“Handling it just fine!!”

The humidity is just god-awful around here today, gang. The heat’s not so bad, but being closed up tight in this room — even with all the window’s open, there’s just no AIR!!

But it’s my final day off until next Monday, and I want to get this novel DONE as soon as I can, so I’m just going to deal with it.

Me SOMEONE dealing with it just fine…

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Before I forget!!

Wow, did I have a wonderful time with my client yesterday. (I hadn’t seen her in 8 months.)

She was in great spirits. She looked fantastic. We had a whole afternoon of great conversations, and as I was leaving, she said, “It was so great seeing you again! I had such a nice afternoon.”

That kind of thing just makes my day, gang.

And being back in her home again — wow, what a feeling. She lives way out in the country and her home is a HUGE old farmhouse (14 rooms), built in 1839. Surrounded by hills, trees, a small lake, a couple of small barns. And the house is absolutely filled with love — you can feel it the moment you walk into it. She and her husband were married 63 years before he died (during COVID, but not from it), and they lived on that property the whole time and raised a really happy family there.

It was just so great to be back there, with her.

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And for whatever reason [HINT: novel-in-progress} I am feeling really wiped out emotionally today.

Although, while I was doing all that driving yesterday, I started to get little inspirations — primarily that there needs to be a Part 3 . A very short Part 3.

And I know what needs to happen in it and I felt really excited about that.

But meanwhile, I am working on completing Part 2. It feels so strange to just pick up the story where I left it, 26 years ago…

And Part 1 is 152 pages long and, in essence, takes place during one day — the protagonist’s 24th birthday. But, of course, it’s full of flashbacks, memories, thoughts.

Part 2 is similar — it takes place 2 years later, on the evening where the protagonist has to turn over the funeral urn with her lover’s ashes in it to his brothers, and then flashbacks, memories, and thoughts ensue for 100 more pages.

So I’m guessing what I have here is a novel that will be about 300-ish pages, that unveils a young woman’s lifetime over the course of 2 specific days. Well, 3 — since there will be a Part 3.

It takes so much weaving and weaving and weaving, and making sure you aren’t leaving any lose threads.

**************

Okay, enough!!

Here’s this!!!

One of several great photos posted to Instagram by Marlon Richards’ wife on Father’s Day:

Keith and Marlon Richards

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And here’s this!

The decision was finalized last night, at about 9PM, while I was lying in bed, chatting on the phone with Sandra!

We’ll be staying at this hotel in NYC in July:

The Empire Hotel, across the street from Lincoln Center.

And our rehearsal studio is only 4 blocks away, so it should be a really great trip.

*************

From James Tabor —

Mystery Solved–Here’s How the Shroud of Turin Was Produced! (2 hrs):

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And I think I better get started around here today!!

Have a terrific Tuesday, wherever you are in the world!

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys. See ya!

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As promised!

Another great one from Steve Earle.

I think this song was probably everybody’s first exposure to his music, back in 1986. Well, it was his first single released, anyway, and it was a huge Billboard hit.

I loved this song!

“Guitar Town,” Steve Earle. Enjoy, gang!!

“Guitar Town”

Hey pretty baby, are you ready for me
It’s your good rockin’ daddy down from Tennessee
I’m just out of Austin bound for San Antone
With the radio blastin’ and the bird dog on

There’s a speed trap up ahead in Selma Town
But no local yokel gonna shut me down
‘Cause me and my boys got this rig unwound
And we’ve come a thousand miles from a Guitar Town

Nothin’ ever happened ’round my hometown
And I ain’t the kind to just hang around
But I heard someone callin’ my name one day
And I followed that voice down the lost highway
Everybody told me you can’t get far
On 37 dollars and a jap guitar
Now I’m smokin’ into Texas with the hammer down
And a rockin’ little combo from the Guitar Town

Hey pretty baby don’t you know it ain’t my fault
I love to hear the steel belts hummin’ on the asphalt
Wake up in the middle of the night in a truck stop
Stumble in the restaurant wonderin’ why I don’t stop

Well, I gotta keep rockin’ why I still can
Got a two pack habit and a motel tan
When my boots hit the boards I’m a brand new man
With my back to the riser, I make my stand

Hey pretty baby, won’t you hold me tight
I’m loadin’ up and rollin’ out of here tonight
One of these days, I’m gonna settle down
And take you back with me to the Guitar Town

c- 1986 – Stephen F. Earle

Everything from now on is gonna be weird!!

My life has just gotten so strange, gang. But not in a bad way.

It stems mostly from joy. So much beautiful stuff in my world right now, but the “weird” part is that I had to get old before any of this could happen.

Well, most of it.

This first thing has nothing to do with age — the Agency texted to say that my favorite client, the woman who is now back from Florida and who has all those Theology Degrees from Yale Divinity School, has an open shift for today and did I want it?

Yes!! Thank you!!

So, even though it’s my day off, and even though I will also be seeing her on Thursday, I was more than happy to get started seeing her again as soon as possible.

So I’m spending the afternoon with her today, for the first time in 8 months. She has physical issues, obviously, or she wouldn’t need a caregiver round-the-clock, but it’s her mind that I really, really love. So we will soon see how it goes!

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Okay!

It is, of course, the novel-in-progress that is primarily consuming my life right now. And after working on it yesterday (The Curse of Our Profound Disorder) I realized two important things:

  1. I absolutely could not have written this novel if I had started it today because I wouldn’t have had any clear memories of most of the stuff that is the crux of this book.
  2. I couldn’t have COMPLETED the novel 26 years ago — when I first began writing it. Because I needed to get this far in life to be able to stand back and discern how it needs to end.

And since I believe both of those statements to be true, it makes me wonder “who” is really behind this novel? Me? A younger me? An older me? A “me” that’s set apart from anything physical that ages at all?

It’s a really profound feeling, whatever it’s pointing to. And in a way, it almost feels like I was in a whole other realm of existence these last 26 years, and now I’ve suddenly “come back”.

Whatever is going on here, it is a really beautiful thing. It gives me a chance to look at my entire life in a different way.

And, oddly enough, there is an undercurrent to the novel that is similar to “The Guide to Being Fabulous.” Even though, that play, is the story of Sandra’s life, not mine.

I can’t really put my finger on it yet, but there is just something really beautiful going on here, creatively, with both of these intense projects, after all these years, landing on my plate again at once.

[There is a new excerpt from The Curse of Our Profound Disorder on my substack page today, if you are interested. Mature readers only.]

*************

Nick Cave sent out a really beautiful Red Hand File this morning. He answers a few different questions this time, but all of them address that quality of being human in some way. I really loved it. It’s hard to really quote from it without reposting the entire thing! But here’s this:

“…Certain music has the ability, at least temporarily, to fill that void, making us feel whole and less abandoned. We feel complete when we listen to music we love, while being guided towards the goodness of things…”

You can read it in full HERE.

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Okay. That’s really it for now. I want to get a few things done before heading out to my client.

I hope you enjoy your Monday, wherever you are in the world!!

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys, See ya!

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After posting that video yesterday of Joan Baez singing the Steve Earle song, “Jerusalem”, it reminded me of how much I used to love Steve Earle’s music!! I used to play his CDs all the time in NYC!!

I am conflicted, though! Which one to post here??? So I will probably post a few of them this coming week.

For now — “The Devil’s Right Hand”, from the album Copperhead Road, 1988. How many times have I played this song in my wee bonny lifetime??? I have no clue!! What a great song.

Enjoy, gang!!

The Devil’s Right Hand”

‘Bout the time my daddy left to fight the big war
I saw my first pistol in a general store
In a general store, when I was 13
Thought it was the finest thing I ever had seen

Asked if I could have one someday, when I grew up
Mama dropped a dozen eggs, she really blew up
She really blew up, I didn’t understand
Mama said, “The pistol is the devil’s right hand”

The devil’s right hand, the devil’s right hand
Mama said, “The pistol is the devil’s right hand”

My very first pistol was a cap and ball Colt
Shoot as fast as lightnin’, but she loads a mite slow
Loads a mite slow as I soon found out
It can get you into trouble, but it can’t get you out

So then I went and bought myself a Colt 45
Called a Peacemaker, but I never knew why
Never knew why, I didn’t understand
Mama said, “The pistol is the devil’s right hand”

The devil’s right hand, the devil’s right hand
Mama said, “The pistol is the devil’s right hand”
The devil’s right hand, the devil’s right hand
Mama said, “The pistol is the devil’s right hand”

Well, I got into a card game, in a company town
Caught a miner cheating, I shot the dog down
Shot the dog down, I watched the man fall
Never touched his holster, never had a chance to draw

My trial was in the morning, and they dragged me out of bed
Asked me how I pleaded, “Not guilty, ” I said
“Not guilty, ” I said, “You’ve got the wrong man”
Nothing touched the trigger but the devil’s right hand

The devil’s right hand, the devil’s right hand
Mama said, “The pistol is the devil’s right hand”
The devil’s right hand, the devil’s right hand
Nothing touched the trigger but the devil’s right hand

My mama said, “The pistol is the devil’s right hand”

c – 1983- Stephen F. Earle

Happy Dad’s Day, Everybody!

Unfortunately, it is rainy and humid today in the Hinterlands, so dads around here are not going to get to do what they do best!! (i.e., work really hard out in the blistering hot sun all day, then cook over a blazing fire…)

Here is a photo of my dad that I really love. It hangs on the wall in my family room.

This was taken of him before he got sick, right after he moved into his new Senior Living apartment building, after my stepmom had passed away:

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And this has nothing to do with Father’s Day, but it will finally explain to you why printers were created!

Bobbie Jo and Calico just now

Today’s going to be a big day for them — I’m moving the kitten playpen thingie out of the bedroom. Mostly, I want them to get used to it not being in here anymore, even though they love climbing all over it. But it will be easier for the cat sitter to feed them and clean up after them, without the playpen getting in the way.

Meanwhile, all 4 of them have already started trying to get out of the room the minute the door is open. But as soon as they encounter one of my full-grown curious cats out in the hall, they come running back in.

But we’re getting there… They are 9 weeks old already. They need to explore. My main concern is still Little Blackie (the mom) getting out and attacking my other cats, so I’m taking everything a moment at a time.

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Well.

Yesterday was sort of a weird day for me. And it all stems from my novel, The Curse of Our Profound Disorder.

As I read over it, I’m astounded that it essentially needs no revising, and there have been an absolute minimum of typos. Clearly, I had already spent a ton of time editing it, 26 years ago.

And even though I certainly remember that I wrote this book, I have no recollection of actually sitting at my desk in our apartment at 777 West End Avenue–

Our apartment was the 5th building in on the left — the shorter building

— and literally writing it. Whereas, I have clear memories of every aspect of writing or editing all of my other novels and books (a total of 38, including stories I wrote specifically for other editors’ books).

So I find it really odd that I have no memories like that for The Curse of Our Profound Disorder. I can remember submitting it to the various writing competitions back then and how happy I was when it would win something (it actually won something in each competition I entered it in).

But, as I said in a recent blog post, it is a little unnerving to read over it and readily see who certain characters were based on, and which events were from my own life, and which from other girls I knew — often a very long time ago.

What made yesterday difficult was coming across a few passages where I was clearly contributing my own feelings, about something that had happened to me, to one of my characters. So it was like unexpectedly encountering myself in a novel that I don’t remember writing.

And yesterday was the 50th anniversary of me having seen the Rolling Stones in concert for the first time and, even though it was a HUGE event in my life, I found that I was unable to really even think about it yesterday — because a couple of weeks after the concert, I had my first suicide attempt and was then committed to the mental hospital.

And so all of the characters in my book, and all of my experiences of my early life, have been converging. Some of it is devastating.

Meanwhile, I’ve also been listening to Exile on Main St. — a lot. Which is kind of the soundtrack to all of this stuff, since it was my first Rolling Stones album and it absolutely blew me away. (The summer I turned 12.)

It’s hard to pick a favorite song from it now, there are so many I love, but I remember clearly that when I very first bought it and started listening to it on the record player up in my room, this was the song I loved the most. I played it over and over and over:

When I listen to it down in the kitchen now, while either making breakfast or dinner, I still remember every single word (to every song) — and it seems sort of amusing to me that I knew all these words when I was twelve (!!), for Christ’s sake. Although I really didn’t understand, yet, a lot of what they were singing about.

I sure do now.

And, obviously, I also have memories of my own life now. And now I know, from experiencing it, how (mostly) unhappy it was.

And then I wonder to myself what it would have felt like at the age of 12, if I knew I’d be listening to this same album alone in my kitchen when I was 65, still knowing every word…

Anyway, yesterday, a lot of this converged. And then add to it that I knew today was going to be Father’s Day.

And The Curse of Our Profound Disorder deals a lot with who I was and what life was like before I finally found my birth father (at age 28).

The novel is fictionalized — but not too much.

*************

It is fascinating to read it and I am determined to just not flinch and let it all see the light of day, finally.

And it helps SO MUCH, knowing that a publisher (a woman, no less) is out there, waiting to read it. Wanting to like it. And also wanting to see it reach the light of day.

It’s an incredible incentive. An incredible feeling. So I keep at it, from the moment I get home from my shifts in the late afternoons, up until the early evenings, when I sort of collapse and make dinner — and listen to the Rolling Stones and remember my whole effing LIFE…

Well, yesterday, after I closed down the laptop for the evening, feeling sort of jumbled up inside, a little raw, but also really glad that I was doing this, I quickly checked my phone before heading downstairs and there was an unexpected email from the publisher, simply saying that she is really looking forward to seeing the whole manuscript.

Which, of course, makes everything feel like it finally makes sense.

*************

In case people are wondering — I won’t go into it on the blog — but 2 weeks ago, I left the TV project behind. It had become just an enormous amount of nonstop typing, it wasn’t creative for me, and I had no life left and no time for the play or the novel, which both need my complete creative attention.

So I do feel right now that everything in my world is finally making sense.

*************

Okay!

I think that’s it for now!!

Even though Nick Cave is Australian and lives in England, so it isn’t officially Father’s Day over there, I was going to include a photo of him with his sons. but trying to find a photo that included all 4 of them just became sort of really sad.

So here’s this!! Nick Cave with his grandson, Roman!

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And of course, here’s this! Although there are quite a few more babies in the bunch now!

Keith’s family

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Okay!

Enjoy your Sunday — or Father’s Day — wherever you are in the world!

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys. See ya!

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I’ll skip the daily feature for today, but I leave you with this!!

James Tabor posted this video to his private group several days ago.

Joan Baez’s version of Steve Earle’s song, “Jerusalem.” Beautiful. Enjoy, gang.

“Jerusalem”

I woke up this mornin’ and none of the news was good
And death machines were rumblin’ ‘cross the ground where Jesus stood
And the man on my TV told me that it had always been that way
And there was nothin’ anyone could do or say

And I almost listened to him
Yeah, I almost lost my mind
Then I regained my senses again
And looked into my heart to find

That I believe that one fine day all the children of Abraham
Will lay down their swords forever in Jerusalem

Well maybe I’m only dreamin’ and maybe I’m just a fool
But I don’t remember learnin’ how to hate in Sunday school
But somewhere along the way I strayed and I never looked back again
But I still find some comfort now and then

Then the storm comes rumblin’ in
And I can’t lay me down
And the drums are drummin’ again
And I can’t stand the sound

But I believe there’ll come a day when the lion and the lamb
Will lie down in peace together in Jerusalem

And there’ll be no barricades then
There’ll be no wire or walls
And we can wash all this blood from our hands
And all this hatred from our souls

And I believe that on that day all the children of Abraham
Will lay down their swords forever in Jerusalem

c – 2002 – Steve Earle

A quick Friday post

Since everything is so intense right now — especially if you’re still following the Q-truthers— I’m going to make this quick today.

I’m very curious to see what will happen tomorrow. I’m on the side that still believes that most, if not all, of this is staged. But I’m still very interested to see what will happen tomorrow in DC.

Meanwhile, for me, tomorrow marks the 50th anniversary of when I saw The Rolling Stones in concert for the very first time!! In Cleveland!! Yay!🥰

Stones in Cleveland 1975

Last night, Nick Cave and Colin Greenwood played the 3rd of their sold out shows in Zurich!! They will resume the tour in Germany next weekend.

From last night:

Interestingly enough, now the little girls next door are insistent on coming up to my room to play with the kittens! And their dad texted me last night saying the girls really want to see the kittens…

So we’ll see how that goes.

3 of the kittens, literally, just now!!

Other than that, I’m just sort of standing back and taking it all in.

Enjoy your Friday the 13th, wherever you are in the world.

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys. See ya!!

“It sounds to me like she’s undecided!”

I am completely, 100% undecided about going to the shooting range today. And being undecided is making me nutty.

I didn’t get enough work done on the play yesterday, because as soon as I got home from my shift, one of the little girls from next door was waiting on her bike at my kitchen porch to alert me that one of the neighborhood cats — a sweet cat who hangs out on my porch a lot with KonTiki — had been shot with a BB gun.

The cat is going to be okay and the neighbors are taking care of him. But, still. Really disturbing to hear.

Anyway, her dad wanted to know if he could borrow one of those outdoor cat houses they’d given me during the winter. So out to the barn I went to retrieve one.

And….

I mentioned to the dad something in passing about the kittens and the little girl got all excited and said, “I want to see the kittens!!”

Then, to her dad: “Dad, I want a kitten!!! I want a kitten!!!”

Exactly what my wee bonny ears wanted to hear, of course, but Dad was not going for it. “We have 2 cats and a dog already.”

HER: “But, Dad!! I want a kitten!!”

HIM: “I’ll think about it…”

[Dad-speak for ‘not in a million years’ but she hasn’t figured this out yet… she walked away appeased and hopeful! Thinking that he was going to think about it!!]

You’ll be impressed to know that I smiled knowingly but kept my wee bonny mouth shut…

Anyway. I digress!

I didn’t get enough work done on the play yesterday, and in order to get any work done on the novel today, I need to finish the work on the play and get it back over to Sandra first…

So. Do I want to shoot guns??

Or do I want to work on my novel??

Well, frankly, I’d rather work on my novel (since you can readily see that a writer’s lifestyle is very rewarding).

But then I worry that I should cancel my membership at the shooting range, because if I don’t go there at least once a week, I’m paying for nothing. It’s cheaper to pay as I go…

But then I worry that if I’m not a member, I won’t go at all.

Aaaarrrrgh.

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That endless thought-circle has been (most of) my morning since 5AM.

However, Sandra called at 7AM, with questions about the hotel and as of right now, it’s looking like we’ll both be staying HERE:

Millennium Hotel Broadway Times Square

And Wayne texted, saying that he’ll actually be around that whole week (he leaves for a vacation in Cambodia the following week). And he said to have my people call his people and we’ll do LUNCH!

So, a lot of the morning has been fun. It hasn’t been entirely about me being indecisive.

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Valerie in Brooklyn texted yesterday evening and said that her Naturopath began using a new frequency healing device on her various pain issues and she said it WORKED RIGHT AWAY. (Valerie has had severe arthritis issues for many years and goes to doctors for various treatments & pharmaceuticals all the time, which, for the most part, don’t work.)

So, in the event you suffer from something similar, I post the link for you HERE:

Softwave Tissue Regeneration Technology.

“SoftWave uses therapeutic energy waves to activate the body’s natural healing. Treatment is safe, doesn’t require surgery, drugs, or needles, and helps reduce pain, speed up recovery, and regenerate tissue. Easy to use, SoftWave is an effective and trusted treatment option that improves patient outcomes and boosts clinic productivity.”

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On a similar note, Phil posted this:

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I’m sure that by now you know, this happened yesterday:

I love a lot of the Beach Boys’ songs, but this one is, hands down, my favorite. I will never forget how it felt, as a little girl, to hear this song come on the car radio!! It always filled me with hope!!

“Wouldn’t it Be Nice” (1966):

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And this happened yesterday!!

In Zurich!! (It seems that the audiences in Zurich actually listen to concerts, rather than watch them through their phones… not a whole lot of photos on Instagram. Which is kind of a good thing!)

Nick Cave & Colin Greenwood last night, the second of three sold-out shows in Zurich:

You can sort of buy tickets to upcoming shows here — if you’re not particular about where you have to travel to go see it!! Most shows are sold out through September.

And I guess that’s it for now.

Here’s hoping I have a great day at my desk today!!

Enjoy your day, wherever you are in the world!!

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys. See ya!

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When I was a singer-songwriter in NYC, the musicians in my backup band were guys. And my lead guitar player — a fantastic guy from Argentina — was also a huge Keith Richards fan.

One afternoon, he was at my apartment on W. 45th Street and he was looking through my extensive record collection.

He said, “Wow!” as he picked up my Muddy Waters’ Greatest Hits double-album and studied it eagerly. And then said, “I can’t believe your record collection! You aren’t like any other girl I’ve ever met. You listen to all these records that guys listen to!”

You, gentle reader, know who is to blame for this!!

Yes! Our Daily Feature continues!

Gifts Keith Richards gave me when I was a wee bonny girl!!

Wherein I regale you with “songs Keith loved, that he would talk about in an interview in some magazine, and then I’d go out and try to find the record and then buy it with my babysitting money, and then I’d listen to it alone in my intense little room, playing it on the portable record player that my dad bought me, and the song would change my life. “

Today’s selection!! 

Muddy Waters! If you are a Keith Richards fan, I don’t need to say more!!

Muddy Waters, “Mannish Boy” (live) (originally released on Chess records in 1955). Enjoy, gang!

“Mannish Boy”

Ooooooh, yeah, ooh, yeah

Everythin’, everythin’, everythin’s gonna be alright this mornin’
Ooh yeah, whoaw
Now when I was a young boy, at the age of five
My mother said I was, gonna be the greatest man alive
But now I’m a man, way past 21
Want you to believe me baby,
I had lot’s of fun
I’m a man
I spell mmm, aaa child, nnn
That represents man
No B, O child, Y
That mean mannish boy
I’m a man
I’m a full grown man
I’m a man
I’m a natural born lovers man
I’m a man
I’m a rollin’ stone
I’m a man
I’m a hoochie coochie man

Sittin’ on the outside, just me and my mate
You know I’m made to move you honey,
Come up two hours late
Wasn’t that a man
I spell mmm, aaa child, nnn
That represents man
No B, O child, Y
That mean mannish boy
I’m a man
I’m a full grown man
Man
I’m a natural born lovers man
Man
I’m a rollin’ stone
Man-child
I’m a hoochie coochie man

The line I shoot will never miss
When I make love to a woman,
She can’t resist
I think I go down,
To old Kansas Stew
I’m gonna bring back my second cousin,
That little Johnny Cocheroo
All you little girls,
Sittin’out at that line
I can make love to you woman,
In five minutes time
Ain’t that a man
I spell mmm, aaa child, nnn
That represents man
No B, O child, Y
That mean mannish boy
Man
I’m a full grown man
Man
I’m a natural born lovers man
Man
I’m a rollin’ stone
I’m a man-child
I’m a hoochie coochie man
Well, well, well, well
Hurry, hurry, hurry, hurry
Don’t hurt me, don’t hurt me child
Don’t hurt me, don’t hurt, don’t hurt me child
Well, well, well, well

Yeah

c – 1955 – Ellas Mcdaniel / Mckinley Morganfield / Melvin London

Well, oddly enough…

Yesterday turned out all different.

But in sort of a good way.

I went to the Honda dealership to get that work done on my car that they had “recommended.” And this time, a really enthusiastic and exceedingly energetic young woman checked me in — instead of the usual “guys”.

And she looked over my files on her computer and told me that the only thing I really needed done yesterday was to get the new wiper blades — if I wanted them (and I did). (Yay — it was looking like maybe it would take 10 minutes!!)

She said that the other stuff that had been recommended wasn’t really needed right now since my car didn’t have a ton of miles on it yet (yes, gone are the days where I keep driving back and forth to NYC and now I fly instead!) — and that the other stuff was a lot more expensive.

She added cheerfully, “If it was my grandmother, I’d want her to know she didn’t have to spend all that money if it wasn’t really necessary.”

Yeah, well. That was awesome. Being compared to her grandmother, right off the bat.

But I really did appreciate not having to spend all that money… Especially since my shifts this month have been cut way back.

But I mentioned that the warning light for my tire pressure had just come on again and it seemed weird, since it had only been 2 weeks since the last time…

Long story short — it turned out I had a nail in the tire, so I was really glad I had brought that up. But it was patchable — lots cheaper than needing a new tire. Yay.

And then two and half hours later…

Non-elderly woman notes the time…

But, the good thing — while I was sitting there and waiting, and waiting, I decided that I would forego the meeting last evening and just stop in at the Agency on Friday and get my new uniform and my new ID badge then.

So that made me feel great! Suddenly, I felt like I had all the time in the world!!

And it was a sunny day! Great for driving home on the backroads, listening to my thrilling playlist — which suddenly served me up THIS amazing gem — yay!!

And then guess what?? I had completely forgotten that THIS amazing machine would be waiting for me on my kitchen porch when I got home!!!

My new vacuum cleaner!!! Big YAY!

So, with that extra time I suddenly had, I vacuumed the whole house again and I could not believe the difference.

I am so glad I bought that thing, gang. Between that, and the Bissel carpet shampooer — my house is back to looking like it did when I bought it 7 years ago (when I had a mere EIGHT cats).

Anyway. Wow. It turned out to be a really great day.

And today will be even better– I only have the one shift with my favorite 94-year-old Japanese man (it’s sushi-sashimi day!), and then I’ll have plenty of time for yoga when I get home, and even to work on those changes on the play to send to Sandra!

Which also means that tomorrow, all I have planned is to spend time at the shooting range and then work on my novel!!

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And, btw — thank you to everyone who visited my substack page yesterday and checked out the new excerpt I posted there from The Curse of Our Profound Disorder.

It’s been 6 months since I’d been able to post any of my writing there, so it was great to see some traffic there again.

[Please note that my substack page, in general, is intended for adults only.]

***********

Okay!!

This happened yesterday!!

Nick Cave’s Solo Tour of Europe, with Colin Greenwood on bass, kicked off in Zurich to a sold out audience.

Based on comments on Instagram, it looks like it was another spellbinding show, gang. (Those “solo” shows he does with Colin Greenwood are really just breathtaking. They truly are.)

He’ll be there for 2 more nights, but they are also sold out. (3 shows this summer still have tickets available, buy them here.)

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Other than that, I guess I’ll get moving here. It’s another stunning day in the Hinterlands and I’m looking forward to a beautiful drive to town.

Have a wonder-filled Wednesday, wherever you are in the world!

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys. See ya!

************

Our Daily Feature continues!

Gifts Keith Richards gave me when I was a wee bonny girl!!

Wherein I regale you with “songs Keith loved, that he would talk about in an interview in some magazine, and then I’d go out and try to find the record and then buy it with my babysitting money, and then I’d listen to it alone in my intense little room, playing it on the portable record player that my dad bought me, and the song would change my life. “

Today’s selection!!  The fantastic Slim Harpo!!

Here he is with his song, “Shake Your Hips”, 1966 — which the Stones did a fantastic cover of on their album Exile On Main St. 1972.

Slim Harpo, “Shake Your Hips”, 1966. Enjoy, gang!!

“Shake Your Hips”

I wanna tell you ’bout a dance
That’s goin’ around
Ev’rybody doin’ it
From the grownups, down

Don’t have to move yo’ head
Don’t have to move yo’ hands
Don’t have to move yo’ lips
Just shake yo’ hips

And do the hip-shake, baby
And do the hip-shake, baby
Do the hip-shake, baby
Shake yo’ hips, baby

Now, if you don’t know
Don’t be afraid
Just listen to me
And do what I said

Don’t move yo’ head
Don’t move yo’ hands
Don’t move yo’ lips
Just shake yo’ hips

Do the hip-shake, baby
Do the hip-shake, baby
Do the hip-shake, baby
Shake yo’ hips, baby

Now, ain’t this easy?

Well, I met a little girl
In a country town
She says, ‘what’d you know? ‘
‘There’s Slim Harpo!’

I didn’t move my head
I didn’t move my hands
I didn’t move my lips
She shook her hips

She did a hip shake, baby
Did her hip shake, baby
Did her hip shake, baby
Shake yo’ hips, baby

Now, ain’t this easy?

c – 1966 James Moore

Already A Great Day!

And it’s just getting started — and even though I have to do boring stuff today, I’m still just really happy.

I’ve decided to go to the shooting range on Thursday, when I don’t have anything else planned, because today I have to go get that work done on my Honda, which could take 15 minutes or 3 hours…. and I don’t want to be late for that.

And then I have to go to a mandatory semi-annual event that the Agency is having this evening. And I want to be DON’T want to be late for that…

Me — no, wait — someone else at an entirely different boring meeting…

*************

Okay!

Not only did Sandra and I get some great work done on the script yesterday afternoon — but we also got my plane ticket!!

So it is official! I’ll be in NYC from July 6th through July 10th, to work primarily with Sandra, the Music Director and the dramaturge. I can’t wait!!

However.

The moment I got off the phone with Sandra, Valerie in Brooklyn texted me to tell me that Sly Stone had passed away.

It’s just not something you ever think of happening, right?

What an icon from my wee bonny girlhood!!

This is how I remember him best —

— in 1974, when he got married at Madison Square Garden, in NYC, in front of thousands of fans.

It sort of typifies those wild days in the 70s.

He had way too many songs that I loved to be able to pick a favorite, but certainly, this one is way up there! “Everyday People”, 1970. What a classic! (I used to play this song over and over and over…)

**********

So I have some shuffling around to do on the script — nothing too major. No actual re-writes.

And then the rest of my brain is focused on my novel, The Curse of Our Profound Disorder.

I can’t tell you what a feeling this is, gang. When I read over what I wrote 26 years ago, I am usually just astounded by the images I was putting on paper back then. And I have to say that, even though this is fiction, it is — as usual — based on stuff that either happened to me, or someone in my birth family, or to girls I knew in the 70s and 80s.

Life was so fucking harsh. I just can’t believe it sometimes. The book is so raw. But I am just so glad I put it down on paper while I still remembered it all.

Of course, reading over it, it all comes back to me. But I don’t think I would have ever remembered most of this stuff if I hadn’t put it down all those years ago.

I’m going to be posting some more excerpts to my Substack page, starting today, but I won’t post too many more, since the idea is that I want people to actually buy the book…

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All righty!!!

What starts today??? [HINT: In Switzerland!!]

Yes, that’s correct. Nick Cave’s Solo Tour of Europe, with Colin Greenwood on bass. It is sold out but a few tickets for other shows are still available HERE.

And I guess this will be my final photo from my desktop stash. After tonight, I’ll post new photos from the tour!!

His T-shirt says “My best friends are Smith & Wessons”.

************

Okay. I’m going to get on to other things here before I have to go visit the delightful guys at the Honda dealership.

Have a terrific Tuesday, wherever you are in the world!

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys. See ya!

*********

Our Daily Feature continues!

Gifts Keith Richards gave me when I was a wee bonny girl!!

Wherein I regale you with “songs Keith loved, that he would talk about in an interview in some magazine, and then I’d go out and try to find the record and then buy it with my babysitting money, and then I’d listen to it alone in my intense little room, playing it on the portable record player that my dad bought me, and the song would change my life. “

Today’s selection!! 

This one is sort of a two-for-one. A Sly Stone song and — yes! — sung by the incredible Ike & Tina Turner!! Boy, did I love them!!

I first saw photos of Tina, specifically, backstage with Keith & Mick at Madison Square Garden when Ike & Tina were the opening act for the Stones. And then I immediately went out and bought the double-album: The Ike & Tina Turner Revue LIVE at Carnegie Hall, 1971, and, honestly, it just blew my mind. I was about 12 going on 13.

Below, they are live at Carnegie Hall, singing a HUGE hit by Sly & the Family Stone, “I Wanna Take You Higher”. I just can’t state enough how incredible all this music was to me back then. Okay, enjoy, gang.

Oh, Happy Day!

Well, yesterday was almost nonstop cleaning around here but I did it!!

And guess what??

Yes!! That’s correct — THIS will be arriving tomorrow:

After 5 years of nonstop cat hair and cat litter, my vacuum cleaner essentially died yesterday. But I was on the final room, so I was at least grateful for that.

And the specific brand and model I really like (above) was actually on sale yesterday, so the blessings are mounting up!

************

AND!!!

I wish I could quote her verbatim on the blog, but it would not be professional to do that (just yet) —

However.

Yesterday afternoon, I got an email from the publisher at the small press who’d shown an interest in perhaps publishing my unpublished novel from 1998, The Curse of Our Profound Disorder, and she had finished reading the sample chapters I sent her and she loved it.

And assuming the rest of the novel keeps up with the first part of the novel, she is interested in publishing it.

I can’t tell you how happy this makes me, gang.

**************

And guess who’s having a birthday today??

Yes, that’s right !! Johnny Smoke is something like 62 today!!

And here is one of my all-time favorite photos of him — from yesteryear:

Happy Birthday, Johnny Depp!!!

Someone once told me that the jacket he’s wearing in the photo above had once belonged to Jack Kerouac.

I have no clue if that’s true or not. However. That said–

THIS was a great movie!! I loved it!! (from 1999)

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Here’s some more good news!!!

Loyal readers of this lofty blog will no doubt recall that I was hoping to be re-assigned to a client I’d had back in the fall — a woman who had been a chaplain before she retired and had several Theology Degrees from Yale Divinity School, and she and I had such wonderful philosophical conversations!!

She is back from Florida and since I have a huge hole in my schedule right now (awaiting 2 clients to come out of rehab), I got assigned to her for one shift next week. I was just thrilled to see that on my schedule.

I hope it will lead to more shifts with her as the summer unfolds. I missed her so much and thought of her often.

****************

All righty!!

It’s almost time, gang!

Tomorrow, Nick Cave’s solo tour of Europe, with Colin Greenwood on bass, begins in Switzerland!! There are not many shows that have tickets left, but you could get lucky!! Check here.

And here’s this!!

From my desktop stash:

And now I want to go water my flowers and then get ready to work with Sandra this afternoon!

Enjoy your Monday, wherever you are in the world!!

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys. See ya!

***************

Our Daily Feature continues!

Gifts Keith Richards gave me when I was a wee bonny girl!!

Wherein I regale you with “songs Keith loved, that he would talk about in an interview in some magazine, and then I’d go out and try to find the record and then buy it with my babysitting money, and then I’d listen to it alone in my intense little room, playing it on the portable record player that my dad bought me, and the song would change my life. “

Today’s selection!! 

Otis Redding!!

While I knew this specific song because it was a huge hit on AM radio, but I was only 8 years old at the time. I didn’t really learn about Otis Redding’s work until Keith.

Otis Redding, “(Sittin’ On) the Dock of the Bay”, 1968. Such a great song. Enjoy, gang.

“(Sittin’ On) The Dock Of The Bay”

Sittin’ in the morning sun
I’ll be sittin’ when the evening comes
Watching the ships roll in
Then I watch them roll away again, yeah

I’m sittin’ on the dock of the bay
Watchin’ the tide roll away, ooh
I’m just sittin’ on the dock of the bay
Wastin’ time

I left my home in Georgia
Headed for the Frisco Bay
‘Cause I’ve had nothing to live for
And look like nothing’s gonna come my way

So, I’m just gon’ sit on the dock of the bay
Watchin’ the tide roll away, ooh
I’m sittin’ on the dock of the bay
Wastin’ time

Looks like nothing’s gonna change
Everything still remains the same
I can’t do what ten people tell me to do
So I guess I’ll remain the same, listen

Sittin’ here resting my bones
And this loneliness won’t leave me alone, listen
Two thousand miles I roam
Just to make this dock my home, now

I’m just gon’ sit at the dock of a bay
Watchin’ the tide roll away, ooh
Sittin’ on the dock of the bay
Wastin’ time

c- 1968 – Otis Redding, Stephen Lee Cropper

Wow, What A Terrific Sunday!!

Even though it’s raining — and will rain most of the day — I have already had a morning full of absolute bliss.

I managed to get all the nematodes out yesterday when I got home from my shift — on all the flowers and flower beds and all the ground that runs along all 4 sides of the house, and especially under all the windows. So I’m not expecting any fleas this season!! Yay!

It’s not hard work at all, it’s just sort of laborious if you don’t have a garden hose and need to use a sprinkling can and have to keep going back inside to the kitchen… But it’s done!!!

So that got done, and all the flowers and plants are out on the porches — so that got done.

And I made that appointment at Honda to get that other stuff done on my car — I’m going on Tuesday, after I spend about an hour at the shooting range! Yay!

So everything is done, scheduled, arranged — and today starts my first of 3 days off in a row.

Hence, waking up in a really great mood this morning! Yay! Yay! Yay!

Today, I’ll be reading over some revisions of our play, “The Guide to being Fabulous” and then tomorrow, I’ll be working on them with Sandra over the phone, but most of today I will FINALLY get to clean my house!!!!

Yay!!!

I can’t tell you how happy I am to finally get this stuff done. It’s really only a little dusting and then a bunch of vacuuming, but I never feel really comfortable when my house isn’t completely clean. It’s mostly because I have a thousand and 5 cats and I never want my home to seem like I have a thousand and 5 cats

But, to be fair, they do help out in whatever way they can:

In no way is this an accurate depiction of how they help out…

So — my blissful morning.

When I got out of bed at 5AM, it was raining. But it was a light rain. No wind whatsoever. No thunder or anything like that, which would trigger my PTSD. Just summer rain.

And when I stepped out onto my kitchen porch to feed KonTiki, it just felt so peaceful out there, that once all the other cats inside were fed, and breakfast dishes were washed and put away, I took my cup of coffee out onto the porch and sat with KonTiki and just watched it rain as the sun sort of “came up”.

It’s interesting how KonTiki really loves to stay on the kitchen porch now that all the flowers and plants are out there. She got up onto the chair next to mine and we both just sat there together like old times — and it felt like I was finally going to have a good summer again.

After 2 summers in a row that were sort of “from hell”, with last summer being particularly close to hell.

And just FYI — while not related, this is a really great movie!! Johnny Depp:

But we are moving on over here!! And not only that, I will be going to NYC twice this summer! To work on pre-production of an Off-Broadway show!!

*************

It has been a really, really, really long journey.

In fact, this is the third house I’ve lived in since Sandra and I began working on this play together. And during the first few years, I thought I was moving back to New York — to Rhinebeck , where Sandra lives– and resuming a relationship with a guy I’m still crazy about:

He’s the chef there at the back of the photo, and this is his restaurant on the lower level of his home in Rhinebeck:

If you are ever in Rhinebeck, NY, you MUST visit his restaurant– The Tasting Room:

It is small so you must have a reservation. But Chef Daniel is an incredible chef!! {Read about him here.}

Anyway. It seems we are destined to be eternally “friends” (40 years and counting, although those first few years were memorably wild…)

But, long story short, I did not end up moving to Rhinebeck!!

Okay!!

***********

Happy Heavenly Birthday to my best friend on Earth!!

Paul would have been 66 today. He’s been gone 26 years now.

Here is a selection of photos I took of him a long time ago, mostly in my apartment on E.12th Street, although the photo with the huge flowered sofabed is in the Camelot Building on W. 45th Street, when I was married to Chong Foun Kee.

You’ll note that even back then, there was no shortage of photos of Keith on my bedroom wall… (and Bowie, John Lennon, Jim Carroll, Lou Reed, Patti Smith, Franz Kafka, etc., etc.).

My bedroom, E.12th Street 1983
My bedroom, E.12th Street 1983
Same bedroom, but more like 1984 or 1985
Kitchen on E.12th Street, Thanksgiving 1987
Late 1981, W.45th Street apartment in the Camelot Building

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Well, I’ve managed to get 2 loads of laundry done while I typed this! And now I’m going to actually start cleaning!!

So here’s this and then I’m off!

From the desktop stash!!

And there are now 3 days until Nick Cave’s Solo Tour of Europe (with bass player) begins!! (There are 3 venues with tickets still available, but everything else for the rest of the tour is sold out.)

***********

And now I’m gonna scoot!!

Enjoy your Sunday, wherever you are in the world!!

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys. See ya!

************

Saturday in the Hinterlands!!

Okay, well, no, that isn’t really my life pictured above.

At least, not these days. (But oddly enough, that does reflect summers throughout my childhood.)

Okay!!

Prior to my childhood…

73 years ago, on this very day!! At this very synagogue:

Tifereth Israel Synagogue, Columbus, Ohio
In the sanctuary

My adoptive parents were married! And even while they ended up really really REALLY not liking each other at all as the years went by…. (I can’t tell you how mildly I am stating that)…

On their wedding day, they were truly in love (and for several years afterward).

When I was growing up (while they were still married, that is), I loved when June 7th, their anniversary, rolled around because my mom would bring out their huge wedding album and I just loved looking at all the old photos from their wedding day. I especially loved my mom’s wedding gown.

June 7, 1952
Leaving for the Honeymoon, after the reception

Once my parents got divorced, the wedding album came into my possession (my mom wanted to throw it out but I rescued it from the trash) and I still have it. And I still love looking through it.

*************

Okay. Here’s this!!

This photo was taken on Thursday night, but I saw it yesterday (Friday) morning and I immediately sent it to Valerie in Brooklyn!!

This is one of Keith’s daughters that he had with his wife Patti. And during the time when Keith and Patti’s daughters were really young, Valerie was hired by the renowned interior designer (and wife of Ahmet Ertegun, founder of Atlantic Records), Mica Ertegun, to do a bunch of specialty painting and murals inside Keith and Patti’s (at the time) new home in Connecticut.

Everyone in the universe LOVES Valerie. I cannot emphasize this enough. She is the most likable person on planet Earth. Even her dealers — not to imply that she ever got anywhere near any sort of illicit substances that would require some sort of “dealer” — however, even her dealers love Valerie and can’t wait to just hang out with her.

And when they met her, Keith’s daughters were crazy about her, and called her Big Val, and invited her to have tea with them in their tree house. So she did!

Okay. That, alone, has always amused me because Valerie is 6 ft. 2 inches tall, and always weighs in the vicinity of 190 lbs. I cannot imagine a little kids’ treehouse supporting her weight long enough to “have tea”.

Anyway!! I totally digress!

I sent this photo to Valerie because I couldn’t believe how much Alexandra looks like Keith in this specific photo! (She usually looks more like Patti.) (This is a selfie she took on her way to an event, then posted to Instagram.) I just love it!!

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So, as luck would have it!!!

I discovered that “Midnight Diner: Tokyo Stories”, that show I recently loved on Netflix, was a continuation of a show that ran for 3 seasons on Japanese television, before it was picked up and produced by Netflix Japan for 2 more seasons.

The original show is also carried on Netflix.

So now I get to keep watching the show!! I can’t tell you how happy this makes me. And the 3 previous seasons are just as good — and have the same characters — as the final 2 seasons that I fell in love with.

(Honoring the original show in Tokyo, back in 2015.) (2 minutes)

Wow.

I just looked at the time. And I seriously gotta scoot!! So, here’s this!!

Seriously, this is truly one of my “absolutely all-time favorite Nick Cave photos of all time”. I actually have TWO of these photos (of different sizes) stuck to different areas of my wall…

And FOUR more days until Nick Cave’s Solo Tour of Europe (with bass player) kicks off in Switzerland! (If you’re lucky, you might be able to buy tickets for the tour here.)

**********

And here’s this!

Part of my front porch with flowers yesterday — and KonTiki of the Great Outdoors!!

*********

And now I gotta fly!!

Enjoy your Saturday, wherever you are in the world!!

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys. See ya!

***********

Our new Daily Feature continues!

Gifts Keith Richards gave me when I was a wee bonny girl!!

Wherein I regale you with “songs Keith loved, that he would talk about in an interview in some magazine, and then I’d go out and try to find the record and then buy it with my babysitting money, and then I’d listen to it alone in my intense little room, playing it on the portable record player that my dad bought me, and the song would change my life. “

Today’s selection!! 

I was a little older when I first heard Keith talking about this guy, but I really loved Jimmy Cliff’s music after that, as well as the film of the same name, “The Harder They Come”.

Jimmy Cliff, “The Harder They Come”, 1972. Enjoy, gang.

“The Harder They Come”

Well, they tell me of a pie up in the sky
Waiting for me when I die
But between the day you’re born and when you die
They never seem to hear even your cry

So as sure as the sun will shine
I’m gonna get my share now, what’s mine
And then the harder they come
The harder they fall, one and all
Ooh, the harder they come
The harder they fall, one and all

Well, the oppressors are trying to keep me down
Trying to drive me underground
And they think that they have got the battle won
I say forgive them Lord, they know not what they’ve done

‘Cause, as sure as the sun will shine
I’m gonna get my share now, what’s mine
And then the harder they come
The harder they fall, one and all
Ooh, the harder they come
Harder they fall, one and all

And I keep on fighting for the things I want
Though I know that when you’re dead you can’t
But I’d rather be a free man in my grave
Than living as a puppet or a slave

So as sure as the sun will shine
I’m gonna get my share now, what’s mine
And then the harder they come
The harder they fall, one and all
Ooh, the harder they come
Harder they fall, one and all
Hey, the harder they come
Harder they fall, one and all
What I say now
What I Say now

What I say now
What I say, one time
The harder they come, the harder they fall, one and all
The harder they come, the harder they fall, one and all

c – 1972 – Jimmy Cliff