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Friday, December 22, 2017

Unique new evidence for divine intervention

Remember: “God” backwards spells “Dog”

By Moristotle

By the half-way point of our walk this morning (about 3/4 of a mile into it), Siegfried and I had found (and I had collected) seven piles of poop (presumably dog poop). Hot damn! We had just tied the record set only a few days ago. It had more often been four or five piles, sometimes six.
    I uttered something to Siegfried like, “My god, Siegfried, how about that? Tied the record already! And you did your part!” The very first pile I collected had been his, which greatly relieved me, for he had not wanted any of his first offering of food today, which was very unusual. My wife thought it was probably because that cat had come into our yard, probably pooped, and Siegfried couldn’t help himself and had a snack. I know, it’s disgusting. But his foul gas yesterday and today seemed to indicate that she was right.
    Lest you suspect you have inadvertently walked into the fictional world of W.M. Dean, I hasten to tell you that the detailed account that follows is true and factual – real facts, not “alternative facts.”


And I should explain why I’m picking up dog poop these days. My neighborhood’s homeowners association board has a Facebook group page, and it recently hosted a discussion of the number of “poop stations” we have, the consensus being that we don’t have enough of them. Apparently, dog owners generally want to go as little out of their way as possible to do their community duty of picking up their own dog’s poop. At any rate, there’s a fair amount of dog poop lying around the neighborhood.
    Well, I decided, what the hell, I have no personal problem picking up someone else’s dog’s poop. I can always wash my hands when I get home. And, besides, I am a community-spirited guy; I derive satisfaction from doing my part, or even a little more than my part.


It was fairly easy at first, because I wasn’t using my cane that my doctor recommended, to reduce the risk of my falling down and breaking one of my lower-density bones. But when my wife found out I wasn’t using it, she insisted I do, over my protestation that it’s difficult to manage the cane with Siegfried’s leash, or vice versa. But of course, I said I would. And I thereafter have.
    So, how to manage the collected poop? What I do is hang a larger bag (such as you get at a grocery store) on the handle of my cane, with a rubber band tightened over the bag’s loops. That’s the collection bag. And I have a second, smaller bag for picking up each pile of poop, the scooper bag. I operate the scooper bag by first turning it in-side-out over my pick-up hand so that my hand is covered with the inside bottom of the bag, and then cupping my hand over the pile of poop and closing my fingers around it. The tricky part is to transfer the poop in the scooper bag to the collection bag. I have to ask Siegfried to be still and wait a minute, while I manage this. I have to make sure the collection bag’s “mouth” is open. That’s the tricky part I was referring to.
    Once I’ve released the poop into the collection bag, I use my other hand to pull the scooper bag’s opening back down, so its in-side – now soiled a little or a lot depending on the firmness and age of the poop just handled – is once again inside, where, hopefully, I won’t touch it or get any poop fragments on the handle of my cane, across which I spread the scooper bag so that I can hold both it and the handle of my cane, as Siegfried and I continue our walk.


Okay, so the collection bag now held seven piles of poop.
    And, of course, the thought crossed my mind that, with half of our route remaining, maybe our chances of finding another seven piles were 50/50? And a little bit of excitement tingled in me, I have to admit. I hadn’t expected poop-collecting to be fun when I started doing it.
    Halfway down the next block, there it was, our record-breaker. “Holy shit, Siegfried! A new record! Eight piles of poop.” But now we walked the rest of that block and half of the next, and nothing. It wasn’t looking good. And I was walking slower so I could peruse the grass on both sides of the sidewalk more thoroughly. Several times I bent down to examine what turned out to be a dead, darkly decomposing weed-plant. “Damn it, Siegfried!”
    Ahead I saw a big rental truck, but I didn’t pay much attention to the movers. I was too intent on looking for dog poop.
    As Siegfried came up to the truck, however, I looked up at the man and woman whom I supposed to be moving, smiled, and was immediately captivated by their friendly demeanor and answering smiles. They came down their driveway to join Siegfried and me, and we talked a bit. It turned out that the wife, like me, participates in the Facebook group, and she remembered the poop-station discussion. I told her what I was doing, even the fact that Siegfried and I had just set a new record.
    “My daughter almost stepped in a big pile just down there,” the wife said, pointing in the direction Siegfried and I were headed.
    “Is it still there?” I asked, excited.
    “Probably,” she said.
    “Which side of the sidewalk?”
    “On the right.”
    Okay! I said adieus for Siegfried and me and we took off, not neglecting to examine the grass on both sides of the sidewalk, just in case. But we had come almost to the corner (just across the street from one of the poop stations) without finding any poop, and I was fearing that the poop the woman’s daughter had almost stepped in had been taken.


Then there it was! “Sweet Jesus, Siegfried! Nine piles of poop.”
    It wasn’t looking good, though, for finding as many piles on this second half of the walk as we had found on the first half. We’d have to find five more for that, and I really didn’t think we would.
    None in the next block, uh-oh!
    But then, “Great God Almighty, Siegfried, Number Ten!” It was a humongous pile on the street side of the sidewalk. I almost had to put some of it into the collection bag before grasping the rest, but by readjusting my fingers and squashing the poop up some, I managed to get it all in one go. The collection bag was getting pretty heavy, and it banged against the cane as I walked, making my progress a little awkward.
    One more house ahead, I yelled out, “Number Eleven, Siegfried! It isn’t the Great God Almighty who has been helping us, but Youie!”
    For those who haven’t been following this blog for years, I should explain that during my manic Summer of 1989, Youie Summer, I was seeing numerological signs all over the place, which I took to be confirmations and guidance from a female deity I understood to be Universal Intelligent Energy (U.I.E.), familiarly known as “Youie.” The familiar name, notice, compactly included I (Spanish Yo), you, we (the sound when spoken), and yes (French oui sounds like “we”). And Youie’s number – I was given to understand in the mysterious way that mania makes possible – was 11.
    In quick succession, before we even reached our own block, Siegfried and I found Numbers Twelve and Thirteen, both piles large, but not quite as large as Number Eleven. And now I was saying to Siegfried things like “Holy Mother of God!” “Blessed Jesus!” I was really getting into it, and the title of today’s post had already formed in my mind. What fun! And to think that just yesterday I had posted that piece remembering my New Ten Commandments! It really did seem like divine intervention, so why not pretend it was?
    When Number Fourteen appeared just two houses from our own, I knew I had to write this up and publish today!
    You just can’t let something like this go to waste.


Copyright © 2017 by Moristotle

10 comments:

  1. [Originally posted on the homeowners Facebook group page:]
    Thank you, Morris! We had a contribution in front of our mailbox that we noticed at night but didn’t have an extra bag on hand and totally forgot about it after I warmed up. After work the next evening, I went to clean it up but it was gone. Thank you!

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  2. Wonders continue! By the time Siegfried pooped this morning, I had already collected four piles of poop, on the high-number end of our own [600] block. Five piles and counting. None for two blocks, and then three more in the 900 block, already one more than the record prior to yesterday's doubling of that record. Then, in the half-way block that borders The Green, four more, bringing the total to 12 and forcing me to reconsider how to carry the collection bag, because it was becoming so heavy that managing my cane had become not only uncomfortable but also dangerous, given that its purpose, after all, is to help me not fall down and break a bone! So...I removed the collection bag from the cane handle, took Siegfried's leash off my leash hand, and put that hand through the collection bag's loops before putting the hand back through the leash loop.
        Note also that I was able to report in the preceding paragraph how many piles I found in which blocks. Another "wondrous" gift of doing the "poop patrol" (and reporting on its adventures) was its providing motivation to use my memory to keep an accurate count, etc. We read, do we not, that old people either use their memory, or lose it? (And the same goes for other things too, of course.)
        Okay, so far so good. At the end of the 1000 block, where the circular part of the street intersects itself coming in from the country road, I decided to go right and hit the 200 block (for the first time since starting the poop patrol), with the intention of going to the end of Norwood Court north and possibly seeing a member of the Jad & Mandy Al-Bjali family. But, alas, no one was in evidence there. Never mind, maybe Mandy will read this and know that I was thinking of her and her family. Anyway, no poop on this side trip, which is good, after all!
        Back to the 300 block and past the house of the couple who were loading up to move yesterday, then on to the 400 block at the main entrance of our community. No poop there either (which is good), so Siegfried and I were still at 12 piles in the collection bag, which was proving much more manageable dangling from my leash hand.
        Well! The 500 block provided four more piles (16 total), including another humongous one in roughly the same spot as yesterday. I think I'm seeing a pattern here! At the end of that block, Siegfried and I were back at the starting-number end of our own block, with only a couple of hundred feet to go before crossing the street to enter our garage.
        But this wasn't too short a stretch to yield yet another four, for a total of 20, surpassing yesterday's new record by six. The Lord doth provide!
        Either "the Lord provides," or my eyesight is improving. I did note today that a number of the piles I picked up were not new; that is, I had missed them on previous days.
        At some point on today's patrol, it occurred to me that maybe there's a recurring column here: "The Poop Patrol." But who would be interested in the (presumably) ongoing adventures of a poop patrol?...Unless I might possibly discover something that became forensic evidence in a murder investigation or something? Maybe there's something in this for W.M. Dean after all. Do you suppose he could try his hand at another novel, and maybe even complete this one?

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    Replies
    1. [Posted originally on the community's Facebook group page:]
      You crack me up. I love your humor. Sounds like our neighborhood has a problem with bad dog owners. People shouldn’t own them if they can’t pick up after them.

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  3. [Posted originally on the community's Facebook group page:]
    A most excellent blog article, Morris. Sorry to say, one of the reasons we left Collington Farms. Kyle and I used to do the same thing on our walks with Rocky (dubbed "The Mayor" by our sweet across the street neighbors). I have high hopes that just maybe some will be inspired to join in, or at least pick up their own dog's poop.

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  4. It brings new meaning to the term 'Ablution block', huh? When I began reading your poop account, I realized in myself needed to part company with 'some'. However, I couldn't bring myself to stop reading to see what popped up next. Needless to say, I personally had a very satisfying ending to YOUR story too! ha ha well done!

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    Replies
    1. Hilarious, Vic! Thanks for your sphincter-tightening comment!

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  5. A college classmate in Pennsylvania emailed me:
    I'm glad you enjoy such productive exercise. The people around here are so fastidious about picking up the poop that the sight of any is a rare event.

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  6. Christmas Eve report.
    It was nippy this morning, and I had dressed thinking it was warmer, so Siegfried and I hustled along, heading north on Collington Drive. Or I tried to hustle, but Siegfried kept stopping to put his nose into the grass or up to a cable box. That might make you wonder, does Siegfried find most of the piles of poop, or do I? I find, I’d say, more than nine out of ten. Only occasionally does Siegfried put his nose to a pile.

    At the STOP sign before the 200 block, we turned right onto the 1000 block, and went to the other end of The Green block, where we turned right again and walked along the curb on The Green’s south side (the odd-numbered side of Haywards Lane). As it turned out, we had already found all of the poop we were going to find today, three piles, one each in the 500, the 300, and The Green block. Though we were walking as fast as an old man with a cane and a curious dog on a leash can, I doubt that we missed a pile, unless it were tiny. And who knows? Maybe I’d finally seen yesterday, and collected, all of the aged piles along the sidewalks of the indicated blocks. That’s good, that’s progress.

    And I realized this morning that I might have had another motive for collecting poop, especially for occupying my mind to make memories of how many piles I found where: to avoid thinking of all the shit going on in the White House and the Congress.

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  7. The Christmas poop on the Poop Patrol:
    FIFTEEN piles, THIRTEEN of which were collected on Hastings Drive (one of which was already bagged in one of those station-dispensed black ones, just like I used this morning to “scoop”– at least, I assume the bag contained poop).

    Siegfried and I hadn’t walked down Hastings for a while and, indeed, a few of the 13 piles were vintage.

    The other two piles were collected, one each, in the 500 & 600 blocks of Collington Drive. The latter of these, though, wasn’t exactly a “pile,” but like the shit in the White House, more of a diarrhetic purge. And, appropriate for the political comparison, this poop was on the sidewalk, where people walk. I feel for the poor dog, but not for the rich shit in the White House.

    Can we have a Merry Christmas anyway?

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  8. The three days after Christmas:

    December 26. I had to go to RDU this morning to meet some arriving house guests, so Siegfried and I took an abbreviated walk, 200 feet up to Sutton Place, over and around The Green, then back home. Still, we collected five piles of poop, four of which seemed to be post-Christmas: one each on the 600 block of Collington Drive, the 400 & 300 blocks of Sutton Place, and two piles on The Green block.

    But there was a bonus. My guests and Siegfried took an afternoon walk, and, after I spotted a fresh pile (on The Green block) and one of my guests said, “Oh, you wanted us to tell you when we saw some poop? I saw a pile back there” (we didn’t go back), we did find one more, rather decomposed. (It’s MUCH more satisfying to collect a healthy-looking FRESH pile!)

    Two total for the walk, seven for the day’s work of the Poop Patrol.

    December 27. Since Siegfried and I found poop on almost every block we traversed this morning, I can – by noting their locations, in order – tell you our route: 5 in the 200 feet of the 600 block of Collington Drive northward from our house, 3 in the 500 block, 2 in the 400 block, 1 in the 300 block (11 so far – Youie-e-e! [https://moristotle.blogspot.com/2015/11/thors-day-delivery.html]),1 in the 1000 block, and 1 final one more in the 300 block of Sutton Place. 13 total.

    While you can trust my numbers as honest and true, you should be aware of the following variable affecting my count: sometimes – and two times this morning – several poop piles lie close together, and the poop looks of a similar age and quality (without aid of magnifying glass and better vision than I have), so I have to guess a bit as to how many distinct acts of dog-pooping produced them. C’est la vie!

    For your pleasure (hopefully), I have posted a short story, “Walking the Dog,” by my nephew Steve Glossin (U.S. Army retired, living in Bavaria, Germany), at https://moristotle.blogspot.com/2017/12/fiction-walking-dog-short-story.html.

    December 28(today). Only one pile this morning, but it was HUGE, and frozen solid into the lawn above the sidewalk in the 300 block of Sutton Place.

    At 19 degrees F., Siegfried & I didn’t walk far, and we didn’t walk slow. I’ll even admit (full disclosure here!) I didn’t really even want to spot any poop, and I might have missed a small pile or two. But THIS ONE was a little mountain!!

    Keeping with the dog theme, I share a story about dogs I’ve know: https://moristotle.blogspot.com/2006/12/some-dogs-ive-known.html. Enjoy! Wally moved to Collington Farms with us in July 2008, but he passed away in March the following year. We still miss him, and I occasionally even call Siegfried “Wally.”

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