The Adventures of Bloggard

Been Around the Block. Got Some Stories. These are Them.

  • Home
  • Archives
  • About Bloggard
  • Concise Autoblography
  • Contact

The Dreadful Goatee

03.13.2011 by bloggard // Leave a Comment

San Francisco, 1975: For a year my life was really slow and relaxed. I was collecting unemployment, starting to get some bookkeeping clients, and reading about magic and meditation.

I lived cheaply, and grew a goatee. On Sundays, I’d ride my red Schwin 10-speed in the park with a girlfriend. We’d picnic. I have a photograph that shows the goatee. That day while slowing to a stop, I’d been unable to pull my foot free of the toe clip, and fell over, toward my front wheel. Not wanting to bend the spokes, I’d placed my hand onto the spindle of the axel, which, being pointed, had poked a hole in my hand. In the photo, I am dabbing at my hand with a kleenex and wearing a rueful expression. And, of course, my goatee.

I thought the goatee looked pretty good. I have some indian blood, and grow no whiskers elsewhere, so I cannot grow a full beard. My goatee was frizzy, and my cat Rosie used to bite it to show affection.

Some days I’d bus down to the San Francisco library and spend some hours there, looking things up, reading Consumers Reports. I cannot now imagine how I spent hours, but I did. This particular day I’d taken a picnic lunch consisting of a can of vienna sausages and a sourdough roll. I ate my picnic on the grass on the park across from City Hall, and in front of the Library.

That afternoon, riding home on the bus, I was daydreaming, when my eye was caught by a black-haired guy sitting a few rows up. He sat on the sideway bench behind the driver, so I could see his face. As my mind floated along, I kept coming back to this guy’s face and finally realized that he looked really stupid. He needed a haircut and he had a little goatee and somehow he looked like he thought he was really cool, and he looked like a jerk to me.

Then, with a sudden flash, I realized that he had a goatee just like my own!

When I got home, I shaved. That was the end of the goatee.

Categories // Looking Back

Enter the Voicemail Business

03.13.2011 by bloggard // Leave a Comment

San Francisco, 1987: The last few years, at the answering service conventions, the new voicemail machines were displayed, with big price tags. A few owners bought them, then tried selling voicemail for $30-$50 per month. I thought it was coming, but it wasn’t here yet.

Until I got a call from Judy Laurence.

She asked me if I wanted to buy her voicemail business. She’d looked us up in the yellow pages, and because I’d entered the name ‘A Budget Answering Service’, starting in the A’s, I was the first person she reached.

“Sure,” I said, and then [Read more…]

Categories // Looking Back

Wonders in Wichita Falls

03.13.2011 by bloggard // Leave a Comment

Wichita Falls, 1959: Before I had my driver’s license, the bus took me to Wichita Falls’ downtown for the Saturday movies. The Horror of Dracula, with Christopher Lee, was clearly the best, but wandering the streets downtown was also great.

Once I could drive, it was even better, because I had a place to drive to. In my two-toned green 1951 Chevrolet, very much a man of the world, I drove to spend an afternoon and my allowance.

There was a tiny store there.

It’s name was ‘Thomas Bookstore’, but it sold very few books. It was a hole in the wall, and pure magic from wall to wall. A portly middle-aged man ran it, probably Mr. Thomas. He was balding, taciturn, apparently wearing the same dark suit, sitting on a chair near the front, gazing out into the sunlight. I now wonder what he dreamed, sitting there.

In the middle of the store, from front to rear, was a glass-enclosed wooden cabinet, well lit, and moving slowly down one side and up the other, I gazed on marvels. Magic tricks, practical jokes, oddments and endments. Fake bandages, rubber worms, a fly inside a plastic ice cube, matches that sputter, eyeglasses with wierd-looking eyes. Everything from the Johnson-Smith Catalog and more. Science fiction and other magazines, including nudist magazines showing people doing ordinary things, but naked! Caveman masks, like Ernie Kovacs’ Nairobi Trio.

With one of these caveman masks, Eddy Frank and I took turns standing beside the road in a heavy coat, hitch-hiking. Eddy Frank swears that one motorist nearly hit the phonepole, swerving as he gawked. I missed it, because you can’t really see well from a caveman mask.

There was no end to the marvels at Thomas Bookstore. Every few weeks, I visited again. It required almost an hour to peruse once around the store, looking at the marvels. I bought now and then, a science-fiction magazine, a deck of shaved cards for magic tricks, a book about Hypnotism.

Then, lunch at Woolworth’s counter. See a movie, then home.

How wonderful such a time, when such things were wonders!

Categories // Looking Back

The Bottle Rockets

03.13.2011 by bloggard // Leave a Comment

Near Hurnville, Texas, 1954: At my grandparents’ farm, I had firecrackers, because in town there was an old hardware and general store run by Grover Thaxton. An ancient holdover from the 1800’s, the store had a dirt floor, and glass-topped cases in a long, narrow U-shape running from the front into the dimness inside. Along the side walls, cabinets reached to the ceiling, and the goods were retrieved with a ladder.

Grover Thaxton’s store was already old when my mother’s generation was young. One Halloween long before I was born, my young mother and her pals Billie Jane and Sara Moyer sat with beers and friends in Grover’s kitchen, waiting for the annual attempt on Grover’s outhouse. “Here they come, Grover!” they whisper as they spied the hooligans creeping near.

They’d wait till the boys turned over the outhouse, and were running away, and then Grover would burst from the back door with his shotgun.

“You go**amned hooligans!” screamed Grover. He fired the shotgun over the boys heads, one barrell, then the other. It was actually loaded with rock salt, for safety, but Grover put on a great display. Terrified, the boys ran like hell.

Somewhere beyond the danger, they’d laugh and congratulate themselves. Back inside the kitchen, mom and Sara rolled on the floor with laughter. Grover was pounded on the back. Beers were opened. Every year, just the same.

“Thaxton Hardware” read the faded sign, across from the Methodist Church. I suppose once upon a time, farmers bought from this general store. The store hadn’t changed since that time. And, from one of the bins, any time of the year, we boys could buy firecrackers.

My grandmother’s front porch was about two feet above the ground, of poured concrete, with four brick and timber pillars which held the roof above. Looking out, to the right a huge Oak tree grew up from within the huge metal rim of a tractor wheel. Beyond, the wire fence to keep chickens, guineas, and coyotes out of the yard and the flower beds. And beyond, the land fell away to the creek and the wandering line of trees stretching as far as I could see.

I had firecrackers, and we boys were playing with matches. We’d light a fuse, throw the firecracker, and then thrill to the report. These were small firecrackers, woven into a package. I now know they were designed to be set off as a package, popping and jumping, but we didn’t know that. We unwove them and lit and threw them one by one.

I thought I’d scare my cousin Bobby, so I pulled a fuse off one of the firecrackers. I lit the fuse and threw it toward him. Reasonably, he panicked, and tried to roll away, but in his haste placed his hand upon the burning fuse and got a nasty gunpower burn. My trickery turned sour.

Scolded properly and with firecrackers confiscated, we boys lolled around the summer day. Evening drew closer. It was the habit of our elders that they brought us presents when they’d been away, and Uncle Esty and Aunt Rosemary were returning to reclaim Bobby and Danny. They brought fireworks.

In the dark, sparklers flashing sparks, we drew pictures in the night, spelled out words, ran like the wind with sparks trailing behind.

With roman candles, each took a turn holding the tube upright, with the colorful balls of fire blasting into the sky with a loud whooshing sound. One, then another, then two together, of red, yellow, green. Another and another and another.

And, best of all, the tiny rockets on a long red stick. Held upright by an empty Royal Crown bottle, the fuse lit by Uncle Esty, after a moment’s pause, up they soared, trailing a tail of fire, and then they burst with a clap of thunder, spreading a flower of soaring, colorful petals.

Year after year. Just like magic.

Categories // Looking Back

The Christmas Present

03.13.2011 by bloggard // Leave a Comment

Newport Beach, California, December 1985: Taking the Startel job was a colossal blunder. It’s very clear now, but not then. All women wish to be loved, cherished, and protected. I was married to Lori, but I failed miserably to show that I cherished her, and I failed to protect her.

And that brought me the most painful days in my life.

Do you believe that all events are foretold? I do. Lori and I had written our marriage ceremony, and when I gave it to Father Bob Cromey, he read it and said, “There’s nothing in here about commitment. That’s a mistake.”

He was referring to the lines where it said, “I will remain with you as long as it shall please you.” Father Cromey was correct, and so were my written words. I was with her as long as it pleased her.

This was back in the time of books like Open Marriage and such tripe, but I was turned on by these ideas. And although I never became involved with other women, when I began to ignore her, concentrating on work, building the Line Seizer device, working on computers … when I ceased being fun, when I ceased paying enough attention, when I ceased demonstrating cherishing … she started going out, I’m sure of it.

It started innocently enough, with Oz Koosed’s jitterbug class at the Avenue Ballroom. Lori, as tall as I, kept trying to lead. Either I wasn’t strong enough or focused enough. And when it came to a move called ‘The Drop’, I didn’t have the physical strength. This is a movie-move, where the woman, with body rigid, tips over and almost hits the floor. By strength of arms you hold her just inches above the floor. I couldn’t hold her. Big mistake.

She started going out to dance with the brother of a friend. I’m pretty sure it became the horizontal mambo. And idiot that I was, because I’d thought this openness was good, I put no stop to it. That was the beginning of the end.

One thing led to another. When Lori asked me to move out, I yielded to anger rather than handling the danger. Soon after, around my 40th birthday, I was offered and took a job working with Startel in southern California, and moved far away.

Oh, the business reasons made sense. We needed some equipment to advance the answering service we ran together. She already ran operations, and my marketing department already had a manager. I would bring in a lot of money. Blah blah blah.

I loaded our Volkswagen, which blew up in the desert heat along the way, continued in a rented car, and stayed with her folks in Covina while I began selling answering service equipment for Startel Corporation. Then I bought a Pugeot, rented the house in Newport Beach, and really shouldn’t have been so surprised, that first Christmas here in Southern California.

Because late at night on Christmas Eve, lying in the dark together in a bedroom at her parents home, she had something to tell me. I can still hear her voice in the darkness. She said that she’d fallen in love with another man.

I saw my errors crashing around me, shattering like glass, like mirrors, timeless and cruel as stone.

Categories // family, Looking Back, Problems, truth, Wisdom Log

A Voice From the Past

03.13.2011 by bloggard // 2 Comments

ghost in the machine
nameless, timeless … speed of light
and when is a loss?

July 1, 2003, San Jose, California: Although I am seated at my desk in San Anselmo, right now in San Jose hundreds of my 800-numbers are being fitted into a seven-foot cabinet inside the switching room of a long distance company.

It has been a very techno day; and to my shock I have just heard from my very techno friend Harvey, who died several years ago.

Moving those telephone lines was the final step of the Bloggard Migration Strategy (BMS).

Why migrate? Marin County, where we live, is perhaps the most expensive place in California. To buy the modest house we rent would cost over $700,000. In Montana or even a hundred miles north of here, this house would cost perhaps $150,000. So we decided to move.

In preparation, I consolidated all my local voicemail and 800-number voicemail lines into one place. Because their machine-support will no longer require my personal touch, Adrienne and I are now free to relocate, because I can operate my voicemail office, and my megatar workshop, anywhere.

As I tested telephone lines, I found one I’d forgotten. Some years previously, shortly before he died, my techno friend Harvey Warnke got a voicemail account from me.

Harvey was a unique spirit. Self-educated, he’d learned electronics working in the planetarium, then learned to design the light shows that appeared in the early days of Haight Ashbury psychedelic rock shows. He worked on movies, too.

If you’ve seen the remake of Invasion of the Body-Snatchers, in one of the later scenes there is the meow of a cat; that was Harvey’s cat, whom he named Shi*ty Kitty.

If you saw the movie War Games, in the final war-room scene you saw the huge screens that show missiles launching all over the world; It was Harvey who made those huge screens with their flashing images.

Long ago, he and I traded a project. He designed relays and sensors for the Line Seizer device I built for Network Answering Service, and I in turn did the software programming his Counter Intelligence device, which counted frames of film on a film-editing table for splicing movies. It was a grand time. Harvey was a brilliant engineer, who drove a turbo-charged motorcycle at vast speeds. He was always laughing, always fun.

He was a part of life, a part of my life, and it was a good time.

But his death came suddenly.

He’d contracted some kind of virus, and the virus, invading his heart, made his heart very large and very weak. And then one day, his heart stopped.

At the time, I couldn’t bring myself to delete the voice mailbox with the recording of his voice. I forgot it was there, until now.

Sitting here at my desk in San Anselmo, calling into the machine, suddenly I hear my friend talking.

“Hi, this is Harvey,” he says, “I’m not here right now. Leave me a message, and I’ll call you as soon as I can.”

His voice has survived the years and the equipment changes. He promises to return calls, but he will not.

His voice remains, in the machine.

And you know what?

I still can’t erase it.

Categories // All, friends, Looking Back, Problems, Projects, time

It’s Your Tree

03.13.2011 by bloggard // Leave a Comment

San Francisco, 1980: I shanghai’d Richard W. and Derek S. to help me move from the third floor at 495 Third Avenue. I’d just rented the new office on Geary Boulevard for Network Answering Service, and I was going to live there in the back room.

When Derek showed up, he was yellow-colored.

Ignorant lads as we were, none of us realized that yellow eyes and yellowish skin meant hepatitus, and he really shouldn’t have been working. As it was, complaining of fatigue, he carried boxes of books down the stairs and loaded them into the borrowed van.

Richard and I sympathized by mocking him as much as possible.

But it became clear that he wasn’t doing so well. He started stumbling around a bit, but gamely continued. We were nearing the end of the job.

I had a nice ficus tree. Aside from it’s bad habit of dropping some leaves if moved, it was a happy little tree, and it was going to live in a new home. It grew in an elaborate chinese pot, very heavy.

In most any chinese grocery store in Chinatown or on Clement street, you will find “hundred-year-old” eggs for sale. They aren’t really a hundred years old, but they’re pretty old. They are black in color. I don’t know how they taste because I see no point in eating an egg known to be really, really old. But the point is that they are shipped from China in huge ceramic bowls. I’d bought this one for $5 from a grocer on Clement Street.

Derek grabbed the heavy pot of the ficus tree, and hefted it. He was doing pretty good till he tried to round the corner at the end of the hall, so as to get out my apartment door. But the tree had grown. It wouldn’t really go around the corner. Derek backed up, tried again, and was again balked.

He tried it several times, sweating heavily, using colorful language and expressions. Behind him, Richard and I, holding boxes, encouraged him to get a move on.

Derek stopped, thought, backed up, set the tree down, and turned to me.

“It’s your tree,” he said. “You break it.”

Categories // Looking Back

Eddy Frank

03.13.2011 by bloggard // Leave a Comment

Lulu Johnson Elementary School, Henrietta, Texas, 1953: In the third grade, Eddy Frank was a big hit with Susan J. For reasons I could not comprehend, she favored him above other, more attractive boys, such as, for example, myself.

Susan had invented a wonderful game, and Eddy Frank knew just how to play it.

Susan had two little girl accomplices, and, in cahoots, the three of them would sneak up on Eddy Frank, who pretended he didn’t notice. When they jumped him, the two would grab his arms, and he’d wail, “Oh, noooo!”

Meanwhile, Susan J. stepped around to face him, and then, grasping her skirt, she’d pull it high, exposing her brown belly and girlish drawers. Eddy’s eyes bugged, as he feebly struggled.

“Oh, no!” he’d cry out. “Don’t make me look! Don’t make me look!”

Oh, the anguish of it! His wailing cry, the pathos! The boy had the touch. I burned with envy, but never found a way to insinuate myself into the game. I mean, how do you say, “Don’t make me look, too!”

Eddy Frank’s unique brand of resistance made him irresistible. But Eddy Frank wasn’t just skillful with the girls.

That year, a new kid showed up. A skinny, burr-headed boy named Jimmy B. He was the solemn-faced, thin and wiry kind of kid. He seemed tough, and said little.

At the first recess, we gamboled in the fresh September air on the north side of the school. But not Eddy Frank and the new kid. Eddy Frank and Jimmy B. were circling each other, warily. Not a word was spoken. Suddenly, Eddy Frank jumped the new guy. It was a grand fight. Rolling over and other, dirt and pebbles flying, wild fists flailing, tearing shirts, with lots of grunts and growling. They were just wild.

We enjoyed this spectacle until Ms. Gilbert and Ms. Stine pulled them apart. It was clear that Eddy Frank had started the fight, and it seemed out of the blue. That was part of the wonder.

Ms. Gilbert shook Eddy Frank’s arm. “Why did you do that?” she hissed. Eddy Frank glowered at Jimmy, then slowly answered.

“I didn’t like his looks.”

Categories // Looking Back

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 53
  • 54
  • 55
  • 56
  • 57
  • …
  • 75
  • Next Page »

Your Fortune Cookie

  • A complex system that works is invariably found to have evolved from a simple system that works.

Our Host


Perhaps you are wondering why I have gathered all of you here.

Recent Posts

  • How to live a long and healthy life?
  • Can You Have a Completely Original Thought?
  • Can a Person have an Original Thought?
  • How to Write a Book — Quick and Easy.

Recent Comments

  • bloggard on Phil Groves and the Raskin-Flakkers Ice Cream Store
  • Lance Winer on Phil Groves and the Raskin-Flakkers Ice Cream Store
  • Dennis Briskin on Emily’s Hot Tubs

Search By Keyword

Currently 595 micro-stories searchable online. Enter search words and hit return:

Search by Category

View My LinkedIn Profile

View Arthur Cronos's profile on LinkedIn

Credits and Copyright

All contents copyright (c) 2001-2021 Arthur Cronos and Voltos Industries, Mount Shasta, California. Reproduction prohibited except as noted. All rights reserved.

Webdesign by VOLTOS

** TEXT NAVIGATION **
Home * Archives * About the Bloggard * Bloggard's Concise Autoblography * Contact Us * Terms of Use * Privacy Policy * Site Map * Voltos Industries
 
 

reviews

[wprevpro_usetemplate tid=”1″]

All Contents Copyright © 2001-2019 · Webdesign by VOLTOS