Lessons Learned from a Cheap Motel!


You’ve heard the old adage, “You get what you pay for”?

Sometimes when you stay in small town America, your choices for motels are limited. I will offer some scant advice that I have gleaned from staying in some sketchy  motels in the past. Avoid ones that are named after vehicles; Belair, Cadillac, Rambler, etc. The rooms tend to not have been remodeled since the Eisenhower Administration, the beds look like the back of a 20 year old horse, and the mattress sleeps like there is a saddle horn between your shoulder blades.

We didn’t have a lot of money recently visiting one of our kids, so we stayed at one of the cheaper hotels in town. What could go wrong; it’s a quaint little college town right?

I checked in at the front desk of this flea bag (Oh I’m sorry, I used my inside voice when I blurted that out) I meant, four-star hotel minus three and was met with little enthusiasm. In fact, I got the same kind of enthusiastic response you’d get if you gave your car keys to a beat up ’67’ Volkswagen Beetle to the valet of a billionaires club. This was my first clue that our stay would be less than stellar.

Getting our luggage and traipsing down the hall to our room, I was anxious as I slid my electronic pass key through the slot.  What would the room look like? We entered the room and like a scratch-off ticket, our reward was quickly revealed. If I’d been blind, I would have thought we had secured a college football locker room. What is it with cheap hotels? Do all housekeeping personnel have aerosol cans labeled, “Sweat Socks and Musk Glands?”

I believe low cost hoteliers want you to “feel” the full experience. That’s why despite the fact you crave fresh and invigorating air, all the windows are usually bolted shut. Or another theory is that the windows are locked because so many people want to share in the same experience as you. As I looked around the room, I was angry with myself that I’d forgotten the rake. I turned to my wife, “Honey, there’s enough fur on the floor that I could have knitted you a sweater.” She was not amused!

We finally settled in, put our galoshes on so we could walk across the filthy carpet with confidence, and pulled back the bed covers. The comforter had so many stains on it, it looked like Gorbachev’s   forehead. We finally settled in for the night after we played rocks, papers, scissors, for who got the hand sanitizer bottle first.

The next morning I woke up to a singing buzzard outside my window, or at least I thought it was, and headed for the breakfast room.  The scene in the dining room resembled an intergalactic Star Wars bar.   Strange looking people, (no really strange) screaming children, everyone sporting “unique” body art (including the grandmother). It was completely on display because all the men wore no shirts. I  thought one was even a pirate, but then I knew I had to be mistaken. There was no parrot sitting on his shoulder.

I returned to my room, promptly woke up my wife and before we headed out for breakfast at McDonald’s, we made a beeline for the local veterinarian clinic. After that breakfast scene, it was only appropriate to make sure my distemper shots were up to date.

So was there any benefit at staying in a Motel 1 1/2 ? Yes indeed! After seeing everyone at breakfast and how odd they all looked, I’m throwing away my “Acquiring Self-Esteem” CD collection when I get home. I’m cured.

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Racism in a Sandwich?


The American lexicon has changed dramatically over the last decade. Words that always worked for me in the past have been hijacked and used adversely. Bad means good,  off the chain means it’s fantastic, and crack is now a dangerous drug. Imagine my bewilderment this week when I learned that the iconic peanut butter and jelly sandwich is now under assault.  No, it has nothing to do with Mrs. Obama the Mostess who wants my Hostess (Twinkie) . But before I get to the real story, shouldn’t Mrs. Obama start first with her husband’s plate before she begins at mine? I’m already petitioning survivalist food companies to make dehydrated Little Debbie’s with a shelf life of 25 years just in case her husband wins the election and her caloric crowbar comes to my lunch box.

Okay, back to the real story. The news Tuesday unsettled me. A staple of every American child’s lunch box since 1880, the PB & J sandwich has been deemed racist by an educator in the northwest. No I’m not kidding. A school principal in Portland, Oregon opined Monday that when a student asks a non-American born student of say Somali or Mexican decent whether they like peanut butter and jelly, she says it’s a form of racism. She claims it makes them feel uncomfortable because foreign children grow up on Pita’s and tortilla’s and not our food. She adds that having to say that they’ve never had our sandwich and risk ridicule, makes them feel uncomfortable thereby making it a form of racism. I hate to burst her bubble but that logic makes about as much sense as a wicker bedpan. When I talk with a Somali, I am not jealous nor do I care they think it’s odd that I’ve never eaten Sambosa (Curry Puffs) or drunk camel milk (a delicacy). Nope, bring on the teasing and ridicule, I’m not adventurous, in fact I’m a no “drama-dairy” (pun) kind of guy. Besides, I could never get over the hump. (sorry another pun)

So for our own edification, what is the definition of racism. I looked it up in the dictionary. It says:  ra·cism [ ráy sìzzəm ]

Prejudice or animosity against people who belong to other races the belief that some people or different races are inherently superior or inferior.

While I would never make fun of my foreign friends and their penchant for odd food choices, I can say without a shadow of a doubt that the PB & J sandwich is still far superior to pita’s and curry puffs.

By definition I am not a racist, but I have concerns that my American taste buds may be. If anything the teacher has it wrong, she’s picking on the wrong food. She needs to pick on crackers because I think the cheese is sliding off hers!

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I’m on Faithbook!


It is rather odd that aside from investors, Facebook is so popular and so much a part of pop culture. It seems we can’t wait to log on and share with everybody every facet of our life. It has even made high school reunions irrelevant. Now you can stay home and openly laugh and giggle at all your friends who are gray haired and paunchy without them ever finding out, you are too. 🙂

My son asked me recently to see pictures of girlfriends I had had in my youth. So for fun, I logged on to Facebook and within minutes I had pictures of some of my past girlfriends and love interests. The interests were in far greater number than the former.

I hadn’t realized how old I’d gotten until I found one girlfriend who had posted she was with her Mother. I thought her Mom looked a little old until I realized that WAS my old girlfriend, NOT her mother. The old girlfriend demonstration ended the moment I saw my unintended reality check. Though depressing, it wasn’t a total loss. My son said as he was leaving the room, “You chose wisely Dad.” Indeed I did.

Today I boast over 300 Facebook friends. I didn’t even know I had that many people. Each week I am bombarded with game requests for farming equipment or someone wants my birth date. It’s presumably to make fun of me later in the year. Isn’t it ironic that I haven’t seen some friends in 30 years, but thanks to Facebook I can tell you what they ate last night? I even know where they went on vacation last summer and I know their twisted political leanings. I do find it joyous when friends post once in a lifetime occasions like their children being baptized or their kids getting married. Yet one thing plagues me. I see how connected we are to each other electronically but wouldn’t it be nice if we had our own Facebook called Faithbook to talk directly to God?

I’m sure He would love to hear of our latest vacation exploits, dinners out or the new book we’re reading. But I think He’d be more interested to hear about the new found ways we’re learning to connect with Him better.

When the last of our kids left the nest, the house seemed a bit empty. We spent many a night talking and praying about our kids and the choices they made. But as difficult as it was for us to transition to the empty nest syndrome, I wondered if God sometimes feels the same way about us? He has human thoughts and feelings. Have we been absent so long that He too has the same empty nest feeling?

The good news is He actually does have the equivalent of Facebook. It’s called Faithbook, the Bible. In it He goes into great detail to tell us about Himself and what dreams He has for us. In similarity to Facebook, is He on your friends list? If He is, to help us transition from Facebook to Faithbook, bring a pen. Because the more you read about Him and how much He loves you, the more you’ll want to check “Like” beside each message.

I know He likes to read what’s on your wall (your life), you know the things that everyone can see. However I believe private messages are what He loves best!

Oh, and on a programming note, KneeMail and Faithbook run on the same operating system, perfectly.

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I’m Math Deficient


It’s not often that I am exposed as a fraud, but in this case I am. I can’t deny it, it’s all true, I have few math skills. Oh, I can grocery shop and stay under my tiny budget. I can figure out the cost of lunch at McDonald’s, but aside from that, forget about it, it’s Greek to me.

How do I envision myself when I hear these words? Geometry? Neanderthal. Algebra? Loser. Isosceles Triangles? Flat-line brain scan. Don’t even think about asking me the mind boggling question about two trains leaving the same station in opposite directions. Even knowing the varying speeds of each and where they they will be in 6 hours only gives me the kind of brain cramp you get when you drink a Slurpee too fast.

I have asked myself why am I so bad at math? The reality is clear. I’m learning my math skills from Washington politicians. Don’t believe me? Read the newspapers daily on how our politicians continue to spend money we don’t have. The Government Accounting Office (GAO) published a report on how shoddy accounting practices are within the government.

Some recent “mistakes” in the past two years include:

The Pentagon spending $998,798 to ship two little 19-cent washers from South Carolina to Texas and $293,451 to send one 89-cent little bolt washer from South Carolina to Florida.

Despite trillion-dollar deficits, last year’s 10,160 earmarks included $200,000 for a tattoo removal program in Mission Hills, California.

The Federal Communications Commission spent $350,000 to sponsor a NASCAR driver.

Washington spent $2.6 million training female Chinese vice workers to drink more responsibly on the job. No I’m not kidding here.

And finally, a GAO audit classified nearly half of all purchases on government credit cards were improper, fraudulent, or embezzled. In one extraordinary example, the Postal Service (which I might add is going broke) spent $13,500 on one dinner at a Ruth Chris Steakhouse.

As deficient as my math and accounting skills may be, I can at least hold my head up that my math skills are infinitely better than a congressman.

However, there is one math problem that still leaves me in a quandary. Despite the fact my wife is one third my size, she is always recognized as my better ‘half’. While that equation may or may not befuddle some, for me, I feel like I’m making progress. It’s the first fraction I have ever been able to get my arms around. 🙂

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