My week is out of balance. Let me explain.
Life around here is pretty random. True, I get up early every morning and dress for success with a crystal vision of the productive and goal-oriented day ahead. The clarity always persists at least through the second cup of Folgers. At that point alternatives seem to present themselves and, as a man of small character, I find myself too willing to entertain program changes.
(For instance, the Tuesday agenda required re-shingling a leaky part of the roof. But it might not rain for a while. Therefore there was no important reason not to stuff my fanny pack with cheap .22s and the Colt Huntsman and go afield in search of dirt clods which needed busting. This sort of thing improves soil tilth and is thus an environmentally responsible action, but I digress.)
Just one point of iron routine governs the schedule. Friday night "fish," a gathering of old friends for a drink or two and something to eat. We're all more or less retired these days, and Friday fish is about as close as most of us get to discipline and structure in our social and professional calendars.
So imagine my disorientation this morning. It is as though Earth's magnetic polarity shifted overnight as predicted by the Mayans or Jimmy Swaggert or one of those authorities. We canceled Friday night or, rather, we voted to hold Friday on Thursday. That was yesterday, of course, so this is Saturday morning, confirmed by the stock markets, which are closed.
A taxing cerebral proces leads to intellectual understanding that, in fact, Saturday won't arrive until tomorrow. But the notion can not be assimilated into the spirit, so I remain doomed to a purgatory of temporal disassociation.
Why would we subject ourselves to such confusion? Because of a Holy Day, that's why, combined with a business decision by a nearby Elk's Club. These Elks own a fine building and up until a few months ago contracted the restaurant space to someone who put on a Friday night buffet and poured an honest drink. It became uneconomic. We were forced to cross the club off our rotation list. We missed it.
But the Elks decided on a special offering for Maundy Thursday as the day appears on the Gregorian Calendar which has pretty well won the Easter Date wars around here; at least we hear nothing about bloodshed with the Julians in these parts.
They advertised chicken and ribs, and we bit. I, in particular, bit hard and long and irresponsibly enough to be happy for the reserve supply of bicarbonate of soda in the Armageddon-prep locker. These guys apparently produced the feast themselves. We know they served it.
I am tempted to use all-caps to announce that they know what they're doing. The fellow on the broaster was a fowl artiste, and the rib man had a full understanding of the world's most sublime method of acquiring severe heartburn.
In due course I waddled to the cashier's counter where the money Elk wondered -- I think sincerely -- if I felt as though I had obtained full value for my twelve dollars (including the bourbon). I assured him of my pleasure as he watched me write the check for fifteen. He seemed to find the amount odd and muttered something about twelve out of fifteen. "No, no, That's for the server, or your program, whatever." The smile returned . He took the check and dropped the "change" in a jar. That money, plus the night's chow and booze profits, would finance scholarships in his town and mine.
Well, maybe things are a little hickish out here in the heart of Flyover, USA, but (a) that was a damned nice libertarian thing for the Elks to do and (b) not a hundred people on the entire planet ate better than we did last night.
And that's what I wanted to tell you this Saturday morning.
5 comments:
Sounds like a sensible way to end Maundy Thursday. We may not have eaten better, but we are on the short list. On the way home from services last night, we stopped by our favored German restaurant. Feasted on inch-thick smoked pork chops, grilled pork loin, flounder, German potatoes, potato pancakes, and loads of red cabbage. Didn't get home until after 10:30. Life in the big city. JAGSC
Post like this are why I seldom miss a day of checking to see what you are writing..... and even tho' I hate word verification (and understand why some use it) I decided to go ahead and let you know....
Thatks, J'Bob. I hate this new word verification too, and I have killed it. I'll leave it off unless the spammers become unmanageable.
JAGS. Smoked poke is excellent, and you now have me thinking of smoking a whole loin.
This makes me homesick.
I can't promise the Elks will throw another special for us, but I'll ask. If they refuse, there's always the Gingham. Y'all come.
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