A blast from the past.
CDD20 |
Letters of eclectic commentary featuring the wit and wisdom of a garrulous geezer and {Dana}, a persistent hallucination and charming literary device.
"Just dive under your desk and kiss your ass goodbye." -Jimmy Buffett
Dear Gentlereaders,
The Cuban Missile Crisis — which according to Wikipedia "...is widely considered the closest the Cold War came to escalating into full-scale nuclear war — occurred in the fall of 1962. I was nine years old in '62 and I remember Mum and Dad obviously being freaked out but pretending they weren't so as not to freak out their kids.
I now understand that having lived through the Great Depression and World War Two they were understandably a little jumpy. But I was a Boomer. Boomers, the first generation to grow up with television, knew just what to do if the nukes started flying and there was a commercial to remind us. All you had to do was duck and cover!
I don't remember the commercial, but I do remember seeing the official Civil Defense film at some point that starred the famous Burt the Turtle the commercial mentions. I went a-googlin' to try and find out if anyone is officially credited with modifying the tagline duck and cover to a popular and widely known slightly different version — duck and cover, and kiss your ass goodbye — but had no luck.
My fellow Boomers and I should've all been subject to debilitating existential trauma. Instead, some unknown one of us turned our trauma into a joke, a pre-meme era meme if you will, a poster that was quite popular. I know this because I owned one. An alleged original copy of the one I owned in the early 1970s that I purchased for, maybe, five bucks is nowadays a collector's item that sells for $270.
Given the price of concert tickets for Boomer rock bands (that may or may not feature original members who nowadays look like death sucking on a LifeSaver), it seems like there's good money to be made in the nostalgia business.
{Official Civil Defense film?}
Civil Defense, as my fellow geezers/geezerettes hopefully remember, was the purview of various and sundry agencies of The Fed'rl Gummit that were sorta/kinda early versions of what we now refer to as Homeland Security, Dana.
Very long story short (there's a long Wikipedia version available) a ton of tax money was spent to teach Americans how to survive a nuclear war, info about everything from stocking up your pantry to how to build personal nuclear fallout shelters.
Nowadays, it's generally agreed that this would all be ultimately pointless, which is the primary reason the world has to worry about the Pooteen, kids. Mr. Putin, despite the fact Russia continues to fall apart, still has enough nukes in his basement to end the world.
Given that a full-fledged nuclear war could end the world in about a minute, why isn't anyone gluing themselves to streets and/or splashing paint on famous paintings like the traumatized delicate flowers obsessed with global warming?
Anyways... originally, this was supposed to be a full-fledged column adhering to a now-defunct company policy, that is to say, at least 1500 words in length since I now only publish every other week. But it was at this point that I hit a wall and not only lost interest in the subject at hand, I contemplated shutting this enterprise down.
I repeatedly opened my free (which means you no longer have an excuse) Google-supplied software — "Blogger" according to Wikipedia "...is an American online content management system founded in 1999 that enables its users to write blogs with time-stamped entries." — and just stared at the content above.
Stumped.
Holly crap, do I have writer's block? I am, of course, aware of this phenomenon and have even suffered from a mild case of it from time to time but this was different, it felt like I was done and had nothing else I wanted to say.
Fortunately, my spiritual advisor (for lack of a better term), the Daozhang of a secret Taoist monastery in China's Wudang Mountains, was recently gifted with a free Starlink connection by our mutual friend, Elon Musk, so I was able to give him a call and ask for advice.
I'll tell ya, beats the hell out of having to take a sabbatical and make my way there in person, all the while having to worry about being tossed in the jug by one of the Emperor's minions, possibly for years, while hoping for a hostage exchange.
Sometimes I hate to write and I wish I didn't have to.
{Have to?}
Often I enjoy it, when the words flow freely, other times it's too much like work. Sometimes I'm satisfied with the results, but often I'm not.
{Huh. Sounds like someone's off his psych meds again.}
Balderdash! I don't take psych meds, Dana, thank you very much.}
{Balderdash? Have to?}
It's a cool word that I don't believe I've ever used before. As to have to, writing is my psych med. If I don't write, my nogginal neurons tend to get tangled. I've done a bit of research and I'm led to believe that if you're at all creative and don't have an outlet this is what happens.
{Didn't Freud give a famous lecture on tangled nogginal neurons? Anyway, what's your problem? just write. You don't even have to publish the results if you don't want to. Chill, dude.}
Remarkable, that's pretty much what the Daozhang said.
{What's so remarkable? I'm smarter than I look, just like you.}
Alrighty then, new company policy.
Going forward I shall continue to publish a new column every other week. Without a minimal commitment, to this and no shortage of other things in my life, I might just stop getting out of bed or even just float off into space, never to be seen again.
{Say what?}
It's a jaded geezer thing. I'll strive for at least 750 words but there might be far less (or more, like this particular column). Anyone who doesn't like the new policy can request a refund, no questions asked.
Note to Theo: I'm thinking of resuscitating my would-be novel. Don't tell anyone.
Colonel Cranky
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