The Holy Grail Press
Proudly Made On Earth By Earthlings

Word of the Every So Often​
seat of ease: (noun) a toilet on an old sailing ship, which was little more than a waste tube on the stern (the rear) of a ship; any toilet. I think I shall retire to my seat of ease.
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The Almost Daily
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It's Hummingbird Day, a day set aside for those little marvels of avian aviation. They're the only bird that can fly backwards. And if you want more hummingbird trivia, they can't walk. They're feet aren't strong enough for it. So if they want to move, say, one inch over on that perch, they have to fly there. As well, most hummingbirds are very territorial. Pretty much, they don't like each other. A dominant male will chase off any other hummingbird that tries to move in on its territory… except for the ladies. They're welcome to come on in. So, yeah. If you have a hummingbird feeder and there's more than one hummingbird and they're all getting along… they're probably all females.
Not really a holiday, today is also a full moon, and, as I'm sure you already know, a full moon in September is called a Corn, or Harvest Moon, because harvesting is what we do this time of year.
There are 12 or 13 full moons every year, so if you miss this one, just wait 28 days. Contrary to werewolf movies, a full moon lasts, really, an instant. It’s that constant moving thing. Imagine a second hand sweeping around the face of a clock. Before you can even say it’s exactly at the 12, it’s gone. And that’s without even getting into the whole idea of what “exact” is. The earth, the moon, the stars… yeah. They’re not precision instruments. Yet we try to measure them like they are. Aside from werewolves, full moons have little meaning to anybody… except those folks who still base their calendars on the full moon, mostly the religious types. Which explains why they never show up on time for anything. Aside from the full moon.
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Cartoon of the Week

Bull Sheet
STUFF
Paint Machine
Miles mixed paint.
You know,
he ran one of those machines
that put little squirts of colour
in a can of white paint,
and then after he shook it up
it’d come out out being this colour
that had nothing to do
with any of the colours that it was before.
Not that it’s magic or anything.
I mean, they have this little book
that tells you just exactly how many squirts to squirt
when the customer finally makes up her mind.
Miles also waited on customers.
He didn’t run a cash register or anything like that;
he just marked the price on the top of the can
and then somebody up front rang it up.
Not like it really would’ve mattered anyway
if they would’ve let him run the cash register.
Miles would’ve hated his job just the same.
You see,
Miles hated his job
because it was something that any idiot could do.
There was no intellectual challenge.
And the more Miles thought about it,
the more he became convinced
that a machine could do his job
just as well.
So that’s just what Miles did.
He made himself a robot.
Oh, don’t get me wrong;
it was a really lame robot.
He started with an old, self-propelled lawnmower
and worked up from there.
The body was a worn-out shop vac,
and the only arm it had was the hose.
The head was this pathetic bowling ball
that he bought at a garage sale,
and on top of that bowling ball he had duct-taped an old video camera
and then painted this really stupid looking face.
He tried the best he could to make it look human
by sticking clothes on it.
You know, like his blue work smock
with his name badge stuck on it.
But it still looked like a pile of junk
that got caught in a clothesline.
But it worked.
It really worked.
He’d wind it up or whatever,
and it would go into work
and put in eight hours a day,
overtime if it had to.
And the people down at the store bought it.
Or they just didn’t care.
None of the customers seemed to mind, either.
Why should they?
I mean, as long as their paint came out the right colour?
And once every other week
they’d send a pay check home with the robot.
Nothing went haywire with the robot.
It didn’t go berserk and kill all the customers
or get a conscious and want Miles to share the money,
or anything like that.
The paint store never wised up
and made robots of their own
so that they could stop paying Miles to stay home
while his robot did all the work.
Miles never got depressed
because he’d replaced himself with a machine.
In fact, pretty much of nothing happened at all.
Miles just stayed at home and watched TV all day,
which seems kind of boring,
but who am I to judge?

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Allen is a well-liked, successful furniture salesman, except for once a month at the height of the full moon, when he changes back into what he once was… the assistant manager at the Health Food Emporium. For that one day, it falls upon his wife to make sure he doesn’t do anything he might regret. By the Full of the Moon, a ten minute duet by Michael Soetaert.
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