Settle in, grab a cup of coffee and enjoy your stay here at Shelly's. The pie is great, the coffee pot is always on and soon you will find this to be the best place in town. SOON TO BE AMERICA'S MOST READ BLOG

Friday, July 28, 2006

SHEEHAN PURCHASES A LITTLE BIT OF HEAVEN IN TEXAS

CRAWFORD TEXAS---Renowned war protestor and one time mother, Cindy Sheehan purchased a "fly speck," on the Texas map in Crawford Texas.

Using what Ms. Sheehan called dirty money, a government insurance policy from her sons death, she drew upon a trick known as The Texas Two Step to purchase a five acre plot of cactus and scrub land seven miles from President Bush's well kept ranch.

A fellow war protester Gerry Fonseca, acting as Sheehan's agent, stated he bought the five acre armadillo habitat for $52,500.

Posing as a homeless Katrina victim, Fonesca told Realtors that he wanted to settle in and "just build a little place to find a new start."

Sheehan, who is usually spat upon when she shops in Crawford, knew she didn't stand a chance in Hades to buy the property so she sent in Fonesca as a decoy.

Crawford residents are not taking kindly to being hoodwinked and soon threatened to burn down the five acre estate but there is nothing there to torch but catus and armadillos and Texans respect there state flower and mammal to much to do that.

A spokesman for the real estate firm said they had all but given up on selling the five acre plot and was about to let it be used as a place for kids to take their guns and "plink," tin cans and old beer bottles.

"And as far as I am concerned the boys are still welcome to go there and "plink," any piece of litter they can find," the spokesman said.

Ms. Sheehan on the other hand has thought about planting a peace garden on the land with a little house built of native materials ( mesquite ) to study with other protestors how to recreate a world where there is no more war, no anger and freedom for all who hate America to vent their frustration.

"When Bush gets impeached or forced to leave then who knows what we will do with the ranch. By then the taxes will be due and taxes means more money for war machines," Sheehan told reporters. "Guess I'll just have to go back home to California and become a housewife."

Friday, July 21, 2006

HAPPINESS IN A BOTTLE

As I ponder oil shortages, gas price increases, global warming and the Middle Eastern war, I am painfully reminded life isn't always tranquil. Years ago it became apparent to me when one takes the path less traveled we often come upon a fork in the road. One direction leads to further pandemonium and the other leads one to a place where they don't serve ice water.

Sure this sounds a bit sarcastic but I have put on enough miles on life's highway to know the bluebird of happiness can easily become road kill in the twinkling of an eye. Still, a little dusting off and a warm smile and few kind words from a friend can easily set you back on the right turnpike.

Over the past few weeks the chemo made me feel like a an ol' horse that had been rode hard and thrown out to pasture. Al Gore's detestable global warming has me all tuckered out and for a while I thought life had bottomed out.

A week ago last Wednesday, as the Good Ship Reality was heading for a crash landing, I became a crazed woman bent on self destruction. My apartment had become a sanctuary for clutter, so finding a desired book among the pile of hundreds of other books became a futile search, so I arose from my chair and with the mighty cane in hand threw every book I owned onto the bed, forcing me to rethink the whole universe and its order.

As often is the case when a person sets out on a project you soon become distracted by an object that holds memories of some sort and such was the case when I found a small book that had been long forgotten. When this book first came into my life I was at a friends house trying to yard sale my collection of what nots. I had recently been diagnosed with MS, closed my restaurant and was beginning to really understand the meaning of fatigue.

As I reclined on their hammock, not seeing a customer for hours, I drifted off to sleep with dreadful thoughts of packing 99.2% of the junk I brought to this stupid yard sale. Soon my friend woke me up from my nightmare by throwing a book at me entitled "14,000 To Make You Happy."

Now you must understand multiple choices drives me into fits of anxiety. The best thing you can do is take me to a cafe where there is a sign above the grill stating "Only 3 things served–hamburgs, fries and drinks." Menus that read like novels short circuit the decision making part of my brain.

14,000 Things To Make You Happy depressed me, but valiantly I opened to a random page, closed my eyes and pointed to what would soon make me utterly joyful. My finger landed on Tabasco Sauce, not gold nor silver, not sunny skies, good friends or sweet corn, but Tabasco Sauce.

Tabasco Sauce should be immortalized. Eggs are not worth the bother of eating without the hot sauce. So why did the little bottle of pepper juice make me happy? I pondered that question on my 25 mile journey back home, returning with all the junk I hauled to my friends yard sale.

My Scandinavian upbringing recalled a time when a product called Hot Ketchup was about as fiery of a substance one should attempt to consume. Swedish cookbooks only had one hot thing in them and that was a loaf of rye bread straight from the oven.

Strangely enough when I moved to Minnesota as a young naive woman I discovered feisty Mexican food. True, Minnesota is a long way from the Rio Grande, but that is not what this chronicle is about. It's Tabasco Sauce!

So what is it about Tabasco Sauce that makes me so darn happy? Well simply enough thoughts of hot sauce and eggs makes me think of Huevos Rancheros, something you won't find on the menu at Cracker Barrel, but you sure will out west.

Breakfast back home in the wild west meant three things, sitting with friends at the restaurant over strong coffee, hot sauce and eggs on a tortilla or biscuits and gravy. The local cafe was more important than city hall in several ways.

There on a stool with a worn Formica counter, politics were discussed, horse stories swapped and crops planned. Fancy decor never made the food taste better so pretty decorations was not a priority. What was important was biscuits. If the owner couldn't make good biscuits and gravy the townspeople generally took the law into their own hands.

After following the Cowboy Poet Circuit around for a length of time, trying to emulate their style, I realized the need to find my own voice. Most cowboy poets were folks who had been bucked off the horse one time to many and I didn't feel the need to pay those dues. Besides, for some strange reason I felt God calling me back east and what good is a cowgirl poet back here in the rust belt.

Still I loved those days out west. It was the cowboy way that got me involved in storytelling and that is not such a bad thing. Food, coffee and real people–gosh I sure miss it.

So pass the Tabasco Sauce, pour me a good cup of strong coffee and a plate of Huevos Rancherous and forget the other 13,999 other reasons to be happy