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                                                                                    WELCOME  TO  MY  AUTHOR  PORTFOLIO

Among the special recognition days coming up, one stands out. April 11 is National Pet Day. If you miss that because of a busy schedule, wait a few weeks. May is National Pet Month. Who’s a good puppy? Yes you are!

 

While humans have been keeping cats and dogs as companions for thousands of years, pet rocks have only been around since 1975. And chia pets since 1977. Fifty years ago, you could get a pet rock, a portable carrying case (with air holes), and an owner’s manual all for $3.95. Of course, Gary Dahl, the genius behind pet rocks, bought the Mexican beach stones for about a penny each and quickly became a millionaire. But, by 1976, the fad was fading. His later inventions, including the Original Sand Breeding Kit, which let buyers grow their “own desert wasteland,” never really took off. You only get one of those, Gary.

 

Ivan Pavlov reportedly did not have pets in the usual sense, but was famous for his dog, the one the experimental psychologist studied in his St. Petersburg lab. There was not just one dog, though, but over forty. Everyone is familiar with the bell ringing experiment where the dog salivates when a bell is rung since it has been conditioned to associate hearing a bell with feeding time. I am reminded of someone I know who once had a dog that peed on the carpet each time the doorbell rang. But that, my friends, is not science. That is just something a pet owner has to deal with.

Whereas Pavlov’s dog was not just one dog, Schrodinger’s cat, a less famous animal, was not even one cat. Not even real. Schrodinger’s cat was theoretical, which saves a bundle on tuna and litter. Schrodinger proposed a hypothetical situation where a cat contained in a steel box may or may not be alive, depending on whether or not poisonous gas was released at the direction of  a radiation monitor. Like certain radioactive particles, the existence of a live cat could only be determined by direct observation.

 

As the joke goes, a person walks into a public library and asks the librarian if there is a book about Pavlov’s dogs and Schrodinger’s cat. The librarian responds: It rings a bell, but I’m not sure if it’s here or not. Yes, it’s the sort of joke Sheldon Cooper might find hilarious, and nobody else, like jokes about entropy and quarks

 

Although there is a band named Pavlov’s cat there is a reason Pavlov did not perform his experiments with cats. A cat might well associate a ringing bell with suppertime, but it would not give the experimenter the satisfaction of drooling. More likely it would begin to bathe itself and then curl up on a newspaper. Or barf up a hairball on Pavlov’s shoe.

                                                                              

PUBLISHED  STORIES  AND  ESSAYS

construction, protection, life safety fundamentals, brainstorming and creativity concept.

HARD  KNOCKS
(CLICK ON LINK AND SCROLL DOWN TO PAGE 31)

UFO, an alien plate hovering over the field, hovering motionless in the air. Unidentified

PLACES TO GO, THINGS TO SEE

Missing piece of the puzzle, white puzzle pieces on blue background.jpg

MISSING

Antique Shop

JUNK, READY TO BUY

OTHER PUBLISHED STORIES... AND ESSAYS

How To Eat Right
How To Manage Your Money
How To Stay Healthy
The Fall Of Squirrel
Cake Walk
Do-gooders Gotta Eat Too
Of Peas and Queues
Three O'clock in the Garden of Good and Evil
News Item
The Visitor
Mr. Blinkie To The Rescue
The Point System
Elements Of Success 
She Spits to Conquer
The Tree Remembers
Christmas Time Is Here 
The Sodfather
What MLK Day Means To Me 
Thanks, Mussolini 
The Cure 
Tarzan In Decline 
Side Effects 
Greatest Of All Time 
The Last Hundred Days

Plight Of the Humble Bee

Graddoo

This is NOT a Christmas Story

Early Man

Books

AWARDS AND HONORS

               

 2017     Pushcart Prize nomination from Hawaii Pacific Review for The Last Hundred Days

    2018     First Honorable Mention Short Story Division AWC contest

                2018     Second Place Chattahoochee Valley Contest Short Story category

2019     First Place Flash Fiction Division AWC contest

2020    First Place Essay Streetlight Magazine 

2020  Top ten finalist for The Opossum Prize

2020  Honorable Mention Stories That Need To Be Told Anthology

2020  First place  Flash Fiction category  in Seven Hills contest

2021   Second place Streetlight Magazine's Flash fiction contest

2021   Second place Seven Hills contest for flash fiction

2021    Second place Seven Hills contest for essay/memoir

2021     Third place Seven Hills contest for non-fiction

 2022     First Place Seven Hills contest for flash fiction

2025     Finalist in Tulip Tree Publishing Humor anthology contest

Writing on Computer

"Life is a moderately good play with a poorly written third act."

-Truman Capote

 "Hold to the now, the here, through which all future plunges to the past."

-James Joyce

 

"Writers aren't people exactly. Or, if they're any good, they're a whole lot of people trying so hard to be one person."

-F. Scott Fitzgerald

Old Book

CURRENTLY READING

...or just finished

Prayer by Tim Keller

The Optimist's Daughter by Eudora Welty

Pile Of Books

Acknowledgments: Photos of Stonehenge courtesy of Trevor S. Key from our trip to England in 2015. Photos of ball pit courtesy of Amelia C. Key from our trip to NYC in 2019. Photo of purple slime courtesy of Triana Nana on Unsplash.

ballpitphoto2.jpg

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©2018 BY RICHARD KEY. PROUDLY CREATED WITH WIX.COM

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