Monday Musings

October is Facial Pain Awareness Month, sharing the time with Breast Cancer Awareness. While facial pain doesn’t carry the dire outcomes of some breast cancer diagnoses, it it most debilitating and often lasts years.

For eight years now, atypical trigeminal neuralgia, TN-2, has been a daily problem for me, and my recent spine surgery exacerbated the symptoms big time. I won’t go into details, but it has been a really rough couple of weeks. Thankfully, I seem to be doing a little better. I think a couple of afternoons at a park with a small lake helped. As my brother reminded me in a text, “Nature can be so therapeutic, especially with water.”

I agree.

It was so refreshing so sit at a picnic table and watch the water as wind rippled the surface. Then one day the ducks decided to take a swim.

When I start to feel a little better, I tend to push myself, and I think I need to rest a bit now. Did a lot this morning, so it’s time. I’ll turn the space over to my friend, Slim Randles and his story of an unusual legacy. Enjoy!

We all read about Pastor Jeff’s latest tribulation in the local paper, the Valley Weekly Miracle.  Maybe tribulation is too strong a word, because, after all, when someone leaves your church a huge legacy, isn’t it time for rejoicing? Shouldn’t we all be walking around the walls of Jericho tootling on ram’s horns and beating the drums in jubilation?

It seems one of Pastor Jeff’s former church members – a kinda strange former church member – went off to the city some years ago and became a fairly well-known painter of pictures. When this eccentric artist went to that great studio in the sky recently, leaving no family, his will left everything to Pastor Jeff’s congregation. There was a little money, which was welcomed, naturally, but the main items were paintings.

More than a thousand of them.

The paintings are now the property of Pastor Jeff’s church. The basement is filled with them and they’re threatening to crowd the pie-cooling counter in the ladies’ kitchen area, something that just can’t happen.

The paintings must be sold, of course, but there is one catch: none of them are named, and everyone knows a painting must have a name or else it’s not a real work of art. These paintings are from the school of abstract expressionism, which means there’s a lot of bright paint on them, and if you can look at one and figure out what it’s supposed to be, the artist failed.

A painting-naming committee was formed, naturally, and the last we heard, had about a dozen paintings named, based loosely on what some wild curve or blob on the canvas brought to someone’s mind.

Of course, down at the Mule Barn truck stop’s philosophy counter and world dilemma think tank, we came up with a solution in about three cups’ time.

The trick, we decided, is to blend nonsensical words together, because anyone who would buy one of these paintings has an obvious contempt for reality in the first place. So we came up with a formula. Make a list and name a painting an amalgamation/dynamism/cataclysm/rudiment/despotism/heraldry/approximation

of

sin/pulchritude/embellishment/innocence/hitchiking/world order/fishing season/spaghetti feeds/lassitude/ennui/cyclamates.

You simply pick a word from one column, one from the other column, slap ’em together and there you go. With seven words in the first column and 11 in the second column, the naming committee can instantly name at least 77 paintings.

And we come up with this just during three cups of Mavis’s best.

A hard-working church committee could name a thousand paintings during one of Pastor Jeff’s sermons and be back in business in time for the benediction.

I’m putting my dibs down on Despotism of Pulchritude. Hope I don’t get outbid.

                             ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Read the first novel ever published in Alaska – The Long Dark by Slim Randles.

4 thoughts on “Monday Musings”

  1. miracle scuba – Raised on a farm in eastern South Dakota, flowered with values and future lessons for life. Graduated high school, entered the US Navy. Two years (1992-1994) I gave to our great country, in the 'Med' (Sardinia, Italy) and gave my mother intense anxiety the whole duration. No idea what to do upon discharge, I went on unemployment for a period of time. However, I 'happened' to check the box on the paperwork, asking about the GI Bill. After six years of waitressing, production work, and scrubbing hotel toilets, I finally decided upon college. I graduated with a BS in Psychology and English in May, 2005. My time was taken up by volunteering at the nearby VA, as related jobs were hard to come by. I secured a job at the VA in Sheridan, Wyoming. One and a half years. Engaged in a severely bad relation, my parents drove nine hours (more than one time) and the final occurrence, I went back to the farm with them. I drank, a lot, not as much as when in the service, but enough to get me another DUI. On the farm with my parents, 36 years old is nothing to be proud of. Still, I am grateful, for what would I have done? Of course, we also have the intensive eating disorder, which stems back to high school, but the implementation began in childhood. This is a book all in its own. I have struggled with these issues my entire life. I have now secured a very stable job, had a blessed true 'miracle' baby in October of 2016, long to stay home and pursue my dream of writing. This is my first step and I hope and pray that people are out there who long to here my story...'a story to tell.' Thank you all and I long to connect .....Hoo Ya

    I told ma you got too much writing to do so am so bestilled at your determination. U have always inspired me and always will be. Don’t the geese we always saw when we went for a walk down the see west road. This is what got my attention. Love and blessings ❤️

    1. mcm0704

      Thanks for popping in, Sheila. I do remember those geese and the great walks we took eons ago. Hope you continue in your recovery, too. You are one strong woman!!

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top
Exit mobile version