Those hours, all eighteen of them in the Emergency Room hallways before a room became available, revealed the open wound that is America's health care system. Without a curtain separating us from our fellow captives, we saw and heard it all.
The Burrow
"If you always do what interests you, at least one person is pleased." (Katherine Hepburn)
Monday, June 22, 2026
The Hospital is Full
Those hours, all eighteen of them in the Emergency Room hallways before a room became available, revealed the open wound that is America's health care system. Without a curtain separating us from our fellow captives, we saw and heard it all.
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
On The White House Lawn
It happened on our lawn.
Not only was it tacky. Not only did the grift include paying the fighters in the felon's personal crypto. Not only were the military personnel (fit and clean shaven) used (illegally) for political capital. Not only did the fly over shake buildings in DC and delay flights out of National Airport (without prior notification of the airlines, passengers, or air traffic control). Not only were the lights bright enough to cause a pilot to file an incident report (because he couldn't see) with the FAA.
Nope, that's not all. At the end, the winner decided to opine on Michelle Obama's gender. The head of the UFC smiled. There were cheers.
All of this happened in front of the people's house. A president created a situation that allowed (and appreciated) a foul remark about a woman to go unchallenged. That woman lived for eight (exemplary) years in that house. It was her lawn.
On FFOTUS's birthday, he defiled it.
If your neighbor's animal crapped on your lawn, you'd do something about it, right? As Nicole Wallace pointed out, none of the corporate sponsors whose banners decorated the arena have spoken out about the outrageous behavior. I searched and found that I don't patronize most of them - Ram trucks, Budweiser, Monster Energy (there were others). But there was one place I thought I could make a difference - Scotts Miracle Gro.
I have a conflicted relationship with them. I usually buy untreated (but excellent) soil and add my own amendments. Especially for the school garden, it's the most cost effective way to grow. I don't have grass, but Scotts line of grass related products is extensive and profitable.
Their advertising is ubiquitous, featuring responsible, middle class, home owning family men, none of whom are shown shirtless. I get the trucks and the beer and the energy drinks. I don't get Scotts Miracle Gro, not one little bit.
That this obscenity occurred on a lawn makes their lack of response even more egregious.
I went to the computer, found the website, looked high low, clicked on all the links I thought would be relevant, and finally found Send us an email. Obediently, I clicked. And, after several failed attempts to load the page, this is what I found:
So sorry.
We're currently updating this site.
It won't take long, so check back soon.
We apologize for any inconvenience.
- The Scotts Company
There's a phone number I can call in the morning. There's a land address to which I can send a (soon to be more expensive) letter or postcard. Those are at the end of the post if you want them. They offered a chat option, but this is what I got when I typed how can i comment in the little box:
Agent said Could you tell me a bit more about what you'd like to comment on? Are you looking to leave feedback about a product, an article, your order, or something else? Let me know so I can guide you!
You said corporate response to ufc fight
Agent said I’m sorry, I can’t help with that request.
They really don't want to hear from me.
But I needed to write about the cowardice of executives who do nothing when their advertising is used to promote the most vile of insults. There's no walking this back. Target lost $12 billion when they abandoned DEI. This fool insulted the most admired woman in America in front of the people's house and got paid to do so.
Some of the money that went through FFOTUS's crypto company on its way to rewarding the slimiest (expression of freedom of) speech imaginable originated in The Scotts Company's coffers. If they deplore such behavior they should say so.
Actually, they should have said so already.
Their silence speaks volumes. I'm no longer conflicted. I hate them.
And yes, I promised to post the address and phone number but I've just spent five fruitless minutes searching for them, all to no avail. Have I mentioned that I deplore them?
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
I Found The Joy
The World Cup was barely on my radar.
Then it started.
Suddenly I'm cheering for Uruguay and searching for the exact location of Cape Verde (which is now Cabo Verde and has always been about 350 miles off the coast of Guinea Bissau).
I can type during hydration breaks and half times. Otherwise, I'm mesmerized.
Almost like I was mesmerized on Friday night, watching the scaffolding, and the rain, and the workers outside The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.
But that's a post for another day. The Iranians and the Kiwis are about to go at it again.
Gotta go.
Monday, June 15, 2026
I Got It Back
Big Cuter learned about MJ in preschool. He was a devoted fan until Jordan's last (championship) game with the Bulls in 1998. His loyalty never transferred to the team.
We were living in Marin by then, and the 1990's Warriors were uninspiring, to say the least. The 49'ers, on the other hand, were the winningest NFL team of the decade, and his fandom stretched to cover every aspect of his life except, perhaps, his underwear.
He moved to the East Coast and took his 9'ers gear with him. He was a regular at the neighborhood sports bar which showed their games. He dragged us to one here in Tucson in what he said was a crucial situation. Sunday game times were sacrosanct; call only if you wanted to talk football.
We knew that Queen T was the one when he shared a photo of them hiking while his team was on tv. Granted, they weren't playing that well and being disappointed had dampened his affections just a bit, but still.... these were his 49'ers.
I envied him his devotion. I didn't think I had it. I came to the Cubbies in my twenties and I love them still. That's felt like my longest connection until this past week. Once I heard the organ in the Garden I was transported back to my childhood on Long Island, when tickets for the family didn't call for a second mortgage, when Daddooooo or Uncle Abby chaperoned one or two of us into the city to see The Knicks.
They were very good and then they were very bad and I had the Bulls and glommed onto Big Cuter's Warrior's obsession once they moved across the bay and I didn't miss the Kncks at all. Or so I thought.
I've spent the past ten days feeling every bit the New Yorker I am at heart. Taos Bubbe and I text about it frequently, as does Sister. OG Anunoby's Indiana University heritage creates a double whammy of affection, as proud alum Little Cuter delights in reminding me. Big Cuter calls cheering for the Spurs and my New York snark joyfully fills the air.
I am seriously thinking about investing in a championship t-shirt. Turns out I do have a childhood sports connection. It ust took 53 years to reappear.
Friday, June 12, 2026
I Understand It Now
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
And Now It's Wednesday
Monday, June 8, 2026
Monday, Monday
Friday, June 5, 2026
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Ashleigh Burroughs has been with me since college, when I realized that I was never going to write the great American novel but that, perhaps, Ashleigh would. It's good to have dreams and it's awful when your dreams make your reality seem paltry in comparison - especially when your reality is a good one. Giving Ashleigh her own persona cured that problem lickety-split. Like her namesake from Gone With the Wind
The Edgar Rice Burroughs Martian series
When I really really really like a book I'll try to make it last by rationing the chapters I allow myself to read in one sitting. Herman Wouk's The Winds of War
Ashleigh Burroughs is a great writer's name. A burrow is a great place to live and to leave. Living up to the name and enjoying the adventure - that's the challenge. Welcome to Ashleigh Burroughs in the Burrow.
Thursday, June 4, 2026
Apologies
Looking back to the very beginning, in April, 2009, I made a promise to post every week day. Almost all of the 4,463 of them since then have kept to that standard.
Age and caregiving have caught up with me. I've been sloppy lately. The Little Cheese has stopped emailing that my screed hasn't posted today; she understands all too well how hard it is now to fit everything into a day that used to have large gaps of empty spaces.
I'm not berating myself. What has to be done has to be done and it's really not that difficult at all. It's the always piece that's tearing at the edges of my life.
I'm lucky to be taking care of a person I love. We have the resources, financial and familial, to withstand everything they've thrown at us so far. I have the brains and the bandwidth to coordinate the pills and appointments and protein intake and all the rest of it.
I stop every day and wonder what those without are doing right now. It didn't take a masters degree, but it did take two hours and several iterations before I came up with the first medication/dosage/time/purpose/end date chart. And that was once I figuired out that I couldn't possibly keep it all in my head.
But I was able to think clearly and sort it all out and now I'm on the 7th version of that chart. I have answers to all the nurses' questions at my fingertips. I have little paper cups with hours, am and pm, in purple marker outside and the appropriate medications inside. When he's taken them he turns the cup over, so that we both know what he's done anytime we want to look.
I've gotten really good at tempting his tastebuds; G'ma's stuffed cabbage was a big hit last night. Costco chickens keep me easily fed and provide plenty of other culinary opportunities. Sometimes is chicken on pasta, sometimes it's chicken salad, sometimes it's shredded chicken on one of the bags of salad that have become staples in my kitchen.
It's all interesting and amusing and exhausting.
I'll try to post daily, but sometimes I might have to resort to oldies but goodies.... like tomorrow.
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
Abdulrazak Gurnah
He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2021. That would be enough to scare me off had Theft not been sitting on the Large Type shelf (so I could read it under improper lighting, ie my living room), in paperback (so it's not too heavy to hold), with an engaging picture on the front cover.
I'm still working out the deeper meaning(s) behind the title.The obvious one is obvious, obviously. (Sorry, I couldn't resist)
The others have something to do with love and loss and betrayal and mostly hope and confidence and a generally upbeat sense that life has a purpose and a meaning even as reality tries to smother it.
It's an easy read, even if he's left off the quotation marks. If I were starting out, I'd create a series of family trees to help me remember who did what to whom, and when, because the prose is so inviting that I read so quickly to see what was coming next that the plot got lost in the rhythm.
It's a glimpse into modern day Africa, something I don't encounter in my everyday life. Some of the characters are slipping into my thoughts in the few days since I finished it, carrying on the conversations we started when I had to reread a few chapters to pick up the thread once again.
That didn't bother me. It gave me a chance to admire the verbiage once again.
