Once more I call upon my lovely little hen, #33, to wish everyone a merry Christmas.
The last show for 2016 was in Victorville last weekend, a 7 hour drive through some of the nastiest parts of California. This is never my favorite show, but this time Anna went with me and that made it almost fun. And, of course, it's always wonderful to see my chicken show friends.
There is a movie now available that depicts chicken shows and the people who participate in them.
It was on CMT, but it's available at Amazon Instant video. Anna and I watched it on the plane on the way home from Kauai last month. It can be watched by people who know nothing about poultry shows. Like everything these days, it's too dramatized to suit my tastes, but I guess that's what the public wants. It's what they get, no matter what they want.
I know some of the people in the movie, those in minor parts. Notably Walt (a judge that is criticized early in the movie, and his helper Suzanne). The whining fellow in the movie calls Walt a bad judge. This is so far from the truth. Walt is not only a very good judge, he's also a very helpful fellow, one of my favorite people to see anywhere. And he's nearing 80 and he still races cars. If you watch the movie, you may get the impression that chicken show people are unstable. That's simply not so. I don't know the 3 people who are profiled, but I'd bet they're more down to earth than the movie implies. Even so-called documentaries these days are full of manufactured drama.
I'm trying to forget all the drama from the social and political insanity of 2016. It's difficult because the offending idiot is still being dangled in our faces; each new day expanding our perception of the absurd.
I wanted to go to Standing Rock. Me, an old lady who has trouble shuffling around on flat ground. The rebel within never dies. I sent them money instead, and am so proud of the Veterans who, once again, went in my stead.
Here in Sloughhouse, life is pretty much the same as usual. Bob and Anna are still my roommates. I'm not sure what their plans are (I don't think they know, either.) but I like having them here. "Here" in this picture is at my brother's place in the mountains.
Both the kids are working hard. Anna is a medical assistant for a company that serves people who need assistance. The company is scrambling hard right now to find ways to continue their services if healthcare funds are curtailed. Bob is in a service van, driving all over Northern California. His job is typical of what young people face today. A year ago he was with a company that wasn't well managed, it was very top heavy. He moved to a company that is more savvy and responsive to their employees, and was enjoying working in a place where initiative was rewarded. Then the first company merged with the second company and he's back to top-heavy management. This morning he was sent to Santa Rosa (a 2 hour drive) for a small maintenance job. His pay doesn't start until he gets to the site, and it stops as soon as he heads home. This is the kind of shit young people have to deal with.
One of his friends, a very capable young man, went to two more years of school after he got his college degree, to become an EMT with a fire department. He is expected to work for free for months until they decide whether or not to hire him. The same thing goes on in the law enforcement business.
Being retired, I'm no longer subject to the whims of an employer. When I worked, there were good times and hard times, but my employers were generally straightforward people and as long as their businesses went well (or there were grants - in the edbiz) you could count on a paycheck without the spectre of doom hanging over your head. We all felt like we were working for everyone's benefit.
Now, in my retirement, I raise chickens and show them. I garden, I read, I travel when I can, and even find time to cook a bit. For Thanksgiving I made a Pilgrim Pumpkin Pie. The historians' theory is that the Pilgrims had no flour for pie crust, so they just hollowed out a squash, baked it, then added some custard and baked it some more. As I was making this, I had to wonder where the pilgrims got milk and eggs for the custard.
It looks a little dicey, but it actually tasted very good. I'd make it again.
Finally, here's what keeps me going...a picture from a family Thanksgiving.
There are 5 of us who have seen a lot of years, 7 (one is taking the picture) in the next generation who are all bright, creative, hard-working and very lovable people, and their 5 young ones. Being with family is a joy that keeps you going even when the rest of the world is insane.