Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Fishing

The third or fourth time I went fishing I was about 5 years old. I only went fishing off the dock into the sound, none of that serious business middle-of-the-ocean stuff. I had my own pole and tackle box. The pole was bright green and the tackle box was purple. I had artfully personalized the tackle box with paint pens. 
My dad spent all morning sitting with me on the dock teaching me about fishing… even though I’m pretty sure he doesn’t really know about fishing. But that was okay because I probably wasn’t listening anyway.

He mercilessly skewered worms so I could dangle my bait in the water and say I was ‘fishing.’ I didn’t have the heart to kill an innocent worm but I was willing to watch someone else do it for me.

I had just gotten the knack of casting out the line when my dad needed to take a bathroom break. He left me sitting on the dock with my fishing pole and assumed I would be fine while he took a few seconds to use the facilities.


If you think you know what is going to happen, you are wrong.

I wasn’t getting any fishie bites. I reeled in my line, absentmindedly turning to face the side of the dock. The bait was still there so I didn’t have to wait for my worm-murdering father to return to continue fishing! This would have been perfect if I had been paying more attention to my change of direction.
My hook ended up on a neighboring dock. That would be okay if a seagull was not also on that neighboring dock.

I caught a seagull. My wimpy arms had quite a bit of trouble keeping the fishing pole in my grasp when an enraged seagull was attached to the other end.




My dad cut the line. I was done fishing for the day.

Monday, September 6, 2010

BMW Golf Cart/Motorcycle Thing

....what? This looks like something that would eject from a space ship.


Sunday, September 5, 2010

Lack of foresight


I was pushing the ripe old age of five when I had my first direct encounter with fire. 

Ironically, I was in a church. We went to a big fancy church and that day the service was a particularly fancy service where everyone held a candle. I was sitting with the Callisons because my mother sang in the choir and my father was an usher. The Callisons made a big mistake – they allowed me to hold a candle like everyone else. 


I vividly remember my hair falling into my face as I looked down at the candle. This inspired the game I created for myself to pass the time. The rules were simple: get the flame as close as I possibly could to my hair without having them come into contact with one another. It seemed like a fantastic idea while it was happening. Maybe I didn’t understand that I may lose my game, or maybe I didn’t understand that hair easily catches on fire.


My nose began to realize that there was something wrong.  "Burning, rotting death is not a normal church-y smell..." it thought to itself.

I looked around for the source of the odor, thinking that maybe it was bad incense.  Bad incense can sometimes smell like burning plastic, probably.  In a matter of seconds, my theory about the bad incense was discredited based purely upon the raw strength of the smell. At this point, I was thoroughly confused.

Unsurprisingly, it turned out to be my hair.

I jerked the candle away from my face. I thought I had the problem solved. When I realized the hair itself was on fire, I began to grasp the severity of the situation. 



The rest was a blur of confusion and terror. I’m told that Cleave Callison valiantly put out the fire by smashing his sweater against the side of my head and carried me out of the sanctuary.


Saturday, September 4, 2010

It's probably NOT the thought that counts.


Lately I’ve been involved in many situations where it’s the thought that counts. I began to think “Wow, it’s the thought that counts with everything lately… when is it not the thought that counts?” 
There are a lot of times when it is absolutely not the thought that counts. Here are a few examples:


Turning in assignments



Getting gas



Paying the bills



Putting on clothes



Showering and other basic hygiene



Making an arrest




If you're looking for a new philosophy to live by, a good one would be "it's the action that counts."

Friday, September 3, 2010

Bear Trap

Repost from the O.G. Bloggity Blog

H
ave you ever found yourself trying to shove your arm into a painfully small space? The other day I dropped my phone behind my bed. I knew it would be an uncomfortable and challenging rescue mission, so I left it there. A shelving unit around my bed (perhaps my best impulse buy… IT HAS A CUP HOLDER!) would make the phone rescue particularly difficult. Here is a crappy drawing of the arrangement of my bed and surrounding furniture:



About an hour or so passed when my roommate asked if I would accompany her to Chic-Fil-A. For some reason an outing to Chic-Fil-A requires the presence of my cell phone. My options for reclaiming my phone from the dark depths of under my bed were as follows:
A) Slide my hand between the bed and one of the bars that supports the over-the-bed shelving.
B) Remove the drawers from under my bed and crawl under it.
Neither of these options were appealing. My extreme laziness told me that even though sticking my hand between the bed and shelving unit would be more painful, it would take less time and effort. Option A it is.
Reaching my phone was easier than expected.


Getting the hand/phone combo out was quite another story. With the phone, my hand was much too large. Without the phone, my hand was just large enough that it wouldn’t fit back through the space. I don’t think my hand grew while it was down there, but I could be wrong. After my feeble attempts to get my hand out of the under-the-bed bear trap, I admited defeat and even though it was mildly embarrassing, I desperately needed assistance.


It was like the time in kindergarten when you stuck your legs through the stair banister bars and were happily swinging your legs about until you realized your knees had grown while you were doing your leg swinging making it impossible to get them out and then you had to call for help because if you didn't you would waste away stuck on those steps, so your mom had to use lotion and butter to free your legs from their hand railing prison and it left your knees smelling like Johnson & Johnson and disappointment.

After taking her sweet time instead of rushing to my aid, Miyuki (pronounced me-you-key) was not of any assistance. When she walked in to my room she was probably not expecting to see me in such distress, but I am positive that laughing instead of helping was not the most effective reaction. Eventually she was able to use her super-human, manly strength to hold the leg of the shelving unit away from the bed long enough for me to slip my hand (complete with cell phone) out of harms way.


  
Once I had my Chic-Fil-A my hand didn’t hurt anymore.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

I bet I can fit in that.

Every time I find a small space I am consumed with an overwhelming desire to fit my entire body in it.   Suitcases, dryers, Rubbermaid crates, etcetera.  When I discover that I am able to fit into these places, it suddenly becomes imperative that I know just how many positions I am able to put myself in while squashed in the small space.  And then for some reason I’m surprised when I get stuck… which is most of the time.










If it’s a larger space, I desperately want to know how many people can fit in it. 


Not everyone is as excited as I am about shoving seven people into a bathtub or under the table.  My junior year in high school I convinced 17 girls that we should all shove into the smallest bathroom stall.




There are seriously 17 people in there.



Guess what else? Turns out bodies are effective measuring tools.





That's true.  Five people will fit in the trunk of a Nissan Altima, just in case anyone was wondering.  

If you were to ask me how big my suitcase was, I would respond with "it's about one person big."