3/30/23

SHE, THE PREMIER POET, HAD DISAPPEARED

SHE, THE PREMIER POET, HAD DISAPPEARED

by Christine Trzyna


She, the premier poet, had disappeared.

'Off the face of the earth,' they said,

leaving me to think she had gone deeper underground 

on the spoken word scene than they knew.


Maybe beneath the floorboards of a closed and vacant bookstore in Reseda, 

where photocopied posters were still stuck with tape.

Maybe in the library archives of Cal State - Northridge,

where they digitalized 

but it wasn't easy for a researcher to be taken seriously in person.


Maybe she'd appeared in a video that Brendan made,

having you sign under false pretenses. 

Shown at parties.

Making a fool of you for the pleasure of his guests.

A sadistic ritual.

Infamy.


Maybe when Murray turned her into a cover girl

the publicity was just too much.

Bags of fan mail, too many letters,

unsigned love poems that rhymed?


Other people with her name appear on the Internet.

You just didn't know it till you'd read a while

that she could not possibly be the mother who wrote about her son.


I recall the disappeared poet back when 

she knew who she was.

She pretended incompetence at running a vacuum cleaner, 

moving it over the fringe of a tattered Persian rug in the forever twilight

which broke the vacuum and ripped the weave.

Then she departed.

Who did we think she was?

She was not a maid,

not with her way with words.

She might fill the room with people

but the toilet would remain grunge.

She herself had never been known to go in there.


Everyone wanted to know her, 

not just the name on the flyers that drew them closer,

to benefit from a brush with her, 

to keep a vigil,

as if she was the lint that could light their bonfires.


To say she was their close personal friend,

that they wrote where she did, 

though she was mostly alone at an undisclosed location.


Here and there, 

Everywhere,

she was hard to pin down.

Deliberately.


They listened.

Her mother perched on a stool at the back of the room.

Her daughter on stage and earnest.

What had she created?


Was there such a thing as a career in poetry?


Her gentleman offered all she would accept, such as rides places.

He waited for her to one day recognize him,

standing with a dusty fedora in his hand in the back.

He waited for her to know his nobility was what kept him at arm's length.

He waited for the virgin who finally made a choice.


Maybe she lightly rests in an unmarked coping grave of her own choosing,

Far away in a crowded cemetery in New Orleans.

Where only a vampire, 

with his heightened sense of smell, could find her waiting.


Down on her wedding day,

Someday she might emerge from the chuppah, holding a candle.


I recall the disappeared poet back when she made high pitched squeals

and jumped as a cartoon, her legs back, never forward, 

almost kicking her own ass.

Weeeee!

On a teeter-totter only she could see.

Had she been flung into a hospital?

Were there visitors?


Everyone wanted to know her.

Her deepest, most inner being,

a darker side that hadn't made it into print.

"That would not be good," she said.


I recall the disappeared poet who had boyfriends

who were men in prison.

Stuck away for a life time.

They knew it.

She did not but she wrote them.

Sister, they called her.

Sister!


Maybe her prison was poetry, 

from where you must remain a keen observer 

like a spook that makes it through the wall behind

and sees over someone else's shoulder.


You sit reading one of her chap books quietly.

Your dog senses something.

Can you sense that?


But she escaped

And is now truly living under an assumed name,

that you could never guess.


Or, maybe

she's become an ancestor 

who once put Los Angeles poetry on the map.


Los Angeles has disappeared without her.


March 30 2023  7:05 am - 9:00 am

C Christine Trzyna

3/29/23

OLDEST HEBREW BIBLE SET TO AUCTION FOR UP TO $50 MILLION

 Excerpt:   codex also contains directions of how to properly spell, pronounce, punctuate and chant the words correctly, in what is known as the 'Masorah.'

This differentiates it from Torah scrolls, which are written in a special, easy to read script, known as 'Ktav Ashuri' or 'Assyrian script' that is devoid of vowels and punctuation.

DAILY MAIL ; HEBREW BIBLE AUCTION - 50 MILLION

3/26/23

TRIVIAL or SUPERFICIAL or LIGHTHEARTED ; THE LIST OF THE MOMENT

WHAT'S NEW?

I'm Curious About:  Sewing blouses without using patterns.  Making one's own custom shoes using flip flops for soles.

So Bad - So Good : The Cold.  The Rain. After a True Winter, I'm so ready for a True Spring and True Summer.

I Might Just Be Done With : Some of the guests who appear or appeared on Coast to Coast AM - which is still broadcast. Finding their YouTube stations and listening to their full agendas that are not discussed on the talk program, I realize just what they have withheld or have not been questioned about on that program with George Noory. I'm about 90% done with the whole Coast to Coast program. 

So funny! : Phil Hendrie's parody renditions of the old Art Bell Show. I burst into laughter and almost rolled off my bed the other night when I discovered these.  East of the Rockies, West of the Rockies, South of the Rockies, North of the Rockies...all those phone numbers... and he's got the bumper music right...

***

AM I WHO I KNOW?

My Favorite Person Is : The highly intelligent, flirty, twinkle eyed man who must have memory loss, since he's wearing a wedding band.  No harm done, my friend. Everyone wants to be thought of as beautiful.

The Celebrity that Interests Me : None.

The Celebrities I've met (Just saying) : (Maybe another time.)

Historical Person I'd Like To Interview :  Isadora Duncan

TRAVEL?

If I Could Travel Back In Time : The Village in New York at the time of the Russian Revolution.

AM I WHAT I INDULGE?

Oldie Film I Want To Watch Again Sometime : Niagara  (Just watched it for the first time.)

Oldie Favorite Album I Blissfully Recently Listened to from Beginning to End :  Buffalo Springfield (debut album)

Book I Recently Read Cover To Cover :  (See the reviews)

Book(s) I Keep Meaning To Reread : Mantra Books and Audio by Thomas Ashley Farrand

Person I Get and Nobody I Know Understands :  Shall Remain Nameless.  (I get it that he has Narcissistic Personality Disorder.)

AM I WHAT I EAT?

Favorite Cheese Of The Moment :  Fontina

Bread : Home Made Old Fashioned Farina muffins. Bakery Pretzel Bread.

Condiment : Mayo.  

Sweet : SweetTarts.  Chalky bits of flavor.

Spice : Paprika

I'm Drinking : Columbian Coffee - Cowboy Brew.

I Just Cooked : Chili with ground beef steak, black beans, carrots, onion, garlic, paprika, diced fresh tomato, canned tomato sauce.

I'm Craving : Old Fashioned Creme Puffs with pudding filling like mom used to make. Light airy crust, smooth warm milk pudding.

AM I WHAT I BUY?

Charcoal- Eucalyptus soap from a small -business - crafts fair - home-maker.  Made in U.S.A. Love the delicate perfume scent and the hard milling.

Beautiful tiny rose patterned fabric for the above mentioned blouse without a pattern, even though ditsy patterns are not like me. Pre washed and shows no sign of being crinkly.

Water Buffalo Lung dog treats :  I still have dogs to sit. These treats are real stinky and crunchy and they love it. They come running without being called or hearing the word "treat."

AM I WHAT I MISS?

My dog. Memories of her always put a smile on my face.

Having my own garden in pots.

Being able to afford using the house heater.

LATEST REALIZATIONS : 

That my best woman friend is never going to be a person who likes to get out there and do things.  (This is not just about Covid-19.)

That I need some new friends who do like to get out there and do things.

That I miss the real Art Bell. Check out this program about a man who was camping out by a lone phone booth in the Mojave Desert and spends hours at night talking to people who call it.  ART BELL INTERVIEWS DESERT CHAD  (Research shows that the booth was removed some time ago as it was feared that the people traveling there to see it were causing some environmental harm... Really!)

C 2023  Christine Trzyna

Ask yourself the same questions.

Don't let me influence you. 


3/22/23

1933 BOOK BURNING BY NAZI'S : 20,000 BOOKS : WHERE THEY BURN BOOKS THEY BURN PEOPLE AS WELL

BERLIN ART MEMORIAL BOOK BURNING 

1995 this art installation in Berlin commemorated one of the largest book burnings in 20th century history.

Now.... isn't censoring books to make them "politically correct" or WOKE a way of lighting a match to a book?  Maybe the book won't be entirely turned into ash and be no more but it will show the damage.

3/20/23

MISSING

Yesterday morning, I sat up in bed and looked through one of the windows in my bedroom which until recently had a heavy drape over it. A little sunlight had broken through the clouds. Rejoice!

A couple weeks ago I removed the heavy drapes and laundered them and then did not put them back up. There were thick cobwebs around the room that I had not noticed in the dull natural light.  I swept those away.

The window is bare to let in light, much needed light after weeks of cloud cover, rain, and dreary weather. Through that window, up in the tree that got pruned last fall, I saw a white and black cat, a fluffy cat that appears to be healthy unlike the orange cat that seems to be stalking the neighborhood and is loosing weight from unsuccessful hunts. It was on a limb in a down hunting posture, no doubt awaiting the vision of a mouse scooting across the stones. However, just as I saw it, it saw me. We stared at each other through the window for a moment. 

Then I realized that the cat might actually be attempting to come down out of the tree on an unstable limb. The tree is not robust.  Since the "True Fall" and "True Winter" it has lost its leaves and the limbs are exposed. They give.  If he was stuck twelve feed up, I might find a ladder.

I rushed out in my socks, onto the cold pavement stones, and gently tapped the tree, telling the cat to come down. It had only one way forward and it seemed to obey.  To come towards me or to get away from me, it moved fast. He lost his balanced on a shaky limb and fell out of the tree from about four feet. He crashed into a watering can. Then he ran as fast as a panther through the side yard and towards the walls and gates to get away.

I'm not enjoying the "True Fall" and "True W" even though the drought has concerned us and - to a point - the rain was needed. We'd cut back on our water use significantly.  We showered far less frequently, washing hair in sinks, taking sink baths like our ancestors who lived without bathrooms that had tubs and showers. Not using the gas heat either. It became an ordeal to shower in the cold tile bathroom.

I dislike cloud cover and dreary weather, dank, moldy, and cold. I would rather be dodging the sun by finding shade to walk in.

This morning I checked the "accurate weather" and see that there will be no rain here until tomorrow. Then I looked out the window and damn, it was raining. 

Weeds have grown tall in the garden.

I miss my dog.

She was hot and cold about cats.  Off the property almost always cold. But once in a while she would be friendly to a cat for no good reason. On the property, exhibiting tolerance. We were not here first. 

One skinny black cat would pass by her in the mornings. It seemed as if they both had their noses in the air and had given each other extra room. My dog let her feelings be known. She could show she did not like a particular creature, that she was put out by my giving one too much attention, and that she did not want any other dogs in bed with me.

The skinny black cat was an old cat and the new cats on the property wanted to claim all his turf. The black cat gave itself a nest in leaves in the front yard near the bushes. This small stake was all it had left. One day this black cat appeared with a cut on its head at the base of its ear, deep to the skull it seemed. Eyes dazed. Moving very slow. It left the property, as it had every day, to go see what was happening across the street and next door.

"I think that cat has gone off to die," the owner said.  Would we ever see it again?

Three days later the black cat was back. The head wound appeared to have mended and was just a hairless white line at the base of its ear. Its eyes were no longer dazed. It was still moving slow though, as if the fight was still causing pain. A new cat had beaten this old one up. No doubt about it.

To keep its food away from the dogs, its owner had always fed this cat on the top of her dinner table.  It knew how to jump up on a chair, even knew how to climb the back rails of her chairs in order to get to the table top.  Now it struggled to get up there.

I went to the dollar store and saw they had packets of what was supposed to be "The Worlds Strongest Catnip."  If the cat was on its way to death, it might as well have some nip. 

I pinched a tiny amount between my fingers and put a dusting of nip on a dish for the old cat. He took to it immediately.  From that day forward I had nip for that cat on a daily basis. Just a little. The high and mellow low, which, according to research, lasted about fifteen minutes, was something to live for.

Within a few days the cat had gotten its strength back to climb the rails and get back up on the table.

Which reminds me of a line that appeared in an article by true crime writer Dominick Dunne in a Vanity Fair magazine years ago.  The article was about a scion of the Dupont Family and a murder.  It appeared in the September 1999 issue and was entitled In Cold Blood, Blue Blood.  The murder victim was found stuffed in a cheap Vegas motel room wall, behind a vent.  Three people were paid to murder her, possibly to end the romance between her and the Dupont's n'er-do-well.

....  Pati loved Dean, but Pati was just a drug addict, scam artist, and hooker, while Dean was the drug-addicted, ne’er-do-well son of a glamorous du Pont heiress. ....

Then, this is the line: ... As rotten as Pati’s life was, she still wanted it, and she fought hard to save it. ...

The black cat took to spending time near me and my dog, as if it needed protection from the new cats. I found him in my basket of yarn sleeping.  I found him in a box of my fabrics. He went in and out through the doggie door and took refuge in my bedroom. He knew who his friends were. My dog seemed OK with this, so long as the cat was not sharing our bed.

Then one day he sat on his nest of leaves in the front yard and did not seem to want to get up. I went towards him and he shied away from me. Three days later, a vet diagnosed him with a tumor in his stomach and his owner put him to death.  They thought he was twelve.

It is unknown to me what, if anything, my dog thought, if at all, about the missing black cat. I could imagine her thinking "Cats, they're all alike, independent without loyalty, not like us dogs, not like me."

My dog was meant for me.

So goes the saga of how I got my dog:

A friend asked me to look in on the unofficial widow of a long time friend of his. His friend had died of cancer after being in a relationship with this woman for many years. They had never lived in together.

I knew she had an ex-husband who had appeared for a weekend and stayed years. The ex-husband was the father of children with her but had been a rascal and had done her wrong. I supposed he had nowhere to go. I had gone by there one time when he was out in the front yard, smoking cigarettes. He seemed to be a nice man. For some reason he handed me five dollars. I didn't need it but accepted it, figuring that it was a matter of passing it along, or perhaps passing it back to him at some time in the future. So my first impression of this man was positive, but I have since learned that, unless it is a very dramatic and impactful first meeting, YOU NEVER CAN TELL.   

The next time I was up that way, I went to see the woman, who I will call Tilly. The ex-husband was not there that time. I sat with her in her living room thinking I would spend an hour.  An afternoon into the conversation it was clear to me that this woman was having some form of memory loss or brain malfunction, for her stories were repetitive.  In the repeats she told me that this ex-husband was abusive to her. She even said that he monopolized the bathroom due to an illness he had, so that she had taken to using a bucket in her bedroom to do her business.

Upset, I called my friend and told him that from what she was telling me I thought Adult Protective Services might need to be called in.

"Don't do that," he advised.  "They might take her from the only home she has ever had."

That is probably not how that goes, but at the time I said to him, "You know her better than I do, so I won't call them."

"Just check on her from time to time."

During my several visits with Tilly, her repetitions of stories continued, yet she also had passages of clarity. I wondered if the level of stress she was feeling at any particular time was tied into it.

Because her ex-husband was a veteran, I started making phone calls to find out if there was a way to get him medical help and housing through the veterans. Then, because I felt that she might not remember what I was telling her, I wrote all the information down and sent it to her by snail mail. There was some potential help for him.

When I called her she said she did not get the letter.

It seems he had gotten the letter, addressed to her, and opened it. That's mail theft. So, by reading the letter, with the various possible opportunities for veterans, the man basically realized that she was seeking some way to get him out of that house.

Strangely, not long after that she called to say that he'd had some medical crisis and had actually been taken to the veteran's hospital and was now in a nursing home. She took to visiting him there a couple times a week, bringing him cigarettes and cola. So you see, she was not completely through with him yet.  

I also called there to ask about him and found there was supposed to be some problem with the phone, which I found suspicious. Employees at these places, I have found, are often full of shit. They will say someone is sleeping or unable to come to the phone because they are just too lazy to connect a patient with his or her people.  (If you have someone in a nursing home or assisted living, take to showing up whenever without alerting the staff first. Keep them off guard and on their toes.)

Her ex-husband was supposedly verbally abusive to staff.  Quite Possible. She got a call that he was well enough to go into an assisted living and the veterans would pay a good portion of the fees. She and I took off in two different directions to find an assisted living for him as the nursing home wanted him out ASAP. We both found places along bus routes she could take to visit him. Then days before we were going to move him, also strangely enough, he was sent back to a hospital, where he died.

Although this was possibly the best conclusion for her personally, she was now without any men in her life, good or bad. She felt more lonely and alone.

She and a couple of her neighbors, all older women, had taken to feeding stray cats in the neighborhood. Now these were not cats that got caught and taken in for spaying. These were cats that went from one porch to the next, eating food and drinking water that the three widows put out for them, reproduced when they could, and died. These women were thrilled with the cat visits.

Then one day, when I was visiting with Tilly, she said, "I haven't seen that male cat in a while. Last time I saw him, his tail was rotting off!"

"Tilly, where do you think these cats go to die?"

"I don't know.  Don't they crawl up into the bushes somewhere?"

"It's a good thing this house isn't closer to the mountains because you'd have coyotes eating them in your yard."

The mystery of where the stray cats were going to die was solved when one of her children came in from out of state, which he did twice a year for a week at a time.  This man kept a car in the garage, which, if the story is true, had been in there for years awaiting his visits. During those two weeks a year he would do some running around, repairing and buying things, checking in on his mother. The car was like the car in the Woody Allen film Sleeper, like a car that was in an ancient cave but always started right up. Apparently it did not leek fluids or need the battery to be recharged. The son opened the garage door to get to the car and there found a number of cat - and raccoon - carcasses in various stages of decay.

So, on another visit to Tilly I said, "You have to stop feeding the strays. These are diseased animals.  What if I got you a nice fat healthy tabby cat that could live indoors with you and sleep with you? You'd have to make sure that the strays aren't coming around. With what you're spending on strays, you can afford to keep a cat in the house. I'll buy you the cat and a start up kit."

Tilly agreed with one condition. She said she could not go to the city shelter because she could not bear to see all the dogs and cats that would not make it, that would be put to death. So I agreed to go there by myself, about three miles from where she lived, and seek the perfect cat.

I went to that shelter a number of times over a few weeks, calling Tilly, telling her about this one or that one.  She didn't have a cell phone so I couldn't send photos.  And she just kept demuring, saying she preferred a different color eye or fur.

In the meantime I'd seen some dogs.  One, a small white dog in a kennel with a troop of combative chihuahaus, was hiding beneath what looked to be a water fountain, unwilling to be part of the war.  A peacenik.

I went to the kennel and the white dog came to the front bars and licked me through them.

However, I had determined that I would not be ready to adopt a dog for another three months and I wanted a Pomeranian. I thought they were cute and witty and light weight enough. I'd been taking books out of the library about dog breeds and dog training.  As for dog training there was a variety of attitudes from the discipline mistress woman who trained big dogs to some monks who did dog training to make their living. Slowly I came to the realization that I wanted an "older" dog.  One I could outlive. I purchased dog bowls and a dog bed.  I made a list of names, male and female names that I could name my dog.

One day at that city shelter a volunteer asked if I wanted to see a couple dogs and I did. One was a very old, very sleepy, female.  I knew this dog had to be on death row, but I knew she was not a dog that would want to go on walks with me. Then there was a long haired chihuahua that was as active and as jumpy as a kangaroo; I could only imagining it scratching up the rental, pulling down blinds. I did not ask to see the little white dog.

One day as I walked through the big lobby doors into the kennel area my side vision picked up on the little white dog running to the front of the kennel, as if she were expecting someone. Waiting for me?

This brings me to the memory of a friend who was adopted at the age of three telling me that when people came to the orphanage that was run by nuns, he would try to get attention because he knew he really wanted to be adopted.

A picture of the little white dog was posted on the kennel wall. There was a birth date below her photo and to me that indicated an owner surrender. I knew that when a mystery dog got dumped at a kennel, the vet would guess at an age, which they would post. I also assumed that the name on the picture was the name she came in with. I knew shelter personnel made up names for dogs that were dumped otherwise. Her name on the kennel was one of the names on my list.

I did not know at the time that the policy was to put to death any animal that was not adopted in five days due to overcrowding and underfunding.

I felt that Tilly was not sincere about wanting a cat about this time. I decided to go to the shelter one more time and then, if she didn't say yes to a cat, give it up. With cat box in hand I appeared at the shelter fifteen minutes after they opened in the morning. I headed out the big lobby doors and noticed that the little white dog was no longer in the kennel. Her photo was down. I found myself going back into the lobby and got in line at the desk.

"I was just curious. Did that little white dog that was in the kennel to the right get adopted?  Did her owner come and get her?"

"She's just been pulled," the clerk said.

My heart fell into my stomach. I heard myself croak, "Well, I want her."  By some miracle I had a hundred bucks cash on me. Usually I had a twenty.

"Let's see if she's still available
," the clerk said.

She went through the doors into the room where dogs were waiting in cages. I believe this is where the dogs who had been pulled were waiting for death.

My dog had not been chosen by any of the so called Rescue Groups, which I had seen around, photographing dogs, making choices on which dogs they thought could be adopted  - which dogs they could make money on.

Fifteen minutes later the same clerk came out and said, "You can have her."

When my dog was brought out on a temporary leash, she seemed to know I was the person taking her home. She ran right towards me, looking straight into my eyes. Behind her were some people in white lab coats watching her run. One of them shouted, "It's about time!"

She also knew where the door out was and raced towards it.  "Watch her!" one of the men yelled.

My dog was cute, affectionate (licking everyone in tounge range), healthy, and smart.  

Recently, when telling someone about her, I said, "Sometimes I wonder if some spirit wasn't there urging her to run forwards when I came through those big doors.  If I had not seen that, I might have forgotten about her."  The truth was that the thought of adopting her had come to me strongly that day I headed out with the cat box, yet I was not determined. This was a case of the body knowledge, body intelligence, knowing better than the analytical brain.

I gave up on a cat for Tilly.  She didn't bring it up to me.

I also felt that her children needed to look in on her more frequently and that she might need someone to live in with her as a carer. That she sat in the summer in one chair with a fan blowing on her all day because the house had no insulation and no air conditioning was telling. That she had run up charge cards and let one of them pay it off more than once; clearly she did not have enough income. Were they letting her live there like that because they wanted the value of the home to rise until she was dead, for purposes of their own inheritance?  There are so many children like that. I get it that a parent does not want to leave the house that is home but still there comes a time...

A year after I adopted my dog, I needed to get her re-vaccinated in order to keep her legal. I got her shots very close to the deadline before a penalty fee could be charged and decided to take the paperwork in to the shelter in person and pay there as well as take in some items for donation. (They always need newspaper, blankets, towels...)  The cashier clerk was a bit surly but I went on about how adopting my dog was the best thing I'd done. She saw that I had vaccinated the dog with yearly shots, not just rabies, and made a big deal about that. She imputed the information into a computer and gave me a fold of papers. I assumed these were flyers as well as my receipt.

When I got home I opened the papers and saw the name of my dog, who was going on six, and the words "one and a half year old white female."  Without reading further, I called the shelter to speak to the cashier clerk.

"I think you might have put my money on the wrong dog..."

"Turn the page," she said.

She had printed out my dogs entire shelter record, which was surprising to me because by now I knew that no one in their right mind would've given up such a dog unless they had died.  

My dog had a rap sheet.

There was a "before" picture of her upon entry into the shelter with a head of rasta-type knots, which had to have taken months to develop. It said "dog surrendered by someone who would not give name, address, or pay $20 fee - probable owner."  She had been full of worms. Further it showed that she had first been dumped at one and half and had been taken out by the next owner without spaying.  Next she had been picked up by the animal catcher: "Released to owner without medical intervention due to advanced stage of  pregnancy," it said.  (So she had run away from that second household pregnant.)  Finally a note from the vet "A Sweet Animal."  How many litters had she had in some backyard breeding program?  How many of her puppies had been sold?  For how much each?

It turned out that the shelter had kept my dog twice as long as they were supposed to - ten days instead of five - because of her sweetness and all else.  So when I adopted her it was not just a jail break but a jail break from DEATH ROW.

That my dog had such a hard life before me made me more determined that I would provide her a forever home.  That said, I would have not given her up even if the both of us had gone to the street.

I do not understand WHY it is considered HEROIC to adopt or rescue a pre-owned dog.  It is simply NOT TRUE that the stay in a shelter kennel turns the animal's personality sour or mean. It is true that some people give an animal up because it has a bad personality. I do think some dogs are traumatized by being dumped.  My dog, the first time, due to horrible Friday traffic, I was hours late getting home, chewed a half dollar sized wound into her hide by her tail, a spot she went to when she felt anxious. I'd thought I'd be home in time for her usual dinner and the place was dark when I got there.  Clearly, she was afraid I was not coming home and she'd been abandoned again. 

But I tell you, she was a blessing upon me.

The truth is that a city shelter is the first place anyone who wants to adopt a dog should go, BEFORE A RESCUE GROUP.  Small dogs who are dumped by long time owners such as old people who have to go into nursing homes or assisted living or who loose their housing, need the most medical care and are the most traumatized and can often be seen and heard crying aloud. Some shelters are now offering "pre-arranged" adoptions in which owners who have to give up pets can do so without the animal ever being in a shelter.

Shelter kennels are also hard on dogs who have been taken from the people and places they are used to and feel attached to because as pack animals they are confronted with a confusion over their place in a pack. Being evicted from a pack means death or the disadvantage of being the "loan wolf" for a dog in the wild, and the other dogs in the kennel present a problem about who is going to be the leader. A dog will adapt to a new person as leader of the pack and in general will also fit into the new pack in a household with other animals, so long as you feed them in order.***

I do believe that dogs - perhaps particular dogs - are able to love and are not just opportunists who play-act in order to get their needs met.  I know that my dog loved me.

Proof of this is, among reasons, is an incident that occurred a few years ago. My dog and me had gone to visit with an old friend in our old neighborhood and were sitting up high on a porch above the street. My friend, who also has dogs, had taken them for a walk around the neighborhood to do their business before twilight set in. He planned to drive us back home after that. I had my dog to my side and we were just  looking out at the ocean from between the houses, relaxed. Then we saw some women walking down below. For the first and only time in my decade of being the "owner" of this person in a dog, she pitched forward in complete attention.  At this point she had cataracs forming - yet she knew.  One of the women - could it be? - if she she had lost a hundred pounds of morbid obesity - right height - right hairstyle - was a woman who had been co-dependent in some horrendous meanness towards me by her mother months earlier. My dog pointed her body and head towards the woman down below and she let out a long and sustained growl of pure hatred. My dog had never been a guard dog but she was showing contempt for someone who had done me wrong. (The woman did not react so perhaps she did not hear her or see us up above.)

My dog.  My girl...

When she died I told myself that perhaps that first owner, who had dumped her at age one and a half, had loved her. She had not been spayed. But perhaps my dog was till then an only dog, a dog that stayed in a house and yard, or a dog that rode around on the lap of someone in a wheel chair. Perhaps she - now dead to this world - in her little energy body, had met this first owner on the Other Side. Perhaps some of her many puppy descendants were also there. I cannot be selfish. There may be others who were in her life who also loved her. I want to be the special one. The one she will meet again. But she has her own spiritual path.

I made up songs for her, songs of love, that I would sing to her.  She would take a breath in, smile, squint her eyes, and know to take that love in.

He doggie frenemy, who I sometimes sit and often give treats to, who liked to raid my dog's bowl, showed signs of understanding that my dog had died, of showing respect for her. I showed her a framed photo of my dog's face and said "Who is that?"  She looked at the photo and hung her head.

So now, temporarily, I live in a world in which other people's cats and dogs concern me.  Will I travel unencumbered with dog duty?  Perhaps.


C 2023  Christine Trzyna

Notes: The above mentioned Vanity Fair article appears in the magazine's archive.  A link is not posted because only a limited number of articles are free per month.  But you can find it.  I often think of first reading that article and how that line hit me. So often we humans think about how bad our lives are but yet, most of us want our lives and are not through with life yet, even, for an example, when dealing with horrific medical treatments.  (This is not an advert for positive thinking by the way.)  

The shelters are again overfull so if you can, adopt that soul in a doggie body.

*** March 25th... Slightly edited for clarity...  ***  In households with more than one pet, it's advisable to feed them one by one in the same order each day, so the new addition to the household is the last fed.  This communicates to to dogs that you acknowledge their place in the pack and they are less likely to fight.

My dog cost less than a hundred dollars.  They had bathed and groomed her, deworned her, given her shots, cleaned her teeth, and the money included her registration as well. 

A couple years ago someone I knew who adopted a found dog that turned out to be pregnant and had five pups gave three of them to a rescue group.  They posted them on their web site at $700 each warning the price would go up with medical care.

3/19/23

TIMOTHY SAID IT BEFORE I COULD ! ON THE OBSESSION WITH BRYAN KOHBERGER : TIMOTHY ALLEN CAMPBELL

Sorry but the video I posted is no longer available.
Timothy Allen Campbell  

The driest sense of humor ever or just saying? He is right on about the nation's obsession with Kohberger.  I was composing my own rant about the stupidity of desperate "journalists" and media to keep the Kohberger balloon in the air and NewsNation - which claims to offer unbiased news but has Banfield - awash with emotions meant to prejudice any viewer.  But then I saw this. I no longer click on any YouTube videos from Newsnation.  Shame on media that goes against our Innocent Until Proven Guilty.  It's one thing for YouTubers who live for clicks - which might translate into income - and people who are PAID JOURNALISTS, professionals, to be leading the way towards a pre-trial indictment.

Of all the YouTube True Crime videos I watched regarding this upcoming trial - and it could be a couple years - Surviving the Survivor is the most professional.

Check out his other videos such as the one about Miranda Rights.

****
Remember YOU might be the next person arrested - be you innocent or guilty - who might have your life ruined by the media.

3/17/23

INTERVIEW OF JIM MORRISON CIRCA 1970 WITH TONY THOMAS

Jim Morrison's then futuristic notions have proven true, as he suspects that the "Influencers" will have impact in the future... but he doesn't know what to call them.  An interview that took place when he was 26 - a year or so before he died. He says he doesn't listen to the radio, that most stations pay 30 songs over and over again, That college students had no power until recently (1970).  And he sees no point in watching television (so he'd be no fan of reality TV.) He considers himself "over the hill" and says he has little contact with younger people, associating only with his peers. 

YOUTUBE INTERVIEW JIM MORRISON with TONY THOMAS

He suspects computer experts will be the heroes of the future.

He says every generation supersedes the last in intelligence and awareness.

And that the world is becoming more feminized.  Softer men? That's good. "Women have it all over men. They have the right idea."  (But are his ideas sexist?)

(Tony Thomas says Unisex "terrifies" him.)



 

3/12/23

HINKY

What makes one person hinky and another not?

I checked the definition of this slang word, which means, as a an adjective, nervous or suspicious.  The problem with this definition is that it's not correct.  A hinky person may not have a case of the nerves or be or act suspicious at all. A hinky person makes YOU nervous or suspicious of them. You think that the person is up to no good. And now that you "know" it, you are somehow involved because they involved you. Involved because they know you know - somehow.

It could be how they look but I think it's more than that. Few people on this earth are beautiful or handsome, which is why we notice those who are and why there is so much emphasis on being one of them.  

I  once saw a gallery of old photos on the internet, in which a number small time criminals from a hundred years ago or so had been photographed for an exhibition. These were not arrest photos or prison photos but simply portraits, each man's true nature explained - a pickpocket here - a con artist there.  The question I had was if their looks - their faces - had made it difficult for them to find honest work, forcing them to go into crime. They appeared to be an inspiration for the no-good characters in a comic strip such as Dick Tracy. Had these photos been taken for some Nazi-like purpose? To prove genetic misfortune predicted psychology? Eugenics? For each person, called hinky, was a slight bit unusual looking or hunkering; no 100,000 dollar big smiles here. What of that big slouchy hat? Did hinky people also dress different?

In today's world in which there is so much sexualization, it can be confusing about what is healthy and what is not.  Hinkyness has something to do with sex but yet is not just about sex. it's perhaps more about feeling a person is somehow predatory.

When it comes right down to it, who is or isn't hinky might be something that is self- determined, something without anything close to universal agreement.  Does a person make you uncomfortable?  To the point where your skin actually crawls?

Having a reaction to another person that causes me to think they are hinky is to have a reaction that is a bit different than that they made me feel uncomfortable. I feel the need to find a way to get away from them or to avoid further encounters with them or to at least be very cautious with them. I have a feeling of regret that I ever spoke to them or was in some situation where I met them. While being uncomfortable can happen simply for lots of reasons that are generally inconsequential.  

Lots of people are a bit eccentric, or artistic, or nonconforming, or "odd" or thought to be by others and are not hinky. Maybe it's because I've experienced city life, but I take a lot of different people in stride without suspicion.

For instance, a small town overly protected woman I met would actually whisper to her husband that she needed protection at the sight of a man walking down the street who was tattooed or pierced or who sported a rock and roll effect, while seeing such a person has no special effect on me. But the small town woman would hold herself back and stare and mumble and take a breath in and say "Look at that. Oh my God!" First of all, the man was simply walking down the street and not having a personal encounter with her.  If he was also bulked up and walking towards me in a threatening way, I would be concerned that I not get cornered by him. Otherwise it's just another person doing their own thing with their appearance. And as for the rock star effect, I'd probably think "But he has no interest in me so what's the point?"  (I would hire such persons qualified for a job - with a couple exceptions.  I cannot stand piercings through the nose that appear to be something forced upon a cow so that it could be lead by the nose.)

People can be called or considered odd just because they have a lifestyle you don't have or you don't understand. It could be as simple as that the person never married. Or that they love dogs more than people. Or, that they eat meat. 

***

I strained to think of women I've know through the years that I could call hinky. 

Men?  I could think of several I met who I determined were hinky.  (I could write a book on a hundred bad dates.)

As an example:

I can't remember where or when I met a particular man that I went out on a date with at this point or how it was that he asked me out. But I do remember that the one and only date was uneventful, nothing glaringly obviously wrong except that he attempted to impress me that he was a Rich Preppy - except that he was Jewish and not a WASP - and at that time even construction workers in their dirty uniforms were throwing sweaters from L.L. Bean over their shoulders in bars.  Maybe we went to lunch on a Sunday in Pasadena...

He referred to going to polo matches and talked his investments. He was arraying his feathers as a peacock, showing off. He didn't seem much interested in me.  I wasn't the self expresser I am now in those days. I was just supposed to sit there and be impressed. Be pretty. However, I started feeling that I wanted to go home already. I also felt myself feeling wary of him physically on the way home, even though I was in the passenger seat with a seat belt on and he was in the driver's seat with his seat belt on. He had not reached across the table to hold my hand.  He had not tried to play footsie with me under the table. I should've felt safe.

As we pulled up to the curb, I already had my hand on the door of the car, ready to get out and go. I said a polite goodbye - with no wish to linger, talk, discuss a future plan to get together, or invite him up for coffee.  No, this educated, clean, employed (we speculate monied) gentleman, though a pathetic snob, had not said or done anything that was obviously hinky,  But then he did it, as I went for the car door, my head turned towards the window, I felt a tounge go for my vulnerable left EAR, which by the way held an earring!  We had never hugged or kissed. We were not having sex. Yes, he was doing that.  He was using the last few seconds of our encounter to taste my ear wax. To really stick it in there. Did he think he was turning me on?  I needed to shower ASAP.

I pushed the car door open, got out, and slammed it. I keyed the security gate and ran up the stairs. My phone was ringing. I answered. It was him asking me if I got into my apartment OK?  Was this just to show off that he had a cell phone and could call from the car? He did not call again.  HINKY.

Example:

One of the men I think of, as hinky and hinkier, I still encounter once in a while due to his current job.  But I also encountered him at the job previous to that one and the job previous to that one. He's young, trying to string jobs together to come up with a career like a lot of people. From this I learned he has a history of "falling in love" with women who are here, there, and everywhere, often much older, and often otherwise unlikely. He seems to me to be stuck in the phase boys usually go through, not lingering, in which a person is infatuated with another from afar. Like junior high school.

I now suspect any such person as likely having a rich fantasy life and being a porn addict and either avoidant of real relationships or unable to conjour any.  (For the record I see nothing wrong with NOT being in a relationship, in not being married, or celibacy, as a life style choice. These conditions are a lot better than being in a bad relationship. Take it from someone who has had a number of women friends in bad relationships with men.)

That's NOT it!

A few years ago when I first encountered him, I believed that he wanted to meet someone likely, I invited him to an event where a woman I'd met was working, telling him that she was nice, smart, pretty, and available. (And they were close in age.)

I clued her in too and she was into it. At the sight of him she flipped her hair. Unlike the gallery of cons previously mentioned, this man is actually very good looking.  You would think that he had women throwing themselves at him but that's not the case. 

I call this a soft meet. I will not match make or specifically introduce anyone for the purposes of a match up and the event meant they were simply in the same room together. He could decide if he found her attractive and go from there, make his own moves. Afterwords he said he did find her attractive but he did nothing about it.  That's OK.

However, I came to think that he had agreed to attend this event for another reason. Because we had planned to take a walk together afterwards to get some exercise.

We took the walk after the event, a couple miles. At that time he did not know where I lived. As we clearly entered the next town, he suddenly said "We passed your house. Where is it?"  So, he was wanting an address.  

"Oh we passed it a while back," I said.  And let that go.

But then came the day someone wanted to put a camera in my face, take a photo, without first asking, which I hate and which happens way too much now. All these people who need content, who want you in their film or on their web site. I don't like it. I told one person NO PHOTOS so she published one in which the back of me and my dog was showing, as if the back of me is not me. NO PHOTOS!  (The beginning of the end to that friendship.)

I had a long day and was feeling tired and I did not want a photo taken, so I spoke up.  And damn if this man told everyone there it was because I thought that a photo would zap my ENERGY, like my anti-photo stance had something to do with an esoteric idea, an ethnic religious thing.  They believed him. What bullshit!

Pain in the ass.

Does everyone look everyone up on the internet?  That was next.  He was trying to find out other information about me that would clue him in so he could be the Mr. Know It All about me. I happen to know there has been and is misinformation related to me or other people with the same name or close to on the Internet. Including someone who was supposed to have been arrested at my address who was not living there and who I never met - an ex tenant who was clearly still using the address months after I moved in. And years ago I actually shut this blog down for some time because some woman who was not me had her picture exposed on Yahoo and under it was a quote that was from me - from my blog.  Good luck to her finding a job!

Does anyone remember when we thought that Russia - the Soviet Union  - Communists - did the kind of spying on their neighbors that people are now thinking of as "transparency" in the U.S. ???  Well, tell me you have Facebook and there is not much of a chance that I'm actually going to look at it. 

The more this man wanted to know about me, the weirder I thought he was and the more uncomfortable I got with him. He didn't just want information for himself, but to give to others, to show off to them or be in with them and to REPORT into them. 

Then one day he asked me if I would like a little free-lance work. I thought this had something to do with the job he had but he revealed no, it was for him personally.  I said what I usually do.  Well, let me see what you've written so far, and I'll let you know if I can do it. I mean if I want to do it. He said he needed editing and a rewrite.  It turned out he had invented a game. Two pages into his writing, which was incredibly screwed up for a college grad, I realized the game was a game in which women were sex trafficked.

I was appalled.

I'd started editing and wrote notes on the first few pages. But when I realized what was what, I wrote an angry feminist diatribe all over the papers.

One day he caught up with me and asked me what I thought.

I said something like As A Woman I Cannot Put My Energy towards a project like this. It took courage for me to say that and it should not have. I let him know I did not approve. I was not going to be involved in a game in which women as objects were to be traded back and forth among Mexican Mafia drug lords as prizes and the object of the game was to own the most women.

He suddenly realized I was not compliant. "Where are my papers he asked" and I knew he was afraid I had shown it to others.  I had not. "Oh, I can't remember where I put them," I said, honesty.  *Maybe I had shredded them? I I'd spared him my critique of outrage.

From that point on, this hinky character has made it a point of involving himself in my life in some way, in particular when it comes to more free lance work; leads that are always a waste of time - jobs that really do not exist - to the point where I will not follow through if the so called lead is from him.  He has presented himself to OTHERS as a person who gets me work but he never has.  He just wants to appear to be so HELPFUL to me to impress them. Being in situations in which I can't entirely avoid him without carefully planning not to, I see him and hope he is too busy to be friendly.  I caught him watching what I was doing on a computer screen more than once, walking behind me to look. I think of him as a spy.  A gossip. As up to no good. 

At the time of the sex trafficking game he invented, which he said was "just a fantasy"  (Yea well, raping babies just starts with a fantasy too...) I spoke with a friend of mine who became a Fundamentalist Republican Christian. Her church prides itself on attracting men from the local drug and booze rehab and I conclude that people who are out of control need the strict rules of a church like that, but... 

She thought I should tell on him.  I was torn up. Who would care or listen?  Was there any reason to think that he himself was at all involved with sex trafficking? Or the Mexican Mafia? There was not. (Was he going to market his game on the Dark Web?) Did I want to create a situation in which he might loose his employment?  I tend to not want to effect anyone's employment, to go that far. What it came right down to was that I did not trust the people I would have told to have my point of view or my back.

I chose not to get into it. I hoped that my reaction to his game had put a stop to it.  

****

Hinky...

The skin crawl.

Some years ago when I was writing with a partner, he had a friend, a man who was a regular at the public library, a man who was supposed to be so rich he never had to work. Had he ever tried to? I had seen him around at one branch or another for a few years and well, I was also a regular at libraries at the time, using the public computers, researching for a writing project, and so on. His apartment, dinners out, car, basics, were all paid for though he did not seem to be living lavishly. On the basis that he did not have to work, rather than that he was a homeless hanger-outer, he attracted a group of men who liked to small talk, tell jokes...bad jokes. I stayed on the outskirts of these men when they were in a group, knowing if I ever wanted to be one of the boys it would not be one of these boys...

Well, came the day when the rich kid proved that he was either mentally ill or the ultimate spoiled brat.  He took off in his SUV to parts unknown. His dad did not know where he was except when, after a month, the bill for his charge card came in and he was able to see that he had already spent about $10,000 and had stayed at exclusive resorts as well as what could be considered skid row adjacent lodgings. He was driving all over the state, not leaving the state, spending like he could. He was on the run. But who from?

I recalled the day when I was out front of the library taking a break and some men with cameras showed up. The men were taking photos of the new architecture but this rich kid hid behind a pole. He was showing signs of paranoia.  

I was enlisted to try and "talk" to him and I had tried. The story went that he had witnessed an auto accident that was probably a set up.  A friend of his, much older, had been run into, and was now being sued.  He had testified and as a result the criminals were after him. 

My writing partner called the Senior Lead Officer who came out and investigated. He even talked to the person who had been accused of the deliberate auto crash, their family, and there was no reason to think he was the member of a gang or after the man. He had, however, been seen in the park where the rich kid took morning walks. Reporting this in to the rich kid made no difference.

Weeks went by and then one day the rich kid showed up at the library. We all went over to talk to him, to figure out if he was OK by now, and to hear about his trip. But there was now something amiss with his eyes which appeared blank. He was clean yet there appeared to me to be a thin coat of grime on his skin.  And then I felt it and saw it. The skin crawled on my left forearm. This was the first and only time in my life that I experienced that.

Later I told another woman writer who used the library about this experience and she said, "He has ALWAYS given me that feeling."

We do not know this to be a fact, but we both wondered if he had been up to no good while he was gone.  Did he harm someone? Did he rape?  Did he assault?  Was it even possible he had murdered?  We were being fantastical in our thinking but the skin crawl says a lot - if not it all.

C 2023  Christine Trzyna


3/6/23

EVE BABITZ : SLOW DAYS, FAST COMPANY - THE WORLD, THE FLESH, and L.A. : RAIN

The silver lining was rain.  A sudden, mistaken rain that came all at once in the middle of the following Thursday, vanishing after five minutes upon noticing its blunder. No clouds, seventy-five degrees, no reason, but it rained.  It rained on the hot oily asphalt and made it smell rainy.  It rained the fray from the landscape, just like that, with a snap of its wrong turn.

The wild blue yonder came upon us like a drunken zoom lens thundering into focus.  It seemed that God had made up His mind to change the background without telling anyone.

Los Angeles got huge shafts of pure yellow sunlight surging through office windows.  Daffodils came to mind. Violets.  

You could choose any direction and see as far as you wanted.  Past Catalina and on west all the way to the East. In a quick clap of mistaken thunder the look of Southern California had been transformed miraculously and I have seen nothing like it anywhere else or heard of any such thing.

You could pick up mad gladness from bus drivers and studio chiefs and pool cleaners and check-out girls and guys doing their news on the radio.  "Rain!" they cried, and immediately meteorologists were contacted to predict more rain. Rain from Mexico, rain from the San Joaquin Valley, rain from a storm out in the Pacific, rain coming down from Oregon.  Converging rain -- we're bound to have more rain.

"Did you see it, it rained! everyone said to each other, in soft panting voices as though they were in love.

Excerpt pages 92 and 93 published in 1977

3/4/23

SET THE NIGHT ON FIRE : LIVING, DYING, and PLAYING GUITAR WITH THE DOORS by ROBBY KRIEGER : CHRISTINE TRZYNA AUDIOBOOK REVIEW

SET THE NIGHT ON FIRE : LIVING, DYING, and PLAYING GUITAR WITH THE DOORS by Robbie Krieger   "Listened to on an Audio Book"

First, this book is read by someone else, not Robbie Krieger, but the reader's male voice was not terribly unlike Krieger's which is a good thing because I had no trouble believing I was listening to Krieger. The reader did a good job of following the intent of Krieger, the emotions of the telling. So when I think about Krieger's writerly "voice" I mean both the reading of it, and the telling of it.

Unlike many memoirs, this one does not proceed from start to finish in the telling but rather each chapter is topical. The story telling is a circling, a dipping and flying again, adventure, going back to Jim Morrison and the Doors often and Krieger's personal experience and life - before, during, and after being part of one of the most famous music groups in American history, made more famous, I feel, in years after their time with Jim Morrison, the singer. He answered the question "How did being in The Doors effect your life?"

Krieger comes off as genuine and frank. He includes his heroin addiction and what that meant when it came to being a father. That all the doors managed to evade the draft for the Viet Nam war. His honesty includes that he thinks Ray Manzarek, the keyboardist, expressed some strange, if not esoteric, notions in his own memoir.  He says he cannot imagine the Jim Morrison he knew indulging in any "witch wedding." He thinks resistance to using Door's music for commercials makes no sense. He also thinks some of those who wrote books about the Doors, especially those who were not there, are - did he use the word "bullshit"? - I think he did.  Overall, Krieger's memoir is one that takes issue with reportage of the past, including that of film-maker Oliver Stone's exaggerated and erroneous take on Morrison and the Doors.  Importantly he says that Jim Morrison did not expose himself on stage in Florida - or anywhere. And the backstage problems with the police also did not happen as the film suggests.  But, significantly, he was amazed by actor Val Kilmer's interpretation of Morrison.

Krieger wrote Light My Fire, perhaps the most famous of all the songs the group recorded long ago. It's been years since I heard that song blaring out of a radio, and I feel that the Door's music has what can properly be called "a cult following."  

Like most of the music that I find on YouTube and embed into this blog, I became of that music as an Oldie.  I was not aware of the Doors when they were actually a group. There was one kid in my high school who was into their music and supposedly had all their albums, a too skinny kid who was also a genius and once took a brief stroll as an opportunity to give me a gentle kiss. But my best friend was accumulating Beatle's albums. So I came to the Door's music late and like many, mostly after the film. I must also admit that I saw Oliver Stone film in Hollywood on a triple wide screen and thought it was fantastic, that it captured some energy that had come out of that era. I've seen it on smaller screens since, at least twice, each time noticing something new. 

It's been a while since I traveled the canyon and went past the renamed Love Street, in Laurel Canyon, but we all knew that house with "Jim Lives" spray painted on a foundation behind the store, was where he and his girlfriend Pam had lived. So, I feel it is near impossible to be an Angeleno and not learn about the Doors.  And, there is something about their music that IS Los Angeles at a certain time and place - the beach at Santa Monica - Sunset Strip - which is evocative. 

Krieger came from an advantaged family and credits his dad as being especially supportive of his efforts and The Doors as a group. He says that Jim Morrison and his dad could really talk because of his dad's acceptance, unlike the relationship Morrison had with his own father.

After finishing this book, I went onto YouTube and listened to videos of the Doors for a while, including their performance for their induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

How many of your friends from your twenties do you still know?  How many of the people you creatively collaborated with do you still?


C 2023  Christine Trzyna


3/1/23

EVE OF DESTRUCTION : BARRY MCGUIRE


Came out in 1965....  WHAT HAS CHANGED?

YOU NEVER CAN TELL : ERSEL HICKEY