Random thoughts, analysis and color commentary with, as yet, no clear focus or agenda.
Thursday, December 24, 2009
2010, Looking Up
“The best way to have a good idea is to have a lot of ideas.” This Linus Pauling quote was the solution to a recent New York Times Sunday crossword puzzle. I knew when I read it that it would be the inspiration for a blog, I just didn’t know what the blog would be about. As I set out now to write, I still am not entirely sure. You see, I am no genius. For whatever reason, I just don’t have as many ideas as Pauling, a Nobel Prize winner for Chemistry and Peace. Albert Einstein agreed with Pauling. He was passionate about imagination and said it was more important than knowledge. It was his ability to be persistent, and be willing to imagine and fail 99 times that allowed him to be recognized as a genius when, on his hundredth attempt, he succeeded. The more you read about Einstein, the more you’ve got to like him. My joke about sex at 60 is that I’m for it, but you should at least pull over to the side of the road first. Einstein said the same thing in a different way: “Any man who can drive safely while kissing a pretty girl is simply not giving the kiss the attention it deserves”. I wonder what the first 99 girls were thinking.
I do have some ideas. Usually, they come to me at 4 AM. To those of you who have been faithful to PinpointAnalysis, you may remember my Naybob Bobblehead doll. Now that was a great idea. Can’t you imagine how many parents would buy one with their face on it for their kids in college. I’m sure it would be a big seller, especially if it contained an audio chip with a recording of the parent’s voice, “No, no, no!” I’d follow it up with one for the college freshman to balance out the parental advice with some that spoke more to the id. For the guys, there’d be the YeaMeg doll. It’s head would bob in the yes direction only and the recorded voice would be Meg Ryan’s from the Deli scene in “When Harry Met Sally” (see link below). An orgasmic yes, yes, yes, yes would do it for me. For the ladies I’m still not sure. It would have to be a multidirectional bobblehead, one that could be pushed in any direction. I think I’d leave the audio chip out, you know, keep him strong and silent, or just plain dumb. There would have to be a changeable face option, Antonio Banderas one day, Brad Pitt the next. The problem is that it might be nice to leave out the face altogether, a la Xaviera Hollander’s zipless sexual encounter. I haven’t yet figured out how to make a bobblehead with no face and a tight ass.
Another idea of mine is the Backapplicator. This invention is a long rectangular shammy towel designed to allow sunbathers to apply suntan lotion to their own backs. Utilitarian and feels good too! Imagine kiosks at the beach where you could either buy a Backapplicator or lie down on a massage table and be lathered up like a shoe getting buffed. I’d start this one out in California.
With the New Year approaching some of us reflect on the year, or decade, that is ending. Others look forward to the year to come and make resolutions of all sorts. Einstein said that our main problem is that we have perfected our means to get things done but are confused in our aims. For those of you who are reflectors, I think you’d have to agree. I’m more of a look forwarder. This coming year I’m going to follow the advice of two great Americans, Satchel Paige and Pat Paulsen. Baseball legend Paige said, “Work like you don't need the money. Love like you've never been hurt. Dance like nobody's watching”. Paulsen never won a US presidential election despite trying six times. Still, I’ll aspire to follow his campaign slogan, “I've upped my standards. Now, up yours”. A very happy and healthy New Year to you all.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F-bsf2x-aeE&feature=PlayList&p=0C96102F6BAD11D0&index=0&playnext=1
Thursday, December 10, 2009
Falling Out Of Bed
This blogging gets tougher as the days get shorter. The news media do not have the luxury of a warm den, a leather chair and a hi-def TV with cable and DVR to wallow in (like I do) as the season takes its toll on their affects. They must produce copy to meet their deadlines, deadlines that in the age beyond CNN no longer wait until five PM, but rather exist in real time, ever ready to shake, jolt and revolt us. I have no such constraints and I readily admit, my readers, that it has been two weeks since my last blog-fession.
We are in the midst of Tiger frenzy. A friend asked me to comment in my blog. Pinpoint Analysis is what he may have hoped for, but I’m thinking, these days that, like my brother Bill joked, my postings tends to be not at all analytic, a bit obtuse and written (who said it?) by a pinhead. What, me worry? Heck no. Here goes…
Hiding Tiger, Revealed Transgressions is nothing more than an ancient Greek tragedy. How the mighty have fallen and all of that. It’s Oedipus with his eyes out or the Emperor with no clothes. We elevate our modern heroes up on 90 million per year endorsement pedestals and delight in their falls. For some of America Tiger was more than a king or hero, he was a god. There was a website tigerisgod.com. Forgive me, but I can’t go on without playing the race card. Tiger was revenge. He beat the white guys at their game. He proved yet again, the physical superiority of blacks. He took the white guys' trophies, prize money, endorsement contracts and even their blond Viking goddess. For white America, he made us feel less racist. Corporate America showed us how colorblind they could be… when there’s profit to be made. They turned him into a billion dollar brand. No matter what bad consequences may come as a result of Tiger’s infidelity, if rich blacks, Asians, Jews and women can now be members in formerly white only clubs, I’d say Tiger did good. Without Tiger (and Oprah) there’s no way Obama would be President. They showed America’s power brokers that a black product could be packaged, sold, return a profit and inspire along the way. A shake up like this forces us to face the wide racial divide that still exists in America, and that is good too. Amid comparisons between Tiger and OJ, SNL skits and all of ESPN’s self-righteous pundits telling Tiger how to live his life, my favorite quote was from a black 20 something, who when interviewed on the street, said that he would never have voted for Obama if Obama had not been married to a black woman. That thought had never occurred to me. Of course not, I’m white.
For Tiger and his family, I wish them the best. No one really wants to be, or live with a god. For the rest of us, there’s still a lot of work to be done as a country, and as we all must admit, behind our own closed doors too; as husbands, wives, children, parents and friends. Before the year is over please, someone, get me up out of this leather chair. There’s some holidays and a new year coming. If there’s work to be done , let’s do it together.
Tigger: There's no difference between plunging 10,000 feet to the jagged rocks below and falling out of bed.
Piglet: Oh, really?
Tigger: Sure, haha! Except for the splat at the end they're practically similar.
Saturday, November 28, 2009
NEJM -- On Mammography -- More Agreement Than Disagreement
NEJM -- On Mammography -- More Agreement Than Disagreement
This week’s blog is serious. Please take a few minutes and click on the link above to read the New England Journal article on mammography in women between 40 and 50. Before you start reading, take a moment to recognize and acknowledge your biases. After you have read the article I’d like to discuss some of these issues with you. The issues that come to mind for me are breast cancer, cancer screening, women’s health, health care rationing, the health care crisis, the government’s role in health care decision making, technology and its limitations….there’s a lot to talk about.
“The choice is not between health care rationing and some undefined alternative, since there is no alternative. Rather, the choice concerns what principles we will use to ration health care. In the United States, we have traditionally rationed health care in the same way we ration expensive cars: those who can afford to pay for them are those who can have them. The alternative currently being considered in health care reform would involve a shift to other principles, such as those rooted in considerations of fairness, efficiency, and efficacy.” Robert D. Truog, M.D. From the same NEJM issue as the article above.
The Republican National Committee’s health plan covered abortion for its employees beginning in 1991. When feminists pointed this out this year, the Committee Chairman withdrew the coverage.
Among uninsured women, only 30 percent had a mammogram during the past two years, compared with about 70 percent of insured women.
I am interested in what you have to say!

In order for an online discussion to take place, you have to use the comments area at the bottom of the blog. You can use your name or be anonymous. If this format works, we can use it to discuss other issues in upcoming weeks. If not, it was worth a try.
Some food for thought:
• In 2009, some 192,370 American women will be diagnosed with breast cancer, accounting for more than one in four cancers diagnosed.
• In 2009, an estimated 40,170 women will die from breast cancer; only lung cancer kills more women. This corresponds to 25 deaths per 100,000 women, down from 35 in 1989.
• Data from 2006 -- the most recent statistics available -- showed that about 2.5 million American women have a history of breast cancer. Most of these women were cancer-free. Others were still undergoing treatment.
• From 2002 to 2003, there was sharp decline in breast cancer rates, particularly for women aged 50 to 69. This reflects the drop in hormone replacement therapy by menopausal and postmenopausal women that began in 2002. Breast cancer rates have remained about the same since 2003.
• Since 1990, breast cancer death rates have dropped steadily. The decline has been greater among women under 50 (3.2 percent per year) than among women over 50 (2 percent per year).
• From 1997 to 2006, breast cancer deaths dropped by 1.9 percent a year among white and Hispanic women, 1.6 percent a year among black women, and 0.6 percent annually among Asian-American and Pacific Islander women. Death rates have stayed the same for American Indians and Alaska Natives.
17% of Congress are women.
Among uninsured women, only 30 percent had a mammogram during the past two years, compared with about 70 percent of insured women.
I am interested in what you have to say!
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Cay-ent Get They-uh From He-uh
Dr. PETER AMES GOODHUE, M.D.
Announces His Retirement from
THE PRACTICE OF GYNECOLOGY
Effective January 1, 2010
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He is handsome with a full head of silver hair, a ruddy complexion and an easy smile that brings a sparkle to his Paul Newman blue eyes. He is always well dressed with a trademark bowtie, usually bright colored and flowered. And he speaks slowly in that Maine sort of way. As President of the Medical Society, he would begin his meetings with a story. If you have never heard a Mainer story I encourage you to do so. They are unique regional Americana at its best. They are told slowly with the distinctive “they-uh, he-uh” Maine accent and a Bob Newhart deadpan. Think the opposite of Henny Youngman with his one liners and you have Bert and I—the comedy team that brought Maine humor to the mainstream.
Amazingly, neither Bert nor I, Marshall Dodge and Bob Bryan, were from Maine. They were Yale undergrads with connections to Maine from summer vacations, great ears for dialect and a talent for low rent sound effects. Their original album, recorded for family and friends, went on to sell more than a million copies. They inspired the storytelling of Garrison Keillor (Lake Wobegon Days) and were forerunners to other styles of regional American humor such as southern redneck, as perfected by Jeff Foxworthy.
Excuse the digression, but what native New England story would be complete without one. Peter’s stories went on and on and, if there was a punch line, he never got to it in the first fifteen minutes. The audience of doctors would groan, and then try to hurry him up, and finally shout and heckle to get him to stop so we could eat our dinner. It was of no use. Peter would finish when he was good and ready. Now, after 50+ years of practicing Obstetrics and Gynecology I guess he is good and ready. He is retiring. One story ends and the next one, hopefully just as long and rich with that same Mainer spirit, begins. Q: Have you lived in Maine all your life? A: Not yet.
Sample Maine storytelling at:
http://www.islandportpress.com/BIwhichway.html
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
A Thing and Two
I sat there with Barbara, we sat there we two
We were waiting for Himes, our new congressman who
Was to talk to us doctors about a new bill
Being bandied about up on Capitol Hill.
We doctors grew restless, we bided our times,
Just who does he think that he is this Jim Himes!
We heard he’d been talking to town halls of late
He was dealing with folks spewing venom and hate.
Though he was a freshman, of little import
Fear mongers set out free discourse to abort.
I cut him a break as I sat and I waited
He just tried to listen and ended up hated.
A bit late and flustered he entered the hall
He looked like an intern who’d just come off call.
He said he was sorry, yes friends, fancy that
A humble young man, not no Cat in the Hat.
He was a bit slim with an oversized collar
He was poised, I believe he had been a Rhodes Scholar.
Retired real young, he said those were the facts.
He made all his millions at Goldman and Sachs.
Now some would not trust one so young and so wealthy
To keep us in health and to make health care healthy.
But me, I believe that a man who’s patrician
Is less apt to be a corrupt politician.
Our own Constitution was drafted you’ll note:
A Pres’dent gets in by Electoral vote.So back to Jim Himes, what did he then do?
He pulled out of his tall hat Thing One and Thing Two.
No kidding, he said it. He said that Thing One
Was though smoking and drinking and eating were fun
They were bad for us one and thus bad for us all.
And in order to get healthcare spending to fall
It was up to us doctors to somehow arrange
To institute effective life style change.
Thing Two then chimed in with a screech and a shout
Saying docs, pretty soon all our money runs out.
If we don’t all spend less getting sick people curedWe’ll be unemployed and we’ll be uninsured.
Great Britain’s care’s cheaper, Canucks they pay less
It’s spending and costs got us into this mess.
I listened to Himes going on with offenses
And sat on the fence not yet come to my senses.
Did he think that changes in base human nature
Could come from a bill he and his legislature
Would magically cook up and somehow then pass?
Was he bold and enlightened or foolish and crass?
My friends, I’ve no knowledge of mirrors and smoke.
I’m a doctor and sometimes I tell a good joke.
But big steps, they scare me. Small steps they seem wiser
And if to Obama I was an advisor
I’d say be more cautious. Don’t go risking it all.
Take it small step by small step or you and we fall.
Friday, November 6, 2009
MRB 1924-1994
Eulogy delivered to the Stamford Medical Society on December 13, 1994. For his Yahrzeit November, 2009.
Martin Robert Benjamin loved medicine. From Brooklyn, N.Y., the son of a clothes manufacturer and a housewife with a heart condition, and from the University of North Carolina, he went to Flower Fifth Avenue, the New York Medical College, where he got his MD. From there he went to Bellevue where The elusive blue breasted seersucker he completed his training in Internal Medicine. Bellevue, my father told me, was a lively place even back then. As often happens when working in the trenches,a camaraderie developed among the residents. Marty got to know an attractive female resident who happened to be married, but told him that she had a sister at home just like her. She introduced him to her identical twin, Vicki, and Marty and Vicki soon married.
In 1954 Marty, Vicki and their one year old son, Dan, made the adventurous move to the suburbs. Marty put out his first shingle on Summer St. at the Mayflower Gardens, with the
young family living upstairs. Those early days were a struggle, but Marty did what he had to do. He covered for many of the well established doctors in town, taking their night and weekend
call, and through their kindness received referrals as well. Marty wrote a story about his first New Years Eve in Stamford. It was 3 AM, cold and raining, when he got a call from one of the busiest doctors in town, someone who had never called him before, a real SOB to those who knew him, but, of course, the doctor to his patients. Marty was told to see an immigrant tailor with CHF who was short of breath. Before long, Marty was climbing up to the third floor of this tailor's tenement. He was let in by two policemen and stared down by a tiny man in obvious heart failure. The man said nothing, but took Marty's coat lapels and ran the material between his fingers. He then turned the lapels over to examine the stitching. Now, Marty always prided himself in his dress. He took to heart the advice of Polonius, "In thy dress be rich but not gaudy," paraphrased in Brooklynese, "Dress British, think Yiddish". Even after his stroke, when it would take him 45 minutes to dress, he would walk out to the family room to have us check his ensemble. He called himself a public figure and always had to maintain that professional appearance.
But how was that little tailor to know that this was the only winter jacket Marty owned. When he got through fingering the material, he told Marty, between coughs, "Big shot, vat do you know". He just couldn't trust such a young doctor with such a well made jacket.
Mayflower Gardens soon got crowded with the practice downstairs and the family, now expecting a second child, upstairs. Marty moved the office south on Summer St. where he rented space from Dr. Leo Heimovitch. His first break, an ironic one, came soon when Dr. Heimovitch had a heart attack. Marty took care of the older physician’s practice and from there his own practice took off. I don’t have many vivid memories of my father in those days. I know I was busy with school and football and baseball. He was busy with the practice. That seemed okay to me…except when my friends’ fathers would throw a baseball with us or take us swimming, or just be around the house. I guess I was so used to not seeing him that I didn’t really notice when, in 1961, at the age of 38, he had a heart attack. My older brother and I visited him once in the hospital. The two younger brothers, there were four boys then, never did. As soon as his doctor would allow, Marty went back to work. He was in Hanover Hall on Bedford St. then. Dr. Michael Browne had the office to the left and Dave Widrow the one on the right. Dave’s consultation room was through a thin wall from Marty’s. That, Dave tells me, is how he learned all of his dirty jokes. Marty would call them stories, “true stories”. He’d tell them and then laugh louder that any of us.
Marty loved his patients. He was a kid from Brooklyn. They were mostly blue collar workers, West Side immigrants, cops. He just hit it off with them. He’s listen to them, they’d confide in him. We were never hurting for cookies, cakes, sweaters, wine; you name it at Christmas time. We couldn’t walk down the street in Stamford without someone stopping us to say hello. They wouldn’t even let us pay the 25 cents at the Greenwich tolls. The toll taker would take my father’s quarter and return 25 cents in nickels to the kids in the back seat. I remember one call at night at home. My parents were out and my father had signed out to another doctor. The man was calling about his wife. She was sick, but not the kind of sick that a covering doctor could help. He told me this, and then told me, a kid, maybe ten years old, that my father was a special man. That he listened and cared and meant more to people than just a doctor. My brother Fred tells of another middle of the night call, on the kid’s telephone. My father, head on hand, elbow on knee, listening and listening, and finally putting the phone down. Fred said, apologizing for getting dad out of bed, “The man told me it was important”. Marty replied, “To him it was, and that’s enough”.
In 1967, at the age of 44, Marty had his second MI. This time his doctors told him he couldn’t continue to practice medicine. Marty had Vicki, now five boys, the youngest just one, and the practice. He became depressed. After he recovered from the MI he spent six months in a Westchester psychiatric institute. I was twelve. I remember this very well. I hated seeing him sedated, moving slowly, smiling slowly, walking among the splendid trees and the green grass of this institution. I saw him only twice in that six months, but when he came home he looked normal, walked normal…smiled and told jokes…and went back to work. He said he had to work half time. But we all knew what that meant.
I noticed a real change after that. Marty did spend more time at home. He was home for dinner with the family. And I liked that. Dinners at home with the family were great. Every time my mother got up to go to the kitchen he’d tell us another dirty joke or “true story”. We were turning into teenagers and he wanted to be a part of it. “Did you get lucky last night?” he’d ask me. At sixteen I was pretty tight lipped in my replies. But by eighteen, after my freshman year in college, I knew I could go to him when I needed some penicillin. And I’m sure to this day he never told Vicki.
Marty practiced another 15 years. He put a lawyer, a doctor, a rabbi, an MBA, and a young Hollywood exec through college. A lot of pressure, a lot of worries. Vicki tells me that he started to voice a lifelong conflict. “I’m sicker than most of them,” he’d tell her. He resented when, after praising him, deifying him, they left him after his illness. But there was a good side to this. The practice became almost like work and his important relationships grew with us. He became co-owner of Ben-Paul Stables so he could sit in the owner’s box at Belmont. He travelled, read, gardened. He was the life of the party with his violin on birthdays and holidays.
I was an intern in Philadelphia, doing my neurology rotation of all things, when I got a call. He had a stroke. Despite a dense hemiparesis, he felt he’d again return to work. He worked hard at the physical and occupational therapy. He learned to walk, to dress himself, to drive, but he never practiced medicine again.
Some have said over the years, that it was medicine that caused his heart attacks and strokes. But he never did. It was his family history, high cholesterol and hypertension that did it. It was medicine that kept him going. He never lost faith in medicine or in his fellow physicians. When he could no longer practice, he began writing, mostly about his days as a practitioner. He continued to go to medical conferences and, along with Monroe Coleman, developed the Physical Diagnosis course for second year medical students. He read and read about the history of medicine, and delighted students with the wisdom of Osler and Freud.
For his sons and many of his nephews, nieces and special friends, he remained a sounding board. He still wanted to listen. Something about the way he listened made others sure he cared, and this caring became addictive. In the end Marty was not ready to die. He still felt he had something to give.
This last year was a recurring nightmare for us. Marty didn’t remember what hit him, but we told him. I was angry at the indifference, incompetence, insensitivity of some fellow physicians, but not Marty. He was thankful. Among our community he had his heroes. He spoke of Mike Parry as a clinician, Noel Robin as a teacher. In his word processor I found a letter of congratulations to Bill Hines.
In the end, he wanted to come home. He never made it back to his study, his music, his gardens that he loved so. But he died where he labored…in Stamford.
If there is a message to us physicians from Marty’s life, it is his sons. We have all achieved some measure of professional success, but every day we go home to our families, and play with our children, bathe them, feed them, talk to them, listen to them, or just spend time around so they’ll know we’re there for them. Marty Benjamin loved his family, and we miss him very much.
Martin Robert Benjamin loved medicine. From Brooklyn, N.Y., the son of a clothes manufacturer and a housewife with a heart condition, and from the University of North Carolina, he went to Flower Fifth Avenue, the New York Medical College, where he got his MD. From there he went to Bellevue where The elusive blue breasted seersucker he completed his training in Internal Medicine. Bellevue, my father told me, was a lively place even back then. As often happens when working in the trenches,a camaraderie developed among the residents. Marty got to know an attractive female resident who happened to be married, but told him that she had a sister at home just like her. She introduced him to her identical twin, Vicki, and Marty and Vicki soon married.
In 1954 Marty, Vicki and their one year old son, Dan, made the adventurous move to the suburbs. Marty put out his first shingle on Summer St. at the Mayflower Gardens, with the
young family living upstairs. Those early days were a struggle, but Marty did what he had to do. He covered for many of the well established doctors in town, taking their night and weekend
call, and through their kindness received referrals as well. Marty wrote a story about his first New Years Eve in Stamford. It was 3 AM, cold and raining, when he got a call from one of the busiest doctors in town, someone who had never called him before, a real SOB to those who knew him, but, of course, the doctor to his patients. Marty was told to see an immigrant tailor with CHF who was short of breath. Before long, Marty was climbing up to the third floor of this tailor's tenement. He was let in by two policemen and stared down by a tiny man in obvious heart failure. The man said nothing, but took Marty's coat lapels and ran the material between his fingers. He then turned the lapels over to examine the stitching. Now, Marty always prided himself in his dress. He took to heart the advice of Polonius, "In thy dress be rich but not gaudy," paraphrased in Brooklynese, "Dress British, think Yiddish". Even after his stroke, when it would take him 45 minutes to dress, he would walk out to the family room to have us check his ensemble. He called himself a public figure and always had to maintain that professional appearance.
But how was that little tailor to know that this was the only winter jacket Marty owned. When he got through fingering the material, he told Marty, between coughs, "Big shot, vat do you know". He just couldn't trust such a young doctor with such a well made jacket.
Mayflower Gardens soon got crowded with the practice downstairs and the family, now expecting a second child, upstairs. Marty moved the office south on Summer St. where he rented space from Dr. Leo Heimovitch. His first break, an ironic one, came soon when Dr. Heimovitch had a heart attack. Marty took care of the older physician’s practice and from there his own practice took off. I don’t have many vivid memories of my father in those days. I know I was busy with school and football and baseball. He was busy with the practice. That seemed okay to me…except when my friends’ fathers would throw a baseball with us or take us swimming, or just be around the house. I guess I was so used to not seeing him that I didn’t really notice when, in 1961, at the age of 38, he had a heart attack. My older brother and I visited him once in the hospital. The two younger brothers, there were four boys then, never did. As soon as his doctor would allow, Marty went back to work. He was in Hanover Hall on Bedford St. then. Dr. Michael Browne had the office to the left and Dave Widrow the one on the right. Dave’s consultation room was through a thin wall from Marty’s. That, Dave tells me, is how he learned all of his dirty jokes. Marty would call them stories, “true stories”. He’d tell them and then laugh louder that any of us.
Marty loved his patients. He was a kid from Brooklyn. They were mostly blue collar workers, West Side immigrants, cops. He just hit it off with them. He’s listen to them, they’d confide in him. We were never hurting for cookies, cakes, sweaters, wine; you name it at Christmas time. We couldn’t walk down the street in Stamford without someone stopping us to say hello. They wouldn’t even let us pay the 25 cents at the Greenwich tolls. The toll taker would take my father’s quarter and return 25 cents in nickels to the kids in the back seat. I remember one call at night at home. My parents were out and my father had signed out to another doctor. The man was calling about his wife. She was sick, but not the kind of sick that a covering doctor could help. He told me this, and then told me, a kid, maybe ten years old, that my father was a special man. That he listened and cared and meant more to people than just a doctor. My brother Fred tells of another middle of the night call, on the kid’s telephone. My father, head on hand, elbow on knee, listening and listening, and finally putting the phone down. Fred said, apologizing for getting dad out of bed, “The man told me it was important”. Marty replied, “To him it was, and that’s enough”.
In 1967, at the age of 44, Marty had his second MI. This time his doctors told him he couldn’t continue to practice medicine. Marty had Vicki, now five boys, the youngest just one, and the practice. He became depressed. After he recovered from the MI he spent six months in a Westchester psychiatric institute. I was twelve. I remember this very well. I hated seeing him sedated, moving slowly, smiling slowly, walking among the splendid trees and the green grass of this institution. I saw him only twice in that six months, but when he came home he looked normal, walked normal…smiled and told jokes…and went back to work. He said he had to work half time. But we all knew what that meant.
I noticed a real change after that. Marty did spend more time at home. He was home for dinner with the family. And I liked that. Dinners at home with the family were great. Every time my mother got up to go to the kitchen he’d tell us another dirty joke or “true story”. We were turning into teenagers and he wanted to be a part of it. “Did you get lucky last night?” he’d ask me. At sixteen I was pretty tight lipped in my replies. But by eighteen, after my freshman year in college, I knew I could go to him when I needed some penicillin. And I’m sure to this day he never told Vicki.
Marty practiced another 15 years. He put a lawyer, a doctor, a rabbi, an MBA, and a young Hollywood exec through college. A lot of pressure, a lot of worries. Vicki tells me that he started to voice a lifelong conflict. “I’m sicker than most of them,” he’d tell her. He resented when, after praising him, deifying him, they left him after his illness. But there was a good side to this. The practice became almost like work and his important relationships grew with us. He became co-owner of Ben-Paul Stables so he could sit in the owner’s box at Belmont. He travelled, read, gardened. He was the life of the party with his violin on birthdays and holidays.
I was an intern in Philadelphia, doing my neurology rotation of all things, when I got a call. He had a stroke. Despite a dense hemiparesis, he felt he’d again return to work. He worked hard at the physical and occupational therapy. He learned to walk, to dress himself, to drive, but he never practiced medicine again.
Some have said over the years, that it was medicine that caused his heart attacks and strokes. But he never did. It was his family history, high cholesterol and hypertension that did it. It was medicine that kept him going. He never lost faith in medicine or in his fellow physicians. When he could no longer practice, he began writing, mostly about his days as a practitioner. He continued to go to medical conferences and, along with Monroe Coleman, developed the Physical Diagnosis course for second year medical students. He read and read about the history of medicine, and delighted students with the wisdom of Osler and Freud.
For his sons and many of his nephews, nieces and special friends, he remained a sounding board. He still wanted to listen. Something about the way he listened made others sure he cared, and this caring became addictive. In the end Marty was not ready to die. He still felt he had something to give.
This last year was a recurring nightmare for us. Marty didn’t remember what hit him, but we told him. I was angry at the indifference, incompetence, insensitivity of some fellow physicians, but not Marty. He was thankful. Among our community he had his heroes. He spoke of Mike Parry as a clinician, Noel Robin as a teacher. In his word processor I found a letter of congratulations to Bill Hines.
In the end, he wanted to come home. He never made it back to his study, his music, his gardens that he loved so. But he died where he labored…in Stamford.
If there is a message to us physicians from Marty’s life, it is his sons. We have all achieved some measure of professional success, but every day we go home to our families, and play with our children, bathe them, feed them, talk to them, listen to them, or just spend time around so they’ll know we’re there for them. Marty Benjamin loved his family, and we miss him very much.
Sunday, November 1, 2009
House and Holmes
Why does history bore us? I wanted to tell you how OWH Sr. started a monthly literary magazine that, of course he named, the Atlantic Monthly. His monthly column related conversations from the breakfast table at an inn of his creation. His persona, the Aristocrat one year, the Professor another, would talk with other guests at the inn. The conversations were witty, humorous, and were at times the same stand up routines he had given on his lecture hall tour years earlier. He was really not too different from George Carlin. He just came a century earlier. But who cares? No one, I think, unless you're a really old dude.
It took a most Excellent Adventure for Bill and Ted to get into history. It’s the same for me. I went through my years at Yale without ever taking a history class. I couldn’t read the stuff. History writers can’t write. Three weeks ago on a mountain in Great Barrington, MA I had my own most excellent adventure and discovered history. For me, it’s the same as learning medicine. The reason medical education takes place in the clinical setting is, in large part, that there it becomes alive, is understandable and is remembered. Once you see a case of say, subacute bacterial endocarditis, it becomes real for you and you want to go to the textbooks and read more. And when you read with interest, instead of laboring over the words, you become alert and absorb the material. Do medical writers write better than historians? Keats and Holmes aside, probably not.
I will never forget bacterial endocarditis because of a Delaware VA Hospital patient who came in with shoulder pain and chills. We talked. As it turns out, he lived next to a racetrack and every evening would walk his dog around the stables. Had I ever heard of Streptococcus equi? I’m sure it was in the books I read for cardiac pathology, but come on. After his blood cultures came back full of horse bacteria I went back to those books, learned about that obscure bug, yes, but also learned everything I could about SBE. I may be a gastroenterologist, but I still come across SBE, and get a big kick out of beating the interns, residents, medical attendings and cardiologists to the diagnosis. Our Infectious Disease guys, I admit, get there with or before me.
As Dean of Harvard Medical School, Holmes wanted to admit women. The overseers would not let him. He admitted three blacks, but withdrew the admissions, succumbing to pressure from students and administration. He resigned as Dean but continued to teach until the age of 73. “Life is a fatal complaint,” he said, “and an eminently contagious one.”
“It is a good thing to save a few lives, but it is better to infuse a new life into our language.” So said Holmes as he found new life and went on to worldwide fame as a poet and author. And that’s history. You can read about it, or better yet, do as I did…take a hike! Or do like my father and go birdwatching. (That translates to the racetrack.)
The crack-brained bobolink courts his crazy mate,
Poised on a bulrush tipsy with his weight.
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Dr. Holmes, Part 2
The brilliant Sherlock Holmes is certainly the most famous detective, for that matter character, in all of literature. The Guinness Book of World Records lists him as the “most portrayed movie character” of all time. Over 70 different actors have portrayed him in over 200 films. We are of course dazed by his wealth of knowledge and unequalled sleuthing skills, but we are mesmerized by his personality and presence—his self-absorption, his addiction, his passion and his egotism. “Excellent! I cried. Elementary, said he” is Watson’s correct account of that famous conversation with his friend, the one that lives on in movies in its misquoted form, “Elementary, my dear Watson”.
The real Dr. Holmes was the Parkman Professor of Anatomy and Physiology at the Harvard Medical School in 1847 when one month after Halloween the school was closed by a coroner’s jury. They spent the next week gathering evidence in the form of Dr. Parkman’s dismembered body. They found his jaw with its teeth and an identifying gold filling in the furnace of Dr. John Webster’s lab. Dr. Webster, a chemistry professor, was heavily in debt to the wealthy Parkman. In those days a professor was paid from the receipts of tickets bought by students to attend his lectures. Apparently, neither Dr. Webster nor his subject was too popular. His murder trial and the precedent it created in case law, however, were sensational. When Charles Dickens came to America he asked to tour the crime scene. The conviction on the basis of circumstantial evidence is part of American legal history.
Unlike the unfortunate Dr. Webster, Dr. Holmes was a masterful lecturer. His craft took root in his days as a Harvard undergrad where at 5’2” his sport was lively conversation. He joined the Hasty Pudding Club where he wrote and performed comedic poems and skits. His wit followed him into the lecture hall. He added spice to Anatomy and Physiology with puns and poetry in the form of mnemonic devices, at times of a ribald nature. When the four month term was over he would take his act on the road. Every city and most small towns had a lyceum. In the Age before movies and Comedy Theater, speakers like Holmes would tour the country and provide entertainment for the locals. His favorite topics were poetry, especially Byron, and homeopathy, a practice he railed against. “The causes of disease,” he said, “have been less earnestly studied in the eagerness of the search for remedies.”
Doctors in the 1800s still used bleeding and cure-all elixirs for any and all ailments. Holmes was schooled in Paris in the French methode expectante, a sort of therapeutic nihilism that instructed the physician not to do harm and to keep the patient going long enough to allow the body to heal itself. He was taught to observe. This training led him to collect hundreds of cases of postpartum infection into an historic paper, "The Contagiousness of Puerperal Fever". His claim that doctors and midwives spread infection to mothers giving birth was not accepted by mainstream medicine for another twelve years. His recommendations that practitioners involved in infection cases stay away from future deliveries saved many lives. His scientific method was a model, that when applied to other ailments, saved many more.
Holmes was an educator and an entertainer. He did not pretend to be a genius or scholar. “Nothing is so commonplace as to wish to be remarkable,” he said. He did not invent the use of ether in surgery but he came up with a name for it, anesthesia. He was no Keats, but his simple rhyme, “Old Ironsides” inspired mainstream America and helped save the USS Constitution from the scrapheap. His unwillingness to show proper reverence to religion or to take sides with “moral bullies” like the Abolitionists in the pre-Civil War years got him in trouble in the press. “I don’t want to be bullied into heaven by the pulpit—neither do I wish to be called hard names to make me better or more humane.” For a public figure, he was certainly naïve. He just preferred to see the good in people, humor in difficult situations and be a conciliator. Not surprisingly, University politics did not suit his temperament. Next week, his transition to 19th Century blogger.
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
The Real Dr. Holmes, Part 1
We started off on our trail, in skiing terms a blue slope. It rose gently, winding around the side of the mountain instead of attacking it head on in double black diamond fashion. It was one of several trails used over the years by Mohegan Indians, loggers, horse drawn wagons, charcoal makers and local pleasure seekers. The most famous of those pleasure seekers was a group in 1850 that included Herman Melville, Nathaniel Hawthorne and Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. The outing that August morning made such an impression on the adventurers that five out of ten of them wrote about it in letters or journals, preserving the day in history and giving us, 159 years later, an accurate account of their actions and impressions.
Herman Melville was in the process of writing a nautical adventure. The inspiration for the book came from the profile of Mt. Greylock, a whale shaped mount to the north of Great Barrington. He was behind schedule with his editor who was encouraging him to befriend Hawthorne, a shy New England author who had just completed The Scarlett Letter. The two of them hit it off so well, that according to Melville, the advice and encouragement he got from Hawthorne that day put him back on track, and shaped the rest of Moby Dick. The odd man out was a third author, Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes. He however, brought the champagne, and was happy to pass it among his comrades. It seems that the good doctor kept a healthy dose in reserve for himself, and when the group reached Squaw’s Peak, he acted like the Harvard undergrad he once was, leaning out over the cliff’s edge, scaring his friends. We climbed that peak and I can tell you, it’s a long way down from the top.
Most of us know the name, Oliver Wendell Holmes from the doctor’s son, OWH, Jr., the “Great Dissenter” who served on the U.S. Supreme Court from 1902 to 1932. Holmes, Sr., though, is the one who intrigues me. He did more than just hang out on that limb. He was a great American in his own right. His medical writings presaged the discoveries of Pasteur in germ theory. As Dean of the Harvard Medical School he challenged the white establishment by admitting 3 black students. He was a poet, inventor and leading thinker of his time. Next week I will tell you more about his life and explore my growing kinship with him. I hope he will inspire you as he did another physician and author, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, whose brilliant detective, Sherlock Holmes, was modeled after the real Dr. Holmes.
http://www.thetrustees.org/what-we-care-about/history-culture/hawthorne-melville.html
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Take That!

I used to look forward every Sunday to Safire’s New York Times Magazine column “On Language”. It was unique and clever, only at times espousing his conservative political views, but always letting the reader know who was right—he was. I asked him once to help me find the origins of the phrase “I keep the ends out for the tie that binds” from Johnny Cash’s “I Walk The Line”, but he never wrote back. Now I’ll never know.
George Carlin died one year ago. He was my other favorite word maven. He was also self-educated, a New York high school dropout and, like Safire, proud of it. Many of his stand-up routines revolved around words and their meanings. Most were crack-a-smile humorous like “If crime fighters fight crime and firefighters fight fire, what do freedom fighters fight?” Others were more over the edge like his “Seven Words You Can Never Say On Television”. That one got him arrested many times but never convicted. You can read the routine on line as it is quoted in the Supreme Court Decision of FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION v. PACIFICA FOUNDATION, 438 U.S. 726, 98 S.Ct. 3026 (1978). Read it at http://www.georgecarlin.com/.
Do you remember who was the first host on Saturday Night Live? It was George Carlin. He came back from the future in “Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure” and down from heaven in “Dogma”. “Scratch any cynic,” he said, “and you’ll find a disappointed idealist.” That attitude probably led him to be the original conductor on “Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends”. He inspired the likes of Richard Pryor and Howard Stern but was able to calm his demons early in his mid-life and never burn out (up?) or become ugly. Without him and Safire my Sunday night forecast is “dark,” but like George knew, “turning to widely scattered light in the morning”.
Before I sign off I’d like to leave you with a word and a phrase. The word is tennis. It is derived from the French “tenys” meaning “take this” or “take that”. The origins of our modern game of tennis are in a 14th Century game played by French monks. Apparently the game involved a lively repartee and, a la Monty Python’s medieval knights, the monks would often hurl insults at each other along with the ball. Ergo, “take that”.
The phrase is: give and take. It’s a lot nicer than the in your face, “take that”. There are any number of aphorisms about giving, but my favorite came to me from my mother-in law, JoAnn, who died before Barbara and I met. She said that in every marriage if you’re not giving 95%, you’re not giving enough. Now, even though at times I choose to take it as “okay, I only have to do 5% of the work around here” or “if I’m giving 10% I’m exceeding my wife’s expectations by 100%,” I usually take the advice to heart and give it a try.
As we head off to a joyous family wedding my thoughts are with the soon to be married couple and my wish for them to choose and use their words wisely, often and with a sense of humor, and to give and take, always giving, always taking and never forgetting the flexible give and take.
Special thanks to Valerie Byrnes, a genius of bobblehead.
Friday, October 9, 2009
In-Goo We Trust, PLEASE!
Henny Youngman arrived early to the theater. He needed to go backstage to get ready for his act and asked a stagehand to find seats for his wife and friends. “Take my wife, please” was the innocent remark he made, but the stagehand thought it was a joke and laughed. Did Sadie blush? Did she laugh with the stagehand or cut Henny a dirty look and give it to him when they got back home? What about the friends? Did they laugh or were they embarrassed for poor Mrs. Youngman who said nothing but meekly allowed herself to be led to a seat? Maybe the remark wasn’t as innocent as Henny claims. In any event, he used the line in his act for the next 40+ years, along with many others, much worse, that would test the limits of any marriage. He and his wife stayed together until she died after over 60 years together.
Rodney Dangerfield and the mother of his two children had a much shorter and stormier marriage. He gave up on the comedy business in his twenties to work selling aluminum siding. He tried to provide for his young family but went broke anyway. He gave comedy a second go at 40, but by that time he and his wife were history. Despite the lousy marriage, Rodney’s jokes, unlike Henny’s , were not at the expense of his wife. His humor was self-deprecating. He was almost always the butt of his own wife jokes. “My wife likes to talk to me during sex. The other night she called me from the motel.”
Henny would work and then work some more—he was known to do a big show, then go to his hotel and try to find a bar mitzvah or some other private party to entertain for 15 minutes and 150 bucks. His credo was the Yiddish for “Get the cash”. Rodney was happy to make the bigger bucks too, but he would blow it on alcohol, drugs and women. His jokes were funny, but his big attraction was his persona. Of course he got “no respect” because after a cruel childhood of neglect and his struggles with marriage and career, he didn’t feel he deserved any. He fought depression and got high every day of his adult life. His trademark bug-eyed look of confusion, head to the side, hand pulling at his open collar and tie was born when he forgot his lines on stage at the Ed Sullivan Show. Ed thought it was brilliant and it was. We laugh at his discomfort like we laugh when Curley is hit by Moe or when Laurel cries at Hardy’s verbal abuse.
Many of us small folk try to get a laugh from time to time, not always with success and at times with unforeseen bad repercussions. A freshman at Tufts tried his hand at comedy and suffered for it at the clenched fists of every politically correct organization on campus including the school administration. It happened this year during a campaign for student office. A female student of Chinese ancestry put up a poster with her picture and the phrase, “Small stature, big ideas”. In-Goo Kwak, himself of Korean origin (but perhaps Daily Show suckling), put up a poster next to hers with his picture and his slogan, “Squinty eyes, big vision”. In-Goo apologized and avoided suspension. The student body was divided, but many rose in his defense and in an expression of anti-PC-ishness actually elected him to the school’s ethics board. Go figure. They like him. They like him.
If they like you, like they say in Chicago’s Razzle Dazzle that I referenced last week, you can “get away with murder”. Take Bill Clinton. He had W.C. Fields' smile and George Burns’ cigar, screwed around, lied to Congress, got impeached and rode it all the way to the bank. Now he goes around trying to act presidential. That makes me laugh. God forbid Hillary should ever try to tell a joke. She’s smart enough not to.
So I got this problem. Every now and then I try to be funny. What could be wrong with that? Let me tell you. First, look at that picture—the stiff in the suit. Nothing funny about him. Second, you may not really like me. I act too serious and am one of those doctor types who knows a bit too much and does some uncomfortable sounding things. Third, maybe you’re not like Sadie, shy and totally devoted. As Carly Simon said, “You probably think this song is about you”. I know what Lenny Bruce would tell you…but I’m no Lenny Bruce. Friends, it’s not about you. If anyone is to be the butt around here, let it be me. Q: What’s a colonoscope? A: A medical instrument with an A-hole at both ends. ,PLEASE!
Rodney Dangerfield and the mother of his two children had a much shorter and stormier marriage. He gave up on the comedy business in his twenties to work selling aluminum siding. He tried to provide for his young family but went broke anyway. He gave comedy a second go at 40, but by that time he and his wife were history. Despite the lousy marriage, Rodney’s jokes, unlike Henny’s , were not at the expense of his wife. His humor was self-deprecating. He was almost always the butt of his own wife jokes. “My wife likes to talk to me during sex. The other night she called me from the motel.”
Henny would work and then work some more—he was known to do a big show, then go to his hotel and try to find a bar mitzvah or some other private party to entertain for 15 minutes and 150 bucks. His credo was the Yiddish for “Get the cash”. Rodney was happy to make the bigger bucks too, but he would blow it on alcohol, drugs and women. His jokes were funny, but his big attraction was his persona. Of course he got “no respect” because after a cruel childhood of neglect and his struggles with marriage and career, he didn’t feel he deserved any. He fought depression and got high every day of his adult life. His trademark bug-eyed look of confusion, head to the side, hand pulling at his open collar and tie was born when he forgot his lines on stage at the Ed Sullivan Show. Ed thought it was brilliant and it was. We laugh at his discomfort like we laugh when Curley is hit by Moe or when Laurel cries at Hardy’s verbal abuse.
Many of us small folk try to get a laugh from time to time, not always with success and at times with unforeseen bad repercussions. A freshman at Tufts tried his hand at comedy and suffered for it at the clenched fists of every politically correct organization on campus including the school administration. It happened this year during a campaign for student office. A female student of Chinese ancestry put up a poster with her picture and the phrase, “Small stature, big ideas”. In-Goo Kwak, himself of Korean origin (but perhaps Daily Show suckling), put up a poster next to hers with his picture and his slogan, “Squinty eyes, big vision”. In-Goo apologized and avoided suspension. The student body was divided, but many rose in his defense and in an expression of anti-PC-ishness actually elected him to the school’s ethics board. Go figure. They like him. They like him.
If they like you, like they say in Chicago’s Razzle Dazzle that I referenced last week, you can “get away with murder”. Take Bill Clinton. He had W.C. Fields' smile and George Burns’ cigar, screwed around, lied to Congress, got impeached and rode it all the way to the bank. Now he goes around trying to act presidential. That makes me laugh. God forbid Hillary should ever try to tell a joke. She’s smart enough not to.
So I got this problem. Every now and then I try to be funny. What could be wrong with that? Let me tell you. First, look at that picture—the stiff in the suit. Nothing funny about him. Second, you may not really like me. I act too serious and am one of those doctor types who knows a bit too much and does some uncomfortable sounding things. Third, maybe you’re not like Sadie, shy and totally devoted. As Carly Simon said, “You probably think this song is about you”. I know what Lenny Bruce would tell you…but I’m no Lenny Bruce. Friends, it’s not about you. If anyone is to be the butt around here, let it be me. Q: What’s a colonoscope? A: A medical instrument with an A-hole at both ends. ,PLEASE!
Saturday, October 3, 2009
And All That Jazz
Thank you, friends, for your encouragement, support and critical comment on my new creative effort. The comments have been varied, from “WOW” to “Gotcha” (a clever play on my “I get you” plus “I’m wi’cha”), to “I don’t read blogs, take me off your list”. One professional media type liked my writing. Another former editor advised me to stick to topics in which I had some expertise—as in, who wants to hear about tennis from an over the hill suburban swim and tennis club weekend hacker? Once my dander got back down I got to thinking. Did my column reveal an obvious lack of expertise on tennis, or am I unqualified because I was never a tennis professional? Does having a father who loved to tell jokes and a Jewish mother give me the street cred to get up on stage and try my hand at a High Holiday, half asleep Jewish joke/holiday greeting or do we all have to stick to Seinfeld reruns? In this era of reality TV we see examples daily of delusional clowns who really think they have talent. As standout talent is rare, the major entertainment value of the shows is not in the discovery or display of real talent, but rather in the spectacle of us mortal folk reacting to harsh criticism and ridicule. It’s not easy. Still, I’m not delusional. Though I still fantasize about being a star professional baseball player (Sorry ladies, that’s what your men fantasize about too), I know the difference between a job and a hobby. I take a small measure of personal satisfaction in having more maturity and insight than say, Michael Jordan. He was the best basketball player ever and he left it all for what? Baseball. Then there’s A Rod. Now he’s got a real problem. You see, he’s already a baseball star. So what is he to do when he gets bored with his day job? You got it. He’s got to fantasize about sex. How else do you explain that Madonna thing?
So, there are jobs and there are hobbies. I’d like to be able to write about both, and maybe even about stuff I know nothing about. If I have fun writing it and you, the readers, are entertained, does it really matter if I’m no expert? If it does to you, don’t read the blog. I’d be happy to take you off the list.
Humor me a bit longer. I’ve still got this bug up my ass about expertise. What is it? Can it be objectified, rated, certified and licensed, and if so, who gets to do all that? Once the experts have spoken is there any voice left for us little people? Sorry. This is getting a bit heavy for this humble country doctor’s fledgling blog. I may be a gastroenterologist, but in my family I’m not even the most expert on bugs up the ass—that title would go to Lindsay, staff researcher for TV’s Monsters Inside Me.
Some random favorites and then I’ll sign off…
Wizard of Oz: They have one thing you haven't got: a diploma. Therefore, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Universitartus Committiartum E Pluribus Unum, I hereby confer upon you the honorary degree of ThD.
Scarecrow: ThD?
Wizard of Oz: That's... Doctor of Thinkology.
D.A. Jim Trotter: Now, uh, Ms. Vito, being an expert on general automotive knowledge, can you tell me... what would the correct ignition timing be on a 1955 Bel Air Chevrolet, with a 327 cubic-inch engine and a four-barrel carburetor?
Mona Lisa Vito: It's a bullshit question.
D.A. Jim Trotter: Does that mean that you can't answer it?
Mona Lisa Vito: It's a bullshit question, it's impossible to answer.
D.A. Jim Trotter: Impossible because you don't know the answer!
Mona Lisa Vito: Nobody could answer that question!
D.A. Jim Trotter: Your Honor, I move to disqualify Ms. Vito as a "expert witness"!
Judge Chamberlain Haller: Can you answer the question?
Mona Lisa Vito: No, it is a trick question!
Judge Chamberlain Haller: Why is it a trick question?
Vinny Gambini: [to Bill] Watch this.
Mona Lisa Vito: 'Cause Chevy didn't make a 327 in '55, the 327 didn't come out till '62. And it wasn't offered in the Bel Air with a four-barrel carb till '64. However, in 1964, the correct ignition timing would be four degrees before top-dead-center.
D.A. Jim Trotter: Well... um... she's acceptable, Your Honor.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rn5-VN3SH1o&feature=fvw
“Long as you keep ‘em way off balance, how can they spot ya got no talents?” And all that jazz.
So, there are jobs and there are hobbies. I’d like to be able to write about both, and maybe even about stuff I know nothing about. If I have fun writing it and you, the readers, are entertained, does it really matter if I’m no expert? If it does to you, don’t read the blog. I’d be happy to take you off the list.
Humor me a bit longer. I’ve still got this bug up my ass about expertise. What is it? Can it be objectified, rated, certified and licensed, and if so, who gets to do all that? Once the experts have spoken is there any voice left for us little people? Sorry. This is getting a bit heavy for this humble country doctor’s fledgling blog. I may be a gastroenterologist, but in my family I’m not even the most expert on bugs up the ass—that title would go to Lindsay, staff researcher for TV’s Monsters Inside Me.
Some random favorites and then I’ll sign off…
Wizard of Oz: They have one thing you haven't got: a diploma. Therefore, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Universitartus Committiartum E Pluribus Unum, I hereby confer upon you the honorary degree of ThD.
Scarecrow: ThD?
Wizard of Oz: That's... Doctor of Thinkology.
D.A. Jim Trotter: Now, uh, Ms. Vito, being an expert on general automotive knowledge, can you tell me... what would the correct ignition timing be on a 1955 Bel Air Chevrolet, with a 327 cubic-inch engine and a four-barrel carburetor?
Mona Lisa Vito: It's a bullshit question.
D.A. Jim Trotter: Does that mean that you can't answer it?
Mona Lisa Vito: It's a bullshit question, it's impossible to answer.
D.A. Jim Trotter: Impossible because you don't know the answer!
Mona Lisa Vito: Nobody could answer that question!
D.A. Jim Trotter: Your Honor, I move to disqualify Ms. Vito as a "expert witness"!
Judge Chamberlain Haller: Can you answer the question?
Mona Lisa Vito: No, it is a trick question!
Judge Chamberlain Haller: Why is it a trick question?
Vinny Gambini: [to Bill] Watch this.
Mona Lisa Vito: 'Cause Chevy didn't make a 327 in '55, the 327 didn't come out till '62. And it wasn't offered in the Bel Air with a four-barrel carb till '64. However, in 1964, the correct ignition timing would be four degrees before top-dead-center.
D.A. Jim Trotter: Well... um... she's acceptable, Your Honor.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rn5-VN3SH1o&feature=fvw
“Long as you keep ‘em way off balance, how can they spot ya got no talents?” And all that jazz.
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
New Year 5770
So there were these three Jews, one orthodox, one conservative and one reformed. And they were sitting around on Rosh Hashanah evening. “Joe”, I says, “What did your rabbi talk about in his sermon?”
Joe thought a minute, smiled, gave a sheepish laugh and answered, “I forget”. So much for orthodox oration.
Vicki was next. “My rabbi missed his son. You could see it in his face…”
“Mom,” I says, “The sermon?”
“Oh that. He said Israel and Jews are being threatened by Iran and that Iran is evil. And that we should try to do more good deeds.” Timely, touching on the political, with a cloying aftertaste of conservative ethics.
It was my turn to give a report of this year’s reformed rabbi’s message—usually the punch line in any decent Jewish joke. I always try to fall asleep during the sermon. This year I almost did, twice. But each time I was about to drift off I caught a couple of words that sent me into an AllieMcBeal/Scrubs-like imaginary funk. The rabbi said that we should make a strong and consistent effort to know each other. He said that one of the greatest expressions of friendship and love is to be able to look at someone and say, “I get you”.
Well, that did it. I found myself in a Hollywood producer’s shabby office with Harry Zimm (Gene Hackman) sitting behind a desk in front of a window, blinds open, lights shining into the eyes of his guest, Ray “Bones” Barboni (Dennis Farina).
Harry: “Ray, look at me.”
Ray: “Why don’t you take a look at this?”
You know the rest. Harry got the crap knocked out of him. You see, Ray wasn’t really in the mood to bond emotionally.
And then somehow I find myself between John Travolta and Robert Deniro. John’s got his arm around my shoulder and says, “I’m wi’chu”.
“You’re with me?” I ask.
“No, I’m wi’chu. I know you. I get you.”
Then there’s the rabbi again. He’s saying that there’s a lot of things we don’t talk about that we should talk about because talking about them will make us both feel better and bring us closer together. But that it’s hard to be the first one to bring it up but that we should. And that whenever a shepherd lost a lamb and that lamb returned, the shepherd could take a seed and put it into a sack, but only if he really knew that lamb well. Hey, don’t laugh. This is reformed Judaism and we don’t take things literally. It’s all metaphor. We might as well be Freemasons. Good. Now you don’t have to read Brown’s The Lost Symbol. I did. Don’t waste your time.
I have learned after many years, that when talking to my mother, I should keep it short and keep it simple.
“Our rabbi’s sermon was the same as last year’s. He never talks about politics. He just tries to get us to be better people.”
Not a bad sermon. Happy and Healthy New Year to all.
Joe thought a minute, smiled, gave a sheepish laugh and answered, “I forget”. So much for orthodox oration.
Vicki was next. “My rabbi missed his son. You could see it in his face…”
“Mom,” I says, “The sermon?”
“Oh that. He said Israel and Jews are being threatened by Iran and that Iran is evil. And that we should try to do more good deeds.” Timely, touching on the political, with a cloying aftertaste of conservative ethics.
It was my turn to give a report of this year’s reformed rabbi’s message—usually the punch line in any decent Jewish joke. I always try to fall asleep during the sermon. This year I almost did, twice. But each time I was about to drift off I caught a couple of words that sent me into an AllieMcBeal/Scrubs-like imaginary funk. The rabbi said that we should make a strong and consistent effort to know each other. He said that one of the greatest expressions of friendship and love is to be able to look at someone and say, “I get you”.
Well, that did it. I found myself in a Hollywood producer’s shabby office with Harry Zimm (Gene Hackman) sitting behind a desk in front of a window, blinds open, lights shining into the eyes of his guest, Ray “Bones” Barboni (Dennis Farina).
Harry: “Ray, look at me.”
Ray: “Why don’t you take a look at this?”
You know the rest. Harry got the crap knocked out of him. You see, Ray wasn’t really in the mood to bond emotionally.
And then somehow I find myself between John Travolta and Robert Deniro. John’s got his arm around my shoulder and says, “I’m wi’chu”.
“You’re with me?” I ask.
“No, I’m wi’chu. I know you. I get you.”
Then there’s the rabbi again. He’s saying that there’s a lot of things we don’t talk about that we should talk about because talking about them will make us both feel better and bring us closer together. But that it’s hard to be the first one to bring it up but that we should. And that whenever a shepherd lost a lamb and that lamb returned, the shepherd could take a seed and put it into a sack, but only if he really knew that lamb well. Hey, don’t laugh. This is reformed Judaism and we don’t take things literally. It’s all metaphor. We might as well be Freemasons. Good. Now you don’t have to read Brown’s The Lost Symbol. I did. Don’t waste your time.
I have learned after many years, that when talking to my mother, I should keep it short and keep it simple.
“Our rabbi’s sermon was the same as last year’s. He never talks about politics. He just tries to get us to be better people.”
Not a bad sermon. Happy and Healthy New Year to all.
Saturday, September 19, 2009
American Idol?
Serena Williams, in her post-meltdown news conference, revealed that one of her idols in tennis is John McEnroe. I was shocked and a bit unsettled. Did she mean the tennis brat famous for his immature tantrums, tirades and threats? “Are you serious?” Did she even know about the young father and Hollywood hobnobber who was no innocent bystander to his druggie wife’s cocaine laced high life? Or did she mean the divorced father of three who overcame accusations of controlling and bullying and bravely took custody of his children? She probably does know that he has profited greatly from tennis, becoming one of the richest in the sport. And we all see and hear his commentary during the US Open where year after year he shows himself as the most insightful analyst out there. I loved John McEnroe most as a fiercely competitive and gifted winner on the tennis court. Even when he lost a match, as he did to Bjorn Borg in arguably the best match ever played, his intense effort and racket artistry made him and us, his awestruck audience, winners. So Serena, which John is your tennis role model?
Serena was being pressured by great tennis from Kim Clijsters. She was down a set and behind 6-5 in the second. She was on serve and had already fought off four match points. She was hitting the ball hard and deep, but the balls were coming back just as hard and deeper. Several of her forehands failed to clear the net. Her serve was keeping her in the set. She was acing Clijsters on the ad court with a flat, wide 112 mph bomb. At 15-30 she stepped up to the baseline, fired her second serve and was blindsided by a line judge’s call, “foot fault”. And she lost her cool. F this f that, down your throat, code violation, point to Clijsters, game, set, match. Do you call a foot fault at a crucial point in a marquis US Open match? Yeah, you do. Why? Well, not only because it’s the rules. Just as much, because, just maybe, it was the unrelenting pressure from Clijsters that told Serena she needed to hit a really good serve. That subconsciously nudged her toe forward to touch the service line. That ultimately made her snap and not default, but lose to Clijsters who did not slide into the finals but won.
So Serena, which John do you want to emulate? You’re already the most gifted women’s player out there. How about the John who has turned his life around and looks back at his past with a smile of bemused embarrassment, the rewards of a champion, the pride of a father and looks ahead every day, richer for that past, to be a good person and live life. Do you have what it takes? It’s in your court.
Serena was being pressured by great tennis from Kim Clijsters. She was down a set and behind 6-5 in the second. She was on serve and had already fought off four match points. She was hitting the ball hard and deep, but the balls were coming back just as hard and deeper. Several of her forehands failed to clear the net. Her serve was keeping her in the set. She was acing Clijsters on the ad court with a flat, wide 112 mph bomb. At 15-30 she stepped up to the baseline, fired her second serve and was blindsided by a line judge’s call, “foot fault”. And she lost her cool. F this f that, down your throat, code violation, point to Clijsters, game, set, match. Do you call a foot fault at a crucial point in a marquis US Open match? Yeah, you do. Why? Well, not only because it’s the rules. Just as much, because, just maybe, it was the unrelenting pressure from Clijsters that told Serena she needed to hit a really good serve. That subconsciously nudged her toe forward to touch the service line. That ultimately made her snap and not default, but lose to Clijsters who did not slide into the finals but won.
So Serena, which John do you want to emulate? You’re already the most gifted women’s player out there. How about the John who has turned his life around and looks back at his past with a smile of bemused embarrassment, the rewards of a champion, the pride of a father and looks ahead every day, richer for that past, to be a good person and live life. Do you have what it takes? It’s in your court.
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