I ran to Great Clips yesterday for a haircut. After checking in on the app, of course. Good thing too, ‘cuz when I walked in, it was standing room only. For me, at least; everyone else had a seat.

Here’s what bugged me: there were seven chairs in the lobby and six people waiting for haircuts. One of them had turned the last empty chair into his own personal coat rack. No big deal as long as somebody isn’t standing awkwardly in the tiny lobby, half-blocking the door, but there was.

Me! I was the awkward stander! It was this guy!!

Riddle me this: if you had been in that position, wouldn’t you have removed your coat from the chair so I could sit down? Had the tables been turned, I would have done so. But this guy just sat there, either oblivious or stubborn, while I had to scoot over a couple of times, half-turning my body and trying not to knock over the shelf of moisturizing shampoos and boosting creams to let people enter or exit.

Not gonna lie: murder crossed my mind. But there were too many witnesses, so I settled for an angry glare instead. I suppose I got the last laugh in the end, because they called my name next and his sorry ass was still waiting.

I hope he waited there for hours. Which, in chatting with the stylist, I learned is totally a thing. She said it’s insanely busy during the weekends, and many a time somebody will walk in, discover they’re 37th in line and there’s a two-hour wait, and they’ll plop down on a chair anyway. I’m sorry, but are these people out of their minds?! Weekends are way too precious to waste 120 minutes thumbing through a tattered two-year-old issue of Mademoiselle in a crowded lobby for the sole pleasure of getting a haircut. I’d grow a goddamn ponytail before subjecting myself to that nonsense.

Besides, like I said, THERE’S AN APP FOR THAT. It’s no more difficult than making a dinner reservation, except instead of prime rib or pasta you’re going to get a chin-length bob or butterfly layers. Maybe a polished shag if it’s a special occasion and you’re in the mood to splurge.


I’ve gradually been rereading my blog from the beginning. This is no small undertaking; I’ve been blogging so long, I’ve got 14 years worth of posts to catch up on! I’m only doing this when I have a few minutes to spare and nothing else going on, so it’s probably going to take me another three years just to catch up to the present, by which point it will be the past, so tack on another couple of years for good measure. Case in point: I’m only up to spring 2011.

What a year that was, by the way. My whole life changed. Hello, Tara.

In any case, the blog is like a time capsule. This post I read earlier today, for instance, mentions Foursquare, Angry Birds, iPods, and DVRs. (Not to mention the Dewey Decimal System and Julius Caesar. The wayback machine was in overdrive here.) There have been many references to Charlie Sheen and Groupon and “How I Met Your Mother” and, well – things that aren’t really things anymore. People whose 15 minutes of fame ended seven hours ago.

If I’d started my blog a couple of decades earlier, I’d probably be reading about “Wheel of Fortune,” Sally Ride, heavy metal suicide, foreign debts, homeless vets, AIDS, crack, Bernie Goetz, hypodermics on the shore, China under martial law, rock and roller, cola wars. I can’t take it anymore!

(Sorry. Billy Joel on the brain.)

But what strikes me most is how virtually every regular reader from that time period has dropped off the face of the earth. Wherefore art thou, Catherine and Kathryn? How ’bout Friscolex and PlaneJaner and Jevcat? Where’d you disappear to, Tori and Flyinggma, Theresa and Patti? Clicking on their links, I see their most recent updates were from 2012 or 2014. One person made it as far as 2020. I guess not everyone has the stomach for long-term blogging.

Like my wife, for instance.

Not every disappearance is a mystery. Some, like The Edmonton Tourist, I follow on social media. Others have transcended the blogosphere and become real-life friends, like Justin the Realtor’s sister, Jess. And a few hardy souls have hung in there. Carl D’Agostino was commenting on my posts when I was a single, unemployed wannabe writer sharing custody of two young kids in a cramped townhouse in the Pacific Northwest – and is still reading and blogging today. That’s dedication, Carl. Gold star for you!

You too, Bytes from the ‘Burbs and aka Gringita.

It’s weird to think that a decade from now, I may look back on this post and wonder whatever became of a bunch of you. I hope that’s not the case, but people disappear, and not in an “I’ve been abducted!” way. (Well, sometimes in an “I’ve been abducted!” way.) I get it.

Man, I never realized I had such a raging case of separation anxiety.

Should I have murdered the Great Clips chair-hogger? How long have you been blogging – and do you expect to retire someday?


79 responses to “Six customers, seven chairs. No problem, right?”

  1. Reading back through the archives is quite the undertaking! (I might have to though because my niece has become a reader, and SHE is reading the history, and she’ll say something I haven’t remembered writing about SOOOO long ago)
    Thanks much for the Billy Joel earworm, and here’s hoping your blog is still making me smile in the next decade-plus from now. 😃

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Thank YOU for sticking around through all the madness! You and Carl arrived right around the same time. You two are by far my longest-tenured followers, and I appreciate that immensely!

      Liked by 2 people

  2. Is it wrong I’m strangely disappointed you didn’t get a mullet at the hair salon? 😉
    As for blogging, I started back in 2006 on Yahoo 360 so I’ve got you beat for longevity. Sadly all the sites I was on died…. so I can’t go back and read my old posts, not that I’d really want to. But I know what you mean about losing friends. Thankfully a bunch of my original blog buddies started a FB group so we keep in touch that way, but the vast majority of people I knew are lost to me.
    But never fear, I’ll be here until WordPress ( or I ) die.
    🤣

    Liked by 3 people

    1. Actually, I started blogging in 2001 on a site called Open Diary. I was able to chart the entire course of my divorce on there. I recently reread those old posts from start to finish, and they are beyond cringeworthy. It’s a wonder I survived with my sanity intact!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Can we read those posts? It would be the dark prequel to this blog.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. I would link to those posts if I could, Patricia, but Open Diary is a member-only subscription service. You’d have to be a paying member to even read them, and I let my own subscription lapse a couple of years ago. They had actually shut down the site for several years and then brought it back. I do have unformatted copies of all those old posts downloaded somewhere, but it would take some real doing to even find them, let alone format and post them. I’m thankful that I wrote during that tumultuous period in my life, though; it helps me remember just how bad things were then, and how good they are now. “Dark prequel” is a great way to put it!

        And thank you for reading through all my old posts, by the way. I’m humbled and impressed that you would do so!

        Like

    2. 360 refugees in the house! Solidarity!

      Liked by 2 people

      1. That was a great site for it’s day! It’s where I learned to blog…
        😊

        Like

  3. Hire a professional, don’t try to do it yourself. I know, I know, murder looks so easy on tv or in the movies. But trust me, it is not. Especially if you want it done, right, ie, they actually die. Remember that news story a couple of years ago about some woman stabbing a guy like 15 times? He lived. Plus, obnoxious jerks won’t believe they are actually dead unless some guy with a name like Leon, or Johnny or Gringo does the deed. If you try to do it yourself, they’ll just laugh and be like “Yeah, no way some guy named Mark just tried to murder me” and then you’ll hang your head in embarrassment. I’ve seen it many a time.

    I’ve been blogging since about ’05, but nuked several blogs and it wasn’t until about ’16 that I settled at my present one and decided it was time to stop wondering around. I call it The Churn when people just drop off the radar. Life churns them into a big tub of butter and they’re not bloggers any more. It’s sad and discouraging but with my name changes and blog changes, you won’t find a hint of me either from back in ’05, so I’m part of the problem. At least, I tell myself that so I don’t blame others for just disappearing from the blogosphere.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. As far as names go, the one to watch out for is Wayne – but only when it’s a middle name. I’m onto you John Wayne Gacy, Elmer Wayne Henley, Monty Wayne Lamb, and countless others. (Seriously. The list is very long and distinguished. It’s bizarre. http://www.capecharlesmirror.com/killers-named-wayne/).

      “The Churn” is a great way to sum it up!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Dang, I never would have guessed “Wayne”. Wait a second, I know a guy at church named Wayne. He just started coming too. Oh boy.

        It just feels like they come and go doesn’t it? No stability….

        Liked by 1 person

  4. Inconsiderateness is my biggest pet peeve. I would have asked the guy, “Do you mind moving your jacket so I can sit down?” with a bit of acid in my voice. Like, seriously? What a jerk. I’m glad you got called up sooner. Two hours to wait would never fly with me either.

    I think the nostalgia of re-reading old blog posts would be bittersweet. Most of it would be about when my kids were little, hence the original name of the blog, (yes, yes, I know you’re still bitter I didn’t change it to whatever you came up with, you smug bastard) and realizing those days of them being little is long gone. I have three teenage daughters now. What?!

    I have nearly wept when blog buddies left the blogosphere, so I get that. I intend to keep mine up for as long as I feel I have something worthwhile to say. Glad you’re still around.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. See, for me, my life back then sucked. It’s a million times better today, so the whole nostalgia trip doesn’t bother me. I love to see how far I’ve come!

      But like you, I hate inconsiderateness. Take emails, for instance. If Tara had a nickel for every time I’ve complained about emailing someone and not gotten a response, she’d be able to retire already.

      Don’t you dare ever leave!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. That makes sense about your blog. Good for you. That’s cool.

        No plans to leave anytime soon. Wonder what I’ll talk about once I’m done with martial arts. Or what I’ll name my blog then. Tell me you at least smiled at my smug bastard line. 🙂

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Yes, I smiled at your smug bastard line. 🙂

        Like

      3. Maybe you’ll let me have another go at renaming your blog!

        Liked by 1 person

  5. I had my own website with a ridiculosly long url that never got much traffic around 2003 called asparagusfilms-bowshipublications. Then I moved onto sort of blogging on LiveJournal to blogger to WordPress around 2011: 5 different blogs, arts editor at a short lived blog called The Finest Example of, a podcast and I nearly thru in the towel with the previous blog..but i have decided to stick aound with this incarnation I think I have a lot of interesting stories to write/draw. Sometimes bloggers die or just hang it up without notice..i would rather give notice. As for that chair, I’d be pissed. I’d ask if someone was sitting there for sure. I will say I once xame in for a cut, it was a busy Sat..dude before me was getting a cut AND a shave, my barber was kind enough to ask him if i could go ahead cos I was just getting a cut and he obliged.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I did have the thought that some of those bloggers might have died. Gulp. A couple of them were up there in years.

      I had my own brief foray into LiveJournal, too. It all felt like such a novelty then!

      Like

  6. Sorry, it’s too much effort to try to remember and/or go back and actually look at # of years. I started on Blogger then stumbled onto WP a few years in. Kids were in their tween and teen years and now the youngest is turning 31 next month so…

    As to chair hog I can easily play the older lady card and hope everyone else would add to the guys guilt as I groan and stumble and threaten to fall down in a heap given how decrepit I can act. I really wish I was someone who could simply walk over and toss the coat onto the floor and plant myself in the chair in situations like that.

    I have no plans to stop blogging. In fact, the kids have written instructions to make a big announcement should I succumb unexpectedly. Then they can do whatever they want with the blog and I assume that means deleting it.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. It’s good that you have a plan. I’ve instructed Tara to come on here and post something in the event of my untimely demise, but really, I should have a draft saved that she can just publish. Morbid? Yep. But I kinda want to say goodbye myself, you know?

      Liked by 2 people

      1. That’s actually not a bad idea at all… sort of like writing your own eulogy because of course we only how perfect we really are. Who wants to take a chance on what someone else might write 🙂

        Liked by 1 person

  7. I’m curious why you are reading your old posts. Are you editing or adjusting them, or just taking a trip down memory lane? As far as the guy with the coat goes, I think I would have asked whose it is (even if I suspected who), then asked them to move it. I reserve murder for times when I have no witnesses.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Great question. It’s part nostalgia, but also, I have a ton of broken links since my URL has changed not once, but three times, over the years. If you’d clicked on that old post this morning, I linked to other posts, but those websites no longer exist. I updated the links, and now they work. I don’t really care about SEO, but I’m a completist, and don’t want to leave people hanging on the off chance they go back and read something from my past.

      Liked by 1 person

  8. Because my patience declined long ago when it comes to waiting on haircuts, I aligned myself with a local place who schedules appointments months out, offers a variety of times, and you can also see the same stylist each time if you so choose. When you go in there, there are two barbers and at the most four customers…two in the chair and two “on-deck.” Nice and organized. My thoughts on murder is if you are going to play that card…aim way, way bigger than a thoughtless patron at Great Clips. Fifteen minutes of fame beckons. Blogging…I’ve only ever been on WordPress. The first three blogs are all deceased…#4 is still “hanging on” as it appears I’ve taken a break…if you call not posting anything in almost a year a break lol. Retirement could be imminent…unless I already have.🙂

    Liked by 2 people

    1. I’ll admit, I was wondering where you’d disappeared to. But at least you had the decency to come back, and even if you aren’t writing, you’re at least commenting. It’s good to know that you’re alive and well!

      Liked by 1 person

  9. I would have sat on the coat and commented how nice the chair cushion is. glad you got to strut right by him on your way to the stylist’s chair. as for rereading my blog from the beginning, eek, I’m not sure I could handle it. I’ve rerun an old post now and then if it’s relevant to something I want to post, and even then I see things like how long-winded I was, my poor readership! I could probably edit the hell out of them and they would be so much lighter and easy to read. like you, when I look at anything even a couple of years ago, so many of my regular readers have disappeared, makes me wonder about them

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’ll admit, the temptation is strong to edit some of those old posts. But I’m leaving them be. If nothing else, they show my growth and maturity from wannabe writer to actual writer. It’s been a journey for sure!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. exactly, and sometimes, it’s our real evolution from start to finish in this realm, just a bit scary at times )

        Liked by 1 person

  10. Well, I’m still here. I’m just too lazy to comment. Though I sometimes do in my head. Like that really helps you.

    BTW, if my email subscription ever stops working, I’ll never remember to check your blog. So please don’t move to another platform. I really enjoy your posts.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Lisa! I’ve come across some of your old comments, and of course I know you’re alive and well, but I had no idea whether you still interacted with WordPress at all. I’m so happy to learn you’re still reading, even if you aren’t commenting. I really enjoyed meeting you in person and will always recall your summer solstice parties fondly! Don’t worry, I’m a WordPress guy for life.

      Like

  11. I sometimes go back and read my Open Diary entries, some of them make me laugh and think “who the HELL is this person?!” and others make me pine wistfully for the person I once was. There are times when I want to start up again, but life has been too hectic to do so. Or, I get sucked into the “Am I the Asshole” on Reddit…it’s all about priorities. Ha. But there are days when Jubilee isn’t too far away, for sure!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Ol’ PC circa 2004 is barely recognizable. No way do I yearn for that guy. Jubilee is a name I haven’t seen spelled out in a long time!

      Totally with you on the Reddit addiction though.

      Like

  12. It is wild to go back and read old blog posts and see the commenters who have stopped blogging or disappeared entirely. Even a year ago I see names that I remember but who are no longer around BlogWorld. (or my blog anyway) I make a reservation for a hair cut/color mostly or call to see how long the wait is. In the coat situation, I would ask that the coat be moved because otherwise I would fume about it for too long! If not, I would sit down with the coat.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I really wish I’d sat on his stupid coats. Both of them.

      Like

  13. Justifiable homicide for sure. So much for all the Midwest nice! Can’t believe he didn’t go, “Ope!” and move his stuff. I’ve got a stylist and I always make my next appointment during the current appointment. Otherwise, I’d never get in. Good hairstylists in LA are always booked, and some women won’t even share their hairstylist’s names!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Also, please no ponytail.

      Liked by 1 person

    2. He must not be from around these parts. (It’s so much easier being a guy. I know Great Clips isn’t exactly the epitome of a fine establishment, but it’s all I need.)

      Liked by 1 person

  14. I’ve been around for a while, but I demand nothing and expect nothing. I just read and comment occasionally. Duh.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. You’re the definition of low-maintenance. And that’s just fine with me!

      Like

  15. See, I would ask the guy to move the coat. Or sit on it. Because I’m really pleasant that way. I think I’ve been blogging six years? I’ll stop when it’s no longer fun. Until then…carry forth

    Liked by 3 people

    1. If I wasn’t next in line, I probably would have said something (or just sat down anyway).

      Liked by 1 person

  16. I recently had blood drawn and my doctor ordered 29 vials, which took a little longer than a single tube. The 10 chairs in the lobby had been filled when I went back, but there were an additional 22 awkward standers with death glares when I walked back through the lobby. I perfectly my speed-walk that day!

    I started blogging here in 2010, though that includes a few different blogs because I was a dumdum in my 20s and including pictures of myself attracted some major creeps. I recently posted about some old friends on here, and one reader actually knows on in real life, which is wild!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. It’s not your fault there was only one phlebotomist on duty, but yeah, I’d be pretty impatient standing around like that for so long.

      I’ve attracted a creep or two myself, but not in the same way as yours. Mine have mostly wanted to argue politics.

      Liked by 1 person

  17. OMG, I’d forgotten about Charlie Sheen. Yikes, that is a time capsule. Love hearing your observations as you re-read. That’s a lot of history!

    Thank goodness you didn’t murder the chair guy. That’s creates a whole different kind of history!

    Congratulations on your haircut and maximizing your weekend!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Charlie claimed to have “tiger blood” and “Adonis DNA” that. Compared himself to a warlock and a rock star from Mars. He was off the deep end for awhile there.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Way off the deep end. He would have murdered the guy for sure!

        Liked by 1 person

  18. I do things like approach the guy and ask, “are you using this chair?” to call attention to everyone how inconsiderate he’s being. New to blogging, no idea how long I’ll do it. But, the thing I can’t get past is your dig at Wheel of Fortune being old news from previous decades. Dude, we watch WOF many nights at 7:00pm while eating dinner. Don’t you know that Pat Sajak has announced his retirement, so this whole season is his swan song? And, what about Vanna? Will she stay or will she go? If that’s not a riveting current news issue, I don’t know what is!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The WOF reference is just part of the lyrics from “We Didn’t Start the Fire.” No personal dig; I love it myself!

      Liked by 1 person

  19. I’ve felt like murdering people at the grocery store. Some live in total oblivion. And omg yes, I’ve wondered whatever became of so many commenters. I began blogging in 2008, when my oldest was a senior in high school. Now her oldest is in kindergarten. Life marches on.

    I’m glad we’re both still blogging! I don’t have any reason to leave.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. What I failed to mention were the people who no longer comment on THIS blog but are still very much around!

      Like

  20. I passed 5 years of blogging in October (but just realized it a few weeks ago). I have every intention of keeping on keeping on. If I disappear for longer than a three weeks (my usual summer vacation length), call 911.
    I, too, marvel at how many blog buddies have disappeared over my five years in the biz. I’m super disappointed that my very first real “blog buddy” is off the grid because we are probably heading to a country (in 2025) that she is responsible for putting on my radar all those years ago, and I want her to know!!
    As for the chair hog, murder seems harsh. Permanent maiming would have driven home the point without facing the death penalty.
    BTW, I still watch Wheel of Fortune sometimes. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Well, rest assured that blog buddy #667 will keep on keepin’ on for as long as he is physically able! Where are you headed in 2025? Or is this top secret information?

      Again, no shade on Wheel of Fortune. I was just quoting good ol’ Billy!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Yay!
        It’s top secret for now. Probably will reveal on the pod once bookings start happening, so summertime or early fall. It’s a very exciting set of destinations indeed!!!!
        My mother is a Certified Wheel of Fortune Addict. I’m not as into it as she is, but I definitely have the gene.

        Liked by 1 person

  21. Oh my goodness…I would’ve been giving ‘the guy’ a death stare. (Okay, probably not, but I would’ve been scanning the space – looking for the person – other than myself – most likely to appreciate a seat and would’ve asked him to move his stuff – for someone else. Just to make a point.) And your memory lane visits to old posts? What fun — literally a trip to your archives. I’ve got some old, old stuff from my life as a blogger for parents of new college students and I re-read some posts from the 90’s recently and you’re right! Like a time capsule…when concerns about social media were only beginning to emerge. Oy…life is so different, eh? 😜

    Liked by 1 person

    1. In a sense, it’s like thumbing through an old photo album. At least these virtual pages will never turn brittle and fade.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. True true…but some of what I’ve written ***should be*** banished forever. LOL! 😉

        Liked by 1 person

  22. I started my author blog (isabellanorse.com) in 2013 and was active there until Oct 2021. I started my current blog (lindalouslife.com) in 2017 but posted sporadically until 2021; that’s when I learned that I really had no interest in maintaining two blogs. (One of my great regrets is choosing to write under a pen name. I much prefer blogging as me instead of my alter ego, even though we’re basically the same.) I have no plans to “retire” from blogging so we’ll see how long it lasts.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I blogged under various pen names for the first 15+ years (though I linked to my book often, which kind of defeated the purpose when you think about it!). I also maintained multiple blogs; in 2013, Tara and I participated in a year-long food challenge that involved daily blogging on our other site. After awhile, it just gets to be too much!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Daily blogging? Yikes.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Every day for a year on the food blog. Plus 1-2 times a week on my regular blog.

        Liked by 1 person

      3. Just the thought of all that makes me want to cry.

        Liked by 1 person

  23. Mark, doesn’t it seem like a lot of people are ‘checked out’ even when they appear to be alive and well? I’m talking about the hair cut guy who couldn’t see that you could use a seat. WAKE UP PEOPLE.

    I too go back and look at some old posts…usually if I’m trying to remember something that happened and hoping I’d documented it. WHERE DID ALL MY READERS FROM 2008 go? I think a few of them are my FB friends, as they quit blogging and a few have passed away. (I’m hoping they are reading from the Other Side now)

    I saw a post where I was going on and on about OCTOMOM and Jon and Kate plus 8! *sigh* I wonder how they’re getting on….

    I don’t know if I’ll ever quit. My kids would be so disappointed, but I am feeling very uninspired lately. Hopefully my Meh feeling will pass.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. OMG, Octomom and Jon and Kate +8! I think they’re even more ancient than my Charlie Sheen references. Apparently, you were really into people with large families back then. Interesting…

      In my experience, meh feelings come and go. I, for one, am glad you have no plans to hang up the ol’ blogging quill!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I think you’re right about me being obsessed with people with big families. My first blog that I had back in 1974, was all about the Brady Bunch. 😆😆

        Liked by 1 person

  24. Oh I would’ve gone all passive aggressive with the guy and his coat. I may not have done so when I was younger, but now I lean into using my grey hair. It renders me invisible for so many purposes, but when disapproval is the order of the day, it is the perfect accessory.

    When will I stop blogging? When I don’t miss it while taking a break. But as I’ve only been blogging since 2015 (my previous blog is no longer available online), it’s hard to tell when, or if, that will change.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. “When I don’t miss it while taking a break” is probably the best answer I’ve seen. It’s a great benchmark! Personally, if a few days go by (like now!), I start missing the ol’ blog. That’s a sure sign it’s time for a new post.

      I think I need more grey hair…

      Like

  25. I wrote a blog post (which has yet to be published) about bloggers I used to know who no longer write. I feel like we become attached, and then one of us is sucked up by life, never to be seen again. I hate that because I become very attached to my blog community.

    I’m commenting out of sequence…I definitely would have moved my coat. What a dickbag. I’m so glad you were called on before him.I hope he sat there all afternoon. 🤣🤣

    My oldest daughter said something really lovely the other day. She mentioned that she would like to have my blog printed someday so that she can read it to her children after I am gone. I mean, that is going to be a huge ass book. “Grandma sure was long winded,” but I love the sentiment because I rarely talk about my blog with my children. They just know it exists. It made me feel good inside. ❤️

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Dickbag! *snort*

      Tara has suggested I do something similar with my blog and let my kids read it after I’m gone. Man, you two really are peas in a pod, aren’t ya?

      I want to read your post about MIA bloggers!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. We are! I love that.

        I will publish it eventually…🤣

        Liked by 1 person

  26. I don’t want to know what I said way back when. I’m in awe of your project to reacquaint yourself with yourself. Hope who you were makes you smile knowing it has contributed to who you are now. 

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Man, I had to read your comment three times…but it’s sheer poetry. To answer your question: yes! It does! Or, he does. Or I does?? I do?

      Liked by 1 person

  27. Well done you! As someone who’s just a reader, it’s disappointing when you lose a favourite because they’ve stopped blogging. Couldn’t you just ask the guy to move his coat? That’s what I’d have done

    Liked by 1 person

    1. What can I say? I’m confrontation-averse, ha. I’d have asked if I had a long wait, but I was next up and they were already cleaning the station.

      Also, few readers-only ever bother commenting. I appreciate the fact that you do.

      Like

  28. […] used to fire his gun at rabbits in the backyard. The only thing I shoot are withering glances at people who hijack empty chairs. It’s hard for a city slicker like me to measure up to these hardy […]

    Like

  29. […] wrote this post back in november. with everything going on, i forgot about it. then mark wrote about his blogging community and it made me think of this […]

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