So I have come to terms with the skills I do have. How else would I write a blog for more than 20 years and hawk t-shirts with bad puns on the Internet. Now that is a skilled trade. Or at least a skilled trade-off.
I haven't been to Reno in years. I used to go there quite often. In fact it was the first place I gambled when I turned 21. Honestly, to a 21 year old from Boise, Reno seemed like the height of sophistication. It wasn't until I went to Las Vegas for the first time that I realized Reno was blue collar and Vegas was...well Vegas.
When I started going to Reno it still had lots of the old casinos like the Nevada Club, Harold's, Harrah's and the Sands. Most of the old casinos are long gone. But I still like the old casinos. I never really did much but play slots. Table games stressed me out. I played a bit of Black Jack when I first went there, but I just never like the stress of knowing when to hit or stay. And casino dealers don't have a lot of patience for people who don't move quickly.
So I sat at the slots with the blue heads and plunked coins in until a cocktail waitress gave me a free watered down drink and rolled her eyes when I didn't tip.
At one point a college friend of mine moved to Reno and worked in a casino as a slot host so I went to visit at least once a year. He had been the photographer on my college newspaper and was one of the people who taught me how to develop film and print photos. On a couple of trips we drove around taking photos in a series we were going to call the art and architecture of Reno. It was a joke because at the time Reno was basically a white trash mecca.
It is also National Raisin Day and anyone who has ever had a rabbit or been around a rabbit will understand this design.
Isn't that ironic?
I realize that my blog had never been recognized for burning wisdom or genius. And obviously I have turned to t-shirt art as an outlet for both my genius at dad jokes and absurd artistic humor. And also, obviously I have encountered Vincent Van Gogh's lack of recognition. But it isn't for lack of trying.
I scroll through my store chock full of t-shirt designs that I would by and wear if I could afford all of them. And I have started getting regular likes of my social media posts blatently promoting my t-shirts, but no one buys the friggin things. It isn't that I need the money. But come on, look at the shit you see promoted on Facebook that people buy.
I didn't feel like creating a Devil Dog t-shirt design so I repurposed one of my Cryptid designs for a Jersey Devil. Because Devil Dog...Jersey Devil...eh, who cares.
Before discovering King Tut, I spent years uncovering the past in my grandmother's drawers and closets. She lived next door to us growing up and she never minded my fascination and grubbing through things and asking questions. I loved old photo albums and boxes of papers. It was all treasure to me.
I've related before that my father was obsessed with finding lost treasures of the old west. He would take me along on trips to old ghost towns where he would run his metal detector over old outhouses and cabin walls. We never found anything much but horseshoes and railroad spikes.
My father would also take me to flea markets and I loved walking by table after table of country antiques: oil lamps, tools, dishes and other junk people had dug out of old barns or rescued from estate sales. I loved the unique and unusual. My bedroom as a kid was filled with various curiosities like bird's nests, wasp nests, rocks, marbles and old toys.
Ironically, my mother was a minimalist having grown up in the depression with 11 brothers and sisters and very little possessions. My father had grown up in the same house my grandmother lived and was an only child. He liked his stuff. So it was one of those points of tension between my parents that she eventually just tolerated.
I kept my habit of going to flea markets, thrift stores, antique malls and auctions as I became and adult. When I lived alone, it was entertainment and I'll admit I accumulated a great deal of stuff just for the sake of having it. When I got married much of the stuff went back home to the same thrift stores I sourced them from but some of my treasures that I could give up ended up in plastic bins that moved with me to two new homes and habitatted the garage for years.
When the pandemic hit I decided to go through the treasures and that's when I truly began an eBay seller. AI hadn't been created yet so the research and drafting listing and setting prices was all up to me. And slowly I emptied the bins. Things that didn't sell eventually made it back to Goodwill.
As the pandemic winded slowly down my interest in thrifting picked up again. I gained a home office and was excited about stocking it with treasures. But when it looked like I was going to cross over the line into "too much stuff" territory, I started selling again and realized it was the best of both worlds. I could go to thrift stores and antique malls (which I love) and acquire as long as I kept a steady flow heading out the door via eBay. Dizgraceland Collectibles took form.
I'll admit it is still difficult at times part with really cool things at times. I still have my collections and interests. So far the lack of space caps those collections and I have been able to stop acquiring things I don't have room for. Also, as I age, my forays through thrift stores have taught me that many of those stores are the great mother ship that all things come from and return to eventually. And the reality is that same will be true for my precious treasure.
I actually like Shakespeare. I particularly like Hamlet. To a lesser extent I sort of like Romeo and Juliet and Midsummer's Night Dream. Most of my exposure has been through having to read the plays in high school, college and then again when my children had to read those plays in high school. Funny how I have to relive things you have to read in high school. I can't tell you how many times I've had to read The Things They Carried. Though in all fairness I didn't read it in high school since I was in high school during the time of the Vietnam war which is where the book was set.
But I digress. Back to Shakespeare. Here is one of the first riffs on Shakespeare I made years ago. I thought it would be a pretty funny name for a Dry Cleaners.
Then there was another riff on Hamlet with this one:
Having grown up a Christian Scientist as a kid, being sick was never an experience filled with comfort and sympathy from my mother. Being sick meant more shame than anything else. When other kids got thermometers, aspirin, and cool wash clothes, I got disappointed looks and passages from the bible and Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy. So I never faked being sick to get out of school like other kids.
Now I hate staying home as well as long as I can stand up. Fortunately I don't get sick often. But I get the same disappointed (and often dirty looks) if I show up at the office coughing. Since Covid, people prefer silent suffering.
I have exercised off and on most of my life. I was never an athletic person. I was a straight A student until until 7th grade PE and got a C because I never could climb a rope or do a hundred sit-ups. And I learned in 7th grade to hate running with a passion.
I have gone through many phases in my life of being overweight and losing weight. It truly does seem to be a Sisyphean type activity. Now that I am in my late 60s I have started to question the point of worrying about my weight. I have a doctor's appointment in May and if she says I should lose weight I am tempted to ask her if losing weight would keep me from ultimately dying anyway. But I imagine she would just shake her head and write something in my chart. Or she could say no, but it could help me live longer. But if living longer means I have to cut out all of the things I enjoy, I'm not sure what the point is.
Regardless, I posted three new t-shirt designs that ChatGPT assures me will be a hit with people who do exercise. But something tells me it is merely another exercise in futility.
I'm getting pretty good at that exercise.