Month: June 2025

In the Fields

Itโ€™s a walk Iโ€™ve taken countless times. The first time I took this walk was with Kinga probably 28 or 29 years ago. At that point the deliniation between houses and fields was clear. Most all of the houses were at 15 to 20 years old, and those that were new were likely incomplete. The block walls and slab floors were done. It had a roof, and there were windows. Often there were even window boxes filled with flowers. Yet the exterior of the house was still, as the Poles would call it, raw–surowy

Once in the fields, one saw several things consistently. Fields planted with various crops often potatoes or grass for livestock streched out in various directions, sometimes to the horizon. An farmer might be making loops in the field as he cut that grass or turned the grass as they processed it into hay. Strang pyramids of may might line another field–triangular wooden frames piled with grass it for the final drying process. Families might be loading the grass from the frames to horse-drawn wagons to be taken to the barn storage for winter feed. But most of all there would be cows. Cows everywhere. 

Now, almost all of that is gone. The fields have been turned under and houses constructed upon them. The cows have completely disappeared except for exotic bulls that are likely more status symbol than anything else. The A-frame with hay drying on them (drabiny the Poles called themโ€”ladders) are also a thing of the past. In short, the Polish village to which I arrived in 1996 has completely disappeared. Cows are no longer a basic necessity. Theyโ€™re simply an expense. Giant hay balers have replaced the drabiny. And the people in the new houses are once the children of those farmers whose crops and dairty once supported them. But dairy production is now on an industrial scale; crops are grown on an industrial scale. The small family farms are no longer profitable, so they disappear.

Now, I take a walk in the fields and there are no people. There are no cows. The only sound of humanity that I hear on the cars is passing on the road and the distance. 

As we were driving back from Nowy Targ yesterday after getting ice cream, I was talking to my brother-in-law about how I regret not taking pictures of the communist, social realist style of architecture that was so prevalent when I first arrived in Poland. There was the bus stop in Nowy Targ, which was a textbook example of 60s Eastern European architecture, where I sat for many hours waiting for a bus here or there. I have almost no pictures on the inside and absolutely none of the front of the building. I think about the old bus station in Krakรณw, where I also waited for countless hours.I also have no pictures of it. Most significantly, the apartment in which I lived for three years, which was pulled down during our last visit in 2022, survives only in my memory. I have not a single shot just of the interior of that building or my apartment. I have only some pictures of the apartment when I went for a visit in 2001. I poppoed into the apartment after the American who replaced me had moved out and cleaning ladies were battling the complete mess heโ€™d left behind. I took a picture more of the wreck than of the apartment. Those were the elements of my everyday life I shouldโ€™ve realized would change, or even disappear, and I never took a single photograph. 

It occurred to me during the walk today, though, that all the pictures Iโ€™ve been taking while on walks in the fields over the last 30 years have been just that: images of a disappearing world. Unlike the brutalist architecture of Eastern Europe, which I knew would eventually disappear or be renovated beyond recognition, it never really occurred to me that the village too would disappear. But it should have: thatโ€™s exactly what happened in America. Thatโ€™s exactly what has happened in various countries in western Europe. It hasnโ€™t disappeared, but it has transformed beyond recognition.

It occurs to me, though, that this has really been the theme of our visit our European adventure. We spent five days in Greece visiting ruins of civilizations that never really anticipated their own demise. They hadnโ€™t foreseen the technological advancement of the coming millennia that would make every single element of their daily life completely redundant, unnecessary, or even silly. 

We as a family are also entering a time of great change, a time of endings. L will soon be heading out to college, and since we are going to be trying to establish Florida residency for her to decrease costs during her second year at Florida, she wonโ€™t be coming to visit nearly as often as we would probably like. E has one more year of middle school, and then, as with L, high school will disappear in a flash and he too, will be heading off to college. For all we know, this might be one of the last if not the last time we are here together as a family of four. Itโ€™s depressing to think that way, and I donโ€™t think it is the last time we are here as a family of four, but it certainly wonโ€™t be a certainty anymore.

Such endings used to be heavy for me. Iโ€™m such a sentimental sap that when an ending appears, I want to wallow in the potential nostalgia of that moment. Yet the older I get, the easier those ends come. A school year ends, and instead of thinking despondently, โ€œOh, I will never see these kids again,โ€ I simply think, โ€œWell, itโ€™ll be a new group next year.โ€ Perhaps that is not the best example: school years by their cyclical nature never really end. One year simply replaces the other. One group simply replaces the other. No one will replace L when she goes off to college. Nothing has replaced these cows in the field now that theyโ€™ve gone. Some endings are just that: endings.

Polska 2025 Day 1

For a first day in Poland, it couldn’t get much better than today: a day that slipped by without a pause as one moment bled into another to form a day that’s a blur and so much more.

“Tomorrow, we’re going to church at eleven!” Babcia announced, telling D that he was to drive from their home outside Krakow (where we were last evening) with all three kids and meet us in the church. “I haven’t had a chance to show off my whole family in the church in a long time!” she declared. In fact, I suppose she hasn’t had a chance to show off her entire family at all: the last time I remember us all being in the church here in Jablonka together was when L got baptized in 2008. That’s when we took this picture:

Naturally, when we got back from church, we had to recreate that photo:

Only one of them could fit in the swing, and poor S, who is the middle in age (one year older than L and a year or two younger than W), has been left behind in the height category.

After we had a light lunch, we decided to head to Nowy Targ for ice cream. Sure, there’s ice cream in Jablonka, but it’s not the same as Lodziarnia ลปarneccy.

“Isn’t this just the best ice cream in the world!” K was raving as she savored her cone.

“Maybe for your generation, Ciociu,” S politely demurred.

Your generation? That makes sit sound like some kind of disease, doesn’t it? Be careful, Cousin S: middle age is very contagious, and it has a way of sneaking up on you unawares.

Once we got back, it was time to prepare for the day’s main event: Babcia’s seventy-ninth birthday. We’d invited all the aunties and cousins who live nearby, and we had a classic Polish ognisko with grilled chicken, kielbasa, boczek, kiszki, bread toasted over the fire, some beer, some wine, and a lot of talking and laughing.

Arrival 2025

Itโ€™s a minor miracle that any flight at all leaves Athens airport on time. We saw the chaos when we landed and quickly decided we might feel safer with more time than less when it came time to head to Polska. We arrived at 10:45 for a 2:00 flight. Admittedly I thought that was a bit excessive, but I knew K would feel more comfortable, and she was probably right, I reasoned. 

We unloaded our baggage from the taxi and entered terminal one at check-in desk 60. Not knowing where to check-in, K and the Boy waited with our baggage as L headed one way and I the other looking for the LOT desks. I made it to desk 1 without seeing anything, so I asked an airport attendant I passed. He liked it up: we were to check-in at desks 168-171โ€”literally in the last desks in the terminal. โ€œThey will open the desks two hours before the flight,โ€ he explained. I glanced at my watch: we had an hour to wait.

We began weaving our way through the crowd of passengers waiting to check in, heading to or from their check-in desks, and just sitting or standing with their luggage. It must be that chaotic regularly because there was a passage of large round decals forming a path on the floor directing people to find somewhere else to sit or stand as the decals indicated a walkway. 

We quickly figured out why.

We made our way to desks 168-171 and found a spot to camp out, but within twenty minutes we realized we should go ahead and get in the line though no one was even at the check-in desks yet. Poles are expert queuers and there was already a line. (When I lived in Poland, Iโ€™d arrive at the administrative office in Krakow where I renewed my visa well before it opened only to find the line stretching halfway around the block.) Gathering our luggage, we joined the line, and to our surprise, four attendants soon began checking passengers in as the line grew behind us. With only about ten to twelve groups of passengers in front of us, I was sure wevavimg already checked in online, would be through quickly.

The first clue that the whole process might be a bit more time consuming than we anticipated was that the fourth attendant was not checking anyone in. Instead she was consulting with the third attendant, helping her almost continuously, and when she wasnโ€™t, she was talking to someone on the phone. After a few minutes, the second attendant left while she was helping someone. He stood there for a while until the first attendant finished with her passenger and then finished with him. There was some problem or other with his baggage, and he must have been there ten to fifteen minutes. Meanwhile, the only other attendant working must have been completely inexperienced for she kept asking for help from the assistant in the fourth desk who was moving between five activities: talking on the phone at her desk, talking to the attendant in the third desk, taking on the phone at the third desk, talking to the worker at the firstย  desk, and taking on the phone at the first desk. After a while, a fourth attendant came but she also checked no one in and insisted was apparently supervising the whole incompetent mess. Each group of travelers was taking at least eight to ten minutes to check in, with one group of Canadian travelers working on the process for well over fifteen minutes. In short, though we were very close to the start of the line, it took us well over an hour to get checked in.

Was it a technical issue, incompetence, inexperience, or some mysterious combination of the three? I feel we got an answer when we were checking our luggage.

After printing and attaching our first luggage label, the attendant told us, โ€œI donโ€™t see that youโ€™ve paid for any checked baggage,โ€ pointing to the screen (which we couldnโ€™t see of course). K pulled up the reservation on her phone and showed her. She nodded in assent, ripped off the label, printed a new one and attached it. โ€œIncompetence and technical stupidity it is,โ€ I thought as we walked away.

Looking at the line snaking down the terminal, I wondered if there was any hope at all that we could take off on time. There were three times more passengers behind us than in front of us. โ€œIf this pace keeps up, it will take three more hours just to check everyone else in,โ€ I grumbled. Iโ€™m really skilled with complaining when the perceived problem seems to be due to othersโ€™ incompetence, and I have an absolute gift at reading incompetence into my inconvenience. 

Suffice it to say, we all somehow made it through and we took off only twenty minutes late.

Athens Day 5: Lake Vouliagmeni

We made it to the required attractions here in Athens; we visited an island; we drove up to Delphi and experienced the charm of Arachova. It’s been go! Go! Go! We’re tired, and today was a day to relax. Do we go to a beach? Do we head to an island for more discovery? In the end, on L’s urging (she’s picked most of our adventures, and she’s chosen excellently), we went to Lake Vouliagmeni just south of Athens. We considered renting a car, but who wants to drive in Athens again?

“It would take an hour and a half by public transport,” we told the kids, not sure whether or not it would discourage them. It did not. “That’s fine.” So our journey today was a typical city journey: we walked a few blocks to our Victoria (ฮ’ฮนฮบฯ„ฯŽฯฮนฮฑ) metro station where we took the metro a few stations to catch the 122 bus down to Vouliagmenil. We weren’t the only ones with that idea, though, and soon the bus was positively packed as we crawled through southern-Athens traffic.

“This gives you an idea of what it was like for me to be a student in Krakow,” K explained to the kids

Once at the lake, we discovered what the Garra Rufa fish do: they’re also known as doctor fish or nibble fish, and they do just that. Within moments of entering the water, I looked down to see they’d completely covered my legs. Once I eased into the water completely and relaxed, they swarmed my arms, my chest, my back. It was strangely addictive.

We ended up staying there for hours: none of us really wanted to leave.

Athens Day 3: Delphi

When L began picking out places she wanted to go (this Athens portion of our trip is, after all, her graduation trip), the ruins at Delphi were very high on the list. At first, I was opposed: itโ€™s at least two hours out of Athens, and I wasnโ€™t fond of the idea of driving in Athens. I had no firm reason why; it just didnโ€™t sound pleasant. It was just a feeling I had. After all, โ€œchaosโ€ is as Greek a word one could ever imagine. Still, she kept talking about it, and I relented. (Truthfully, it really didnโ€™t take that much: Iโ€™m a reasonably confident driver, and while Iโ€™d never drive in many countries–India comes to mind–I knew it wouldnโ€™t be all that bad.)

We headed out today after breakfast. While K and the kids were in a pharmacy getting something for the itchy bites plaguing L (and strangely enough, no one else), I went to the car rental place just a block away and started filling out the paperwork. As we headed out to the car, the representative asked casually, โ€œYou can drive a manual, canโ€™t you?โ€ Of course, I can drive a manual, and yesterday on Aegina I drove a manual. But thereโ€™s a big difference in driving a manual on a small, sleepy village where the biggest challenge was ridiculously narrow streets. Narrow streets pose no challenge for a manual transmission. Hilly terrain with lots of stop lights does indeed pose a challenge. Itโ€™s not a big deal once youโ€™ve gotten the hang of the clutch in your car (just how loosy-goosy is it?), but to acclimate yourself to that clutch in a busy city where stop lights hide on poles on the corner of streets — that did not sound enticing. 

We made it through Athens and to the quieter roads of the countryside, but it was indeed a stressful driving experience. Scooter drivers and motorcyclists split lanes constantly, which is technically illegal, I read, but one would never know it watching their behavior. There were portions of the road where there were no clear lane markings, and where I drove it appeared to be a three-lane road whereas just in front of me, it seemed like a two-lane road. Once we made it to the quieter streets, it was a bit better, but double middle lines apparently mean nothing to Greek drivers, and the people being passed casually pull onto the shoulder to get out of the way. 

Though I was initially less than thrilled about driving two hours (with morning traffic, it was more like three hours) to get somewhere while on vacation, I came to appreciate the opportunity it offered: we were able to see parts of Greece that we would never have seen otherwise. We passed through small villages and quaint towns. We saw how ordinary Greeks live, even if only a glimpse. It also gave us freedom: when we found a town — Arachova — we thought charming, we were able to work that into our return plans as a dinner stop and a place to get out for a lovely walk.

Delphi itself was, as so many things here are, overwhelming. The thought of how much work it took to create something like that in a time when there were only the simplest of machines is almost overwhelming. How could they do something like that? And then the silliness of why they did it: the Delphic Oracle needed a special place to commune with Apollo and tell his priests his will using what I inferred was glossolalia. In other words, she spoke gibberish and the priests โ€œinterpretedโ€ it. That sounds a lot like modern Evangelicalism, which is depressing: it means we as a species have outgrown this silliness in almost  2,500 years.

On the way back we stopped in Arachova for dinner. It was a stunning little town. โ€œWe should learn Greek and retire here,โ€ K suggested.

Athens Day 1

We wake up exceptionally early: 11:00. PM — body-time. Weโ€™re seven hoursโ€™ difference and trying to acclimate to the new time. Yesterdayโ€™s long day gave way to an exceptionally short night (or so it felt). Hopefully after today, weโ€™ll be fine.

When we began planning this short Athens adventure, we planned the big sightseeing day as our first full day: the Acropolis. We can see it from our apartment; we walked all around its base yesterday evening while exploring Plaka (so many maรฎtre d’s inviting us in for dining: street-side dining, rooftop dining — I felt I was continually saying, โ€œNo thank you, we already ateโ€). Today, though, is the day we actually visit the site.

We start with a light breakfast — pastries we purchased on the way back to the apartment last night. The best was the cheese and spinach that K and I shared, the one K mistakenly called chocolate last night to the bemused horror of the shop attendant. Iโ€™m sure it went through her head to play along and sell our son the โ€œchocolateโ€ pastry and then imagine the reaction. It went through my mind. We eat on our terrace, which has views to all the antennae and solar water heaters that cover all the roofs.

Weโ€™re staying in an older part of town. The taxi driver warned us that it is not the safest neighborhood, but I think she was being the overly-cautious (perhaps somewhat xenophobic — there are a lot of immigrants in this neighborhood) babcia (whatโ€™s โ€œbabciaโ€ in Greek? ฮ“ฮนฮฑฮณฮนฮฌ I learn) she was. (A ฮณฮนฮฑฮณฮนฮฌ taxi driver? First Iโ€™d seen. She took calls during the whole journey, and during each conversation, she sounded like the ฮณฮนฮฑฮณฮนฮฌ she clearly was.) When we returned yesterday evening, no worries at all; when we got up, we heard all of them heading out to work like the usually-hard-working immigrants they likely are. I think ฮณฮนฮฑฮณฮนฮฌ was exaggerating.

After breakfast we head to the Acropolis: we ordered tickets weeks ago through a third party because the package included a five day metro pass as well as admission to the Acropolis, the Acropolis museum, and a lot more. We reserved tickets for 8:00. When we arrive, the attendant tells us our tickets are for one in the afternoon.

โ€œThatโ€™s not possible. We made reservations for 8:00;โ€ we protest.

โ€œBut the ticket is for 1:00,โ€ she says pointing to the spot on the ticket that indicated the time: 1:00 PM indeed. So we go from โ€œWeโ€™re about to enter the Acropolis,โ€ to โ€œJeez, what do we do for these five hours? The logical option is just to switch afternoon and morning plans, but our afternoon plans were so loose and free because we thought weโ€™d be coming off the Acropolis, tired, sweaty, ready for something easy and pleasant in the afternoon. Still, what else could we do? So we go to the National Gardens (lovely), then head to the parliament building to watch the changing of the guard, followed by the Panathenaic stadium, the ancient Agora, and modern lunch.

The whole time I find myself thinking about how we made reservations for 8:00 but they registered as 1:00. At first I reason it had something to do with the time difference: โ€œStupid website somehow took into account the time difference and registered us for 8:00 our time.โ€ But that doesnโ€™t make sense: weโ€™re seven hours different, not five. Where is the difference five hours? Between South Carolina and England, the country that runs the website we used. โ€œThat must be what happened,โ€ we reason.

When itโ€™s time to head back up to the Acropolis, we buy more water (we never seem to have enough) and decide to go back via the metro. Unlike the morning, itโ€™s relatively empty, but with the wait times at each station (we had to make two line changes), we end up arriving fifteen minutes after one.

Already riled up, I start muttering under my breath: โ€œIf they donโ€™t let us inโ€ฆโ€ Of course, they do, and of course, weโ€™re amazed with what we see. The main building is of course a temple to Athena, making it sort of the Notre Dame of ancient Greek religion — or rather, the opposite: Notre Dame is the Parthenon of Christianity. Perhaps in a few more millenia, people will be visiting cathedrals like we view the Parthenon now: relics of a bygone time honoring a deity we canโ€™t imagine worshiping. (Are there any who still worship Athena and the other gods? A quick search reveals that Hellenism or Hellenic Polytheism does still exist, but theyโ€™re a religious curiosity at this point. Perhaps Christianity and Islam will be the same?)

After our visit, we head back to the apartment to refresh and to relax for just a bit before heading out to dinner. That is, everyone but me: I start working on pictures, which will be especially challenging this trip. I thought I could do everything through Lโ€™s iPad, which I guess I could, but I ran into some initial hiccups yesterday and ended up doing all the photo editing on my phone. Long-ish story. It has its benefits: Iโ€™m not willing to spend so much time editing on my phone, so Iโ€™m more selective, and there will be a lot of unedited pictures I can play with when we get back to the States. But it adds a step to the workflow, and itโ€™s really aggravating working on such a small screen for editing. The second challenge is the new camera, rather its batteries: they take forever to charge, and they die quickly. Iโ€™ve never had to be so conscientious of my battery life when photographing. We have two batteries, but we should have brought a third. First world problems — one must keep things in perspective.

Athens Arrival

For all intents and purposes, this has been one, long, sleepless day. We left for Atlanta around 9:30 Sunday morning and arrived in Athens around 2:00 local time.

Add to it the fact that I barely slept at all in the plane from Atlanta to Frankfurt, and took only the shortest of naps when we arrived in Athens and it’s fairly obvious why I’m about to fall asleep typing this.

Busy Saturday

1

Busy day — countdown only.

Final Friday

2

Today is our last Friday in the States before heading for our great European adventure. We’re all excited about Greece, and we all have things we want to do there, but the thought of just going straight to Poland like we always do, heading straight to Babcia’s for hugs and rosol — part of me wishes we were just doing that.

Morning in the backyard

Just the Number

3

Nothing really to say. Nothing to write about. Taking something of a break before the storm of pictures and thoughts in Greece and Poland. But we need the number…

Which isn’t formatting correctly on the main page. I could track down the problem and fix it, but who really cares?

Tornado?

5

The wind came so suddenly, seemingly instantaneously, and it was so immediately intense, that we were sure it had to be some kind of mini-tornado. What’s a F1 tornado’s wind speeds again? The news report later classified it as only a thunderstorm, but I’m not convinced. It came up suddenly, the whole thing lasting no more a minute, then disappeared almost as quickly. There were lingering gusts, but nothing like what the main storm was like. According to the news:

Thunderstorms accompanied with wind gusts as high as 71 mph have caused power outages in areas of the Upstate and Western North Carolina.

As of 10:15 p.m. Tuesday, at least 25,000 customers are without power in the Upstate. More than 10,000 are without power in Western North Carolina.

WYFF News

Still, gusts of 71 miles an hour classify it as a EF0 tornado according to the Enhanced Fujita Scale. What would a EF0 tornado be? Isn’t that just a not-tornado? Strong thunderstorm?

Whatever it was, it knocked out our power. K’s phone only had 5% battery left, so we plugged it into L’s computer to get a bit of a charge.

Fortunately, it’s not a terribly hot or humid night, for the power company estimates getting the power restored some time early tomorrow morning.

The Boy took the opportunity to go to bed early, as did K. And the GIrl? She’s not here. She’s in Gainesville for orientation at the University of Florida. Yes, we looked at our finances, looked at the possibility of getting in-state tuition (do-able, but not this year), and decided it was the better option for our girl. A six-hour drive away, so she’s close enough to be relatively quickly reached in an emergency and far enough for her to feel she’s on her own.

She and I texted extensively this afternoon when she was making decisions about her class load for the fall semester. She’s done AP Calc 1 and AP Calc 2, so her plan was to take Calc 3. She was getting advice from her advisor (because that’s what they do) that she might consider re-taking Calc 2. “There’s some stuff they go over that most AP classes don’t cover” he/she (not sure) explained. “I looked at the Calc 2 syllabus,” she texted me, “and I feel confident in everything on it.” What to do? I explained that it’s up to her: “If you feel you need to re-take it, re-take it. If you want to go for Calc 3 but are a little nervous about it, all universities have programs for assistance in subjects like math and English. You can go there and get help from some grad student, I’m sure.”

That she was asking for advice was a little surprising. She’s so strong-willed, so confident (she planned her entire high school academic course with no input from us, and she never really asked either of us for help or advice) that I took this to be another sign of her maturing. She’s independent, yes. But independence doesn’t mean doing everything solo.

If she comes hope during Thanksgiving break asking for help in Calc 3, it won’t be me helping her. I’m no good in math. Truth be told, I never even took Calc 1. I tried it in college (liberal arts — one or two math courses required for all), but I just got lost. It didn’t help that the professor would fill a whole board with an equation and then stop and erase it all, mumbling “I don’t think that will show what I want it to show,” just when I was thinking, “Hey, I think I’m getting this…” That help will have to come from K. And since she won’t be taking any humanities, I’ll be out of the loop.


Also out of the loop has been the Polska countdown I always do. I have been taking a break from writing, posting only pictures because frankly I had nothing to say. And with a bunch of pictures, my countdown wouldn’t format properly. But we leave in five days. I guess I should update the flag: we’re going to Greece first, but I’m not too worried about that: it’s still, first and foremost, a trip to family in Polska.

Pics

Wet Dog

Our pup is not a fan of baths.

Haircut

The Boy has gone through several hairstyles over the years. When he was little (i.e., when we made the decisions), it was quite short. Given his violent cowlicks, it seemed the safest bet.

As he grew older, his hairstyle preference grew longer. A couple of years ago, he kept his hair almost down to his chin all the way around.

Today, we went to a new barber shop for a haircut. Despite E’s protests, I showed the barber a picture of the long-hair phase: “It was Lord Farquaad style!” the barber said. E just laughed.

Today’s cut was about the best he’s ever gotten. K loved it. “Approved” was L’s verdict.

Repairs

Sometimes I wonder if anyone ever goes more than a few days without something somewhere breaking. Usually it’s small things that we can almost ignore, I think, but the medium and large issues seem to cluster up and hit all at once.

K’s car required some work (issue 1), so yesterday I drove it to our Polish friend who’s also a mechanic. He lives in the north of the county, right off the rails-to-trail project that runs through the county, so I usually drive the car up there and ride my bike back.

But issues never come alone: they always bring company. On the way back, I got a flat (issue 2). In the same tire that I’d just repaired. Or didn’t repair — what’s the difference?

But issues never come alone: they always bring company. The ramp to Papa’s room (it will always be “Papa’s room”) needs to be repainted (issue 3), which means it needs to be cleaned, which E remedied this morning. Upon returning home from Lowe’s with the appropriate paint, I noticed a bit of wood sticking up from one of the knot holes. I bent down and dug it out with my finger only to discover that the entire knot hole had somehow rotted out.

Which meant I had to get a new 1×6 to replace it. Which meant a trip to Lowe’s. Which is where we had just been.

Fixing the board was one of those projects for which the prep and cleanup took longer than the actual project.

But issues never come alone: they always bring company. While I working on this, L returned and informed me that her car stalled three times while driving home.

“And there’s a weird emoji on the dash,” she said.

“Probably the ‘check engine’ light,” I thought.

I checked; indeed, I was right. I cranked the car. It started stalling immediately. It was as if it weren’t getting enough fuel. Fuel pump? Clogged fuel filter? Not sure — and of course I couldn’t find the error reader that would have given me a little more information on the nebulous “check engine” light.

Breakup

Who could have seen it coming? Surely two rich megalomaniacal narcissists should be able to get along if they have the same goal: make themselves richer at the expense of the rest of us.

Who am I kidding: we all saw it coming. What we didn’t anticipate was how fast everything would escalate. Trump remained uncharacteristically calm and approached the border of magnanimity at first, but then the cliche gloves came off:

  • Trump threatened to kill Elon’s government contracts and subsidies.
  • Elon brought up the Epstein files and claimed (probably accurately) that Trump is in them.
  • MAGA diehard Bannon called for Elon to be deported and for the government to seize Space X
  • Elon retweeted a call for Trump to be impeached.

All this within a few hours.

There’s a part of me that’s absolutely gleeful about this. But most of me finds this just as horrifying as everything else Trump does. Think of what Putin and Xi are saying about this. Sure, Putin lost a lot of bombers this week, but he’s looking at the long game, and a civil war within the MAGA party that could further destablize America — what a gift for him.