Monthly Archives: February 2024

Parrhesia

Parrhesia (par-rez’-i-a): Either to speak candidly or to ask forgiveness for so speaking. Sometimes considered a vice.


I’m sorry, but I just need to tell you what I think of your father. I’ve been holding back for two years, since we got married. I need to tell you. We’ve got to be honest with each other. Honesty is the foundation of a solid marriage and I’ve been remiss. Basically, I don’t think much of your father.

He borrowed $50 at our wedding reception and hasn’t paid it back. He hasn’t offered an excuse—he hasn’t offered anything. I don’t get it, but it is bad. The only other time this happened was when I loaned $20 to my best friend and he got killed in a car crash on the Goethals Bridge, coming beck to Jersey after a night of drinking on Staten Island where the drinking age was 18 and it was 21 in Jersey.. Needless to say, I never saw my $20 again. Damn!

Your father dresses like a mobster at a bowling alley. He wears red and yellow shirts with his name embroidered above the pocket: “Carl.” The shirts are made of synthetic material that picks up and radiates armpit smell: polyester. He has the audacity to ask me if I smell him. He says: “It’s my signature, everybody knows, here comes Carl, get a whiff of that.” How can he take pride in his armpit smell? It’s like taking pride in mugging elderly women or beating your dog. And his “friends,” what are they about? Are they making fun of him, or are they some kind of smell-club of perverts? I’m going to ask him.

For the rest of his clothes, he wears a black t-shirt, a black sports coat and dark purple sharkskin pants. His “look” is topped off by black and white wingtips and a black stingy brim hat. In addition to looking like a mobster, he looks like an unemployed game show host on acid, or maybe a cab driver in Oz, or a thief who had stolen random clothing from a Salvation Army donation box.

And more: He won’t let anybody but him sit in “his chair” in the living room. He keeps a handgun in his lap in case anybody tries to wrest him from his chair. He belches loudly to interrupt people when they’re speaking. He will not vary what he eats: eggs for breakfast, sardines for lunch, pork chops and mashed potatoes for dinner washed down with 5 PBRs. He flirts mercilessly with Linda, the counter girl at Cliffs. I’ve heard him say “I want to jump the counter a squeeze your ass.” Linda tells him, “In your dreams, you smelly old man. Buy something or I’ll call the cops,” That usually slows him down, but he has been cautioned twice by the police.

Moving right along: His breath smells like a mixture of decaying flesh and paint thinner. I think it may be flammable. In addition to his BO, he exudes the odor of a poorly wiped butt.

There’s more, but I’ll leave it there. You know all this, and you probably didn’t need to hear it. I am hopeful that we can do something short of having him undergo deprogramming at that place in New York where Rudy Giuliani has gone.

Your mother is a saint, and so are you. And moreover, despite everything, your father is a loving man who has raised you to be a loving, confident, tolerant, and self-sufficient woman.

Maybe we should just leave well-enough alone.


Definition courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu)

The Daily Trope is available on Amazon in paperback under the title of The Book of Tropes for $9.95. It is also available in Kindle format for $5.99.

Prolepsis

Prolepsis (pro-lep’-sis): (1) A synonym for procatalepsis [refuting anticipated objections]; (2) speaking of something future as though already done or existing. A figure of anticipation.


Struggling walking. Vision dimming. Old person smell. These are the burdens we bear. As we imagine their inevitability, we feel their echoes from the future and assume the state of mind their presence induces. What possible benefit can accrue from thinking about one’s demise and ultimate death? What good can it possibly do to dwell on the inevitable end?

I want to live forever—drink a beer when I’m 300. Sometimes I feel like I’ve already hit 300 when I talk to people 30 and younger. I know this is a well-worn topic, but it still has some traction. I have a friend Bart who is 80. On New Years 1970 he froze his life in 1970. He rode a motorcycle and was covered with tattoos. He said “I don’t give a shit. I’m staying right here.” That would be with the “Beatles” and bellbottoms and love beads, and cheap beer, and hash. He never got married because he couldn’t find a woman willing to live his dream. He still works in the Chevy plant making car doors fit with a breaker bar. Oh, he wears Beatle boots with his bellbottoms. Now, they’re called “Chelsea Boots.”

I went to visit him. When he answered the door, I was shocked to see that he had gone completely bald since I had seen him last week. He laughed and told me he had shaved his head like Kojak. He was tired of the naked ring on top of his head. He said he had already gotten some “action” since he had shaved his head. An elderly woman had given him a cherry tootsie pop and had said “Who loves ya baby,” Bart was going to make his move, but these guys in white coats took her by the arms and walked her away. This would be a cliche if it wasn’t true!

Bart’s tattoos had turned into blurs of color—totally obscured. Time had obscured them. Luckily, when they started to go, Burt drew a map with a key explaining what each one was. For example, the tattoo he had of Elizabeth Montgomery (“Bewitched”) on his chest had turned into a maelstrom of color seemingly dripping toward his his belly button. But, it was clearly displayed on the map, with a brief synopsis of “Bewitched.” On his back there was a tattoo of Niagara Falls, running out of his shoulders down to his butt. It was almost discernible, except for the barrel with Bart riding it over the falls.

I asked him what it was like to be frozen in 1970. He told me it was like 1970. Oh, I thought that was pretty insightful. He asked me if I knew where he could “score” some bellbottoms. I said, “Maybe at the Salvation Army thrift store.” He laughed and then told me “They’re tapped out.” He told me he had heard of a place called “Internet” that sold things on computers, but he didn’t have a computer. I told him I’d have a look there and let him know.

“Do you remember the disco song ‘Funky Town?” He asked. I old him “Vaguely.” He jammed a cassette tape into his player, and “Funky Town” started playing. Bart started dancing, he was busting some sweet moves, twirling one hand like a lasso over his head and clutching his crotch with the other hand, sweating. Living the 70s. Suddenly, he grabbed his chest, cursing in pain, falling to the floor. I called 911. By the time the EMTs got there, Bart was dead. Heart attack.


Definition courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu)

The Daily Trope is available on Amazon in paperback under the title of The Book of Tropes for $9.95. It is also available in Kindle format for $5.99.

Pathopoeia

Pathopoeia ( path-o-poy’-a): A general term for speech that moves hearers emotionally, especially as the speaker attempts to elicit an emotional response by way of demonstrating his/her own feelings (exuscitatio). Melanchthon explains that this effect is achieved by making reference to any of a variety of pathetic circumstances: the time, one’s gender, age, location, etc.


I was 84 years old when my hip stopped working, I contracted chronic double vision, started stumbling when I walked, a rash on my butt and lost my hearing aids. It was like my being was waiting for the right time to betray me. What else could happen? Later that day, a giant boil erupted on the back of my neck. The first order of business was the hip. But first, I went to my church. I figured it might be a good idea to ask for forgiveness for whatever sins brought the onslaught a maladies, and losing my hearing aids. The church was vacant, so I had the altar all to myself. I hadn’t been to church since 1970 when Donovan did a benefit concert there to aid the development of the “electrical banana” and used churches as venues around the US.

So, I took a swig from the bottle of cheap wine that was sitting there in a brown paper bag, got down on my knees and started pleading with God to restore my health: “I know I haven’t taken good care of myself, but at least I never took heroin or smoked or caught an STD. NOW, I’m only 84 and I’m falling apart. Please fix me. I am leaving $20 on the altar. I know you always need money. I will go home and wait for the miracles to begin.”

I took an Uber home and waited. Suddenly, I saw my hearing aids on top of the microwave. Then, I realized that’s where I left them. No miracles yet. No miracles at all. I was mad. I called the hospital to schedule my hip replacement surgery. They told me there was a one year wait. Now I was really mad. I decided to tell off God: “You are total bullshit. In fact, maybe you don’t exist. Maybe you’re a fairy tale like “Peter Pan’ or ‘Little Red Riding Hood.’ I am going to write another story: ‘The Man That God Didn’t Listen To.’” I finished my diatribe and headed to the kitchen—limping along—to get a beer.

My phone rang. It was the hospital. A person had cancelled their surgery, and the hospital had an opening they could offer me. The surgery would be in a week. I went back to the church and gave thanks and gave God another $20. I talked nicely to God. The boil and the butt rash went away. I am patiently waiting for my vision to be restored along with my gait. Maybe next week.


Definition courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu)

The Daily Trope is available on Amazon in paperback under the title of The Book of Tropes for $9.95. It is also available in Kindle format for $5.99.

Perclusio

Perclusio (per-clu’-si-o): A threat against someone, or something.


“If you don’t start being my friend, I am going to beat the crap out of you.” This was Bascom Rogers at his best. For him “friend” was just a noise he made at people before he started swinging. God forbid, he wanted to be your friend. Everybody ran away when he started the “start being my friend” bit. It was rumored that due to his leg braces from having had polio, Bill Vegas was caught by Bascom and severely beaten with one of his own braces. Now that they were “friends” Bascom would push Bill down and ask “How’s it going pal?” and laugh like a cartoon vampire. Bill would lay there until Bascom left, and somebody would help him up. The “somebody” was often me. It was bad enough that Bill came close to dying from polio, but to be mercilessly bullied was nearly as bad.

I knew what I had to do. My Dad was a lab technician at “Experimental Labs.” They were funded by the government and made a lot of money and had developed vaccines for “orphan” viruses. Their vaccine for Korean Flu had saved the US Army during the Korean War. They produced a vaccine for rope burn that had saved countless high school students in gym classes across North America. They had developed a vaccine for “Milkaphobia” and virtually wiped out rickets in North America. Vitamin D deficiency in children became a thing of the past.

Now, in collaboration with Dr. Jonas Salt, they were working on a vaccine against polio. My plan was to steal some polio virus and administer it to Bascom. I knew, it was horrible, and illegal, but my moral compass pointed to doing it. I went to my father’s office. There was a gallon jug on his desk that said “polio.” He said he’d be right back, and left the office. I had a jelly jar that I had rinsed out. I put on the rubber gloves lying on the desk and poured a few drops of “polio” into my jelly jar. Now, I waited for my opportunity to administer it to Bascom.

Bascom and I were in an isolated corner of the school playground. I held out my jar and said, “Here Bascom, drink this. It will make you high.” He grabbed it out of my hand and drank it. As I was running away I heard him yell, “It better get me high or I’ll kick your fu*kin’ ass!”

The next thing I knew, Bascom was in the hospital. He had had a spiritual awakening and was going to India when he got out of the hospital. He would find a guru and learn how to spread love, peace and happiness wherever he went. He had taken out an ad in the local paper begging Bill Vegas to forgive him.

This was crazy! I asked my dad if he was still working on a polio vaccine. He said, “In fact, the other day when you were at my office, I stepped out to make a new label for the polio jug, but you left before I got back. We are working on a drug now, expanding our offerings. We are working with Doctor Timothy Larry on a new drug called LSD. That’s what was in the polio jug.

In the coming years it would be called “Acid,” it would help end the Vietnam War and gave many young people a deep appreciation for the mutability of the “taken for granted” backdrop of everyday life. Guru Bascom started a commune in central New York and teaches his followers to “love one another right now.” Bill Vegas found his way to Bascom’s commune, forgave him, and joined.


Definition courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu)

The Daily Trope is available on Amazon in paperback under the title of The Book of Tropes for $9.95. It is also available in Kindle format for $5.99.