The four of us were at the Chinese restaurant to celebrate the 10th year I’ve been writing a column.
It was a small dinner party. My cousin and his wife. Me and mine.
Our waiter was a cheerful guy who spoke with a heavy foreign accent. He said he was originally from—and this is why I love Asian restaurants—Mexico.
We knew this because he could not pronounce the Chinese dishes, such as zhá jiàng miàn, and zìchuān huǒguō.
He had an even harder time understanding English words. For example, I ordered a sweet tea, but he brought me a Pabst Blue Ribbon.
“This is an affront,” I said to my wife.
“I’m sorry, señor,” said my waiter, “I will take your beer back.”
“No, wait,” I said. “Let’s not react in haste.”
We ate ourselves silly. We celebrated with spring rolls. We ate Krab® rangoon. Egg drop soup. And when it came to the calamari, we were enjoying our appetizer when my cousin informed the table that this might not be actual calamari.
“What do you mean?” we said.
My cousin went on to tell a story. He knew a guy who used to inspect meat processing plants for a state agency. One day, the man was at a farm and he saw several boxes stacked and labeled “artificial calamari.”
“What is artificial calamari?” he asked the plant manager.
“Hog rectums,” the manager replied.
We all stopped eating mid-bite.
“The industry term is ‘pork bungs,’” my cousin went on.
I ordered another “sweet tea.”
Everyone at the table stared at the plate of puckered calamari on our table. Whereupon my wife brought out her phone and started Googling the validity of the claims about alleged “seafood.”
Come to find out, there is such a thing as my cousin’s unsavory theory. However, it would be illegal in the U.S. to serve pork parts and call them “calamari.” Moreover, the USDA reports they’ve never heard of anyone trying to pass pork parts as squid.
So before you send me three metric tons of hate mail, let me state, for the record: you can ABSOLUTELY trust your local restaurant’s menu. If the menu calls it “calamari,” it’s calamari. Your local restaurant owner would NEVER lie to you just to make a buck. This is America. We don’t lie.
“It’s really not a big deal,” my cousin went on. “If you’ve ever eaten a hotdog or a sausage made in America, chances are you’ve eaten thousands of pork rears.”
Once again, my wife brought out her phone to Google this little tidbit. Whereupon my wife’s countenance fell. She wore a sudden frown.
“I think I’ll just have a salad,” she remarked.
But I’ve gotten off track. The reason I am writing this is because when our meal was finished, the waiter brought out four fortune cookies for the table. We all took turns cracking them open.
My cousin’s wife’s fortune was: “Of all the resources you have, time is the most valuable.”
My wife’s fortune read: “A new romance is in your future.”
The table got a big kick out of this. Then, my wife looked at me and said, “You’re walking home tonight.”
My cousin’s fortune was: “If you tell the truth, you won’t have to remember anything.” My cousin, the guy who once convinced a gal that his job was working for the Secret Service by talking into his sleeve all night.
I opened my cookie. The little slip of paper fell into my lap, along with a crumbled cookie shell. I retrieved the paper and read it privately.
“A man can fail many times, but he can only be a failure if he gives up,” the fortune read.
Ironically, I’ve been writing this column for a decade. For 10 years, I’ve written every day. I have no qualifications. My early life was a total failure. I am a dropout. A construction worker. A former ice-cream scoop. A bar musician.
I graduated from community college as a grown man. I am an educational shipwreck. I have no pedigree. But I’ve been writing for 10 years now and sometimes I wonder how.
Lord knows, I’m not a great writer. I think we can all agree. Sometimes the words are hard to find. Sometimes, I don’t know how I’m going to produce another column. Sometimes I feel like a total impostor. But then, inevitably, something always happens to push me forward.
Simply put, sometimes the words fall right into your lap. Sort of like they did tonight.
No hogs were harmed during the making of this column.
Thanks for not giving up on us. And for being so reassuring about the calamari 😉. I heard scallops were sometimes made by cutting plugs from “inadvertently” hooked sharks. But that would be wrong. No fortune cookie could say this unless it was the size of a softball, but remember this: among those paid purveyors of the pixelized word, there are natural writers, polished writers, and gifted writers. Words come easily to the natural. Grammar is the strength of the polished. But hearts belong to the gifted. We are grateful you’ve continued to share your giftedness for the past decade. Many hearts are better because of you. Blessings.
Sean, Confucius has spoken, 🤣🤣. You’re okay, in fact you’re more than okay. Despite your early life, your Gods given talent has enlightened the lives of so many with your humour, your kindness & stories. Take heart Sean, you are my daily lift, no matter my mood. Keep going.