The art, adventures, wit (or lack thereof), verse, ramblings, lyrics, stories, rants & raves of Christopher R. Bakunas
Eddie Arana, Rick Thibodeau, & Chris Bakunas San Diego, Ca. March 2012
Saturday, December 30, 2023
Friday, December 29, 2023
Thursday, December 28, 2023
Ode To Refrigerators, Past & Present
Tuesday, December 26, 2023
Why Bother To Ask If You're Going To Ignore The Answer
There comes a time in one's life when the thought of acquiring anymore stuff not only seems impractical, it nearly makes one nauseous.
The fact that the timing of those thoughts coincides with the Christmas holidays is most likely just coincidental.
The coincidental timing, however, does make it difficult to answer the question, "What do you want for Christmas?"
Then, because your intensely clear reply of "nothing" to each and everyone of those questions has been roundly ignored, you end up getting a lot more stuff on Christmas.
And none of that stuff is ever a 1969 Boss 429 Ford Mustang, which was your alternate answer to everyone who followed up your nothing response with, "No, really, you must want something."
Sunday, December 24, 2023
On The Other Hand You Get To Catch Up On All Those Shows Stored On The DVR
Being the whiny sick guy.
Friday, December 22, 2023
Cough, Cough, Cough *HACK!*
Having a bad cough these days is painful - and not just the pain in the chest and/or ribs caused by the involuntary action of coughing, but the pain of embarrassment caused by everyone around you staring as you cough.
For the sole reason that you're coughing. Loudly. In public.
As if you're patient zero of a new pandemic.
Coughing in public now requires an abrupt snap of your head into the nook of one of your arms bent at the elbow, and an elaborate set of twisting, turning convolutions so that your cough is not directed anywhere near other humans.
Which, maybe, should have always been the coughing protocol - might have avoided a lot of the mess of the past four years.
But that's a moot point, and I have to go find a box of surgical masks.
Wednesday, December 20, 2023
Sunday, December 17, 2023
En Espérant Passer Un Mauvais Moment Mémorable Dans La Ville Lumière
Thursday, December 14, 2023
The Anarchy Of Diffraction
Tuesday, December 12, 2023
The Great Pueblo Flood
Monday, December 11, 2023
Friday, December 8, 2023
The Bright, Twinkling Tunnels Of Christmas Cheer
The origins of these particular Christmas holiday decorations seem to be lost to the passage of time - or at least to the amount of time I'm willing to spend on the internet searching for their origins.
Someone, somewhere, at some time in the fairly recent past got the idea that making a skeletal tunnel out of a long row of connected arches and then stringing strands of Christmas lights along the arches and the braces that provide structural integrity for the tunnel's length would be a great way to decorate for the Christmas holidays.
By "fairly recent" I'm thinking sometime after National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation was filmed, which was in 1989. If the Christmas holiday tunnel of lights had been around when that movie was filmed, I'm fairly certain the set designers would have included a Christmas holiday tunnel of lights in Clark Griswold's front yard or maybe his driveway.
So, sometime in the past 34 years the idea of festooning a skeletal tunnel with Christmas lights as a holiday decoration came into being.
And now they are everywhere, in holiday displays large and small.
So here's to you, anonymous originator of the Christmas tunnel of lights display, you created what has become a world-wide phenomenon.
Large municipal and commercial displays can now be seen just about everywhere Christmas is celebrated on the planet. From the Longwood Gardens Holiday Lights display in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania to the Winterfest in Costa Mesa, California (Southern California's largest winter carnival...in a land of no discernable winter), to the Norwich Christmas lights in Norwalk, England (the Tunnel of Light on Hay Hill) to Charleston's (in Cornwall, UK) claimed and famed longest indoor tunnel of lights (with approx. five miles of lights - that's a lot of lights).
Christmas tunnels of light can be seen in London, Munich, Paris, Brazil...even in Red Square, Moscow.
Heck, there are at least 12 municipal or commercial tunnel of lights displays within twenty minutes of my house.
There are also several smaller, front yard-sized tunnels of light in front of several homes in the neighborhood (most of these appear to be store bought - kits are now readily available at several stores and online retailers).
If you want to build your own tunnel of lights (and who doesn't?), there are plenty of online resources for those who are so inclined, such as https://www.mymydiy.com/diy-christmas-light-tunnel-archway-plans/ or https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BEW106rkXXc.
As for me, I'm going to just stick with the single strand of LED bulbs that grace the eaves of the roof in front of the house. Those and maybe the candy cane lights up the walkway.
Wednesday, December 6, 2023
Tail-Wagging, Barking, & Biting
Tuesday, December 5, 2023
The Little Voice Telling You No
Monday, December 4, 2023
Passing The Torch To Light The Latest & Greatest Fuse Yet
At this point in time there may be someone, somewhere, sitting on the next big powder keg of controversy.
Will it be something along the lines of medical research that reveals chewing gum causes nonconformity in field mice? Will it be a geopolitical disagreement that results in a new and even more exciting twist in the commonality of mankind's ever-present need to be angry and outraged to cause enough dissension in the gun-chewing communities of the world to beget an upsurge in used-gum deposits on the sidewalks of major cities? Will it be a sudden change in the attitudes of artists and entertainers regarding the size of the average stick of chewing gum which will bring about a sea change in not only the packaging design but also the size of display racks used for chewing gum in retail outlets everywhere?
The tension is almost unbearable.