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This picture is emblematic of how Nature teaches lessons. This tree appears dead at first glance, but there is that one living branch, somehow surviving out of a bole that is in the process of decay.
The more Iām in the woods, the more I see how closely intertwined death and decay are with growth and abundance. Itās relatively obvious that decay feeds life; moldering earth gives birth to abundant plants.
But this picture offers something deeper: the stubbornness of growth, the overpowering will of life and creation even amidst its likely end.Ā
It is an appropriate lesson for a new year. Turned into a metaphor, perhaps that tree is a cherished dream long held that is beginning to slip away. But there is that one branch that still lives, if you focus your energy and passion on it. Ā
May you find your dreams and focus your will on what you want and need in 2023.



The other night I was letting Anna the dog out. Any time it is dark, I will at least step out on the back deck and survey the property with a flashlight. There are a lot of animals that travel through our backyard.
That night, I spotted the unmistakable glow of eyes. Anna had started down the deck steps, and I quickly followed, calling my wife for backup. Thatās when I spotted the second set of eyes. Two coyotes.
Anna is not one to back down. She runs towards them barking. I started to call Anna, like I always do, a frantic and usually fruitless attempt to get her to back away from danger.
Continue readingItās special when this waterfall is flowing in the winter and becomes iced up.

The boss hands me the chalk and some gloves and I walk over to the first one. About a foot long, brown, curly hair, black nose. Typical. Abrasions on one of its stubby little legs. One ear torn, and it doesnāt look like it was because of contact with the road. One of its button eyes is hanging out by just a thread. I already know Iām going to see the same things on the other ones. Trust me, after you see a couple of GI Joes with their arms in the leg holes, or a couple of My Little Ponies with their tails lopped off and their personalized insignias perverted, the little stars made into pentagrams and the little hearts made into intricately and minutely drawn images of unsuccessful coronary bypasses, you get to where you can spot a pattern before you even see it repeated.
I look up and I see some rookie cop throwing up on the concrete divider. Iād like to say I had never been there. I smile when he looks at me, just to let him know heās not alone. Sometimes lies are the best truth.
Jack comes over to snap some pictures before I get to work. He gives me a long look. āKinda like those Smurfs in New Haven back in ā02.ā Jackās not surprised I donāt answer. He knows that I like to do my own thinking.
I pull the latex gloves on with a snap at each wrist. The boss comes over with a plastic bag. I like the Ziplocs with the āyellow and blue make greenā seal, but funding has been short lately, so I make due.
I press gently on the bearās belly to hold it steady and trace it out with the chalk. Then I pick up the bear and put it in the bag. The eye gets hooked on the top, but I get it loose before it tears off. I try not to think about the home it could have had, the cheeks it would have solaced, the gentle, sleepy breathing it would have caused. Those kinds of thoughts get you where there aināt no toys, just a lot of white, and padding, and needles with sweet, soothing, liquid nothingness inside.
The boss tells me thereās more bears up the road, but I tell him to wait a second. Iām looking down at where the bear had been. There, right in the middle of his white outline, is a hunk of thin plastic. The remains of a grocery store bag. I open up my DoTaS Investigators Crime Scene Set. I pick it up with the tweezers. I take out the magnifying glass and look until I spot it. One brown hair stuck by friction to the plastic. Nine will get you ten that that hair came from my little friend that I just bagged. And if my hunch is right, fingerprints on the plastic will lead me to the scum who did this.
This is one of several stories I wrote that was inspired by seeing several stuffed animals that had been dumped up next to a highway divider. My curiosity was sparked, and I wrote the stories to provide an explanation for why they were there.
Nameās Lance Rimshot. My friends call me Lance. I work for the Department of Toys and Services. Its friends call it āDoTaS.ā
It was Wednesday night. Wednesdayās the night that Mom goes over to Ednaās for cards. Those ladies like to play late, so I stayed up until she came home, watching rented movies. You donāt need to know what kind.
Later I was asleep. The phone rang and I was awake. It was three AM on the clock next to the phone. It was the old kind of clock with the white numbers that click when they flip. But you donāt need to know that.
It was the boss. I did some quick calculations. At this hour, it couldnāt be an intervention with some girl to explain why Barbie looked so much different from mommy. Or some pale little hombre who had been spending so much time killing aliens in a game that he had told his father that he wanted to move to a different āmodā so he could get more āfrags.ā No, this one was going to be different.
āLance,ā the boss says. āWe need you on I-84 West between exits 29 and 30, where it slices through Hartford. Pronto.ā
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