Let it cool a little longer
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JOSEPH N. BELL
Yesterday, my wife -- when I wasn’t paying attention -- called the
Gas Company to send someone out to light our wall furnace pilots.
“Why did you do that,” I asked her, “when I know quite well how to
light the pilots?”
“Because,” she said, “I feel safer if they do it. And I want to
watch them so I know how to do it myself. Then, when it gets cold, I
don’t have to wait for you to get around to it. Besides, I can bend
over better than you can.”
Most of this is inaccurate, of course, except the bending. I’m as
safe as the Gas Company, and I get our heaters working when the
weather turns truly cold. But Sherry heats our house by the calendar
rather than the thermometer. Cold weather begins Oct. 1. Not a day
later. That’s when she cracks out her winter comforter and huddles
under it while I throw off the sheet. That’s also when she begins
talking quite insistently about lighting the pilot.
I consider this a crime against fall, the most glorious time of
the year. The occasional bite of cold air that might require a
blanket but certainly not a comforter tells us that the lethargy of
summer is over and we need to address life head on once again. At
least, that’s what it meant during the years I lived in the Midwest.
It told us there would be snow but not yet. It smelled of burning
leaves and popcorn and tasted of cider and taffy apples. It put
stride in your walk and zest in your soul. Some of that carries over
to Southern California, but it’s the one time of year I’d rather be
somewhere else north of here.
Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine are the only three states in the
U.S. that I’ve never visited, and each year, we cut out pictures and
stories about fall travel packages in those states, but we haven’t
managed it yet. We did get to the mountains of North Carolina to
marvel at the fall colors two years ago, and last week, the Los
Angeles Times featured a color spread on Utah’s Zion National Park,
which is only a short day’s drive away. So we’re thinking about that.
Meanwhile, the Gas Company will come calling.
The rich and soothing colors of fall are especially welcome
because October is such a stressful month, made more stressful this
year by the Sacramento coup and the pilot lighting caper. These
diversions have been piled atop the normal stress of the confluence
of the baseball, football and basketball seasons -- one ending, one
in the middle, and one about to begin -- which properly demands my
full attention. (I understand the ongoing ice hockey season is also
of interest to some local immigrants from Canada.)
Last Saturday, when the stress stepped up considerably, will
illustrate. I had agreed in a careless moment some weeks before to
attend a high school reunion with my wife on that day and evening.
Had I checked schedules beforehand, I could have projected two
baseball playoff games on that day and would certainly have known
that the University of Missouri -- from which I graduated several
years ago -- would also be playing Nebraska. All things considered, I
probably still would have gone to the reunion, but at least I would
have weighed the risks of not going first.
Finally, in October, there’s Halloween, which has not been a
favorite holiday for me since kids started carrying shopping bags
instead of soaping up the windows of hostile neighbors. When I was a
kid, Halloween was the one holiday all year when we could express
ourselves in an adult world. Now, its major saving grace for me is
the gigantic Halloween balloon display we have grown to expect from
our neighbor, Treb Heining.
The weather we’re having these days in California is what, in the
Midwest, we called Indian summer. (This doesn’t parse at all if you
get politically correct and call it Native American summer.) Indian
summer was a brief throwback to warm weather after the first cold
spell had arrived. As the song says, “It’s the tear that comes after
June-time laughter.” Remember that when you turn the clock back.
*
Many years ago, Rush Limbaugh -- when he was still polishing his
right-wing attack mode -- spoke at UC Irvine. A curious friend took
me to hear him.
At that point, I knew nothing about him, but it took about 10
incredulous minutes to pick up the hate-mongering message he was
offering to an audience clearly ready to embrace any public figure
who might justify for them their own hatreds and fears. He’s been
performing that service ever since.
People like Limbaugh and William Bennett, who make a great deal of
money by telling other people how to shape up morally, run a basic
risk. If they are ever exposed as not following their own advice, the
hypocrisy can -- and should -- be multiplied many times over.
That is now happening to Limbaugh as a result of his admission
that he has, for the last six years, been addicted to prescription
painkillers, which he allegedly sometimes procured illegally.
The mea culpas being heard now remind me that double standards for
the rich and powerful will probably never go away. But maybe
Limbaugh’s admissions will, at least, make us a little more skeptical
and a little less accepting of the moralists in our midst who would
define right and wrong for us in their own self-aggrandizing,
absolute terms.
And even though they took place in another state, Limbaugh’s
difficulties might also influence our new governor to examine one
sure-fire method of public cost-cutting. Instead of building more
prisons and hiring high-priced guards, California could save millions
of dollars by offering victimless drug users treatment rather than
locking them up. Ironically, that might allow Rush Limbaugh to turn
his problems into a legitimate public service.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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