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Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle

~ The Home Pub of the Famous Pink Drinks and Trotter's Ale

Window Dresser's Arms, Pig & Whistle

Author Archives: Therese Trouserzoff

Madness

24 Sunday Apr 2011

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Entertainment Upstairs

≈ 23 Comments

29 Our House

29 Our House

.

30 It Must Be Love

30 It Must Be Love

.

28 House of Fun

28 House of Fun

.

Foodge 23 : Acacia’s Plan Foments

21 Thursday Apr 2011

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Big M, Foodge Private Dick

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

humour

Acacia jonesii

Story by Big M

Acacia’s plan for Foodge depended on Fern being able to carry out her part, flawlessly. Acacia had already established, from medical records and old newspapers that Foodge was the only son of Hamish MacFoodge, socialite, barrister, and philanthropist, and his wife Felicity, socialiser, Solicitor-at-Large, and professional cake contest judge. They had both been tragically killed in a ballroom accident, leaving poor young Felix MacFoodge orphaned. The rest was a mystery, wrapped in an enigma, or, was it an enigma wrapped in a mystery (or a wedge wrapped in a newspaper…ed) ? Either way, Acacia had gone as far as she could go with public records. This was where Fern had a huge part to play. Acacia had just finished explaining all of the above, over a glass, or two, of ‘Chardy’.

“So, Foodge’s dad was a famous coffee maker, right?” Fern was trying to resist the temptation to fiddle with her new acrylic nail.

“No, where did you get that idea?”

“Oh, silly, you said that he was a famous barista” Fern replied triumphantly, once having dated one. “I should know!”

“No, you’re the silly one, I said ‘barrister’, not ‘barista’, don’t you know the difference?” Acacia was starting to get short with Fern, which was a pretty common occurrence, as Fern wasn’t playing with a full deck.

“Yes, of course I do, one makes coffee, the other hangs around in bars!” Fern waved at the waitress to top up their glasses.

“That’s right, this one was the bar hanging around type. Anyhoo, what we need is for you to get back into Foodge’s office and get the name of his solicitor, so that you can find out just what he’s worth.” Acacia took a long drink from her glass, thinking it might be time to change to cocktails.

“Why do I want to find out what Foodge’s solicitor is worth?”  Fern was really struggling with this crazy plan, and hoped the waitress would return so she could order a low fat mudslide.

Mudslide

“No, find out how much Foodge is worth. He must have property, or a family trust, or investments, or, all of the above.”  Acacia grabbed Fern’s face with two hands to force her to look Acacia right in the eyes, like she used to do when they were kids.

“Above, the above.” Fern was trying to look over Acacia’s head to look at ‘all of the above’, but her head was trapped by Acacia’s hands, so Fern tried to roll her eyes upward. Unfortunately the woman seated at the next table thought that Fern was choking, so leapt up, placed both arms around her midriff and thrusting backwards in a poor imitation of the Heimlich manoeuvre. This forced all of Fern’s stomach contents upward, through her oesophagus, and out her mouth, straight into Acacia’s face.

Heimlich Manoeuvre a little bit wrong.....

Fern felt about a kilo lighter, but was still none the wiser. Acacia was covered in nibblies, chardonnay and grated carrot. The Heimlich manoeuvre lady stepped back with her hands grasped above her head, like a prizefighter, whilst the other patrons cheered. Acacia stormed out to the ladies, whilst Fern meekly followed.

Monday was a new day. Acacia had persuaded Fern to return to work at Foodge’s office. The appearance of Fern’s missing pay in her bank account gave the perfect excuse for her return. Fern had spent Saturday afternoon at the beauty salon (no, not that run down place near the Pig’s Arms) being waxed, plucked and streaked in anticipation. They had been over the plan all weekend, well, not all weekend, they’d spent Saturday night drinking cocktails, eschewing ‘Chardy’ for the first time in their lives.

Fern did everything as usual. She caught the 08:50 bus, which brought her to the bus stop right outside the doorway between the drycleaners and the kebab shop leading to the offices above. The nameplate on the door read, ‘Suite One. P.J Heinz, Esq. Debt Collectors. Suite Two. Fong Chin, Imports. Suite Three. F.Foodge, Esq. Private Agent.’ She climbed the threadbare stairs, trying not to hang onto the sticky timber handrail, but every second or third tread threatened to tip her backwards, out onto the footpath. Of course, the stilettos didn’t help!

Fern reached the landing, stepped forward to the Art Deco styled door, which she had to unlock. This wasn’t uncommon, as it was rare for Foodge to be in the office before 11:00. She entered the office and gasped. It had clearly been ransacked. Her filing system was in complete disarray. Biscuit tins of receipts had been tossed across the room. The drawers of her desk had been pulled all the way out, and threatened to collapse under the weight of spare lipstick and mascara. Her telephony headset (as she liked to call it) had been torn out of its socket, and tossed across the room, which didn’t really matter as she was unlikely to answer the telephone. She stepped into Foodge’s Private Office, at least, that’s what it said on the door. Everything was as it usually was. Spare Fedora and overcoat on a wooden stand. Row of unused pipes in a rack, next to a half empty bottle of  ‘Seven Seas’ rye and two shot glasses.

Fern sat at the desk, and started flicking though the teledex. There was nothing under ‘B’ for barista, or ‘C’ for coffee maker, then she remembered, and checked ‘B’ again for ‘barrister’ then ‘L’ for ‘lawyer, then, ‘S’ for ‘solicitor’. She was about to give up when she spied a card wedged under the edge of the Bakelite telephone. It read ‘Reid, Reid and Reid, Attorneys at Law and Notaries Public’. She was about to slip the card into her pocket, when she realised that it’s absence might give a clue to a sleuth like Foodge, so she transcribed the details into her notebook. Fern spent the rest of the day tidying her filing system, and going through old mascaras and lipsticks, discarding most of them, as they were no longer trendy.

That evening Acacia made Fern a celebratory meal as a reward for her good work; frozen calamari, steamed vegetables and rice, also frozen. They ate their meal in front of the television, laughing, whilst the ‘Fat Fighters’ struggled to run through an obstacle course whilst wearing weight jackets equivalent to their weight loss. Acacia turned to Fern. “ A toast, to Foodge, who’s gunna get a whole lot poorer”.

Foodge, meanwhile had spent the afternoon in the company of his ‘parents’ and now, his solicitor, Jonathon Reid, Solicitor at Large, as he liked to call himself, more for his size, rather than for being out and about. Mr Reid had telephoned Foodge early in the morning, around 11:30, to invite him for lunch. They met at 2:00pm at the Swindlers’ Arms, Mr Reid’s second office. They polished off steak in red wine, surely an oxymoron, as it tasted distinctly of cleaning fluid, washed down with Swindlers’ Arms Porter, a dense carbonated brew with a firm mouth feel, diesel fumes on the front of the palate, and a rather axillary nose.

“I’ll come straight to the point, not beat around the bush…you…er…know…ah…you’re, well, broke!” Mr Reid tried to soften the blow with a sardonic grin. All the while holding his pint up to the light, which was futile, as the fluid therein was entirely opaque. “Mr Swan approached my office last week. I know that you may see this as a breach of confidence, but, I am, after all, your legal guardian.”

Foodge’s little face fell. “Yes, of course Uncle Jonathon.” He started to nervously fiddle with his well-worn pack of Camels.

“Now, there’s nothing to fear. Mr Swan and I have approached the Taxation Department, and Mr Swan should have your tax matters sorted within a fortnight. I am prepared to release money from your trust fund in order to set things right on two conditions. One, you must fire that secretary. She’s the most indolent, incompetent, inept person I’ve met in my life, and, two, you modernise your office. New telephones, fax, computers, broadband, billing systems, and so on.” Mr Reid eyes moved from the glass to attempt to meet Foodge’s, who stared down at the cigarette packet in his left hand.

Foodge had failed to comprehend most of what his legal advisor had said. All he’d heard was, ‘fire Fern.’ He couldn’t fire her. She was a great secretary, punctual, always there by 9:30 or 10:00, and sometimes staying back until 5:00. She had a great accounting system, and even answered the ‘phone, sometimes, plus, she was a real good looker. Foodge mumbled some thing like, ‘I’ll think about it, thanks for lunch’ Then donned his hat, pocketed his Camels, and pushed his way through the crowd black suited legal and financial people, until he tumbled out onto the footpath. Foodge knew exactly what he needed; wedges and cold, hand brewed ale.

Leaving Shoes

20 Wednesday Apr 2011

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Lehan Winifred Ramsay

≈ 31 Comments

Tags

Leaving, SHoes

Leaving Shoes

Editor’s note:

Apparently Foodge’s message was a bit too garbled….. here’s the cat properly out of the bag ….

Painting and Story by Lehan Winifred Ramsay

This is the story of a kingdom far, far away. Where the old men divided up the goodies of the land and held on to them, refusing to let them make things better for everybody. Today I am thinking that it’s a country that people grow old too fast in, and so cannot think of how to make a better place.

Really, this is a story of my leaving. To anyone who ever asked me why I stayed, I always told them that it was because every day of my life here there had been something new. But I got tired of struggling. Some dust must have entered my eye, and I could no longer see new things, but old and tired things.

This is not the story that I put a bright and excited face on returning to Australia. This is a story where I tell it how I feel it. It was cold, and things felt never-endingly grim. All around me seemed to be people who were only just managing, dragging too many set ways along with them. Even the people with a bit of spirit seemed only lightly alive, and I felt squashed down under all of them.

There was something enchanting in my eyes for a long time, and then some dust got in. And I got tired, so I am leaving, and I am a little afraid of my future. I made some kind of dream for myself, this house and those animals, but in the end it was only me, and too heavy for me, and I have to let it go. Not knowing if I will ever have a chance to make it again.

Everyone needs some kinds of tokens for taking a big step don’t they? Mine are a pair of cheap shoes, ivory coloured, made of light rubber. They won’t last me for very long, and they will pick up a lot of dirt, but they are a pleasure to walk in. If ever I wanted a business to succeed, it would be selling these shoes. Who could not love them? I’m not going to start a business though, I think I must be a bad businessperson, I couldn’t make my school succeed. So these shoes and I are going to walk out the door of Japan on April 30, leaving behind the dream house that I made, the animals that were my family, and some kind of enchantment that after 20 years, one day wore too thin to keep me following.

Foodge the next: Ex What ?

18 Monday Apr 2011

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Emmjay

≈ 28 Comments

Foodge swung the Zephyr into the car park at the Pig’s Arms, running at an impossible  clip and sending a shower of discarded eyebrows and Brazilian wax imprints across the driveway.  Reminding himself that Glenda should arrange for the Hair’em Scar’em waste removal and illegal dumpsters to do something about her overgrowing business refuse problem.

He removed the 8 track from its slot in the front wall of the Z mobile and reminded himself to book for ZZ Top  set to play at the Pig’s Arms in the Nathan Rees Memorial Ballroom at the month of the end.

He scanned the lot for the usual suspect local urchins and noting nothing suspicious – itself a suspicious nothing, he locked the car, adjusted his Fourdoorer, paced the six steps through the side door of the pub and as if he lacked a car / sorry as if he lacked a care and took an urgently vacant chilled vinyl stool on the good side of the jukbox.

He cooked his heart, adjusted his flannels and looked expectorantly ant Mirf.  Moive’s bar tab amnesia swept over him (Mirth, mainly, but also a litter offal Fodge) aird he pored the dick a drunk and containerd to swap dawn the bar.

“Harbor leave dart a sir tan  expat airtist hazar plain ticket to come bark tudor pub in May.  High over herd some loo shat why liar ah was gettingar hare cut indoor Pig Sleggs.

Wafer rom ?  deksa vreM, stihl loo king in the ma raw.

“Libel leave some where hoover the rain barrel in Hokey Dokey.  They men shined Harry Garto” sed egdooF, coal aps sing urn has peer.

Arm geld thart shezz calming bark two sed vreM.

“Sfuckin coald in Hokey Dokey”  offered Flogged.

.deilper verM “erad revooh yrd tniap dluow yaw oN “

Steve the Butcher

16 Saturday Apr 2011

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Algernon

≈ 33 Comments

Tags

Bus Driver, Butcher Great Bloke, Great Bloke

Steve the Butcher / Bus Driver / Great Bloke

Story by Algernon, photo courtesy of the RTA’s 251-252 bus timetable

We moved here around 18 years ago. Familiarizing ourselves with our new environs we came across a butchers shop being run by a couple slightly younger than us. In the early 90’s butcher shops outside shopping centres or strip shops in the suburbs were becoming rarer and rarer. The couple recently bought the family business and not long after the recession we had to have had hit. What impressed me was the quality of the meat and foods on display. One Saturday we took Algernon Junior who would have been about 12 months old to buy some meat for the weekend.

I like my food and always look for the quality rather than the quantity. The couple had both been chefs at City restaurants combined their skills with the family trade and produced a wonderful array of goods. They cured their own hams and have won prizes including firsts for their hams, sausages and other goods at the Sydney Royal Easter Show.

Steve the butcher offered Algernon Junior on this trip a piece of ham, which he woofed down and a friendship developed from that time. Steve offered small pieces of ham to all the kids who entered the shop and well as the adults. Since then we’ve bought ham for Christmas to share with the family. Junior recalled this marketing in his HSC years and this small offering as being one of his earliest memories.

Some years later they moved down the road to a small shopping precinct called Midway. They bought out the butchers who where there a butchers shop one wonders how it ever survived. It rarely looked to have anyone there. Their claim to fame seemed to be chicken boilers!

Steve could be called upon to supply our local primary school for snags for our fireworks night at a good rate. His kids didn’t ever go to the school. In fact he’d supply all the local schools for their fetes, father’s day BBQ’s or even election days. Saturday Netball at Meadowbank the Lions club would be cooking his snags. The local football clubs the same.

About three years ago Steve took up a new career bus driving, it’s a natural progression. He still worked in the shop two days a week. The bugger cut me off on a couple of time a roundabout when picking up one of the Algernoninas. That usually met with mock indignation the next time I saw him.

For Steve good food, family and friends were important things in life as well as sharing those things with others.  Too much sport was also barely enough to quote the great HG and Roy.

On the 6th of April, Steve suffered a massive heart attack and died. On the 12th Mrs Algernon and I had the privilege of attending his funeral with some 500 others from all parts of our local community. Whilst a sad occasion, there was much to laugh about as we recalled collectively his life and the way that he’d touched us. One of those was Steve being chosen to adorn the 251-252 Sydney Buses timetable, such a handsome bugger.

That evening Mrs Algernon, Algernonia the younger and I attended the Sydney Royal Easter Show Arts Preview where Algernonia is an exhibitor. She went close to a ribbon though the thrill of being hung is satisfaction for her. Of course they feed and water you as well.

As for Steve’s wife Ann, well she’s out the front of the store talking with people clearly comforted by the concern and love shown by the community. Rest in Peace, Steve it’s a privilege to have called you a friend.

Sistas are Doin’ it for Themselves

16 Saturday Apr 2011

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Bands at the Pig's Arms, Warrigal Mirriyuula

≈ 24 Comments

Tags

Annie Lennox, Aretha Franklin, Barbra Streisand, Chaka Khan, Chrissie Hynde, Dionne Warwick, Dusty Springfield, Ella Fitzgerald, Etta James, Gladys Knight, Joni Mitchell, Julie London, Kate Ceberano, Linda Ronstadt, music, Nancy Wilson, Peggy Lee, Petula Clark, Phoebe Snow, Sandi Shaw, Sistas, Warrigal, Wendy Matthews, youtube

Playlist and Digital Mischief by Warrigal Mirriyuula

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yi6dqhi8Ptw

Aretha Franklin Natural Woman

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0SESmndcKI0

Phoebe Snow Harpo’s Blues

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uJ_DJYLBxGg&playnext=1&list=PL3B7E02350D1BB0A5

Chrissie Hynde I Wish You Love

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jjNNijd4t0Q

Dionne Warwick The Windows Of The World

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JGb5IweiYG8

Peggy Lee Fever

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0qFpvlBYQy0

Nancy Wilson The Very Thought Of You

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iFN_Iu_PD-g

Julie London Black Coffee

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eJmplWfWAPU

Gladys Knight Neither One Of Us Wants To Be The First To Say Goodbye

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=abaJfuJbkgg

Linda Ronstadt  Long Long Time

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P5mZErvdXVM

Joni Mitchell The Refuge Of The Roads

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZXvLsltu2A

Etta James At Last

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AsqTADlyUz0

Petula Clark Who Am I

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a28kY1-s-Vc

Dusty Springfield The Look Of Love

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gFOvNRlE4Kk

Sandi Shaw Girl Don’t Come

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2XggjVo3j-o

Ella Fitzgerald Cry Me A River

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ixHeMICGoYM

Kate Ceberano & Wendy Matthews You’ve Always Got The Blues

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MS1jAvCycCY

Annie Lennox No More “I Love You’s”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XP-oGwt8ng0&feature=related

Chaka Khan My Funny Valentine

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kmuF3jiufww

Barbra Streisand Evergreen

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Pu0Fn1oRN4

Aretha Franklin and Annie Lennox Sisters Are Doin’ It For Themselves

 

Keywords: Aretha Franklin, Phoebe Snow, Chrissie Hynde, Dionne Warwick, Peggy Lee, Nancy Wilson,  Julie London, Gladys Knight, Linda Ronstadt, Joni Mitchell, Etta James,  Petula Clark, Dusty Springfield, Sandi Shaw, Ella Fitzgerald, Kate Ceberano, Wendy Matthews,  Annie Lennox, Chaka Khan, Barbra Streisand

 

Systems Trouble

15 Friday Apr 2011

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Lehan Winifred Ramsay

≈ 25 Comments

Tags

Chernobyl, Fukishima, Systems

Maybe Nothing

Painting and Story by Lehan Winifred Ramsay

Sometimes we lose sight of what a system is, drawn into some kind of mystical enlargement of the concept. System engineer, systems analyst, computer system. A system is just a reusable format after all. We make a system for preparing our lunch, a system for figuring out what to wear to work. Systems have become a specialization, even the foundation of a career. We can take a three year course on systems. Nobody in that course is going to say: we are teaching you how to make a reusable format.

There is no refuting that systems are important. We put layers and layers of new experience over our lives. But we still need all the basics, and a dependable understanding of systems is going to help us to navigate all of that information. There is no doubt that the rise of systems goes hand-in-hand with the rise of complexity.

The nuclear power plant in Fukushima, Japan is an interesting problem to consider in regards to systems trouble. Systems were put in place that seemed to be good, and those systems worked without major trouble for a long time. The problem that emerged – an oversize tsunami – was not one that could have been foreseen. Modelling had been done, estimates had been made,  nobody expected the problem to be as large as it was; an earthquake compounded with the lifting of the sea bed. Now we know that we must build to withstand an event far more extraordinary than had been factored in. But that is not enough. Now that a serious event has occurred, all kinds of small errors in managing such a problem – such a system – are compounding and growing. There are fundamental flaws in the design of the system itself.

I want to reconsider the system. To consider the ways in which our systems cause us to lose our consciousness of what we do and fall into default. It’s fine to have a system for preparing your lunch. You just have to remember that your options are not limited to what you make. They also include what you don’t make but may one day have no alternative but to make. Likewise you need to remember that your options for what to wear to work may also be helped along by adding another element now and then. And that at some point those new elements are going to shift your wardrobe into something completely different. In the case of the nuclear power plant, people prepared for a particular size of disaster, they prepared for forty years. Over that forty years, though, as nothing as large as their planned disaster happened, no doubt they began to forget that things could actually be worse than that.

We lose sight of systems by taking them for granted. You’re looking for a new outcome. You use an old form. What you need this form to do is different from what you needed in the past, but you figure you can just work that in later. We make up forms as a kind of shorthand system, and then because they’re convenient we stick with them. Forms, though, make an idea rigid; the form is what makes the shape. If we continue to reuse the same form over and over when our aims have changed we run the risk of having the form define what we do. It’s important to regularly go back to very basic working systems and take a look at what those core elements mean. The nuclear power plant was built to withstand a certain level of disaster. But forty years of use meant that that level may well have decreased without anyone being the wiser. New concrete, pipes, joints and old ones do not have the same ability to endure stress.

Systems develop flaws through repeated use, and often those flaws are not noticed. Not noticed by the people who use them anyway. Other people might notice but think that they are seeing mistakes by people. But often it isn’t a mistake of the moment but a mistake from deep in the system. And often those flaws come out when something big happens. It’s not until the nuclear power plants in Japan are abruptly shut down by tsunami that the company understands fully what happens when they shut down abruptly, and at that time any simple flaws will be in full view.

When we lose sight of systems, they start to take us where we don’t want to go. There was some anger that the TEPCO power company had submitted a plan to the government to expand their plant. The submission was written before the earthquake and submitted without adjustment after the earthquake. It’s interesting to note that without this disaster, this aging plant may have grown even more dangerous in the future. Over the years there has been some serious opposition to nuclear power in Japan. But up until now the positive aspect of ample home-grown energy has outweighed the possible risks to people’s health.

Now we have the system clearly in our sights. We can see that it contains multiple flaws and errors, oversights, inadequacies. More than that, we can see that should a problem occur, we with our global connection all stand to be affected by it. Isn’t nuclear power a little dangerous to be staking our futures on? I hope to see some positive outcomes from a little more scrutiny of where this technology is taking us. Perhaps Japan could not afford in the past to invest heavily in developing alternative technologies. I can’t see now that it will have a choice.

Sometimes we lose sight of what a system is, drawn into some kind of mythical enlargement of the concept. Isn’t that what we did with nuclear energy? Baffled by the science of it, we felt unable to have a judgement. The science may be complicated, but the solution to the problem of a faulty nuclear reactor is not. There is radioactive material, and despite a half a century of messing around with it, we have not worked out how to make it safe. There is no great advance on the Three Mile Island accident, no great advance on Chernobyl. The only solution the scientists seem to come up with is to contain it. I say: this is systems trouble.

Pig’s Psalm 16: No News is Good News

12 Tuesday Apr 2011

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Emmjay, Pig Psalms

≈ 43 Comments

Tags

ABC News, Bally Pinball, humour, Pig's Psalm

PA's 1976 Captain Fantastic Pinball Machine

Keep us all safe, our Merv

And protect us from Chris Uhlmann’s barbs and pointed arrows

And wife-beater questions

Weary we are of his constant harping attacks and always negative whining about the goverment didn’t do this or failed to do that or hashed up whatever.

Sick to the navel or the Head of Defence Forces we are of him and his ABC harpies.

Release Emmjay from his prison hell in wardrobe

Turn off the pub TV

And let in a little light

And the patrons looked upon the Pig’s Arms LCD

And they saw that it was blank

It was good

It was Better than good.

It was excellent

And Merv sayeth until the multitude

I shall forswear the A of B and C

all the days of Viv and Ian’s childhood

And groweth-up they in a Pub with No Fear

For it’s lonesome away from no NEWS you can hear

By the pool table at night where the dart board’s quite near

And the News and 7:30

Will ne’er here reappear

For all the days I will walk

behind the bar you’ll recall

I will stroll straight and tall.

By the flickering light

of the Bally pinball.

There endeth the middy and the lassoo.

Sugar

10 Sunday Apr 2011

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Lehan Winifred Ramsay

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

Dog, Standard Poodle, Sugar

Sugar

Painting and Story by Lehan Winifred Ramsay

I gave away my beautiful dog, that I had loved for a year, cared for and struggled with for a year. I took phone calls and answered questions, I invited people here, I sat with them while they struggled with his size, I sighed after each phone call, I worried and looked at him and felt great sadness. Please let it be over soon, I thought.

A man came with his two sons, and he liked him. I don’t know what kind of a life he will have, I hope he can have fun with more people around him. I helped take him to the car, and when they drove off I watched his head bouncing around in the back seat. He looked so cute. I had never seen him look so cute.

I wish I didn’t have to let him go. He was the dog I wanted. He was even the dog I wanted to become like. Always straining to go faster, always interested in everything.

I am trying to pretend that he is like a child who has grown up. He has his own life now, he is going out in the world. But really, I will never see him again. So I say goodbye to Sugar.

Opinion of the Drum – Rejected

07 Thursday Apr 2011

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Emmjay

≈ 75 Comments

Tags

The Drum

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