- The Most Dangerous Flame
- Grape Expectations
- Scents and Sensibility
- Two Gentlemen of Aroma
- Fahrenheit 1832 (The Temperature at which Candles Burn)
Monday, June 14, 2010
Five Names for Candles that are Literary Allusions
Saturday, November 14, 2009
Your Celebrity Birthday for 11/14/09
Friday, November 13, 2009
Mind the Gap (or, How I Spent my Web-Log’s Hiatus)
As anyone with a cursory knowledge of the Gregorian calendar can probably figure out, it has been roughly two-and-a-half months since I’ve last updated this volume. It is inexcusable for someone, even someone with as many fascinating side projects as myself, to neglect a responsibility like the one I have to my many devoted readers. Therefore, I feel some explanation is in order and so offer this list of some of the things I've been up to that kept me from writing here.
- Working on my adaptation of the musical Annie into a slightly different musical, also called “Annie."
- Hiking the entire distance of Sherman’s march to the sea, followed by my less than successful capture of the city of Savannah, Georgia.
- Composing palindromatic entries for my other web-log, Backwords.
- Backing up the files on my computer by hand-transcribing their contents, bit by bit, onto sheets of paper.
- Developing strategies to profit by monetizing this web-log or, barring that, somebody else's.
- Fielding the substantial quantities of mail asking why I had stopped updating.
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Keeping Up (With My) Appearances
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
Your Tiny Crossword for the Day

Monday, August 3, 2009
The Six Stages of Bonsai Fanaticism
Bonsai, literally translated from the Japanese as “tray planting,” is the ancient art of growing trees in shallow pots, maintaining them so they never develop beyond miniature scale. Bonsai has now become a popular hobby among many in the West, and although it seems like an innocent enough venture, Bonsai fanaticism has a potentially dangerous dark side. If you know someone interested in growing bonsai trees, read this guide to the hobby’s eventual progression, so you can step in before it’s too late.
The process begins simply enough when the bonsai enthusiast decides to cultivate a bonsai tree. He researches the proper care and maintenance, learning the methods of pruning and shaping to achieve a proper bonsai tree. He finds that bonsai trees require an inordinate amount of care and he will lavish that care. To his delight, his tree develops beautifully, developing tiny leaves and bark.
However, that will soon not be enough. His hobby moves into its second stage when he decides that he must have multiple bonsai trees. He sends out for seeds and clippings from other trees to plant in his bonsai trays. He plants coniferous and deciduous trees—trees from across the world and from down the street. He plants an entire grove of miniature bonsai fruit trees, approaching the limits of his small apartment.
Now begins the third stage, as the enthusiast begins to clear space in his apartment by slowly selling off his furniture. He begins to set his bonsai trees out across the apartment floor, creating a forest beneath his feet. His preference for small versions of things will become all the more obvious when he purchases dollhouses to build in the clearings. He then lays out a layer of soil and peat across his apartment floor, only a few inches deep. He plants his trees in this shallow layer of earth and covers his walls and ceiling with a mural of the sky.
Having created a miniature domain, the bonsai enthusiast will naturally seek to populate it, in the fourth stage. Although many different types of small animals could be used—hermit crabs, small lizards, frogs—he most likely chooses mice. Having acquired a dozen or so mice, the enthusiast then retreats back into his apartment biome, turning his back on civilization. His journeys into the outside world will decrease in length and frequency at this time, until they stop completely.
At this point, the fifth stage, the enthusiast’s entire focus is on maintaining his diminutive ecosystem. The mice, clever creatures that they are, are soon trained to reside in the dollhouses and harvest the tiny bonsai fruit. Free from natural predators, the mice flourish and civilize. They develop primitive communication and begin to regard the bonsai enthusiast as a sort of god. They praise him and offer sacrifices to him, which he takes and eats, residing on his bed and surveying his creation.
In the sixth stage, the bonsai enthusiast has contented himself with sitting and watching as the world he has set in motion slowly unfolds. The mice, having worked out their own systems of agriculture, are now in charge of maintaining the forests. They have progressed extraordinarily as a culture, producing great works of art and writing. Some of the writers begin questioning the existence of the giant man whom they have been worshiping. The enthusiast wishes to remind them that he is so close at hand, but he has become disconnected and is afraid of upsetting their society’s balance. As their collective memories of the enthusiast blur, the mice search for meaning in everything they do. One mouse decides that he will content himself with some sort of personal pursuit. He takes a few clippings from one of the trees and plants them in a shallow pot, carefully pruning and shaping his creation—a miniature tree.
Sunday, August 2, 2009
Lesser Used Internet Acronyms
- CWATC - Chuckling Wryly at That Comment
- AMTRSIM - Allow Me to Repeat Some Internet Meme
- TWAF - That Wasn't Actually Funny
- TASS - Typing in Acronyms to Save Space
- WTGAN - Writing the Great American Novel
- EAFOL - Erecting a Façade of Laughter
- WWTRLLIITOIA - Wondering What the Reasonable Length Limit is in Terms of Internet Acronyms
Saturday, August 1, 2009
Free Style: On the Subject of Neckties





Thursday, July 30, 2009
Upcoming Presidential Summits
- September 7, 2009 - Labor Day Barbecue Summit
- October 3, 2009 - Dinner-and-a-Movie Anniversary Summit with First Lady Michelle Obama
- December 25, 2009 - Obama Family Christmas Summit
- February 7, 2010 - Super Bowl Party Summit
- March 7, 2010 - Academy Awards Watch Party Summit
- June 25 - 27, 2010 - Annual G8 Leaders Summit
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Three Alternative Proposals for Health Care Reform
As Congress is currently negotiating major health care reform legislation, I felt obligated to weigh in on this contentious political topic. Although there is wide consensus that reform is needed, the details of that reform are fiercely debated. How drastic should this change be? Should health coverage be federally mandated? What role should employers pay in providing coverage? How would public health care be funded?
Of course for all the discussion of the different ideas being considered, attention should also be paid to the ideas and proposals left out of the debate. The following are three of these proposals.
- Each American is required to spend three years studying a specific area of medicine. In this time, each person is able to cultivate a tiny amount of medical expertise, which they can offer to their friends or family. Because each person is knowledgeable in a different area, an informal barter system develops as people trade their services. For future reference, I would study dentistry.
- Health care funding is transferred to the Department of Defense, supporting programs focused on helping people slowly develop immunities to all manner of diseases. These diseases are then weaponized and stored in top-secret facilities, where they can be used to defend the Earth from the hordes of extraterrestrial invaders we inevitably face.
- The Department of Health and Human Services undertakes a $245 million media campaign convincing Americans that “if it hurts when you do it, don’t do it.” This is followed up by federal funding specifically allocated for the purchase and distribution of chicken soup to the ill and an Executive Order establishing the President’s Task Force on Making Sure You Get Some Rest.