We regret to inform you that Elrond
Junior Johnson, Esquire, III, passed away on the afternoon of
December 31, 2015 in Richmond, VA, due to complications from
congestive heart failure and renal failure. Elrond was a loving friend who only asked in life for love and company. Born in 2000 in Concord,
NH, Elrond was rescued as a kitten and has lived a life of adventure.
He has lived on both the East Coast and the West Coast of the
country as well as in the north and the south of the country. During
his life of adventure Elrond even flew across the country, an
experience he did not enjoy but was nonetheless proud of. Bright and
always seeking new knowledge, Elrond graduated from Kitty University
in the spring of 2015 with a degree in Meowology. Elrond loved
Christmas and he was happy to spend one last Christmas with his
family. After being diagnosed with congestive heart failure and
renal failure, Elrond has been attended to by his personal physician
Dr. Meow Meow Paws. He is survived by his father Kenneth Johnson,
his mother Jennifer Rutter, and his brother Sparta Jesus Vernal.
Services are private. Per Elrond's wishes, in lieu of flowers
donations can be made to your local animal rescue.
Fiction, Creative Non-Fiction, Non-Fiction, & Opinion
Thursday, December 31, 2015
Sunday, December 13, 2015
This is Why We Can't Have Nice Things
by Ken Johnson
The clock read “No human should be
awake” as I stumbled down the dark hallway with not even the
faintest glimmer of morning light yet cresting on the horizon to
light the apartment. A golden orb lay at my feet. I turned the
corner and saw what could have been a ball pit for elves all over the
living room floor. I screamed, “Sparta Jesus Vernal,” at the top
of my lungs at the sight of more satin Christmas ornaments than I can
remember using to adorn the Christmas tree laying upon the floor.
Scattered and torn apart in an orgy of fun that had occurred during
the wee hours of the morning. Sparta lumbers up to me with a defiant
and proud stride and rubs into my legs showing his appeasement with
his early morning activity of stripping the tree of anything round
and relocating them to the floor without any attempt to try to avert
the blame to our other cat Elrond Junior Johnson Esq. III.
We never name cats thinking of when we
must call upon them in anger or punishment. Do we ever think of how
Elrond Junior Johnson Esq. III twists the tongue at 2 A.M. when he is
dumping a glass of water all over the floor? How insane shouting
Sparta Jesus Vernal sounds to the neighbors when you find the silk
all carefully removed from the Christmas tree ornaments? No, when
naming your cat you are holding and looking at the cutest most
innocent ball of fluff you have ever seen, who will never misbehave
or cause you to raise your voice. This is why cats get cute long
names that sound absurdly silly while yelling them in anger.
The Christmas tree goes up each year on
the day of my birth, forming a division between the great feast of
turkey undertaken in November and the great feast of goose undertaken
in December. On the eve prior to the tree rising I am visited by
three ghosts. While Dickens was right about the appearance of the
yuletide specters, he was wrong about the order in which they plague
one when he wrote his account of Ebenezer Scrooge. The first to
visit is the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come masquerading as the Ghost
of Christmas Present. He shows you visions of your Christmas tree,
the lights twinkling on the glass balls adorning the tree. Garland
hung with care and ornaments meticulously placed to create the
perfect Christmas tree. Then comes the Ghost of Christmas Past. He
shows you images of Christmas trees past. Glass balls shattered on
the floor, silk balls laying half under the couch with the fine silk
coloring in a mass and the Styrofoam guts showing through the gashes,
and the garland strung haphazard from endless times of trying to put
it back on the tree from being mauled at night. Finally comes the
Ghost of Christmas Present, who shows you the tree you will have, the
tree garnished with safe silk balls, the ornaments, the garland and
the bottom two feet of the tree a neutral zone that is devoid of any
decorations from its nightly coordinated attacks from the cats.
Eyes half blurry still, the morning
light just starting to give the sky the faintest of faint red
illuminations, I stumble through the living room collecting the
colored orbs from the floor. The most heavily attacked have their
hooks removed and are tossed away creating a pile of the night's
carnage in the trash. The less heavily attacked returned to the tree
at a higher elevation in hopes of staving off the next attack. Then
I return to bed, pull the covers over me, feel their warmth envelope
me, as I try to grab a little more sleep before having to begin the
day. As I drift off the sound of a tree branch rustling quietly
wafts through the air.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)