italian place which closed perhaps only a year ago.  I remember a cute waitress there.  I grab some Japanese chicken before I get my yogurt.  Then I'm headed back the way I came.  When I cross one wooden bridge, I happen upon one park where I see a smattering of people.  Four guys are playing soccer.  Another woman is soaking up the sun.  I decide to pick a spot and eat my giant triple fudge yogurt.  A white Toyota, a city vehicle, comes down the trail from the way I came before it turns around and leaves the opposite direction.  I finish my snack and am back on the trail.  I'm rolling past a golf course with a gravel shoulder.  A maintenance cart is oncoming as it turns onto the gravel.  It hauls ass past and leaves a cloud of dust behind it.
     Day 16.  I headed downtown to pay a visit to a friend at  restaurant close to where I hope to return to work at some point.  When I get there, he tells me that the governor has decided to "reopen the state" on the 26th of this month.  Cases appear to be declining here.  So, if we continue to practice safety first, customers may begin showing up.  I swear, unless I come in here, I never hear about any of this.  On the way home, I stop and have lunch on a bus bench.  Police are patrolling my neighborhood for a change this afternoon, and a patrol car rolls past.  The bus comes along and I wave it off.  I finish eating  and decide to get out of here.  No sooner am I back on the bike than I'm passed by five-oh coming back the other way.  Day 19.  I'm back at the supermarket with my one product.  As soon as I pull up I notice a drunk.  He looks familiar.  He tells me what a great bike I have.  I vaguely remember him saying the same thing to me someplace else.  In no time his pal comes out of the store and they mosey along.

     ...a siege - something that had happened only once, fifteen years ago, when a strong raiding party had come up from the south.  Two fifty-caliber machine guns - salvaged from an Army jeep that had been abandoned on the old state highway a few weeks after the War - were mounted on top of the school's roof, where their field of fire would cover most of the town.  Times had become more settled, almost sleepy now.  ...it had been three or four years since they'd had a skirmish with anyone; the flow of hungry refugees and marauders and aimless migrants had mostly stopped by now - dead or else they'd found a place of their own.  - "Executive Clemency", by G. Dozois and J. C. Haldeman II, OMNI Magazine, 10/1981

     Day 22.  Yesterday the early summer vanished as snow blew in with below freezing temperatures.  I'm standing across the street from the local CBS station, downtown.  The station is across the street from where the company I work for used to have a store and a plant.  The old store and plant is next-door to a restaurant I've been coming to during my doctor-ordered bike rides.  (I enjoy telling anyone that my doctor ordered me out on my bike during a pandemic.  I'll let others argue with science.)  As I was coming up the hill toward the restaurant, I saw a CBS SUV pull up in front of the station.  Along the sidewalk comes who you would expect a homeless guy on TV to look like: long grey beard and hair.  The guy approaches the cracked open passenger side window.  "Hiiii," he says to the guy behind the wheel, who is texting.  He strikes me as perhaps a producer.  He gestures at the guy that he isn't buying whatever he's selling.  The guy comes closer to the window and attempts to decipher what's taking place in front of his bewildered eyes.  "Whaddya' doin' in there?"  The driver continues texting.  The guy continues staring.  The driver waves him off.  The guy says, "Oh, alright." and moseys on his way.  I walk next door to the restaurant.  I was just there yesterday.  I surprised the manager, who told me customers were complaining about the cold.  "And here you are out on your bike."  This afternoon, it's dark inside and the sign reads "closed".  There's a police car parked at the curb.  Suddenly, a police officer walks out of the dark eatery.  He gets into the car.  I don't know if the manager I know or anyone else is inside.  I don't see the office lock the door.
     Day 23.  I wonder if my present status as a homebody is interfering with my internal clock.  I woke up thinking that today was yesterday.  Today, I decide that I want more yogurt.  This means another 25-30 mile bike trip, one way.  But, why not?  So, I find myself back out on the trail along the South Platte River, one of the most popular trails for biking, running, and walking your dog.  Today is no exception.  I'm coming up on the entrance to a golf course, and I'm surrounded by bike traffic.  A woman sneaks around me on the left, just missing oncoming bike traffic, specifically a middle-aged guy in a yellow reflective vest.  As he whizzes past, he says to her, "Dipshit."  Then it's down past the entrance on the river for kayaks and tubes, and left onto the trail east.  I did this route six days a week, back and forth, for a little less than two years.  One chapter in my three decades travelling the curious path along the drycleaning business.  I pass through a few tunnels beneath several roads and along a dog park.  Over one of the wooden bridges along this way, I approach a steep hill before the waterpark entrance.  Passing me is a woman on a fat tire bike.  It has some kind of electronic chime instead of a bell.  On her back, she wears a handmade sign, which reads, "Don't support bike shops."  Before I can read the rest, namely her objections to them, she's up the hill and away.  As much as I've relied on bike shops, it's a new one on me.  I'm through another tunnel and another park, condominiums on my left and a car dealership on my right, before I reach the trailhead next to a high school.  A few more corners and I enter a ritzy neighborhood.  Three young children are playing outside their home.  One tells me he has a "magnetic speaker.  That's why it sticks to stuff."  Another steep hill and down a street, and I'm out on a busy road.  The next corner is the shopping center.  I arrive at the yogurt place.  It's also a bakery which used to be a hangout of mine before work, when I worked down here.  I collect my yogurt, sneak a rest on a bench to consume some of it, and then I'm off back the way I came. Somewhere along the trail, I want to say back at the dog park, there is a homeless woman standing behind her stolen shopping cart.  The cart the single suggestion that she lives outside.  Her clothes are not disheveled, she's without the slightest dirt.  She even appears to be looking at her phone.  It's as if she was plucked from the aisle of some supermarket and dropped out here, perhaps somehow without her even realizing it.
     Day 24.  Yesterday evening rain has turned into more spring snow.  I'm back at the restaurant which yesterday appeared to be closed.  The manager is there.  I ask him about the police officer.  He tells me that someone left a door either open or unlocked, and an alarm went off as a result.  Again today, he is surprised at my cycling in inclement weather.  I grabbed a steamed milk from Starbucks and have it with me in the falling snow.  On the way back home, I'm passing beneath the last underpass along the way.  Standing inside, out of the snow, is a guy in a poncho.  He's fumbling with something inside his poncho.  As I pass him, I think I smell a skunk before I realize that he's blazing either some medical or recreational marijuana.  Day 25.  I'm headed back to the downtown supermarket.  Today, sunshine and rising temps instead of day-long flurries.  So sooner am I out the door and across the street but I'm coming around the corner of the liquor store, to toss some trash in the can at the bus stop.  A couple street guys are sitting in the shelter.  As I am braking next to the can, one of these guys yells at the top of his lungs, "WATCH OUT!"  I reply at the top of mine, "OKAY!"  I've been going into downtown over the bike trail, and then with a long climb on a bridge over the lightrail tracks.  I've been swinging by my rec center to check on any notice of when it will reopen.  I pass another neighborhood's group of street guys.  They're sitting in the tiny skateboard bowl next to the center.  They're silent and I don't notice them sitting, each with cigarettes, until I'm on the way out.  One says to me, "Papa Willie!"  (?)
     Day 27.  I'm headed back up at the supermarket with the single product I like.  I'm pedaling past more brand new condos.  I roll past an entire couple of blocks of a new complex.  Right after it is a slew of crumbling homes.  Along the way are young Caucasian couples, some with dogs.  At the supermarket, outside is a homeless guy speaking loudly to no one I can see.  When I come out, I see that his right arm is gone up to the elbow.  A young woman is telling him about a shelter somewhere near a big stock yards, perhaps 20 blocks north of here and a city block east.  She tells him that this shelter is accepting occupants.  The guy acknowledges her and says, "I'm goin' there now.  I'm goin', I'm goin'."  Day 28.  I'm headed back downtown.  I'm coming down a big hill on the way to the bike trail.  It's the same way I take to work.  I always pass the home of an old guy who spreads his collected aluminum can out on his patio.  Then he steps on each one before they get recycled.  I haven't seen him since at least this winter.  Instead of him, I see someone else, at the home next door.  The Spring days have been in the 60s.  There is a young shaggy blonde Caucasian guy in shorts, out on his front step, attempting to play acoustic guitar.  Inside an hour, I'm sticking my head inside my friends restaurant to say hi.  When I come out, all I can hear is a dog barking.  What I see is one of the funniest things I've ever seen.  A truck is making its way along the downtown avenue. Behind the driver is a dog yapping nonstop through the open window.  It's head is sticking out directly at the rider of a motorcycle keeping stead pace alongside the dog.  This goes on all the way down the street as the guy on the chopper, baseball cap on backwards, is doing his best to look cool.  I wish every guy on a chopper had a dog in his face.  Clearly this is a sign I'm getting on in years myself.  Soon my back patio will be covered in aluminum cans...



Random Road On the 100 Mile Bike Ride
     Day 28.  I've been wanting to do what I did today, which didn't occur to me until later in the day could be a 100 mile round trip.  I do the first third with a trip to get some yogurt.  Then I decide to pay a visit to a couple of places where I used to work.  I take a ride up an avenue which I used to ride alongside some 15 years ago.  Those times I ride this way take me over ground I used to ride, some of it almost 20 years ago.  I turn down a trail along a road which will take me to a store where I worked, for a previous company, both before and after the company came under new ownership.  Under the latter, employees would be hired and then fired or quit in rapid succession.  It's where I learned the latest industry standard software, from a young woman who was later fired for complaining to the new owner, about customer complaints about the company no longer having anyone to call for supplies.  The new owner discontinued production and shut down the boiler, thus removing any source of heat in the winter, one of which I worked there.  Along the way there, I'm coming uphill, past a road called Random Road.  There are families out riding bikes among the residential neighborhoods.  A mom and her two daughters come down Random Road to the intersection with the busy street.  I ask her if she lives on Random Road.  At first, she thinks I'm serious.  She spots me taking a photo of the street sign and laughs.  I tell her to have a random day.  She replies that it hasn't been random for the past four weeks.  (Day 28?  Four weeks to the day indeed.)  Her youngest is the only one on a bike with no gears.  She has to walk it up the hill.
     It's a busy streetside trail this afternoon.  I turn off onto an intersecting trail, up a big hill, and over to the shopping center where the old store was located.  It appears as if the current stay-at-home order is being taken advantage of.  The entire strip mall is getting a new coat of paint.  The old supermarket, where employees at this former store used to get breakfast and lunch, is having a similar restoration.  Last time I was here, both it and a deathburger next-door appeared to be slated for demolition.  Then it's north again, across the highway and down the street, onto another trail and under the interstate.  The trail comes to an end and I'm off and on residential streets.  I'm walking my bike on a sidewalk when a middle-aged guy comes out of nowhere with his own bike.  He spots me eyeing an approaching thunderstorm, first of the season.  When I turn and notice him, he says to me, "Someone's gonna be pissed."  I'm clueless as to what he's talking about.  Soon I'm back on my bike and I pass him turning a corner.  I'm coming upon the very first shop where I worked when I moved to this town, 29 years ago.  It's one of those places where every garment is a dollar.  Actually, in 1991, shirts were a dollar each.  Drycleaning was $1.25.  After almost 3 decades, it's only gone up to $1.70 per piece.  I cross the street and cruise past the place.  And...they're open.  At first I'm surprised.  Then it occurs to me that they probably can't afford to be closed.  As I recall their business model, something about having to deposit the day's earnings immediately to allow the low price.  I ride alongside the busy highway.  I used to walk to work here, three decades ago.  It took me 54 minutes each way.  Along the road I stop into a grocery for some vegetables.  A Gunther Toodie's restaurant used to be here.  I come to and cross my old boulevard, pedal past where my old home was, now a pair of two-story duplex condos.  Each have the old street numbers respectively of the previous pair or little houses.
     Then it's through my old neighborhood.  If the single remaining office building is the one with my original mortgage broker, it's the only one which hasn't been replaced with condominiums.  He helped out with my refinance ten years ago without charging me a thing.  If this isn't his building, he's gone from the neighborhood.  I remember when this place was a collection of individual shops.  My old shop I just came from had an old guy who once gave me a ride home.  He told me he remembered when this neighborhood was "all woods," he said.  I'm across another busy artery, past the building which housed my old supermarket when I lived here.  The employee I saw, where I get my single grocery product, used to work down here.  At the corner of the following boulevard is where I still see my old dentist.  I'm across and down another busy bike trail, across a bridge and down an avenue lined with old apartments.  Across the last busy avenue before my own, I roll up on a supermarket of the same chain with my on e product.  At the bike parking are a pair of street folks.  One is a short middle aged woman with a freaking hula hoop.  She's in  sandals and has mud on her feet.  She sounds more lucid than the lanky guy she's talking to.  He has a bike with a bike trailer attached.  They are holding court in the corner of the supermarket next to the bike rack.  His trailer contains a collection of who knows what.  I'm in and out of the supermarket.  A third street guy has joined the original pair.  Along with his own bike, he has 1970s hair, a red bandana around his neck, teardrop sunglasses and a denim jacket.  He would fit right into Easy Rider.  I repack my groceries and I'm on my way.  It's overcast now, and a few drop come down.  I take a long sidewalk underneath the lightrail tracks.  Standing on the sidewalk are a trio of smore street guys.  I'm whizzing downhill, past a guy adjusting his underwear.  I make it home just before a light rain falls.  What a day.
     Day 31.  I head for the single-product supermarket.  I'm going past a condo unit under construction.  It doesn't have any glass in the windows yet, and the entire thing is already sold.  Day 32.  It's Arbor Day.  It's also a year to the day that my mom passed away.  I'm headed for more yogurt.  The past week or so has been following the same pattern.  At some point, it's cold and raining lightly.  Then the sun comes out and it warms up.  Today, this cycle happened twice in the same trip. There's a place along the way to the yogurt place, the bike trail goes across a second bridge over the Platte River.  The trail turns toward a long, tree-lined stretch before it breaks out and turns across the third bridge.  Under a shady spot are a couple who appear homeless.  Both are dressed all in black and they each have a bike.  The guy appears s working on his front rim.  The lady is laying on top of a black bag.  She's staring motionless at anyone who comes across the bridge.
     At the end of last year, I quickly realized that I didn't have as much money to pay certain annual expenses as I needed.  My mom had been supplementing my income while she lived with me.  Now, this source is gone.  These expenses came on top of unexpected dental work.  I had to suspend payments to my retirement mutual fund, and since then I have been mulling the consequences.  After two or three years of not updating changes to my income with the state health care exchange, through which I have insurance, I decided that it was time to finally do so.  My wages had been fluctuating during this period, I depend on my advisor no navigate the exchange, and I had a health care exchange advisor who I decided was less than competent.  When I secured a new advisor at the end of last year, he updated my income with the exchange.  He also mentioned that the system didn't like too many updates throughout the year.  The money I otherwise usually used to put into the mutual fund was now being saved for required dental work.  The result of my not updating my income means that the exchange had underreported figures.  And they collect their back payments through income tax.  In 2019, for the first time since I can remember, I didn't get a refund.  Which I money I use for annual expenses.  Instead, I owed money in an amount comparable to the cost of dental work I was planning to schedule.  For which I had saved by suspending my mutual fund account payments.  At that point, it looked like an uphill slog to collect the money to finish my dental road construction, and get back to making my damned mutual fund payments.  And there I've been.  Yet, pathology had yet to play its own hand in this game between income and health, where health had been running low on chips.  A month ago, the Coronavirus pulled out a chair at the celebrity poker table.  And as is laid down deaths by the hundreds, and the then thousands, it called the bluff of the mightiest nation states.  Politicians and branding advisors and who the late Hunter S. Thompson called wizards all took the obligatory emergency meeting with their doctors on staff.  I once heard science described as  something treated as one of  several "opinions," as it is considered by politicians.  Opinion indeed.  After a handful of weeks, the result is some financial "assistance" to citizens of this nation, at least to those who pay taxes.  Including this particular taxpayer who lost his last hand to the wizards.  As plans are revealed, harried wizards are folding and my own fortunes are reversed.  Instead of money disappearing from my checking account, it's being direct deposited into it, and those of others on unemployment insurance.
     This has resulted this year in more than a reversal of, excuse the pun, fortune.  The sister pointed out that I may get more money than if I was simply (for some odd reason during a pandemic) still employed.  Until of course I go back to being fully employed.  This may make perfect sense to the wizards.  Though all I hear is that, for others, the assistance offered still isn't enough.  I had a meeting this month with my investment advisor, to whom I finally sent in a long awaited list of my monthly expenses.  She referred to those expenses as "reasonable" with a tone which approached envy.  But I came of age during the 1980s.  And I'm more familiar with the words "unemployment" and "socialism" having themselves been treated as a virus.  As the socialist soccer mom replaces the welfare queen, I have yet to hear that past complaint so familiar.  That "the rest of us" are expected to pay for "special rights for the unemployed."  Okay, maybe that's more than one familiar complaint.  The remarkable thing is, with so many of us clamoring for government assistance without so much as a nod to the classic deadbeat assistance addict, it's as if we're all socialists now.  That's the problem with western governments, death scares the shit out of them.  And while some are taking to the steps of state capitols, and hospital employees are being assaulted in checkout lines, my own experience under the official pandemic response has been a world away.  While the president is getting high injecting Windex (where is Dr. Thompson when we need him?), I've been following my doctor's orders.  I've been taking wonderful springtime bike rides on paths I haven't been on in years.  I begin by lamenting the long ride ahead and it turns into an adventure of changing weather and unplanned treats.  I end up at a place where I can get some Japanese shrimp, and yogurt for dessert.  And the sequester at home allows me time to read a book from an unread pile stacking up, or a magazine collection I enjoyed during my youth, back when the government was going to war against the social services for its citizens.  I have stacks of recorded music I haven't listened to in decades.  I watching online old broadcast TV series I never saw the end of.  I haven't had a vacation since 2009, and while mass death ignites vigilante panic...  I'm relaxing and having fun.  And doing so strikes me as somehow crazy.  I should be pulling a gun on a nurse.  I should put on a mask from the movie V Is For Vendetta and pick up an American flag.  And there are thousands dead.  What of all which they won't live to accomplish?  But the planet spins so fast.  Stop the world and let me off.  But the days keep coming, and they're getting warmer.  This week will break into the 70s.  And the state government refers to me as "job attached."  And speaking of the state, it "reopens" tomorrow.  And the mayor will decide if the city reopens this Thursday.  My vacation doesn't have long to go.  And I shouldn't be out of books until the next pandemic.

The Forrest For The Trees
     Day 35.  The state reopened yesterday.  This will become less clear later today.  It's been some time since I've read about any crime in the neighborhood.  My neighborhood has a Facebook page.  A resident posted that, last night at 10:38 PM, she heard 40 gunshot rounds in the street outside her home.  Five or six ended up through her window, in her wall, in her couch.  She's a new resident and this is her first post.  Someone replied that "Mexican gangs are out of control."  It appears that she's a couple of streets north and less than three city blocks to the west of me.  Today, according to my back patio thermometer, we broke 80 degrees for the first time this year.  Just a couple of weeks ago we had several days of snow.  Today, I'm off to see my friend at the restaurant.  I slept in and didn't make lunch.  I get there and order a salad.  He tells me that the news is confusing.  Either "non-essential" businesses in the state will remain closed until May 8th, or "non-essential ones", or public gatherings.  He's not clear.  But his brother tells him that some businesses have already reopened.  We appear to be together, waiting for the wizards to make up their minds on the truth, not unlike talking to my own family.  I'm off to a park, next to the rec center where my gym is.  I've been stopping by here to check on any potential new notices posted on the entrance, with clues to it's reopening.  Nothing yet.  I have my salad, soda, and book to read.  I find a shady patch under a fir tree.  The golf courses have reopened, there are fishermen and women strolling the banks of the Platte River along the bike path, and the parks never did become abandoned.  I'm reading my book cross-legged on the grass and munching my salad.  Owners are out walking their dogs along a gravel path a few feet from me.  Today is really the first day it's been warm enough to do something  such as sit outside in the park.  I'm never outside reading.  I'm either on my bike going to or from work, or on the weekend during the summer, I'm on my bike going to and from the swimming pool.  Later on today, this will occur to me as I'm reading out on my back patio.  In a moment of clarity, I look up at the sky and realize that I don't remember the last time I sat and did this either.   For the moment, here in the park, a young woman is out with her Labrador, over by another tree.  It's about this time when I begin to hear someone yelling a string of "Shit!"s, "Fuck!"s, and "Goddamnit!"s.  I look toward another end of the park.  What to my wondering eyes does appear, but a man underneath his own tree.  As I see no one to whom he is directing his enthusiastic denouncements, I assume that he is cursing the tree. I glance at the woman with the Lab and he appears to have caught her attention.  I watch him shake the liquid out of a cup nd begin walking down the gravel path, my direction.  As he goes past, he is talking out loud.  "...I'm so fucking stressed out right now..."  With this, he disappears along the gravel path.
     Day 36.  I'm headed back to the park.  Before I do, I stop off to see my friend.  I tell him that I went online to see what the story is on the postponement of the municipal reopening.  It appeared to me that the city stay-at-home order is indeed extended until May 8th.  He tells me that businesses may reopen on the 1st, and that I need to check with my boss.  I plan to do this tomorrow.  Before heading home, I stop at the downtown supermarket for a couple of items.  I'm locking up my bike at the rack when a guy comes along.  He has a kind of brunette Serpico hair and beard and teardrop sunglasses.  He scolding someone who, at first glance from the corner of my eye, I think is his girlfriend.  He's preparing to lock his bike with hers.  He strikes me as too cool to get upset as he suggests to her, "We need to come up with a signal so you know which direction I'm going."  When I eventually glance her direction, I see it's instead his daughter.  Day 37.  I'm off to our plant in the morning, to catch the general manager before he leaves.  It's some time after 9 AM.  I'm headed along one side of the park in the neighborhood across the boulevard.  There is a young Caucasian guy standing and talking to a middle-aged Mexican guy.  The former has glasses and a huge beard, and he holds a baby in one arm.  He's a relatively new sight 'round these parts.  As I cruise past them, the latter is telling him something about possible teaching him.  I arrive at the plant and speak with the manager.  He verifies the plan that, indeed, our satellite stores will remain closed at least until May 8th.  He tells me that I'm number one on the list to get a call back to work, which is always nice to hear.  And once the 8th rolls around (as in just around the corner), the owner will still have to wait for our customer to reappear before he so much as thinks about reopening the location where I work.  I decide to make today's ride at least long enough as if it were a trip to my own store and back.  Instead of heading back west to the trail I came south on, I go north before then turning west.  I end up at a big park in a longtime trendy neighborhood.  Though the morning is still chilly, the place has a collection of dog-walkers, stroller-pushers, cyclists, and at least one sunbather with a hardback book.  I scout out the place to make sure residents are occupying spots on the grass before I claim my own under a tree.  Along the way, I pass a guy in his sixties.  His shirtless body is muscled and tanned brown.  He stands along the bike lane as he takes a swig from a water bottle.  As I'm pulling lunch out of my pack, he strolls past with a friend.  I hear him tell his friend how lucky our nation is to have the leader it does.  Following them are a trio of other elderly men, each with a little white Terrier on a leash.  One guy is telling the other two how Canadians visited Mexico and stole $50 million.  Torches, pitchforks, and fifty million dollars aside, and despite the lingering chill, the park is percolating with the energy of young mothers and singles.  After lunch, I'm off for home.
     Day 38.  It's a day I'm headed back for yogurt.  This means the long haul on the trail.  Along the way, this overcast day feels muggy.  When I get home, I see today's high.  Holy Christ, it's 88!  I'm out the door and down the street.  I turn a corner and pass an old coworker's home.  Her two daughters are out on the porch with their laptops, no doubt attending their virtual lessons.  We exchange waves.  After a downhill coast to the trail, it's a long pedal along this trail.  I've been riding my weekend bike, the one from Walmart.  The axle connecting the arms, each with a pedal on the end, has either lost bearings or is broken, or both.  It pedals with a lot of noise.  I wonder if this is the reason I need to stop three times to rest along the way.  It's the first time this has ever happened to me.  Businesses are still closed, but the golf courses are open.  I slog along with my broken bike.  Right after I turn onto a connecting trail, I notice something I don't ever remember seeing in my two years riding to work and back along this route.  In a lot across the creek are buildings being used to train firefighters.  A collection of them are out this afternoon doing just that.  Up a steep hill is the ride along the back of the waterpark.  I wonder if it will open this year.  More slogging, and I'm there.  I get yogurt, and then go back for seconds.  The two girls behind the counter are the kind of very earnest students you may see in any American high school.  I don't want to slog the same way back home.  I head north alongside the busy boulevard.  When I get out of the municipalities zoned for horses, I turn off onto residential streets.  There are kids out on bikes.  It feels very much like a summer afternoon, very wistful.  I haven't been this way before that I remember.  I roll past my first doctor's former place of employment.  My final northbound leg takes me past some old homes.  I cruise past a yellow-brick duplex with a porch swing which appears to have been painted last perhaps during World War II.  Then, I cross a street, and I'm out of the neighborhood of my childhood and smack into a canyon of giant condominiums.  Speaking of World War II, these condos were built on the site of a former rubber plant, built around the beginning of the 20th century.  Home isn't far from here.  When I get there, it feels like a typical summer evening.  My neighbor's kids have depicted an admirable likeness of SpongeBob SquarePants characters in the courtyard of my townhome complex.  And the Caucasian Latter Day Saints are holding court outside their apartment building directly across the street.  I'm trying to remember the last time I saw pens in a shirt pocket.  Junior high school?  The Hispanic pickups and street racecars fly past to and fro.
     Presumably, the end of this viral tunnel is within sight.  This depends on the revelation of continued unknowns at this end of the timeline.  I began this year not knowing how I would continue to meet existing expenses and save for ones due again at this year's end, as just happened at the end of last year.  This month, I've been collecting not only unemployment insurance, but extra money through this very same agency given to them by the federal government.  As of now, I have May bills covered, I've paid the sister back for covering my health insurance, just like that I have the money to complete the replacement of my long suffering crown, and enough left over to return my bank account to a cushion of funds which disappeared along the way.  Just like that.  Thanks to a pandemic which has killed thousands.  Just when I think I've seen everything.  And I thought, without a job, I wouldn't have anything to write about.

     ...between which there should always be "creative tension": the light on the hill versus the arch of salvation.  ...great purity and enlightenment...can be so pure that it reaches no one and becomes a movement to irrelevance.  But the arch of salvation...  With all welcome, no dues to pay, there can only be darkness.    The twenty-first century needs the light on the hill.  ...a "prophetic minority."  "...a church only of elected, purified monks?" I ask.  "That would be okay, provided...biblical insights illuminate...life, and...that salvation is for everyone, including us few monks."  Morality never captivates the masses.  The majority usually stone the prophets among us.  - OMNI Magazine, 12/1981