Avery, on The Meaning of Life:

"Remember kids, it’s only funny until someone loses an ideology."

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July 7    

         Tom Cruise Insanity Watch 
           Today:
Guarded
  
(Check Back For Daily Updates)

                    

Tom Cruise To Buy
Michael Jackson’s Bones

Tom Cruise has confirmed that he has put in a bid to buy Michael Jackson’s bones. “I also plan to buy many other things. Each one more confounding than the next,” the unhinged canned-ham told a perplexed group of reporters that he later ordered to be shot.

When asked what he planned to do with the bones, the Cruiser jumped up and down, pointed to the sky ala Ron L. Hubbard and then wiped his nose. When pressed, he finally allowed, “Jackson needs the money and I require human bones for when the aliens arrive and make me their silver-headed Gamma Ray God. Oh yeah, oh man, oh baby.”

Questioned on the recent comments by John Travolta’s wife, Kelly Preston, who said, “He (Tom) is creating awareness. Good for Tom Cruise for bringing it to the forefront," the batty actor replied, “To think I had once considered having her destroyed. I am glad I resisted. Her husband has tender loins. Now go! This press conference is over. Yah! Yah! Yah!”

Terrorism Wakes George Up

President Bush has yanked out his terrorism talking points after a series of deadly bombings ripped through London's transportation network at the heart of the morning rush hour.

“The war on terrorism goes on,” he said from Gleneageles, Scotland, where he was attending the Group of Eight summit. "This could help me rebound in the poles and get people’s minds off the crappy job I'm doing. While we haven’t yet proven this is the work of Al Qaeda, I remain hopeful that it is.”

Bush warned Americans to be “extra vigilant” as they headed to work, “Let’s ignore all the Karl Rove crap and focus on this. Remember, this type of terrorism will happen to you unless I am allowed to run amuck. Name your poison, America. It’s your choice. The terrorists or me.“  

The Lingering Disinterest 
of Mrs. Wallham

Several of Mrs. Ellen Wallham’s closest friends had recommended Dr. Bell as their psychoanalyst of choice, should she decide to pursue her recent interest in finding the root of her lingering disinterest.

Mrs. Wallham was initially reluctant to enter therapy.

Her anxiety regarding the field of psychoanalysis stemmed back to when her daughter Alexa, at the tender age of seven, began referring to her as “mommy shit box head.”

An amused Mr. Wallham and his rather furious wife sent their only child to see a prominent child psychologist and Mrs. Wallham had been quite dissatisfied with the results. Alexa had grown into a monumental disappointment and Mrs. Wallham remained convinced that Alexa’s six months in 1979 with Dr. Tamal Shakamanth, were squarely to blame.

Nevertheless, Mrs. Wallham was bored, Alexa was in rehab, her husband was simply that and her recent interest in finding the root of her lingering disinterest was, well, taking root.  She decided that she had nothing to lose and called Dr. Bell’s office to book an appointment.

Mrs. Wallham was immediately impressed by Dr. Bell. She was greatly relieved to see that unlike Dr. Tamal Shakamanth, the good doctor did not wear flared trousers, gold chains and was refreshingly white. There were no lava lamps, beanbag chairs and hookah pipes.  Mrs. Wallham was soothed by Dr. Bell’s conservative suit and by the charming opulence of his office.  As well, Dr. Bell’s manner was pleasing.  He spoke warmly, clearly and slowly in a low, forgiving and hushed tone designed to lull his listener into a tranquilized sense of calm.  Mrs. Wallham admired the doctor’s sensibility and saw a little of her own father in him.  She thoroughly approved.

During their first session Mrs. Wallham told Dr. Bell about her interest in finding the root of her lingering disinterest and more. Mrs. Wallham was so very relaxed lying on his couch and found herself opening up to the doctor and began telling him things that surprised even herself.  Not because of their content of nature, but only because she had never allowed herself to consciously feel, let alone verbalize everything that she had stored away for the past sixty-some years.  At the end of her first session, Mrs. Wallham shook Dr. Bell firmly by the hand, offered up her heartiest of congratulations and arranged for 10 more sessions.

The following 10 sessions flew by in what seemed like a week, which was not entirely surprising since it was in fact, only 2.  Mrs. Wallham was aware that she was perhaps going a bit overboard, but frankly didn’t care.  It was bliss to talk of nothing but yourself for 45 minutes everyday and have a man as cultured and intelligent as Dr. Bell hang on her every word. It was expensive yes, but she trusted the doctor implicitly and was convinced that his examination of her lingering disinterest and other disorders was going to pay massive dividends to her, her family, and quite possibly the field of mental health. After all, if Anna O could do it, why couldn’t she?  And Mrs. Wallham, or Mrs. W., as she sometimes imagined herself named in the medical journals, was a complex woman, convinced her lingering disinterest was much more than what it appeared.

For the next five months Mrs. Wallham unleashed her dreams and demons within the walls of the good doctor’s office. She spoke at length not only of her lingering disinterest, but also of her husband’s many shortcomings, the crude manners of young shop girls and the health benefits of orange peppers.  She bitched, moaned, confessed and never felt better.  Not cured, but better...

Mrs. Wallham arrived at her Tuesday afternoon appointment and was somewhat surprised when she entered Dr. Bell’s office and found it occupied by both the doctor and a boy approximately 10 years of age.  Mrs. Wallham was embarrassed initially; in her 5 months of treatment, she had never walked into a session in progress. She then remembered that Livia Seezer, Dr. Bell’s competent secretary had told her the doctor was ready to see her.  She looked at the two in confusion, Dr. Bell asked her to have a seat and explained.

“Mrs. Wallham,” he began, “I realize that this is a tad unusual, but I would like to introduce you to my son Hamish.”  Hamish rose from the small ottoman he was perched on, walked over to Mrs. Wallham, politely shook her hand and said hello.  Mrs. Wallham smiled graciously, complimented the boy on his choice of socks and was surprised when, subsequent to their exchange -- he failed to leave the room. Rather, he returned to the ottoman and fished a pad of paper and pencil from his knapsack.

“Mrs. Wallham, I hope you won’t mind me saying that I feel we’ve developed a very synchronistic, positive therapist/patient relationship.”  Mrs. Wallham was listening to Dr. Bell but was still watching Hamish as he scribbled some notes on the paper. Dr. Bell meanwhile seemed to be awaiting her reply. 

“Uh...no.  Of course not doctor,” she finally managed. “In fact, I’m quite...should he be here?”

Dr. Bell clasped his hands together and sat back in his chair.  Hamish peered up from his notes, put his pencil away and clasped his hands together as well.  Dr. Bell spoke very carefully, placing weight on each individual word.  “Mrs. Bell, I have a favor to ask of you.  A serious favor and I will understand if you choose to say no.  Please do not worry that some sort of...judgment, or change in our relationship will result in a negative answer.”

Mrs. Wallham shifted uneasily in her seat, it suddenly felt rather uncomfortable.  “Oh my!” was her only response.

“Precisely!”  agreed Dr. Bell. “Now my son Hamish, is in grade 4 and has been asked to hand in an assignment about the person he admires most.  Naturally, that person is me.”  Dr. Bell tilted his head slightly, allowing the light from the window behind him to frame his sensibly thoughtful face.  “I discussed the thesis with Hamish and we both agreed that if he was truly going to get to the essence of me and write an appropriate homage, he must be allowed to see me at work, helping people.  What I would like from you, is signed approval to allow Hamish to observe today’s session.  I know it’s a breech of ethics, but I have a hard time saying no to my son.”  For the first time in her 5 months with him, Dr. Bell laughed.  “Of course that’s my problem, not yours.”

Mrs. Wallham seriously doubted his last statement and for the first time in the doctor’s office felt herself at a loss for words.  She certainly didn’t want some ten year old child observing her therapy, but at the same point she was afraid of hurting Dr. Bell’s feelings and flattered that he had chosen her for Hamish to observe.  Dr. Bell smashed that last illusion quickly.  “Hamish himself asked to observe you. I allowed him to review the case histories of all my patients and he was most intrigued by your fear of dust and need for restrictive undergarments.  Isn’t that right, son?”  Hamish nodded and smiled.  Dr. Bell continued.  “So...what do you think?”

Mrs. Wallham hated herself for doing it but she somehow felt she had no choice.  She figured it was worth it to indulge the good doctor for one session...besides, she didn’t plan on saying much.  Mrs. Wallham had been getting quite explicit in her last couple of sessions and had been planning on pulling back a little anyway. She decided that this was as good a time as any to refocus her attentions on her lingering disinterest.  She lay back on the couch and started quietly.  “I was very disinterested this week.  Nothing seems to...”  Dr. Bell cut her off immediately.  He was out for bigger game this session.  With Hamish at hand taking notes, Dr. Bell was not going to settle for vague notions of lingering disinterest.  He wanted to blow the kid’s socks off.

“That’s very interesting, but I would like to return to last week’s session in which we discussed your fear of manual masturbation.”

Mrs. Wallham thought she was going to be ill, but couldn’t be sure if was out of embarrassment or emotional recall. Hamish giggled slightly. “Hamish!” said the doctor in a stern voice.  “You must never laugh...no matter how funny the patient is.  Mrs. Wallham’s fear of masturbation is not to be tittered at.  It is to be understood.  You have to ask yourself -- why fear?  Is it a mask for desire?  Does this phobia extend to other areas? Is this symptom merely an underlying cause of far greater emotional problems?  You have to think, Hamish.  Not judge.”

Desire?  Did he say desire?  This was too much for Mrs. Wallham to bear.  She sat upright and crossed her arms over her shoulders. “Dr. Bell I must protest.”  Dr. Bell looked over at Hamish eagerly.  “Did you hear that son?  The vehement protest?  Not to mention her body language.  What does that mean to you?”

The room fell quiet for a moment as Hamish looked Mrs. Wallham over closely. “That she’s upset?” 

Dr. Bell sighed, looked at Mrs. Wallham and shrugged.  “No Hamish...I think it might mean more than that... Mrs. Wallham, I think this might progress more smoothly if I filled Hamish in on some more of your personal background.  You don’t mind...?”

Mrs. Wallham felt faint.  She lay down and closed her eyes and tried to block out the sound of Dr. Bell filling young Hamish in on all the lurid details.  She had never realized that he was so calculating, that he was so clinical in his analysis of her thoughts, she had only mentioned her distaste regarding masturbation in passing.  When he was finished, Dr. Bell had the boy leaning toward the theory that Mrs. Wallham was, among other things, an obsessive compulsive, passive aggressive and a victim of social stratification -- systematically taught to fear touching herself and at the same time longing for what she was supposed to keep her hands off of.  The whole theory was nonsense; Mrs. Wallham felt herself getting angry but did not act. The 45 minutes would be over soon enough and she was in no mood to encourage further debate on the subject.

Dr. Bell, on the other hand, had an entirely different point of view. “I would like to probe this issue in more depth,” he calmly stated, “I would like to hear of your first understanding of masturbation as a concept.  When did you first become aware of it?”

That was it.  Mrs. Wallham had heard enough.  In all her life she had uttered the “M” word four times and heard it from others perhaps another ten.  And now, here, it was being bandied about like a maid’s first name.  She decided to put an end to it.  “Dr. Bell, I no longer feel comfortable discussing this.  To be honest, I considered it a trivial matter to begin with and think it would be more productive if we were to move on to my lingering disinterest.”

There was a long pause as Dr. Bell furiously scribbled a note down on his pad.  He sat forward, scratched his chin, looked at Mrs. Wallham, looked to Hamish and then spoke.  “Hamish, this is what we in the profession call resistance...and this is important. There is something lurking behind this resistance, something significant.  We are close now, son.  We are turning the key, and I want you to be the one to open the door.”

Dr. Bell rose, picked up Hamish and sat him down in his seat.  He handed Hamish his notes and pen and took a seat on the ottoman.  “Mrs. Bell, I would like Hamish to conduct the rest of the session.  We are very close to some kind of a breakthrough and I think it would be beneficial for Hamish to really get his feet wet, so to speak.  Hamish?  Do you think you can handle this?  Remember when I let you prescribe for your mother?  Well, it’s no more difficult than that.  Just listen...just listen.”

Hamish appeared confused, but it was obvious that he didn’t want to, or was afraid to, let his father down. He bravely picked up the pad and looked at Mrs. Wallham. For her part, Mrs. Wallham was mentally reorganizing her schedule in light of her newly available hour every weekday afternoon.  She had been swindled, bamboozled.  This man was a sham, not a shaman.  A con, not father-confessor.  It was Dr. Tamal Shakamanth all over again.  She felt her face go flush with shame.  She was a sucker, all right.  She was about to get up, slap Dr. Bell in the face and storm out when Hamish spoke.

“I think it might be valuable to get back to your lingering disinterest.”

She paused.  There was something about his voice.

This Week’s Featured Album: 
Gee, Dad

Organ Music by Ed Scofield with son Tim

Liner Notes.

All songs by Ed Scofield unless noted.

Side One:

1. My Big Organ and My Son’s Small Kit
2. I Wish I Was Sterile
3. Stop Calling Me “Dad”
4. When Big Brains and Good Looks Skip A Generation (The Ballad Of Tim)
5. You Were An Accident
6. Keep Your Eyes Off Mom – I Saw Her First
7. Where Did You Hide My Gun, Tim?
8. You’re 16, You’re A Man, You’re Out Of The House

Side Two:

1. Tim (You’re An Enormous Disappointment)
2. Dad Gets The Groupies
3. Making My Boy Cry (Makes Me A Big Man)
4. Shut Up and Shine My Shoes
5. Surfing Bird California Wipe Out Girl (by Tim Scofield)
6. Dumb As A Chimp and Twice As Smelly (An Ode To My Son)
7. The Useless Progeny Two-Step
8. I Think Tim’s A Homo

Writing and performing “Gee, Dad” was a long, difficult, acrimonious and, yes, explosively violent experience. Originally intended to be an artistic collaboration of folk organ ballads written by a loving dad and his “devoted son” it ended up being a financial setback and an ugly discovery of the shortcomings and many failings of my hapless drummer boy, Tim. We walked into the studio with one objective: to write catchy songs about the seasons (mainly Fall). We walked out of the studio with a newer objective: to never speak to each other again. I’m pleased to say that we still haven’t exchanged a single word. These 16 songs represent what I went through in that studio and are the essence of everything that I discovered about my son as well as my feelings of absolute disgust for them: From my concerns about his obsession with his mother to my thorough belief that he is a vile and deviant homosexual. And I’ll say this much, my feelings of loathing really come through in all the songs (with the exception of Tim’s derivatively putrid “single,” Surfing Bird California Wipe Out Girl) and I still enjoy playing them when family comes by for a visit. We had everyone over last Xmas and I fired up the Hammond and played a rather “rocking” version of I Think Tim’s A Homo. It didn’t go over all that well with everyone, but I was so drunk I couldn’t have cared less. Ha, ha, ha.

Ed Scofield (revised liner notes 1972)

My therapist says I should try and talk about that summer dad and I recorded these 16 tracks. So I’ll try... “Gee, Dad, you ruined my life and I hate you.” 

Tim Scofield (Belleview Mental Asylum 1972)

Cover photo: Mrs. Scofield. © 1967 Oedipus Records

Your Horoscope:

Aries: An old flame will self-combust.
Taurus: It is essential that you understand how lucky you are that you’re not Tom Cruise.
Gemini: Mercury, your ruler, enslaves you. Hey, knowing Mercury, it was bound to happen.
Cancer: Today you will even manage to bore yourself. 
Leo: A new moon in the most sensitive area in your “chart” requires some steroid cream and a little talcum powder.
Virgo
: You will continue to view golf as a game played on a large outdoor course with a series of 9 or 18 holes spaced far apart. 
Libra
: Delusions ultimately come crashing down – wear a hat.
Scorpio
: Searching for the meaning of life in the cat’s dish proves foolhardy.
Sagittarius
: Your quest for the perfect breakfast cereal continues.
Capricorn
: Inject some levity into your life. We suggest incorporating coconut cream pies.
Aquarius
: Bad things do not happen all the time, just most of the time.
Pisces
: You have so much faith and hope. Good luck with that. (Hey, who are we to shatter your dreams?)

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