While emptying the spam folder on my email the other day, I realized that I seldom look to see what the spam actually is.
That may or may not be hazardous to my health as there are generally several offers in there which I could use to enhance various body parts that I may or may not own.
Then there are the numerous business opportunities offered to me by the solicitors and intermediaries of various members of the royal houses of Kenya, Nigeria and Zimbabwe, all of which seem to have stored their millions in an offshore account to which I seem to hold the key of release if only I will give them my social security number, bank account number and my dog's shoe size.
They promise they will give me a generous percentage of the bounty if I will comply with their carefully composed request which often contain more grammatical errors than a freshman composition. They also seldom actually KNOW my name which is even more troublesome since they are asking for so much detailed information. Am I actually THE Shelley Merrill they are searching for who has the vast power to return them to their money sucking royal status, or do they want the dude named Shelley Merrill who lives in California?
And since we are asking questions, if the offshore pharmaceutical companies really have my best interests at heart with their various solicitations for products and services they wish me to purchase, shouldn't they care about what gender I am? Confident as I am in the knowledge that Viagra, Cialis and the plethora of lotions and cremes they are hawking are for my own benefit, I have to believe that once again they have me confused with that nice MAN in California who actually owns a penis.
From time to time, Reader's Digest encourages me to enter their sweepstakes virtually guaranteeing me that I AM the grand prize winner with only the mere formality of my participation holding me back from untold millions. I say "Cut to the chase and just give me the loot". Sadly, I appear not to have checked my spam folder to know which little digital stamp I need to transfer to what square to collect the riches held in the initials of S. M. somewhere in Alabama. I am reasonably sure that Sugarbear Mullholland is more than happy with his Reader's Digest check for 75 billion dollars because they sure haven't sent any money to the initials that spell out MY name.
Then of course, there are the various emails from the companies that I no longer wish to hear from but who cannot remove me from their mailing lists because I have forgotten what password I used when I logged into their company website to try and win a trip to Bombay, India. I still get emails encouraging my participation in their latest giveaway promotional that assure me that I might already be a winner.
Spam folders are pretty exciting. When I actually DO check them, I discover that for just a couple of clicks and the paltry sum of $39.95, I can discover who has been searching for me online and do background checks on strangers. I have no interest in either as my plate is full with all the activities that fill my calendar with other people's appointments.
To look at my datebook, you would believe I am the most unhealthy individual walking the planet as a soon to be corpse. There are appointments for doctors, neurologists, cardiologists, oncology specialist, veterinarians and a dental appointment that I will have to reschedule since it falls right on top of a therapy visit that I refuse to miss.
I promise they are not all for me, but they do all require some input from me... it's as if the entire world demands my attention if only to fill out the massive amounts of paperwork that are making some Indian cry somewhere in the world for the loss of forest habitat that I'm causing. Every time an appointment reminder dings, a forest loses another bird on the wing... or something like that.
Spam. It's food but also more. It's the meat product who's name was bogarted by the kind people who now use it as the euphemism for all kinds of digital junk mail. Thomas calls it "stuff posing as meat". I think that definition can be expanded to also include "stuff posing as mail".
The vagaries of life compel me to actually open and check the spam folder from time to time just in case I am missing something I actually need, someone I really want to talk with or some kind of appointment I still have time to attend. Mostly, it's just stuff posing as meaningful. Actually it is far more likely to be stuff pretending to be meaningful than actually being useful to me. Morbid curiosity compels me to check once in a while just to see if I am missing anything. The answer 99.99% of the time is a resounding "NO!".
Meanwhile, I think it's time to have a bite to eat and get ready to cart Jared to the doctor's for his appointment today.
If I use my prep time well, I still have some time to fry up some Spam... I'll save you a slice or two. I promise to email it to you along with a bonus offer for Viagra, the entreaty to save the whales and share your account information with me so that you, too, can be a winner of vast sums of Nigerian currency.
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