Podcast: The Best Shit Has to Offer

English is enriched by its many idioms and Americans seem to be particularly partial to incorporating the word “shit” into their idioms.  These are the five best shit idioms.

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Open Letter to the Neighbor Who Put a Bag of Dog Shit in My Purse

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Dear Neighbor,

First of all, I would like to sincerely apologize for my dog.  It was an entirely innocent mistake, but I also realize how you might have misconstrued the situation. We had just arrived at our cabin after a long drive and I was taking our dogs for a walk.  I momentarily lost control of them as I stopped briefly to give another neighbor a welcoming hug.  The dogs ran ahead to the beach in front of your picture window.  I can imagine your disgust as three generations of your family collectively watched our dog crouch and deposit a well-crafted poop into your sand.  I was unaware of this grievous misdeed when I caught up to the dogs.

I can offer testimonials from other neighbors who will verify that I am meticulous about picking up after our dogs. I have even attended to other dogs’ deposits.  I would have immediately responded if you had popped your head out of the door and directly asked me to pick up.  Instead you elected to let me pass by, then went out to the beach and picked up the poop yourself.

Perhaps you were originally going to dispose of the offending item in your garbage can, but now with bag in hand, you reconsidered.  Feces are a powerful motivator.  The phrase “Don’t shit where you live,” neatly encapsulates the evolutionary and cultural mandates for any social animal living in a confined space, so I understand how unattended shit could prompt retaliation.  As I walked away you headed in the other direction across the footbridge and back to my cabin.

It was a beautiful night along the remote shores of Lake Superior.  Far from any city lights the smear of the Milky Way was highlighted by the profoundly black sky.   I imagine that on other nights you might have wandered out to the footbridge to look for shooting stars and lingered in the hope of seeing the Northern Lights. But instead you were stomping along the bridge with the sand-encrusted, piping-hot bag of shit rhythmically swaying in your hand and tapping against your leg.  Picking up a dump is inherently humiliating, the humiliation further deepened when it’s someone else’s.  Perhaps the wafting fragrance fueled your anger.  This was not what you wanted to be doing on your hard-earned vacation.  I get it.

When you arrived at our cabin, how did you choose where to deposit your fetid bag? This was a big decision.  I’m sure you realize that the power of shit escalates when you make it personal.  The hood of the car, the lid of the garbage can or the porch would have been neutral spots, but when you nestled that dog shit in my purse, you made it personal, turned a marginally acceptable but teachable moment into a vindictive act.  Okay, it wasn’t exactly a purse, it was really a tote bag, but now my toothbrush, hairbrush, address book and cell phone were separated from feces by only a thin and permeable layer of plastic.

Perhaps you had worked yourself into a seething fit of pique over the time bomb left on your beach – so much so that the shit in the purse actually represented restraint on your part.  I suppose you could have lain in wait and flung the bag at me, like the frustrated ape in the zoo, or in scene from the Godfather, placed the bag like the head of a horse onto our pillow.  Perhaps I was lucky to escape further escalation.  If so, thank you for your consideration.  As it was, I calmly plucked the poop from my bag and placed it in the garbage. No harm, no foul.

Please be reassured that I am writing with good humor and a forgiving heart.  You see, I have struggled to control identical impulses.  At home, I often cross paths with an aggressive Doberman whose owner steadfastly refuses to leash his dogs as required by park regulations.  His consistent disregard for etiquette has prompted me to consider sabotaging his walks.  As I stand there gazing at his big black Escalade, I touch the bag of my own dog’s shit idling in my pocket and feel it transform into a handy weapon, a grenade without a pin. Glancing to my right and left, I think how easy it would be to skulk over to his car and discharge my weapon with a big smear across his windshield.  So far I have just barely held off and held on to my dignity.  In the future I hope you would also refrain from weaponizing feces.  My advice – just don’t let a bag of dog shit turn you into a person you don’t want to be.

Warm regards from your neighbor,

Sincerely,

Liza Blue

 

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Podcast: Open Letter to Neighbor Who Put Dogshit in My Purse

The title says it all.

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The Best of 63,000

Spare ribs

I grew up in an atmosphere of food as fuel, though my mother would wince to hear her culinary efforts so lightly dismissed.  But she was in charge of feeding five kids three meals a day, and then a separate meal for my father, who arrived home later.  Our kids’ meals were simple and repetitive – hamburgers, macaroni and cheese, carrot sticks, brightly colored Jell-O for dessert.  Done – 15 minutes tops, with a reward of two Hershey kisses for a clean plate, then it was out the door for more horsing around in the summer twilight, or during the winter watching the Dick Van Dyke show at 6:30 PM.  In our family, shared food was just not the vehicle to create a forced intimacy prompting teachable moments, lessons learned, experiences shared.

The sensory elements of food – smell, texture, or artful presentation – were   foreign concepts.  I do recall the creamy-mouth feel of ice cream and the sound of burbling bacon on weekend mornings, but beyond that, nothing.  Cheese was limited to American cheese of suspect orangeness.  The only foreign food was dreadful Chop Suey sloshed out of a can.  Indian food – never heard of it.

Yet even in this desolate palatal environment, there was one instance when everything coalesced into the pinnacle food experience, a shining moment among the estimated 63,000 meals that I have consumed in my life.  And it didn’t even involve a table, a plate, a fork, or a napkin. Continue reading

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Podcast: The Best of 63,000

Of the estimated 63,000 meals that I have eaten in my lifetime, this plate of ribs was my favorite.

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Marketing Unplugged: An Honest Advertisement

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The Genius of Birds is a book that provides a compelling tour of bird intelligence based on their navigational skills, architectural skills and vocal virtuosity.  But it was the chapter on avian aesthetics that most piqued my interest.  Specifically, I was startled by the description of the peacock’s tail as an “honest advertisement,” a term that, from my experience, struck me as suspiciously oxymoronic.

Perhaps I am jaded from the hours spent wandering the grocery aisles reading labels.  My view is that advertisimg operates in the murky gap between perception and reality – a jug of orange juice that advertises fresh taste, while the orange juice itself is far from fresh; free range chickens, which only guarantees that chickens have access to a door if they can find it; the vague but comforting terms of natural, organic or artisan.  In my experience, honesty is a rare attribute of advertising. Continue reading

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Podcast: Marketing Unplugged: An Honest Advertisement

What exactly is the peacock advertising with his elaborate plumage full of eye spots?

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As It Was in the Beginning

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Our newborn son sat in my lap as I waited at the hospital entrance for my husband to bring the car around to take us home for the first time. I thought about all the surprising professions that required a license – beauticians, private eyes, and even interior designers.  Basically, any profession where incompetency may result in public harm requires a license.  If anything cried out for a license, it was a new mother taking home her baby.  I knew nothing about infants. My husband pulled up, the nurses bundled us in the car, noting that the car seat should be rear-facing, and off we went.  The next day Nick went back to work. Ned’s big brown eyes fluttered open and I said to him, “Okay little man, we’re in this together.  Be patient with me.”  Continue reading

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Podcast: As It Was in the Beginning

Why didn’t someone tell me that being a mother to an infant could be so boring?

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Podcast: Marketing Unplugged: Madagascar Vanilla

My menu says the vanilla in the creme brulee comes from Madagascar.  What should I do with this information?  Have I been eating crap vanilla my entire life?

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