back in the day: ‘lesson lesson’ Category

fancy gap

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Greetings from the burbs of Chicago, Monkey Keys. I just got here yesterday after driving 11ty-billion-billion hours from Raleigh, NC. It was a ton of fun! I got to learn about muscle groups that tend to spasm if locked in a constant position, and I was able to compare how different cities deal with traffic jams.

One of the most amusing things about being on the open road is making fun of native city names. I happened to be updating my Google latitude location yesterday as I passed the wee village of Fancy Gap, VA. At first I laughed and laughed. I decided it reminded me of a plumber in a tuxedo.

“Some gaps will never be fancy…”

Right you are, Disgusted Key. I started to internally wax poetic about the place though. I started to realize how large this world really is. On my brief 13 hour drive, I was going to pass thousands of Fancy Gaps. they would be of all shapes and sizes, and some would be fancier than others. I’d go through entire states populated by millions of idiots, and here I was, my own idiot, driving a little piece of metal by Fancy Gap.

What kind of person lives in Fancy Gap? According to the 2000 census*, the town is heavily populated with 260 individuals. Out of that 260, their racial makeup was 99.23% White, 0.38% Native American, 0.38% from other races. That means 258 white people, and an Indian/octopus couple. Suddenly the story of Fancy Gap is starting to make more sense.

I was originally under the misconception “Fancy Gap” was so named because the settlers found a mountain pass, or gap, that was highly decorated or of a particularly fine quality. This is not so. Those who named the village were actually making reference to imagining a break in continuity.

You see, back in the late 1700s the area was little more than a collection of trails. The settlement was known as Foggy Camp by the Indians. This was so named because of the foggy outcome for the settlement as seen by the chief Indian soothsayer, Swims with Fishes. Swims with Fishes could only predict that an ancestor of his would have to overcome a great evil in order to save the holy spirit animal of the mountain.

Years later in the 1800s, Ira Blair Coltrane, the illegitimate child of his single mother, was helping push wagons up the mountainside Sisyphus style. He was 15 at the time and did this because 15-year-olds were cheaper than oxen as accurately depicted in The Oregon Trail (an ox costs $20, extra kids are free). One day years later, he happened to notice Foggy Camp and went to investigate. The Indians had long since left, but he did find a struggling octopus. Legend has it he said, “Fancy that…” Coltrane picked up a large rock to crush the mollusk with, but was stopped at the last second by a frantic scream from his mother.

“Don’t hurt him, Ira!” she begged. “He’s your father!” Coltrane became so dumbfounded and disgusted by the realization he was half octopus, he ran screaming down the mountainside. Once at the base of the mountain, he gathered all the able bodied men he could find in order to hunt down the beast and his mother and kill them both.

“We have to create a gap in my lineage,” he said. “We must ensure that no more octo-mates grace God’s great earth!” the bloodthirsty mob scoured the Fancy Gap region, and finally found Coltrane’s mother and father in Devil’s Den (a nearby cave system).

Coltrane took the initiative and charged his own mother with a miner’s pick. Before he could strike her, the great beast of the sea entangled him in its tentacles. He screamed for help, but he was only paying the mob minimum wadge (which was -$14 in the day) so they all ran off to watch cricket instead.

Nobody knows what became of Coletrane or his parents, but members of the mob said they imagined he was able to kill the octopus and live for 40 winters on sweet succulent tako. Thus, when the town was settled nearly one day later, they named it Fancy Gap in honor of the perceived gap he was able to create in his family tree.

What the population didn’t know at the time was the octopus was the spirit guardian of the mountain. He was able to retreat into the bowls of Devil’s Den and hibernate until 1997 when he was discovered by Jessica Fishes. The two instantly fell in love and moved back to her home in Fancy Gap. History, however, has an evil way of repeating itself.

The couple was immediately subject to massive amounts of discrimination by the predominantly white community. Their marriage was viewed as illegal by the government of Virginia. The local media began to lambaste the union saying it was unchristian, and next people would want to marry their cars. The community ostracized the couple, and then turned violent.

Fish frys started popping up on the couple’s lawn in the middle of the night. People spray painted, “fish go home to the sea!” on their home. In late 2003, the couple’s home was set ablaze by a bloodthirsty mob. The two were forced to flee back into Devil’s Den.

“What’s become of them now, Dylan?”

I’m afraid I can’t say, Tyke Key. I didn’t take the time to visit Fancy Gap and find out.

“Why not?”

Are you kidding? I’m not going there. That place is a dump.

*The United States Census Bureau would like to remind all American citizens to FILL OUT YOUR FREAKING 2010 CENSUS! If you don’t, you WILL suffer a fate much worse than that of Fancy Gap, VA. By that, we mean velociraptors. Probably 80-90 of the things WILL be mailed to your door. We at the United States Census Bureau like to provoke our velociraptors prior to shipment by forcing them to watch America’s Next Top Model during playoff games and feeding them rice cakes when there is a strawberry rhubarb pie within noseshot. They never get the pie, but we do tell them you have one… in your belly.


going that extra mile sucks

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Welcome to the migrated site, Monkey Keys!  You’ll probably note it looks very similar to the old site. This was intentionally done because I am lazy. I plan on making some big updates to the layout in order to stay extra super competitive, but I’ll worry about that when my motivation goes from super to super duper (Sargent Savage GI Joe style).

I could start gushing about how awesome it is to have my own domain and whatnot, but who cares.  Instead, I want to focus on my near total inability to do one step in any random activity. This step I have lovingly named the “cinchpin” step.

Most any undertaking has a series of steps to get it done. For instance, making a new LEGO King’s Castle Siege (set 7094) generally involves:

1) Finding a sharp object to cut the invulnerable, Kevlar and titanium laced bags the pieces come in.

2) Dumping everything into an indiscernible pile on the carpet.

3) Finding all the parts to the castle guards and the dragons and building them first.

4) Play “whoops, I sporked the dragon” with the brave knight guy wielding the proportionately improbable, one-handed battle axe for three hours.

5) Give up on building the set and leave the pieces unfortunately close to the bottom of the stairs so your mother can step in them and fully understand the meaning of LEGO’s acronym “Lethal Edged Gouging Object.”

Now, you’re probably thinking the same thing I am.  These are some pretty simple steps.  Why would you go an omit one?

Well, therein lies the glory of the cinchpin step.  This step is generally found very early on in the order of operations, is surprisingly easy to accomplish, and is quite necessary to finish the activity.  However, it also almost always requires moving physically or undoing a step that is already finished. In my above example, the cinchpin is finding the sharp object. Invariably, if given the task to build the LEGO, I would sit down with my box and remove the individual bags of pieces.  At this point I would be sitting down, and thus, my butt is committed. The knives are normally in the kitchen, and that is nearly ten feet away. That’s where my brain thinks the fatal thought, “Do I really need a knife to open these bags?  Isn’t that what teeth, nails and screaming are for?”

So I attempt to open the bags.  I don’t, of course, because those things are absurd.  I think they’re chemically altered to survive the lethal edges of the pieces contained within. After about 20 minutes of tooth decay on the side of the bags, I suddenly feel stupid for not having just gotten the knife.  It would have taken one of those 20 minutes, and then I would be done in a heartbeat.  Generally this realization does nothing but aggravate the problem. In realizing my wasted time, I suddenly have to prove my method can, and will, work. This leads to several chipped teeth, claw-marks in the wall, and a blacklisting for all future LEGO products.

Just yesterday I experienced two such cinchpin situations.  One was just prior to my beddy-bye.  I wanted to put my iPod on sleep mode and listen to some lullabies. However, I had already turned the light off and could not actually see the iPod dock.  Cinchpin step one would have been to drag myself out of bed and shed some light on the situation. Dylan step one ended up being a mad fumble in the dark with the iPod for the little raised docking node. I managed to nearly knock over a lamp and scratch my hand significantly on the bed-stand before getting the thing docked two minutes later.

Then while moving this very blog I had another cinchpin moment. One step required ftp-ing a bunch of wordpress files to my server. Instead of taking the two seconds to install an ftp service and properly configure it with my hosting provider, I decided to upload every file individually. “How many can there possibly be?” thought I.  Apparently a lot.

So why leave the cinchpin out? I think it has something to do with our preconceived notion of what a task requires. At a certain point, we believe all our ducks are in a row and it is time to start. When something requires extra effort that wasn’t counted on, and we think that extra effort isn’t needed, the step is omitted. The longer it is omitted, the more we’re committed to the initial plan.

I’d like to say I plan on doing my cinchpins from now on, but honestly, now that I’ve named them, I’m more annoyed than ever at the things. I mean, who are they to dictate weather or not I can build my freaking LEGO? Now if you’ll excuse me, I have some wasp nests to remove of.


what else happens in October?

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Halloween is coming, Monkey Keys. It’s basically the last bastion we have before winter; it stands orange and defiant against insurmountable snow. Halloween is a great symbol for cold calling and childhood obesity world over. However, in the later years of its life, Halloween has been receiving a lot of fliegerabwehrkanone. Maybe that’s why it was no surprise to me the Irish had a hand in its creation.

The whole thing used to be called Samhain and was a celebration for the end of harvest. The ancient Celtic IRS would audit the food stores for the winter while everyone else put on masks to pretend they were dead. They believed this would fool the IRS into ignoring their undisclosed mutton. Sadly, it was still subject to estate tax.

Eventually some striking individuals decided to call the 31st All Hallows’ Eve as the evening prior to the similarly named All Hallows’ Day. This was abbreviated to Hallowe’en by the lazy before being abbreviated again to Halloween by the even lazier. Future Dylan informed me this will be abbreviated further to Hall’een and then Hleen respectively before ultimately being called H in accordance with the single letter proper noun standard of 2047.

Pope Gregory III blindsided H Day by moving the Christian holiday All Saints Day from May 18 to November 1 sometime around 834 AD. The attempt was to fully Christianize H since the burning mutton fires lit by the pagans lowered land value in Rome. However, the sudden name change confused the Celtics who had been at the pub. The result was a weird blend of attending mass and going door to door with masks on to collect “soul cakes.” The cakes were consumed until fatness set in so evil spirits would ignore the consumers. Evidently they were shallow evil spirits.

As is tradition in America, the Celtics brought H over on the boats to be completely screwed up. The cakes became candy to remove any hope of nutrition from the practice. All the religious malarkey was replaced with Spiderman costumes, and the sense of pride and honor in one’s family ancestry was replaced with blackmailing neighbors under threat of egg to feed children they didn’t know. The traditional ‘trick or treat’ question itself is actually a thinly veiled threat against the homeowner. A more descriptive phrase ‘prepare to have your homestead redecorated in rotting carcasses and fecal matter before ultimately being burned down or treat’ was ultimately rejected as it took too long to say and cut into candy time.

This was all fine and dandy for the free loving children of the 60s, but now they’re grown up and determined to stop future generations from ever having the fun they did. Alternatives to trick or treating have arisen in the form of lame parties and sit-ins. While this is a widespread practice, it is not widespread enough to remove trick or treating entirely.

Modern H is now celebrated by purchasing way too much overpriced candy. Said candy is dispensed in one of two ways. It can be physically handed to the three children and five teenage punks who come to your home over the course of three hours by referencing the following formula:
amount of candy per child measured in ‘fun sized’ bars (C)
number of children at door (D)
time passed in hours (T)

C = 1/D * T^4

The other option is placing said candy in a dish with a ‘take one’ sign to be taken via the following formula:

amount of candy per child measured in ‘fun sized’ bars (C)
number of children at door (D)
age of child in years (A)
total candy in bowl (T)

C = T * ((A/15) /D)

With any C greater than T meaning a break and enter by the child to collect C pieces of candy.

“So, Dylan, you must really hate Halloween.”

On the contrary, Pumpkin Key, I’m simply getting in the festive mood. It’s about time to be picking out those costumes. I might also suggest buying that pound and a half of candy now. As we get closer to H the price goes up:

Price per bag (P)
Day of the month (D)

P = D^3

“So what do you think you’re going to dress up as this year, Dylan?”

A failed economy.

“…so do they make a mask for that or what?”

job me once

Friday, January 30th, 2009

Happy day, Monkey Keys. Today I’d like to comment on an interesting new trend I don’t fully understand. Whilst perusing a popular job searching website a moon or two ago, I came across a very interesting job opportunity. For hilarity’s sake, I actually just ctrl+c’ed the ad and put it here. I can’t make better stuff up!

NO EXPERIENCE? PLEASE APPLY! Marketing Positions, Entry Level

About the Job
If you’re looking for an old-school Clerical, Administrative, Cubicle or Retail Job, keep looking….

This ad is for a business opportunity – a unique shot at advancing in the marketing field if you have the drive and ambition it takes to excel.

REMEMBER, THIS IS ENTRY LEVEL. So you MUST HAVE LESS THAN 4 years experience.
If I still have your attention…GREAT, read on!

What we are doing is looking for a group of people dedicated to working hard and who are prepared to do what it takes today in order to give themselves the lifestyle they want in the future, and reach management status 12 months from now. If you’ve got people skills and a little experience in sales, retail, or in marketing things to consumers, you’re halfway there. If you’ve got the ability to see the big picture, and a drive to succeed at all costs, we are definitely interested in working with you!

No cubicles, no cold-calling, no chasing down leads, no 9-5 hours here. No prior experience necessary – we’ll give qualified candidates full, on the job mentorship, from successful people in the business.

So whats the catch?

No catch. Go ahead and visit our website at: www.idpromotionz.com
You can reach management, if you are willing to work hard and succeed, and make a solid commitment in changing your life.

Requirements
Excellent verbal and communication skills
Ability to work effectively and succeed in a fast paced environment
Must have (or be able to learn) leadership skills
Ability to prioritize job responsibilities and manage time effectively
Must be able to get along well with other team members!
Have a Student Mentality.

The ad seems very adamant about getting people who know nothing at all to do something unspecified in order to become the manager of who knows what. If you can see the “big picture” though, they’re definitely INTERESTED IN U! I suppose that rules me out, since I can’t even see the small picture here. Although I meet most of the requirements, so maybe they won’t mind. Who would be unable to “learn” leadership skills anyway? Their primary job requirements are a watered down concoction of any normal job’s crap requirements that everyone claims they can do by default. The one exception would be “have a student mentality” which I can only assume means “must be uneducated enough to fall for this horrible debacle of a scam.”

They had better hope second graders are looking for work if they actually want people to apply. Seriously, did they have to spell promotions with a flipping Z? Why not name their company “LOL u g0Tz PWN3D 5|_|K3r.” At least then I’d take them as some hip new internet gaming company. “ID Promotionz” sounds like it was spawned by a washed-up, middle-aged, balding salesman who, after going on a three week bender only to end up passed out in a puddle of his own goo that used to be his last four dollars, decided he needed a funky-fresh sounding name that could attract gullible 20-somethings with a weak grasp of the world outside text messaging.

If you get past the superfluous Z, the next deceased giveaway should be the “so whats the catch” line. I can let the missing apostrophe slide, but what is that line doing there in the first place? Why would I, as a potential employee, even consider a “catch” being involved with doing work for monetary compensation? This company is on the defensive for no conceivable reason. That simply screams there actually is a catch. I mean, this is a lesson they should know from Bugs Bunny.

Irish Cop: “Alright, Rabbit. Where’s Rocky? Where’s he hidin’?”

Bugs: “He’s not hiding in the stove!”

Irish Cop: “Oh ho! He’s hidin’ in the stove eh?”

Bugs: “Now look, would I turn on the gas if my pal Rocky was in there?”

Irish Cop: “Ehhh, you might, Rabbit, you might.”

Bugs: “Well would I throw a lighted match in there if he was in there?”

BOOM!

Irish Cop: “All right, Rabbit, you’ve proved your point. I’ll go look for Rocky in the city.”

In fairness to Bugs, he was trying to kill Rocky in order to save his own hide and wanted the cop to be skeptical. Perhaps ID Promotionz wants people to be skeptical too. If the applicant is skeptical of the ad and STILL calls in, they just might be stupid or desperate enough to work there. None of this answers what ID Promotionz actually DOES, so, my curiosity piqued, I checked their website.

I could put another mountain of text here, but instead I recommend you check out the site. I CHALLENGE you to tell me what your job would be at this company based on anything they printed. The only thing I could really glean was their affinity to hiring attractive models. Perhaps it is a modeling agency? No, they mention marketing and non-profit organizations a lot. Maybe you make professional looking websites for companies that make no money. Someone had to do that for ID Promotionz after all.

I finally found two descriptions that confirmed every suspicion I had about the place though. Read this and then this to find out what ID does and who does it for them.

Irish Cop: “Alright, Dylan. Where’s ID Promotionz? Where’s he hidin’?”

He’s not hiding in the stove…

journey to the edge of the earth

Sunday, January 18th, 2009

Happy New Year, Monkey Keys! I hope your holidays were merry and filled with silver and gold.

“Just silver this year, Dylan. Thanks for rubbing it in.” Oh right… sorry I forgot about the tax evasion charges, Scrooge McDuck Key. I could talk about how there’s a new year coming and so many things are about to change. The country is headlong in an economic crisis that has no signs of letting up. Major corporations are collapsing. We have a new president about to be inaugurated. His ambitious plans are certain to spark controversy and change at every level. American Idol is planning on removing their Tuesday night show this season…

So much that needs to be covered, but I wanna talk about pirates, so nuts to that. Specifically, I want to talk about the era of exploration. There was a time, Monkey Keys, where the map of the world looked awesome. Nobody knew where anything was. Countries were formed by plopping a flag in the ground and shouting a decree. A DECREE! Who even decrees anymore? Maybe a used care salesman will decree on an extremely rare occasion. Every fork in the road could mean certain death by a monster that has yet to be wikied. Conversations about exploring the unknown parts of the earth were wild speculations of doom.

Don’t sail too far out into the Atlantic, Jimmy. The Kraken lives there and he sank a million boats before you!

“But we haven’t sent any boats out there SPECIFICALLY because there’s a Kraken…”

SILENCE! You’re a witch and shall be sliced into cubits before being fed to a dragonsaur that will then be burned and eaten. The Kraken actually ate TWO million boats, and he did it without any tartar sauce. Besides, even if you made it past the Kraken, who, incidentally, patrols the entire coastline of the known world at all times, you would be consumed by the ghosts of the two hundred million people who he ate!

“But there are only like 500 million people on Ear…”

AND if you made it past the ghosts, you would reach the dreaded downspout of decapitation which no man has ever seen and lived. We only know if its existence because a sparrow ate three worms last Wednesday which is a sign from God that the downspout will eat all our wormlike souls.

“I think you actually mean drain of decapitation. Downspouts need to be attached to a roo…”

Then, past these unheard of terrors, what awaits your discovery; the end of the world of course. You will die for sure in a most humiliating eternal freefall.

“Life expectancy on land is about 22 years anyway, and that will be considerably shortened for me if this witch trial thing doesn’t get an appeal.”

Alright, I’m going to level with you, Jimmy. Financing boats costs like 45 francs, and I need the cash money to pay for concubines.

“Does this mean I get to live?”

Yes, Jimmy, concubines.

The world was, in essence, a blank canvas where anything could happen. That blank canvas has been carved into sovereign nation states that hold the legal rights to any discovered creatures. The conversation before setting sail across the Atlantic would be rather mundane.

Don’t sail too far into the Atlantic, Jimmy. You may get seasick.

“ROFLCOPTER!”

Granted, any occurrence of a roflcopter is an exciting turn of events, but not Kraken exciting. I’m essentially sick of science spoiling all my fun. It’s basically a fact I’m not going to be eaten by unicorn riding werewolves if I go out into the forbidden forest after nightfall. Great, I’m real happy for you science. Thank you for proving werewolves don’t know how to ride unicorns. Telling me Santa would have to go 3.5 thousand miles a second to make his yearly rounds was already heartbreak enough. I think our only option is to destroy a bunch of scientific research.

Hear me out on this one, Keys. What if we picked an animal at random (aardvark for example) and burned everything that documents their existence. Then, we send a bunch of attractive 20-somethings into whatever country aardvarks live in. We tell them horrible stories about these creatures with extremely long noses that burrow into the human brain for shelter while their host sleeps. Someone inevitably sees an aardvark and freaks out. Crazy scandalous sex parties and petty rivalry ensue in a most hilarious fashion. We get it all on tape, and send it to FOX for a new reality show, “Survivor: Forgotten Legends.”

Ah, who am I kidding? That’s basically the plot of Lost already. I guess I’ll eat a gallon of Haagen-dazs and watch American Idol like everyone else. Maybe I’ll discover a peanut in my ice cream.

I do decree!

+2 to writing skill

Saturday, December 13th, 2008

G’day, Monkey Keys. It’s Saturday, so be default I’m going to be playing a lot of video games today. A good friend of mine has been playing through the original Fallout as of late. This got my little beanie brainy thinking about the various stats that make up your character within the game and how they would work if applied to real life.

Strength
Its purpose in games: Strength is vital to any warriors out there. Hey, when you’ve got a horde of zombies breathing down your neck (literally) you need a little pizzazz. See that eight foot wide, flaming, broadsword? Well you aren’t heaving it off the ground without full strength baby! A side effect is the ability to carry tons of garbage around. Every point in strength gives you another 100 or so pounds of weapons and armor you can duct tape to your body.
Usefulness in games (7/10)

In purpose real life: Strength is vital to any players out there. If you want a horde of women breathing down your neck (literally) you need a little pizzazz. To determine curb appeal to the opposite sex, you must multiply your strength and charisma modifiers and divide by two. If this number is higher than the girl’s jackass detection skill, she will accept your offer for a date. It is a prerequisite for military jobs or being an American Gladiator as well. While it will enable you to carry more, you already have a car to put junk in.
Usefulness in life (4/10)

Intelligence
Its purpose in games: Generally speaking, intelligence determines your overall magic pool. MAGIC! This is throwing fire and lightning all over the place, and teleporting to Chicago and back for a pizza. If you don’t know what you’re doing, you could break Florida off by accident and send it sailing into the Bermuda Triangle. If you get really good at magic, you can make yourself stronger and faster anyway. This makes every other kill pointless.
Usefulness in games (10/10)

Its purpose in real life: Intelligence is helpful in conversations with people who are smart. Nobody wants to look like an idiot. It gives you a +2 saving throw per point to bluff your way into a job interview.
Usefulness in life (2/10)

Agility
Its purpose in games: Agility raises your armor on account of the fact you’re all ninja dodging arrows and bullets. It normally will also increase ranged damage. This is presumably because you can pinpoint a guy’s kidney from 1000 yards. Sometimes it will also increase your speed and movement abilities so you can be a shadow in the night.
Usefulness in games (7/10)

Its purpose in real life: You could be a gymnast I guess…
Usefulness in life (1/10)

Endurance
Its purpose in games: Endurance normally decides your max hitpoints. That’s kind of important. Important, that is, until you find kraken shell, Nessy laced armor that can deflect depleted uranium tank rounds. Then it seems superfluous…
Usefulness in games (2/10)

Its purpose in real life: If you live in Michigan, you need an endurance of 9 just to walk outside right now. Anyone with a lower stat will take 40 damage of hypothermia every round until they are forced to move to Hawaii.
Usefulness in life (7/10)

Charisma
Its purpose in games: Charisma determines how the computer controlled characters react to you in game dialogue. No matter how high your charisma is though, the stupid werewolf running out of the forest will not listen. Good thing you have full intelligence and lit the forest on fire with a meteorite. Oh, and then you used some charm spell on the computer controlled characters to make them like you anyway.
Usefulness in games (1/10)

Its purpose in real life: Charisma is needed for everything. It is half your date modifier. It adds +5 to all “not getting fired” saving throws per point. It determines how many friends you can have in your party. It will help you sell a used car. It grants a smooth talker reflex save when getting pulled over by the police. Yeah, you get it.
Usefulness in life (10/10)

Luck
Its purpose in games: Something or other. It’s never really explained. Thieves generally start out with a lot of it though. I’m guessing that is because thieves don’t use magic and will need all the luck they can get.
Usefulness in games (1/10)

Its purpose in real life: When is the last time things went according to plan?
Usefulness in life (10/10)

Hey, what am I doing wasting time here? I have some games to play. Twelve days until Christmas, Monkey Keys. Nobody dare sing it…

history lesson

Friday, March 28th, 2008

Summers came and went in mid-Michigan Monkey Keys. This summer was no different than any before it up to that point. We were kids in middle school and did the usual asortment of kids’ stuff that none of us would find interesting for more than a nanosecond today. The day’s activities up to that point included going to a friend’s house and making fun of bad television by putting it on mute and playing music over the actual dialog. I believe we had it on the third or fourth music video from MTV before the laughter of Ozzie singing Ace of Base began to subside. Our attention span waning, we turned our gaze to the outdoors.

It was three of us. Keys Habeck, Pelton and myself. The trampoline in Pelton’s yard caught our eyes first, and soon we were risking life and limb for the adrenaline rush of assisted gravity defiance. It was then we three heard it. It came soft at first (as many melodic tunes drifting over the suburban wasteland do) and perhaps we mistook it for a car radio. Few car radios blast “She’ll be Comin’ Round the Mountain” though, and soon we all knew what it was we were dealing with. The ice cream man had come to town.

Being in middle school, we weren’t endowed with an abundance of currency. This was hardly a deterrent for such up and coming entrepreneurs as ourselves however. As the music approached, and our will to feast grew, we sprang into action. In the absence of a civilized means for acquiring goods and services, we enacted a crude form of bartering. It was rough around the edges, but the plan made perfect sense to our pubescent minds. We were going to purchase our glorious treats with some socks found in Pelton’s garage.

The exact exchange rate for old socks was unknown to us, but simple logic seemed to dictate that the ice cream was a fleeting joy. The socks had already endured the trials of time, and may have brought their new owner many more moons of happy foot warmth. Or perhaps he would simply trade the socks himself once he realized the amazing deal that had fallen into his lap. Regardless of the outcome, the creamed ice would soon be ours. As the truck creped it’s way down the block, we flagged it down.

A large stubbly man greeted us as we stood at the end of Pelton’s driveway with socks in hand. He expressed passive joy in seeing three eager consumers ready to cool their troubled minds with fresh ice cream. We each placed our orders making sure we chose the most suitable flavors for our distinct tastes. EDITOR’S NOTE: I believe I may have tried for a Ninja Turtle ice cream bar as I was prone to doing at that age. However, I may have also gone for the more formal creamsicle. Please use your discretion when envisioning the scenario.
The man took no notes when hearing our demands. He simply leaned out the small window in his oversized van and listened. At the conclusion of our individualized order soliloquies, he spouted off a number that I can only now assume was some kind of Greek pickup line. We looked at each other a moment, and then made mention of our plan to get our treats in exchange for the socks in hand. By way of a blank stare, several expletives and screeching tires, our ice cream was soon driving away.

This was unacceptable. We had come too far, and fought too hard, to lose out on such nourishment now. We mounted our trusty Huffy steeds and gave chase. The day would be ours. Surely some simple reasoning would educate this salesman on the error of his ways. Maybe he just wasn’t aware of the many benefits of wearing a warm sock. Perhaps he had never had gangrene of his big toe for instance. EDITOR’S NOTE: By this guy’s outward appearance, he probably had endured gangrene of a toe or two in his day.

Several blocks later, the plump, angry salesman stopped his truck. We again appealed to his sense of judgment and reason. We were clearly losing out on this deal. Surely any sane man would come to this same rationalization. After our second explanation, with smiles on our faces, we awaited our ice cream.

“I have a shotgun in the truck,” he said with a deadpan, lifeless scowl. “I’m not afraid to use it if I see yous again.” With that, he crept off down the road. Now, being threatened by large firearms wasn’t a common occurrence for us, but this meant little. This was ice cream, Keys! It’s not everyday ice cream is brought to you on a silver platter inside a rusty truck. We had to try one more time. This was for the glory of the treat! With hardly a word to one another, we climbed back onto our bikes and followed.

We peddled as fast as we could, and finally caught up with the ominous truck as it approached a crossroads. We were within smelling distance of the cream when the truck screeched to a halt. The happy music that had been blaring from its mammoth speakers abruptly went silent as well. It was as if all the animals of the suburb knew what was about to transpire as extreme silence fell about us. We three were stopped in the middle of the road about 100 yards from the truck. For ten seconds, nothing happened.

When the music kicked in again, it was nearly deafening. “Old Suzanna” erupted into our eardrums with a thunderous force, and the truck peeled out in reverse. The large man executed a perfect reverse three point turn as fast as the rickety truck would allow. Then he rocketed toward us.

There was no time to scream, only to react. The three of us slammed our feet down and peddled for our lives. We could never outrun the truck. Our only hope was to outmaneuver him. The gap between us closed quick. In another few seconds, we would be roadkill. Someone shouted to turn left, and we all cut down a side street. The truck had been too close to react in time. We heard a terrible screech as he tried to correct his trajectory.

The move had bought us time. We flew down the street faster than we ever rode before. Soon, we made it around a bend, and came to a gradual stop. Silence had fallen over the homes again. No music was to be heard. All of us stood in the middle of the road, eyes transfixed on the bend we had just rounded. He seemed to be gone. I breathed a sigh of relief, and looked up just in time to see the metallic beast drift silently around the bend.

“Merry Had a Little Lamb” was suddenly reverberating off every tree and house nearby so that it seemed to be coming in every direction at once. We rode again, this time with no side street to escape down. He was closing too fast. It would all be over in a matter of seconds. On guttural instinct, I yelled something about getting off the road. Habeck motioned right, and we all hopped the curb. Using my last strength, I forced the Huffy forward into a strangers backyard. It was our luck the stranger’s house bordered a small forest. We didn’t stop riding until the road was far behind us.

Exhausted, I collapsed next to a tree. For some time after, as we hid in that forest, we could hear the terrifying echoes of children’s songs worming their way through the trees. He was out there, hunting. At length, the three of us packed up our bikes and socks, and crept out of the forest the opposite way from where we came.

None of us ever saw the ice cream man again. None of us got ice cream that day, and none of us ever attempted a bartering situation with a shady character again. Lesson learned?

Nah.

pandemonium

Monday, March 24th, 2008

Hey Monkey Keys. I decided it was a prudent time to introduce you to someone who is very near and dear to me. She’s the first to greet me when I wake in the morning and the last to nuzzle me good night when I rest my weary head. She’s not much of a talker, but she’s the life of any party. I’d like you to meet my new teddy bear, Mona.

“Aww, Dylan Mona is adorable!” Yes, I know Easily Amused Key. Mona is the most adorable teddy bear on the planet as a matter of fact. Editor’s note: any who are bold enough to challenge Mona’s reign of dominance as most adorable teddy bear, feel free to mail pictures for comparison. You will lose. Mona came into my family just recently after quite the harrowing childhood.

You see, like most of the Panda tribe, Mona was born in east Asia. Here is a map for people who “like such as” don’t know where east Asia is. Mona was forced into the bamboo factories at a young age. She worked for a harsh dictator named Sancho Panza who demanded all the pandas in the village work 40 hours a day to produce more bamboo than any other factory. Mona obeyed because she had to make money to support her sick mother. One day, however, Mona’s best friend Ling Ling was ordered to do battle with a robotic tiger from the future by Sancho Panza. Mona begged Panza to let her fight the beast instead, but Panza secretly had a grudge against Ling Ling for her part in the Teddy Ruxpin Revolt of ’85. And so the battle raged on for nearly a minute, but sadly, Ling Ling was eaten.

Mona immediately burst into a rage and ate three guards before Panza had her shackled. For three weeks Mona was left in the dungeon with nothing but Wendy’s fries to eat. Finally, on the fourth week Panza came to gawk at her. Mona, being quite the clever one, tricked Panza. She said,

“Oh Sancho, you are ever so smart and wily. If you were to challenge me to a test of brains, I would be the most doomed panda ever to graze the earth!” Well, Panza could never turn down a direct challenge. So he laughed a snide tune, and accepted. Panza had a foolproof plan. He would disable part of the factory’s machinery, and have Mona guess what was malfunctioning. If she was correct, he would set her free. If she was wrong, he would make her into a coat for him to wear about the factory in demonstration of his awesomeness. Only Panza didn’t even want Mona to have a chance, so he would disable two parts of the machinery. That way, no matter what Mona picked, she would lose the challenge.

He went over the rules with Mona, and she accepted. He could barely contain the grin he had on his tainted heart. With all the other Pandas watching, the two went into the machine room.

“You may begin,” Panza sneered. “You only have 5 minutes to choose, or you forfeit your chance.” Mona studied the machine carefully. She looked up and down its elaborate cogs. She studied the intricate detail of every wire. She carefully checked bolts to ensure they were tightened correctly, and even made sure the reed shoot was clear of debris.

“Mona, your time is up,” Panza laughed at length. “Have you made your decision?” Mona held her breath a moment, and turned to Panza.

“I have,” She stated. “The problem with the machine is right there!” All the Pandas gasped in amazement as Mona pointed right at Panza.

“Wha-what!?” Panza exclaimed in confusion as he looked behind himself to see if there was some type of machinery she was pointing at. Just as he turned around though, Mona charged him and sent him flying into the tiger pit below.

“Goodbye Sancho Panza,” Mona said coldly. “You can take this as my resignation.” Panza struggled to his feet just in time to see his robotic tiger from the future jump out of its dog house. He barely had time to scream before the beast ate him alive.

All of the guards were astonished. At length one said,

“You killed him… You killed Sancho!”

“Well I didn’t mean to,” Mona replied. “Alright, I kinda did, but he was a huge jerk.”

“Yeah… he really was. So what do we do now?”

“You set us all free!” The guards looked at Mona with obfuscated glances. Mona sighed and pulled out a roll of Mentos. Suddenly, theme music chimed in seemingly from nowhere. The guards all turned to each other and laughed shaking their finger at Mona, and all the Pandas were set free.

Mona was heralded as a great hero that day. She was showered in gold and jewels and the finest of Shamrock Shakes. She brought all of this to her mother and said it would pay for any expense she would ever have.

“Mona,” her mother said in between sipping a shake. “It is time for you to leave the village. You have done so much here, you must find someone else to help.” Mona didn’t want to leave, but knew her mother was right. The pandas were saved, and her mother was the richest of them all. It was time she saved someone else. So she decided to go to a real troubled place, the United States.

I met Mona in the least likely of all places. I’m not saying that just for dramatic effect either. She was actually in a New York club called The Least Likely of Places. It was one of those hip downtown jazz places without enough seating or fresh air. Mona was making ends meet as a beatnik singing some jive tunes. I sat in the back nursing a gin and tonic wondering how such a wonderful Panda made it to such a rotten place. She had an amazingly soothing voice, and I found her entrancing.

Suddenly, a customer in the club stormed the stage saying he wanted to sell Mona to a zoo. I immediately leapt from my seat and tackled the perpetrator. Little did I know the man was actually a 10th degree orange belt in the deadly hands style of muay tai. He began giving me the beating of a lifetime. I mean, I held my own… well, alright it really depends on what your definition of holding your own is… er…

Well that’s not the point. The point is, in between getting my face used as an accordion, I see Mona leap from her chair and whistle. Suddenly, this robotic tiger comes running in from nowhere and mauls the man. I started to black out and then Mona picked me up.

She took me back to her flat, and nursed me back to health over three weeks. We became so fond of each other over that time, she agreed to come with me back to Michigan, and we’ve been inseparable ever since.

Sniff… that story is so touching…” I know Crybaby Key. I honestly feel blessed to have the greatest teddy bear in the world. So tonight, my hat is off to Mona. Thanks for the good times and the pandemonium you bring!

the bitter truth

Monday, January 21st, 2008

You know what the bitter truth is Monkey Keys? About -10 degrees kelvin. Because that’s how cold it is right now. It’s so cold out today, I had a high ranking Key tell me her hair froze. I nearly died today, not of frostbite, but of shattering. It’s times like these where I have to ponder why humanity came this far north.

Let’s go back to the time Michigan was first settled. In the 17th century, random French dudes came here from… France. Accent heavy Étienne Brûlé was the first idiot to show up, and he went straight for the upper peninsula. It must have been July at the time. Etiey had been in search of Bigfoot so he could get a photo for his bratty niece. Suddenly, September hit and the temperature dropped to absolute zero. In a panic, the fool built a city. As the years passed, the refugees realized they had to escape south. So, a few brave souls ventured outside. Some of them made it… some of them. It took decades, but the people migrated. Every once in a while, the most depressed of them would give up and build a cabin. And so, Michigan was settled. Yes Keys, we are a bunch of depressed, gullible French who were too lazy to make it to Florida.

So why don’t we break the cycle? There’s a number of factors that this map make abundantly clear:

As you can see there are some problems. First of all, Lake Huron is home of Jaws’s cousin Muffins. That’s not really an issue though. Lake Huron is so cold anyway, nobody would ever try to swim it. They may try to caulk the wagon and sail across, but we all know that ALWAYS ends horribly (seriously, just pay for the ferry you cheap penniless Key!)

The bigger problem is down south for people escaping on foot. Everyone knows the dinosaurs of Ohio are murderous, and even worse are the inbred hunters of Indiana. Many people would rather freeze to death than venture through these scary beasts.

But all these things combined still aren’t really enough to stop people. The sad truth is, we’ve all become docile and unmotivated in Michigan due to the convenience of Walmart. Yes Keys, because we have a happy smile face on every corner, we can buy blankets for cheap and reasonable prices.

And when it is vaguely easy to make due with what we have, what is the point in changing for the better? It’s easy to sit in our homes and complain about the weather, and how wonderful a warm place would be. We may even Google some homes down south, and investigate the cost of plane tickets. When we think about those dinosaurs and hunters though, we become scared. Maybe Michigan isn’t so bad. It’ll be spring soon, and then we’ll be happy. The bitter truth is; most people don’t want to change because it’s easy to stay the same. With that, Keys, great change is halted with great complacency.

I would challenge you though, Keys. Don’t let a mythical dinosaur scare you from your dreams. Don’t become complacent and take the easy way out. Remember, something warmer is always just a few steps south, waiting for you to come and get it.

what has it gots in its pocketses?

Saturday, December 15th, 2007

Good morning Monkey Keys! It’s Saturday, and you know what that means. Because I sure don’t. I decided to start a blog for a myriad of reasons that I won’t get into since we just met. Suffice to say tough, I wanted to, and that pretty much brings us to the present. I’ve never really shared the meanderings of my mind on an open forum, so I apologize in advance if things get a little rowdy in here. I guess it’s going to be my intent to have an honest portrayal of the happenings in my life for any interested parties to examine. Yeah, that sounds kind of legit. Sure, I’ll go with it.

So, this being my first post, you’re not going to get anything too insightful. Instead, here is everything that happened up to this point:

-Genesis
-Dinosaurs ate some plants
-I was born
-We made this awesome game called raccoon ball where you couldn’t touch the ground at or below the level of a stuffed raccoon that was heaved through the air.
-School
-I grew a beard
-Suddenly, Midland found me again

Those are just some key findings. I think the cotton gin was invented in there at some point as well.

…I’ve lost all credibility already haven’t I?