Monthly Archives: August 2025

Deesis

Deesis (de’-e-sis): An adjuration (solemn oath) or calling to witness; or, the vehement expression of desire put in terms of “for someone’s sake” or “for God’s sake.”


“For God’s sake. Stop humming! You are driving me crazy. If you don’t stop humming, I ‘m going to tear out your tongue.!” He ignored her. His humming wasn’t even a song. It was random sounds with no tune. It was like listening to her stomach rumble in the morning before her daily bowel movement. It was grotesque. It was maddening. She flew over the edge.

It was the most horrendous crime ever committed in Parkerville. His tongue was floating in the toilet. His head was split open like a cantaloupe ready for breakfast. There was a recording of his random humming playing on her cellphone. When the police heard the recording and her story, they chalked up what she had done to self defense and let her go.

After she washed off the blood, she headed out to dinner at Marty’s Big Spoon. When she walked in, the other patrons saw that she was alone. “Hummer” wasn’t with her. They gave her a standing ovation for what she had done. With his incessant humming her boyfriend had been an irritant everywhere he went. It was humorous the way the other patrons raised their butter knives and made slashing figures in the air.

She wrote a book titled “He Really Bothered Me.” It told the lengthy story of how she became unable to “take it” any more. Killing your partner for becoming exceedingly irritating became the go-to remedy for bad relationships. Violins were doused in gasoline, ignited and stuffed down pants, Kiss CDs were smashed and used to slit throats, Hamsters were packed with explosives and detonated on top of partners’ heads. These are just a few examples of the homicidal coping strategies developed and enacted across the USA.

As the irritating perpetrators were being disposed of by their murders, a lovely tranquility settled into Parkerville and other towns a cities. For the cost of a burial and a couple of bullets you could rid your life of tension, stress, and frustration.

The wedding vow “Until death do us part” took on new meaning. It was more of a warning than a promise.


Definitions 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.

Dehortatio

Dehortatio (de-hor-ta’-ti-o): Dissuasion.


“I believe in miracles” Sally told me as we walked home from church. I said, “Yeah, you believe you can get pregnant from swimming in a public swimming pool too. You keep telling me how it happened to your cousin Ella, but I have it on good authority that she was banging a line of boys in the ladies’ changing room. Clearly, her activities were the cause of her pregnancy—not little sperms swimming up her vagina in the pool.

Miracles were on my list for debunkery. Especially since Sally was a believer—a Christian as a matter of fact. Jesus was a regular miracle machine. He brought a dead man back to life. He made wine out of water. And the BIG ONE: he died and came back to life. He got out of his tomb and hung out with his pals for awhile before he went straight up like a helicopter to heaven where he landed and sits by his dad, God, on a throne.

For obvious reasons, I don’t believe any of this, although I’m trying. Like Pascal, if I don’t believe in all this crap and I’m wrong—ha ha, what does it matter? So, I might as well believe and hope I’m right—or something like that. So, I believe Jesus might have walked on water! I believe that Jesus’ horse could’ve always won at the racetrack. I believe Jesus could’ve caught his limit every time he went fishing. I believe that, for Jesus, the crown of thorns might’ve been a fashion statement. I believe there is an evil clown who lives in the sewer on Elm Street. The list goes on and on now that I’ve scrubbed all the skepticism from my head. I’ll pretty much believe in anything!

There’s no way you can change my mind about any of my beliefs. I am a man of faith. I believe because I believe—belief piled on belief, affirming each other as they stack up from bottom to top, to hallelujah brother!

I have never met the clown in the sewer, but I have imagined him peering out of the grate with sharpened teeth and blood stained clown suit. That’s all I need—my imagination to affirm his existence, that, and the rumors I’ve heard. Rumors + Imagination=Faith, and faith is necessary to deal with the vagaries of the human condition. From evil clowns to the earth being round.

So, after wrestling with Sally’s profession of belief in miracles, I became a Christian. I am studying to be an Episcopalian minister so I can show people the way, the truth, and the light and how to walk the path of righteousness straight to a sewer grate. Ha ha, that’s a joke. I think I’ll have another glass of wine.


Definitions 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.

Dendrographia

Dendrographia (den-dro-graf’-ia): Creating an illusion of reality through vivid description of a tree.


I was tipsy. I shouldn’t have been driving, but I was 17 and wild. With my arm around my girl and one hand on the wheel, I was driving 30MPH so we wouldn’t be killed. I kept weaving over across my lane, but it didn’t matter. It was 2.00 am and the roads were deserted. I had already amassed three DWI tickets. Back then, you needed six before the penalties kicked in, like having your license suspended.

Marla didn’t care what I did. She was 17 too and she loved me. We would go parking down by what we called “Moon River.” She would say “No. Not yet!” Although it was difficult, I waited. Tonight, I had had a bit too much to drink. I stumbled out of the car, grabbed ahold of a tree, and puked.

It was a birch tree and my wine-tinted vomit gave its white bark a pinkish color. As I held onto the tree, its bark felt velvety—I was surprised. I had never bothered to touch birch bark before. I went back the next day. I peeled off a piece of bark. When I got home, I wrote a love poem on it to Mandy, my girlfriend: “Birch bark reminds me of your skin, it raises my hope that we will sin down by Moon River where the birch trees grow. Oh baby. Wo, wo, wo!”

After I gave her the poem, she wrote back to me on a piece of sandpaper: “You disgust me like moldy food. Don’t try to call me. It’ll do you no good. You stink. You’re the missing link.”

I cried for two days. I went down by Moon River. For some reason I hugged the birch tree. I felt the velvet white bark with little black bumps. I looked up and saw the catkins dangling and blowing back and forth in the wind. The small green leaves fluttered like feathers, holding tight to the tree’s slender limbs.

Two years later I found a baby birch growing by the tree. I dug it up and transplanted it in my backyard. Mom loved it. I graduated from high school, was drafted, and went to Vietnam. I had hoped to see my little tree when I came home. I didn’t expect to die.


Definitions 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.

Diacope

Diacope (di-a’-co-pee): Repetition of a word with one or more between, usually to express deep feeling.


I need new shoes. I want big black shoes. The shoes will shine. The shoes will enable me to glide into the future. They will be my chariots of leather—magical clipper shoes conveying me to Xanadu and beyond—to the halls of Montezuma and the shores of Tripoli.

But no! My mother was taking me to Buster Brown’s, the kid with the idiot hat who lived in a shoe with his drooling cross-eyed mutt, Tigh. Buster wore sissy shorts and a shirt with a big lace collar with a red bow-tie made out of what looked like a blue dish towel tied around his neck. The worst was his hat—it looked like a red cowboy hat that had been run over by a truck.

My mother wanted to buy me special shoes sold only at Buster Brown’s. The had shark skin toe caps and were reputed to outlast leather toes by hundreds of miles. My mother bought the shoes. They were the color of dog shit and they were heavy and tight-fitting.

Somehow, I had to get rid of them.

I walked by the Farnham Johnson Land Fill on my way to school every day. I could chuck the shoes in the landfill! I would tell my mother that I was mugged on my way home after school. I tore off my Buster Jack-Weed shoes and threw them as far as I could into the landfill. For good measure, I threw my shirt in too. When I got home, I sobbed “Ma! They got my shoes and the shirt off my back too!” She was sympathetic and made me some hot cocoa.

We couldn’t afford to replace the shark-tip shoes. So, Mom bought me a pair of big black wingtips that had been left at the shoe repair shop by a customer who never picked them up. I loved them! They smelled like shoe polish and were already broken in!

Then, two days later, I saw our garbage man Mr. Crozeman wearing my shark-tip shoes. He must’ve found them in the landfill. If Ma saw him, I would be dead meat. The next day was garbage pick up day. I hid in the bushes by our garbage cans and bopped Mr. Crozeman over the head with a wine bottle when he came to pick up our trash. He went down in a heap and I pulled off the shoes. I burned them to ashes on one of the charcoal grills in the town park.

Mr. Crozeman was seriously injured and the police were looking for his assailant. There was a police artist’s sketch published in the newspaper. It did not look anything like me—it looked like President Kennedy. Clearly, the police artist was incompetent. That was ok with me!

Mr. Crozeman got well, but whenever I saw him he squinted at me and backed up. It worried me a little bit, but with his brain damage, he’d never recognize me.


Definitions 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.

Dialogismus

Dialogismus (di-a-lo-giz’-mus): Speaking as someone else, either to bring in others ’ points of view into one’s own speech, or to conduct a pseudo-dialog through taking up an opposing position with oneself.


Imagine this, “ME: I’ve always hated people like you. YOU: The feeling is mutual. ME: I’d like to kick you in the balls a throw you out a 10th story window. YOU: I was just thinking the same thing about you. Heave Ho, out the window you go! ME: I knew this was how your unreasonable stand on the environment would end. I’m calling 911 you depraved high-school dropout—if you had taken biology from Ms. Mann like I did, you wouldn’t be murdering me, we’d be working in partnership to save the swamp. Instead you want it drained and turned into a parking lot for the golf carts from the adjacent “King’s Crown” golf course, a haven for contemporary Scrooges who want to own everything and exploit the natural world in their own perverse interests. The parking lot is a case in point. You want to trade endangered frogs for asphalt. How depraved!”

There we have it folks. Our masters want to ruin another piece of nature’s bounty to serve their selfish aims. Get ready to see those poor little endangered frogs lying on their backs panting for breath, writhing, foaming at the mouth, dying on the hot asphalt surface of the paved-over swamp.

This is why I’m selling these t-shirts. As you can see, they say “Frog Murder” on the front and depict a jackboot crushing a little frogus hoppitatus lying on its back on a slab of asphalt.

Every penny raised by the sale of these t-shirts will go to the purchase of low-tech weapons to be deployed in the upcoming “Battle of the Swamp.” Pitchforks, garden rakes, and hoes are being donated by Home Depot. We will be purchasing shovels, hedge clippers and some small hand tools such as screwdrivers, ball-peen hammers, and monkey wrenches.

The t-shirts are $18. They are 100% cotton and fade resistant. They come in one color: black. The sizes are standard.

The Battle of the Swamp is real. Some of us will be wounded. Some of us will be killed. But all of us can take pride in the righteousness of our cause.

I say “Ribit, Ribit” in solidarity with the frogs. This is war!


Definitions 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.

Dianoea

Dianoea (di-a-noe’-a): The use of animated questions and answers in developing an argument (sometimes simply the equivalent of anthypophora).


“Where were you Friday night? Pickle Willy’s, that’s where! Did you pull the trigger? Sure as hell you did! You were at Pickle Willy’s when Roko said his last goodbye laying in a pool of blood. Weren’t you, sleaze-ball? Sure you were, Mr. Killer. Mr. Hitter. Mr. Murder! Why did you do it? He had stolen your autographed copy of War and Peace, that’s why!”

I had just graduated from the Millburg Police Academy and was honing my interrogation technique in front of my bathroom mirror. I was questioning my fictional nemesis Carl Steele. He was a hit man for International Plastics, a company covertly producing plastic bags black marketed to grocery stores that had been negatively impacted by environmentalism and the outlawing of plastic bags. Their use at the grocery store was complicated, but bagging took place in a shrouded booth in a back room and the bagged goods were wheeled out of the grocery store in “black ops” shopping carts covered in “double-deep camo” that made them nearly invisible.

I started work as a Junior Patrolman the next Monday and wanted to be up to speed. I had a few problems at the Academy that almost got me expelled. The worst was on the target range when I wounded our instructor Sergeant Williams in the leg. He was standing down range waving a red flag and yelling what I thought was “Shoot me! Shoot me!” So, I shot him. I thought I was doing some kind of marksmanship training exercise. He was actually yelling “Don’t shoot me!” Along with waving the red flag, that is what instructors did to keep from getting shot when they had to go down range. In this case the motor that moved the target away and toward the shooter got jammed. I don’t know why I failed to hear the “Don’t.” But, after rigorous testing, it was determined by the Board of Inquiry that it was my protective earmuffs that distorted the sound and blotted out the “Don’t.” I was vindicated.

After the range instructor’s leg healed, he was reassigned to parking enforcement, where he issued parking tickets—the lowliest task a cop can perform. He had, in effect, been demoted.

In my last week, he came to the Academy to give a lecture on “Issuing Parking Tickets.” He hated me. He limped up to the podium with his permanently disabled leg that I had caused with one round from my .45. When he saw me in the audience, he threw his TD-7000 machine-readable bar code ticket issuing machine at me. It hit me in the head and gave me a severe concussion that affected my hearing and my cognitive skills. I waived my right to monetary compensation in exchange for a Cadillac Escalade patrol car and an instant promotion Detective Sergeant. It granted with the provision that I would not carry a firearm, mace, handcuffs, taser, or baton. Sergeant Clifford was sent to “Roger Wilco Rehab” for counseling in anger management. When he returns, he will be stationed as a greeter at the police station door. I hope we can be friends.


Definitions 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.

Diaphora

Diaphora (di-a’-pho-ra): Repetition of a common name so as to perform two logical functions: to designate an individual and to signify the qualities connoted by that individual’s name or title.


Ginger put “the ginger” in her stride. Ever since sixth grade there was a quality of vigor and energy to her step. It began when she took up baton twirling and marching with the school band. Mother had bought her a pair of white baton twirler boots to go with her baton.

Sadly, she couldn’t master the baton. When she practiced in her room, you could hear it repeatedly clatter to the floor. I used to sit in the living room and count the number of times the baton hit her bedroom floor. I was secretly happy. Mom wouldn’t even buy me a Superman lunchbox, or a cap pistol. Little did I know that the dropped baton was shaping into some kind of mental disorder in Ginger’s head.

One evening she came downstairs with the baton wrapped around her neck. She could hardly breathe. She was crying. Her right hand was scuffed and bleeding. We should’ve realized that she had flipped out, but we didn’t. With great effort, Dad removed the baton from her neck, asking her how the hell she managed to wrap it around her neck. She said, “Eduardo the 3rd.” Dad and I looked at each other and shrugged our shoulders. Again, we missed a sign that Ginger had gone psycho.

That’s when she started marching. She joined the middle school drill team “The Stomps.” She loved it and seemed to have gotten over the baton twirling thing. The only problem was that she started wearing her white boots and marching everywhere she went. It was as if she had become possessed by an evil marching spirit that wouldn’t let her walk anywhere. Her legs started swelling up from her thighs and calves becoming over-muscled. They had become like fenceposts. The stomping gait that had become her marching gait and it was frightening. It left imprints in the ground. It cracked sidewalks. It began taking a toll on our house’s oak floors.

Then, Ginger came home holding a mutilated Goldfinch by its wing. She had “stomped” it on the ground under our bird feeder. Two days later she showed up with a dead groundhog she had stomped. Her stomping had popped its eyes out. They were hanging over its face. She twirled the groundhog like a baton over her head. Blood splattered the kitchen walls. Then, I realized she was twirling the groundhog as if it was her baton.

It was time to send Ginger away to the mental hospital before she stomped a person to death. Dad wouldn’t hear of it. “Just give her some time. She’ll outgrow it. It’s just a phase.” At that point, I started to believe that Dad was crazy.

Ginger got really good at twirling dead animals—mostly Raccoons and Groundhogs that she had stomped to death. The groundhogs were seasonal. They hibernated in Winter.

She would perform in a wooden structure like a sandbox. The “sandbox” was filled mice that she stomped with her white boots to the tune of “When Johnny Comes Marching Home.” At the end of each show she would throw the dead animal into the audience and thank Eduardo the 3rd for providing guidance and encouraging her.

What was shocking to me was the fact there were people who loved Ginger’s performances. The audiences were huge and Ginger had a cult following. Although she was insane, Ginger was making a living at it. It made me question the line between sanity and insanity. I guess if you can make a living being insane, you’re as good as sane. At that point, I stopped worrying about her and learned to enjoy burning down buildings for a share of the insurance payout.


Definitions 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.

Diaporesis

Diaporesis: Deliberating with oneself as though in doubt over some matter; asking oneself (or rhetorically asking one’s hearers) what is the best or appropriate way to approach something [=aporia].


“Should I stay, or should I go?” I really wanted to know. But there I was mumbling to myself. I did this too often. Why didn’t I just ask somebody? I resolved to ask other people and shut off the deliberation valve in my head that was getting me nowhere with its steady stream of bullshit. What I made in my head was puzzling, irresolute, and foggy.

That night I was going to my girlfriend’s for dinner. After dinner and tree glasses of really good red wine, I said “Do you want me to stick it in?” She gasped and smiled. “Yes! Stick it in me now! Oh Johnny! You’re so romantic.” She yelled. I was off to a good start. Countless times, I had deliberated with myself about sticking it in. Asking my girlfriend whether she wanted me to, was a game-changer. No more time-wasting head trips! I was on a fast track to my sex-tination. Woo hoo!

Like all cool dudes from New Jersey, I had more than one girlfriend. Cheating was an acceptable lifestyle. In fact, friends would cheat each on their girlfriends with each other’s girlfriends. I had reserved a motel room at the “Pigeon Coop” motel on Rte 22. This was a well-known cheaters’ roost. I got there early. I lit a scented candle and sprayed some Fabreze on the bedspread. I hung a “Little Pine” air freshener from each of the bed-side lamps.

There was a soft knock on the door. It was Caroline. I had changed into my playboy bathrobe. I was naked underneath. I opened the door with the front of my bathrobe open. I said “Do you want me to stick it in?” She looked down at my equipment and said “Why do you think I’m here big boy? Let’s get to it!” Woo hoo!

I was on the fast track again! We took the ride to paradise. I didn’t waste any brain power getting where I wanted to go. I started calling my new tactic “Just Ask.” After 100s of encounters, I wrote a book and sold t-shirts that said “Do you want me to stick it in?” It became a popular catch phrase on television shows and was the title of a movie about me.

Although I was generally successful at fast-tracking sex, I had a number of encounters that failed. But, that’s to be expected. There is a lot of diversity out there. The worst I had was with my buddy Ralph’s grandmother. She was a babe. Her blue hair was like a magical tumbleweed riding on top of her head. She had a cane wrapped with red reflective tape. She wore a black track suit that made her look like a mature Ninja. She aroused my passion. So, I asked her “Do you want me to stick it in?”

She pulled a Derringer out of her track suit and shot me. She yelled “You fu*kin’ goddamn sex creep!” The first shot missed. The second one got me in the arm. There were a couple more incidents like this. Then, I realized my technique only worked with women I had already done it with. Once I realized that, I haven’t had any more incidents. A disclaimer has been printed on the cover of my book and the money keeps rolling in.


Definitions 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.

Diaskeue

Diaskeue (di-as-keu’-ee): Graphic peristasis (description of circumstances) intended to arouse the emotions.


I was wondering where I was, when suddenly I was run over by a camper van. At that instant I realized I was in the middle of the street at the entrance to Yellowstone National Park.

I was pretty badly injured so it was no surprise that a huge brown bear started dragging me toward the woods. My brand new hiking boots were getting scuffed all to hell. I had paid $200 for them two days before. The salesperson told me I could scale hills like a mountain goat looking for a mate. I believed him, but now I would never get a chance to find out if my faith was well-founded.

The bear was dragging me by my left arm. That wasn’t too bad given that I’m right-handed. If he tore off my arm, I’d still be good to go. Arm-wrestling would still be a possibility, and hygienic wiping and eating with a fork too.

The Rangers were closing in. One of them had a gallon container labeled “XXX-Bear Spray, Jackson Hole Hardware.” That filled me with optimism. A whole gallon in the bear’s face would make it drop me and send it packing to Idaho. Suddenly the bear said “Only you can prevent forest fires.” It came from a little solar-powered black plastic box hanging from around its neck. The astonishment pushed back my terror. For at least two minutes I was laying in a warm soft bed with a fresh loaf of bread. Suddenly, I awoke from my revery and realized the “warmth” of my revery bed was my blood. A Ranger yelled “The bear spray didn’t work. Make yapping tourist sounds. Bears hate that.” I said “Get away from there Timmy,” “Stop it right now!” “No! I will not buy you a Smokey the Bear T-shirt!” “Give the Ranger back his gun!” “Wait until I tell your father!” “Is that mud or dog pop?” I kept spewing them out. The bear put his paws up to his ears and began shaking his head back and forth violently.

He dropped my arm and ran into the woods making a whining sound. It sounded like a cranky baby crying. Then, he was gone. I was free! The ambulance ride to the hospital was uneventful, except at one point I thought there was a bear driving, wearing a white coat. It had to be some kind of hallucination, so I forgot about it until I met my doctor, Dr. Bear. He was gruff and had a really thick beard. He was tall and plump and wore brown Birkenstocks. He was a really good doctor. He advised me to eat fruit and nuts and the occasional salmon. I lost 25 pounds on what he called the “Ursine Diet.”

What did I learn from all this? I learned how to grunt like a bear and accept my fate.


Definitions 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.

Diasyrmus

Diasyrmus (di’-a-syrm-os): Rejecting an argument through ridiculous comparison.


“Your argument is like a potato with no eyes. It’s like you’re trying to make a birthday casserole out of nails and Kool-Aide.” She just sat there looking at me. No reaction. She was a first year student in my “I and Thou” class. I used Buber as my whipping boy, presenting a counter argument for every word in the book. I advocated cruelty and the destruction of self-esteem, following my mentor’s book “Everybody’s a Loser.” Johan Brest was noted for pushing his students over the edge, making them into blithering “poo-poo pants.” If students made it to the final exam, there were ambulances parked outside waiting to take them to the mental health clinic. Brest was quite likely the worst human in the world. I was his competition. I aspired to be worse than him—far worse, I should say. I aspired to be the “King of Cruel.”

The idiot student sitting in front of me was a mere stepping stone on my way to becoming King Cruel. I took another shot: “Your argument is like an empty elevator stuck between floors.” Nothing. No reaction. “Your argument is like a smokestack up a weasel’s ass.” She squirmed a little, but then she yawned.

I was infuriated. She was too stupid to see what I was trying to do—mutilate her self-esteem and send her stumbling out of my office in a state anomie with thoughts of suicide.

I turned on my computer and Googled “people who don’t respond to insults.” The Spam & Ham Health Network to told me “These people are psychopaths and will explode with lethal rage if pushed too far.” I was terrified. She had taken out a switchblade knife with at least a 10-inch blade and was waving it in figure eights and whistling “How Much is That Doggie in the Window?”

I said: “Your argument is like expensive perfume wafting through my mind.” She put the knife away and we had lunch together in the school cafeteria. I was reconsidering my quest to be King of Cruel. Now, I was tending toward “King of Kind.” I said to her: “You’re one of the most beautiful students I ever had.”

She reported me for harassment. I have been placed on indefinite leave.


Definitions 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.

Diazeugma

Diazeugma (di-a-zoog’-ma): The figure by which a single subject governs several verbs or verbal constructions (usually arranged in parallel fashion and expressing a similar idea); the opposite of zeugma.


The crows were cawing, crapping, and crashing. It had to be some kind of crow plague infecting the flock. I thought the worst symptom of their demise was their crapping. The crow crap was so thick I had the scrape it off my windshield with an ice scraper. Inevitably when I was scraping, I would hear cawing and the crap would rain down. No matter what the weather was, I started carrying an umbrella and wearing a raincoat wherever I went—I called it a “Crow Crap Coat.”

Nobody knew the origins of the Crows’ “shit and die disease.” The Department of Health told us it wasn’t really happening, and if it was it was due to the “fact” that the crows had been vaccinated against polio by a “rouge” Department of Health employee.

This person, unknown to the general public, was being hunted by bear trackers from Montana. The department of health had put up posters without pictures of the culprit offering a $500.00 reward for his/her capture or “removal from this incarnation.” As soon as the reward was posted, people came out of the woodwork carrying weapons from Boy Scout single-shot .22 target rifles to hand grenades. Many innocent people were killed or wounded, but the Department of Health insisted we were on track to getting the rogue vaccinator. It was doubtful.

A man was seen on a bus with a syringe. He was shot 42 times. Sadly, it turned out he was a diabetic who was having an insulin episode on the bus. Nevertheless, The Department of Health congratulated the buses’ passengers on their vigilance and “clear” disposing of the “potential” vaccinator. Luckily, his six-year old daughter will survive her wounds. Father and daughter were on their way to the zoo for her special birthday treat.

Oh my God! The crows are coming back to life! They’re wriggling around, standing, taking off, cawing, flocking, and flying in circles.

No more shitting and crashing! No more innocent people killed! No more Director of the Department of Public Health. He was judged to be insane by a government commission. Also, his credentials were severely lacking. He knew nothing about medicine. When he was confirmed, “placing a flesh-colored bandaid” on his knee, and taking laxatives and OxyContin “recreationally” were accepted as significant medical experience by the Congressional panel.

Hearings are underway now to select a new Director of the Department of Public health. I’m betting on the shaman from the Amazon River Basin or Doogie Schnauser the 12-year-old brain surgeon from New Jersey.

An underfunded and inappropriately short-lived study found nothing regarding the crows’ malady. The scientists kept saying “Give us another week.” They were given another week and they failed to find anything. They were censured by Congress and exiled to South Texas where they have been put to work “pounding salt.”

Does anybody care?

We don’t think so. The crows are flying again. All is forgotten. I do understand that a documentary, “They Shit and Then They Fell,” is in the works and will be in theaters in January 2026. Threats have been made on the movies’ trained crows. It is suspected that “Big Bobby Jr.” the disgraced Director of the Department of Health, is responsible for the threats. He has escaped from the “Mental Health Bosom 42DD” government facility and is reported assembling a group of like-minded mental cases to “set things straight.” Big Bobby Jr. is currently being hunted by dog packs and will most likely be torn to pieces soon.

So, the new hit song, “Fly Crows Fly,” does not even mention Big Bobby Jr., instead, it is about the crows excusing themselves while they “kiss the sky.” This is a tribute to their innocence and a paean to their love of the sky.

I have written an ode to the crows: Fly crows fly! Your hearts are pure! Your sleek black wings slice the sky. At night you roost in mystic murders and see the stars. Heads cocked you sleep like angels on softly swaying branches.


Definitions 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.

Dicaeologia

Dicaeologia (di-kay-o-lo’-gi-a): Admitting what’s charged against one, but excusing it by necessity.


“I cannot tell a lie. I chopped down the cherry tree. It was blocking my view of Ms. Tuckwiler’s bedroom window. What more can I say Dad?” I was trying to do my best George Washington imitation. My father saw right through it and told my mother. Dad cut a branch off the tree and whipped my butt. It hurt like hell, but at least I knew my view of Ms. Tuckwiler undressing wouldn’t be blocked for another ten years.

My father called me a pervert and my mother insisted I go into therapy and get these “scandalous” ideas wiped out of my head. I didn’t protest. I knew I would always be a pervert, so therapy wouldn’t do anything at all. But, it might be fun talking about my disgusting thoughts to a complete stranger.

My mom dropped me off at the “Mental Changes Clinic.” I was late so I went straight into my therapist’s office. I opened the door and there was Ms. Tuckwiler sitting behind her desk! Obviously, she didn’t know I was her perverted neighbor. This was like a dream come true. Maybe I could talk her into taking off her clothes!

Without naming her, I told her, in the most salacious terms I could summon, why I was there. I talked about watching the unnamed woman take off her clothes and “do things” that were unspeakably sexy. As I spoke, a buzzing sound started coming from under Ms. Tuckwiler’s desk. I thought nothing of it.

She told me I should make an attempt to get to know the mystery woman. If we could develop a friendship, perhaps my lewd thoughts and inappropriate peeping would go away. “Ok” I said imagining how it might be when I showed up at her door.

That evening I went straight to her house and rang the bell. When she answered, she didn’t seem surprised at all. She told me to shut up and get down on my hands and knees. She got on my back and told me to give her a ride to her bedroom. There was Dad on the bed. She said, “Your father is faster and better than you are. He’s the pervert, not you. Get out!”

I was cured! It was like a wave of asexuality washed through my body. I decided right then and there to become a Presbyterian Minister, a calling perfectly suited to a cured pervert. I graduated from Harvard Divinity Shool with highest honors for my dissertation “Who Wants to Be a Big Pervert Right Now?” It reviews the literature of “Off-Sides Thinking” as well as “Being Disgusting” and “Going to Jail on a Yellow School Bus.”

To further my cure, I married Ms. Tuckwiler’s daughter Mary. She’s 18 and I’m 32. It is a match made in heaven. By the way, the replanted cherry tree is only 4 feet tall. It doesn’t block the view.


Definitions 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.

Dilemma

Dilemma (di-lem’-ma): Offering to an opponent a choice between two (equally unfavorable) alternatives.


I was strolling through life, oblivious to its pitfalls. I was 26 and the worst thing that had ever happened to me was crashing my remote-controlled model airplane into an old man in a wheelchair. The crash started the dominoes falling.

The propellor sliced off the end of his nose. It became infected and killed him. I was only 17, but I was arrested for manslaughter, tried and found not guilty. I immediately bought another radio-controlled airplane which I mistakenly flew into a baby carriage, disfiguring the baby’s face. I was arrested for causing grievous bodily harm. I was found guilty and it was judged that I pay restitution to the tune of one-million dollars. My parents disowned me and threw me out onto the streets of Chatham, New Jersey. I was required to pay $500.00 per month or go to Rahway State Prison for five years.

Pay the compensation or go to prison? These were the options offered to me. Neither was good. I was stuck. I begged the baby’s parents to let me off the hook—I would mow their lawn and shovel their snow. I would clean their house, stand guard on their porch at night, and wash their car once a week. I even offered to do their laundry. They called the police and accused me of harassing them. A restraining order was issued. Under the terms of the retraining order I was allowed to stand across the street from their home and yell and wave signs—I created a nearly endless list of things I could do as substitutes for paying the one-million dollars. None of them were acceptable to the parents, so I decided to go to prison, almost by default. In five years my “debt” would be paid. How bad could Rahway State Prison be?

I was young and healthy, so I was made into a prison “Punching Dummy.” Every day the older inmates took turns beating me up. Most of them were in their late 70s so their punches didn’t pack much of a wallop. In fact, a ninety-year-old inmate died hitting me in the face. I got used to being beat up every day and the five years flew by. Part of my perception of how fast my sentence went was due to the brain damage I had acquired due to the daily blows to my head.

I was released from prison with two-dollars in my hand and wearing a “graduation” track suit that said “Rahway State Prison 2025” across the back. I was also given a pair of flip-flops. Even though it was December, I appreciated them.

Now it was time to resume my blissful life. As I walked down the street, I was whistling “Zippity Dooh Dah.” I was feeling blessed, even though my face was badly scarred and I limped a little. I looked up to give thanks to God and I bumped into a toddler holding hands with his mother. The toddler fell into the gutter and was run over by the cab his mother had summoned—that they were waiting for.

The mother went crazy and pulled a little semiautomatic pistol out of her purse and shot me in the forehead. Clearly, I survived, but the quality of my life is diminished. I have lost all of my senses due to the bullet’s trajectory into my head. I can still walk, but I’m having to learn sign language. Since I’m blind, and I can’t hear, it is a big challenge. But at least I’m still alive. Sometimes I think I would be better off dead. My doctor agrees and has applied to provide me with assisted suicide in a state where it’s legal.

The woman who shot me was found guilty of attempted manslaughter, ordered by the court to pay me $500.00 restitution, and she was sentenced to 6 months probation and 20 hours of community service.

I have obtained a seeing eye dog. I have named him Bullet. He is undergoing training as a tracker. We will find her.


Definitions 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.

Dirimens Copulatio

Dirimens Copulatio (di’-ri-mens ko-pu-la’-ti-o): A figure by which one balances one statement with a contrary, qualifying statement (sometimes conveyed by “not only … but also” clauses). A sort of arguing both sides of an issue.

Protagoras (c. 485-410 BC) asserted that “to every logos (speech or argument) another logos is opposed,” a theme continued in the Dissoi Logoiof his time, later codified as the notion of arguments in utrumque partes (on both sides). Aristotle asserted that thinking in opposites is necessary both to arrive at the true state of a matter (opposition as an epistemological heuristic) and to anticipate counterarguments. This latter, practical purpose for investigating opposing arguments has been central to rhetoric ever since sophists like Antiphon (c. 480-410 BC) provided model speeches (his Tetralogies) showing how one might argue for either the prosecution or for the defense on any given issue. As such, [this] names not so much a figure of speech as a general approach to rhetoric, or an overall argumentative strategy. However, it could be manifest within a speech on a local level as well, especially for the purposes of exhibiting fairness (establishing ethos[audience perception of speaker credibility].

This pragmatic embrace of opposing arguments permeates rhetorical invention, arrangement, and rhetorical pedagogy. [In a sense, ‘two-wayed thinking’ constitutes a way of life—it is tolerant of differences and may interpret their resolution as contingent and provisional, as always open to renegotiation, and never as the final word. Truth, at best, offers cold comfort in social settings and often establishes itself as incontestable, by definition, as immune from untrumque partes, which may be considered an act of heresy and may be punishable by death.]


How do we achieve closure on anything at all? I say “red” and you say “pink.” Can we both be right? Surely, we can both be wrong. Remember Hume’s missing shade of blue? So, what makes one of us right, especially if we’re both color blind? Colors are bad enough, but this is especially vexing when we impute or avow motives.

I have a friend Marly who is “motive impaired.” He has trouble avowing credible motives and imputing plausible motives to other people. His most frequently avowed motive is “I did it for the money.” This is never true because he has no service to offer that anybody would pay for. He’s a rag boy at the car wash—the pay is illegally low, and there’s nothing else he can do. He can’t even rake leaves properly. It is a pity, but it is true. Not only did he not do it for the money, but he didn’t even do it all. He told me he avows the motive so he’ll seem to be a productive member of society. Instead, he seems to be a prolific liar who should be pitied, not praised.

Then, when it comes to the imputation of motives, Marly decides that everybody who interacts with him loves him, even when they’re holding a gun to his head or kicking him in the stomach. He sees a woman kissing another man and he says “She actually loves me.” I try to explain that he’s wrong and he chides me and accuses me of trying to steal her from him. It’s very frustrating, but there’s nothing I can do. He forms his decisions like everybody else, only in his case “proof” is optional, or it is so untethered from the judgement that it is grounded in madness—like the kissing woman—he claimed she looked at him, and this proved she loved him. But, as much as I hate to say it, there’s a very remote possibility that he’s right. Nobody “knows” what the kissing lady is thinking—maybe not even the kissing lady, or, she could be reviewing her grocery list or thinking about her upcoming vacation to Seaside Heights, New Jersey. Those of us who’ve been torn apart by a faithless lover know what I’m talking about.

So, in a way, crazy Marly has it right. You may as well believe what makes you happy, even if it’s only temporary; even if it makes you look like an idiot or crazy. Marly’s “wishful thinking” may put him out of touch with reality, but it can make him happy, even if his happiness is grounded in bullshit—happiness is a feeling and the feeling is real, even if nothing else is.

If I feel happy, I am happy. It is by virtue of cruelty that one person would try to debunk another person’s happiness, unless of course, that person derives their happiness from shooting heroin or being a serial killer. Our thwarting of the addict’s or murderer’s happiness is called “drawing the line.”


Definitions 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.

Distinctio

Distinctio (dis-tinc’-ti-o): Eliminating ambiguity surrounding a word by explicitly specifying each of its distinct meanings.


Time: a measure of duration, a break from the action. There are probably more meanings, but I can’t think of any right now—I don’t have the time. Time is not on my side. Why? Because I’m talking about thyme, not time. Ha ha!

I collect herbs and grow them in my little back yard garden. It is the size of a door mat, but it provides me with all the flavors and odors I need to keep me satisfied. In summer, it is my bliss. In winter, I look out my kitchen window and cry. But all is not lost. I dry my summer herbs and keep them in socks secured by rubber bands and hang them throughout my house.

Thyme is one of my most potent herbs. Sometimes, I put its sock in the front hall closet to reduce the odor grip it has on my whole home and give its brethren a chance to waft and be detected. Poor lovage barely has a chance—it is almost odorless and it makes me sad. An herb without a smell is like a chimney without smoke. It makes no sense, like a truck without wheels or a bucket with no bottom. I get angry at the lovage and sometimes stomp it into the ground. This may seem crazy, but it is not. It is perfectly justified by “The Law of the Garden.” This is an ancient law that allows stomping on whatever you have planted, for whatever reason, under all circumstances.

I discovered it imprinted on the back of a packet of Foxglove seeds I had purchased in the Edinburgh University bookstore on my most recent trip to Scotland to visit my grant-grandfather Angus Muir. For centuries the Muir’s have lived on the moor—a piece of land preserved for shooting grouse where the family had secretly grown herbs. At times they were harassed by the Laird’s sheriff, yet they were valorized by their fellow peasants, especially when they found out that the Laird was allergic to oregano. They would hang oregano “ornaments” from trees along the road to Edinburgh. If the Laird hit one with his face, it would burst, setting off a near fatal coughing fit. The peasants hiding in the bushes would bet on how long the Laird would choke. This is how “Thyme” got its name—they would bet the herb on the duration of the Laird’s coughing fit. Thyme became time.

Anyway, after I stomped the Lovage, I always felt bad, especially since it was named “Lovage,” suggestive of “love.” I would lovingly wash off the Lovage and make it into a sandwich with mayonnaise, baloney, American cheese, and tomato with lots of salt. That would assuage my guilt and put me back on track.

Today, I planted what may well be the world’s largest herb: a kind of wild banana that can grow 15 meters tall—around 50 feet. I am bound to make my fellow herb aficionados jealous.

My wild banana grew over the summer to 14 feet. Then, I caught Millie Jackson sawing it down with a chain saw. She was unremorseful. She was angry. She was jealous. She said she was sick of me and my “herbbragging” bullshit. I had grabbed the chain saw from her and was considering sawing off her arm or hand. But I couldn’t do it. I had loved her ever since she had joined our herb club. She smelled like Lemon Balm and her hair was dyed the color of chive flowers—a beautiful grayish purple.

I dropped the chain saw. Millie ran to me. We embraced. All was forgiven, or so it seemed. That night, I peed on her herb garden and wrote “Bitch” with a stick in the dirt.


Definitions 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.

Distributio

Distributio (dis-tri-bu’-ti-o): (1) Assigning roles among or specifying the duties of a list of people, sometimes accompanied by a conclusion. (2) Sometimes this term is simply a synonym for diaeresis or merismus, which are more general figures involving division.


Most people believe living and dying are different. Actually, they are the same: living is dying, dying is living. Sure, there’s infancy, toddlerhood, adolescence, adulthood, middle age, old age, nursing home, death. Maybe there’s an afterlife where you spend eternity in a diner or a really well-run library, or clog dancing in the sky on a perpetual Irish holiday. Don’t scoff. Anything you can imagine about the afterlife is just as possible as anything else—it’s a matter of faith, not facts or even plausibility.

What are the foundations of faith? You can give me a list 500 miles long and reflect on what you have faith in, in a staccato burst of reasons read off the list, that are themselves are taken on faith—in matters of faith, there’s no escaping faith: it may be a pylon pointing nowhere, erected by hope and fear.

Faith turns on narratives projecting pathways to a range of destinations—from Truth Town to Cloud Cuckoo Land. All destinations have arbiters: from scientists, to jurors, to hard-boiled lunatics resting in their cells. But then, the arbiters may have arbiters who affect the community with faith that putting immigrants in detention centers will cleanse the community of evil, or a pain relief medication is harmless when administered to pregnant women. Historically, the list of truth-catastrophes is pretty long. So yes, one of the hallmarks of truth, as far as it is taken on faith all the time, is that it can be wrong. The comforting image of the cure it may project can be shattered, and vice-a-versa.

So anyway, as I eat my breakfast, I reflect on the brevity of life. At any moment, any day, I may succumb. We can’t predict it. We can’t control it. Now could be the time!

POSTSCRIPT

His cereal bowl clattered to the floor. He was dead. The Grim Reaper looked in his kitchen window and shook his bony head and said, “He talked himself to death. What a joke.”


Definitions 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.

Ecophonesis

Ecphonesis (ec-pho-nee’-sis): An emotional exclamation.


“Jesus Christ! Where the hell is my cider press?”

He had “lost” everything from a gold-plated mustard seed to a Rolex wristwatch. It was painful to watch his response, vacillating between crying and cursing and punching the walls—which had become dented, and in some cases, cracked.

Grandpa was flipping out again over losing something he never had in the first place. He had this condition where he “lost” things pretty much all day every day. This had been happening since his budgie Peeper flew the coop two years ago and would fly past the window on a regular basis taunting him.

How do you help somebody who loses things they didn’t have in the first place? I was starting to think an overdose of Abilify was the best I could do. Grandpa’s anger and sadness would come in for a smooth landing on the wings of a drug-induced death. It was a great idea, but I didn’t want to risk prison for murder. Instead, I would give suicide a try.

I checked “The Sorrows of Young Werther” out of the library—Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s novel where the protagonist (Werther) commits suicide because he can’t have the girl of his dreams. My plan was to read a chapter from “Sorrows” to grandpa every night until he killed himself. I realized early on, though, that I needed to find him an “unrequited love” for my plan to work.

It was Friday and grandpa was lamenting the recent loss of his Rolls Royce—stolen from our driveway. That was when I introduced his new helpmate, Babycakes. She worked part time as a lap-dancer at Nicky Bad’s Men’s Club. I met her there when she was on my lap in a back room for $85.00. I could feel myself starting to fall for her and I was sure grandpa would go head over heels. She had big breasts—that was a favorite of grandpa. He was a part of the “greatest generation,” an ensemble of men who really liked giant knockers and fought in WW II.

The moment Babycakes walked into the living room, grandpa calmed down and did a wolf whistle. He was instantly hooked. I didn’t anticipate it, but he stopped losing things he didn’t have in the first place. Babycakes would give him a free lap dance whenever she came to visit him. Then, after a few weeks, Babycakes told him she had gotten engaged to Sal Zucchini and they were going to be married in December. Sal ran the produce section of the grocery store.

After Babycakes left, grandpa started crying and punching the walls and asking what the hell had happened to his airplane. He was super agitated and said he had seen it “clipped” from the back yard where he had parked last night. Clearly, Babycakes’ announcement had kicked in the “Werther effect.” His suicide was nearing!

But then, Babycakes came over the next day. She told grandpa that she actually loved him and had broken off the engagement with Sal. Grandapa was ecstatic and started jumping around and whooping. He tripped on the carpet and fell out the window.

Grandpa’s death was sad, but not that sad.


Definitions 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.

Effictio

Effictio (ef-fik’-ti-o): A verbal depiction of someone’s body, often from head to toe.


Tall. Blond hair. Blue eyes. Skin the color of Crisco. Tall. Black hair. Brown eyes. Skin the color of milk chocolate.

What is this? What about muscles, and boobs and the nose, and the lips, and the teeth and the ears? What about them? How about feet and ass and shoulders? Are we moving from waypoint to waypoint—headings on a map to acceptance or rejection.

We don’t talk. We look—we don’t look and listen too. We look and fantasize and hope our looks meet some standard—a standard displayed all over the place in media images.

But why? Is there some sort of connection between looking good and being good? And this is the big question: Where does the standard of beauty come from. Why is it’s achievement unobtainable for 99% of us no matter what we do? There’s always at least one glaring imperfection that thwarts our quest to “look good.”

But, since most of us don’t measure up, there are a lot of fellow travelers to choose from. We say “Oh fu*k it” and jump into the pool of uglies that nearly covers the entire face of the earth. That’s where I met my wife: flat chested, almost invisible ass, thinning brown hair, skin mottled with various-sized moles, teeth in need of bracing, elephant ears, size 12 foot, minor drooling. I was not much better: 2 inch penis, balding, chronic double vision, half deaf, walk with a limp, chubby, B.O., nose like a traffic cone, claw hands, skin rashes from multiple allergies.

We took one look at each other and decided we couldn’t do much better than each other. It wasn’t clear who was uglier, so that set a level playing field between us. We quickly learned that looks do not matter on love’s voyage. What matters is character—what induces trust and desire: that makes you glad to see each other, glad to do things together, and want to have a child together. So what if your jeans don’t fit. So what if your hair’s falling out. So what if you’re covered with moles. So what if your hands are like claws.

Our daughter Rushy is pretty ugly. She’s about a 50-50 combination of her mom and dad. We hope she sees her gross body as a blessing, not a curse. So far, she sees it as a curse. Once she realizes the futility of trying to become beautiful, we hope she finds somebody uglier than her to love. In a positive development, she has subscribed to “Ugly Duckling,” a dating site for people that are “hard to look at.”


Definitions 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.

Ellipsis

Ellipsis (el-lip’-sis): Omission of a word or short phrase easily understood in context.


I could actually see the germs crawling around on my hands. They were . . . wriggling and curling up like springs. I was cursed with telescopic vision. The lenses of my eyes adjusted to distances, randomly without warning. One minute, I could see parameciums swimming in polluted water and then, without warning, the moon’s craters. Sometimes, when I looked in the mirror, I saw these microscopic bugs running around on my face. They were flesh colored and hairy and it looked like they were wearing tennis shoes. That really scared me. Although my ophthalmologist assured me I was suffering from telescopic vision, I thought I was losing my mind. She had prescribed me special glasses that were supposed to control my malady. But, before I was able to pick them up, I met the man in the moon.

I was moon-gazing out by my swimming pool when suddenly I telescoped toward the moon. I felt like I was flying through space. I was cold. Suddenly, I landed on the moon! There was a man standing there. He was wearing a calico nightshirt and black rubber boots. He said, “I’m the man in the moon. Who are you?” I told him I was Brad Bonecharge and I had an eye problem. He lifted up his nightgown and said “We all have our problems.” I telescoped in and I was shocked and panic stricken. There were tiny little people crawling around in his pubic hair. They did not seem to be very happy. I turned my gaze back to earth and telescoped into my back yard—to my swimming pool. I flew home and realized that I was starting to get some control of my malady. Nevertheless, I picked up my special glasses at the optometrist’s and started wearing them all the time.

I went to my first monthly appointment with my ophthalmologist. I sat across from her and we started to talk about my eyes. Suddenly, I heard mumbling coming from between her legs. She must have noticed my discomfort because she lifted up her dress and told me not to worry, “they” were harmless and had moved into her crotch a couple of moths ago. She said she didn’t understand their language, but she was keeping them because she enjoyed the company and the tickling sensation. She said the only inconvenience was waiting for them to climb off when she’s going to bathe. She has a doll house bench that they sit on while she takes a shower.

The more we talked about the little people, the louder the din became coming from her crotch. I was convinced that I had gone totally psycho, that my visit to my ophthalmologist was a total hallucination. Then, I felt a tickling in my crotch. I excused myself and went into the office bathroom. I pulled down my pants and saw six or seven little people talking and laughing. I pulled up my pants and ran out of the office.

How would I take care of these little people? How would I feed them? I found out that night. They latched onto me like tiny ticks. That’s when I realized they were vampires. They lived in the darkness of people’s underpants and were distantly related to leeches! I had read about them in National Geographic, but I thought it was a hoax. I realized, given they were vampires, if I pulled down my pants out by the pool in the afternoon they’d go up in smoke, or maybe, I could stick wooden toothpicks in their chests while they were sleeping.

I had a decision to make.

The next day I was out by the pool. I was ready to pull down my bathing suit in the bright sunlight and fry those little suckers. I put my thumbs under my waistband. I heard screaming and crying and what sounded like begging coming from my swimsuit. I relented. . . let them live.

I recorded their mumbling and took the recording to a linguist friend of mine. She was stunned. She told me the dialect hadn’t been spoken for 900 years when it was erased along with the little people who spoke it. She said is was a dark day in Romania when the little people were eradicated due to a rumor they were vampires.

My friend loaned me a valuable text that had been translated from “Vorbe Mici” (Small Talk) into English. It was a biography titled “Night Moves” (Mișcări de noapte). The “book” was one inch by 2 inches in keeping with the size of the author and his readers. I used “Night Moves” to learn the ancient dialect, using the English translation as a key. I realized that I was slowly becoming a vampire: I have been bitten over and over again. I got a night job at Cliff’s. I sleep during the day in an unplugged chest freezer in my basement. Since I’ve started sucking blood from my neighbor Thelma, my telescopic vision has gone away.

I told my ophthalmologist about my cure and she suggested we take a night walk down by the river where a lot of “juicy” homeless people camp.


Definitions 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.

Enallage

Enallage (e-nal’-la-ge): The substitution of grammatically different but semantically equivalent constructions.


“I don’t know nothin’ about who your father is.” I lied. I knew everything. I had succumbed 20 years ago to my fat sweaty neighbor’s charms. He had a gold tooth, a big wristwatch and wore reddish-brown ostrich skin boots. He also wore a snap closure shirt—white with horseshoes embroidered on the shoulders. His belt buckle was a silver heart with “Hey Baby” engraved on it.

His name was Mel and he tended bar at the AI Pub. The clientele was mixed from underage college kids to bent over blue-haired grannies high on their Social Security checks. I went there every night and got fairly drunk and chased after the horny college boys, getting my fair share of bangs in the parking lot. I was 18, so I figured it was ok. Mel would always slide me a couple of extra shots of vodka free of charge. I wondered why he didn’t want to take a trip to the parking lot. Then, I realized he couldn’t because he was tending bar. That’s when I got the idea to “do it” behind the bar. It would take us both to the outer limits of our humping skills.

The next night I climbed over the bar and bent over by the beer taps. I dropped my pants and Mel came up behind me with his jeans down. The bar concealed what we were doing. Mel even poured a couple of beers while we were at it. After we finished Mel whispered in my ear: “Do you take birth control pills? I didn’t wear a condom.”

Damn! Right then I knew I was going to be a mother. I had gone a week without the pills. I couldn’t believe it. I was too lazy to have my prescription filled.

I asked Mel if he’d take care of me. He laughed and said “Once in a blue moon.” I was pretty sure that meant “no.” I was right. When I started bulging out he wouldn’t even look at me. He’d cover his eyes and snicker. How could a man who dressed so sharp be so mean? I spent a lot of time crying and plotting to murder him. But, before I could take him out of play, he ate a bad oyster and died of food poisoning. First, his brain went, and then, his kidneys exploded. Women from hundreds of miles around came to his funeral. Most of them cried during the eulogy. Some of them were pregnant.

The most amazing thing was he left everything to you, our unborn child. You inherited his gold tooth, ostrich boots, big watch, snap shirt and heart belt buckle. You look so dashing! The tooth is like a shining star twinkling in your mouth. But, he also left you $500.00 and his 2009 AWD Chevy pickup. Oh—and his guns too—he always said his flintlock belonged to Davy Crockett.

Even though you’re a girl, the clothes you inherited, and the tooth, and the truck and gun are gender neutral. You’ll be able to enjoy them, wearing the clothes wherever you go. Also, I never told you I named you “Dick” in memory of your father, for the kind of man he was. Your middle name is Jolene and you’ve been using that since you could talk.

Well, there you have it. You know most of this already. But now, you know something about your father too and how you were conceived. I’m sorry it took so long to tell you.

You should take a DNA test. I have been saving one of your father’s hairs that fell out when we were doing it behind the bar. You can use it. If you don’t get a hit, you’ll probably want to get a sample from the Mayor, and Nicky Dorn of “Nicky’s Honest Used Cars.” Oh. Also “Stimpy’s Miniature Golf and Pizza.” If none of these register, there are a couple dozen more names I can give you.


Definitions 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.

Enantiosis

Enantiosis (e-nan-ti-o’-sis): Using opposing or contrary descriptions together, typically in a somewhat paradoxical manner.


I was freezing. I had just waded through three feet of snow to bring my grandma’s mail from the post office one mile away. I sat on my grandma’s glowing pot-bellied stove to warm my ass. Instead, my pants caught on fire and I ran outside to do snow angels and put out my pants. My butt was cold and hot at the same time. It had broken the rule of contradiction that has governed scientific reasoning and other things for at least 1,000 years.

It started with Plato’s toga catching on fire at a symposium when he was making goat fondue for his date. He jumped in the river that had become recently famous by Heraclitus when he realized he couldn’t dip the same foot in a different river twice. He was ridiculed for his pronouncement. He subsequently revised it to shut up the critics: You can’t put your foot in the same river twice. Critics said this was probably a function of having your foot bitten off by a crocodile. Heraclitus was perplexed and went back to Athens mumbling and distraught.

Anyway, Plato successfully extinguished his toga’s fire. The singularity of the blaze’s consumption of his garment made him realize it wasn’t cold at the same time. Here, the principle of contradiction was born, and eventually become Aristotle’s Primary Axiom: “A or Not A.” I was stunned that it did not apply to my burning ass. I felt betrayed by Plato and all his lying fellow travelers. He had duped Western Civilization into believing that the binding of contradictories was a “mere” figure of speech: oxymoron—the yoking of contradictories. “Jumbo shrimp” became the flagship oxymoron, making people laugh, never realizing that “jumbo shrimp” is a singular entity—wholly jumbo, wholly shrimp—literally!

Grandma loaned me one of grandpa’s red union suits. I could leave the rear flap open and sit in the snow to soothe my butt’s pain. But first, I stood by the stove trying to figure out how my liberation from contradiction would affect my life. “Either/Or” would be excised from map of decision making. Free from philosophy-induced illusion, I looked forward to eating jumbo shrimp in the deafening silence of my dining room. It will be awfully good. This is my unbiased opinion.


Definitions 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.

Enigma

Enigma (e-nig’-ma): Obscuring one’s meaning by presenting it within a riddle or by means of metaphors that purposefully challenge the reader or hearer to understand.


This is the most disgusting thing you’ll ever read. It will make you mad. It is a poison scented flower, a chrome plated bumper smooshing pedestrians on the road to salvation. It is a turkey stabbed and sliced and flagrantly gobbled in a dark corner of a white room. It is dentures shattered on the subway station floor, never again the take a bite out of crime or a chocolate chip cookie. It will make you sick. Your life will be changed forever.

This is my story.

It’s about cuisine that should never be eaten. It’s about chewing and swallowing and choking and swallowing, eating what you are. Eating yourself.

The tumult of my trajectory through life is like an earthquake that should’ve afforded me the opportunity to be crushed spiritually and physically. But that didn’t happen. I was in the espionage business. Nobody knew who I “really” was. I was a cipher with a gun. I am a CIA operative in Jo Burg, South Africa. I received my orders in a trashcan at the Nelson Mandela shopping mall, next to the huge statue of him. It was awkward routing around in the trashcan looking for my orders from Washington, right there where people dined outdoors.

Then, the inevitable happened. Two big burly uniformed men asked me what I was doing. I told them I had lost my car keys. They dug around in the trashcan and found my orders. They were innocuous. I was ordered by Washington to enroll in chef school. The uniformed men laughed. One got on his cell phone. After he hung up he said, “I’ve been instructed to take you to the stone cave.”

We took a cab. The stone cave was on the outskirts of Soweto where pigs roam free and life continues to be rough. They threw me into the cave, wished me luck and told me I was going to starve to death. They slammed the door and they both laughed and got in the cab and drove away. I started getting hungry. There was no food in the cave, so I just went with the flow.p, fantasizing about juicy steaks and apple pies.

After about two weeks, I actually started to starve—I was weak. I thought I had started to die, but I did not want to die. I thought “I’m made of meat. I will eat myself.” I rolled up my sleeve and took a bite out of my forearm. I was hard ripping a piece of flesh off my arm. It was warm, and tender, and bloody. It tasted like chicken. I figured both my arms would last a couple of months. I started looking forward to “dinner.” Although it hurt like hell to rip a chunk out of my arm, its flavor was “me, myself, and I.” It was the ultimate self indulgence. It was heavenly.

About one month later some kids found me in the stone cave. The joke was on me. The door had never been locked. I really can’t say how big an idiot I felt like. I’m the only person in the history of the stone cave to fail to discover the door was unlocked.

I went to a hospital and the doctor asked me what happened to my arms. I told him I had been eating myself in a cave. He yelled “Security!” and I was taken to a room with wire mesh walls for observation and medication.

I guess I shouldn’t have eaten myself. I have developed a fondness for my raw forearm meat that has outlasted my sojourn in the stone cave. As soon as I get out of this place I’m going to use a knife to cut strips like bacon. I don’t’t know what I’ll do when my meat’s gone and I’m down to the bone. Maybe I can find somebody to share their forearm meat with me.


Definitions 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.

Ennoia

Ennoia (en-no’-i-a): A kind of purposeful holding back of information that nevertheless hints at what is meant. A kind of circuitous speaking.


I couldn’t imagine who put a can over our cat’s head. Who would do something like that? I don’t know. I’ll never know, but I’m going to help little Snarly out.

I duct-taped Snarly’s paws together. Then, I pulled on the tin can. It was stuck. I had to tie Snarly to a saw horse. He was squirming around too much. I got my father’s metal shears and cut a line up the side of the can. I pried the can open and it easily slid off and fell with a clank on the garage floor.

Snarly was ungrateful. He was laying there on the saw horse with murder in his eyes. When I went near him he hissed and yowled. How was I going to set him free without getting hurt myself? Then “hazmat”popped into my head. I could wear protective clothing! I could wear my football helmet with the protective face guard. There were two lengths of plastic sewer pipe laying on the floor. They were left over from Dad repairing the septic system. I could put them on my arms—they were the perfect length to protect me from claws. Mother had oven mitts with fingers like gloves—perfect for peeling off the tape and untying the rope.

The time came. I suited up and moved toward Snarly. He started writhing around a growling. I went for the duct tape and got it undone. The rope was more difficult, but I managed to get it off and free Snarly. He ran out of the garage and it was a year before he came back home.

At that point in my life I decided to become a veterinarian. Now, I shelter abused pets and nurse them back to health. Right now, I am working with a trio of of visually impaired mice who had their tails amputated by a sadistic farmer’s wife.


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

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.

Enthymeme

Enthymeme (en’-thy-meem): 1. The informal method [or figure] of reasoning typical of rhetorical discourse. The enthymeme is sometimes defined as a “truncated syllogism” since either the major or minor premise found in that more formal method of reasoning is left implied. The enthymeme typically occurs as a conclusion coupled with a reason. When several enthymemes are linked together, this becomes sorites. 2. A figure of speech which bases a conclusion on the truth of its contrary. [Depending on its grammatical structure and specific word choice, it may be chiasmus].


“There’s a war outside. You better take a gun and a couple of grenades.” My mother gave me this advice. I lived in the worst country in the world. All day and all night, there was screaming and gunfire—pistols, rifles, machine guns and other lethal devices that kept me awake—like hand grenades and mortars.

My mother did such a wonderful job of keeping us in touch with reality. The war of “Everybody against Everybody” had been raging for twelve years. The only people benefitting from it were the ammunition, arms, and body armor manufacturers.

I rode to work in an Uber armored transport vehicle. There were sandbags around the entrance to the “Daily Rake” a muckraking newspaper where I worked. The Rake told mostly lies. In a way, it was responsible for perpetuating the war by making up reports that made it seem that everybody deserved to be shot. At work, we had sandbags on our desks and we kept our weapons alongside our computer keyboards while we worked. I worked in the sports section to make it look like cheating was rampant. Last week I did a piece on drugged horse racing and nine horses were put down by “patriots” who posed as jockeys. I liked the fact that my writing influenced peoples’ behavior. I was hoping to win a Putzlicker Prize for effective journalism.

“Effective” was the key word in everybody’s journalistic success story. “No impact, total shit” was the saying we all marched to. Like my mother told me: “Son, the truth is boring. Vivid lies will win the prize every day.” I followed her advice. I lied and told her I was married and had four kids. When she asked me where they were, I told her I didn’t know. I lied and told her I made $200,000 a year. She asked why we lived in a shit hole. I told her I was saving my money for my kids to go to college. I was an enigma wrapped in a baloney skin headed out on the midnight train. But it didn’t matter. I had a fireproof apartment with gun ports in every bulletproof window and the door too. I had a generator and a well and a small vegetable garden in the living room.

Monday was Truce Day. Everybody put down their weapons so everybody could go shopping. I didn’t like it much. I still took my armored Uber to the grocery store, the hardware store and the knives, guns and ammo store.

My first stop was “Big Ted’s Gun, Knives and Ammo.”

I had been collecting switchblade knives for a couple of years. They make me tingle “down there” when I press the button and they fly into action—especially the Out The Fronts (OTFs).

My collection consist of fifty knives, all renowned for their killing prowess, and slashing prowess too. I am always eager to see the most recent models. Kershaw has made a 2–foot long out the front (OTF) automatic knife. It said in the pamphlet “Sneak up behind your opponent. Press your OTF against their back. Stroke the knife’s button. Voila! They’re dead.” I think I’ve killed ten or fifteen people, but it’s never been that easy! The knife is $600. I bought it on layaway.

Well, life isn’t great. Nobody remembers or knows how we got here. Anyway they say it all started on the subway when a transit cop shot somebody’s dog.


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

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.

Epanodos

Epanodos (e-pan’-o-dos): 1. Repeating the main terms of an argument in the course of presenting it. 2. Returning to the main theme after a digression. 3. Returning to and providing additional detail for items mentioned previously (often using parallelism).


I was lying again. Nobody cared. Truth had lost its luster. I was telling my constituents that I heard them and “felt their pain.” I used “no pain, no gain” as the premise of my key argument. “Yogi Berra said this when he squatted down to catch. If he was going to catch, and catch better and better, he had to squat and feel the pain. It made him smarter too—he said things like ‘If there’s a fork in the road, take it.’”

I did not believe a word of what I was saying. I knew for a fact that Yogi would whine like a dog whenever squatted and hated playing catcher. Also, the only quip he ever made up himself was “Me hee for Yoo-hoo.” It was a totally ridiculous attemp to sell a disgusting chocolate drink that probably killed a few kids.

Then I followed up: “You remember Lance Armstrong, don’t you? Before he went down the tubes for cheating, he rode his bicycle with cancer of the nuts. That had to be painful! Can you imagine, pumping along, pumping away, twisting your cancer-ridden balls around a hard leather seat? But he came out a winner. ‘No pain, no gain’ is the credo of all winners—from Chuck Ponzi to Pete Rose. Live it. Love it. Lift it—the heavier, the better. ‘One hernia for man. One hernia for mankind.’ There is no other route to fame and glory than pan.”

I received a standing ovation. I didn’t believe a word of what I had said, but the standing ovation was all that mattered. My motto is “The truth is a slavemaster. The lie will set you free.” I was free! I was re-elected again.


Definitions 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.