Monthly Archives: November 2025

Sententia

Sententia (sen-ten’-ti-a): One of several terms describing short, pithy sayings. Others include adageapothegemgnomemaximparoemia, and proverb.


“Let the wind blow.” My father used to say this to me when I was upset and wanted to kill somebody—anybody—including him. If I “let the wind blow” he’d be on the fooor with a bullet hole in his forehead. I couldn’t “let the wind blow” because I was afraid to go to prison. My father was a beloved hardware store owner in our town. He catered to the DYI crowd. They would relentlessly search for his killer and I’m sure that when they found him it would be nail guns at dawn on the Little League field’s pitcher’s mound. That’s where they found the mangled remains of Red Rider. He had a hot dog stand he would wheel around town, selling hot dogs. He was observed picking his nose and wiping it inside a hot dog bun. He was doomed. The Society for the Preservation of Sanitary Conditions met that afternoon and voted to nail gun him to the pitcher’s mound that night. He was lured by what they said were his “favorite buns.” He took that to mean Barbara Shine AKA “Boulder Buns Barb.” When he arrived, he was tackled, held down, nailed to the pitcher’s mound, and sprayed with hand sanitizer—it was sprayed down his throat. He choked on it and it killed him. Bye, bye Red Rider. Go sell your hot dogs in hell!

“Let the wind blow” has become totally meaningless to me. Now I abide by “Suck it Up!” It sounds like a vampire credo, but it isn’t. Actually, I got it from my housecleaner. She talks to her vacuum cleaner, telling it to “Suck it up!” referring o the dirt on the floor. It “sucks it up” into a bag inside that gets thrown in the trash when it gets full. I say “Suck it up” to myself when something bad comes my way. I put it in my brain-bag which I dump when it gets full. I dump it in a bottle of vodka.

I am becoming a drunk, but I’ve still got to suck it up into my brain bag. I’ve tried to come up with different way to empty my brain bag. I stuck my head in the low-hanging ceiling tan in my living room. I now have a large bald spot on top of my head. It did not work. My inane plumber Mario is going to install a faucet on the side of my head to drain my brain bag. If that does not work I’m going to find a new saying. Maybe “Christ on a crutch!” or “Holy shit!” I think the religious sayings are edifying.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Simile

Simile (si’-mi-lee): An explicit comparison, often (but not necessarily) employing “like” or “as.”


He was like a pizza covered with all the wrong things—pineapple, baloney, jolly ranchers, and Brussels sprouts. He was like toenail clippings in a dish of ice cream. He was like a white sport coat with no carnation. He had gotten his finger stuck in a wine bottle and was calling for help from under the train trestle where he had gone camping with his dog Barney that he had dyed purple and taught to bark whenever he said “Hi boys and girls!” It’s almost as if he had cracked the code of buffoonery. For failing clowns and comedians, he may have had some value. What that would be, I don’t know, but there is something there that has a modicum of value, like a counterfeit coin, or a fallen Autumn leaf, or a raw carrot.

I think he is what the Doors would call “a rider on the storm.” Into this world he was thrown like a scuffed up traffic cone or a piano without a tone: a rider on the storm. He is like a one-armed cowboy riding a nasty big-horned bull. It will probably gore him when he falls off. But, he rides it to the buzzer. When he steps off the bull it licks him on the face. The crowd roars like 50 hungry harbor seals. He gets in his limo with the New York state vanity plate saying “STUPIDASS.”

This is a phantasy comparison with no merit. He’s more like a hockey puck sliding over the ice of pomposity—confidently spouting inaccuracies, misconstrued fables, and recipes for inedible “treats” like a dried pea sandwich, gravel and cream, or fried blind mice. Scary!

I was going to end my relationship with him, but I couldn’t. He had me and was ready to blackmail me for the deed we had done. We were drunk and I was driving. I ran over a dog walker and the 10 dogs he was walking. I killed the dog walker and the dogs. We took off out of there and I ran over an elderly woman in the crosswalks as she crossed the street. We sped away only to hit a woman pushing a baby carriage, killing her and injuring the baby. Luckily, we were a block away from home and escaped detection. The next day we took the car to Gleaming Fenders Car Wash and washed off the blood and hair. Now, he was going to blackmail me! He wanted $50 per month to keep his mouth shut. I agreed and wrote him a check for $50.

Now, he’s like a stain on my life. He needs to be removed. My .45 is like stain remover. One pull of the trigger and no more $50 per month, no more him. I’ll invite him over, shoot him, and then I’ll tell the police I thought he was an intruder.

It didn’t work. I’m doing 30 years in Attica. My aim was bad. The shot wasn’t fatal. He’s still out there., like an overweight Beagle or a moldy raison scone.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Skotison

Skotison (sko’-ti-son): Purposeful obscurity.


Some people like them. Some people won’t even go near them. The first time I tried one, I can’t even tell you how much I enjoyed it. I never thought I would’ve liked it at all. It was just sitting there like it wasn’t worth anything at all, but it was soon to become worth everything to me.

Are you ready for the big “disclose”? Do you want to know what “IT” is? I bet you do. I can see the anticipation in your eyes. You look like you’re going to explode.

It was a motorcycle—a 1965 BSA Thunderbolt motorcycle—black and chrome with a 650cc engine. I had just gotten back from Vietnam and the motorcycle was my salvation. The wind in my face blew away things I didn’t want to think about. It gave me hope and a good night’s sleep.

I decided to ride it across the USA. I had a VA disability so I got a very small monthly check—so although I didn’t have a job, I had some money, and I thought I could pick up odd jobs along the way. I ran out of money in Boulder, CO. My Army boots had come apart, so I went to an Army Navy store to see what I could find. I found a pair of Army surplus ski boots for ten dollars—all that I could afford. I was broke.

The next morning, I hopped a stake truck in front of the state employment office, rode out of town, and went to work chopping weeds to clear a place for a trailer park. All my fellow workers were Mexican. There was an arroyo down the hill were everybody took turns hanging out—smoking and drinking beer—taking unauthorized breaks. When it was my turn, I eagerly joined my compadres who offered me a beer and a cigarette. I worked long enough to make enough money to head off to my new destination.

New Orleans!

When I got there, I went into this bar where a guy was “dancing” on s small stage. He was clothed only in black underpants. He was doing a sort of hip-humping dance to Deep Purple’s “Highway Star.” There were women packed around the stage waving money at him and stuffing it is his underpants. He was very demented looking—dark rings around his eyes, chipped front tooth behind a lewd smile aimed at his audience. Suddenly, he dropped to the floor twitching. “Fu*ing speed,” the manager yelled. She had him dragged off the stage to loud boos. Then, she came over to me and asked me if I wanted the job—$150 per night, plus tips. This was a godsend! I said “Yes” and became an underpants dancer. She handed me a pair of black underpants and told me to change in the back room.

I came out on the stage and did a series of hump thrusts. The women screamed and the music started. It was The Rolling Stones “I can’t Get No Satisfaction” covered by Devo. I started humping and the money started flying. These were some of the best nights of my life. I saved up a pile of cash and decided to call it quits.

I was a big fan of the TV show “Bonanza.” Now, I wanted to go the Lake Tahoe and get a look at the Ponderosa. So, I headed west. I encountered a nearly lethal dust storm—blowing my motorcycle over to 50 degrees. Suddenly, a building emerged from the nearly blinding dust. It had a sign on the front that said “Trading Post.” I went in. There were Native Americans sitting on the floor and a guy that looked like Burl Ives standing behind a lectern and reading from a ledger. He stopped and welcomed me. Then, he started again—reading a name and what that person owed. It was really weird, like something from the 19th century. I got up and peeked outside. The storm had ended.

I resumed my trip. I headed for Salt Lake City. I wanted to see the Great Salt Lake, cut across the Salt Flats, and across Nevada to Lake Tahoe. As I was pulling out of Salt Lake, there was a beautiful blond woman hitching a ride. I pulled over. She put on my backpack and slung her messenger bag over her shoulder and jumped on the back of my motorcycle. She told me she was going to Tahoe. I said “So am I!” and we took off. Somewhere on the Salt Flats, she told me to stop. She jumped off my bike, opened her messenger bag and pulled out a sheet of paper imprinted with pictures of Daffy Duck. She said, “Blotter acid. Tear off a Daffy, let him melt on your tongue, and let the good times roll.” I did as she said. In about ten minutes, the mountains in the distance turned into piles of diamonds. The sky started falling until I yelled “Stop!” My passenger was sitting on the ground wiggling her fingers in front of her eyes and laughing. Then we decided we were cows grazing on the Salt Flats. Sadly, the acid wore off and we resumed our trip.

We arrived in Tahoe the next morning. My passenger told me she had fallen in love with me. I sort of loved her too. I met her parents. They lived in a huge mansion and owned two gambling casinos on the Nevada side of Tahoe. I ate dinner there and got to meet Wayne Newton. I said “Danke schon” to him as a joke and he threw his martini in my face and called me an asshole.

So, I found out my passenger’s name was Cher. As crazy as it seems, we got married. As a part of the wedding vows, I said “I got you babe.” She said “I’ll hold you tight and kiss you at night.” It was perfect.

I’m too old to ride a motorcycle any more, but my memories are vivid. I keep the BSA in the garage and go sit on it every once in awhile. I go “vroom vroom” sometimes.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Syllepsis

Syllepsis (sil-lep’-sis): When a single word that governs or modifies two or more others must be understood differently with respect to each of those words. A combination of grammatical parallelism and semantic incongruity, often with a witty or comical effect. Not to be confused with zeugma: [a general term describing when one part of speech {most often the main verb, but sometimes a noun} governs two or more other parts of a sentence {often in a series}].


She broke my heart and broke my bank account. I never should’ve given her my PIN number. Money, money, money was all she cared about. She asked me two of three times every day how my net worth was doing. She asked me why I didn’t leave more cash lying around. She said it was polite to leave stacks of twenties in the bathroom.

It was crazy but I loved her. I started leaving stacks of twenties in the bathroom. I could hear her squeal when she went in to take a leak. It was endearing and brought me lots of pleasure, and that’s what life is about. When we made love, she made me spread $100 bills on the mattress.

Her name was Susie Lou. When she left in the middle of the night she took my watch and chain, she took my diamond ring, she took the keys to my electric car—she jumped in my Tesla and drove real far. I lived n New York and she called me from Moosejaw, BC. She was crying and promised to be good if I let her come back. She told me she was living with a Mountie who was abusive. He made her put on his Mountie pants while he sang the Canadian national anthem and made her eat poutine with chopsticks. She was humiliated by what he put her through. The only thing she could do was jump in the Tesla and drive home. She had sold my watch and chain and my diamond ring and needed more money. She asked me to wire $250,000 to Mountie headquarters and everything would be all right. I wired her the money and never heard from her again. I admit, I missed her. I even hired a private investigator to track her down.

She had gotten a divinity degree at “Holy, Holy, Holy Seminar” in Nevada. Now, she was the pastor of a Baptist Church in Florida where she ministered to the elderly, assuring them a place in heaven if they signed their worldly goods over to her, to be transferred to her upon their death. By targeting people over 80, she cleaned up.

She was taken to court over her “place in Heaven” offer. One family’s dead matriarch kept manifesting in the back seat of their Subaru yelling “God knows it’s a fraud.” She had landed in Hell, clearly not what she had been promised. The PI discovered that Susie Lou had left town after the matriarch episode, like she always did—disappearing down the wide open highway.

Next, she was an Uber driver, using the Tesla to ferry tourists around New York City. Among her colleagues she was referred to as “Lost Lou Lou.” Clearly, she wasn’t so good with directions. It came to a head when she drove into the East River. That was the end of my Tesla and Susie Lou too. Nobody at her funeral had anything good to say about her. However, I did. I said “She loved money. That’s a kind of love. It resonates with Paul’s Epistle to the Pergans who had a banking crisis and needed God’s help.”

This was the end of it.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Symploce

Symploce (sim’-plo-see or sim’-plo-kee): The combination of anaphora and epistrophe: beginning a series of lines, clauses, or sentences with the same word or phrase while simultaneously repeating a different word or phrase at the end of each element in this series.


Where there is a will, there’s a way. Uncle Ed was going to die soon.

Where there’s a will there’s a way. I was going to be rich soon.

Uncle Ed had tons of money. He had a truckload of gold that he had bought back in the day for $35.00 per ounce. Over the years its value had gone insane—it was now worth $4,000 per ounce. Ed’s “truckload” was probably worth 20 billion dollars.

I had been kissing Uncle Ed’s ass since I was sixteen. I treated him like a king. I got him hooked on cigarettes and fed his desire for alcohol. I can’t tell you how many times I left him passed out in the afternoon. Scoring alcohol wasn’t much of a challenge. My best friend’s father owned a liquor store and my friend supplied me with bottles of Gypsy Rose for free! I was hoping Uncle Ed’s liver would go to hell soon and so would he.

I am ashamed to say, I started drinking Gypsy Rose in the 7th grade. Me and Ed would hoist bottles and toast each other. But, I didn’t lose sight of my goal: do in Uncle Ed’d liver and collect his coins. “Where there’s a will there’s a way,” I said to myself and started going to AA. The group facilitator told me that I was the youngest drunk he had ever met. I felt good about that and got dried out.

I went to visit Uncle Ed. I had a case of Gypsy Rose for him. He reached out his shaking hands to take the wine. He dropped the wine and most of the bottles broke on the floor. Uncle Ed crawled to the kitchen, turned on the oven and stuck his head in. Uncle Ed was going to commit suicide! This was the kind of break I was looking for!

I got the hell out of there. I was almost home when I heard a loud explosion. Uncle Ed had blown himself up with his head in the oven! I heard sirens and went back up the street to watch Uncle Ed’s house burn to the ground. They brought him out on a stretcher. How the hell did he survive? He pointed at me and yelled “It was him! It was him!”

He died before he reached the ambulance. I wasn’t even questioned by the police who thought Uncle Ed was delirious. I was waiting to hear of my gigantic inheritance. I didn’t happen. Uncle Ed left his fortune to “The Wind.” Nobody could figure out who or what that was. So, all that money sits in trust and will be granted to the state of New York if the heir can’t be located.

I have started eating food that gives me gas. I intend to argue the “The Wind” is a reference to my copious farting—that I am “The Wind” and am entitled to the inheritance.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Synaloepha

Synaloepha (sin-a-lif’-a): Omitting one of two vowels which occur together at the end of one word and the beginning of another. A contraction of neighboring syllables. A kind of metaplasm.


Th’ extra strong stench made me cough like an old man at the edge of death! It was like a giant was squatting over the city, farting prolifically, spreading his rotten-smelling gas like a blanket.

My grandfather needed fresh air in his lungs or he would die choking in his hospital bed. He had worked all of his adult life stringing beads in the back room of a head shop in San Fransisco’s Haight Ashbury district. He had gone there after returning from the Vietnam War. In Vietnam, his job was picking up litter from the front steps of CIA headquarters. He would stand watch every day and burn the trash in the Agency’s incinerator. It was believed that VC agents would clandestinely drop poisoned candy wrappers, misleading coded messages, and random trash which often consisted of 8X10 photographs of Ho Chi Minh. Additionally, green pith helmets with gold and red stars pinned on them often littered the steps in the morning.

My grandfather believed it was the poisoned candy wrappers that had affected his lungs, but he couldn’t prove it. So, the VA would not classify it as service connected, so he wasn’t granted disability compensation for his condition. It was sad, but we lived with it. We loved grandpa and would be there with hm until the end, which, given the poor quality of the air here, was very near.

I did some investigating and found out it was the new battery acid factory that was stinking up the air through its prodcton line’s ventilation system. As far as I could see, we had been conned by our Republican mayor Stewart Greedski. As soon as the deal was struck for building the plant, he showed up in a Maserati with a vanity plate saying “OOHTHESMELL.” Clearly, he was an advocate for the factory that was bringing my father’s life to a close.

First, I would assassinate the mayor, and then, burn the factory down.

Sadly, I didn’t fulfill my self-proclaimed mission. My grandfather died and it became pointless.

Our town was named Pine Cone Hamlet when it was founded. It has since been nicknamed “Stinky Town.” The battery acid factory has driven 3/4 of the residents away. I’m moving to Tuber Town on Monday. I will be working in the organic produce section of the Happy Hippy Supermarket, arranging potatoes and learning to juggle them to attract and entertain customers.

I saw my old friend Buzz at the store yesterday. He still lives in Stinky Town. He has a chronic cough and memory problems. He told me that Mayor Greedski had coughed to death in church after singing “Amazing Grace” with the choir. We both laughed. Buzz started coughing and fell to the floor dead.

Stinky Town has become a ghost town. The battery acid factory has relocated to someplace in Texas. Some people say they can hear coughing on the deserted streets of Stinky Town when the moon is full.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Synathroesmus

Synathroesmus (sin-ath-res’-mus): 1. The conglomeration of many words and expressions either with similar meaning (= synonymia) or not (= congeries). 2. A gathering together of things scattered throughout a speech (= accumulatio [:Bringing together various points made throughout a speech and presenting them again in a forceful, climactic way. A blend of summary and climax.]).


I had that same sandwich every day for lunch for nine years—elementary school, middle school, high school. I didn’t dare to trade lunches with my class mates. Ma had told me she would kill me if I did, just like the guy she killed at the supermarket when she set the orange display loose on him and smothered him under a torrent of rolling navel oranges. It was judged an accident so she got off scott free. Nevertheless, when we misbehaved she alluded to the “accident” and the 50 lb. sack of flour on the top shelf of the cupboard with the piece of rope tied around it. When we were bad she made us stand under the flour with her holding the rope. She’d jiggle the rope and make the sack wobble over our heads and imitate a witch cackling. It was traumatic. It instilled in me the belief that only bad things come from above. So much for God and Jesus and miracles. That hymn, “On The Wings of a Snow White Dove,” gave me panic attacks as the “white dove” for me, was a 50 lb. sack of white flour falling from above and breaking my neck.

Heaven, hell, freedom, curse: peanut butter and jelly every day, every week, every year. White bread sliced into triangles. Crusts gone. No redeeming value like duct tape holding the doorknob on your house. Ridiculous, sticky, craven.

In sum, I was a skinny, hyper-nervous kid, suffocating in peanut butter and jelly packed between white bread triangles and eaten every day for lunch. I had to do something. I considered killing my mother, but given my luck, I knew I’d get caught and end up in prison. Instead, I decided to lure her into the cupboard and slash the flour bag and make the flour cascade down on her—covering her in flour and teaching her lesson.

To get her into the cupboard, I told her I noticed that Dad had left a wrapped package in the cupboard right before he ran away with his 20-year old secretary Bunny. With an a angry look on her face Ma said “Yeah?” and started rummaging in the cupboard. I pulled my knife and slit the bag, but I slipped and cut off Ma’s right ear. It was a gusher. Her blood mixed with the flour turned pink—it was not altogether unpleasant. It reminded me of the makings of a Valentine’s Day bundt cake.

Nevertheless, I called 911. Ma was cursing me out as she bled all over the kitchen floor looking for her ear. The ambulance arrived and I picked up her ear—it was lodged under the refrigerator. I had to stick a fork in it to pull it loose.

Ma’s ear was successfully sewn back on, but it was a little crooked. It was bigger than her other ear too, making me think it wasn’t actually her ear. I asked the doctor. He told me hee new ear was harvested from a dead horse whisperer from Montana. Evidently, Ma’s ear was lost on the way to the hospital.

With her new ear, instead of yelling all the time, Ma whispers. This is a huge benefit, although Ma is hard to hear sometimes.

The accident opened a new door in our lives. Ma’s brush with death gave her a new appreciation for life. Now, she works at the pet shop “Roll Over!” She takes care of the Guinea Pigs—feeding them peanut butter and jelly protein treats, brushing them, and whispering to them. But beyond that, she has stopped making peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for me! Instead, she gives me a different frozen meal for lunch every day. The school cafeteria has a microwave oven that I cook my lunch in. Today I had a “Hungry Lumberjack” beef-chicken-beaver dinner with mashed potatoes and beer. It prepared me for my 1:00 creative writing class.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Synecdoche

Synecdoche (si-nek’-do-kee): A whole is represented by naming one of its parts (or genus named for species), or vice versa (or species named for genus).


My 10-inch switchblade flashed in the moonlight. I was going to whack “Shoe” Bigelow, named for the exotic shoes he wore, made from different kinds of skins. He had a pair of jaguar loafers with a black nose and whiskers on each shoe. He had a pair of brogans that were stained with blood from the Battle of Gettysburg in the American Civil War. They were gruesome, but he wore them anyway to intimidate his rivals. Probably the weirdest shoe in his shoe collection was made of dodo bird skin harvested in the late seventeenth century when the dodo went extinct.

I was going to make Shoe Bigelow extinct.

I wasn’t going to club him like the dodos were clubbed. I was going to stick him in the heart for his transgressions against the “Golden Hand,” a social club managing the conduct of crime in our small town in upstate New York. We committed crime in a measured way to keep our profile low and make sure the police would take their bribes and ignore us. Shoe was running wild, trampling on the false trust we had cultivated in our community’s 175 years of existence. Shoe had stolen a baby carriage with the baby still in it. He had committed bigamy with the Mayor’s daughter. He had sold fake Christmas cards door to door. They depicted Jesus pole dancing with a cross on Calvary Hill. He dressed up like the Grim Reaper, scaring everybody out of “Booker T Elementary School,” and then, stealing the day’s lunch money and basketballs from the gym. I have word that he’s at the county flea market selling the balls.

I drove out to the flea market. I walked up to him and said “Hi Shoe.” He threw a ball at me and ran across the field. He tripped and fell on an upturned garden rake. Stabbed by the tines, he flopped around like a speared fish, bled, and died. He was wearing his dodo shoes. I grabbed them and put them in my backpack. A crowd gathered and I slowly walked away, fading back into the flea market.

I get a lot of compliments on the dodo shoes. They’re designed like Chelsea boots and have Vibram soles added in the 1970s by a rich hippie. Back in the day the dodo shoes came with a dodo beak on a lanyard that you could blow on to make dodo sounds, calling the dodos to slaughter.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Synonymia

Synonymia (si-no-ni’-mi-a): In general, the use of several synonyms together to amplify or explain a given subject or term. A kind of repetition that adds emotional force or intellectual clarity. Synonymia often occurs in parallel fashion. The Latin synonym, interpretatio, suggests the expository and rational nature of this figure, while another Greek synonym, congeries, suggests the emotive possibilities of this figure.


Big. Large. Huge. Gargantuan. My sunflowers had broken the bands of size. When I planted their little seeds I never imagined they would reach into the sky. I bought the seeds at the farmers market from a guy named Jake. It was a small town and I’d never seen him before. He told me his cousin Jack lived on Maple Street where he tended a small garden for its seeds. He usually grew beans, but claimed he had started experimenting with sunflowers—tall sunflowers. I bought a small bag of what I thought were Jack’s sunflower seeds. They were called “Cloud Kissers.” I thought that was hyperbole and was hoping, at best, for ten-foot high plants.

I planted them on a Friday and when I woke up on Saturday they had grown into the sky. They disappeared into the clouds. Not only that, they were marijuana plants. Jack had lied to me, but to tell the truth, I loved to smoke pot and this was an amazing, stupendous, good thing.

When it neared the time to harvest the buds, I bought rock climbing gear to scale the plants. I had a marajuana leaf painted on my helmet and practiced climbing at “Sheer Drop” at the mall. I was a little uncomfortable practicing at the mall with 12-year old kids, but it was the only option I had.

It was harvest time.

I donned my climbing equipment, adding my electric hedge clippers to cut off the buds. It took me two hours to get to the buds. The air was pretty thin and it was freezing cold. I probably should’ve enlisted my SCUBA tank and worn my snowmobiling snowsuit. But I didn’t. The snot was freezing in my nose as I lopped off the first bud. It was at least three feet around. I was going to be the king of pot! I lopped three more buds, letting them fall to the ground. My lips froze shut and I started to think I was going to freeze to death. Time for an emergency descent! I didn’t know how that was done, but I knew I had to do it or I’d freeze to the pot plant and die.

I picked a marajuana leaf, and cut handholds in it with my hedge trimmer. Then, I grabbed ahold and jumped. The marajuana leaf worked like a hang glider, taking me in for a soft landing about a mile from home. When I got home the giant buds were there on the ground. I pulled a piece off one and packed it into my pipe. I lit up, took a hit and drifted into oblivion. At the edge of unconsciousness, everything took on pastel colors, throbbing. It was righteous. I would never sell this pot. It would be like selling my brother. I went inside and took a nap. When I woke up and went outside, everything was still there. Under a fake name, I rented five self-storage units on the outskirts of town. They’re jam-packed with pot. They wreak to high heaven, but nobody’s complained.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Synthesis

Synthesis (sin’-the-sis): An apt arrangement of a composition, especially regarding the sounds of adjoining syllables and words.


The sliding dog tried to break the sound barrier, borne on fresh beet booties marinated in vinegar. He was launched on a football field with a small rocket on his red collar, howling his determination and wagging his tail as he sped along. He failed, but he put on a good show for everybody who came to watch him on his 85th attempt. He modeled perseverance. Bobby was the ultimate Beagle—he kept his tail up and his nose to the ground. He enjoyed leg humping, go fetch, rolling in shit, and tugging on a towel.

I got him from an unbalanced rabbit hunter named Fudd. Fudd had 101 Beagles. They overran his life. When he walked around his fenced yard, it was like he was floating on a sea of tail-wagging barking Beagles. As fast as they had puppies, he gave the puppies away. He would put a big cardboard box filled with puppies on the curb in front of his house. The adult dogs lived in dumpsters that were modified to accommodate them with entrance holes cut out with acetylene torches at the bottom corner of each dumpster—there were 70 dumpsters in his fenced-in back yard. The pet store delivered a pickup truck overflowing with dried dog food every week.

When it came time for a rabbit hunt, Fudd would lasso one of his dogs, shove it in a carrier box, and put it on the back seat of his vintage Oldsmobile. They would drive out to the state land tract on the outskirts of town. He would load his shotgun, turn the dog loose, and wait for some action. On this particular day the dog “opened up” almost immediately, but it wasn’t chasing anything—it was just barking in one place. Then, it came out of the woods carrying a sneaker. The dog turned around and went back in the woods. Fudd followed him.

There was a corpse of a middle-aged woman leaning up against a tree. she had been shot several times in the forehead. She was wearing only one sneaker. Fudd commanded his dog to drop the other sneaker. He put a leash on the dog and they got out of there. Fudd had a criminal record and didn’t want to take any chances with the police. They drove a mile up the road and Fudd turned the dog loose again. The same thing happened, only this time the dead person was sitting in a wheelchair riddled with bullets. He was about 70-75 and had note pinned to his chest. It was full of bullet holes and soaked with blood. Fudd could still read it. It said “I did him a favor.” Fudd said to himself “Mercy killing,” leashed the dog and headed with him back to his car.

When he got out to the road, there was a state trooper standing by his car. He asked to see Fudd’s hunting license. Fudd produced it and the Trooper told him “You’re ok” and Fudd put it back in his wallet and decided it was time to go home. The rabbits could wait.

When he got home, his house was on fire and all of his dogs were gone—“liberated” by the local animal rights activists “Barking Up The Right Tree.” Fudd was furious. He called his homeowners insurance agent and put in a claim for his burnt down home.

“Barking Up The Right Tree” was meeting at the “Doozy Duds” laundromat that afternoon. They had five members. Fudd loaded up what was left of his charred pump shotgun and headed to the laundromat to kill them all. He walked in the front door and the first thing he saw was “Bouncy” Barbara Mills. She was the one woman he had loved in a life littered with pain, rejection, and humiliation. Barbaa looked at him with tears in her eyes and said “My Fuddy.” She ran to Fudd, embracing him and kissing his neck. His thoughts of mass murder quickly faded away and they headed for “Slammin’ Chalets” to reconnect.

Believe it or not, they got married the next week. Fudd bought a new home with his insurance settlement. “Bouncy” is pregnant and Fudd has promised to own no more than 10 Beagles. Rabbit pox has caused a significant setback to rabbit hunting. Fudd has started hunting groundhogs and squirrels, and the occasional house cat.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Syntheton

Syntheton (sin’-the-ton): When by convention two words are joined by a conjunction for emphasis.


I live somewhere between heaven and hell, New Jersey and Oklahoma, and hook, line and sinker: a trifecta of woe. There is a cloud continuously hovering over my head. It rains on my parade and strikes me with lightening illuminating my inhumanity. I have two arms, two legs, a body and a head that talks, but I fall short of being human.

I have no empathy. I am missing the feeling in my gut that most people get when they witness horror with a human cost—a teenage girl impaled on a tree branch after being hurled from her boyfriend’s pickup truck, moaning with pain in her final moments—bleeding, dying five feet away from where you stand in shock. This is an experience that will haunt you with inner tumult for the rest of your life—with the empathy embedded in your gut. Medication and counseling will help you deal with your PTSD. But me? Nothing.

Or, what about the time I saw a mother (a friend of mine) yelling at her toddler—a little being barely able to understand language. She was blaming the child for her losses at the horse track where we were. She was shaking the child. So far, she had bet on four races and lost them all. She had smuggled the child into the track in her oversized purse. I didn’t care, and didn’t care that I didn’t care.

The child’s name was Marlon and there was a horse named Brando running in the next race: Marlon Brando—it had to be a winner. She hadn’t bet on a winning horse for years—they all lost. At Gamblers Anonymous she had been encouraged to stay away from the track—it was poison to her. She didn’t care. She headed for the betting window with every cent she had. She bet it on Brando and waited for the race to begin. She lost everything. Brando ran last. I felt nothing—it was almost as if nothing had happened. Nothing.

She was crying and banging her head on the track’s rail. Her forehead was bleeding. I felt nothing standing there holding her smuggled child’s hand. “Take the little f*ck!” she yelled as she climbed the pole at the finish line. She reached the top and jumped and smashed her head. The EMT said she died instantly. I felt nothing. I left the child there alone, but I had second thoughts and went back. He was standing right where I left him. I wrote out a note that said “His mother is dead” and taped it to his forehead with a piece of the duct tape I keep in my car’s glove compartment. I drove him to his grandmother’s, rang the doorbell, and ran back to my car. I didn’t want to get involved. I felt that was an improvement over feeling nothing.

I was becoming human.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Synzeugma

Synzeugma (sin-zoog’-ma): That kind of zeugma in which a verb joins (and governs) two phrases by coming between them. A synonym for mesozeugma.


“That’s how a life bereft of morals goes, bereft of edification, bereft of charity, empty as a dog dish waiting to be filled. But the emptiness bears a quality—a palpable quality, a negative quality inducing hunger—a distraction from a feeling of comfort, without the anxiety of deprecation, of lack, of absence—of the absence of something desired—warmth, physical contact, a favorite TV show—‘Andy of Mayberry,’ ‘Slow Horses,’ or ‘Carbon Dating,’ a show where contestants compete for the affections of people over 80.”

This is the opening paragraph of my creative writing assignment: “Plumb Truth.” My assignment’s tentative title is “Around the Bend: Building a Nietzschean Nest in the Valley of the Deaf.” I’m not very insightful when it comes to truth. But I feel confident that in the valley of the deaf, the one-eared man has an advantage.

My dad was a professional wrestler. Mad Dog Dynamite had bitten of his ear. He sued, and settled for 2-million dollars. So, being a one-eared man afforded him many benefits: a villa in South Beach Miami, a Rolls Royce, and countless beautiful girlfriends. Eventually he married one—Steamy Lakes. She’s my mom. Dad didn’t like it, but she was a dedicated pole dancer. We had two poles set up in the family room where mom and I danced to classics like “Disco Inferno.” These are some of my most fond memories. We would sweat and wriggle like two nervous snakes. Sometimes we would hiss just for the heck of it.

I had a girlfriend, Eloise. She said she came from Mars. She wore two antennas on her head all the time. When she was aroused they turned red. That convinced me she wasn’t faking it—that they were actually an outgrowth of her body, and possibly, tokens of her being from Mars. She could tune into radio broadcasts from anywhere in the world and channel them through her mouth. I enjoyed Radio Belize for its unbiased news reporting. Unfortunately, Eloise disappeared one day—there was a roaring sound in the yard that left a large smoking circle. I believe it was Eloise going back home. I think her parents made her leave Earth because she was getting too attached to me. I do think we loved each other. I miss her, maybe too much. I bought blueprints for a rocket ship from “Space WXYZ,” Elon Musk’s DYI space ship company.

My “Ship” came with no guarantee. It cautions that taking off in it will likely result in being burned alive. I was blinded by love, so I was willing to take a chance.

I have burns over 100% of my body.

Eloise came down from Mars and hovered over my hospital bed. Her tears dripped on my bedsheets. They were different colors—red, green, blue and purple. She lowered herself to about a foot above my body and put her hands on either side of my head. I felt like a great weight had been lifted and I was healed! I sat up and hugged Eloise. She said, “I hear my mother calling me” and disappeared.

I told my father what had happened. Now I’m on medication and seeing a counseling psychologist once a week. I can tell that she thinks I’m a total nutcase. So far, we’ve talked about my memories of being born. I told her I thought it was like a vaginal dump; that I was a crying pink poop. My therapist was visibly excited when I told her that—rubbing her hands together and saying “Yes, yes, yes!” Of course, I was lying. I had no recollections, but I wanted to give us something to talk about. We spent the next two months talking about it, then, I quit seeing her.

I was starting to worry about completing “Around the Bend: Building a Nietzschean Nest in the Valley of the Deaf.” I wish I had a deeper reservoir of experiences to draw on. I figured that a couple of all-nighters would do the trick. Adderal, Red Bull, and Marlboros would pull me through. I was confident.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Systrophe

Systrophe (si’-stro-fee): The listing of many qualities or descriptions of someone or something, without providing an explicit definition.


“Five foot two, eyes of blue. Big fat ass blowing gas. Feet lke logs, croak like frogs. Fingernails like knives, scratch her hives. Nose like a cliff. It can’t take a whiff.”

Has anybody seen my science project?

Her name is Frankenbarbra and she’s wandering the grounds. I know she can’t escape from Franken U. The walls are tall and electrified with enough voltage to kill a potential escapee. She was originally “harvested” from a grave in the faculty cemetery at M.I.T. (a graveyard filled with genius’s) by my idiot minion Eager. He dragged her to my lab from the cemetery—a distance of eight miles. She was a mess by the time she got here. I had Eager give her a bath and dress her in clean clothes—a nightgown imprinted with Tinkerbells and bunny rabbits. I laid her on the operating table and hooked a car battery to her ears with jumper cables. There was smoke and a little crackling sound and she sat up. She said “This is bullshit.” She tore the jumper cables off her ears and ran out of my lab. I called “Frankeenbarbara, Frankenbarbara,” out my lab’s window. There was no answer.

I grabbed Eager and we took off to find her. If we couldn’t find her, at best, I’d get a “D” on my resurrection assignment. Franken U. had rigorous standards. My professor, Carl “Dolly” Pearton, was very strict about losing subjects. He wouldn’t hesitate to cut off one of my fingers if I screwed up. One of my fellow students only had 4 fingers left after screwing up as many times. So, Eager and I went hunting for Frankenbarbara.

We found her leaning against the wall clutching an arm and a leg that had fallen off of her. This wasn’t unusual for resurrected cadavers. She wasn’t going anywhere unless she crawled. I had installed an emergency “off” switch in her head before I juiced her with the car battery. I stuck my finger in her left ear, pressed, and she went back to “deceased.” I carried her arm and leg while Eager dragged the rest of her back to my lab. Professor Pearton was waiting at the door with a meat cleaver. He checked out Frankenbarbara and determined that, despite the detached leg and arm, she was whole enough to keep experimenting on. My finger was spared.

What a relief!

During the year, I succeeded in bringing Frankenbarbara back to life! She is employed by the University and works in the University dining hall setting tables and refilling napkin holders and salt and pepper shakers. She has her own staff room and, despite her smell, has a small circle of friends making up a book club that meets on Thursday nights. Currently, they are discussing a book about belly-dancing blue-haired women. It is titled “Dancitude in Miami.”

I earned an “A” on my Frankenbarbara project. I went on to earn a degree in Mortuary Science. Every time I reach inside a dead client to yank out their guts, I think of Frankenbarbara. Although I never eviscerated her, I think she has been a real inspiration.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Tapinosis

Tapinosis (ta-pi-no’-sis): Giving a name to something which diminishes it in importance.


I was trying to become some kind of Buddhist. I needed to give up my attachment to the material world. Once freed, I would be Enlightened. Accordingly, I believed calling everything “shit” would set me free. Who wants to be attached to shit? Only a mentally ill person would!

So I started calling everything “shit.” I called my dog Shit. When I called him at the doggy park, people looked at me like I was mentally ill. I told them that calling my dog “Shit” was part of my path to enlightenment. Some of them laughed, but most of them turned and walked rapidly away. Some said “poor man” and offered to give me a ride home. I refused—I could feel the enlightenment coursing through my body, cleansing it of its attachment to the foul garbage heap world.

Things came to a head when I told my girlfriend Molly that she had become shit to me. I was going to use that statement as an intro to the story of my progress toward enlightenment—her becoming shit to me was a milestone because I had been so attached to her. Molly didn’t give me a chance to get my story out of my mouth. She sprayed me in the face with a good dose of pepper spray. I had given it to her on her birthday for self-protection. While I was rolling around on the ground crying, she put her foot on my throat and yelled “If I’m shit, you’re a puddle of steaming vomit! Now I know why you shaved your head and started wearing orange robes. You’re a loser. You’ll never become enlightened by calling everything shit!” With that, she removed her foot from my throat and kicked me several times in the stomach.

I was starting to think my “shit” strategy wasn’t working. No matter how I tried to think of everything as shit, their reality leaked through. My dog Rip was still Rip no mater how many times I called him Shit. And Molly. My god, calling her shit was the biggest mistake of my life. I don’t think I’ll ever be able to make it up to her. It gave me an ache in my stomach.

My doorbell rang. It was Molly. She asked me if she was still shit. I said “No.” She forgave me. Her compassion restored my hope and taught me what it means to be enlightened.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Tasis

Tasis (ta’-sis): Sustaining the pronunciation of a word or phrase because of its pleasant sound. A figure apparent in delivery.


I was having a balll baby. Scrabble had captured my soul. My spelling was poor, so I never won. I played with my sister. She was in the sixth grade and knew a lot more words than me. It was something to do on Saturday nights.

I was in the ninth grade. I was called “differently abled.” At least I wasn’t slow, so it did not bother me. In my senior year of high school I suddenly became a genius. I don’t know what happened, but one morning I woke up and saw complex equations on the ceiling that I solved before I got out of bed. I had chicken embryos for breakfast and jumped on my four-wheeled lumber transport device and headed for the learning institution.

In history class, I recited an abridged version of the history of Long Island. My favorite part is when the Dutch are kicked out and sail back to Holland. After what they did with their tulips, they deserved it for wasting good farmland. In metal shop, I tore down and rebuilt a 1955 Ford v-8 engine. My teacher told me I could teach the class from now on. He couldn’t compete with my genius.

I learned French in one day and was awarded the school’s “French Prize.” It was an all expenses paid one week trip to Paris. Instead of going to Paris, I sold my plane ticket. The transfer fess were steep, but I still got away with $1,000.

I felt my genius fading. “Easy come, easy go” I said to myself—as I became my old self again, I couldn’t make good choices. I spent my thousand dollars on Jolly Ranchers at the “Sugar Hi” candy store across the street from school. It is a lifetime supply. They keep it for me, stored in the back room, and I go in once a month and have my candy bucket filled. It is a dream come true.

I would like to be a genius again someday and get more Jolly Ranchers—they make my bedroom smell sooo good! I’d like to learn how to set fires too!

I am back to playing Scrabble on Saturday nights with my sister. I am pretty good with three letter words: dog, hog, and, boo, con, car and so forth.

Anyway, life goes on. Nothing’s perfect. Sometimes life gives you lemons. I need to learn how to make lemonade.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Thaumasmus

Thaumasmus (thau-mas’-mus): To marvel at something rather than to state it in a matter of fact way.


Consider the bumblebee. It makes a buzzing sound. It circles around. I eats from flowers. It is nice to look at. It is a marvel to behold. Not quite a butterfly, but more than a mosquito. They don’t flutter. They don’t suck your blood and make you itch.

Bumblebees remind me of my grandmother who lives with us. She’s not an exact match, but she’s close enough. When she sleeps at night, or takes a nap in her chair, she makes a buzzing sound. Sometimes she sniffles, but most of the time she buzzes. It is a wonder to behold—Grandma sounds like an snoring insect!

Grandma eats from flowers too! Well actually, she drinks from flowers. She has a silver tulip cup that she was given by “John” when she worked in a hotel room in New Orleans back in the 60s. “John” would fill it with Southern Comfort and she would drink it down before they “bounced up and down” New Orleans style. “John” disappeared the day after his probation officer visited them and asked what they were doing. “John” was honest. Grandma said he was stupid. She lost $5.00 cash each week. But, another “John” soon came along. He was wealthy so he “donated” $8.00 per week to Grandma. It was like a windfall after the other “John.”

Around that time, pole dancing was invented. It paid $2.00 per hour. Grandma jumped at the chance to “dance” naked with a shiny silver pole. She wore only a rubber band on her wrist to hold the cash that patrons slipped her. Between her tips and wages she was able to buy a car. She rented it to tourists. Surprisingly it wasn’t stolen. That’s when Grandma met Mel. He owned a car wash called “Kleen Weels.” They fell in love and got married. That’s when my mother was born. Soon after, Mel was gunned down in the “Car Wash Wars.” Grandma raised my mom as a single parent.

Between Mel’s life insurance, the car rental business, and pole dancing the two of them were well off. My mom was home-tutored and went Tulane University where, in addition to her B.S. in engineering, she got a law degree.

Now, Grandma is a bag of wrinkles who’s headed for the last roundup. Every once-in-awhile she yells “Get your fu*kin’ hands offa me!” She frequently walks around the house naked asking “Where’s the fu*kin’ stage?” Sometimes she asks where “John” is—“He owes me five fu*kin’ dollars.”

Anyway, we love grandma. We don’t give a fu*k about her past.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Tmesis

Tmesis (tmee’-sis): Interjecting a word or phrase between parts of a compound word or between syllables of a word.


The strawberry ice friggin’ cream was Humpty bumpy Dumpty good. Maybe it fell off the wall! Maybe it had a great fall! It made my mouth drool. It could’ve been a sandwich, but it wasn’t. It could’ve been a cheeseburger. But it wasn’t. It was me thinking crazy thoughts, sitting by the window in my white room with blue curtains. There was an electrified fence encircling “Happy Niche” the big granite manor house that been converted to accommodate people like me—a pants-shitting howling psychopath who composed songs and tried to escape every three days, like clockwork.

My latest song was about a man who had decapitated his mother with the intention of eating her. Just as he was going to take a bite out of her thigh, the police showed up with a big net—like a giant butterfly net—and netted him. He shit his pants to try and fend them off, but they were wearing nose plugs. They moved in and netted him. The son’s refrain was “I want to eat my mother’s thigh, on rye, in the sky, bye, bye.” It makes me sob. It’s like the folk song “Hang Down Your Head Tom Dooley,” or “Fire and Rain.” The title of the song is “Yummy Mummy Dear.” I performed it at the “Happy Niche” talent show. I was booed during my entire performance and was beat up in the men’s room afterwards by a gang of five schizos and one bi-polar monster who stuck my head in a toilet, flushed it over and over, and spanked me.

Now, I really want today’s escape attempt to succeed! I have wrapped myself in toilet paper to mimic the white clothing the orderlies wear. I will boldly walk down the hallway to the exit door. If I am stopped, I will say I’m going outside for a cigarette. I have a cigarette prop that I paid fifty dollars for—it is a “Lucky Strike.”

I took two steps out of my door and an orderly asked me “What the hell are you doing?” I held up my cigarette and told him I was going outside for a smoke with the other orderlies. He took my cigarette away and told me to get back in my room or he would kill me.

Busted again! Un-fu*king real!

I am doomed to live my life out as an inmate in “Happy Niche.” I’m just going to shit my pants and go watch TV. Dean Martin reruns are on.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Topographia

Topographia (top-o-graf’-i-a): Description of a place. A kind of enargia [: {en-ar’-gi-a} generic name for a group of figures aiming at vivid, lively description].


It was cold and dark. It was my heart. It was a metaphor. I was unemotional and secretive. A cat got run over in the street right in front of me. I felt nothing, absolutely nothing. it was like I saw it, but I didn’t—blank, invisible, non-existent. I was unaffected and continued on my way to school. I told my biology teacher in a flat voice that I had seen a cat run over. He brightened up and smiled and asked me where. I told him and he took off leaving the class sitting on their stools at their work stations trying to figure out how to dissect their formaldehyde-soaked frogs. I cut my frog’s legs off and threw them at the blackboard.

Mr. Shed kept a dove in a cage in the classroom. It was named “Peace.” I let it out of its cage. It flew around in a panic. It flew into a closed window and broke its neck. That was the end of Peace. Some of my fellow students were crying. I felt nothing in my cold and dark heart. “Let’s cremate Peace!” I yelled. My fellow students cowered and whined, but they stayed to watch!

I fired up a Bunsen burner and gently laid Peace on the flame. His burning body smelled awful. So I extinguished him in the sink. That’s when Mr. Shed came back. He was carrying the mangled cat by the tail and threw it down on his desk. “What’s that smell?” He asked. The class said in unison “Peace, Mr. Shed.” I told him what had happened and he asked me if I had disposed of Peace properly. “Yes sir” I said, “He’s in a paper bag in the trashcan by the door.”

Mr. Shed told us to make sure the janitor took him away promptly. We all knew the janitor would probably eat him. He was scary. The way he held his squeegee made us feel like he wanted to decapitate us.

So much for my absent emotions. Like I said, I was secretive too. I wouldn’t tell people my name—not even a fake name. At most, I might use “Mr. X” to let them know politely that I didn’t want disclose my name. I knew if I told people my name I’d start getting spam in my email and getting spam phone calls. I NEVER gave out my address! Who wants strangers showing up at your front door to kill you? I don’t! I also wear disguises. My favorite is the Maytag repairman, followed by one of the Mario Brothers. When I’m in disguise I feel free—concealed beneath cloth and makeup. In some respects I feel like a movie actor. Maybe some day I’ll win an Oscar.

What’s best is my secret life. By day, I work at “Sudsy Fender Car Wash” as a finisher—using a rag to wipe off washed cars. At night, dressed as the Maytag repairman, I stand in a statue pose in front of Carnegie Hall. Almost everybody walks by not even noticing me. People who notice me usually say “What are you trying to prove?” Or, “Go home num nuts.”

Anyway, my life is complicated by my cold and dark heart—it is a place that is closed—like a refrigerator or an ice chest sitting at the North Pole. The are no Northern Lights, there are no sunrises, no Eskimos. There are just dreams frozen into nightmares and nightmares guiding my life.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Traductio

Traductio (tra-duk’-ti-o): Repeating the same word variously throughout a sentence or thought. Some authorities restrict traductio further to mean repeating the same word but with a different meaning (see ploceantanaclasis, and diaphora), or in a different form (polyptoton). If the repeated word occurs in parallel fashion at the beginnings of phrases or clauses, it becomes anaphora; at the endings of phrases or clauses, epistrophe.


I was vicious. Vicious. Vicious, vicious, vicious. I was like a flesh and blood machine gun. Vicious! I would mow you down on full automatic making you into a stain on the sidewalk with my fists and my feet.

I was so tough that people with poor dental hygiene would run when they saw me coming—if they tried to chew me up they’d lose their teeth. I was like a combat boot made of kangaroo skin that you couldn’t drive a nail through—ready for war. Vicious!

I had the killer instinct sitting on my soul keeping it conscience-free, without regrets, scrubbed off memories, vicious. While everybody else was feeling guilty, I was feeling nothing, except maybe, a desire to wash the blood of my hands, or clean my knife blade, or reload my shotgun. My little brother called me a psychopath. He was right, so I killed him when we were deer hunting. POW! One big .12 gauge slug to the head and I proved him right. I felt good about that. Even though he had powder burns on his forehead, his death was judged as a hunting accident. Vicious! Ha ha.

When I killed my sister’s pet mice and baked them in the oven, everything caught up with me. Initially, I laughed that I hadn’t seasoned her mice with garlic sauce or made a Caesar salad to go with them. That’s when the shit hit the fan. My mother heard me and called “Balmy Days Psychiatric Institution.” When the orderlies showed up, I was chewing on a mouse. Its tail was hanging out of my mouth. One of the orderlies said “Spit it out.” I promptly swallowed it and laughed my vicious laugh. They strapped me to what is called a “Hannibal Board” and carried me to the waiting ambulance. They turned on the sirens and off we went. I loved it!

Now, I am heavily medicated. I am no longer vicious. Now, I am charitable. I am kind and generous and I don’t have bizarre desires any more, although the roaches on the walls make my mouth water, but, they’re too fast for me to catch. When my sister comes to visit, she brings me little sandwiches shaped like mice. We both think it’s funny. That’s not a good sign.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Tricolon

Tricolon (tri-co-lon): Three parallel elements of the same length occurring together in a series.


I was cold. I was hungry. I was snide. I think I was cold and hungry because I was snide. I was banned from the Salvation Army thrift store because of what I said to one of the employees. I said “It’s gonna take an army to save you—maybe more than an army! You should be a POW in the war on titanic losers.”

I thought I was being funny with a little Salvation Army humor. The employee didn’t agree. She tried to gouge out my eye with a coat hanger. She failed and I was banned. I couldn’t buy a coat and I was freezing my ass off. So, I went to the coat check at a local roller skating rink and said my name was John Smith and that I had misplaced my coat check ticket. The woman running the coat check service invited me behind the counter to find my coat. I found “my” coat—a black cashmere overcoat. I would have rather had something from LL Bean, but the overcoat would do.

I was no longer freezing my ass off, so I decided to get something to eat at “Poshy’s.” It was a very expensive steak house. I was seated. The guy seated at the table next to me was eating a Porterhouse steak the size of a doormat. It must must’ve been a $125 piece of meat. I said to hm “Hey numnuts! Is that your mother’s ass you’re eating? It sure looks like it! I’ve got her underpants over here.”

He totally flipped out. He stood up and hurled the steak at me. It hit me in the face, and I grabbed it as it slid into my lap. I ran out the restaurant’s door clutching the steak. I sat down by a dumpster and gobbled it up. My gambit at “Poshy’s” had probably gone beyond snide, but I had scored a delicious steak by inducing out-of-control anger with what I said.

The coat will probably last me for the winter, but eating every day is something else. It is horrible, but I’ve started hijacking shopping carts outside the supermarket from people who’ve finished their shopping and are headed back to their cars. I lurk behind a parked car and pop up pointing a toy .45 and say “Stick ‘em up!” Often, I have to explain what I mean. Once they let go of the cart, I grab it and run like hell behind the supermarket where I transfer what I want to my red wagon. I have a stuffed teddy bear. I put “Teddy” in the wagon on top of the groceries for camouflage.

So far so good. I’ve made it home to the bridge underpass unscathed every time. I have a grill and rickety picnic table. It’s not bad. If it wasn’t for my snidely ways, I could probably go home. But, two months ago, my wife had come after me with a carving knife barely missing my throat as I turned and ran out the door. She had warned me that she was going to kill me if I didn’t stop with the snide comments. I thought she was joking. I had yelled over my shoulder “What, do you think you’re Mack The Knife?” as I bolted out the door. That’s when she threw the knife. It stuck in my left ass cheek. I left it there and ran to “Stitch Wishery” the local free clinic. They took care of me and I’ve been a free agent ever since.

POSTSCRIPT

Our narrator was run over and killed by one of his robbery victims in the supermarket parking lot. When his wife identified him at the morgue, she sprayed bear repellent in his face to make sure he was dead. He was dead. Now she rejoiced. It was good.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Abating

Abating: English term for anesis: adding a concluding sentence that diminishes the effect of what has been said previously. The opposite of epitasis (the addition of a concluding sentence that merely emphasizes what has already been stated. A kind of amplification).


Spence was one of the smartest people I knew, but he smelled strongly of Brussels Sprouts and rotten eggs. It was bizarre. He had invented a new kind of glue—“Loopy Glue.” He put a drop on the roof of a Cadillac and lowered a junkyard magnet (turned off) to the roof. Then, he lifted the car ten feet into the air, using only “Loopy Glue.” The only problem was if you got the glue on your fingers they would be permanently glued together. Loopy Glue came with gloves, but if you didn’t wear them, woe unto you.

His second greatest accomplishment was genetically modified watermelons. At 6 tons, they were organic whoppers. Hollowed out, they made housing suitable for poor people. The watermelons’ rinds were engineered to last a lifetime. There is a watermelon housing tract near where I live. It is named “Meadowbridge Melon Park.” All the melon homes look exactly alike. That causes problems when residents come home drunk, or are suffering from the beginning stages of dementia, and go to the wrong house. But, there’s only been one death due to mistaken identity, and it was spousal. So, it was written off as “familial woes” and forgotten.

Now, Spence is working on something he calls “Brown Tooth.” It is a wireless suppository that monitors your colon. It transmits information on your “Fart Watch,” a mechanism you wear on your wrist that is humorously named for the flatulence that, among other things, your “Brown Tooth” monitors.

In addition to sounds, the “Brown Tooth” live streams rectal imagery to the “Fart Watch.” It comes with a booklet explaining the streamed images for the purpose of self-diagnosis. The major down-side to “Brown Tooth” is charging it. You have to wind the charger’s wire around your finger and probe around until you find the Brown Tooth’s charging socket. If you don’t mind paying extra, you will be able to get a charger with a tiny camera and light. Even though it will cost extra, it is far superior to poking blind.

Someday, Spence will surely hit it big. So far, the only real success he’s had are his origami chopstick rests. They come in an envelope on the table prior to the meal. The customer removes the unfolded origami from the envelope and following the instructions on the back of the envelope, folds the paper into a swan that the she or he can rest their chopsticks on. Recently, there has been a spin-off. The envelopes have been made into tags for gifts—the origami is an additional “surprise” in the envelope/tag. It remains to be seen how successful this will be. Maybe, if the tag has a discount coupon inside, it will become popular.

Anyway, even though he literally smells how hell probably smells, it is amazing to have Spence as a friend. If he didn’t stink, he would be the perfect buddy.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Abbaser

Abbaser [George] Puttenham’s English term for tapinosis. Also equivalent to meiosis: reference to something with a name disproportionately lesser than its nature (a kind of litotes: deliberate understatement, especially when expressing a thought by denying its opposite)


“That cow is no weasel. That boiling kettle is no tray of ice cubes. You knew when you married me that I’m no faithful Boring Bob.” I was leading up to the end, from the weasel to Bob. We’d been married for two weeks and already I wanted out. Why?

She was irresponsible. She bought a used Toyota with our credit card. We had sworn to use bicycles for transportation. She complained because her job at the “Twirly” yo-yo factory was five miles from where we lived. What a joke. My job at the “Blessed Light” candle factory was 32 miles. I left for work at 3:00 a.m. every morning. I was only late once in my entire career. I had a sneezing fit on my bike and veered over a cliff. It was a fifty-foot drop. I broke my wrist.

Now that she’s in open rebellion with the Toyota, I’ve got to get her out of my life. If she won’t go gently, I’ll have to push her, and push her hard. I’m a man. She’s a woman. Get it?

I told her I was leaving. She asked me what had taken me so long, as if two weeks was a year, or something. I told her that initially I hadn’t seen how bossy she is and unwilling to follow most of my orders. I told her to paint our house. She said “No.” I told her to build bookcases in the living room. She said “No.” I told her to go kill us a deer for dinner. She said “No.” The list goes on. The tipping point was when she refused to watch my favorite TV show—“Gerry: Red Wing Goalie.” It is the most popular TV show here in Canada and it is on every night. It follows Gerry—his injuries, his battles with his seven former wives and his run ins with the Mounties for drunkenness, shoplifting, and murder. My favorite episode was when Gerry got dental implants. They showed the whole operation, right down to screwing in Gerry’s new teeth!

So, I sat there alone on the couch, cursing my wife in my head. She came down the stairs with two suitcases. She told me she was going to Joe’s. She said marrying me was a gigantic mistake, that she had loved Joe all along. It wouldn’t have been so bad if Joe wasn’t my older brother. He had been doing stuff like this to me all our lives. It started with him stealing my turtle, Perky. Now, he was stealing my wife, Lynette.

I got a lawyer. We couldn’t find any dirt oh her to establish infidelity as the grounds of divorce and save me a lot of money. But I was a different story. I’m in a video on the internet that is legend after only a week. It has over 1,000,000 hits. Without going into detail, I’m under a pile of 27 naked women singing “Are you lonesome tonight?” Since I got paid to do it, I don’t consider it infidelity, but I was married at the time, so there may be a problem.

Well, “Gerry: Red Wing Goalie” is coming on in five minutes. Tonight, he gets impaled on a hockey stick.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Abecedarian

Abecedarian (a-be-ce-da’-ri-an): An acrostic whose letters do not spell a word but follow the order (more or less) of the alphabet.


“A bubble colored dusk etched flowers growing hellish incidents.” I tried my best to to come up with a witty and profound abecedarian—an acrostic whose letters follow the order of the alphabet, assigned for my creative writing course. Instead, I came up with something vapid and shitty.

This creative writing class sucked. Professor “Muse” Mometer was a self-absorbed lout who thought he was God’s gift to the creative writing world. Ever since he told me I should write my poetry on toilet paper where it belonged, I wanted to do something, short of murder, to hurt him like he hurt me. The course was required in my degree program or I would’ve dropped it and gone back to living a normal life—without the hurt and humiliation.

I decided to insult him like he insulted me. I enlisted my girlfriend Barbara to stand by me and say “Yeah!” to each of my insults. For starters, he was reading one his poems to the class: “Carbon Nostril.” I yelled “That stinks!” and Barbara yelled “Yeah!” He couldn’t see who it was because his head was bowed while he was reading. He ignored me and Barbara, acting like he didn’t care. I made an appointment to see him. Barbara came with me. I sat down and yelled “That stinks! You stink! You can’t write worth a shit!” and Barbara yelled “Yeah!”

He said “Your mother’s a whore! You fu*king asshole.” I already knew that. I’d been grappling with it for years. Dad was addicted to “Smith Brothers Cough Drops,” so he was good for nothing—he laid on the couch with his breath smelling like cherrie’s and cough drop boxes littering the floor. Mom was all we had. She took wonderful care of us—fed us, clothed us, made sure we got to school. As a tribute to Mom’s loving care, my brother Eddy opened his own donut shop and was quite successful. My favorite donut was the “Sistine” modeled after the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican—God’s hand was holding a jelly donut—painted in icing on the donut’s underside.

After what he said, I wanted to really hurt him. Although it was true about my mother, he was way out of bounds saying it.

He had a cat named “Tick-Tock” that he talked about all the time. Clearly he was attached to the cat. It would hurt him to lose it. He let Tick-Tock out every day at 5:00. I kidnapped him and took him home. I renamed him Botox. Prof. Mometer was heartbroken to lose his cat. He cried in class when he talked about the cat—begging us for information. Every light pole for miles around had a “lost cat” poster on it. That was two years ago.

Mom’s still a whore and Botox is a wonderful cat. Prof. Mometer is an unpleasant memory. Barbara and I are still together—a boring couple—ha ha.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Accismus

Accismus (ak-iz’-mus): A feigned refusal of that which is earnestly desired.


A billion dollars. It will make me sick—all that wealth will make me into a hippo with heart disease and pimples. I will die on a concrete floor—cold, wet, writhing with pain until “boom” my diseased heart explodes like a hand grenade in my chest. All the result of unremitting luxury borne on dollar bills—as many as I want, when I want them.

Consumption is my job, my life’s work—to spend, to buy, to possess for the sake of owning—not because I want it or need it, but because I can have it. I have three warehouses filled with crap. I own 600 hula hoops. I own 200 refrigerators. I own 1100 Roy Rogers cap pistols. I own 103,000 Rubic’s Cubes. 850 Pet Rocks. 8,000 pairs of leg warmers. 500,000 Mood Rings. 1,000,000 Pokémon Cards. 92,000 Beanie Babies. 200 Furby Toys. This is just the start.

My collecting spans the spectrum of the material world. I have ride mowers. I have jars of pickles. I have batteries. I have mayonnaise. I have extension chords. I have band aids. I have church bells. I have cologne. I have fingernails. This is where things go dark. I pay women to extract their index finger fingernails.

I have found that paying people the “right amount” of money will get you what you want. The fingernails usually cost around $5,000. The whole finger is a bit more expensive, clocking in at $8,000. After that, body parts get real expensive (not for me, but for the average person). For example, I can usually pick up a penis for $500,000. You’d think it would be even more expensive!

What’s the most expensive body part, you ask. Not the eyes or tongue or ears! Not the limbs! It’s the ass! Yes, the ass! Very few people are willing to donate their ass for any amount of money. Think about all the time you spend on your ass—at least 2/3 of your life. Without an ass you need to sit on a slab of silicone. It is hard to attract a mate—you’ll never hear “nice ass” again. The catcalls will dry up leaving you bereft of self confidence—you may purchase a prosthetic ass and go through life as an ass-imposter, being ridiculed when you bare your rubber butt. That’s why an ass costs a minimum of $1,000.000.

I only have one ass in my collection—it includes both cheeks. It was harvested for me by an addict surgeon in Atlantic City, New Jersey. I had trouble scoring him enough cocaine to do the job. Luckily, I knew some Venezuelan gangsters who could do the job. They had just docked in their six-engined speed boats, ready to deal. I filled my car’s trunk with coke and took off with my “patient” to Dr. Slitski’s. I dropped off my patient and 200 pounds of cocaine. Everything went well. I freeze dried the man’s ass and it is displayed in Warehouse Number Two in a glass showcase.

My collecting obsession is a disease—some kind of mental illness. I really don’t want to be doing it, but I can’t help it.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.

Acervatio

Acervatio (ak-er-va’-ti-o): Latin term Quintilian employs for both asyndeton (acervatio dissoluta: a loose heap) and polysyndeton (acervatio iuncta:a conjoined heap).


My truck spun around in circles—slipping and sliding and screeching and jumping, and flipping over. I was hanging from my seat belt freezing my ass off when there was a knocking on my window. I couldn’t see anything, but I could hear the knocking. Then I saw it. It was a big black crow pecking on my window. It flew away.

Luckily I had a “survival knife” I had bought on the internet a couple of weeks ago. I struggled for a half-hour to get it out of my pocket. It had an emergency seatbelt cutting blade. The blade had a “v” notch that you put around the belt and pulled. That’s what I did. My knife sliced right through the belt and I fell, slamming hard into the truck’s ceiling, breaking the overhead light and embedding pieces of the lens in my head, and hurting my neck too. I was bleeding and in severe pain.

I reached down to the door handle to get the hell out of the truck. I could smell gasoline and was fearful I would be going up in flames soon. The driver’s side door wouldn’t open, neither would the passenger side. My knife had a glass-breaking tool. I banged it on the window and nothing happened. I kicked the window and nothing happened. That’s when the crow showed up again. He pecked the window hard, just once, and it shattered. I swear I could hear him say “Loser, loser, loser” as he flew away.

I wrote it all off to panic hallucinations—that my glass breaking knife blade had somehow done the job and then I passed out or something.

I had an illegal handgun in my glove compartment. When the cops came they searched my truck before they would permit it to be towed away. I saw one of them reach in the glove compartment. He said, “What’s this?” I was screwed. He held up a crow’s feather.


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

The Daily Trope is available in an early edition 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.