Laden...
Post to the HostComments from 04.25.22
Mr. Keillor, Dr. Schwartz asked today in PTTH about the Scottish party joke — which I clearly remember from an APHC that was broadcast sometime in the period from 2006 to 2012. I remember the punchline more like “Och, come as ye are, laddie, it’ll only be the two of us.” My Scots grandpa was a Glaswegian and not a Highlander. He wore trousers, not a skirt. He didn’t drink or dance. And now I understand why. GK Dear Mr. Keillor, I just wanted to respond to the issue of mental health care currently. Although, I agree that much needs to be done to improve the situation that resulted from the dismantling of psychiatric hospitals because of concerns about warehousing mental patients, I disagree that everything is as dismal as you seem to suggest. My own son has a severe mental illness that he had been unwilling to address. But when he finally walked into an emergency room in a small hospital in West Virginia, not only was he given excellent care for the 21 days they could keep him there, but also they discharged him to a community mental health clinic that serves the poorest of the poor and took him in as one of their own. Nothing is perfect, but there are some very special people out there trying to make a difference for patients like my son. Barbara Fairfield Glad to hear it, Barbara. My column was prompted by the dilemma of a friend whose granddaughter is caught in a hard place between taking drugs that make her feel catatonic or living in the nightmare of schizophrenia. There are temporary shelters available but the long-term prospect is rather terrifying. GK GK, Some years back, in my U.S. Coast Guard days, I was working on Orcas Island in Puget Sound, at a remote radio site. It was a one-day trip, so I left Seattle early, got to the island, did the work and drove back to the ferry landing. With it being summer, there were about a zillion cars and tourists there. I parked, went down about 50 wooden steps to a café, got the largest to-go clam chowder they had, and started walking back up the steps to the car park. With there being sheer boredom for those waiting, they were out of their cars and lining a wooden fence, looking down at me walking up and waiting for the ferry. Suddenly I heard an airhorn. The ferry arrived early. I started running up the steps. I tripped and my extra-large clam chowder seemed to travel in slow motion out of the container and straight up. As it hit its apex straight above me, real time returned and it came down on top of my head, covering it completely, my beard and my uniform shirt. I only assumed everyone saw this; I wasn’t sure, clam chowder was covering my glasses. I had zero time to clean up and drove onto the ferry. I went up into the ferry seating area to find the bathrooms and wash up, but with next to zero water pressure, I gave up and sat down in the enclosed area where the heat was on full blast. Despite the ferry being completely full, oddly enough nobody would sit next to me. Finally, a young girl of about 10 did but her mother immediately grabbed her and pulled her away. “Don’t sit next to that man. He’s the one who threw clam chowder over his head, thinking we’d all find it funny.” “But mom, it was funny, it was really funny.” As I sat there picking clam chowder out of my hair and beard, I thought about your Homecoming story, when Carl Krebsbach ends up in front of his daughter’s homecoming parade, hauling an old Chevy that had been used as a septic tank. Carl’s line: “If it had to happen, I’m glad it happened where a lot of people could see it. Who needs dignity when you can be in the entertainment business?” That’s what I figured too. If you’re going to wear clam chowder, you might as well do it in front of a crowd so everyone can enjoy it. Cheers, Velo Mitrovich London That is a fine visual story, Velo, I can see every step of it. The mother’s line is disappointing, but the rest is perfect. I guess it looked as though you had vomited, but how could a person vomit on the top of his head? GK Good morning. I am with you on mac and cheese; enjoyed reading this. I had thought I was the only person addicted to Cheerios and bananas. Cheerios is one of the old originals that has escaped change. Our thoughts and prayers are with you on your upcoming cardio procedure when they remove the regrets from your heart. Hope all will be well. What happens to the regrets though? Dick Thank you for your kind thoughts. Regrets, of which I have a bucketful, become fainter with time and what becomes clearer and sharper is the memory of wild good fortune. I still cannot believe that Bill Kling let me start A Prairie Home Companion back in 1973 when KSJN was a little duplex office suite in downtown St. Paul. I was destined to be a parking lot attendant and the man made me a performer. GK Dear Garrison, He lived! Kathy, you may not know it but you’re a comedy writer and I think this story is the beginning of a novel. But are there novels set in Canada? I don’t know of any. GK GK, Got a chuckle from me. I’m sure you will live … as they say, “Only the good die young.” Not really inferring that you aren’t good, after all, I read you and if you are not good, then maybe I am not either? Regardless, (’cause irregardless is NOT a word) so I’m told. And what would it matter as they know what I meant anyhow? Regardless, make sure you are okay, because for whatever reason, while drinking my no name coffee, I look for your dribble each week. I mostly concur with your conclusions, that the most sensible of all are the gifts given from above, like my baby (72) who wakes me daily at 4:30 a.m. so I can go to work while he putzes around rolling that roller picker-upper on the rug and doing dishes, as he is retired after a cancer episode 10 years ago. He is cancer-free now but still retired. Okay is fine with me. I will go now and finish my coffee, do the Wordle online that I play with my granddaughter remotely, then go be the best parts saleslady in these parts. After Saturday Mass, and a bit of Castle or Saturday Night show, perhaps a few hours at the casino Sunday with my babe. Then back to parts on Monday. Yup, okay is fine with us. Godspeed, old man. Manchester, New Hampshire I never met a woman before who works in parts and it’s an honor to hear from you. I was in Manchester years ago but wasn’t in need of a part and now I need so many parts that I wouldn’t know where to start. But that’s just how it is. GK Dear Mr. Keillor, Livia, you’ve written the only thank-you letter I will need for the next ten years and any other listeners can set their pens aside and go back to work. What an independent spirit you are, to have settled in that cabin and devoted yourself to reading, and taken nourishment from poetry. I wouldn’t have had the gumption to do that and I admire it with all my heart. While you led a disciplined life, I stumbled along, a clueless husband and absentee father, trying to cobble together a career for myself, and your letter tells me that out of the confusion of my life came some good for a woman near Lake Tahoe, and I feel good about that. I met Jenny when I was 50 and life has been good for thirty years, and it’s very pleasant to think of you in a snowy cabin listening to Merwin and Bishop and Gioia and Lee. Thank you, my dear. GK Have you ever commented about ageist views that accompany aging? If not please consider commentary about it either from his own experience or general concepts. Ramona Johnson I made fun of old people when I was a kid, imitated their quavery voices and confusion and fearfulness, and now that I’m old, I still do. Why should we be exempt? I love being 79. Some days are better than others. What’s the problem? I worry about people under 30 — we had all sorts of advantages unavailable to them. When I was a kid, I had the ambition to support myself by writing. And I did. Nowadays, that’s ten times harder than it used to be. And college kids are paying lavishly for a mediocre education that isn’t preparing them for much. I could go on. GK Hi, I’m sure I won’t be the only one to point this out but wearing jeans with holes is high fashion. Although — your not knowing that does prove your point of being out of the loop. Teresa, my wife Jenny does not view jeans with holes in the knees as high fashion. She views them with disgust. The two of you can discuss this and work out something and I’ll wait for further instructions. GK Having spent months either in hospital or homebound for recuperation, I needed some joy. I remembered the Saturday evenings I spent since the 1980s listening to your show. Today I found your show again. Jean Shepherd was my radio show during my teens. Certain people have a radio voice and your show provided a perfect replacement for Jean’s shows. I longed for a respite. Thank you for providing just what this 80-year-old needed. Sonia C. I missed out on Jean Shepherd, Sonia, growing up in Anoka, Minnesota, as I did and I really need to catch up. One of these days, I’ll google him (her?) and see what this is all about. GK I know you are tired and want to rest. You deserve a rest. Take a vacation. Please come back. The sound of your voice is a comfort and the comments you make lighten my daily load. The Writer’s Almanac has been such a wonderful combination of thoughts and events. What could I do to replace you? Bob Shaffer Pick up a copy of Mary Oliver’s Devotions and read the poems aloud to yourself. The poem about wild geese, the one about the grasshopper. She’s gone from the world but she’s still very much in it, thanks to her poetry. GK
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Laden...
Laden...