Monday, August 9, 2010
My Parents Love Their Vacuum More Than Me
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
An Honest Out of Office Auto-Reply
During my week off, I will be attending a wedding, and then traversing the Montana countryside. During your week, you will do things that probably won’t matter in the slightest in a few months. In all likelihood, I will be forced to wrestle a bear and scramble to safety (possibly using its hide for a sleeping bag later on), while you will passive-aggressively deter your cubicle neighbor from stealing your stapler for the third time this week by keeping it in your desk drawer from now on.
In the event that the bear episode doesn’t go as I envision, and I do not return from Montana, you will probably not receive a response to this email. In the event that I’m only slightly maimed, you will receive a response to this email, it will just take longer as I may have to learn to type with my feet or nose.
If you need immediate assistance, you may contact my boss, though she is very busy so don’t be self-absorbed. Picture your amount of work, multiply times one hundred million, then think about if you’d want to respond to your email. Didn’t think so.
Peace!
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
Lindsay, Lindsay, Lindsay...
Lindsay Lohan has officially gone from jailbait to jail bound. Since I heard the news, all I've done is wonder, why am I the only person in the world who has yet to put Ms. Mean Girls in handcuffs?
Many of us have spent hours pondering the actress' mighty fall from glory. She captured our hearts with her freckled, impish performance in The Parent Trap, and tickled us pink with her endearing, but befuddled (and kinda bitchy) perpetrations in cinematic masterpieces such as Mean Girls, Freaky Friday, and, uh, those other ones.
Lindsay was the princess of Tinseltown and the Queen of America's collective heart. So what happened? How did we get here, Linds? Help us help you!
Drug possession, DUIs, and lesbianism--oh, my! The hard-partying starlet has somehow pulled off making court-ordered ankle bracelets and passing out on the sidewalk the new sexy. While we wait for her to rise from a pile of her own Marlboro Light cigarette ashes like an over sized handbag-clutching Phoenix, she continues to break our hearts, one infraction at a time. It's like watching a glacier, once so imposing and majestic, slowly fracture and fall bit by bit into the sea.
Lindsay is Hollywood's hottest Humpty Dumpty. Except skinny. And drunk. Here's hoping that a few months in the clink will put Humpty back together again. I'll be sure to do my part and send her brownies and a copy of A Long Walk to Freedom...
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Afternoon Delight
Sunday, April 11, 2010
The Suckiest Bunch of Sucks That Ever Sucked: A New Moon Recap
Monday, March 1, 2010
Canada Wins Men's Hockey, Remains Polite
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
The Unfriendly Skies
If it were an equally viable option for me to arrive at a destination by crawling through broken glass and used baby diapers, I would opt for that instead of ever setting foot on an airplane. My feelings toward flying have transcended discomfort, and landed squarely around an emotion I typically reserve for bananas and genocide: it's an exquisite hatred.
Not that it's an altogether pleasant experience for anyone, having to wait in line, shoeless, like some sort of sock-wearing imbecile. Inevitably finding yourself standing behind someone who has apparently time traveled to the present, and has no idea about the TSA's expectations (albeit ridiculous) of today's modern passenger. I constantly consider yelling, "Terrorist!! Look at all those liquids and gels! They're not even in the quart-sized bag! She's probably gonna turn her kids into crotch bombs! Why are you even taking a plane if you're a time traveler?!" just to get them out of my way.
Out of all of the things that make flying an excruciating ordeal, it's really just about two things for me. First, I have a relatively significant fear of heights. It's not unusual, and actually, when you think about it, might even be pragmatic. Somewhere in that primordial, good old-fashioned caveman part of our brains, a mechanism evolved telling the conscious mind it's scary to be up high, inhibiting us from chasing our two-to-four-legged dinner off a cliff, ensuring we stay alive long enough to have baby cavemen and propagate the species. It's science, and you're welcome.
Secondly, I have an extreme aversion to confined spaces. Innately, right down to the core of my being, I grapple with this. Possibly another residual caveman brain function, though it's perhaps not as logically sound because of, like, caves and all.
To be specific, it's the type of confined space in which I find myself hurtling through space at 600 miles per hour, next to complete strangers who, in all likelihood, would step on my face rather than assist me in an emergency. I find this concept disheartening on a good day, and altogether calamitous on a bad one.
Being on an airplane is the only scenario in my life in which I worry about being adequately prepared for dealing with the worst case scenario. I might feel more comfortable if the little pre-flight safety blurb included: In the event of emergency, the flight attendants will move through the cabin passing out complimentary shots of Johnny Walker and parachutes. All I want is a fighting chance. I don't think it's too much to ask.
Once, drunk with the "knowledge is power" illusion, I figured the more I knew about flying and how planes operate, the more comfortable I'd be. So, I did a little reading on lift and Bernoulli and Newton and the viscosity of air. I realized with shocking abruptness that my prior Sesame Street understanding of what was going on outside my upright seat back and locked tray table was plenty of information. Plane goes fast, something happens, plane goes up....plane goes slow, something else happens, plane goes down.
The more I knew, the more I could worry about. Well, if the power needed to lift the airplane is proportional to the weight times the vertical velocity of the air...omfg, what if it's not?! What happens?! Not a particularly productive exercise for me.
But what's life without a little incapacitating fear once in a while? The second we stop feeling it is the second we stop evolving, at least according to my earlier, very scientific theory.
So, for now, I'll continue to fly, monitor my elevated pulse while sweating profusely and frantically asking the person next to me, "Is that normal?!". Eventually, as always, I'll arrive at my destination unscathed.
However, you can believe wholeheartedly that I'll be the first person in line for the grand opening of the Baby Diapers and Broken Glass Transportation Company. And I'll probably even be able to keep my shoes on.