My life would be easier if I could use more of my own options for spelling and grammar.
—Mitchell
Hegman
My life would be easier if I could use more of my own options for spelling and grammar.
—Mitchell
Hegman
Happy 250th Birthday, America. It seems like just yesterday I was celebrating your 200th.
—Mitchell Hegman
Yesterday, I live-trapped two more chipmunks in our never-ending scheme to reduce the looting of Desiree's flowers and exotic (at least to our prairie) vegetables planted around our house. I noticed the second caught critter ping-ponging around inside the trap at midday.
"Jeez,"
I said when I picked up the trap, "you need to chill before you have a
mini chipmunk heart attack. I am just going to drive you down the road and let
you go."
After
picking up the trap, I headed back into the house as a shortcut to the garage.
"Tell you what," I said to the trapped critter, "I'll turn you
into the prodigal chipmunk and give you a big adventure."
With
that said, I gave it a quick tour of the dining room and kitchen, explaining
things. "We call that a table. Those are chairs. Check out the LED lights.
Nice, right?" When we got to my laptop, I hovered the trap near the
screen. "That's a computer. You're not likely to see one of those
again."
A
few minutes later, we found ourselves over a mile down the road, where I
released the prodigal chipmunk into a knot of tall sagebrush. "Just
consider this," I said as the chipmunk vanished into the tangles.
"The latest theories suggest we may all be nothing more than minor players
in a grand simulation."
—Mitchell
Hegman
The Maya imagined that before there were mountains to climb or fields to till, before dry land lay beneath the first person's feet, there existed only an endless sea. Upon these restless primordial waters drifted a vast crocodilian creature. This ancient beast was not merely an inhabitant of the deep but was, in the end, the very stuff from which our earthen world would emerge. The creator gods subdued this monster and divided its great form into the features of the Earth itself. From its flanks came the forests. From its back emerged the mountain chains.
In
this scenario, the Rocky Mountain basin in which I live might have been a small
crease someplace on the back of this primeval beast.
I'm
not opposed to this idea.
—Mitchell
Hegman
Welp, I flunked another basic human intelligence test. This one involves the process of grinding your own coffee. The idea behind grinding coffee is fairly straightforward: you drop whole pre-roasted beans into a grinder, press a button, and the grinder reduces the beans to grounds that collect in a receiving vessel below.
Thing
is, there are no honest shortcuts here. You can’t grind coffee if you forget to
drop in the beans. You get nothing if you neglect to press the button. And you
produce a grand mess if you forget to place the receiving vessel below the
grinder.
So,
as you might have surmised from the photograph I shared, I neglected to place
the vessel below the grinder before I pressed the button and fluttered off to
find some potato chips, which I should not be eating. The photograph features what I found when I returned to the task at hand.
—Mitchell
Hegman
Let me tell you about America. To begin, we have an inordinate number of actors, realtors, car salesmen, and oilmen. We also have a few cowboys. One of the cowboys once stepped inside a café where I was eating breakfast and teased our good-looking waitress. That occurred in a town named Wisdom. Wisdom is just down the road, a statement that has a nice, distinct ring to it. Wisdom, Montana, and West Yellowstone, Montana, seem perpetually to compete to provide America's coldest temperature during the daily winter weather reports.
America:
the nation.
America
is a great military force. Some of our forces are presently hovering over a
country called Iran, which, coincidentally, has a few oilmen and lots of oil.
We,
I mean America, again, also landed men on the moon and returned them home. On a
smaller scale, we sometimes carefully cut women open and insert fake boobs in
them. Long before this stuff, some of our soldiers chased Indian men, women,
and children across mostly barren plains. Just up the road a spell (as they
like to say here) is the Big Hole National Battlefield. At that location, in
August of 1877, the Nez Perce fought against the 7th Infantry Regiment.
In
other words, they fought against America.
As
an American, I like birds.
—Mitchell
Hegman
I struggle to recall names. I can’t remember why I go from room to room. Yet I recall with perfect clarity the long-past midnight hour, many years ago, when my two cats and I chased a mouse from kitchen to living room and back again, me with a large cooking pot into which I eventually scooped the mouse.
Of
what value is this clear memory when I land in my kitchen today having
forgotten my purpose?
—Mitchell
Hegman