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Category: General Cerebral Leakage (Page 4 of 25)

When all other categories fail (or absentmindedly forget to be assigned), General Cerebral Leakage, fresh off his third tour of duty in the war against wise insurance providers, steps in to save the day!

An Old Friend Revisited: 2023 In A Nutshell

< 1 Min Read

Come, sit down with a tumbler of brandy or a glass of fine wine.

I’ve got some tales to tell you old friend, if you have the time…


Welp, Dear Readers, just like clockwork, the new year is upon us, and beyond wishing a very heartfelt ‘Happy New Year!’, the only other thing I’m really wishing in this moment is that you would join to ponder the year past here at The Point of the Story. ‘Tis it not our time-honored tradition to look back at some of the highlights that we have shared together? Or even better, to give you the chance to catch up on some of my witty and/or heartfelt and/or slightly-bitter-but-with-a-tongue-in-cheek-take posts that you may have missed?

Let’s see…what did we do in 2023 anyways? Oh, that’s right: their were, in fact, some fairly broad strokes that painted the year for us, with the usual odd ‘n ends sprinkled in between.

As you peruse at your own pace the posts presented here within, you’ll get tastes of:

  • Remodeling Shenanigans
  • Hair-related Adventures (aka Follicle Foibles)
  • Health Insurance (or the lack thereof)
  • Easter in Kansas
  • Forward and Reverse Racism (But The Lite Version)
  • Academic Grievances
  • …And More!

Of course, this is only a sampling of what all went down over the past 12 months, so feel free to fall down any of plethora of rabbit holes you may find (for example, Easter in Kansas actually spans 5 posts, but only 2 of those were featured here due to space limitations).

Now, without further ado, I present to you: “2023 In A Nutshell”…

But Dad! I’ll Never Get Sick And Tired Of Being Unique!
But Dad! I’ll Never Get Sick And Tired Of Being Unique!

7 Min Read

You ever wonder why you fought with your dad so much when you were a teen?

Oh, if only we could ever get to the root of it…

Hello, 911? It’s Urgent! An Unauthorized Intruder Is Terrorizing Mother!
Hello, 911? It’s Urgent! An Unauthorized Intruder Is Terrorizing Mother!

6 Min Read

When an unknown pervert starts lurking about, you know it’s time to whip it out.

Uh, whip out your cell phone, just to be clear…

What? You See Sum-Ting Wong With The Great White Hope?
What? You See Sum-Ting Wong With The Great White Hope?

5 Min Read

Did you know…racism comes in many flavors?

Well then, ret me tell you a story–though I might not be doing anyone any favors…

That Tempting Siren’s Call? It’s No Match For My Willpower!
That Tempting Siren’s Call? It’s No Match For My Willpower!

4 Min Read

What’s that? You can’t resist picking up the phone every time it rings?

Of course I’d be happy to show you how to not do it. Of course…

Could The Truth About This Life Possibly Be Any Dumber?
Could The Truth About This Life Possibly Be Any Dumber?

5 Min Read

Most people can’t quite put their finger on what feels ‘off’ about their lives.

At least until what’s ‘off’ is a little too ‘on the nose’…

Ah, Kansas! The Truth About You Finally Comes Out
Ah, Kansas! The Truth About You Finally Comes Out

4 Min Read

Just when I thought my MotherLand couldn’t bring me any more shame…it goes and completely redeems itself! (Uh, that’s from Dumb & Dumber…)

Look Out, Neighbors! Someone’s On The Prowl For Big Favors!
Look Out, Neighbors! Someone’s On The Prowl For Big Favors!

6 Min Read

Quick question: do you have to actually know your neighbor before you call in that big favor?

Asking for a friend (or vice versa)…

Celebrating 25 Years Of The Great 21-Trap-Flap Compromise Of ’98
Celebrating 25 Years Of The Great 21-Trap-Flap Compromise Of ’98

6 Min Read

What’s that? You’re worried that maybe this ahistoric moment in sports may have scarred me for life?

Just wait until see the other guy…

All Is Fair In Love And War And Scientific Research
All Is Fair In Love And War And Scientific Research

6 Min Read

Face it: your science project sucked, but it can’t be that bad, right?

On the bright side, at least that nightmare is finally over…

Now THIS Is An Authentic Easter In Kansas, Baby!
Now THIS Is An Authentic Easter In Kansas, Baby!

6 Min Read

You hope to give your baby daughter an Easter surprise, but…(Spoiler alert)Jesus isn’t the only white thing that’s about to arise…

Hey Man, Don’t Hate Me Just Because I’m Beautiful
Hey Man, Don’t Hate Me Just Because I’m Beautiful

4 Min Read

Boy, you got yourself some pretty hair there.

But with great beauty comes great responsibility, son, so you better beware…

How To Prepare A Speech For Your Smug Old Teacher
How To Prepare A Speech For Your Smug Old Teacher

5 Min Read

The teacher smiled an evil smile as her devious plan came together.

But when that plan done blew up in her face? That was oh so much better…

The Bulldog Wanted Baloney. You’ll Never Guess What Happened Next…
The Bulldog Wanted Baloney. You’ll Never Guess What Happened Next…

6 Min Read

Look, don’t judge me for honoring a homeless guy’s request.

Oh, but you’ll never guess which of his weird-ass requests I’m talking about…

Really, What Would Jesus Do…With All That Insanely Affordable Lube?
Really, What Would Jesus Do…With All That Insanely Affordable Lube?

4 Min Read

When religious ministry and wordplay collide, ya better butter up, BuckleCup.

Slipe ‘n slide and glide, it’s gonna be one heaven of a ride…

So You Made A Dumb Deal With The White Devil…Now What?
So You Made A Dumb Deal With The White Devil…Now What?

4 Min Read

What do you do when you realize there’s no time left on your collegiate clock?

Well, that’s when you best call in the BWC (Big White Cauc)…

Silly Rabbit, Affordable Dental Care Never Killed Anyone…Yet
Silly Rabbit, Affordable Dental Care Never Killed Anyone…Yet

5 Min Read

Was the question: “Eh, what’s up, Doc?”?

Ah, hell naw, the answer should never be “malpractice insurance premiums and patient death rates”…

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Content created on: 26/31 December 2023 (Weds/Sun)

A Special Reminder What This Holiday Season Is Really About

< 1 Min Read

Last Christmas, I gave you my heart, the very next day you gave it away.

This year, I’m giving you a semi-random collection of old stories…


Ah, ’tis but the holiday season at long last! And you know what that means, right? Time with family (for better or for worse)…time to take a break (but only if you’re under the age of 12)…time to make memories of a lifetime (and I mean that most sincerely, though now that I think about it, it’s no doubt also a time in whence much lasting childhood trauma is generated)…and, well, in general it’s the most wonderful time of the year, no?

But all that ‘relaxing’ can be pretty draining–however, the masses demand non-stop entertaining! And thus is created that truly hallowed hallmark of the holidays: recycled content. I mean, hey, if Saturday Night Live can get away with showing us the same dang Thanksgiving and Christmas specials year-in and year-out, then why can’t the rest of us?

The good news is that this is the first Christmas-And-Other-Winter-Holidays-Not-Including-Festivus Special to be had in this here part of the internet, so although you may have read these various pieces in the past, this is the first time you get read them again back-to-back. What can I say but “You’re Welcome!”, amiright?

So whenever you need a break from all the hub-bub this particular stretch of days on the calendar brings, just grab your iPhone, iPad, or other handheld entertainment device, and lock yourself in the nearest bathroom, where you can peacefully peruse, in no particular order, the pain-stakingly crafted pieces loosely upon the topic of, um…well…”Christmas And Other Winter Holidays Not Including Festivus”…

Don’t Worry Little Buddy, Your Secrets Are Safe With Me…
Don’t Worry Little Buddy, Your Secrets Are Safe With Me…

3 Min Read

Pleased with ourselves that we had Top Secret intel that no one else had, Elmer and I spent the rest of our bus ride dreamily wondering aloud what super-cool toy the Universe would endow upon as at the gift exchange…

It’s A Holiday Miracle On Willow Drive, My Dudes
It’s A Holiday Miracle On Willow Drive, My Dudes

5 Min Read

Sometimes, there are no gifts under the tree. Sometimes, the real gift is the tree itself…

No, Olive You, Man
No, Olive You, Man

9 Min Read

Everybody needs at least one constant truth in their life to keep them sane. For me, that one truth was that I could always count on olives to be intolerably nasty. I knew from an early age that olives and I weren’t going to get along. For example, when I was 9 I had gone […]

The Gift Of The Magic Fire Water
The Gift Of The Magic Fire Water

6 Min Read

Here comes Santa Claus, here comes Santa Claus, with his Pillow-Sack-Of-Fun…

Holiday Hints: How To Make Lasting Memories With Your Parents
Holiday Hints: How To Make Lasting Memories With Your Parents

6 Min Read

Sure, your mom’s insomnia may be cured. But now you’re the one who can’t sleep at night…

A Very Merry Bar Shitzvah
A Very Merry Bar Shitzvah

9 Min Read

In some cultures, a boy’s twelfth birthday is a very important rite of passage in his life. In Judaism this is marked with a Bar Mitzvah, in which, in the eyes of his society, he has officially become a man. Although I wasn’t brought up in the Hebrew tradition, I was still pretty excited for […]

A Degenerate Family Christmas
A Degenerate Family Christmas

6 Min Read

No, not that kind of degeneracy. I’m talking about a much more refined and pretension degeneracy. Now, in quantum physics–and just bear with me for a few seconds–there’s this whole thing about being able to say what quantum state a group of particles1Or, more formally: a system. are in based on the result of some […]

How To Make Your Own Dang Christmas Miracle
How To Make Your Own Dang Christmas Miracle

3 Min Read

“No! Only I get to stuff the ballot box!” he hissed at me as he grabbed my wrists and wrestled the stack of raffle entries from my hand…

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Content created on: 24 December 2023 (Sunday)

All Is Fair In Love And War And Scientific Research

6 Min Read

Face it: your science project sucked, but it can’t be that bad, right?

On the bright side, at least that nightmare is finally over…


“Um…how about I use ‘laser beams’ to measure the speed of light?” the 14-year-old me hesitantly suggested.

I looked expectantly at my mustachioed science teacher, hoping that this would be a solid enough idea for my mandatory science fair project.

“We already know what the speed of light is. I’m sorry, but you’ll have to come up with something original,” Mr. Susman calmly replied.

And thus began my career as a half-assed scientist…


Actually, now that I think about it, the half-assery began a year earlier, when I was in 7th grade at Christian Schools of Springfield (Missouri). That year, the science project I really wanted to do was to put various metals in the microwave and see how long it took before the sparks started to fly. I honestly don’t know why that got shot down without any reasonable discussion; nevertheless, I was forced to come up with a different project altogether. Finally, the night before it was due, I threw together a project that measured how long it took various small objects, such as string, a button, belly button lint, etc. to fall/float to the ground when dropped from about 6 feet up. I know, I know: half-assery, at it’s finest, but I figured since my Christian school didn’t take science seriously, then why should I?

When I showed up the next day with my hand-drawn charts and graphs exploring the aforementioned topic, I was directed to setup next to my dyslexic best friend, Josh. What was my C-Average amigo’s science project about? Surface tension of water. Even if you accounted for the gross disparity in access to resources (his dad was a doctor; mine wasn’t–if you get my drift), the contrast in our core intellectual content was stark. Needless to say, for being the token smart kid in our class, having my kindergarten-level experiment on display directly next to real science was incredibly embarrassing.

Fast-forward roughly 12 months to my 8th grade year, where I found myself at Ocean View Junior High, a public school in California, in the extremely science-focused ‘Research & Development’ class for so-called ‘gifted students’.

If I didn’t want to be laughed out of the classroom by my high-IQ peers, then I had to seriously up my science game from the sloppy shenanigans I had pulled in 7th grade.

But in the end, the most original idea I had come up with wasn’t much more evolved–sorry, I mean, ‘intelligently designed’– beyond the stereotypical model ‘erupting volcano’: at the heart of both was the well-known chemical reaction of mixing vinegar and baking soda to make bubbles. In my case, though, I posited that dosing young tomato plants with a little carbon dioxide on a daily basis would result in a measurable growth spurt.

In retrospect, it wasn’t a completely horrible idea, but it wasn’t the most imaginative either. But when you combine that with limited financial resources, then the execution really starts to suffer.

To begin with, mixing a cup of vinegar with the appropriate amount of baking soda for each plant in the ‘treatment’ group probably only provided a barely perceptible boost in the CO2 available to that plant–and even though those two ingredients are cheap, they still aren’t free, Bub (I did at least have the plants isolated from the surrounding atmosphere by having them covered in plastic bags, though).

Of course there was the cost of the tomato plants themselves, and thanks to my budget, I was able to buy a whopping FOUR plants–2 ‘control’ plants (no dosing) and 2 ‘treatment’ plants (dosed). Honestly, if I would have been able to, say, triple the dosage, and, ya know, have 50 plants in each group, then it might have passed for a decent scientific endeavor. Alas, this ’twasn’t the reality I was living in.

But, wait! There was even more poor-kid shenanigans afoot…


“Thanks for printing these graphs for m–hey, what is up with the colors? That’s not how it looked on the computer I borrowed to make them!”

I peered over the several sheets that Michael, one of my richer, computer-with-a-color-printer-owning friends had printed off for me the night before our science projects were due. My sole graph, which charted the growth of the four plants over several weeks, was supposed to feature four lines of four different colors, yet what I was staring at was 2 red lines and 2 blue lines.

“What can I tell you? My printer ran out of yellow ink,” he replied, communicating the helplessness that he, too, felt about the situation.

I let out a heavy sigh.

“I guess beggars can’t be choosers, right?” I said, honestly acknowledging my current lot in life.

“Hey, it still looks pretty good. I’m sure it will be fine…well, mostly fine.” said the guy who would go on to become the Chief Scientist at Numerai (and, coincidentally, uses the exact same WordPress theme for his neuroscience/machine learning blog that I use here).

“Yeah, I guess no one will notice and and it’ll still get the message across,” I figured aloud.

*Later that day, in R&D…*

“So you’ll see here in Figure A1The joke being is that there was no Figure B, so calling it Figure A was a bit misleading… a plot of the plants’ growth from Week 0 to Week 6.”

I didn’t have the strongest project, but I was trying to at least pretend that I did.

A kid halfway back in the classroom raised his hand–oh dear lord, it was that Jackass Jacob.

“So…which line is which plant?” he queried with a smirk on his face.

“Well the blue line is…oh, sh*t, uh, I’m not sure which blue line is Control 1 and which one is Treatment 2. Uh…um…dammit, Oliver,2Michael’s last name you and your printer have screwed me over!”

I eventually fumbled my way through the rest of my presentation, buoyed only by the promise that, no matter what, 10 minutes from now this nightmare of a scientific endeavor would be over forever, never to haunt me again…


“Listen up, youths, we got the Ventura County Science Fair coming up in a few weeks, and unfortunately, we can only send a select few of you,” announced Mr. Sogioka, our other R&D teacher (there were so many smarty-pants 6th, 7th, and 8th graders at our school, they needed two classrooms to contain us all and two teachers to wrangle us rascals).

Half the class groaned in disappointment, already knowing full well they weren’t going to make the cut. For my part, I could have cared less. My project had sucked chestnuts and I knew it. I was at peace with that hard truth.

“Let’s see here…first on the list: David Chandler,” Mr. Susman announced.

“Good for David,” I thought to myself. “If your project is ‘The Impact Of Computer Monitor Radiation On The Development Of the Fruit Fly’, you sure the hell deserve to go show that sh*t off to the world. You sir, are a true scientist. A bit of a pompous ass, yes, but a ----- good scientist nonetheless.”

“Next: Michael Oliver…” Mr. Sogioka proclaimed.

“…for his study, ‘The Impact of Not Knowing How The F*** To Change A Depleted Printer Cartridge On Your Lower-Income Resource-Strapped Classmate’, no doubt,” I quipped as I elbowed Michael sprightly.

“Har, har, you’re hilarious,” he responded.

“Seriously, though,” I whispered to him, “I’m kinda glad you suck at printing things off in color. It got me out of the County Science Fair, at least!”

“…B.J.!”

I jerked my head back to the front of the class at the sound of my name.

“I’m listening! I’m listening, I swear, Mr. Sogioka! I promise,” I lied. I had been chatting Michael’s ear off the whole time and hadn’t been listening as our two most esteemed educators had read off the rest of the List of the Damned, the poor souls who had to go to the county science fair.

“Huh, what? I was just announcing the students moving on to the next level of science.” Mr. Sogioka seemed confused.

“Congratulations, B.J., you were the last one to make the cut–you’re going to County! Wait…what?” Mr. Susman said, seeming just as surprised as I was at this turn of events.

“Nooooooo! Why me?” I rended my shirt in two and shook my fist to the heavens.

“Oh, you know exactly why,” Mr. Sogioka looked at me with…no, it wasn’t quite a sh*t-eating grin on his face..it was more of sh*t-eating smirk.

“Dammit, Sogi-yoki, you’ve screwed me again!” I muttered.

“What was that you said, hmmm?” he inquired, clearly full of the power he be trippin’ on.

“Nothing, Donald, I didn’t say anything at all.”

“Hey, look on the bright side,” Michael interjected, “At least I can reprint your graphs in full color this time around.”

I stared daggers at him.

“Yes,” I replied with all the sarcasm I could muster, “CYK graphs will prevent it from a being a complete and utter fustercluck this time around…”


The point of the story is never make fun of your bald Japanese American teachers by racistly butchering their name and calling them Sogi-Yoki. Yeah, you read about that last week right? Of course you did. And of course you would have also known that it was just an honest, oh-fudge-I-wasn’t-really-paying-attention mistake on my part. But not in ol’ Donnie-Boy’s eyes, no sirree, Bob!

And now, finally, Karma had smiled upon his shiny dome of a head and had given him the chance to rain down retribution on me, the proverbial thorn in his side: he was sending my sorry ass to the county state fair–not based on merit in any way, shape, or form–only for the sole purpose of seeing me scientifically embarrass myself on an even bigger stage.

So, in the spirit of the holiday (Festivus, of course), I am officially airing this grievance in the general direction of one Mr. Donald Sogioka. Sogi-Yoki, sir, what you did to me was just plain ----- -up. If I were a lesser man, I would blame my lack-luster scientific career on you, but I won’t. The mere presence of three tiny letters after my name gives me the last laugh in this matter, and that is enough for this chatty slacker:

P.

h.

D…


Content created on: 7/9 December 2023 (Thurs/Sat)

Footnotes & References:[+]

Who Wouldn’t Love To Take Down That Obnoxious Class Clown?

5 Min Read

Bane of every teacher’s existence, he casually be chillin’ in the back and talks and talks.

He’s the species we call the ‘Chatterbox’…


“Uh…I think you’re in the wrong class.”

His name was Jacob, and all these years later I don’t need my 8th grade yearbook to remind me of that. Nope, I’ll never forget the name of the jack-ass1I desperately wanted to phrase this as “that jack-ass’ name”, but I couldn’t find a definitive answer on what the possessive form of ‘jackass’ is…so please, if you know the answer, share it in the comments below. who oh-so-condescendingly told me, the new kid, that I didn’t belong in the ‘gifted’ students’ science class (which for some reason, Oceanview Jr. High called ‘Research & Development‘).

Of course, I didn’t know his name was Jacob at the time, so this made it harder to throw some condescension back at that buffoon. Instead of replying with something like, “Well, Jacob, I actually do belong in this class, you cocky little ----- face…”, the humbler side of my personality responded with:

*checks class schedule*

“Uh, this is R&D, right? Yeah, I’m pretty sure I’m in the right classroom…”

“Pfft! Yeah right–this is the smart kids’ class, Dummy. You better check that schedule again,” Jacob tut-tutted, standing his ground.

“Dude, I’m in the right place, so just buzz off,” I said, rolling my eyes.

“Whatever, Dummy,” Jacob muttered as he turned back around in his seat to face forward.

I mused to myself that Jacob must be pretty ----- smart to have the Chutzpah2P.S. Happy Hanukah to all my Hebrew friends! to tell a random stranger that he looks to stupid to be in his hallowed classroom. I was definitely curious to see if he actually had the brains to back up those words…


“Hold my root beer”…is essentially what I told Jackass Jacob, as it would turn out.

When it comes to asses, I can hold my own, at least in the sub-category of Smartasses. And it didn’t take too long to claim my rightful spot on that throne.

So, as I’ve implied above, I started 8th grade a week or so after classes had already begun. One consequence of this was that I didn’t get a proper introduction to the teachers in my various classes. You know, like when they got “Mrs. McDougal” (for example) written in big letters on the chalk board and that, being the very first thing you see, is indelibly burned into your memory and seared into your retinas.

And had I been there on first day of R&D, I would have none, without a shadow of a doubt, that my two esteemed science teachers were Mr. Brent Susman (may that mustache R.I.P.) & Mr. Don Sogioka.

I mean, I kinda knew their names. But apparently I didn’t really know their names. Case in point: a scene from my second or third week of school.

“Hey, would you stop talking in the back there?” Mr. Sogioka seemed slightly perturbed by my incessant chatting with my fellow classmates throughout his lessons.

“Oh, ok, sure. My bad…” I responded in a manner befit of any 13 year old.

Ol’ Donnie Boy was non-plussed by my attitude.

“Seriously, though, all you’ve ever done since you’ve joined our class is sit in the back and distract all the other students. I bet you don’t even know what my name is.”

“What? Of course, I know your name, it’s Mr. Sokiyoki!” I indignantly declared.

It was in this moment that I learned that I did not, in fact, know what his name was.

The rest of the class, thinking I was clowning him by pronouncing his name “Soki-Yoki”–perhaps the Japanese equivalent of calling your teacher of Chinese descent “Mr. Ching-Chong-Chang”–all burst out into an uncontrollable fit of laughter.

“IT’S SOGIOKA!” he asserted, clearly flush with anger at what he perceived was being made of fun of to his face.

“Dammmn, my bad…”


“Oh my God, you never shut up, do you?”

Mr Sokioga. Again.

By now we were a good 3 months or so into the school year, and 3 things had become clear:

  1. I was, much to Mr. Sokioga’s chagrin, one of the brighter minds amongst all of the 40-50 students in R&D (#HumbleBrag).
  2. Jacob, on the other hand, was all talk and no walk. That guy was a complete idiot.
  3. I was a non-stop chatter box.

Now, to be truthful, I had never meant to be a supreme smartass back when I accidentally called my esteemed co-teacher ‘Mr. Soki-yoki’, but this had apparently set the tone for our relationship for the entire year. And, as you can imagine, Science Facts #1 and #3 annoyed the living hell out of Ol’ Sokioga.

Science Fact #2 is irrelevant to the rest of the story; I figured I’d give you, Dear Reader, a little closure since I had brought Jacob in the first place.

Anyways…Mr. Sokioga wasn’t done chewing me out for incessant talking in his class.

“You know what?” he said with a defiant look in his eyes. “I bet you can’t go an entire class without talking. You are simply incapable of keeping that pi3#STEMNerdReference hole of yours shut.”

Aww, snap.

Gauntlet: thrown down.

“You’re on, Don!” I just couldn’t help myself. Sometimes my wit beats my brain to my mouth, and sh*t like that just slips on out.

“Please, don’t ever call me Don…”

Fast-forward to a day or so later, and I was determined af to prove the haters wrong: I can be quiet. I swear I can.

Now, it wasn’t easy by any means, but I actually pulled it off. I apologize for adding a narrative pizzazz to this part via some imaginative dialogue, but what can I say? There was nothing to be said for me saying nothing for a solid 50 minutes.

Except for the last 2 minutes of class…

“I did it. I didn’t say a single word all class long,” I stated with the confidence of a true champion.

Mr. Sokioga was not impressed.

“Congratulations, kid” dripping with sarcasm was all I got in return.

Honestly, I don’t know what I was expecting to happen. In retrospect, we were at a stalemate, and I should have just left it at that. Where exactly did I think, “ha ha I proved you wrong and didn’t annoy you for one whole class” was going to get me?

A very good question indeed…


The point of the story is that sometimes ya gotta respect the power imbalance between teacher and student. At the end of the proverbial day, the teacher has, um, let’s call them ‘tools’, at his or her disposal to deal with particularly pesky proteges. “Whatever is he talking about?” you may be wondering right now. Well, I’ll tell you what I’m talking about…next week, and maybe the week after that. Sorry, but you’ll have to stay tuned to hear about the various forms of Donald’s Revenge hath taken.

And while ultimately those tales will be keeping in line with the spirit of The Holiday (Festivus, that is), and fall squarely in my ‘Airing of the Grievances’ category, I can’t help but wonder if maybe, just maybe,Mr. Sokioga might have one or two grievances to air with me…


Content created on: 1/2 December 2023 (Fri/Sat)

Footnotes & References:[+]

How To Prepare A Speech For Your Smug Old Teacher

5 Min Read

The teacher smiled an evil smile as her devious plan came together.

But when that plan done blew up in her face? That was oh so much better…


“And in conclusion, fellow students, that is why Greek mythology is still relevant to our lives today, even in this modern era of technology and hyper-connectedness.”1This was not the topic of my speech–that particular detail is left to the annuls of history. But it was similar in nature, tone, and depth.

As I wrapped up my 3-minute impromptu speech in Mrs. Murray’s Freshman English class, what I heard wasn’t quite the thunderous applause every orator hopes to elicit from their audience. Instead I got the second best response: the rest of the class sat stunned in silence, except for a few scattered whispers of “damn, that was good.”

In fact, I think one of those whispers came from me–I don’t think anyone was more stunned by the eloquence and coherence of the auditory gem I had just dropped than yours truly. Like many folk, I’m not the biggest fan of public speaking, so you can imagine my anxiety after Mrs. Murray–out of nowhere–announced to the class that we would all have to give mini-speeches on the topic of her choosing with exactly –*checks notes*–ZERO preparation.

Oh, and guess who was hand-picked by ol’ Suzanne2If you’re wondering why I’m name-dropping my freshman English teacher, it’s because I finally remembered not only her last name but her first name too–after wracking my brain for over 4 years! to go first? I’ll give you one hint: it was the same guy she had sent to the principal’s office earlier in the semester for–and get this–“acting insolent and insubordinate when intentionally and habitually failing to bring a library book to class” to read when he was done blazing through his in-class work.

Yeah, I’m still a little miffed about being on the receiving end of the ‘Dumbest Reason For Getting Sent To The Principal’s Office (1995)’ award.

But now here I was on the other side of a terrifying speech that had seemed like it would most assuredly go sideways on me and end in embarrassment and humiliation. Not only had I survived, I had knocked it out of the frigging ballpark. And it felt ----- fantastic.

After a few more moments basking in the glory and admiration of my peers, I couldn’t help my newfound confidence peek through the curtains.

“Alright, who’s next?” I quipped3Okay, okay, I admit this probably doesn’t technically qualify as a ‘quip’–what are you? My Freshman English teacher or something? nonchalantly, scanning the crowd for anyone brave enough to try to follow my act.

In the process I happened to glance over at Mrs. Murray, to whom (not ‘to who’) I couldn’t resist flashing half a sh*t-eating grin.

She just glared at me.

“Okay, class, it looks like it’s time to move on to today’s lesson about past participles…” she said, brazenly gaslighting the entire class.

Not that my colleagues minded the deception–I’m pretty sure that the munchkins all away across the school in the Kindergarten classroom could hear the collective sigh of relief let out by everyone else in the class. I’m sure none of them was exactly chomping at the bit to endure the bullcrap I just had.

“Wait, what the hell is happening???” I confess that I was slightly confused by this turn of events. Wasn’t the entire class supposed to be partaking in this exercise? And now she’s acting like it never happened? Seriously, what the funk, Mrs. Murray?

I sat there silently for the rest of the period, mulling over the situation in my mind. Occasionally my gaze would wander across over to Mrs. Murray, who (not ‘whom’) had returned to her desk after a very brief, very half-assed lesson on past participles. And every time, I would catch her staring daggers back at me.

By the time the bell had rang, I finally understood what had transpired.

There never was an ‘impromptu orations’ in her lesson plan! She had no intention of making anybody else give a speech (though it was pretty cruel of her to make them sweat it out). That skinny witch had set me up–she had made that all up in hopes of harassing and embarrassing me–and only me–with a speech that she thought most assuredly would suck balls. No doubt it was because I was being a real Chatty Kathy in the middle of class (again), but that is very much beside the point…


The point of the story is karma can be a real b*tch, ain’t that right Mrs. Murray? You very unprofessionally attempted to publicly humiliate a rascally-but-ultimately-harmless student of yours, and what do you get for giving in to your petty impulses? Oh, that’s right, you ended up make him a g0d amongst [fresh]men, all thanks to a short speech that went a little sum’thin like this (with all apologies to my dear mother):

Side note: do you realize how hard it is to choose amongst all the Google image search results for ‘flipping the bird’??? So many great options…Mister Rogers, Dolly Parton, a newborn baby…oh the options were endless, I could barely pick one.

Anyways…despite realizing that I had bested Mrs. Murray and her nefarious scheme, I gotta say…a full 28 years later, and I’m still a little peeved about her big batch of nonsense that was targeted specifically at me.

But then again, isn’t this is what the holidays are all about?

Oh, sorry I forgot to remind you that around this time of year I often find myself expressing my thoughts in the universal language of gifs from the 90s NBC hit sitcom, Seinfeld.4Who I got to see performing live just last night, not to brag or anything. *Ahem*…

To which holiday do I refer? Thanksgiving? Christmas? Hanukkah? Chinese New Year’s? Nay, I’m speaking of…

And we all know that the tradition of Festivus begins with The Airing Of Grievances:

So buckle ups, Buttercups, cuz we got a couple weeks of celebrating this fine holiday ahead of us…


Content created on: 17/18 November 2023 (Fri/Sat)

Footnotes & References:[+]

Silly Rabbit, Affordable Dental Care Never Killed Anyone…Yet

5 Min Read

Was the question: “Eh, what’s up, Doc?”?

Ah, hell naw, the answer should never be “malpractice insurance premiums and patient death rates”…


“I finally got me some health insurance, so I’m going for The Trifecta, Doc–are you ready for Phase One?”

My new dentist just stared back at me blankly through his special tooth-pulling glasses that, for some reason, were designed to make him look like a buck-toothed rabbit–“ah, a guy with a sense of humor,” I surmised.

“What’s this ‘Trifecta’ of which you speak, young man?” he sincerely inquired.

I was more than eager to oblige his request, as I was just certain he would find my idea to be genius.

“Well, I’m glad you asked, Doc. See, it’s like this: I figure that us modern humanoids have three extraneous body parts that are more of a liability than an asset…” I intentionally left a pregnant pause hanging for dramatic effect.

“Ok…and to which three body part are you referring?” the Doc bit hard for my bait.

“The obvious ones of course: wisdom teeth, tonsils, and the appendix. What good are any of those doing us, amiright?” I said, again pausing, trying to draw him in to what I was selling.

“Uh, sure, I guess. Where are you going with all this?” the Doc seemed a bit more dull-witted than you would want in somebody who is about to take a set of over-sized pliers to your face.

“So what I’m proposing is that we, as a nation, get out ahead of all these potential unforced errors. Within 2 months of every U.S. citizen’s 18th birthday, I say that we should offer them completely free-of-charge a one-stop chop-shop: a single surgical event in which they get all three removed in one fell swoop. It’s genius, right?” I looked at him expectantly for affirmation of my ----- brilliant outside-the-box idea.

Instead, I got another blank buck-toothed bunny look before he eventually spoke up.

“That may not be such a good idea,” he said. “If those things aren’t causing any particular issues, then one probably shouldn’t be taking those unnecessary risks. And don’t even get me started on doing all three at the same time–the human body isn’t designed to be able to recover from that much trauma all at once.”

“Well, my wisdom teeth are indubitably the source of my occasional halitosis, so minor procedural risks be damned–grab your pliers and get those suckers outta my face! What’s the worst that could happen?” I implored him.

I had had those 4 calcium fortified bungholes in my mouth causing me to have bad breath for the 5 years of my entire adult life, and I couldn’t wait a moment longer to bid them good riddance…


“Just keep your eyes on my bunny nose, and we’ll be all wrapped up before you know it,” the Doc gently reassured me.

I wasn’t so much nervous as I was excited. Nevertheless, he had opened up the clinic just for me on that late Saturday afternoon, so it was borderline creepy having not another soul around, save for my Mother Dearest–my designated driver, if you will–waiting patiently in the lobby. So even though I had no doubt it would be smooth sailing to my newfound fresh breath and slightly-better-spaced toothy smile, I appreciated his calming presence.

After getting me nice and numb, we cruised right on through Tooth One and Tooth Two. On Tooth Three, well, that was a different story.

I was chilling like a villian when Doc gave that final tug to pop ol’ #3 out. Out it popped, indeed–the loud ‘schluuuuuup-POP!’ was immediately followed by the even louder metalic ‘CLACK!’ of his pliers snapping together. Empty, that is.

“OH,” was all the Doc managed to say aloud. But the look on his face said it all.

And by ‘all’, I mean ‘OH SH*T’–so dramatic that including an exclamation mark would do the sentiment a disservice.

“Don’t…move…” he said, clearly trying to not to lose his nerve.

“Why, whaass up, Dawk?” I attempted to quip, but was foiled by facial anesthesia.

“Uhhh…oh…uhhh…this is bad. This is real bad…”

I could see beads of sweat forming in real-time on his brow. I figured I would let him sweat it out a few more seconds. Meanwhile, I was feigning alarm on the outside, but was cool as a cucumber on the inside.

Why? Because I had an ace up my sleeve.

And by ‘ace up my sleeve’, I really mean ‘tooth caught in the back of my throat’.

But what the Doc didn’t know was that–very, very fortunately for his sorry malpractice-insured ass–was that I had reflexively caught my maverick molar with my tongue, and, if I didn’t ----- around too long, I wouldn’t have to worry about finding out what choking to death on my own esophageal blood in a deserted dentist’s office would feel like.

“Ahhhh…” I could hear relief wash over the Doc as he realized that the cat-like reflexes of his patient had saved him from watching another one of us bleed out in his dentist chair.

I could also see the relief wash over his face. And, oh, was it awkward…


If the so-called ‘point of the story’ for the last three weeks was that it is absolutely insane that we don’t have free, universal healthcare in this country, consider this the ‘counterpoint of the story.’ In pursuit of The Trifecta, I was mere microseconds from dying–dying!

And that was just Phase One. Do y’all remember what went down a year later when I got to Phase Two? Please tell me you do. Please tell me I didn’t not suffer through pure hell–replete with a visit from the Grim Reaper himself–to not have my story told. Go ahead, go back and read one of the most popular posts I’ve put out, Touched By An Angel, and its counterpart, My Time To Go, and behold the most amazing and stupid way to die from a tonsillectomy.

You do see what’s happening here, though? You give a ‘genius’ numbnuts like me absolutely free, no-strings-attached health services, and what do we do? We go run off and have completely elective ‘out-patient’ procedures that end up with us in the morgue. Y’all gonna have a smart-people blood-bath on your hands, I tell you what.

Oh, and though it’s beside the point, guess what? I still haven’t got around to Phase Three–the appendectomy–but guess who’s been having occasional discomfort in that exact region? And guess who’s getting the idea in their head they might just want to get a jump on a potential exploding appendix and have that sucker taken out against the advice of medical professionals?

And guess who didn’t learn the lesson from Phases One and Two that he is indubitably ill-fated and is destined to die in the most statistically improbabilistic way during a routine, yet unneeded, medical procedure?

Who has two big toes, and one of them has a tag on it?

No, Dear Reader, the answer is not ‘this guy!’–you think I would use such a bourgeoisie ‘who has two thumbs’ punchline in such a grave and earnest post? No!

Instead, I implore you to look at the Toe Tag1Yes, this is very much indeed an unpop-culture reference to the grunge band ol’ Phillip K. Ballz and I were in during our early high school years. of that handsome body on the slab…


Content created on: 11/12 November 2023 (Sat/Sun)

Footnotes & References:[+]

And Then Suddenly, This Little Piggy Went Straight To Slaughter…

4 Min Read

Ten…nine…eight…seven…

You got about six more seconds before you’re gonna see ol’ Hamhocks go up into porcine heaven…


“Noooooooo!” I screamed in my head as I watched gravity have its way with the can of soup that I was planning on having for lunch. “Seriously, can’t this wait until tomorrow?!?”

Unfortunately, the laws of physics ignored my request to reschedule my hot date with gravity to a later date. Instead, I got a front row seat at the ‘Watch-A-Canned-Good-Fall-In-Slow-Mo-Towards-Yo-Toes’ Theatre.

And of course it had to be a beautiful day in May that inspires one to wear flip-flops. My toes didn’t stand a chance without the protection of nary even a sock. This wasn’t going to end pretty…

The worst part about this was that I kept my trusty stash of Progresso canned soups1To be honest, it wasn’t Progresso, but that’s the only brand name of soup I can think of in the moment. above our sink, so once I accidentally knocked it off, I had a surprisingly long time to think about my life choices.

“Why, my Good Lord, did you choose today of all days to send such trials and tribulations my way? If you’re really there, then I just want to say you have a really sick sense of humor.”

It was moments like this that the most faithful and devout believer have a wee bit too much empathy for the pagans and atheists.

“I’m going to lose a toe, ain’t I?” I was resigning myself to fate, even before the can had a chance to do its damage. “And, can I just say, ‘f**k my life’? Dear All-Powerful Being In The Sky, if you’re going to be so unkind as to take a toe, the least you could do is wait until I have proper health insurance.”

As I waited for the can to cover the last few inches of its downwards trajectory, I put my hands on my hips and looked impertinently towards the heavens, which in that moment happened to resemble the kitchen ceiling of our bachelor pad on College View Drive.

“Not even one day. You couldn’t just hold off on mangling my limbs one day–nay, 12 hours–could you?!?” I shook my fists to the sky.

*Smack-runch!*

The can made contact. But not with my whole foot, or even with all of my toes. No, it had to channel all of its affection to my left pinky toe. ‘One little toe to take the full blow,’ one might say if this were some sort of twisted nursery rhyme.2Wait, isn’t that redundant? Aren’t almost all nursery rhymes twisted by definition? I mean, London Bridge and Ring Around The Rosy were both about the ----- Plague, for crying out loud.

I felt the shock of adrenaline hit my system as it reacted to the injury of indeterminate magnitude. Against my better judgment, I looked down.

“Oh, sh*t! That’s a lot of blood.” I quickly averted my gaze, regretting that I looked down, as the sight of oxygenated heme sent another, much larger surge of adrenaline through my system.

I was in a full-on cold sweat at this point, barely able to breath.

“It’ll be okay, it’ll be okay…I can turn on the stove an cauterize the wound, and go to the hospital tomorrow,” I assured myself. “Besides, plenty of people lead very successful and happy lives missing whole limbs. I should be able to get by short that little piggy who get beheaded like a French aristocrat in a guillotine,3Holy sh*t, I spelled this word right on my first try, without any help from autocorrect! right? Nine toes are more than enough to get by in life.”

Was it really the trauma of possible losing a piece of my flesh and bone to a can of soup–of all things–that was causing me so much distress? Actually, I didn’t mind that as much as the fact that I was right at 60 days into my first job out of college working for Western Wireless, 4Now a part of Verizon via a couple of mergers. and for the first time in my life, had proper health insurance…starting tomorrow. When I say ‘f my life’, this is what I’m talking about–seriously?!? I lose a toe in a freak canned-soup accident a matter of mere hours before I am financially able to have it reattached, if necessary? This is a sick joke right?

“Time to pay the piper, I suppose,” I said, indubitably using the wrong turn of phrase for the occasion.

I moved the can off of my foot, and through the barely modest amount of blood–adrenaline can turn you into a real drama queen–and I was delighted to see a roughly 1 cm gash on top of my miraculously-still-attached pinky toe. Good news, everybody! This wasn’t anything a little super glue and a BandAid (TM) couldn’t handle!

I was so relieved and excited that I even did a little jig and clicked my heels in celebration like I was a flip-flop-wearing Leprechaun or something, lightly misting the adjacent cabinetry and fridge with a bit of blood spatter.

“Oh, right! I probably should glue that up first…”


Can you, Dear Reader, guess what the point of the story is? I truly doubt you’re reading this in a vacuum, and have no context for what I’ve been diatribing about recently. Surely, you’re aware of the 21-Trap-Flap and the Youthfront Lake Monster, because you read the last two posts.

Right? Right.

That’s right, I think it’s utter nonsense that a matter of a few ticks on the clock would determine whether or not one has to suffer through life with only 19 digits instead of 20 like a normal person. Just like it’s complete and utter tomfoolery that a matter of mere miles can determine whether or not one has to go through life looking like Harry Potty instead of having a smooth and hale forehead like a normal person. Just like how it’s a massive load of bullshit that the fact that your dad is a hard-working but tragically self-employed farmer determines whether you have to go through life with your right elbow looking like Harry Potter instead of having a uniformly dry and flaky elbow like a normal person.

Oh, PS, tragically late spoiler alert: I might have just ruined the plot of my last two posts, but go ahead and go back and read them if you haven’t.

The point is that the U.S. health insurance system5This, ironically, could be a case of ‘biting the hand that feeds’, seeing as how the bread winner in our household is a…health insurance executive. LOL? is complete cow-crap and should be burned to the ground.

Single-payer, universal health care for all. How ----- hard is it? Is it that outrageous that a government should be interested in investing in the well-being of it’s citizens (most of whom are taxpayers, but honestly, that’s irrelevant)?

Oh, and if you think I’m done regaling y’all with tales that are tangentially related to insurance and health care, just you wait. Just you wait until next time, that is…


Content created on: 3/4 November 2023 (Fri/Sat)

Footnotes & References:[+]

Hey Kids, Here’s A New Mind-Bending Perspective On Underwater Terror

5 Min Read

Sure, what lurks beneath the surface might seem terrifying.

I’d recommend you hope and pray to the Jesus you never actually run into it…


“…and then, kids, a blood-drenched beast arose from Youthfront Lake and let out a mournful roar…”

Jimmy paused in his story and looked at me for approval.

“Um, yeah, ----- you, Jimmy.”

Needless to say, he did not get my approval.

“Yo, Circle C is a Christian camp,” Jimmy tut-tutted me. “I know it’s been a long day, but you’ll need to stop dropping the F-bombs by time the kids show up tomorrow.”

Jimmy was a buddy from Kansas State, and had kindly took me up on my offer for a week of co-cabin counseling with me. Wrangling 10-12 pre-teen and/or teenage boys for 5 straight days could get exhausting, so it was also nice to have a familiar face to help me out (normally, it would be just some rando who Brian, the boss of all of us cabin leaders, recruited off the streets of Kansas City).

He had shown up Sunday evening to prepare before the campers showed up the next morning, and fortunately, we got the work out of the way to quickly and found ourselves with time on our hands. Unfortunately, that was when things literally went sideways.

And for some reason, Jimmy thought it would be fun to regale our campers with the tale of our little misadventure. I disagreed.

“Dude, too soon, ya think?” I glared at him and rubbed my forehead, which was still throbbing.

“Ok,” Jimmy conceded, “but I still think telling it from my point of view is more riveting…”


“Let’s see who can swim underwater the furthest,” Jimmy challenged me as he gestured towards the oversized pond the camp had so generously named ‘Youthfront Lake.’

“Sure, why not?” I said, accepting his challenge. “We’re young with some free time to do stupid stuff like this on our hands. What do we have to lose?”

Earlier that evening, the two of us and a third unnamed co-conspirator had donned swim trunks and had been bouncing each other off The Blob. If you don’t know what a Blob is, it’s basically a ~40’x8′ inflatable water pillow that sits in the lake and–you know what, let’s not waste more time on this tangentially relevant detail, and you can just check it out here yourself if you’re curious.

Next to The Blob, about 20 feet down the ‘coastline’, was a dock that wrapped around a swimming pool-like area. This 20 feet in between the two would be our swimming lane, the idea being that we would dive in and not come up until well out into the open water of the lake.

Since the gauntlet had been thrown down to me, I nobly went first.

I dove in and took a couple of initial powerful strokes to get my momentum going. But on the third stroke, my left hand caught one of the underwater ropes that held The Blob down.

“Oh, snap, I’m swimming right into The Blob…better course-correct slightly to the right,” I thought to myself, because, you know, I didn’t want to waste my lung capacity on saying it out loud underwater.

A gentle swerve back in that direction and I was on my way to making Jimmy rue the day he decided to challenge my aquatic skills. In my mind I was keeping track of my location.

“Three…two…one…and I should be hitting open wat–“

My train of thought was interrupted by…sonar?

Yup…that’s the only way to describe it.

“So this is what it feels like to be a bat,” I thought, as I immediately became aware–via a complete 3-dimensional rendering in the darkness of my mind–of a vertical rectangular object that must have been made out of…steel?

“Yes, that’s definitely steel,” I mumbled incoherently to myself as my skull wrapped around the object that had positioned itself squarely between my eyes.

A good full beat passed as I floated there, completely stunned and completely submersed, my noggin ringing like a mother ----- bell.

Eventually I came to my senses and, upon groping about, I was delighted to realize that what I had collided with was a ladder. You know, like one of those ladders that you can climb to get out of the swimming pool. Or a lake. Or Youthfront Lake, even.

Half conscious, I pulled myself up the ladder and out of the lake.

“Did I win?” I sputtered through a stream of blood gushing out of the gaping split in my forehead…


“So…you probably need get that stitched up,” mused the camp nurse’s adult son–also a nurse–as he attempted to stem the Crimson Tide that flowed down my once-handsome visage. “You want me to take you to the ER in KC?”

First, I was lucky that any medical professional had been at camp, since it was the weekend and the place was usually a ghost town. Second, I was lucky to have health insurance.

Maybe.

“Uhh…I would go to the ER, but…well, I think I have insurance, but I’m not quite sure,” I replied.

“What do you mean? How do you not know whether you have insurance?” he asked.

“Well, I signed up for the temporary insurance that was offered at cabin leader orientation, but I never received any type of card or anything like that. So…”

“…so you don’t want to risk showing up at the ER and getting stuck with a $2,000 bill? I gotchya, bro. Lemme just slap a daub of super glue and a butterfly BandAid (TM) on there, and let go and let the Jesus take care of the rest…”


“Dear Sir, unfortunately we are unable to offer you health insurance coverage, as you reside outside or area of coverage…” read the letter I found in my P.O. Box upon returning to Manhattan (KS) at the end of the summer.

“Well, if that’s not ironic,” I muttered as I tore up the letter, threw it in the trash can, lit it on fire, and burned down the entire post office.

Just kidding. I only burned down 60% of the post office.

Well, at least the mystery of whether I had insurance during The Sonar Incident was solved: I did not.

And why didn’t I? Because I had used the only address I actually had when I signed up for the insurance: the one in the college town where I lived the other 9-10 months out of the year when I wasn’t off gallivanting at summer camp.

And why didn’t I find this out until it was way too late? Because I had used my stupid ----- permanent address.

I feel like the system is broken somewhere in this asinine loop of circular logic…


The point of the story is that it can be pretty ----- scary not knowing whether or not you have health insurance when you’re bleeding out like Carrie. Well, I guess it’s not as scary knowing you don’t have any insurance at all.

You know, on second thought, the system isn’t broken on account of which address you use to sign up for health insurance; it’s broken on account of your address–that part that ends in “U.S.A.”

You want a horror story? Behold the U.S. healthcare system. Don’t let uber-rich assholes convince you otherwise: healthcare is a human right, and the Land of the Free is atrocious when it comes to actually taking care of its citizens in this respect (amongst others).

Land of the Free? More like Land of the Free to Bleed Out in the Street…

*sigh*

Happy Halloween, everybody. ScarFace, out…


Content created on: 28/29 October 2023 (Sat/Sun)

Celebrating 25 Years Of The Great 21-Trap-Flap Compromise Of ’98

6 Min Read

What’s that? You’re worried that maybe this ahistoric moment in sports may have scarred me for life?

Just wait until you see the other guy…


“You gotta be kidding me, man! I gave you a hole you could drive a truck through!”

I was one irate pirate, to say the least…

Now, we all know that scholars maintain that I wasn’t exactly what one might call an “athlete with some semblance of coordination.” But that didn’t stop me from playing football for good ol’ Rolla High School, no sirree, Bob!

Well, to be honest, it wasn’t like I really had a choice. With a student body weighing in at a whopping 69 students across 4 grades, just about every male was peer-pressured into joining the football squad so the Pirates could actually field a team. So despite my near complete lack of athletic ability, I was nevertheless involuntarily drafted to play.

And since I had hands of stone and an athletic mind just as dense, I landed on the offensive line–the center to be exact. Coach L figured that apart from the concentration needed to snap the ball to the quarterback or punter without screwing up, that position required the least thinking, and therefore where I could do minimal damage to our offensive efforts.

Heck, by my junior and senior years–when I was actually on the starting squad–I had made the poor life decision to eat so healthy that it was unhealthy, and was pretty light for a lineman (like, a good 20 lbs. lighter than your average corn-fed Kansan lineman). So for the most part, having me on the field was only marginally better than having no center at all and just having the quarterback snap the ball to himself.

In short, I plain sucked at football. And I felt bad for the 3-4 truly athletic guys who had to suffer thanks to me and the rest of the crew of mediocre players.

So, then, pray tell, why was I so pissed off that day in the locker room? Because despite all my sucking, there was one play that I executed like a mothertrucking champion: “21-Trap.” And how did I know I was so dang good at running this so-called 21-Trap? Because I, along with the entire team, was staring at videographic evidence of me actually doing my job right for once.

Just one tiny problem: our running back, an otherwise fine and intelligent athlete, couldn’t grasp the concept that he was supposed to run through the “1” gap.

Oh, what’s that? You’re not familiar with 8-man football plays? Well, fear not, Dear Reader, because I found a little resource to help you out. Please, observe the diagram below, in which the players on my team (on offense) are represented by circles.

In this diagram, I’m the center (black circle) and once I snap the ball, I take a hard right and block the dude trying to rush through the hole that will soon be created by our right guard (“RG”–red circle, and the “2” in “21-Trap” but not the “2” in the diagram) who was “pulling” left behind me and “trapping” whatever schlub he first ran into. And the result of this should be a big-ass gap where the left guard (“LG”, the “1” in “21-Trap”, but not the “1” in the diagram) was before he blocked to the right like me.

So now, our running back (the yellow “2” in the diagram)–who will remain mostly anonymous–had it easy: our running back, who I shall only call “Double-B” (who, incidentally, was the brother of “Double-D”, of Shotgun Wedding infamy), just had to run slightly left and directly on through that hole and, more often than not, right into the end zone.

But three games into the season, and what did every game tape show? They all showed the same dang thing: RG pulling left, LG and me blocking hard right, and Double-B…absolutely not running through the huge fricking patch of amber waves of grain in the 1-Gap. Instead, homeboy would do something like this:

Now, it doesn’t take a wild imagination to realize that about 1.5 seconds after the ball is snapped, the black circle and the yellow “2” circle will be occupying the same physical space. So is it really a surprise to hear something like this:

“STOP GETTING IN MY WAY!”

Yes, that’s right, upon watching the game tape, Double-B had the, um, ‘footballs’ to yell at me. So I had to set the record straight.

You stop running into me, you dumb jock! The “1” gap is on the LEFT…you know, where the GAPING HOLE in the line is,” I retorted. “I’m tired of being the one to receive the credit for the tackle just because you don’t know how to count to 3. Do you know how embarrassing it is for the announcer to give me credit for doing the other teams job? You’re making me look like a ----- moron out there…”


“Holy sheets, dude, that is one gaping hole!” Phillip K. Ballz, my best friend and star tight end on the football team, exclaimed as we trotted off the field after failing once again to make into the end zone against those pesky Satanta Indians.

“Thanks..I guess. But you meant to say ‘that was one gaping hole’, right? Yet another gaping hole that our ol’ dipsh*t Double-B didn’t have the sense to run through…” I muttered in disgust.

“No, man, I mean your elbow…you got a flap of skin flowing in the breeze and you’re gushing blood everywhere!”

I looked at my right elbow, which was a little sore after the full force of the barrelling train we called Double-B smacked into it during–you guessed it–21-Trap.

I gasped lightly in horror at the sight of an almost entirely red forearm.

“Darn you, Double-B! Darn you to heck!” I shouted as I shook my fists–one pink and dry and the other one sanguine and bloody–into the air.

“Dabnabbit, BJ, stop being such a drama queen!” I could literally hear Coach L’s eyes rolling behind me. I turned around toward him to reveal my bloodied arm, channeling my inner Carrie.

Coach L was non-plussed.

“Put a BandAid (TM) on that and get your lily-white ass back in there! I need you to at least pretend to play defense…”


“Bum Ba-dum Bum Bum Bum Bum!”

The photographer handling my senior pictures cocked her head at me quizzically.

“Huh?!?”

“You know, the commercial1Okay, so I’m pretty sure this commercial wasn’t out back in 1998; I openly admit I am using it here for comedic effect.…’We are Farmers, Bum Ba-dum Bum Bum Bum Bum!’ ” I replied.

“The insurance company? Okay…”

“You asked me about the BandAid (TM) covering half my right arm that you are going to have figure out ways to strategically cover up, right?”

“Yeah…and…? I’m not making the connection here,” she said, with a lost look in her eyes.

“Ok, I admit that it’s a bit of a stretch…you see, my family and I are a bunch of farmers, and therefore very ironically, don’t have health insurance to cover stitches when you lose half the flesh on your elbow playing football. Yup…it’s just superglue, BandAid (TM), and bit of Duck Tape holding me together,” I regaled her.

“Oooh…maybe we shouldn’t cover that up after all. It’s like a badge of honor showing off your raw masculinity while playing a man’s-man’s sport–“

I cut her off before she could make the situation any more awkward.

“A teammate did this to me. I caught some friendly fire during the one play that I know how to run…which happens to be the one play where he cockily thinks he knows where he’s supposed to go, but actually doesn’t,” I explained.

“Oh,” she murmurred quietly, “I see. So are you, like, holding a grudge or something? You sound pretty bitter…like this is something you would still be ranting about 25 years later…”

“What? Who me? Do I look like the type of guy who would let something like some mild physical disfigurment fester for a quarter of century and then finally air his grievances in a semi-public forum? Pfft! Please!” I said dismissively.

“Ok, I believe you. But then tell me this: how are you emotionally handling this betrayal then?” she asked gently, as if this had somehow become a therapy session instead of a photoshoot.

“Oh that’s easy. With my incredibly poor blocking abilities up front on the line, my dude gets the living sh*t knocked out of him just about every other play. By my calculations, they guy’ll have CTE by the end of the season. So it all basically evens out.”

“Really? You think long-term brain injury and a barely noticable scar on your elbow are roughly equivalent?” she asked humbly-yet-increduously.

“Look, that butthead ruined my senior pics, so no, I ain’t never letting that sh*t go…”


Content created on: 14/15 October 2023 (Sat/Sun)

Footnotes & References:[+]

You Need To Impress Them Ladies With Superior Humor, Man

4 Min Read

Guys, you wanna know how to win over that beautiful young lass (and perhaps even take them as your wife for life)?

Funny you should ask…


“Who does this dude think he is? Jesus?” snickered Mark, my future roommate and hopeful college graduate.

“Who, Bob? The new guy always wearing sunglasses in church?” I asked.

“His name is actually Bill, but yeah, that guy,” Mark replied as we both looked across the gymnasium where our local church held court every Sunday, chuckling to ourselves at the sight of Billy-Boy.

“I’m pretty sure Jesus even had those exact same Ray-Bans. At least that’s what he was wearing when he posed for the Shroud of Turin…” I noted.

“What? Ray-Bans? No, man, I’m not talking about homeboy’s sunglasses–wait? ‘Shroud of Turin’ What are you talking about?” Mark said side-tracked-ly.1Yes, I just made up the word–but we both know that’s the exact right word for this situation.

“Let me see your awesome iPhone 1,” I gestured to Mark to fork over his new toy that he had brought with him into church.

In no time I had pulled up the Shroud of Turin page on Wikipedia and was showing him that, indeed, our dude Jesús looked like he had been rocking some shades from 2,000 years in the future when they attempted to mummify him. Seriously. Check out the link above (or just look it up on Wikipedia yourself), and you’ll see what I’m talking about.

Mark was stunned.

“No sh*t. They do have the same sunglasses,” he side, clearly impressed by the uncanny resemblance. “But, no man, I’m talking about the wood.

“Bill was also crucified on a cross? That is pretty Christ-like…” I mused.

“You dipsh*t, not that.” Mark realized that he had gotten himself into a battle of wits and puns with me, and was starting to get worried I might be putting up more points on the Humorous Statement Scoreboard (TM) than he was. “Bill? He’s is an actual carpenter–just like Rayban Jesus was.”

“Who the hell is a carpenter in this day and age, anyways?” I observed semi-incredulously.

“I guess Bill is,” Mark stated matter-of-factly, before pulling out the ol’ PSA trope. “You see kids? This is what happens when you don’t go to college–“

“–while tragically deciding to go to church in a college town,” I interrupted, trying to beat Mark to yet another punchline.

“Yeah, you gonna get mocked relentlessly behind your back by us intellectuals. Figures that he’s a carpenter–cuz he’s a real tool!”

We both tried to stifle our laughter at yet another great pun. Our pastor was in the middle of his sermon and we didn’t want to risk getting kicked out…again.

“We’ll continue this after church when we go out to lunch,” I reassured Mark, understanding that he was worried that we might be leaving some Bill-related jokes still on table…


“And have you noticed that Bill suffers from what some in the medical establishment like to call ‘Resting About-To-Cry-Like-A-Little-B**h Face?’ Like, seriously, half the time Bill is wearing an inexplicable frown that makes it look like he’s about to bust out crying at any moment.”

Mark and I had arrived at the Mexican restaurant ahead of the rest of the College/Young Professionals gang from church, and if one of us wasn’t dragging Bill’s ass then the other one definitely was. In fact, we were enjoying our new pastime even more than the complimentary chips and salsa we were scarfing down.

“And what’s with him being old?” At this point, I was edging us closer to a full-on Roast of Bill.

“I know right?!?” Mark concurred. “The guy’s what? Thirty-five, at least.”

“I swear the dude be using skin cream to keep his wrinkles from getting too out of hand,” I half-whispered, though no one was there yet to overhear me confiding in Mark.

“You know who he reminds me of?” Mark got a pensive, far-away look in his eyes. “Your friend from Kansas, Doug-E.–the guy who, despite being 27 and not being in college, would hang out with you and all your undergraduate friends, oblivious to how incredibly awk–“

Mark looked up and locked eyes with mine.

“I think we have found our new nickname for Bill,” he said with understated confidence.

“We have indeed…”


“You know…like AquaMan…right? AquaMan, the underwater superhero…you know who I’m talking about, right?”

Most of the gang–including Bill–had left the restaurant by this point, and I found myself in a lazy, meandering conversation with 2 or 3 of the available young lasses in our congregation. And I gotta be honest, nothing gets a good Christian boy higher than making a girl (or two) laugh. So I couldn’t help flex a bit and show off some of the comedic chops Mark and I had spent the better part of that Sunday honing.

“But instead of ‘Aqua’, we’re saying ‘Awkward’…because Bill is, ya know, super awkward…”

Nothing but crickets and blank stares from my audience. Nevertheless, I persisted. I cleared my throat and put on my best Movie Trailer Voice.

” ‘Ruining conversations with his mere presence, it’s…Awkward Man!’ “

Still, nothing. Time to lay out the facts and steamroll them with logic until they couldn’t deny how funny it I was.

“C’mon, y’all can clearly see it’s a pun. And it’s a hilarious one at that…”

I was slowly realizing that maybe–just maybe–these ladies didn’t have the same sense of humor that Mark and I shared.

It was time to go nuclear and resort to anachronistically pulling a Jeb…

Please Laugh…

The point of the story is you better figure out whether or not you’re capable of marrying someone without a sense of humor–

Hold up–wait a sec…

*checks notes*

Oh, my bad, that was this point of this story.

The real point here is that maybe it wasn’t my female audience’ ‘s lack of humor that was the problem. Perhaps…maybe…could it be…despite my killer stand-up routine, is there any chance I wasn’t exactly the ‘husband material’ they were looking for?

I distinctly remember thinking, “Oh, sh*t, these are kind-hearted church-going women of G0d! And I’m here, basically bragging about how Mark and I are like really good at making fun of this nice guy just because he doesn’t fit in perfectly to our little church clique…hmmm…maybe we’re the assholes. Oh, Jesus, we’re both gonna die virgins, aren’t we?”

The point being that there’s more to it than just making a girl laugh. And Jesus help you if being funny becomes so important to you that it turns you into a complete phallic-face2D*ckhead. I’m trying to hint at the term ‘d*ckhead’ here. ass-hat, well…let’s just say that between Mark and I, one of us learned our lesson and the other one is still single 16 years later…


Content created on: 28/30 September & 1 October 2023 (Thurs/Sat/Sun)

Footnotes & References:[+]

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