Brain Leakage
To my children; words of wit and questionable wisdom from your daddies' head. And for anyone else who might be interested.
About Me

- Name: Bob Parker
- Location: Wilmington, Delaware, United States
I used to go boating, camping, and I enjoyed driving. Now I just read about others doing those things and I sit at the keyboard all day, and most of the night, surfing the net for humor, playing games, and writing nonsense. Being disabled, I'm not exactly unemployed, and I'm not exactly retired. I'm somewhere in between. I still play guitar and sing once in a while, but usually as a result of my daughter browbeating me into it. She sings too. My son and I, and sometimes the daughter, go target shooting on weekends. Other than that I'm usually at home, getting in my wifes way and fighting over the TV remote with my son. We both like to put something stupid on TV that we can ignore while we play on the computer. Since I'm always on the other side of the camera, my current photo is a rendition of my trademark, The Aardmoose, drawn by my brother, Charley.
Wednesday, December 05, 2012
Thursday, March 08, 2012
I Age Therefore I Rant
No problem, I would just go to the restaurant's web site and get directions from the source, as it were.
It were not, as it was.
I clicked on the link to the site, selected the "Driving Directions" tab and the information offered was not in the form of a map or written directions, as I expected but, instead, the information provided by the site was for use in my GPS...except, I don't have a GPS. I have never had a GPS and I do not foresee a time in the future, neither near nor far, that I will have a GPS. What's more, I don't want a GPS and I see no need for a GPS. I drove for a living for most of my working years and I had happily depended on maps and/or written directions to find places I was not familiar with; and maps had rarely let me down. Ok, written directions, depending upon the source, could be a trifle iffy. None the less, it really cuts my cheese that it is taken for granted that everyone has a GPS, just like it is taken for granted that everyone twits on Fartsbook, or whatever. Frankly, to be crudely honest, I refer to them, Facebook and Twitter, as "Sit on my face and be a twit book." (Or the PG13 version, "Sit on my book and be a Twit face.") Nothing personal to those of you who partake of such things. If you enjoy them then I am happy for you but, as the saying goes, to each their own. Such things are just not for me. I don't partake, nor do I desire to. It is as simple as that.
I will admit that, I suppose, perhaps-maybe, that this is on a par with, (if not a bogie) whereas it came to pass, in the mid-sixties, companies and advertisers all assumed that everyone had at least one television in their home; or, by the early to mid-nineties, give or take, that everyone owned a cell phone....
And that's another rant! A rant within a rant, if you will. (Even if you won't) It is a phone, dang it... Call me on it, okay? Don't type at me on my phone. A phone is for talking to me and me to you. You won't find me typing at you on my phone...because it is a PHONE, by gum, and phones are for talking on and listening to. I hear that some people even have GPS service on their phones, for whomever's sake. Why? Hark unto this...It is a PHONE...Talk - To - me!
Anyway, that's it for this/these rant(s), and I highly recommend Nora Lees restaurant. It is New Orleans (or, N'Awlens ) cuisine and the food is beyond absolutely tasty. The menu is diverse enough that those who, like me, do not eat of the dead fish, have other choices. Prices are decent too. I would add directions to the place but I don't have them on hand at the moment. I saved that information to the browser... on my...on my, dang,...on my...well, on my phone....right...aaah...nevermind.....
Mostly Sincerely,
Bob, Is my face red or what, Parker
Bear, DE
03/06/2012
I Age Therefore I Rant
It weren't, as it was.
I clicked on the link to the site, selected the "Driving Directions" tab and the information offered was not in the form of a map or written directions, as I expected but, instead, the information provided by the site was for use in my GPS...except I don't have a GPS. I have never had a GPS and I do not foresee a time in the future, neither near nor far, that I will have a GPS. What's more, I don't want a GPS and I see no need for a GPS. I drove for a living for most of my working years and I had then, as I do now, depended on maps and/or written directions, to find places I was not familiar with; and maps have rarely let me down. Ok, written directions, depending upon the source, can be a trifle iffy. None the less, it really cuts my cheese that it is taken for granted that everyone has a GPS, just like it is taken for granted that everyone twits on Fartsbook, or whatever. Frankly, I refer to them, Facebook and Twitter, to be crudely honest, as "Sit on my face and be a twit book." (Or the PG13 version, "Sit on my book and be a Twit face.") Nothing personal to those of you who partake of such things. If you enjoy them then I am happy for you but, as the saying goes, to each their own. Such things are just not for me. I don't partake, nor do I desire to. It is as simple as that.
I will admit that, I suppose, perhaps-maybe, that this is on a par with, (if not a bogie) whereas it came to pass, in the mid-sixties, companies and advertisers all were assuming that everyone had at least one television in their home; or, by the early to mid-nineties, give or take, that everyone owned a cell phone....
And that's another rant! A rant within a rant, if you will. (Even if you won't) It is a phone, nag dab it... Call me on it, okay? Don't type at me on my phone. A phone is for talking to me and me to you. You won't find me typing at you on my phone...because it is a PHONE, by gnadfrey, and phones are for talking on and listening to. I hear that some people even have GPS service on their phones, for Hepzebah's sake. Why? Hark unto this...It is a PHONE...Talk - To - me!
Anyway, that's it for this/these rant(s), and I highly recommend Nora Lees restaurant. It is New Orleans (or, N'Awlens ) cuisine and the food is beyond absolute tasty. The menu is diverse enough that those who, like me, do not eat of the dead fish, have other choices. Prices are decent too. I would add directions to the place but I don't have them on hand at the moment. I saved that information to the browser... on my...ah...oh my...er...,dang,...on my...well, on my phone....errrr....right...aaah...nevermind.....
Mostly Sincerely,
Bob, Is my face red or what, Parker
Bear, DE
03/06/2012
Labels: Rants
Saturday, March 03, 2012
The Joys Of Home Maintenance or Why Plumbers Make The Big Bucks
WRONG!
All that I had succeeded in doing was to turn a small drip into a steady stream and after a while the toilet started flushing itself without the aid of a proximity switch like you would find in a public restroom. So, Handy Doody tried to figure a way to make it stop...and I did by shutting off the water to the toilet. In the long gone days of my bachelorhood, that would have been the end of it. As a tired, crippled old man, however, reaching the shutoff valve every time the toilet needed flushing was a painful prospect and would simply not do. I had to fix the thing. So, I drained the tank to see what there was to see. What I saw was not what I wanted to see; and seeing what I saw made me want to see no more. What I saw was dirt, grime, rust, and a headache in the making; not to mention a back and neck ache and the subsequent leg pains that always accompanied the back pain. If a cartoon thought bubble were to appear above my head, at this juncture, there would have been the effigies of a heating pad and a bottle of Percosets. Downright prophetic, it would turn out to be.
The house had been manufactured in 1996 and it was evident that the toilet innards were original. This was going to be no quick fix and I was off to Home Depot for parts. Fortunately, there are universal repair kits on the market that promise to be a, "Quick And Easy Repair For Almost Any Toilet." Well, who ever wrote that lied; that is a fact, pure and simple. Being "Universal," by definition, meant that there were a "universe" of toilet styles out there and the enclosed parts were a generalized collection that may or may not apply to the toilet unit in question. First off, and a foreshadowing of what I was in store for that I utterly failed to comprehend, I was amazed that such a very large instruction sheet could be folded up small enough to fit in such a small parts package.
I was also amazed, following my original perusal of said instructions, that the enclosed parts depicted, did not exactly match up to the parts enclosed. Go figure.
At this point, there were two thought bubbles over my head. There was still the original, the heating pad and the bottle of Percoset (the Percoset bottle was now twice the size that it had been) and the second depicted a happy, fat plumber with dollar signs for eyes. I popped the second bubble and went for my tool box which was, sadly, lacking in any Liquid Wrench or any other solvent strong enough to dissolve the large quantities of rust which covered the metal parts in the insides of the toilet tank. The only thing that went right was being able to turn off the water to the tank. It all went down-slope from there. Even the plastic and rubber parts were fused and I'm referring, initially, to the plastic nut that holds the water source tube to the part of the toilet innards thingy that protrudes from the bottom of the tank. According to the voluminous instructions, this thingy is actually a part of the tank refill mechanism. I needed to disconnect this connection in order to drain what water there was left in the tank after flushing the bulk of the tanks water. With a measure of false confidence, I reached for my Channel Lock pliers and set to work. It didn't help that the toilet was located in a small cubbyhole that was, loosely speaking, the size of a high school students gym locker. I managed to reach it, though, and with a good deal of grunting and mild cursing I managed to disconnect the connection and succeeded in allowing the remaining water in the tank to flow gracefully onto the floor. Again, amazement came into play, as I had no idea that there was that much water still left in the tank. This water was now assembled in a large puddle on the floor surrounding the toilet. Half of a roll of paper towels later, I was ready to continue.
I began to continue by comparing the existing tank mechanism with the picture of a tank mechanism shown in the instructions. It is safe to say that the picture resembled the existing mechanism exactly the same as a Ferrari resembles a toddler's big wheel. It seems that toilets had evolved somewhat in the last sixteen years as had their component components. Right, so much for the instructions. I examined what was, I had by now concluded, the original parts in the toilet tank. I should say, rather, what was left of the original parts in the toilet tank. What I at first thought were two, domed shaped bolt covers in the bottom of the tank, covering the top of the bolts that held the tank to the toilet itself, actually turned out to be large, domed shaped rust deposits that used to be the top of the bolts that held the tank to the toilet. Considering the amount of rust covering most, if not all, of the metal parts in the tank, and the degraded condition of the rubber and plastic parts I had encountered thus far, the image in my head of the happy, fat plumber with dollar signs for eyes, had suddenly gained a good twenty pounds and his entire head had been replaced with one, very large, dollar sign. The Percoset bottle and heating pad had morphed into a hospital bed and an IV Morphine drip. With false confidence now giving way to factual apprehension; I soldiered on, certain now that the quick and easy fix I had started out anticipating, had become, without a doubt, a major plumbing repair.
Twelve years ago, I would have happily attacked the problem with relish. Now, however, even the prospect of mustard, onions, chili, and cheese would not even make me feel better about what I was about to attempt. I was a very different man back then; twelve years younger and more limber, for example. Anyway, there was nothing for it but to set about doing the job at hand, knowing that I would hate myself in the morning. Actually, however, I began hating myself much sooner than that. In order to get to the nuts that secured the bolts that connected the tank to the toilet, I had to squeeze myself, on my back, between the wall and toilet, which was a space that would comfortably fit a folded newspaper, only just. Using half a can of WD40 and vice grips, I set to work trying to get the left hand nut loose with my right arm over my head in a completely un-natural position, and my hand in an equally un-natural position. It took a good five minutes of more grunting and mildly stronger language to get it off. I took nearly ten minutes to extricate myself from the position I was in with yet more grunting and not so mild language. (See above, the statement about not being as old and limber.) I then had to repeat the process for the right hand bolt only, this time, I had to use my left hand which, thanks to the many times I had injured that particular hand in the past, was a bit arthritic. I took me nearly ten minutes to loosen the nut and, that finally accomplished, I found that, thanks to the many times I had injured my right shoulder, thus inviting more that a little bit of bursitis to take up residence, I was pretty much stuck where I was. I didn't have the strength in that arm to push myself out of the oh-so-very un-natural position that I was in. So, not being one to let such things get me down, I did the only thing that I could do in the circumstances; I took a short nap.
A half an hour later I was sufficiently recovered that I was able to push myself clear of the toilet. I had to have another brief nap before I could get up off the floor. Once back on my feet it occurred to me that I would feel much better if I was off of my feet. I took an hour nap, this time, after which I determined that the toilet tank, fused as it was to the toilet by what had once been a solidly firm rubber gasket but had degraded, over the years, into a gooey mass of...well, goo, of course, and it was beyond my limited lifting ability to lift off of the toilet. I then did the only thing that I could do; I took another nap and waited for my wife to come home from work.
I want to pause in my narration for a moment and explain the reason for this quite rambling narrative. Had this been a public television documentary about the pitfalls of home maintenance, there would now be a break in the action for various pompous, public television presenters to tell you how lucky you are that you had them, the pompous, public television presenters, who were on hand to present presentations like this, commercial free. For the next twenty or thirty minutes of this commercial free presentation, four or five pompous public television presenters would tell you how wonderful they were and would continuously point to several tiers of not quite so wonderful, non-pompous volunteers who were manfully (and femally) manning (and femaling) rows of telephones that you, the oh so lucky to have this wonderful thing called, commercial-free, public television that was brought to you by the contribution of commercial companies and institutions and by contributions from you, the non-commercial viewers of commercial free, public television, and you should now take advantage of this strictly non-commercial break in the commercial free public television presentation to pick up the phone and pledge lots of money in return for outrageously over priced premiums that you probably don't need anyway but will always be near at hand to remind you of how good you should feel about yourself for supporting commercial free public television,and would most likely end up as yard sale fodder and/or finding a place on a shelf of some thrift store somewhere...Ok, this last, quite loosely phrased paragraph which, I admit, is grammatically and punctuational challenged is exactly not what has been taking place. In fact, what has been taking place had originally started out as an email to my best friend about how a bad week, physically, had devolved into a worse week, both physically and emotionally. A few minutes ago I decided to read what I had, up to this point, written and I was (here is that word again) amazed at how much I had written and how wordy and rambling this writing that I had written had become and I realized that I was no longer writing an email to my best friend, but instead, what I had, up to this point, was more fitting for my often neglected for months on end, blog.
So, by the miracle of those magic words, "Copy and Paste" this overlong email to my best friend has miraculously become a wordy, rambling, grammatically and punctuational challenged entry into this, my often neglected for months at a time, blog. I will mention, as I often mention in my blog and, for that matter, pretty much anything that I write, that it is perfectly alright for me to be grammatically and punctuational challenged because I majored in English in college.
Ok, where was I? Right, my wife came home from work and, after a change of clothing, she was able to separate the toilet tank from the toilet and place it, as per the instructions, on a level and stable surface, which in this case, was on top of the clothes washer. I was then able to, with a now consistent level of grunting and definitely stronger language, remove the rest of the tanks terribly deteriorated innards. Once I had accomplished that and had cleaned the tank as much as possible, I set about installing the shiny new toilet tank parts that did not resemble, nor would they have resembled even if they had been new, the old parts. Finally, thanks very little at all to the new parts instruction sheet but, mostly by trial and error, much dandruff agitating, and many temptations to resort to napping, it was time for my wife to replace the tank, with its brand new, solidly firm rubber gasket designed to create a water tight seal between the tank and toilet and seat it in place. All that was left for me to do was to bolt the two toilet halves together with shiny, new, rust resistant brass bolts, nuts, and rubber washers.
Then, fingers crossed, back and legs on fire, it was the moment of truth. I turned the valve that fed water into the tank. Very slowly, at first, checking for any sign of leaks, until I had the water full on and rapidly filling the tank. It was a veritable mackerel, and I couldn't help but say, "Holy Miracle, it is a mackerel that it really works!" I told my wife, I said, "My wife, it is a mackerel," said I. "It is healed and works like new."
I was euphoric in my success and I reflected that, whereas it had taken me more than half a day to do a job that twelve years ago would have taken me less than an hour to do, I had, all agony aside, managed to do the job and do it right. And lo, did my wife, as would all long suffering wive would do, upon seeing the joy and pride in thine husband's face, make it known that there abides, at the other end of our home sweet hovel, another bathroom with yet another, just as old, toilet lurking therein...Thus did I, blissful bubble of joy and pride maliciously popped, did the only thing that a beat up, aging decidedly un-gracefully, old man could do...I took a nap.
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
DMV Rant
Ok, it seems to me that things get more ridiculous in this, our land of the free, on a daily basis. Bureaucracy runs rampant every where you look. For instance, the new "compliant" ID/drivers license. I went in June to get mine and, as per instructions in the renewal letter, I brought my birth certificate, my current license, and a utility bill to prove who I was and where I lived. No problem. I was in and out of the DMV in all of twenty minutes. Piece of cake.
Now, it was a very different story for my wife, and I'm sure that her experience is not unique. In addition to her birth certificate, current license, and utility bill, and because her name changed when we were married, she also had to provide a copy of our marriage certificate. Ok, not so big a deal. However, because she had been divorced prior to our getting married, she had to provide a copy of her divorce decree. Fortunately she had this and because it also stated her maiden name, which was the same as the name on her birth certificate, she figured she was home free....Ha! says I...Son of a...so and so, said she. (Not really, she doesn't talk like that at all)
It didn't matter that all the information was provided. She was required to produce a copy of her first marriage license and that was almost forty years ago. Who in the hell would keep that document after all that time? Ok, some people would, but I think the majority would not. So, she was given a number to call in Dover where, for a mere $25, a copy of her first marriage certificate would be mailed out to her in not so short order. So, a week after her first visit to the ever so fun DMV (she had to go after work which meant going on Wednesday evenings) and for an extra $25 added to the regular license renewal fee, she was finally granted her shiny new "compliant" Id/drivers license. I really pity women who have had several, or more, marriages. I can really imagine the phrase, "Going Postal" and it's correlating actions, being replaced by the phrase, "Going DMV" with the similar actions being attributed to it.
What gets me is that, one afternoon during that very same week, I bought a new hand gun. I walked into a local gun shop, provided my license and vehicle registration, and within fifteen minutes, my particulars were perused by the state and federal governments and, after my life history was figuratively strip searched, I was permitted to go home with a shiny new hand gun. Why can't the DMV do the same thing? If the state and federal government were to confirm my wife's identity and current address by the same process, it seems to me, that this should be good enough for renewing a drivers license.
I don't get it. I simply don't get it. (Actually, I do get it, but a rant about all this nonsense being caused by a few idiots who feel compelled to try and beat the system; and the system being compelled to make it harder to beat the system, at the cost of we, us everyman and everywoman, who try to just get along...and so on...Well, that's for another time.)
Science fiction is becoming reality. I believe, that in my life time, what's left of it, every one will be required to have a bar code, containing a person's life stats, their entire history from birth on, will be tattooed on the back of one's hand. I believe, and fear, that this is entirely possible. I also believe that I am getting more paranoid the older I get. So only time will tell. And I'd rather not listen....
That's the end of this rant. It's one of many going round and around my brain...what's left of it. Probably more later. Meanwhile, ladies...good luck and god speed....B.
Labels: Rants
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
There was one serious casualty from the move, however, that has also contributed to my extended hiatus from this, my blog, and that was my desktop PC. It was somehow dropped during the move and suffered irreparable damage. It was a total loss and, up until tax return time a few short weeks ago, we were not able to afford a new one. What became evident once I did get the new unit up and running was that the unfortunate demise of the old one was a double tragedy in that I could not find a system that came with XP on it. I was forced to accept Vista Home Premium and that is the basis of this current rant.
At this point I am seriously considering wiping Vista from the computer and buying a copy of XP to replace it. I am frustrated and mightily pissed off that Microsoft is ramming this "Beta" operating system down we, the consumer's, throats when there is so much wrong with it. Nearly every program, game, and utility that I own turns out to be incompatible with Vista. The very first day that I had the new computer, a very good HP Pavilion, I could not download updates from HP because my HP computer, that came with Vista Home Premium, was not compatible with Vista Home Premium. I had to contact HP, via email, and wait three days for a reply and a link to a patch to make my brand new HP Pavilion compatible with the operating system that came preloaded on it.
Over the years I have amassed many hundreds of dollars worth of PC games and utilities that are now worthless. I've managed to find Vista patches for a very few of them and even then, some of those still do not work. I have a stack of mini DV tapes on my desk that I can do nothing with because my camcorder is not compatible with Vista. The camcorder manufacturer is supposed to be coming out with a patch in the near future, but there is no guarantee that it will work. Many of my on line subscription sites are not compatible with Vista and my external back up drive is not compatible with Vista.
There are many online Vista tutorial sights that I'm afraid to try and access in case they are not compatible with Vista, and I have come to the inevitable conclusion that I am simply not compatible with Vista!
Friday, December 01, 2006
Having A Wonderful Time, Wish I Was Here
I have stated before that we currently live in a house over eighty five years old which is very definitely showing it's age. I not so lovingly refer to it as my "home sweet hovel." Because of it's age and condition, I have never been very comfortable having people in; not even close family and friends. For the last three and a half weeks now more people have been in and out of this house than any friend or family member in the last twenty eight years; and friends and family don't poke their noses in to every room, closet, cabinet and underwear drawer. At least I don't think they do. I'd prefer to think that they don't. In fact, I'd rather not dwell on the idea any further.
Since I am the major driving force for selling our house, the rest of the household, comprised of my wife and eighteen year old son, have made it a policy to abandon ship and play invisible whenever there is a showing scheduled. I've been pushing to put the house on the market because I cannot continue to live here much longer. "Why for?" you might ask; and well you might. For by reason of being a house with two stories and one bathroom; the location of which happens to be on the second floor. Would that I were able to access the second floor and the bathroom contained thereupon without having to use stairs to make that ascension, things would be a whole big different bucket of kettle fish . However, use the stairs I must as my powers of levitation are rusty beyond redemption, and my deteriorating physical condition is making such chores as climbing stairs beyond difficult and have been propelled into the realm of downright painful. Things are about to change.
The silver lining of Fate's slip is showing and, at this stage of the game, yea and verily, even as I type, all future showings have been put on temporary hold; soon to be upgraded to the status of permanency as we done got us a contract. We have a buyer after only three weeks and some odd days on the market; and some very odd days they were too. Now, however, there is a light at the end of the tunnel and it ain't the 3:15 to Yuma on the wrong track with Casey Jones at the helm. There is a bug in the balm that we yet have to deal with and that is the wee little detail of having another place to move into. Fortunately, the gentleman buying the house is a contractor who plans to renovate and resell; not someone wanting to move in right away. He has been gracious enough to agree to rent the house back to us for a period of thirty days from the date of settlement. That gives us plenty of time to get packed up, get the house emptied and cleaned out, and a chance to contend with that little detail of where to go from here.
We have a plan, thanks to our daughter whose idea prompted this entire project, and that, as I stated in my last post, is to find a nice, comfy-cozy little double wide mobile home to call our own. I am confident that the same young man who guided us so well through the selling process will be just as proficient and effective in helping us to find one. Time will tell.......
.......and the band played on.
Thursday, November 09, 2006
Movin' On
wanted to sell the property and we had the first option to buy; which we chose to do. Being experienced in the world of Real Estate themselves they walked us through the process from beginning to end. To my recollection, the entire deal went down smoother than an ice tea on a hot day. This time, though, we're on our own.
First off, the primary reason behind our decision to sell. This place is over eighty years old and it needs a lot of TLC that we can no longer provide. I am no longer physically able to do the necessary maintenance and repairs myself and, because of my very limited, fixed income, we cannot afford to pay to have work done. The secondary reason behind our desire to relocate is due to the house being a two story residence. My condition makes climbing stairs a progressively difficult process. Having only one bathroom, on the second floor, does not help matters at all.
We shall move; and we are looking to buy a double-wide mobile home in a mobile home park, somewhere in the quieter, southern half of New Castle County. There will be no stairs of any consequence to deal with, and there will be limited storage space for to assist in our desire to curb our pack-rat tendencies. My parents were the poster folks for post depression pack-ratism and we have been wading through their attic, basement, garage, yard shed, and closets for nearly way too long. I don't plan to burden my heirs with the same problem. Long ago, my wife's parents move to Florida into a double-wide mobile home Where there are not a lot of places to junk up. No attic, no basement, no problem! So we are wading through our attic, basement, closets, and garage now and I am amazed at how much of what we have very much qualifies as "Junk." Not just no longer wanted so lets have a yard sale; but honest to goodness gargbage qualtity. What were we thinking!?!
It is no wonder that I have always been somewhat uncomfortable having strangers in this house. I don't even like friends and relatives to visit. It's not that I'm antisocial, it's just that the place is too small for all of the junk we have Not to mention that it's not very pretty inside. Far from Better Homes and Closets; or whatever. Thus we do not entertain and haven't for at least the past ten or so years. It would be nice to have friends over for coffee, dinner, or even just a social call. We have a long way to go, however, but we are making progress. My son has already taken three very full pickup truck loads to the county landfill. Many more will be needed, I'm sure. I plan to make more entries here as things progress and, hopefully, it won't be over a period of more than two months. We shall see what we shall see.
