Saturday, December 31, 2011

Santa Claus: Your Friendly, Neighborhood Home Intruder


Santa is a big part of the Christmas tradition in my family.

We try to make his visit as comfortable as possible as per the requirements delineated in his manifesto: “Twas Night Before Christmas.” We leave him cookies and milk; we put out a carrot for Rudolf (or whichever Reindeer is the most worthy); and most importantly we open the flue in the fireplace to make his squeeze down the chimney easier.


Santa has an odd procedure for using what we leave out for him. He feels it necessary, for reasons that elude me, to leave remnants of the cookies and carrots as if to prove that he’s visited even though he just left presents under the tree. Up to fifty percent of the cookies remain as if, instead of ingesting them, Santa prefers to crumble up the cookies and snort them, allowing the Christmas Cheer a faster path to his blood stream. A thousand years at a job, and you figure out some shortcuts. Also, he leaves a mangled half-carrot next to the plate. This means he takes the carrot up to the reindeer, teases one with it, and then brings it back down into our house covered in saliva and disappointment. Or he brings the reindeer in the house, which would mean Prancer framed my dog with that Christmas morning turd on the living room rug.


Along with the presents and the powderized cookies, Santa would leave my sister and me a note. We would tumble down the stairs Christmas morning to find this message outlining why he’d found us worthy of gifts and placed us on his fabled “Nice List.” He would know very intimate details of our behavior at school and at home. Perhaps most children would be comforted, but I felt surveilled. I stopped believing in Santa when, after weeks of searching, I couldn’t find any video cameras in dark nooks or bugs in our phones. In Sunday School, I was taught to believe that only God was omnipotent, so the thought that Santa would be able to see me without a vast network of audio and video equipment maintained by a neck-bearded elf in a white van outside my house didn’t ring true. It was also a tip off that Santa’s handwriting was so similar to my father’s.


Some time in the mid-nineties, my family purchased our first home computer. We were Mac people when it wasn’t cool to be Mac people. We had a giant, whirring monstrosity that took five minutes to boot and another thirty seconds to open the primitive word processing software. It was slow by today’s standards, but back then it was amazing- and even more enigmatic to old people.

The next Christmas, Santa embraced the changing times and wrote his note on our new computer. This was a pretty big leap for Santa, I thought. My grandfather who was around 70 at the time could barely use a computer, but Santa, who was easily a dozen times that old, seemed to know exactly what he was doing. He was even savvy enough to crack the login password to my parents’ account and change the font of the note to big, swirly, Santa-esque letters. Between the spy vans and the computer skills, Santa has a super villain's resume.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

A Long Story I Wrote

Fair warning, this is a long story. It's gonna be quite the emotional and physical investment. No seriously, it's like 17 pages long. I'm sorry to do this to you, but I hope you like it. If you like it, hooray! If you hate it, leave me a long angry comment expounding upon why I suck.

Here's a picture because I feel guilty for making this story so long:


Okay, enjoy.



Chloë Is Typing…

Peter’s face was dimly lit by his computer’s screen as he sat tented under the comforter on his bed. He liked to sit like this when he talked to girls he liked; for some reason it made him feel safe.

Except Peter wasn’t talking to girls that he liked. He was staring at a blank chat window that he had opened eighteen minutes ago. Ever since Chloë had come online, he had been desperately trying to do two things: one, think of something disarming to say to get their conversation off to a good start; and two, try not to talk to her so soon after she logged on that she would think that he had just been sitting like a gargoyle in front of his computer waiting for her to appear for the last two and a half hours. He didn’t want her to think this, even though it was the truth.

Peter was almost fourteen now and had finally learned a thing or two about women. You couldn’t just come out and say you liked a girl. The courting process was a complicated and arduous dance in which both sides wrestled bitterly for power until, out of exhaustion, the girl would finally concede and let the boy date her. Not only was the process lengthy, but any false step along the way would result in spooking the flighty creatures. Talking to a girl, even online where the stakes were a little lower, was like walking a barbed-wire tightrope over a vat of eternal virginity.

“Have you talked to her yet?” a different chat window inquired. “She came online like eighteen minutes ago.”

“I know, Glenn. I have to wait and be smooth. I can’t just ambush her like a gorilla as soon as she comes online,” Peter responded. Glenn was so clueless. He knew even less about girls than Peter. I’ll take him under my wing and teach him someday, Peter thought.

“So, have you been working on your hotkeys?” Glenn asked. “You know the raid is in like three hours and you’re going to be our only healer.”

“I know. Don’t worry about me, I’m the highest level of all of you anyway.”

“Yeah, like 37 is high. You don’t even know Divine Shield yet.” Glenn had once had an even higher level Paladin than Peter, but lost all his progress when the server he liked to play on was damaged by a lightning storm in Japan.

Peter didn’t respond. He was too distracted by the clock in the corner of his monitor that seemed to be frozen. Only a few more minutes and then it would be safe to talk to Chloë. Peter held his breath, hoping that somehow that would accelerate time.

---

Chloë looked great in her track uniform. The shorts that the girls had to wear were far shorter than anything allowable by the school dress code and Peter was thankful for the loophole. He would like to use track practice as an excuse to talk to her, but he didn’t always have the opportunity. It didn’t help that she ran short distance and he ran long distance. He was always a little jealous of the short distance people because the girls and guys got to hang out around the track together. In long distance running, the girls and guys would split up and go on separate hour long runs.

He would return to the track after a nine-mile run to see that the short distance people had long since completed their workout and were chatting in groups or playing Frisbee on the football practice field. Chloë usually liked to hang out near the stairs that led up to the bleachers. Guys would gather there to try to impress her, jockeying for position and clashing antlers in loud displays of dominance.

Worse yet, the short distance team was mainly composed of out-of-season soccer and lacrosse players who wanted to stay in shape for the sport that they actually cared about. These guys, for whatever reason, seemed cooler to Peter than the average track runner and thus were more threatening to his chances with Chloë.

Peter ran by the cluster on his way to the locker room. “Hey Chloë,” he offered. No one heard him. Oh well, it’s not as though she was going to be able to talk to him anyway, not with all of those Neanderthals bickering noisily about which NFL teams were going to make it to the playoffs this year.

---

Seventeen minutes. Peter’s feet were falling asleep. He was still waiting for the perfect moment to start his conversation with Chloë. He had pretty much narrowed the perfect entrance down to “hey, what’s up?” First of all, “hello” and “hi” were unusable because they weren’t nearly as cool as the industry standard of flirtatious conversation: “hey.” And just saying “hey” by itself would be too open ended. He had learned these essential tidbits over the years. Also, he knew to never capitalize letters. Girls hate capitalization.

He had also been trying to think of a cute nickname to call Chloë so that they could bond over it. He had come up with “Umlaut” in the shower a couple of weeks ago after he had discovered that her name had one over the “e.” He was pretty sold on the nickname, but he just hadn’t found the right opportunity to warm her up to it yet.

Suddenly he was tired of waiting. It had been nearly eighteen minutes! Surely that was long enough. Eighteen minutes is plenty of time to appear casual and cool like those soccer players with the ankle deep gene pool. He was about to hit enter and send the message he had prepared when his mom called from the kitchen a floor below.

“Peter! Can you please come take out the trash for me?”

“Mom, can I do it in a second? I’m kind of in the middle of something,” he yelled down to her.

“What?” She couldn’t hear him. He sounded muffled.

Peter pulled the comforter off of his head and leaned toward his door. “Can I do it in a second?”

“I’d really prefer if you did it now. I don’t want you to do it after it gets dark.”

Ugh. How old was he going to have to be before his mom stopped treating him like a child? He climbed out of his bed and put on his Tigger slippers. He jogged downstairs and grabbed the trash bag from his mother.

“Don’t get lost up there. Dinner’s going to be ready soon.”

“Okay Mom, I won’t,” he said, not really listening.

He ran outside, trash bag in tow. Technically he wasn’t supposed to wear his slippers outside, so he just ran on his tiptoes as if that would make them less dirty. He put the bag into the metal receptacle and shut the lid with a loud clang. Peter was back inside before the can was done reverberating. He ran directly up to his room, kicked off his slippers, and jumped back under the comforter.

When he opened his laptop again to finally send the message to Chloë, he noticed that her chat window had turned gray and contained a notification in small letters: Chloë has signed off.

“SON OF A-“ he yelled but cut himself off. Peter punched the mattress beneath him. The message he had so thoroughly considered was still waiting dumbly in the bottom of Chloë’s chat box. He removed it with loud bangs on the delete key.

“She just logged off,” Glenn wrote, his message arriving on Peter’s screen with a ping.

“I KNOW. THANK YOU,” Peter responded dryly.

“Well did you talk to her? Is that why she left?”

“No, Glenn. I didn’t get a chance.”

“She was online for almost 20 minutes…”

“I KNOW. JUST FORGET ABOUT IT AND FOCUS ON THE RAID TONIGHT. I know for a fact that you haven’t conjured those mana potions that you promised that you would have ready.”

“Ugh,” Glenn responded. Soon afterward, he changed his status to “busy” and his icon turned red.

---

Chloë always brought the most interesting lunch. Yesterday she had brought pita bread, hummus, and some kind of Indian soup. She had told him what it was, but it had a weird name and he had forgotten. Today, her lunch consisted of grapes, raspberries, and strawberries accompanied by slivers of several different types of cheese that Peter could not readily identify.

Peter and Chloë didn’t sit at the same table, he usually just made his observations from across the cafeteria. He used to sit with her, but he got frustrated by the storm of testosterone that followed her to her table. He would try to talk to her, but who could even hear themselves think over that rabble. The funny thing was, as he watched her (discretely of course, he wasn’t a weirdo) he noticed that she never really seemed to contribute to conversations. She just sat quietly and ate her food. Whenever she did decide to say something, the guys at her table would be suddenly still, listening in rapt attention for her to finish her statement at which point they would burst into raucous laughter as if the one who laughed the loudest was most worthy of her affection.

He kind of hated lunch. Glenn was his best friend but they weren’t scheduled to have lunch at the same time. This charged Peter with the awkward task of deciding which group of periphery friends he wanted to sit with. He was friends with a group of guys that sat at a table in the back corner of the cafeteria, but they played “Magic: The Gathering” at lunch. They would sit and eat and battle each other using cards bearing Goblins and Orcs. Peter thought it was pretty entertaining, but he didn’t want Chloë, or any other girl for that matter, to associate him with nerdy fantasy games. Today he was sitting with the drama geeks. They were probably even louder than Chloë’s table. They were always grotesquely over-emoting some poorly remembered monologue to one another or yell-singing songs and playing loud guitar accompaniment. For some reason it seemed as though these kids thought that being an actor was synonymous with having an insatiable hunger for negative attention.

 Peter sat in silence, eating his lunch and watching how everyone else seemed to be enjoying themselves. He liked to look down on these cliquey ecosystems as inferior but sometimes he just wished he could be as comfortable with himself as they seemed to be.

BBBBBRRRRRRRNNNNNNNNNnnnnnnnn! The school’s bell sounded like a repurposed Cold War missile defense warning system. Its ring heralded the end of Peter’s lunch period. He put his Tupperware sandwich container back into his lunchbox and crumpled all of his foil and plastic trash into a ball. All of the drama kids who bought their lunch simply stood up with their trays and walked toward the door. This moment of clean-up hesitation made Peter look like he had been eating lunch alone at the table, but he never remembered to gather his trash beforehand so he could get up with the rest of them.

When he finally stood to head out with the massive lunch exodus, he glanced back toward Chloë’s deserted table. Under it, he noticed something that looked like a duffel bag. Forgetting his ball of trash, he picked up his lunch box and walked over. He crouched down and tried to pull the bag out, but one of its straps had become entangled in the legs of a chair. After taking way too long to wrestle it free, he pulled it the whole way out from under the table. A tag on the handle of the bag read, “Chloë.”

This was Chloë’s track bag! He looked up sharply, scanning the cafeteria to see if she had already left. He didn’t see her. He grabbed the bag and his lunch box and jogged for the door to the cafeteria. He wasn’t sure which class she had next, so he had to see if he could catch her before she got too far away. He was about to climb the stairs to the cafeteria exit when Chloë appeared at the top of them.

“Oh, hey. You, um. You forgot your-“ Peter lifted her track bag up in front of him.

“I know! I was coming back to get it. Thank you for keeping it safe for me!” Chloë smiled at him, still standing at the top of the stairs.

Peter stood below her, holding out her bag.

“So, are you-“ she started.

“Oh yeah, right. Of course,” he said, finally understanding that she was waiting for him to come up the stairs. He climbed up and handed her the bag. There was a short pause where they were both silent before a group of about eight guys appeared on the other side of the door with puzzled looks on their faces. They beckoned for Chloë. As she walked through the door, she looked back at Peter and smiled. This tiny moment made Peter’s whole week.

---

An alert went off in Peter’s Gchat. It made the “Ka-Ching!” sound like a cash register opening. Peter had set up this alert to go off every time Chloë signed in. The sound itself was a little crass, but Peter liked to know when she got on so that he could begin waiting to talk to her. Waiting, though, had not paid off like he had hoped this last time, and he was worried that he might miss his opportunity again. He retyped the message that earlier he had so carefully crafted and sent it to her: “hey, what’s up?” Now it was just a waiting game. He hoped that she had come back online with the intent to stay for a while and would be able to talk. Pretty soon the message “Chloë is typing…” appeared at the bottom of the chat window. Peter’s adrenaline spiked.

“hey,” she wrote. “nothing much, just watching tv. what have you been up to?”

“oh, you know, watching the game,” he lied. He wasn’t sure if there even was a game on right now. After a minute or so, she replied.

“so I’ve spent the past two hours watching the food network.”

“naturally.” He hoped she would think he was funny.

Suddenly another chat window popped up. It was Glenn again. “Alright, mana pots are good to go. Also, I remembered that I forgot to equip that Blackvenom Blade that we found last week in the Redridge Mountains. I’m gonna try that baby out tonight.”

Ignoring Glenn for the moment, Peter followed up with Chloë, worried that she would misinterpret what he had typed. He didn’t really have anything good to talk about or know what she was interested in, so he just pursued the last thing she had said.

“learn any good recipes?” Ugh, this was horrible. He wished he knew of anything that they might have in common to talk about. He opened a new tab in his browser and navigated to her Facebook page, hoping to find something usable in her “Interests” section. Chloë must have recently changed her privacy settings, because Peter wasn’t able to see her Wall, her Info, or any of her pictures. He’d never sent her a friend request up until this point primarily because he was too nervous but also because previously he was already able to see all of her information anyway without having to reveal himself. Now, he wasn’t sure what to do. He had begun this dead-end conversation with a girl he liked and wanted to impress and he had no leads.

“Dinner!” shouted Peter’s mother from downstairs. Now not only was this conversation dead in the water, but now he wasn’t even going to have an opportunity to try to fix it. This was a disaster.

“So, what do you think? Should I go DPS tonight and try to work on my berserker build with the new sword? Or should I go back to the mage build that I’ve been using?” Glenn asked.

“Just equip the Blackvenom Blade on that level 14 Dark Elf that you started and we’ll get him a couple quick levels.”

Peter sighed. He wasn’t even hungry but “dinner time is family time!” as his mother liked to say.

“What?” was the response. But it came from Chloë.

Why was Chloë reacting to the message he had sent to Glenn? How could she…Oh no, he thought. He hadn’t switched windows before responding. He had sent that last message to Chloë by accident! His brain was scrambling desperately to create a believable excuse when Chloë signed off.

Well that was it. That was the end of any chance Peter was ever going to have of a relationship with Chloë. Now she knew he was a nerd because he had literally sent her the proof. Then Peter noticed that Glenn as well as everyone else in his chat list had signed off. He tried to go to Google in his browser, but the page wouldn’t load. The internet must have gone out! Chloë might still be online! He might have a chance to explain away that errant message. Maybe he could tell her that he had a computer virus.

---

Mrs. Carlisle dropped Peter’s graded homework on his desk during her trip around the room. There was a large, red “100” emblazoned across the top of his stapled stack of papers, but Peter wasn’t particularly excited. Lots of people got one hundreds on their homework in Mrs. Carlisle’s class. She graded purely on completion and when the class learned that this was the criteria upon which their work would be assessed, all effort to generate correct answers vanished and was replaced by putting down anything that might be vaguely construed as Chemistry. This was the sixth or seventh homework assignment on which Peter had earned a one-hundred for complete gibberish and he was becoming more bold with each passing assignment. For this most recent homework, he had simply answered “Argon” for every single question. Obviously this was not helping him learn the material, but he hoped in vain that perhaps the final would be graded on completion as well.

Peter looked over at Chloë. She was wearing earmuffs even though they were indoors and it was a relatively warm day for mid February. Sure Chloë was quirky, but that’s what Peter liked about her. She was so unique that deep down he worried that he might someday discover that they, in fact, had nothing in common. Mrs. Carlisle handed Chloë her homework. A small smile crept across her face. Peter wondered if anyone in the class had gotten less than a perfect score. Her stack of papers gone, Mrs. Carlisle marched to the front of the class.

“Alright everyone, we’re going to start group projects today. I’m going to tell you all who you’re going to be paired with in just a second. I have the list right...here.” Mrs. Carlisle shuffled around some papers on her desk. “I would let you pick your own groups, but I fear the worst when Dylan and Curtis are allowed to be together.” Dylan and Curtis simulated a high five from across the room and shouted “Air-Five, Bro!” They had been separated in the first week of class and sequestered to opposite corners of the room because they were distracting when they were together. But, even separated by twenty-five feet, they still found a way to talk to each other.

“Alright so the pairs are as follows…” Mrs. Carlisle began reading off the list. Peter realized there was a chance that he might be paired with Chloë and almost swallowed his gum. “Daniel and Mark, Martha and Cal, Brandon and Tanya, Bernice and Thomas, Chloë and Peter, Bryan and…” Wait. Wait, did she just say “Chloë and Peter?” Where they actually paired up for the group project? The Gods had smiled on him! He was going to get to do the project with Chloë and she was going to see what a great guy he was and they were going to fall in love and raise a family and grow old together and buy wicker furniture! His wish had come true!

“Oh, I’m sorry. Peter, you’re with Curtis. I thought something sounded funny. Is that okay? You don’t mind if I split up you and Chloë, do you?”

No. Surely the Gods weren’t this capricious. They couldn’t toy with him like this. Peter was crying on the inside, but what could he do? Say that it, in fact, wasn’t okay and that she was totally sabotaging any chance that he and Chloë might have at mutual happiness? “Sure, that’d be fine.” Peter responded, completely deflated. He looked over at Curtis. Curtis mouthed “High Five, Bro!” and held up his hand.

---

Peter leapt out from under his comforter and ran out of his room, past his slippers. He clomped down the first flight of stairs to the kitchen, but he would have one floor to go after this; the modem for the internet was in the basement. He scrambled past his family members who were seated at the kitchen table, waiting to start the meal. “Where are you going?” his father asked. Peter mumbled something incoherent and hurried down the basement stairs.

When Peter reached the modem, he found it blinking confusedly with the internet light unlit at he suspected. He unplugged the modem, hoping that the usual fix of unplug and replug would do the trick.

“Peter, what are you doing? We’re waiting for you!” Peter’s mom yelled down to him.

“I’m fixing something! I’ll be up in just a second!” He knew you were supposed to wait thirty seconds before plugging the modem back in to let it have enough time to fully reset, but Peter didn’t have that kind of time. He mashed the power cord back into the modem and shook it impatiently as the lights on the front slowly became lit again. Soon, the modem seemed to indicate that all systems were go and that the internet, theoretically, should be restored. He jumped back to his feet and ran back toward the door of the basement, kicking his left big toe hard against the leg of the couch as he took the turn too closely.

Pain shot up from his toe through his whole body and resonated in his teeth. Sweet mother of God, the internet better be working now, he thought to himself as he limped up the stairs. His family was still seated around the kitchen table as he had left them. They looked up at him blankly. He continued his limp-run up to his room. His mother and father called angrily after him but he yelled back, “start without me!”

---

The ice bath was freezing. Peter was sitting waist deep in a briskly circulating tub of 45 degree water in the corner of the trainer’s room and was naked except for his running shorts. His knuckles were white as he gripped the side of the tub. He hated this, but his coach had been making him do it once a week ever since Peter had started complaining about his hip. He should have just kept quiet and waited until it either went away or his leg fell off. His teeth were chattering loudly when he looked up to see Chloë enter the trainer’s room. Peter tried to slowly relax and appear comfortable in the ice tub so that she wouldn’t think he was a wimp. Every tiny movement sent ice daggers into his bones.

The only way Peter could get his teeth to stop chattering was to hum to himself. Over his own humming, Peter could barely make out that Chloë was suffering from a cramp in her hamstring and needed the trainer to stretch it out. Chloë climbed onto the trainer’s bench and lied on her back. The trainer leaned over her and pushed Chloë’s leg toward her face. Peter realized he was staring and turned his focus to his knees, which were blue.

Peter checked the timer. There were only twenty-five seconds left in the fifteen minutes that he was required to do, but maybe if he stuck around a little bit longer, he would be able to leave with Chloë. Everyone else would be gone by now and he could be suave and walk her to her car. He would have to time it perfectly.

Peter sat in the tub, edging silently closer to the brink of hypothermia while watching Chloë out of the corner of his eye. It was hard to tell how much stretching the trainer was going to do, but he’d better hurry up because Peter was pretty sure that he was dying.

Suddenly the trainer released Chloë and said that she was free to go. Peter jolted in the tub, sending a small wave crashing over the side. They stopped and shot him a confused glance. He was unaware that they had been this close to finishing. He shakily pulled himself out of the tub while Chloë and the trainer talked about stretches she could do at home and how to apply heat and cold correctly. Peter’s knees screamed out in agony as he shuffled toward his towel and clothes. He looked like a baby foal taking its first few balance-less steps.

Chloë walked out of the door just as Peter finished putting on his shoes. They were still untied, but he had no time. He thanked the trainer as he gimped out of the door after Chloë. She was already on her way to the parking lot. Peter had to jog to catch up with her. This made every joint in his lower body hurt so much that a whimpered laugh was the only thing keeping him from crying. He reached Chloë out of breath and very unsteady.

“Hey.”

“Hey! Are you okay?” she asked, concerned about how Peter’s knees were pointed so violently inward.

“Me? Oh yeah, I’m fine. The ice bath’s a little rough, though.”

“Yeah it looks like it.” There was a pause after she said this. He thought that she must be expecting him to say something since he had started the conversation. Surely there must be some reason for him to get her attention. Nope. He hadn’t thought it this far through yet. He had to think of something quick. What did guys always talk about with Chloë? They were always going on about sports, but he didn’t know anything about sports. He needed something though, anything.

“So how about those Knicks?” Peter mumbled.

“The Knicks?”

“Yeah, basketball. The Knicks are a basketball team…in the NBA.” Peter tried to say this like it wasn’t a question, but he wasn’t totally sure that he was stating facts.

“Right, no I know who the Knicks are.” She said. “What about them? Did they play recently?”

“Yeah...sure did.”

She looked at him like he was trying to sell her steamboat insurance. “Okay…so how’d they do?”

“Pretty good. They- they won. The game they were playing, they won it. By a lot of…uh…baskets. Or points, I guess points they won by. A lot of them.” She stared at him blankly. “It was a good game.” He felt like such an idiot.

“I wish I had seen it.” She said not looking at him. “Well, I’m gonna head over this way. I see my dad’s car, he’s parked in the upper lot. Talk to you later!”

“Okay, bye! Don’t miss the next game! I’ll quiz you!” He called after her.

I’LL QUIZ YOU? He was immediately furious with himself. He shoved his hands into his pockets and clenched them until they hurt. WHY DON’T YOU KNOW ANYTHING SPORTS OR AT LEAST COME UP WITH A TOPIC YOU KNOW SOMETHING ABOUT BEFOREHAND? YOUR HEAD WASN’T UNDER COLD WATER TOO, WAS IT? When he reached his mom’s idling car, he jumped up and down, punishing himself with the icy tendrils of pain that shot up from his knees as he landed.

---

When Peter finally made it back up to his room, he didn’t fling himself under the comforter like he normally would, there wasn’t enough time for that. He sat on his bed, toe still throbbing, and refreshed Gchat. Mercifully, it loaded and Chloë’s name appeared; she was still online! Peter was composing a wildly false message for Chloë about a malicious virus that had commandeered his computer with the intent to defame him in front of females when she sent him a message before he could finish.

“what was that?” she asked.

The cursor in the chat window blinked at Peter, waiting for him to type something. Before Peter could come up with a convincing enough lie, Chloë sent the second half of her thought.

“a dark elf can’t wield a blackvenom blade. especially one that’s only level 17.”

Peter sat slack jawed, staring at his computer screen.

“the blackvenom blade is an alliance weapon and you need to be at least level 20 or something to use it”

“how do you…” Peter typed, dumbstruck.

“how do I what?”

“how do you know that?! do you play World of Warcraft?”

“yeah, I’ve played since last Christmas. my brother got me into it.”

“I had no idea you played…”

“I had no idea YOU played. why didn’t you say something?”

“I don’t know.” Peter suddenly became aware that his mouth was still hanging open. He closed it and blinked to try to clear his mind. He didn’t know what to say. He finally had something in common with the girl of his dreams and that commonality was somehow making her seem even more attractive. There were so many competing things he wanted to tell her simultaneously that he was crippled by all of the options. After a pause, she continued.

“Well, I have to go eat dinner.”

“yeah, I do too,” Peter said, remembering that his food was, at this moment, growing cold next to his gradually angering parents.

“well, will you be online later?”

“Gchat?”

“no, World of Warcraft”

“oh, yeah. I will.”

“cool, me too. my name is Umlaut96. see you then?”

“see you then,” Peter typed.

“can’t wait :)”

Peter closed his laptop, but it didn’t feel like he was controlling his own actions. He felt like he was watching himself in the third person from above the same way he would later watch his character in World of Warcraft as he and Chloë slayed swamp trolls together until the wee hours of the morning.

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Christmas Town


I've done a lot of posts about my childhood and recently I’ve been thinking that it would be fun to write about a more current event.  Here are selected highlights from my trip to Busch Gardens, Christmas Town Edition that I took yesterday with some of my friends.

You know that ride that has the chairs hanging from a spinning column that little kids like to go on?  I got kicked off of that. 


One of my friends suggested that we go on the chair ride and try to kick each other in succession to make a sort of chain reaction that would send the final rider careening out in a much wider arc than he would normally go.  I misinterpreted this as just grabbing each other’s chairs and flinging them haphazardly in random directions.  It really wasn’t that big of a deal or that distracting I don’t think, but after 45 seconds or so, the ride manager came over the PA system saying “Attention!  The ride is not over!”  even though the ride had begun to slow down.

I turned to one of my friends and said “Ah, damn.  They’re kicking us off aren’t they.”  That turned out to be exactly what they were doing. 

In retrospect, the real reason they shut down the ride may have been the fact that, as I was propelled forward by my friend’s kicks to my chair, I pretended to reach out for the little girl in the chair in front of me.  This girl was like 8 years old.  I was just imagining that I was a Ring Wraith reaching out for Frodo as Arwen  rode him toward Rivendell.  Anyway the point is that I was joking.  I WAS JOKING, ANONYMOUS PARENT.  I DIDN’T ACTUALLY WANT TO GRAB YOUR LITTLE KID.  Also, I’m sorry I freaked you out. 

This is what I thought I looked like:


This must be what you saw:


The best part, though, was when my friends and I were getting escorted off of the ride, a chunky, middle-aged woman yelled out, “Ho ho ho- losers!”

We went straight from the exit of this ride to the entrance of the nearby freefall ride. 

I’d never been on a freefall thing like this before and one of my friends said that you could hold out a penny in your palm and when the ride dropped you, the penny would float above your hand.  I rooted around in my pocket and found a quarter.  It was bigger than a penny, but I figured it would work just as well.

I hid the quarter in my fist as we were seated and a guy in a vest checked to make sure that our harnesses were ratcheted down tightly enough.  When he pushed on mine, it locked my arm in a really awkward position.  I wriggled as I tried to give myself enough range of motion to hold my arm out for the quarter experiment. 

The ride started and we were slowly dragged high into the air.  I continued to try to finagle my hand into a suitable position.  By the time the ride got to maximum height, I had found a highly uncomfortable position which let me hold out the quarter on my palm.  My arm was mushed through the small gap between the plastic harness and the seat and twisted like a withered flower, but the quarter was all ready to go.  I was excited to see that bitch float.

Suddenly the ride started and the quarter flew out of my hand like a priest releasing a dove at a wedding.  It shot out immediately into the inky darkness and I lost sight of it.  We plummeted toward the earth.  I was surprised at how fast we accelerated and consequently how short the ride was.  Soon the braking system engaged and we began to slow. 
                                                                         
A loud “TING!” rang out from a place below me that I couldn’t see.  It was really, really loud.  It took me an embarrassingly long time to piece together that what I had heard was the sound of the quarter hitting the ground with probably near-fatal velocity, and that by letting that coin fly out of my hands I was probably as close as I have ever been to the overdramatic intro of a CSI-type show.

Well, it looks like our victim ... just couldn’t handle change.  YEEEEEEEEEEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHH!

Later I almost killed myself trying to jump onto this wall without using my hands.  I misjudged how high it was or something and flipped clean over it, landing on my head.  That is why I am behind the wall in this picture.


To cap off the evening, the girls in the group thought that it would be fun to see a penguin exhibit.  I didn’t know where we were going and followed them blindly until we reached the end of an obscenely long line.  After about four minutes of waiting in the line dumbly without asking why this was happening to me, I was informed that we were waiting to see this penguin thing.  I immediately started to bitch and complain.  I was being really unlikable and hard to be around.  I regret acting that way now and I regretted it in the moment, but I really don’t like delayed gratification. 

Once we were in the exhibit I continued to be an ass.

In a room filled with children and tired parents, there was a tiny case in which three penguins were uncomfortably mashed.  There wasn’t even space enough for the penguins to walk around.  They just had to stand there while a thousand little disgusting kids pointed and smeared their snotty noses on the glass.  I don’t have a bleeding heart and I’m not typically overly sympathetic, but it was plain to see that the lives of these penguins really just sucked.  Looking at these penguins I said loudly, “So are these the ones that haven’t killed themselves yet?”  There were a few parents who looked up in displeasure.  To which I responded:  “What kind of turtles are these?”  My friends ushered me quickly into the next room.

In the next room there were penguins playing in a larger enclosure with a little tank of water that was sealed so you could see the them as they were swimming under the water.  Some of the penguins were mottled with black spots on their tummies.  When there was a lull in the din of the exhibit, I said to the kids in front of me, “You see those black spots?  Each one is a dream that didn’t come true.”  Again the parents looked unhappy, but the kids laughed. 

Then we left the park and I ate a Triple Steak Stack at Taco Bell.  It was a weird Taco Bell, KFC hybrid where the kitchen was open and you could see them preparing your food, which was a huge turnoff for this particular establishment.  Also, never order the Triple Steak Stack.  It tastes like orphan thumbs stuffed messily into a pita shell made from cadaver flesh…with cheese.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Sleepytime Regrets Ch.3


Sleepytime Regrets Chapter 3:  Back to the Few Chairs

When I was younger, and still to a lesser degree today I suppose, I demanded to be the center of attention.  When someone did something that was met with high praise, I had to try to do it too.  I thought that perhaps if I did the same thing, then I could piggyback on the adoration of the original.  This usually ended poorly.  Basically I was the Monkees spin-off to the smarter, cleverer, and funnier Beatles main act that preceded me.  The mere fact that Microsoft Word recognizes the word “Beatles” but puts a red squiggly underneath of the word “Monkees,” something I have literally just uncovered, is testament to the relationship between the two.

One of the most notable of these desperate attention seeking occasions occurred when I was in 2nd grade. 

There was a boy, Chad, who I was friends with in elementary school who was better than me.  It wasn’t just the normal “This guy is better than me at football but I’m better than him at Candyland,” where people stack up as better or worse than others across many categories.    He was better than me in literally all regards.  He could do math homework two grades above us; he would get better report cards; girls liked him more; guys liked him more; he was faster; he was better at sports; he could read aloud without stumbling over himself; and he was taller.  And yet, despite all of this, he lowered himself to be my friend.  This was the ultimate example of why he was better. 


He would sometimes invite me over to his house.  I used these opportunities to ransack his bathroom, hoping to find some medication or voodoo doll to somehow explain his superiority. 

One fateful day, our teacher assigned us an arts and crafts assignment.  All of the supplies were on a desk across the room, so everyone was frequently out of their seat to get whatever they needed.

I don’t remember the particulars of the project, but knowing me I probably wasn’t following the teacher’s instructions.  I always found some way to bend any school activity into something pretty close to what the teacher wanted us to do, but not quite.  For instance, if we were supposed to be making macaroni paintings, then I would make a 3-D macaroni volcano sculpture that was belching glitter lava down one side.  I hoped I would be received as a savant, but usually the best I got was sideways glances and prescriptions for ADHD medication that, perhaps unfortunately, went unfilled.


I was working diligently at my desk when I heard a loud thump from behind me that shook our classroom/trailer.  I turned to see one of my classmates, Jennifer, on the ground laughing.  Chad stood behind her with her chair in his hands.  I spun back around and asked someone if they had seen what had happened.  Apparently Chad had pulled the chair out from underneath Jennifer as she was about to sit down.  I watched as Chad and Jennifer and everyone at her table laughed heartily.  As Jennifer got up, she smiled at Chad and he helped her back into her chair. 

Interesting.  I wanted that.  I wanted the laughter and the smiles and the attention.  I turned to look at my project which was probably a sticky mass of construction paper and rubber cement.  I’m not sure if it was some deep-rooted personality disorder or just the glue fumes, but suddenly I had an overwhelming desire to yank someone’s chair out from under them.

I stood up and scanned the room, looking for a victim.  I decided that I wanted to follow Chad’s blueprint as closely as I could and do my chair pulling to a girl.  I ruled out Jennifer, however, because I figured it would be weird if I de-chaired her right after Chad did.

I walked over and stood at the craft table, absently shuffling the supplies while scanning the room for movement like a predatory bird.  No one got up from their seat for quite some time.  I was left standing in front of the table for several minutes like a victim of Prepubescent Alzheimer’s.


Too much time was passing.  The buzz from Chad’s prank was dying and people were going back to working silently.  I had to do this soon, but no one was getting up!  I started to panic.  I was no longer pretending to look for supplies but rather was watching the class like a vulture up on his perch trying to identify the weakest member of the herd. 

I was losing hope when suddenly Rachel, a quiet girl, stood up to reach across her table for a particular color of marker.  Rachel wouldn’t have been my first pick because she was a little reserved, but I thought that this might be my one and only chance.

She was starting to sit back down when I sprinted noisily across the room and grabbed her chair.  I had it pulled about half way as far as I needed to when she committed fully to sitting.  Her butt missed the chair and she hit the hard metal seat with her back.  Her vertebrae sliding against the metal lip of the chair sounded like a woodblock soloist on meth.  She bounced off of the chair with a yelp and flopped onto the floor, creating a loud thump and shaking the classroom/trailer like before.  However, this time there was no laughter.


She clutched her back and started to cry.  I stood over her, holding her chair.  I looked up to see the entire class staring at me.  Chad shook his head in disapproval.  I felt absolutely terrible.  That’s when the teacher started yelling.

30 minutes later I was in the principal’s office and Rachel’s father was on his way to pick her up from school.  Sometimes I lay awake at night thinking about how I am probably the only person in the world to physically give someone scoliosis.  

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Massages Are Awkward.


I got a massage yesterday.  This normally isn’t my kinda thing, but I’ve recently been suffering from Rapid Onset Old Man Back and my mom made me an appointment. 

I assumed that I would be going to a white-walled and brightly lit facility where a mannish woman named “Helga” would twist me up like a balloon animal until I was cured of my ROOMB.  I based this assumption purely upon the Saturday morning cartoons that I watched as a child which, as it turns out, aren’t terribly accurate.


This particular place was called “Massage Envy.”  As I entered I was greeted with smooth jazz and a tiny Asian woman who asked me timidly if I would “rike a grass of wata?”  Without listening for a response, the lady lifted a cup of water up to my face.  I took it and she led me to a small room lined with overstuffed couches.  She called this the “tranquirity room.”

She left me on a cushy loveseat sipping my cup of water while panflute music played quietly over the speakers in the ceiling.  The light was turned very low, drawing attention to a tiny, wall-mounted plasma TV that played a short, 30-second loop of waves crashing against a beach.  I suppose this was intended to make me feel tranquil.  However, it did very much the opposite.  I became hyperaware of my surroundings and wary of how calm they were trying to make me.  I felt like a suspicious cow must before getting turned into burger meat.


Pretty soon a masseuse lady came and cooed my name like a nurse does when you’re at the Pediatrician…if it was secretly the beginning of a porno.  I’m pretty sure this was just to maintain the illusion of calm and pampering but it came off like this particular establishment was one of those special massage places.

I followed the woman to a room where she instructed me to disrobe and lay under the sheet on the table.

“A-all the way?”  I stammered.

“Yes.  Everything.”  She answered with an odd tinge of ominousness.  “I’ll wait for you outside.”  She closed the door behind her.

I quickly took off my clothes, not wanting her to accidentally walk back in on me in my nude suit, and jumped under the sheet.  Should I lay face up or face down?  I know she’ll want me to lay face down so that she can push on my back but won’t it be awkward to just be lying face down like a corpse when she comes in?  I was laying in between the two on my side still trying to figure out which one to go with when she came back in.  I must have looked like a sultry jazz club singer sprawled across a grand piano.


“You can lay on your stomach.”  She said.

I rolled onto my tummy and mushed my face into the little donut attached to the table.

“Just relax.”  She reassured as she shot lubricant onto her hands from a squirt bottle in little poop sounds.  I tried to stay still as she started rubbing various muscle groups on my back. 

This room, like the one before it, was dimly lit and Enya was playing quietly over the sound system.  This did not make me feel relaxed, though.  I was acutely aware of the fact that I was alone in a tiny, poorly lit room with a stranger as she pushed on me while I was lying naked on a heated bed.  It puzzles me that this could make someone feel comforted and relaxed, because it had the complete opposite results for me.  I started to get paranoid. 

What happens if I fart or I have to use the restroom?  She’s pushing on me a lot down there.  It’s like she’s trying to get the last bit of toothpaste out of the tube.  I wasn’t feeling anything before, but now that I had started to think about it, I began to feel the distinct rumblings of an imminent foofie.  I started to do the math in my head:  How long is this appointment?  An hour?  I’m going to have to hold this damn fart for 55 minutes.  I can’t just let it slip out and hope for the best.  This room is like a broom closet, there’s no way she won’t know.  But, surely I can’t be the first person to face this predicament.  Is she used to this?  She has to be.  She’s basically milking me for farts.


Eventually I hit critical mass and it was time to do or die.  I fired off a tracer shot to see how bad it was going to be.  After a minute or so it seemed as though my sneak attack had gone undetected, which was welcome news because the rest of the regiment was eager for deployment.  I tried to release the remainder in a slow leak, but the masseuse lady pushed extra hard at the perfectly wrong moment.

A sound like a barge horn erupted from my hindparts as the sheet rippled behind me like the flag of an embassy in gale-force winds. 

For the remainder of the hour, the masseuse said nothing.  I said nothing.  My ears were ringing.

After the massage, the lady left and told me that I could get dressed.  I tipped as well as my meager means would allow.

When I got into my car, I started to think about how much money this woman must make and what percent of her paycheck was a result of fart-guilt.  Probably a lot, I would think.  Farts are recession proof.  

Friday, November 11, 2011

She Mail Porn


Christmas is coming up and I've been trying to figure out what to ask Santa for.  A few days ago I was wandering around Best Buy trying to find something cool but not so complicated that the elves wouldn't be able to make it, when I stumbled into the laptop area. 

It’s interesting to see how laptops have diverged into distinct subgroups.  What began as just a portable version of a computer where all companies generally made the same product, has become a spectrum that varies broadly between itty-bitty, pocket-sized machines and gigantic, air-sucking megalodons.


I don’t necessarily NEED a new laptop, but it’s always fun to browse; everyone’s played that game before.

I was wandering through a gauntlet of HP behemoths when I heard something odd.  It sounded like a girl asking “do you want to see my-“ and then it suddenly cut out.  I looked over to see a young kid scrambling around on a computer further down the line.  I kept walking.

When I got close enough, I could see on that the kid’s computer was showing the desktop, and yet his gaze remained fixed on the screen. 

Well this is suspicious.  No one just looks at the desktop…unless…

He turned to me, blushing.  That’s quite the poker face, kid. 

“Jeremy!”  A woman called out from somewhere.  “Jeremy, where are you?”

“H-here!”  The kid squawked nervously.  He cleared his throat and started toward the voice.  After a few steps, he turned to glance back at the computer he had been using.  Then his gaze shifted and met mine.  When the woman called again, he turned and ran, disappearing around the corner.

As the sound of his pattering feet dissolved into the low hum of 500 televisions all set to the same Mexican soccer game, I was struck with a morbid curiosity.


I moved over in front of the kid’s computer and opened a web browser.  I opened the history expecting to be confronted by some sordid something or other.  I found nothing.  An odd blend of relief and disappointment washed over me.  I closed the web browser.

Then I noticed that there were two different web browsers installed on this particular computer.  I had opened Google Chrome, but perhaps the kid had used Mozilla Firefox.

I opened up Firefox and navigated to the history.

It started innocently enough:  “Car Gamse” was his first search.  Kind of funny that he misspelled a word.  Endearing almost.  Then he clicked through a couple game sites:  AddictingGames, Miniclip, and a few I didn’t recognize.

Then something went horribly wrong.

There must have been an AdultFriendFinder advertisement or something dirty on one of these websites because the kid’s next click took him to some like “Japanese Lust Garden” place or something.

There were a dozen or so clicks through what Asia had to offer before the kid began to hone his tastes.

“She Mail Porn” was his next Google search.  There’s that adorable spelling again.


This is oddly specific, isn’t it?  I thought.  When I was this kid’s age I didn’t even know what a girl was, much less a girl with swiss-army equipment.

The shock of this discovery suddenly gave way to jealousy.

This kid was 10?  Maybe 11 tops.  I don’t know what I’m going to do with my future, if I’m going to be able to fulfill my dreams, if I’ll be able to support a family.  I can’t even make simple decisions like whether to eat Frosted Cheerios or Frosted Flakes in the morning, and yet this kid knows exactly what he wants.  I found myself, while I looked through this kid’s very narrow and discerning Google searches, growing envious of his self-assuredness.  I want to feel passionate about something!  If he can do it, why can’t I?

“I wish I liked shemale porn” I found myself thinking.  And then I realized how absurd that was and added this addendum: “Thank God that’s a metaphor.”

A woman’s loud voice ripped me from my reverie.

“Jeremy!  You have to tell mommy what you want for Christmas!  I can’t read your mind you know.  What do you want?”

I know what he wants.

Jeremy and his mother walked by the computers, his hand clutched tightly in hers.  He looked over at me, his face completely draining of color when he realized that I was at his old computer.

I clicked the clear history button on the computer and gave Jeremy a secret thumbs up that I knew only he could see.

No look of realization entered his face, so maybe he didn’t understand what I had done for him.  It’s okay, though.  This is the season of giving after all.  I’m like his secret Santa.

--

I left Best Buy with a little spring in my step.  It’s nice to do things for others, even if it is to protect the perverted generation whose tax dollars I’m going to depend upon for my old people medicine.

Monday, November 7, 2011

Double Irony is a Bitch


I’ve been hard at work deluding myself that I could possibly make a career out of writing. The next step in my unreachable fantasy is to apply to grad schools to get a degree. Grad schools, as a part of their admissions requirements, demand applicants to take a test called the GRE and submit their scores. 

After some research, I discovered that the GRE is offered via computer through designated centers but, unfortunately, very early and considerably far away.  Oh, and they charge 160 dollars for you to TAKE a test, which is such a hustle it blows my mind.


After some initial hesitation, I finally signed myself up to take it.  My limited options led me to a timeslot at 8 in the morning at the nearest facility which happened to be over 60 miles away, despite the fact that I live in a college town. 

I had a terrible night’s sleep the evening before the test.  It was one of those nights where you lie awake for hours and hours only to wake up to your alarm and not be sure if you were actually awake or if your douche bag brain had been dreaming that you were lying sleeplessly in bed the whole night. 

I rolled out of bed feeling more tired than when I got in.

Drowsily, I got myself ready, picking up the pencils and passport that I had set aside the night before.  The passport would serve as a second form of ID in case they didn’t think that the picture of 15 year old me on my driver’s license was convincing enough.


I left the house and hoisted myself reluctantly into my car.  I punched things absently into “Carmen” the Garmin (My sister named her.  I would have named her “Bitch-Who-Always-Interrupts-Me-When-I’m-Talking-To-Someone-During-Road-Trips”).  After I had poked Carmen in the face enough times, she finally figured out where I wanted to go.  This began her 7 minute attempt to “locate satellites.”  Try looking up, Carmen.  I’m pretty sure up is a good place to look.

After doing a few laps around my neighborhood, she was finally ready to go.

Carmen took me straight to a main highway which was unusually intelligent of her.  She usually has an inexplicable penchant for choosing routes that lead her unwitting victims down single lane state roads where they inevitably get stuck behind slow moving trucks spewing hay out of the back.

About thirty minutes into the trip, Carmen directed me to exit the highway.  I was skeptical, but she indicated that we’re only about 20 minutes away from our destination, so I exited the highway.  The road she led me down quickly became rural and she said that we’ll be on this road for another two miles.

Okay, Carmen.  I knew you’d do this.  I know your games.  When I looked at Google Maps last night, it said we were supposed to be on a highway the whole time.  I call bullshit.

So I turned around and reentered the highway.  Sometimes when you just force Carmen down main roads, she takes the hint and recalculates your new route using highways instead of tiny country roads.

Carmen’s reaction was not what I had hoped:  At the next exit in five miles, do a U-Turn and go back to where I was friggin’ taking you.


Noooo, Carmen had been right.  The box in the lower right hand corner of her screen that estimated time of arrival turned instantly from 7:15 to 7:32 as if to say:   I know all of the roads.  Literally.  Now stop second guessing and treat me like the deity that I am.

I drove bashfully down the highway and did the u-turn.  I had just unnecessarily tacked fifteen minutes onto the trip, but I was still going to be half an hour early to my appointment.  No harm, no foul.

I finally got back to the intersection where I had initially lost faith in Carmen.  I gave her an apologetic pat on her robot head and followed her instructions.

Six minutes later, I was bouncing down a gravel road with water-filled potholes and broken mailboxes strewn about.

WHAT THE HELL, CARMEN?  WHAT THE HELL IS THIS?  There is NO WAY there is a testing facility for grad school out here.  No one in this area is looking to get another degree.  Putting a center here would be a terribly unsound business venture.

I grabbed my phone which is fortunately of the “smart” variety.  I opened my test confirmation email and tracked the included location with Google Maps.

38 miles and 44 minutes until destination, it informed.

I sat in disbelief, staring at my phone.

Then I yelled a battle cry and slapped Carmen right across her deceitful mouth.  “You harpy wench!  You have led me astray for the last time!”  I shrieked as I ripped her from the dashboard, gave her a hard elbow to the gums, and chucked her into the back seat.


Recalculating... she gurgled from somewhere behind me.

My phone in my left hand, I jerked the wheel around hard with my right.  The car kicked up gravel as I did a violent half-donut in some farmer’s driveway. 

I was so mad.  I didn’t want to reschedule this test.  I hadn’t studied a ton, but I didn’t want to have to worry about this any more than I already had.  I wanted to get it over with.

My phone led me back to the very same highway which I had thought might be a faster way to the testing facility before Carmen had rebuked me.  This is where literally said out loud, “Goddamn Double Irony!”  I had been wary of Carmen and tried to stay on the highway but she told me I was wrong.  I obeyed her commands only to, after consulting a second technological device, be told that I was right after all.  It wasn’t good enough for me to just have second guessed her.  I should have second guessed her second guess of my second guess.

I was tearing down the interstate toward my destination when the car made a “ping” sound and an indicator came on that said “low tire pressure.”  I was going 88 miles per hour at the time (fast enough for time travel).

“Screw it.  If I blow a tire and hit a tree, I hit a tree.”  I thought to myself.  My judgment was clouded by a dangerous mixture of sleep deprivation and a loathing for technology.

A moment later, the sun peaked out over the horizon and I realized how much it must suck to regularly have the morning shift in job that is East of your house.  I quickly had to decide what was more important:  seeing the cars in front of me or not having crispy retinas.


So many forces had convened to try to keep me from getting to this test.  I felt like a modern day Odysseus only more physically diminutive and with really lame problems. 

I sped the rest of the way to the facility.  I got there 7 minutes after 8.  Perhaps by some small miracle, they admitted me.  The test itself no longer felt like it was a huge obstacle.  I was actually relieved to have made it.  It seems perverse that adversity actually took away my nervousness about the test.  I think I might be on to something.

--

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Getting Dirty in Hawaii - Part 2

This is the continuation of a story which can be found here: PART ONE!

--

I went to the other side of the lookout, a little upset by what had happened.  I had just wanted to show that guy my neat experiments.  It wasn’t my intention to smack his wife in the face with a dirty weed.

I leaned over the balcony with my hands in my pockets, letting the wind blast me in the face for a bit.  For about 5 minutes I pouted, annoyed that guilt was keeping me from my playtime. 

Then I saw it.  The perfect weed.  All remorse from my previous transgression was wiped from my mind as the colossal stalk shimmered in the twilight.  It beckoned to me.  I quickly looked around but couldn’t find the couple I had florally assaulted earlier.  The coast was clear.

I yanked it out of the loamy soil.  A huge clod of dirt came up with the extensive root system.  This was my Mona Lisa, my Sistine Chapel, my masterpiece.


Wasting no time, I heaved the heavy weed over the edge of the balcony.  The wind was caught by surprise and buckled under this ambush of vegetation.  The weed dropped low down the cliff face.  Then the wind found its resolve and with a great rush pushed the several-pound weed high into the air.  I watched it as it soared like a bird of prey up onto the second tier balcony.

A female voice swore mightily.  I heard a man say “Did he hit you again?”  The woman from before leaned her head out over the balcony above me.  I ducked behind a plaque where I could see her but she couldn’t see me.

She scanned the lower tier like the Eye of Mordor atop her windy tower.  Her face was covered in a fresh layer of dirt and there were leaves in her hair.  “I’m gonna find you, you little shit!”  she spat. 


I stayed frozen behind the plaque until she retreated back over the edge of the balcony to pick the dirt out of her teeth.

I ducked low and scampered over to the path that would take me back to the car.  On the way, I found my parents and sister reading another one of the many plaques.

“Okay, time to go.  Let’s go.   Here we go.”  I said as I power-walked past them.

“You’re ready to go?”  My dad asked.

“Yup, yup, yup.  Let’s go to the car.  We should go.  I’m thirsty for some more papaya juice.  Let’s all get papaya juice!  To the car!”  I grabbed my mom’s hand and semi-dragged her down the path.

I led my family back to the rental, my head on a constant pivot, looking for any sign of the man or his agrophilic wife. 

When we arrived, I jerked on the handle of my door relentlessly.

“Open.  Open.  Open, open.  Openopenopenopenopenopenopenopenopenopen-“


Finally the door unlocked and I jumped inside.  I hastily buckled my seatbelt and slumped down as far as I could in my seat and still see through the window.

My family took their seats and my dad put his keys in the ignition.

WrrrnrnnrnrnrnnrnrnrWrrnNNrrnrnrnrrrrr.  The car wouldn’t start.

Are you kidding me?  Of all the times to get car trouble it happens when I’m being pursued by a woman who I’ve inadvertently just committed a class 2 misdemeanor against with dirt and wind.

My dad was still fiddling with the car when I saw the woman and her husband coming up the path from the lookout.  She looked like she was playing to win in a Gollum lookalike contest.  Her hair was messy and matted to her head, there were still leaves on her clothes, and she was, for some reason, walking with an exaggerated hunch.  Her eyes darted back and forth as she seethed with anger.


I sunk even further into my seat.  I was sure to do this as slowly as possible because I’m pretty sure that, like large carnivorous dinosaurs, angry women’s vision is based on movement.

A moment later a knock came at the window.

“SHANANYONION!”*  I shrieked, rolling my body up into the fetal position.

I heard two male voices offer my father a jump for the car.  I peeked out from my womb-shaped defenses to see two Mormon-ly dressed young men.  I unfurled a bit further to look out of the window.  There was no sign of the couple anywhere.

The Mormons pulled their car over to ours and connected the jumper cables.  After a few minutes we were able to get the car started.

“Okay, so we can go now!  Let’s go.  We should go.  Remember the papaya juice you promised us?  Papaya!”  I rambled, my eyes never ceasing from their fervent scan of the parking lot.


“We’ve got to sit here and let the car run for a bit.  The battery needs to recharge.”

Mother of God, I’m going to die here. 

After 15 additional nerve shredding minutes my father finally decided that the car was safe to drive back to our hotel.  I spent the entire drive looking out of the back window trying to see if there were any vehicles following us.

The paranoia didn’t fully subside until the next morning when I finally got my glass of papaya juice.

The moral of the story?

Always carry papaya juice.  Seriously, it's delicious.

--Footnote-- 
(*this is a precise phonetic transcription of the sound that I made)  

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Getting Dirty in Hawaii - Part 1

My family and I visited Hawaii one summer.  I felt and still feels when I tell people this that they perceive me as saying “Oh yes, my family summers in Hawaii.  Doesn’t yours?  Hmm, I seem to have misplaced my monocle.”


Despite this, Hawaii was beautiful and stuffed to the gills with things to do.  We didn’t get to see even half of what the islands offered and I would go back in a second, if not just to spitefully worsen my own cognitive dissonance.

One particular evening that sticks out in my mind is the night we visited Nuuanu Pali Lookout. 

Nuuanu Pali Lookout is a cliff on Oahu which overlooks a huge section of the island.  From the lookout you can see not only the sprawling beauty and sheer majesty of nature but also expanses of angular gray objects made by humans who said “that’s a really beautiful waterfall, but you know, we could really use an additional parking lot for the casino.”

The lookout is positioned at the vertex of a V-shaped mountain range which funnels and intensifies winds coming in from the North-East.  This turns Nuuanu Pali Lookout into a sort of natural wind tunnel. The winds here usually hover around 45mph but can spike to upwards of 80mph.  Scientists have attributed the high volume and speed of the winds as yet another example of something wanting to get the hell away from Canada.


Our rental car groaned with exertion as we drove up the steep, winding passage to get to the lookout.  When we mercifully arrived at the lot at the top of the mountain, the car dry-heaved and stalled.

“Well that was good timing.”  My father chuckled as the car sat, silently weeping below him.

I jumped out of the car, excited to be reminded of what wind felt like.  I ran back and forth oscillating between 25 feet and 5 feet in front of my family as they walked leisurely to the lookout.

When we got there, it was pretty damn windy.

45mph doesn’t seem that fast when you’re driving a Hummer through a School Zone, but getting slapped in the face with air going that speed really puts it in perspective.


It wasn’t so bad just standing a little ways in from the edge, but if you leaned over the concrete balcony, the wind felt like it was trying to rip thoughts out of your head.  There were two tiers of concrete balconies to allow more people to experience the full force of the wind.

A plaque nearby informed that the concrete balconies had been installed because too many people had tried to lean over the cliff’s edge to let the wind hold them up against gravity.  The plaque went on to say that, while this anti-gravity stunt was possible, the wind speed was variable at best and that rapid drops in velocity had led many daredevils to their demise.

I was intrigued. 

Clearly I wasn’t going to try to lean over the edge; I was too much of a pussy for that.  But I did want to see wind besting gravity.

I looked around for things to toss over the edge of the cliff.  I picked up a little rock and threw it over the edge.  I couldn’t see where it went.  I tried tossing a few more over, but I kept losing them against the scenery below.

Then I saw a weed growing up from a crack in the concrete platform by my feet.  I bent over and plucked it from the ground.  Dirt clung to the roots as I held it up in front of me.

I tossed it over the edge.

The weed fell a foot or two before slowly coming to a halt.  It hovered in midair for a moment before a sudden burst of wind shot it violently upward into the air over my head.

That was awesome.  I started frantically pulling up all the weeds I could find and hurling them over the edge. 


I could tell that the plaque was right about the varying wind speed.  Some of the weeds would shoot up into the air like a patriot missile while others would simply float lazily back toward me.  I was experimenting with varying amounts of dirt on the roots when a guy walked up to me and asked what I was doing.

“Oh, check this out.”  I said to him as I flung the weed I was holding over the edge.

The weed disappeared over the edge of the balcony.  A bit later it slowly crept back up into view like Aladdin does right before he shows Jasmine he has a magic carpet.  It was drifting back toward us when it suddenly diverted its path and rushed toward a woman standing off to our left.

She looked up right as it was about to hit her chin.


“Oh what the ffff…”  The woman made a sound like a deflating balloon as the dirt clod exploded on her face.  Dirt went into her open mouth and down her blouse.  She spun in a circle while swearing and shaking out her clothes.

“Oh, gosh, I’m really sorry.”  I said.

The man ran over to the woman.  “Honey, are you okay?”  She said nothing but glared up at me.

Oh shit, these two are together.

“I’m very sorry,”  I repeated.  “I didn’t mean to do that, I was just showing…”  Her venomous stare cut me off.  I stammered a few unintelligible things and then slinked away while her husband tried to get the dirt out of her ears.

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This story isn't even over!  Find the rest here:  PART TWO!