magellan monday

Another snippet from “Over the Edge of the World” by Laurence Bergreen. I can’t think of a book I’ve read in recent years that has left me more agape, more vexed, and more maddened than this one. I’ve tossed this book aside on more than one occasion, muttering, “Oh, Magellan!” in any number of ways: awed, frustrated, angry. I mean, the man is DEAD and I still feel personally invested in his behavior! He is driving me absolutely batty.

You MUST read this book, if for no other reason than to be able to say, “At least I’m not Magellan.” Believe it or not, this is actually comforting to me right now.

Anyway …..

Last time out, we had the whole big mutiny hoodang. Well, prepare, yo’selves, peeps, as this post will surely be the hoodangiest of ’em all so far.

Now Magellan was feeling a bit put out about the challenge to his authority and the hate and all, so what’s a coup’ed out capitan to do?

Bring da pimp hand, peeps, fo’ shizzle.

First of all, Magellan had to tidy up one messy bit of business: what to do with the body of Victoria’s captain who’d laughed at Magellan’s order to surrender and gotten himself killed for it. Well, Magellan did what anybody in his shoes would have done, naturally, and had his body drawn and quartered, then spitted and displayed, a big ol’ bloody warning of the potential fate of traitors and other annoying people. But, you never know, maybe it was done tastefully, with draping and umbrellas. Like Christo.

Shortly after all this rumpus and death and artistic expression, Magellan decided to throw a secular inquisition party, hosted by his cousin as judge — who, by the way, had been promoted to captain of one of the ships, over the heads of several more qualified men. He was not a very popular fellow and no one signed his yearbook in the end.

There were a few obvious instigators of the Easter mutiny. We’ll get to them later, but this inquisition was to assess who, among the common riffraff, was complicit with the rebel leaders. After two weeks of deliberating, Magellan and cousin were having a difficult time trying to find overt acts of disloyalty discrete from the overall “wrong place at the wrong time” status of many of the sailors. So Magellan did what anybody in his shoes would have done, naturally, and chose two hapless sailors to be his scapegoats.

Now, barbaric methods of torture had made a huge splash back in 1478 during that festival of friendliness known as the Spanish Inquisition. I imagine little random joes heard ghastly whispers in muddy alleys and whispered to the next joe who whispered to the next joe until lots of little random joes knew lots more than they should about barbaric methods of torture. Of course, this is all just part of “Tracey’s Theory of The Telephone Game and its Role in Human History,” but still ….

All that to say that through one way or another, Magellan was well-versed in the ways of torture — and apparently, employing torture was well within the authority bestowed on him by King Charles of Spain, who’d granted him the “power of rope and knife.”

And, boy, did he use it.

Scapegoat#1 was treated to a gentle, early Pilates limb-lengthening known as the strappado. Bergreen describes it:

The strappado was administered in five stages of increasing agony. In the first degree, the victim was stripped, his wrists were bound behind his back, and he was threatened until he confessed. If he refused, he was subjected to the second degree. In it, the victim’s arms were raised behind his back by a rope attached to a pulley secured overhead, and he was lifted off his feet for a brief period of time, and given another chance to confess. If he still refused, he faced the third degree of the strappado, in which he was suspended for a longer period of time, which dislocated his shoulders and broke his arms. Once again, he was given another chance to confess. If he still failed to make a satisfactory confession, he was subjected to the fourth degree: The victim was suspended and violently jerked, which inflicted excruciating pain. Few victims of a methodically administered strappado lasted beyond this point without confessing. In certain cases, there was a fifthe degree as well. In the final phase of the strappado, weights were attached to the victim’s feet and they were often heavy enough to tear the limbs from his tormented body.

(Scapegoat #1) suffered the full five stages of the strappado.

In the final phase of Magellan’s strappado, cannonballs were secured to the man’s feet. He survived the torment. He actually survived.

Unbelievably, Scapegoat #2’s punishment was even worse. It’s believed he may have suffered a variation of a procedure called The Wooden Horse, where a victim is “secured with metal bars to a hollowed-out bench, his feet higher than his head.”

Begreen continues the quote from an early account that describes this torture:

“As he is lying in this posture, his arms, thighs, and shins are tied round with small cords or strings, which being drawn with screws at the proper distances from each other, cut into his very bones, so as to no longer be discerned. Besides this, the torturer throws over his mouth and nostrils a thin cloth, so that he is scarce able to breathe through them, and in the meanwhile, a small stream of water like a thread, not drop by drop, falls from on high upon the mouth of the person lying in this miserable condition, and so easily sinks down the thin cloth to the bottom of his throat so that there is no possiblility of breathing, his mouth being stopped with water, and his nostrils with cloth, so that the poor wretch is in the same agony as persons ready to die and breathing their last. When this cloth is drawn out of his throat, as it often is, that he may answer to the questions, it is all wet with water and blood, and is like pulling his bowels through his mouth.”

Whatever was done to Scapegoat #2 beyond this, he did not survive his ordeal.

After the torture of the scapegoats, forty other men were sentenced to death as well. But since the expedition needed the men in order to continue, Magellan, in a fit of mercy, I guess, commuted the sentences of the condemned men to hard labor.

He was not so compassionate towards the rebel leader and his servant. The mutiny’s leader was sentenced to death. The leader’s servant was offered these tasty options: lovely cake or yummy pie.

Oh, all right. It was really: kill or be killed. Whatever, okay? Potato-Potahto.

So the servant chose “kill” and was forced to stand on the deck of the ship, wielding a sword, and cut his master’s head off. He did so, but not before politely asking the man for forgiveness while his head was still attached. Apparently, though, the master was feeling a tad churlish at the thought of becoming a two-piece and withheld forgiveness from his servant executioner.

After death, he was drawn and quartered and added to Magellan’s grisly gallery of “This Could Happen To You, Too, Popeyes.”

Only days later, a sailor who had made an earlier, failed attempt at mutiny was discovered to be conspiring yet again, this time with a priest. Magellan wanted them executed, but couldn’t bring himself to condemn a priest to death. So he did what anybody in his shoes would have done, naturally, and devised this alternate punishment: When the fleet departed Port Saint Julian after their winter respite, the two men would be left behind to fend for themselves.

Magellan’s resolve on this matter did not waver. When the fleet weighed anchor several weeks later, the two men were abandoned on a small island with no boat or firewood. They were given small rations of bread and wine, but apart from that, they were simply left to their new lives, in the middle of nowhere, with volatile natives living nearby. As the ships sailed out to the open ocean, the two men could be seen, prostrate on the shore, begging, begging, begging for mercy.

(In the next Magellan Monday ….. hmm, I’m just guessing now …. Magellan will piss you off??)

then I killed her

The other day, this dented old lady walks into The Beanhouse. She is squat and smushed-looking, a bruised peach.

She is the only person in line.

Self: What can I get you?

Dented Old Lady:
Well, I want something sweet. Do you have something sweet?

Self: Er, yes.

(Another person enters, stands behind her. Two people in line now.)

DOL: Well, because, I want something sweet, you know.

Self: Uh-huh. Do you want something cold or hot?

DOL:
Well, I don’t know.

Self: Sigh.

(Another person. Three people now.)

Self:
Well, it’s pretty hot out. How ’bout a blended drink?

DOL: Wha’s tha?

Self: Um, it’s like a smoothie with coffee.

DOL: Ummmm ….. well ……

(Another person. Four.)

DOL: ….. ummmm ….

Self:

DOL: Oh. I know! I know!! I want a Mocha Coffee Vanilla shake.

Self: Excuse me?

DOL (Enunciating for the mentally challenged barista): A Mocha. Coffee. Vanilla. Shake.

Self: Ma’am, we don’ t have a Mocha Coffee Vanilla Shake. That’s just —

DOL (pointing): It says so right up there!

(Five people now, including Dented Old Lady.)

Self: Riiight. Those are individual flavors, ma’am, separate items.

DOL: Oh. But it sounds really good.

Self:

DOL: Okay, then. I’ll just have a Mocha Shake.

Self:
All right. 3.95, please.

Dented Old Lady tugs at her lumpy purse, pulls out a wallet. Searching … searching … searching. Bupkis. She stuffs her dented hand deeper into the bag, pulls out a coin purse. Digging …. digging …. dig …. oh, look! there’s a fuzzy Lifesaver …. and look! there’s a grimy coin …. annnd, look! Bupkis.

(Six people now. Nope. Seven.)


DOL:
Oh. Look. I guess I need to go to the bank.

Self:

I bury Dented Old Lady in the canyon deep in the scotch broom thicket where there’s a dent that matches hers, anointing her lumpen frame with Mocha Coffee Vanilla Shake.

oh, The Hoff, thank you!

I don’t even watch this show, this “America’s Got Talent.” But tonight, through the magic of ennui and exhaustion, with both of us simply unable — UNABLE, I tell you — to reach the remote, we were treated to a full 5 minutes, right at the very end of it. And that’s when we heard Piers (Simon Cowell) and Brandy (Sober Paula) challenge The Hoff (The Hoff) to sing LIVE on tomorrow night’s show!

PierSimon, with his tea-and-crumpet voice, said, “Why don’t you sing in front of your own countrymen and see what they really think about you?”

The Hoff tried to seem game, but his eyes had a strange glow, the glow of fear and suckiness.

“Ha ha,” coughed The Hoff.

“Well, will you do it?”

“Ha ha,” again. “Um, okay.”

“Really?”

“Well …. I’ll think about it.”

So while The Hoff was busy thinking about it, the producers were busy already airing the promo for tomorrow night’s show, featuring a clip of The Hoff, clutching a microphone, bearing down with great intensity. There was obvious furrowing of both brows.

Oh, The Hoff! How hard you do work for our amusement! How much we do appreciate you — for reasons you cannot possibly understand!

Stay Tuned, America. Tomorrow night, The Hoff will be workin’ it for you, thrusting his aging hips, risking compound fracture, fearlessly disproving the whole theory behind a show called “America’s Got Talent.”

Oh, come ON! Plop your butts down and pass me the popcorn!

“I AM SCANACUS!”

I’m sorry. I can’t stop. It’s crack, people, CRACK!! I am one step away from forsaking family, friends, prestigious career, eating, sleeping, and bathing just to sustain my sorry addiction. And after that comes the intervention where I act clueless and defiant and mumble things like “Whuh?” and “So?” and “Wull, I doan do it that much” while family and friends read quavery-voiced from little papers clutched in their hands. Then after that comes my long and twitchy rehab with group sessions led by a woman named Mona and her flowy tunics and crinkle skirts and jade necklaces where I sit, slumped and alienated, making high-pitched scanning noises, “vvvvvvvtt. vvvvvvvtt. vvvvvvvtt,” while Mona clicks her tongue and chides, “Tracey, I realllly don’t think you’re doing the necessary worrrk,” and I mutter, “Whuh? Whuh?? Shuddup, Mona. Your skirt sucks …. vvvvvvvtt …. vvvvvvtt …. vvvvvvtt ….”

Eh. Sounds okay to me.

All righty! Denial — O-ON!!

This series is from older nephew’s 3rd (?) birthday party. I am a strange auntie, as you will see:


Here I am with nephew, where, just seconds before, I was meticulously demonstrating the proper way to play with fire. I had taken one of his LIT birthday candles, stuck it in some Play-Doh, and smushed it on my nose. So I had a flaming birthday candle on my face — whatever — and he saw that, bugged his eyes out, and started giggling hysterically. Seconds later, he climbed into the chair next to me and blew out my flaming nose. THANK GOD!! Because of the DANGER, you see, of FIRE!! Good thing his father was there, Johnny-on-the-spot with the appropriate response: snapping pictures!

Oh, and then nephew wanted the candle back — so that’s this photo. WHEW! Y’all just missed the DANGER!

Funny thing is, I swear I can hear the world-weary sighs from family members — who WERE in the room with me — actually feel the apathetic vibe, “Oh, don’t bother. It’s hopeless to intervene. Let’s just eat some cake.”

Thankfully, he seems to have survived unscathed by my instructional vignettes on how to live his life. But God only knows what that hideous “antique yellow” beadboard might have done to his tender psyche. Do you see that? “Whuh??”


Um, where I take a colorful balloon arrangement and hold it on his head, because it makes a fetching hat, a balloon bouquet, and I obviously think he should know this. That’s my hand there. Oh, and that’s how the picture was actually taken — with the hand all chopped off and creepy like something out of “Saw,” but without the blood. No, no. That came later. (The horror was definitely there, though, ” ….. and it was allll yellow.”) But this is one of my absolute favorite pictures of his little face. I cannot look at it without dissolving into laughter. That smile! Those eyes! Those cheeks! Smooshysmooshy goodness.


(I did something wrong in the scan of this one. My lipstick cannot be THAT red. I can literally hear it screaming, “Look! LOOK at my redred lips!” No. NO. Scanner error. Gotta be.)

(But yes, my hair is red here; just not as red as my redred lips.)

Anyway …. here’s the poor, traumatized tyke, allowing “Trashy” — as he called me — to snuggle him.

See?

“I AM NOT AN ANIMAL!!”*

(* Yes, it’s in “The Elephant Man,” but it’s in “Spartacus,” too!)

beanhouse kooks

I’m very, very far behind on my Beanhouse postings. So far behind, I don’t know how to catch up. Here are just a few people I need to write about:

Dirty Santa

Dog Boy

Porn $tar!

Lemon Lady

Robbie, the Oh-no! Lady

Crappy Writer

Barista with the Book Deal

Old Yeller

Michael

“Sarah!”

Mr. “You’re So Pretty”

That’s just a brief list. I’m actually quite dismayed at how far behind I am. Some are long-ish stories; others are really just momentitos. Still, I can’t seem to choose or get started. So let’s throw it over to you. Maybe that’ll snap the inertia:

Any requests on which one you want to hear first?

miso happy

Okay. I did make a life-changing discovery on Bait and Switch night, though.

And because I am not the stingy type, here it is, peeps:

Jumpin’ Jehosophat! This stuff is fabulous! Our friend made the yummy fish — ahi, actually — big fat juicy ahi steaks, and we’re sitting there and everything is so lovely and perfect that I’m almost uncomfortable, but then — well, I start howling, because here’s our stinkin’ rich friend, with her huge house above the beach, her endless view of the ocean, and her seemingly endless piles of cash and she’s so down to earth, really, and she plops this freakin’ squeeze bottle into the middle of this shi-shi meal she’s made, and announces, “You guys GOTTA try this stuff,” as she happily “ppfffttts” it all over her giant ahi steak. She just smothered that thing, passed the bottle, and insisted we smother ours, too.

So the three of us sat there in her huge house above the beach in the midst of the seeming endlessness of everything and laughed and ppfffttt-ed our way through that entire meal.

Go getcher selves some.

I’m telling you — miso happy!

updates

Update 1:

So Alert Reader SarahK inquired, “Hey, whatever happened with the bait and switch?”

It’s true …. I’ve been completely remiss in updating on this crucial issue. Shame on me — especially when I know you’re all on the very edges of your seats about it and whatnot.

Sooo …..

Well, we did go, and friend assured us that gammie would stay out of the way, that she really was there just to hang out with her granddaughter, not to worry, and you know what?

That’s exactly what happened.
She said hello to us, we spoke only very briefly, then she ambled off to eat dinner with her granddaughter in the playroom. She really did go out of her way to give the three of us the time and space to catch up.

All I can say is Wow. I’ve never had the Social Bait and Switch end so perfectly, so placidly. In my experience, this was an exception rather than the rule.

Just remember, gentle reader: One must still be on one’s guard against the cheery tyranny of the Social Bait and Switch.

Update 2:

Love is a good, good man and Key Lime Buttercream Cake, people.
Just so you know. 😉 mm-mm-mmmm!