Here's another one when someone leaves the door open. "Were you born in a barn?" How about this one? "Don't make me turn this car around."
When I was a teenager I took care of a man who had cerebral palsy much worse than this comedian. He was going to college where he got his degree. They made one or two movies about him. Also, he wrote one book, Sam and His Cart. I did everything for Art. I gave him his baths, helped him get dressed after using the toilet, spoon fed him and spent a lot of time talking with him. Art Honeyman had the best sense of humor I had ever encountered up to that time. I recall many many times where he made me laugh 'till I cried. I think he lived with us about two years while he was attending Portland State University. We had a ramp constructed so he could use it to get in and out of the house. For a while my dad would shuttle him to the University from our house in N.W. Portland on Northrup street. I loved that guy even though it was quite a burden seeing to his nearly every physical need. I also know that I provided a lot of sociological experience for him. I remember him trying to turn the pages on his text books which he insisted on doing himself. He tried to do as much as possible by himself even walking the long distance from our house to the university on occasion. Thanks for jogging my memory. Incidentally, I've seen nothing in neither of the two movies about him nor any of the thumbnail biographies about him that mentioned all of the effort we provided during his mid college years but trust me, I know all about Art Honeyman. Our experience with Art prompted my mom to buy as much as she could from another famous man with cerebral palsy who was a Fuller Brush salesman who also sold other stuff like light bulbs. We must have had light bulbs to last us for decades. They made a movie about that guy, also. I remember many times when he came to our front door.
That's a pic of my great-nephew on the left. You probably know who the dude on the right is. Fast times we live in. Getting faster all the time.
This is about as random as fuck. A bit earlier, I clicked on this article due to the title, The ‘No-Nos’ of Tule Lake. Right away I start thinking that I know the name Tule Lake. An instant later I had a "duh moment" as I realize that I used to live there back in spring/summer of 1984. I lived there, in the camp itself, for a few months with my girlfriend and her family. I remember it was 1984 because we watched the Olympic torch pass through town on it's way down to Los Angeles that year. I didn't like living there at the time, and was happy when came back to Oregon. Here is the article, in case anyone wants to check it out. https://www.latimes.com/projects/ja...r-ii-camp-speak-out/?utm_source=pocket-newtab
Upcoming UFO report will be 'difficult to explain,' former national intelligence official says (yahoo.com) All of you thought UFO's are real and the shadow forces will legitimize that after 80 years.