Word Game Warriors

There is no game like Scrabble to bring out the worst in human nature. Grown men and women, otherwise civilized in their day-to-day lives, turn suddenly to anti-social behavior as soon as they sit down in front of the board for the popular word game. I have no idea why this is so, unless it’s possible other players realize they have to take extraordinary measures if they ever want to win a game against such skillful opponents as I.

The bending of the proper procedures begins at the very outset of the game and continues from there on. Whoever owns the game keeps the lid of the box it came in and on the inside of which the official rules of the game are printed, under his chair so other players can’t have access to it. When they ask where it is, he feigns loss of memory and can’t for the life of him think where he put it. Then he proceeds to pronounce his version of the rules and they all, strangely enough, favour him.

“Ah, the player sitting directly to the east of the player wearing the most red-coloured clothing and who is nearest to the closest open door in the room and who may or may not be wearing a turtleneck sweater on the front of which his or her initials may or may not be sewn, begins playing first.”

Strangely enough, he is that person and so, he begins.

“Ah, the player who begins the game is given a bonus 50 points plus half of the points each of his opponents accumulates in the first round of play plus an extra two points for every letter he uses and another 20 points if he manages to get rid of the letter Z in his first word and …” This goes on for 10 minutes or so and then the fella who started counts everything up and writes down his score – 210 – for the first word of the game which is “zany.”

Not to be outdone, the player to the immediate left of the player who started the game, then asks if she might be allowed to look in the dictionary to check a word she is thinking of using and when the man with the rules under his chair figures it would be okay (even though it isn’t) she grabs the book ravenously and begins leafing through the Q section, trying to find any and all words that can be formed with the letters QZWTINP. Protests from proper rule-conscious players are ignored. Finally, the word “pint” goes on the board. Seven points.

A third player, decides God will inspire him with the perfect word which will allow him to use up all seven letters on his tray and thus collect a bonus 50 points if he sits still long enough staring at them. And so he sits. And sits. And stares at the board. And sits. Other impatient players protest the time he is taking but that just delays the forming of the inevitable three-letter, five-point word which he will eventually lay down in front of him. Finally, “fit” is placed carefully on the board and proudly, as if it was the most complicated word in the English language.

Squabbles ensue over the proper methods of counting and these continue throughout the game.

“If a word is formed on the tail end of another word the player who forms it gets a bonus 25 points plus 20 points for each letter he uses and triple the score on each double letter square a letter lands on plus …”

Ten minutes later, that player writes down 185 points for the word, “caveman.”

But all this is small time crime compared to the words that adult men and women will try to pass off on their opponents and which they’ll defend almost to the point of resorting to violence.

“Dramble?” you exclaim. “What the heck’s a dramble?”

“A dramble’s not a thing,” says the person who created it. “It’s an action.”

“An action? What the heck are you doing if you dramble?”

“You know. To dramble is to pick up a big thorny stick and run yelling down a hill after a wild dog in an effort to chase him away from your sheep.”

“Oh ya? Well what is it called when you pick up a big thorny stick and run yelling down a hill after a wild Scrabble player who keeps thinking up words that don’t exist?”

Other exchanges such as this – and even uglier ones – follow the attempts by players to get away with the words “croozle, flammy and poptil.”

And we wonder why there are wars.

(Wars – that’s 12 points. I win.)

©1989 Jim Hagarty

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The Economy Of Cowpies

In these troubled economic times, who wouldn’t like to come up with a great idea which could cure a lot of the nation’s ills, especially those of our hard-pressed farmers?

I know I would.

In fact, I think I have.

In Malaysia, people looking for a high who are facing a supply shortage of heroin and cannabis have taken to sniffing fresh cow dung.

“They will wait for the fresh cow dung and quickly put a coconut shell over it, and then sniff the gas through the hole on top of the shell,” the country’s deputy home minister told a conference on drug abuse recently in Kuala Lumpur.

“You may find the cow dung smelly and awful but for them it is heaven,” he said.

Now, to us as Canadians, spending our time hanging around barnyards, waiting for cattle to lay their cowpies on the ground so that we can pounce on them with coconut shells has never yet occurred to us as a great way to have fun. But, hey. Each to his own. It isn’t our place to judge.

In some countries they eat cats and dogs for supper and think they’re great. We dress them up in ribbons and call them Miffy and Muffy and Sam.

In fact, maybe we’re missing the boat altogether on this one. How many of us, who reject outright the idea of sniffing cow dung for pleasure, have ever actually spent much time in the presence of the product? (Actually, as a boy on the farm, I did spend many hours around the stuff and now that I look back, I realize how much I enjoyed being in the barn.)

Perhaps what we need to do in this country is develop a market for our cow dung and then fill it. We have several advantages. Let’s review them.

First of all, dung is a legal substance, and therefore, the risk of running afoul of the law are minimal. Secondly, we have no shortage of cow dung in this land. (Not to mention other dung varieties including pig, sheep and chicken for which markets might also be found some day.) Thirdly, Canadians have been looking for a replacement for tobacco ever since its harmful effects were made known. And most importantly, we have years of experience at marketing everything in Canada from soap to sandwich wrap. I can hear the slogans now:

“Dung! Just Do It!”

“Cow dung! Because you’re worth it.”

We could package he product, complete with plastic coconut shell replicas, and give it names like Home on the Range, Meadowland and Pastures Plus.

If we don’t make our move soon, I’m afraid we risk being left behind by the Malaysians. And with our leaders telling us about economic globalization and the need to be competitive, can we afford to be caught bringing up the rear on this one?

Wouldn’t a sniff or two of Cowadungda Dude go great right now?

©1992 Jim Hagarty

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3

A Driving Ban Idea

You can go ahead and ban the use of cellphones by the drivers of motor vehicles if you like. You’ll get no argument from me.

However, when it comes to this issue, it may be that there are also other driver distractions that need to be tackled.

I’ll admit I’ve spoken on my “cell” while speeding along down the highway, but I’ve never once, when doing so, had a sudden urge to hurl myself out the driver’s door into the path of other vehicles. And yet, that’s what I almost did the day my baseball cap started to move on its own on top of my head while I was guiding my old bucket of bolts in and out of downtown traffic. This was very unnerving because when I first became aware of this unexpected supra cranial activity taking place under my cap, I didn’t know if it was a hamster, a humming bird or a hermit crab that was causing all this commotion.

It’s hard to drive carefully when the member of some other species is rollerskating across the patch of skin holding in your frontal lobe. A frantic struggle ensued as cap was hoisted and a search begun for the head-dancing hitchhiker. Before long, an earwig showed up, but not before my car did a few weird tricks on the road and scared the life and other things out of a couple of pedestrians.

The one irony is that, hair challenged as I am, I had always vowed never to sport a wig on my head, not knowing that one day a wig of the ear variety would take up temporary residence up there. (NEWS BULLETIN: The Worst Pun Of The Year Award Committee has named a winner.)

And while the bylaw restricting the presence of tapdancing earwigs on drivers is being prepared, perhaps we need to go all the way and ban the bumblebee and the mosquito from the inside of cars and trucks too.

Way back in my cigarette smoking days, a lit one, from time to time, would tumble from my lips and fall between my legs, disappearing under my backside as I was driving down the road. This too used to result in my doing a fairly agitated version of the Highland fling while trying to keep my rear end from being scorched. Parked in a driveway, this might not have seemed so serious; roaring down the road was always a poor time to pick to do a modern-day re-staging of the cow jumping over the moon. Or the moon jumping over the … (ah, forget it!).

The authorities are getting some statistics together, now, on the numbers of accidents being caused by drivers on cellphones. But my guess is we have no idea how many are brought about by people with critters in their caps, butts under their bums (huh?) or overturned bags of french fries at their feet.

A hermetically sealed driver’s cabin or special suit patterned after an astronaut’s gear are our only rational solutions to this considerable problem.

No Phone! No Food! No Fun!

Let that be our new safety motto.

And may I add a fourth: No Fanny Furnaces!

And a fifth:

No Furtive Follicle Freeloaders!

©2004 Jim Hagarty

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The Youth Vote

It was bound to happen, I guess, in a country that’s gone rights crazy. A group of activists in Toronto are now calling for the voting age to be lowered considerably. All the way down to what they call age zero, to be exact. They say it’s time society’s shameful discrimination against the young was ended. That kids have a lot to offer the system.

Some people might shrug off this movement as ridiculous but I don’t. I think the enfranchisement of children will happen and in not too many years from now. It will take a lot of marches, and meetings and manifestos, but eventually, the person in front of you in line on voting day will be standing on a skateboard or sitting in a stroller.

When millions of Canadian kids can vote, our society will undergo many profound changes, more than we can possibly imagine. For one thing, our leaders will become younger and younger until one day, the prime minister will be known for striking up games of hide and seek during breaks from debating in the House of Commons. And when journalists search candidates’ pasts for scandals to report during elections, the typical headline will read: Candidate Smith spent evening with teenage babysitter when he was six. (Which was last year.)

By then, political parties of all stripes will be courting the youth vote. And kids’ groups will come up with checklists of political action they want to see taken. A typical 10-point communiqué from one of these committees might contain the following statements:

1. Us kids demand that the cruel practice of mandatory toilet training be brought to an end, so to speak. Hell no, we won’t go!

2. Us kids demand the right to eat cookies for breakfast, lunch and supper, frosticles and chocolate bars for between-meal snacks and jelly beans before bedtime.

3. Us kids demand the right to give ourselves our own names and deplore having names forced on us by non-children who aren’t the ones who have to put up with the teasing at school that results from being given a dumb one.

4. Us kids demand federal funding for the establishment of free neighbourhood toy-lending outlets.

5. Us kids demand that Christmas be celebrated twice a year, Halloween every three months and that birthdays be observed monthly instead of annually.

6. Us kids demand the right to stay up as late as we want when company comes.

7. Us kids demand laws making it an offence for aunts and uncles to pat us on the heads like they would a puppy, to tell us how much we’ve grown and to remark how we’re just a chip off the old block.

8. Us kids demand that “baby-bonus” cheques be made out in our names and that parents not be allowed to spend them on movies and gas for their cars.

9. Us kids demand more cartoons on TV, less cleaning of our ears, laws to prevent parents from entering our bedrooms and a ban on homework.

10. Us kids demand more representation in professions traditionally dominated by non-children such as teaching and babysitting and we want equal access to careers as firefighters, cowboys, astronauts, rock singers, actors, nurses and doctors. And pediatricians, of course.

©1988 Jim Hagarty

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Just This Instant

My son was on the computer the other night, trying to get into a website he wanted to access. I helped him enter the pertinent information to send away for a password which would allow him to get where he wanted to go. The password, we were informed, would be e-mailed to us.

So the e-mail search was on. After about two checks in one minute, and nothing appearing, I could see frustration clouding his brow. A few more checks, more frustration still. I decided to help him, and set my e-mail program to check my messages every 60 seconds and to ring a bell if a new e-mail came in. A half hour passed, and nothing arrived. What was going on?

It was then, naturally, time for one of those talks whereby I pass a tale or two along about how things were when I was his age.

“My friend Jim and I used to send away corn syrup can coupons for black and white photos of our NHL hockey heroes and we would have to wait weeks for them to arrive,” I said, in my best old-guy-reminiscing voice. “Every day we’d check our mailboxes and finally, they’d arrive in a brown paper envelope and we’d be so excited.”

I looked in the direction of my son and could see a look on his face that suggested he might have more easily understood me had I just explained the Pythagorean Theorem to him backwards. Wait weeks for something? Huh?

I regale my family, too, when we are looking at digital photos two seconds after they’ve been taken, with stories about the old days when we would send our rolls of film to some place in the town of Clinton, an hour’s drive away, and the finished photos would arrive weeks later. Weeks. And we didn’t think that was out of place. Something that complicated like making photos would have to take weeks. Wouldn’t it?

When my kids use their mother’s tiny cellphone, I am reminded of my days on the farm, ringing the big black phone mounted on a brown wooden plate on the wall. Two long rings and one short one, as I recall, was a sign the call was for us. All the other rings for the four or five other homes on our “party line” rang too and sometimes you’d jump for the receiver, but stop when you counted the rings and realize it wasn’t for you.

But that process, to my parents, must have seemed like rocket science. They were born in farmhouses without hydro, running water, or central heat. No phones. In their earliest days, no radios. No cars. And I suppose that their parents thought of their kids, even then, as living in a foreign, modern age, what with Victrolas, movies and Model T’s just around the corner.

The one thing all this steady progression of technological change has had in common is speed. We seem to be going ever faster and faster. I doubt that’s a bad thing; it just is. We can’t have cures for cancer and face transplants some day without accepting all the other paraphernalia the incredible human mind can devise. Cellphones have cost some people their lives, but how many have they saved?

But good, bad or otherwise, I can’t help but wonder where things can possibly go from here. What devices will 10-year-old boys be playing with a hundred years from now and how fast will those things go? How about a thousand years from now?

In 10,000 years, will we be back living in caves and bonking each other on the heads with clubs or heading down to the newest coffee shop on Mars for a cold tumbler of lemonade?

On the other hand, it’s nice to know change doesn’t always happen that quickly. After watching Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones bouncing around at the Super Bowl half-time stage on Sunday, I said to my son, thinking I was making a neat connection, “You know, I wasn’t much older than you when I first saw that guy on the Ed Sullivan Show.”

“But Dad, why does he look so old?”

Huh?

I didn’t think he looked that old.

©2006 Jim Hagarty

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Senior State of Mind

They tell you to stay young at heart. Think young. Don’t let yourself get old by believing you’re old. Don’t ever quit having fun. Always be in touch with that kid inside.

Blahbuhdeeblah.

Blah.

But other messages come at you that cancel out the ones just mentioned.

I take my boy golfing. What a great father-son activity. Lots of time together and there’s just something about walking that gets people to talking.

One day, I dreamed up a great surprise for him. When we walked in the clubhouse, I asked to rent a golf cart. No problem, sir. Take that one out there. So we did. Up and down the hills and valleys we rode in style and I must admit, when we got out of sight of the main building, I let him drive. He was in heaven. A wonderful day.

So good was this event, in fact, that my son decided to repeat the experience with his mother. Out to the same golf course they drove, and up to the counter they marched. Now, to the joy of golfing, was added the thrill of riding on the electric cart (and maybe getting to drive it again.)

“Sorry, but those carts are reserved for seniors,” my wife was told by the attendant on duty.

But, but …

I had had no problem getting one.

How could that be?

Had they changed their policy in the few days since last I was there?

However I might try, I couldn’t avoid the truth. But this is ridiculous. It was only yesterday that my childhood best friend and I were not allowed to golf without an adult on Sundays because we would supposedly slow down the “serious” golfers. How could it now be that I am one of those guys that are responsible for getting the teens kicked off the courses?

I put the experience behind me and moved on. I suppose it is nice that I can rent golf carts where others can’t.

Last Friday, on vacation, I was driving along up north trying to find a good radio station to listen to. Every single one was broadcasting ear-blasting hard rock. I’m not a fogey – I really don’t mind hard rock and actually love a lot of it. But this day, I wanted something else.

Finally, I found it. A fantastic station. Great song after wonderful song. Every tune just as good as the one before it. The Stones, the Beatles, Buddy Holly, Aretha Franklin …

“I wish we had a station like this at home,” I thought to myself. I’d never listen to anything else if we did.

My drive into town was super enjoyable.

Until this station break announcement by the DJ:

“It’s 11:30 am. and you’re listening to Songs for Seniors.”

I flipped through the stations and found myself a heavy metal station. And turned my baseball cap backwards for good measure.

Next week I’m getting several piercings and a big tattoo. Maybe showing a guy on a golf cart.

©2007 Jim Hagarty

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1

My Current Tale of Woe

The interesting thing about problems is how there is never any shortage of new ones waiting around the corner for you. Creaky knees, unpaid bills, leaky taps and roof repairs are the ones you expect. They’re comfortable. Treatable. You know whom to call.

But it’s a cruel world when your own car turns on you in the middle of the coldest winter on record in a truly shocking way. There’s nothing mechanically wrong with the vehicle but in the last two weeks, it’s taken to zapping me with electrical charges that have made me truly afraid to be around it.

The dry outside air, I guess, combined with my sliding along the upholstered driver’s seat as I exit the car, have been combining to set up a reserve of static electricity that, when released, would blow the hat off me, if I wore a hat. This is distressing for me because, for a very good, historical reason, I hate with a passion being on the receiving end of a mini-lightning strike.

My theory, and I think it’s a good one, is that when I was a kid living on a farm which made use of electric fences to keep the cattle from wandering over to the neighbours, I had so many volts run through me, entering by the head, neck, legs, back, hands, feet and who knows what else, that I developed a deep aversion to hydro. It isn’t that I mind it running my TV or fridge. I just can’t see any useful purpose in having it coursing through my veins and lighting up the corneas in my eyeballs.

So, I am extra cautious around sources of electric power, preferring other ways to get my thrills, ways that have nothing to do with the conveyance of negative and positive energy particles through any part of my anatomy. This is why these past two weeks have been somewhat of a nightmare. I’ve been in and out of my car a lot lately, almost every time with the same result. As soon as my hand touches the steel on the car door as I go to shut it, that only familiar feeling strikes again.

“Yow!!!” is all I can say at such times.

I’ve even taken to experimenting with ways of avoiding the inevitable but I’ve discovered that once charged, you’re like a lit firecracker that won’t be satisfied until it’s exploded.

Yesterday, as I exited the car, I touched only plastic parts and smiled as I walked away from the vehicle, thinking I had won a round. However, as I reached to put some change in a parking meter …

“Yow!!!”

This situation is even affecting my social life as my supercharged forefinger has recently taken to zapping the fingers of other people I’ve been coming into contact with resulting, I think, in some of them wondering if this was some sort of sign that they should ask me out on a date. And my cats run for cover when I come into the house at night, knowing from experience they’re liable to get their ears singed when I reach down to pet them.

In any case, I guess I can live with this annoyance as long as garage doors I walk by don’t start opening on their own or I don’t start receiving pictures in my head from the Hubble Space Telescope.

And who knows? Maybe these electroshock therapy treatments, several times a day, will give me just the attitude adjustment I’ve been looking for and the one that people who know me have been hoping I would somehow get someday.

©1994 Jim Hagarty

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Dog Day Afternoon

It was a nice afternoon Friday and I was enjoying my 20-minute walk home from work, happy with the end of another week and satisfied that “things” seemed to be fairly well under control in my life.
But as I am beginning to understand, control is a very elusive commodity nowadays. It might even be considered an illusion.

The dog I passed on the sidewalk shortly after I started my walk home, however, was no illusion. It stood there, unleashed, panting at me and looking friendly enough. And being in a “good mood”, I just had to acknowledge its approachability.

“Hello there, doggie,” I said to the mutt in my happiest voice.

To me, that little exchange was the beginning and the end of our relationship – just one of those bright little moments that seem to happen so frequently when you’re having a good day.

But the dog, I realize now, saw my comment in a totally different light. What it appeared to have heard when I greeted it that day was, “Hello there, doggie. How about comin’ home with me? I’ll feed and look after you for the rest of your life.”

Before I had walked very far, I realized I was being followed. I looked behind to see the dog, cheerfully padding along in my footsteps, eager to get to its new home. At first I thought that it would stop eventually, perhaps when it got to the edge of its “territory.” But soon, it became apparent that its territory and my territory were about to be one and the same.

From then on, the scene was like something out of The Twilight Zone. This big, off-white dog with the floppy ears and paws ran into everybody’s backyard on my way home but always returned to the sidewalk and me before I got too far away. Not needing a dog, I offered this one absolutely no encouragement, beyond my initial greeting, but I guess my dog greeting packs a heck of punch.

So, five minutes after I had been commenting to myself about what a nice day it was and what a wonderful life I have, I was a mess of nervous tension, fretting about what I was going to do with this Littlest Hobo that was following me home. Had I lured it away from some lonely senior citizen who would forever mourn the loss of his closest pal? Had I robbed some poor little boy of his most reliable source of nonending, unconditional love? What would I do if it wouldn’t leave my place?Would I have the heart to take it to the animal shelter? Would it eat my cats?

But all these concerns were overshadowed by a more immediate one. I was coming up to Romeo Street during the afternoon rush hour when a lot of Stratford’s factories change shifts, making this road one of the busiest in the city. Would the dog try to follow me across? Would I be luring it to serious injury or its death if I crossed the street?

Those questions were soon answered. Anticipating where I was headed, the dog weaved its way through the busy four lanes of traffic like Wayne Gretzky skating around a bunch of hapless defencemen. In fact, it waited on the other side for me and it was me who, in the confusion, almost got run down by a van.

Somehow, between Waterloo Street and Romeo Street – five short city blocks – my sunny skies had developed considerable overcast. As I continued on my way, neighbours close to my home noticed my new companion.

“Nice dog,” said one.

“Where’d you get the dog?” said another.

I didn’t “get” the dog anywhere. The dog “got” me.

When we made it home, I walked into my back yard. Pardon, me – “our” back yard. The dog ran through the gate in the fence like it had spent half its life there. I sat down at the picnic table in complete frustration. It parked itself on the patio in front of me with an expression that said: ‘Well, pop, what’s it gonna be? Beef or chicken for supper?”

It was neither.

I went in the house, shut the door and spent a half hour reflecting on the fickleness of life.

When I came out, the dog was gone.

And so was my carefree day.

©1992 Jim Hagarty

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Of Newborns and Cellphones

One day a few years ago, I wandered into a coffee shop in my hometown, sat down at a table by a window along the west wall, turned on my cellphone and setting it down before me, started to sip on a coffee.

Within minutes, the phone jumped to life and fumbling for it, I answered it to hear my wife announcing that we needed to rush off immediately to the hospital. I took off and a short time later, a little boy came into our lives.

Almost two years and hundreds of diapers later, I was back in the same coffee shop, a lot more weary and even shell shocked than the first time, cellphone in hand again, but on this occasion, I was careful to avoid the table by the window along the west wall. Instead, I chose one by the window along the north wall. I set down my phone and picked up my coffee.

“Phreet! Phreeft!,” went the maddening little device before me. I fumbled and scrambled and soon a panicky voice announced through the phone that we ought to be going to the hospital again. Rushing to the door, I raced home to pick up my wife and we made it to the maternity ward with even less time to spare than we had on our first visit. And this time around, all that frantic activity produced a little girl.

Since then, I have occasionally sat down at other tables in that same coffee shop, but I have never again taken my cellphone with me. And, so far, the population explosion at home has been contained and I have managed to finish every coffee I have ordered. Finally I had solved the puzzle of what was causing all these trips to the hospital. No dummy me.

But whether this tale is an argument for banning cellphones in public places or not, I really can’t say. (No, I really can’t say, because both those kids can read now.)

©2004 Jim Hagarty

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