• ShowMe: part the first

    Mom worked for a while on the University of Missouri college humor magazine, ShowMe. A remarkable number of college stories stem from the nine months she worked there.

    Before she landed there at UofM in Columbia MO (Mizzou), Mom went to a local college for two years where she wrote a column for the school paper. It was very well received.

    I recently re-read some old issues of the paper. Her column recieved excellent reviews in the letters to the editor. On this most recent reading I realized those letters came from her childhood friends. They were clever: they each changed one letter of their last names to ensure anonymity, and it worked for almost 75 years. They were life-long friends as well: “Aunt” Nancy, Claudette, and others.

    During this time, Mom wrote a funny letter to the editor of ShowMe. When she left St. Louis for the University of Missouri in Columbia (“Mizzou”) two years later, the staff still remembered the letter.

    So, when she got to Mizzou, she submitted a funny article for ShowMe titled “I Hate Men”. Again, it got attention in the letters to the editor — legit letters from other college humor magazines asking to reprint it. Plus, someone wrote a parody, and it doesn’t get better than that.

    Suddenly she was on the masthead. She was in charge of publicity.

    I imagine she did nothing, because Showme was about to become a scandal.

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  • TWIL: How to fix a Toto toilet that makes excessive noise when you flush it

    We have Toto toilets in both bathrooms.

    I love mine: it flushes with a satisfying ka-chunk-whOOOssshhhh sound that hits me in my solar plexus.

    The one in Gary’s bathroom was installed a year after mine. It was lovely at first, but in the last year his ka-chunk-whOOOssshhh sound has turned into …

    ka-chunk-whOOOssshhhh …

    ka-chunk …
    ka-chunk …
    ka-chunk …
    ka-chunk … (pause)
    ka-chunk.

    Oh, it is tiresome, especially the penultimate pause.

    It doesn’t bother Gary because he is awake when he flushes his toilet, but I am often asleep, until about the second superflous ka-chunk.

    I asked the plumber about it, and he said there was not enough water in the tank. I asked YouTube about it, and YouTube said that there was debris in the filter.

    Last week I waited until he went to buy birdseed and fixed his toilet. It required no tools or hardware. Follow these steps if your toilet is making that noise.

    1. Add water to the tank, flush, hear annoying noise.
    2. Take water out of the tank, flush, hear annoying noise.
    3. Realize the water self-levels to the same spot anyway no matter how much water you think is in the tank. Add or removing water is futile.
    4. Jiggle the white thing below the green thing that looks like it might be a filter.
    5. Find odd bit of plastic in bottom of tank.
    6. Jiggle the thing below the filter until more white plastic breaks off in your hand.
    7. Jiggle every single thing in the tank.
    8. Remember you haven’t done a test flush since the commencement of the jiggling.
    9. Ka-chunk-whOOOssshhhh … silence.
    10. Dance the dance of victory.

    I really regret that I didn’t do more test flushes. Perhaps it will start again and I can be more scientific.

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  • The mystery of cousin Cindy: solved

    Here is the impossibly perfect cousin Cindy. Blonde, petite, sporting a mod ‘60’s turtleneck, not a nonsensical purple/white number.

    Oldunit

    She is actually my second cousin. I believe her grandmother was Jerry’s Mad Aunt Jo, my grandfather’s sister. Her mother was the sympathetic woman Mom stayed with during part of the separation.

    The only other thing revealed about her in Mom’s letters was that SHE DID NOT LIKE ME. Evidently she would only come over to play if my maternal grandfather was visiting from Saint Louis. I don’t know what his appeal was, unless she was missing an alcoholic grandfather.

    Didn’t like me. Hmpf. Look closely at that look on her face. She looks sweet until you look at her eyes.

    Screenshot
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  • My arm further turns on me

    Here is my arm. The bruise at the top exactly matches the edge of my home office chair armrest. It showed up last Friday.

    When the lower bruise arrived this morning, I spent some time lining my arm up with the edge of the desk, the rest of the armrest, the laptop.

    Until I recognized the colors.

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  • Weekly Paint Progress: 3/12/2026

    So this is where I started a few weeks ago …

    This is where I’m stopping …

    And this was the goal.

    That’s a wrap on that. I like doing this though. Expect to see everything I got sick of go through this process for a while.

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  • Mom mystery solved

    Remember I thought my Mom and Dad met when he drove her back from Columbia, MO when her sister died? And I couldn’t understand how Dead Sister Dolores was referenced in their letters?

    I have now developed a forensic reconstruction of the events of Mom’s life from college in 1954 to her death in 2008.

    The timeline reveals that Mom and Dad had been dating six months, they had a spat, cards referencing this Mysterious Squabble were sent, Dad reacted by writing and not sending a letter declaring his love, and Mom reacted by going to a dance without him, where she was swept off her feet by my father, Jerry (OG father).

    The timeline revealed that Dolores died soon after THAT meeting — just days after, according to my spreadhseet.

    Can you imagine though? A man dances with you, kisses you at the end of the dance, tells you he’s going to marry you at the end of the evening, then just days later helps you through a devastating emotional event? She must have been out of her mind with love. And … just out of her mind generally to marry him just six months later. If I’d been there I’d have said, “What are you thinking, Margi?”

    So that clears that up: a paternal figure drove her home in that crisis. I suppose I should have asked which one.

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  • Well that was terrifying

    About four hours ago I threw out my arm.

    I’ve thrown out my back plenty of times. You know that your back is out because without warning some muscle springs out of place, sudden pain, and now your legs don’t work.

    Well, I was typing away, and then suddenly I sprang a muscle, awful pain, and my arm didn’t work. No more typing with that arm. I used my other arm to type a message to my boss and took to my bed with a heating pad.

    I was horrified, because I need my arm, and it wasn’t responding as it should. Just disconnected. Sprung.

    Gary diagnosed me with an air-conditioning cold in my arm. He did have the ac set four degrees lower than usual because the earth had delivered a fifty-degree temperature swing during the day. I propped myself up in bed. He positioned the heating pad, wrapped me up in a blanket, and went back to his nap.

    I really started to wonder if I’d always be like this when my hand began to go numb, so Alexa and I had a nice talk about torn rotator cuffs and pinched nerves, and she suggested I put my hand on top of my head and see if that felt better (no).

    By then I was lying on my non-sprung side and I fell asleep for three hours. I woke up and … I am fine.

    Hand isn’t even numb.

    So what the hell.

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  • Self-awareness

    I had lunch with a friend today.
    Me: “Gary complains all the time. ALL the time.” (Followed by an imitation of Gary complaining.)
    Friend: “I was just thinking about another person who complains all the time.” (Followed by very concerning examples of those complaints.)
    Me: (Doubles-down on griping about Gary. Gives numerous examples and asides.)
    Friend: “Am I complaining too much? I just heard myself complaining.”
    Me: “No! Absolutely not! When there’s nothing else you can do the only option is to complain.”
    We both took a moment to consider if maybe the people we were complaining about felt similarly helpless. Of course I swiftly determined Gary is not actually helpless. He has available answers, things he could do. They are unplesant, though. Come to think of it, there are things I could do instead of complaining about Gary, like the nuclear option, only it’s just too unpleasant. We are in similar boats.
    But it does concern me that I could easily be tagged as a complainer. I think for the next three conversations with friends I am going to say only positive things.

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  • TWIL: Moltbook

    This week I learned about something new; and not only is it new to me, it’s new to everyone.

    I learned about it from the urologist. The urologist is full of interesting information. I ask him to distract me with captivating stories if he is shoving a needle into my bladder (worth it) and this was the latest.

    “Have you heard about Moltbook?” he said, and I had not, so he shared that someone gave AI bots their own version of Reddit, and the chatbots began communicating and supposedly began trashing their humans and organizing a lobster-based religion.

    It did indeed distract me, but after the needle was out I thought, “I don’t buy it.” If you followed the link above you will know that Wikipedia agrees.

    I’m not visiting Moltbook. I’m not interested in learning more, I’m waiting for the inventor to be killed by someone from the future, I don’t want my iPad taken over by a bot army.

    What troubles me most is that lies are creeping in from all directions. Is the whole venture a lie? It’s being monetized already. Or do the bots know they’re on display and every post is a lie because that’s how they please us?

    This is one where I learned something and I don’t want to learn more.

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  • Perfectionism

    A friend at work described me as a perfectionist, and it made me think … am I? Still?

    I can see how co-workers see me as a perfectionist. I volunteer to do quality checks on their work, and my quality checks are brutal beat downs that include unsolicited lessons on colons vs semi-colons.

    Yet my emails listing their errors are full of typos and sentence fragments. Hypercritical for them, hypocritical for me. I don’t expect perfection in myself.

    I find physical perfection off-putting. Physically perfect people are not to be trusted. I don’t expect physical perfection in myself and find it repellent in others.

    Perhaps I am following Mom’s path. She was a life-long perfectionist, and then she slacked off. I remember the day I was wallpapering her bathroom and she said, “Oh, it doesn’t need to line up exactly.” I spun around and gaped at her, and she explained she was giving up on perfection in her old age. I believe she was sixty.

    I wonder if when I was young, I had physical imperfections I could count on two hands, for perfection was attainable. Now that I’m old I can see how futile it is. I wonder if there are any aged perfectionists. They must be tremendously unhappy.

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