Full Blue Blueberry Supermoon
The Blueberry Moon is full tonight at 9:36pm. This is the second full moon in August, so this is a blue moon. This is also the time of year that the moon is closest to earth, so it is a supermoon, also the second one in August. As I said earlier in the month, I’m not sure if anyone can actually see the difference between a regular full moon and a supermoon, but this full moon will rise about two hours before it hits peak fullness. So it will be big and bright — and I’m sure you can convince yourself that it is bigger and brighter than usual.
As is becoming usual, Vermont will not see the full moon rise. A storm rolled in last night, and it is not predicted to leave the state again until early Friday morning — after it’s dumped another inch or two of rain. So let me know what a full blue supermoon looks like, ok?
In other news… I ate tomatoes from my garden! I found a bowl full of rather large ripe yellow pear tomatoes buried in the vines. I diced them, added brown mustard, thyme, salt and pepper and spread them on toasted whole grain bread with cheddar cheese melted over the whole thing.
I picked a couple other tomatoes as well. One was not quite as ripe as I thought it was. It was grey and dim and I could only see that it was not all green, but the kitchen light showed that it still needs a few days on the windowsill. The other tomato was a yellow heirloom beefsteak variety (forgot the name, it’s on a tag somewhere in the vine mess and on my phone, where I keep all my planting records). It was ripe, and I was going to eat it, but the first slice revealed a mealy texture that was not appealing. The second or third slice revealed a particularly nasty black worm thing that had eaten its way in and died, rotting the tomato flesh around it. So I tossed the whole thing in the compost. I might have cut out that bit and eaten the rest… maybe… maybe not… it was really disgusting… But it did not seem worth overcoming my revulsion to eat a mealy and probably flavorless tomato. So I did yellow pears instead, which were also not the most flavorful. But they were the first tomatoes of this very bad season, so they were delicious!

Wicker Man
Gary ate another palmful of antacids. Didn’t seem to matter what he ate for lunch these days. Or even if he ate. By mid-afternoon a bubble began to grow low in his gut and propagated up through his digestive tract until he felt like an iron fist was gripping his esophagus. On the long drive home, he huffed acrid fumes into his tiny car. This time of the year, with almost daily icy rain, cracking the windows to bring in fresh air usually wasn’t an option. In any case, with the number of diesel pick-up trucks clogging up the highway, if he dared open a window he’d be sucking down nauseating exhaust all the way out to his ring-road apartment complex.
Gary was tired. Tired of the drive. Tired of the indigestion. Tired of his small car and his smaller apartment. Tired of his ridiculously small life. And very tired of his job.
It was fun in the early days. Or at least he seemed to remember reasons for why he chose this career. Because he did choose. Sort of. Yes, there was the usual degree of inevitability, but he could have done other things… if he hadn’t gone the safe route. But he chose the path of least resistance as a young man. Which is understandable. When you’re young, it always seems like you can do something for a while and change your mind later. Until suddenly you realize that you’re not young anymore and there isn’t much later and there wasn’t much else you could have done anyway. What with one thing and another, he’d remained in this industry — rising only enough to be considered middle management — for thirty-seven years.
Gary would be turning sixty soon. He was still years from retirement age. And at the moment, the way the market kept fluctuating, he didn’t have the funds to stop working — though he’d been contributing to an IRA for his whole working life. Every few years, he’d watched his account bleed out decades worth of investment no matter where those funds were stashed. So Gary was stuck.
Not that he was looking forward to retiring. Yes, he wanted to stop this job, stop this commute, stop this autopilot life. But there wasn’t anything on the other side of stop. The time between ending his career and ending his life was a void that he could not imagine filling. He’d never managed to build a life for himself after the divorce. No hobbies to speak of. Not much of a social circle outside work. Parents both dead. Sister spending her remaining brain cells on finding herself in some desert monastery. His daughters were strung out across the country, none of them within driving distance. And they had their own lives. Two were married, though no grandkids yet. Not that he’d get to play grandpa that much, except maybe through Zoom, like he did birthdays and most holiday family gatherings.
Gary focused on the computer screen and tried to focus on the budget he needed to submit before heading home tonight. Tried to draw his attention back to these numbers and projections that were nothing but so much empty conjecture and mattered not at all even if they turned out to be accurate. Because nobody would ever remember what this report said, if they read it at all. But he had to complete it. Had to pretend to be useful, one of those necessary workers. Or somebody higher up might realize there was, in actuality, no reason for Gary to receive a paycheck at all.
When Gary was a teenager all those decades ago, his father had a saying: “That’s why they call it work and pay you to do it.” Typical of that generation. One clichéd coffee-mug quip after another. Like they’d invented banality. It wasn’t until after he’d closed the casket that Gary realized that his father never once gave him any advice that didn’t sound like it came off an oppressively cute bumper sticker.
Gary thought, they call it work because it’s the opposite of anything anyone would ever voluntarily do. And they pay you for the same reason… No idea why they want this done to begin with though.
He squinted at the screen and hunched over the ragged pile of papers next to his keyboard.
“Hard at it, Wentworth?”
At the booming voice of his boss, Gary jumped and almost knocked over his cold coffee dregs. (Would have been the third keyboard this year…) Sandler was at least twenty years younger than Gary — not even out of grade school when Gary started this job — but he was picked for the regional division head because of his innovative approach. Meaning he could squeeze out more returns on less money. Gary was the first to concede that he, himself, had never been innovative. Just kept his head in the game and did the job. So he didn’t resent Sandler… too much… though he could do with a bit less fake joviality on a deadline Friday afternoon.
“Got a minute, Wentworth?”
Gary blearily looked up from his budgetary mess. He knew the correct answer. No, he really did not have a minute until this pile was sorted — and he wanted that to happen before he headed home, for a change — but he responded according to script and followed Sandler out of his own office and into the lair of the supervisor.
Twenty minutes later, he shuffled back to his desk and sank into his chair, having been officially determined a redundancy that was slated for termination. He felt sucker-punched. Deflated. Undefined. There was a gauzy edge to his hands splayed on the desktop. He was sure they were fading, becoming translucent. He tried to make them solid again. Bent over the keys and entered a few more figures. But why, really?
Gary realized he’d never learned to type properly. He watched his old fingers as he pecked out the characters. He spent almost as much time back-spacing as going forward. Which seemed an apt metaphor all of a sudden. And then a spasm bent him double over his gassy gut. He managed to close his office door before the sobs escaped.
Now, what? He didn’t know. They weren’t even offering much of a package. Just “here’s your hat; turn off the lights before you go.” Business was bad, he knew. That was the point of this budget he would now never finish. Nobody needed that budget. Nobody needed this work. Nobody needed him.
Turns out, he was the opposite of those necessary workers. And upstairs had certainly noticed. Cuts had to be made. We know you’ll understand. Sometimes we just have to bite the bullet and take the hit. (But who is we?)
So this was the expected sacrifice. Thirty-seven years and goodbye. Just like that. And now… that void. Probably get a job in retail or something to keep the bills paid. And then…
©Elizabeth Anker 2023

First of all, tomatoes freshly picked and then eaten are the best. Then, the story … so awfully true!
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No Work/ No Show Man
Then there’s the real world (not cubicle zombie Gary Wentworth, not J.G. Wentworth with all that operatic singing on the bus).
My next door neighbor of 18 months, let’s call him “Gary”, has decided to sell his house for $300K.
Quick-dealer yard sign went up last week. Perusing the property records I found he bought it for $100K, paying $1500 down and financing the remainder. I also discovered online that Gary and his “wife” are both divorced and are fairly recent convicted felons. Each has non-custodial children with court ordered child support. They are nearing 40 and were in the meth business. The man who sold them the house obtained it by what is called an Ostoppo Order. Corcoran claimed that the elderly widower he befriended promised to leave him the property, to the exclusion of near blood relatives. He was able to find legal representation and a cooperative judge. Corcoran is a career real estate flipper who has enjoyed previous Estoppo Orders. But that doesn’t explain his motivation in selling the house for such a low price. Gary is on probation and works sporadically as a heating and A/C helper. Fiona doesn’t work? I have heard this couple in violent altercations. Police have responded and competing battery charges have gone to court. They were fighting over money and unpaid bills. I think Corcoran walked away with more than $100,000… some stash was hidden in the woodpile.
Corcoran washed Gary’s stash, and Gary washed Corcoran’s Estoppo.
Now Gary and his “wife” can split nearly $200K and walk away with clean socks. They announced on Facebook they are no longer fiance’s, and plan to split up. That’s a good plan: After a “job” gangsters should split up. That’s the American way. Good luck out there Gary and Fiona. Fare-the-well, neighbors.
*Next time maybe I’ll tell you about the neighbors on the other side: “Gary and Aida.” They’re all named Gary: This is a profoundly unimaginative society.
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