Department Of Can It Already Be Day Six Of AEDD?
AEDD. No, it’s not some type of learning disability…you could think of it as a culinary learning (or experimentation) opportunity.
It stands for Asparagus Every Damn Day ® . To honor both the impending arrival of Spring and my love for asparagus, I challenge moiself to cook and/or eat asparagus, in some form, every damn day of March. Last year I had some favorites creations; mostly, I defaulted to what’s-easy-but-I-still-love-it (e.g., oven roasted lemon garlic asparagus spears, creamy [1] asparagus and green pea soup….).
Gird your proverbial loins and let the wild rumpus begin.

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Department Of My Favorite Blast From The Past
Were I asked by Someone to come up with an example of carefree bliss, I would show that Someone this picture.
Moiself, son K and daughter Belle (and Mt. Neahkahnie in the background), on Manzanita beach, circa…two decades ago. Picture taken by MH, existential protection provided by Mt. Neahkahnie.
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Department Of Asshat Tag Line Of The Year [2]
Dateline: last Friday; driving to the Oregon coast, listening to one of my science podcasts. At the end of the podcast there is an advertisement from one of the podcast’s sponsors. The ad is for…some kind of service having to do with manicures. Repeated at least three times during the ad is the service’s enticement/slogan, something about how “…we all deserve to have perfect nails.”
And I find moiself thinking, do these people understand the target audience of this podcast? And how can the proverbial we all – or just moiself – deserve anything having to do with our fingernails? And is it deserve as in, how we all deserve basic human rights and to be treated with dignity (and not harassed about our less-than-perfect nails)? And what, exactly, constitutes perfect nails? And is there a committee, a governing board, which establishes and oversees such a standard of perfection?
And the sheer inanity of this ad is provoking way too many, And and and and questions – which made me want to (should moiself be offered a free sample of the product) take whatever was being advertised and heave it off the rim of the Grand Canyon. [3]
Important Note To The Advertising Industry, whether large scale Commercial/Industrial And/Or Small Business Owners: Struck as I was by the astounding vacuousness of the ad’s tag line, I can’t tell you what service it was for. Which is the ultimate failure of an advertisement, the very purpose of which is to get you to want (or at least remember the name of) the product.
I’m assuming these were not the top choice of the Fingernail Perfection Police.
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Speaking Of Mormons…
…which I was, two weeks back ( 2-20-26, The Documentary I’m Not Inspired By, re the Elizabeth Smart kidnapping documentary)….
Department Of And Now Some Words About Witnessing
Relax; it’s a story about Porch Proselytizing®. There will not be pamphlets left on your front doorstep. [4]
The prompt for this story is…moiself saw an article online having to do with someone complaining about having to shoo Porch Preachers away from their front door.
The above is the sign I made and had laminated 10+ years ago, a larger version of which is on our front porch below our doorbell. The sign, in my estimate, keeps ~98% of solicitors away. Before I did the rewording I had another sign up, a cartoon illustrating how we do not want solicitors, but – surprise ! –there was always a Someone who thought it didn’t apply to him. When moiself answered the doorbell, realized who the stranger was on my porch/what he was up to, and pointed toward our no soliciting sign, that Someone would say, “Oh, I’m not *selling* anything. I have good news that’s free…”
Even before the signage, religious solicitors – Mormon “Elders” [5] in particular – left skid marks getting away from my porch, after I’d engaged them and they realized What Kind Of Uppity Woman They Were Dealing With ®.
What used to surprise moiself, about the solicitors I personally encountered as well as those I’d known over the years who’d engaged in such activities, was their seeming befuddlement re overwhelmingly receiving less-than-hospitable reactions from those whom they sought to evangelize. I had to wonder: from Jehovah’s Witnesses to Mormons to Evangelicals, in their witnessing training, was there not even a smidgen of attention paid to the basic human psychology behind someone not in *your* group being presented with *your* group’s message, with no request from them for your thoughts and/or opinions?
Was there no mention of the reality that it is highly likely that what you are indoctrinated trained to think of as informative/friendly/useful information, will be seen by others as presumptuous? And that’s because it *is* presumptuous. A friendly demeanor and/or beatific smile on your face does not dilute the ultimate cluelessness and arrogance of your mission: you are approaching a stranger, unsolicited by her, knowing nothing about her save for the (likely [6] ) fact that she does not share your spiritual worldview, which therefore in your worldview means her worldview is deficient…and you think you can (and even should) enlighten her!
I bet she can’t wait to hear the good news from white boys wearing even whiter shirts!
I remember seeing and hearing my mother deal with the Mormon “Elders” ( nine out of ten of the proselytizers we got were Mormon ) who would, every couple of months or so, ring the doorbell of our Santa Ana home. First off, no one who knew our family came to our front door (when I was a young child I didn’t even know if our front door “worked,” or if it was just for show). We all entered and left the house, along with our friends and neighbors, via our side door or backyard door. Thus, when there was a ring/knock at the front door we knew it was from a stranger; i.e., someone who didn’t know us. This Someone, experience taught us, most likely wanted to sell us something, and would ask to speak to “the adult of the house,” so I and my siblings would call for our mother to answer the front door. But I liked to lurk in the background, to…watch.
My mother would never confront the Porch Preachers, despite my advice that she should tell them the truth ( that you think they’re whack-doodles ) and not waste anymore of your or their time. But Mom came of age in the 1950s, meaning she was raised to be a Nice Woman®. She would listen to their opening spiel, then give her standard, gentle-but-firm, “No thank you; we have our own religion,” response, and wish them a nice day while she gently shut the door.
There was one exception (that I know of) to my mother’s unperturbable niceness with solicitors. This happened during a weekday, the summer before I entered eighth grade. A pair of Elders knocked on our front door. I heard the customary/brief exchange between my mother and the elders, then noticed it was going on longer than usual at the front porch. I was surprised to hear the rising pitch of a young male voice, followed by my mother sputtering, “Blasphemy!” before slamming the door.
After commending her display of backbone, I asked what they had said to her. Instead of simply accepting her brushoff, that pair of snot-nosed albinos [7] didn’t do what they should have done at that point – thank her for her time, apologize for disturbing her, and get the fuck off her property. [8] Instead, one of them challenged her. Yes, you may have your own religion, the cadaverously pale, just-past-post-adolescent pompous primnose [9] preached to a woman twice his age, but only *our* faith has the “true revealed truth“ (I can’t remember the verbatim exchange, but I remember that phrase, and how I’d guffawed at the redundancy).
“Yes, God is beyond our understanding…but let me tell you about him….”
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Department Of And Now For Something (Not So) Completely Different
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Freethinkers’ Thought Of The Week [10]
( excerpt a scene from the movie The Big Kahuna. Three industrial lubricant salesmen, Larry, Phil, and the evangelical Christian Bob, are at a convention in Wichita. In this incisive scene, Phil is speaking to Bob, emphases mine.)
“You preaching Jesus is no different than Larry, or anybody else, preaching lubricants. It doesn’t matter whether you’re selling Jesus or Buddha, or civil rights, or how to make money in real estate with no money down. That doesn’t make you a human being. It makes you a marketing rep.
If you want to talk to somebody honestly, as a human being, ask him about his kids, find out what his dreams are — just to find out — for no other reason. Because as soon as you lay your hands on a conversation, to steer it, it’s not a conversation anymore — it’s a pitch — and you’re not a human being. You’re a marketing rep.”
Or perhaps you prefer the wisdom of *this*Big Kahuna (on the far right) from the world of Gidget surfer-movies.
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May we all have our own favorite example of bliss;
May you never give a thought to the quality of anyone’s fingernails;
May you enjoy all that damn asparagus;
…and may the hijinks ensue.
Thanks for stopping by. Au Vendredi!
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[1] Yet, without cream. Yep, it’s those dastardly plant-based cooking tricks….
[2] Or more…the century is young.
[3] Please do not take this as any form of encouragement to litter in our beautiful national parks.
[4] At least, not metaphorically, from moiself. Who knows what happens in *your* neighborhood?
[5] I just love that title, once reserved for revered people of great age and wisdom in the community, now doled out by the LDS to pimply-faced boys who get the respected title simply by being a male age 18 and up, while a kick ass, grown-ass woman like moiself who is twice their age could never be an Elder in their world.
[6] It’s more than a likely fact, if you are a Mormon missionary. Mormon missionaries are given a list in the neighborhoods they canvas; they don’t waste time showing up at the houses of other Mormons. They know whether or you are not Mormon, because they are given that info by the local Mormon church. Unlike other brands of Christianity, if you are Mormon you do not go to whatever LDS church you like, you go to a certain church – “chapel” – that has a specific geographical area assigned as “their area.” If you live in that geographical area, you are supposed to go to services at that chapel, and your address is noted.
[7] You’ve never seen how white the white boys can be until Mormon missionaries come to your doorstep. I used to think they were selectively bred for their lack of melanin.
[8] I probably don’t need to explain that that was *my* 12-year-old-smartass’s interpretation of their responsibilities as uninvited solicitors, and not my mother’s thoughts.
[9] Yeah, I made that up. But, you know, right?
[10] “free-think-er n. A person who forms opinions about religion on the basis of reason, independently of tradition, authority, or established belief. Freethinkers include atheists, agnostics and rationalists. No one can be a freethinker who demands conformity to a bible, creed, or messiah. To the freethinker, revelation and faith are invalid, and orthodoxy is no guarantee of truth.” Definition courtesy of the Freedom From Religion Foundation, ffrf.org