TheBanyanTree: Honey has Been Healed!

smack58 at nycap.rr.com smack58 at nycap.rr.com
Thu Jul 7 05:45:00 PDT 2011


Never liked circuses, even as a child.  Not sure why.  I never told my mother as she loved circuses and attended even as a little girl in Germany.  She thought she was doing something nice for her children.  My dad went but I think he could have cared less and did it for my mom more than anything.  All my brothers and my sister liked to go, too, but I always felt sorry for the animals. Seeing the movie "Water for Elephants" brought back a lot of those old feelings.  I think I knew somewhere deep inside that the animals were, if not actually abused, so far out of their element that it bordered on a kind of abuse.  They were forced to work so hard and looked so thin and malnourished for the most part (at least to me as a little girl) and the big animals scared the bajeebas out of me when they circled the rings.  The dust and the small was horrible and ended up in my nostrils and hair and I couldn't wait to get home and get a bath.  Ick!

Sharon


---- Woofie <woofie at WOOFESS.COM> wrote: 
What can I say about this, but...........................................

BRAVO Mo!!!!

This is a cracker of a story!:)

I do so wish we had Tent Revivals in Wozland, cuz I would love to attend 
one.

But,  I suspect if one tried to be held, the authorities wot be would ban it 
as an illegal gathering or a terrorist plot or  the RSPCA (Royal Society for 
the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals) would make a complaint or wotever.

Why the RSPCA?
That's cuz they associate tents with circuses wot have animals in them and 
everyone knows that circuses with animals are cruel;)

Woof, who declares that no circus animals have been injured in this reply, 
because she has never been to a circus, but who did see Sugarfoot (remember 
him?) as a very sad clown sitting outside his trailer in Wozland, once.

-----Original Message----- 
From: Monique Colver
Sent: Thursday, July 07, 2011 2:05 AM
To: Banyan Tree
Subject: TheBanyanTree: Honey has Been Healed!

Last night we attended a church revival down by the railroad tracks. Crowds
of people were clamoring to see the prophet, as were we. I have a fondness
for prophets. It was a noisy crowd, but Honey was unfazed, since she
couldn't hear them anyway. She did appear to be considering the possibility
of biting those closest to us, but whatever. We sat through two sermons, one
by a 10 year old child preacher who admonished us to tithe freely in order
to secure our eternal salvation, three intermissions so we could buy hot
dogs and popcorn, and two interludes of a 12 year old soprano singing first
Amazing Grace and then The Battle Hymn of the Republic. The first was okay,
the second was wretched.

At last the prophet himself appeared, and said, "I am here to heal the sick,
comfort the sick at heart, and collect your money!" This was all in a loud
booming voice, except by the end the crowd was screaming hysterically to be
saved and most of them may have missed the money part. We had to wait our
turn of course. This healing thing is apparently a sort of individual
process. If the prophet is as powerful as he would like us to believe,
couldn't he just wave his fairy wand over the crowd and say, "There, all
done." But no, we were given a number, for which we paid a donation, and
made to stand in line behind the makeshift stage.

The first healing was a 42 year old accountant who was complaining of
bunions. "You are healed!" the prophet said, and smacked him in the head,
causing said accountant to fall backward, where he then hit his head and was
knocked unconscious. Guys in black t-shirts rushed on stage and carted him
off, and then the next, a clown who was sad. And by clown, I mean a clown,
in full clown regalia, with a sad drawn on face and the barest hint of rum
on his person. "You are healed!" said the prophet, knocking the clown to the
ground, and the clown's sad drawn on face didn't change at all, but I'm
pretty sure he was no longer sad. Or would be, once he regained
consciousness. Then a scullery maid, who was suffering from steam burns, who
was also knocked unconscious, no doubt so her burns could heal. This went on
for half an hour, or an hour, or some period of time that lost all meaning.

Then it was Honey's turn. "If you smack my dog I'll kill you," I said to the
prophet. "Just fix her hearing."

"It'll cost you extra," the prophet said, "If I can't smack her. That, and
she's a dog, if you haven't noticed."

"Really?" I responded. "I knew there was something different about her. Just
get on with it, will ya?"

"If I must," he said, "But I must insist on cash or a cashiers check first.
Or Visa. Or MasterCard. We minister to those of all faiths."

"Fine," I grumbled, as I handed over my last few dollars.

"We'll bill you for the rest then. This isn't nearly enough."

I have a mailing address I use for these purposes, so I gave him that. Said
mailing address is halfway to Timbuktu, and there's no address there, much
less a there there, so I imagine a pile of mail has been collecting there
for quite a while. Another bill or two wouldn't matter much.

"Dog, you are healed!" the prophet bellowed, and Honey snapped at him.

Wouldn't you, if a prophet was bellowing at you? Well, true, Honey couldn't
hear him, but she got the general idea.

We left the stage as a midget desiring to be tall entered from stage left,
but we didn't hang around to see what would happen next.

After we got home I said to Honey, "Honey? Can you hear me?"

I could tell she couldn't because she made no sign of hearing me. Which is
not to say my dog can sign. That'd just be weird.

But this morning she came into my office, and was snapping at me, which is
her way of saying, "Can you let me outside now please?"

I turned around in my comfy desk chair and said to her, "Do you want to go
outside?"

She responded by barking and jumping up and down, if a dog can jump up and
down. Then Ash, who'd been loitering in the doorway, started barking and
jumping up and down.

I kept talking to her, and she kept responding as if she could hear what I
was saying. Then again, it's hard to tell with a dog. We went into the
hallway and I had Andrew call her, and she looked at him, then went to him.

The dog can hear.

After I let them outside I went back upstairs and called out the back
upstairs window to Honey. She stopped what she was doing, which was sniffing
grass, and looked up, then around. She wasn't quite sure where I was calling
her from, but she knew someone was calling her.

I could have just said that the vet had said she might regain some of her
hearing once the infection cleared up and the ear gunk was cleaned out from
the drops he'd had us giving her, but that doesn't make for such a good
story, does it?



-- 
Monique Colver



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