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Charlie Hatton
Brookline, MA



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HomeAboutArchiveBestShopEmail Howdy, friendly reading person!
I'm on a bit of a hiatus right now, but only to work on other projects -- one incredibly exciting example being the newly-released kids' science book series Things That Make You Go Yuck!
If you're a science and/or silliness fan, give it a gander! See you soon!

The Guide That Keeps On Gifting

My wife and I had our wedding anniversary this weekend. I won’t give away exactly how long we’ve been married — let’s just say that if our wedding cake were a baby, it would have a learner’s permit, a smart mouth and a stupid haircut by now.

(Also, we probably wouldn’t have eaten it. That sort of thing is frowned upon, from what I understand.

At least, it was before the Duggars. I’m guessing people are more fifty-fifty about the idea now. Maybe that’s just me.)

For the first few years of marriage, we stuck closely to those handy gift-giving guides that tell newlyweds what their spouse wants that year, so there’s no need to actually speak to each other about it. This strict adherence was my idea, because I’m a bit of a romantic, somewhat of a puzzle solver, and a gigantic idiot.

See, it sounds good to have a gifting guide. You think that takes the pressure off. Nobody has to ask what the other wants, or worry about getting too much or too little — it’s all taken care of for you, with an idea ready for every year. Just peachy.

Until you actually look at the list, and see what a moron you’ve been for trusting other people for advice.

Because other people give ‘paper’ or ‘clocks’ for first anniversary presents, apparently. Now, I’m no expert on the institution of marriage; I’ve only walked the ‘pookie bear plank’ once, after all. But I can think of a lot of ways to express love and affection and gratitude for a first full year of marital togetherness. A lot. Three or four, at least. And at least one that involves keeping your pants on. Mostly.

But none of those ways involves at any time saying the words:

Here, honey, I brung you a Casio and two reams of Hammermill watermark bond. Happah Anniversarah!

I salvaged that one by gifting her tickets to a show she wanted to see. Or hoped she wanted to see. We had “The List”, so we didn’t actually talk about it. But the tickets were paper, so my job was done. And I assumed the gifts — like all marriages, of course — got easier and easier over the years.

Year Two was “cotton” or “china”. In other words, one thing that probably came in sizes, which I couldn’t afford to get wrong, and another thing that I couldn’t afford, period. Two years into our marriage, she was a grad student and I was working for a startup, getting paid every fourteen weeks or so. Mostly in pizza. So while I don’t remember exactly what I bought her, it was definitely something cotton.

(Though perhaps something cotton made in China. I really was a stickler for the rules back then. And what did it matter if it was shoddy or itched? I wasn’t wearing the whatever-it-was.)

It went on like this for a few years. Around mid-April I’d look up the gift guide and see the godforsaken suggestion there.

(Seriously, year seven: “wool or copper” or “desk sets”? We’re celebrating an anniversary here, for crissakes, not a high school graduation sponsored by effing SkyMall. I can see why most people divorce, rather than dealing with your train wreck bullshit. Idiot.)

Then I’d agonize for weeks over this completely foreign set of criteria and my own personal anniversary agenda — “is wood or silverware more likely to get us naked?” — and eventually get so nervewracked that I wouldn’t even enjoy the day. Too much list, too little living seemed to be my problem — and while my wife played along with the to-the-letter gifting, I’m pretty sure she never gave half a fire-glazed rat’s ass whether or not she received “pottery” after nine years of putting up with me.

Which is good, because by then I think I’d seen the light and given up. The pressure of following someone else’s list — someone who doesn’t know that we have all the “lace” and “textiles or furs” we need already, thanks — eventually got to be too much, and we both stopped paying attention altogether.

(By the way, year thirteen, what the hell is that list, anyway — “lace” or “textiles or furs”?

Were we supposed to develop some kinky sort of cross-dressing beaver pelt trader cosplay fetish in the first dozen years of marriage, or something? Because we definitely missed that memo.

I’ll be honest. I spaced out a little between “to have and to hold” and “you may now kiss the bride”, but I’m pretty sure the vows didn’t include anything about fishnet stockings and a muskrat thong. I would have caught that, I’m pretty sure.)

These days, things are a lot easier on the anniversary front. For one thing, the guides have pretty well given up, too. The “Traditional” gift-giving suggestions kick over to ever five years after number fifteen — I’m not sure what you’re supposed to do on “off” years like, say, twenty-three. Conveniently “forget” that it’s happening? Hiss at each other over a glass of champagne? Repeat the year twenty suggestion until further notice?

(And christ, that’s china again. How many gilded gravy boats can one happy freaking couple need, anyway?)

The “Modern” guide isn’t much better; you can tell they’re just going through the motions. Year sixteen is “silver hollowware”. Twenty-eight is “orchids”. Twenty-four is “musical instruments” — “yo, honey, here’s a French horn — kiss kiss, don’t blow it all in one place, a’ight?

Seriously, I could do better than that, and I’ve proven I’m a moron. Here:

Year Sixteen: Vodka tonics

Year Twenty-four: Leaving the toilet seat in the preferred position

Year Twenty-eight: Boggle

(Hey, I never said I’d do great; I just said better. Would you rather have a xylophone or a commode lid that’s always where you want it?

I rest my case.)

So we’ve given up on “The List”. Now we exchange cards, have a nice dinner out, carve another notch in our marital calendar, and call it another year celebrated. Maybe it’s a little more low-key that in the past — but it’s also lower-stress, and we don’t have a pile of freaking anniversary pottery cluttering up the basement.

Personally, I don’t think of it as less romantic. I just think we’re playing with confidence now. We’re like a rookie getting his first taste of the major leagues. It’s fine to squeal and dance around after your first home run. But if you’re still whooping after fifteen or twenty, the veterans will take you aside and tell you:

Hey, kid, come on — act like you’ve been there before.

And we’ve been there. Many, many times, we’ve been there — all the way up to “silver hollowware”. Whatever in the hell that is. I’ve got to say, I don’t miss the list. Being married usually isn’t so tough; following that damned list is hard.

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Eek!Cards #24: First of All, These Are Opium Poppies

someecards.com - Weed? What makes you think I know where to score weed?

(The ‘Eek!Cards’ explan.)


Quick note for the uber-geeky among you: If you were hoping to be one of the first to hear Jonathan Coulton’s new John Scalzi novel tie-in song Redshirt live during his summer tour, but you weren’t at his opening show in Boston last night, then… uh, sorry:

Jonathan Coulton - Redshirt

But hey — you can still hear it second. That’s a thing, right? Go catch JoCo. It’s good stuff.

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Eek!Cards #22: If the Gown’s a-Rockin’, Don’t Come a-Mockin’

someecards.com - Remember, the hospital staff is there to help you. And to laugh at your wang while you're under anesthesia.

(The ‘Eek!Cards’ explan.)


I noticed a while back this card had a typo. But I left it, because it seems appropriate to run a misspelled word on the day that the National Spelling Bee is taking place.

So take inspiration from my shame, all you finger-sniffing homeschoolees. Get out there are give ’em Heil!

No, wait. Give ’em Holl.

Um… no. Give ’em Helf? Give ’em Hoil? Gah. I got it! Get out there and give ’em Hall.

That’s right. Anthony Michael Hall. Give ’em Hall, kids. He’s one of you.

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Out to Lunch, In a Crunch

I have no delusions of being important enough to attract the universe’s attention.

(Frankly, I don’t really believe anyone else rates that high, either. The universe has an awful lot on its plate, what with the stellar fusion reactions and holding up gravity and supporting life every once in a while. I seriously doubt it has time to pause the cosmic dance just to tap you on the shoulder and tell you to change your hairstyle, or to quit your job, or that you should totally follow Vicky to the West Coast because it’ll, you know, be like a journey of self-discovery and stuff.

Maybe I’m wrong. Maybe the universe wears ironic berets and reeks of patchouli. But I don’t see it.)

However. If the all-encircling Cosmos ever has stopped in its tracks to send me a message, then it was sent to me today. And that message, loud and clear, was:

Yo, home slice. You do NOT need to eat lunch today.

I choose to believe the universe was not saying that. Mostly because I very much felt like I needed lunch today, and as a general rule I don’t like to disagree with the universe. It’s pretty hard to come out on top of a fight with the universe. I don’t care how many Wikipedia articles you read.

“It’s pretty hard to come out on top of a fight with the universe. I don’t care how many Wikipedia articles you read.”

Nevertheless, it almost seemed as if something — maybe the Universe, maybe fate, maybe the Tea Party coalition? — some mysterious and unseen force was trying to prevent my midday meal. To what end? I don’t know. I could stand to lose a pound or six, sure. But does the universe care about that? When it’s constantly busy squeezing out quarks and barfing supernovae all over spacetime? No. No, I think it does not.

And yet. Here’s the thing.

I’ve fallen into a lunch meta-routine at my new job. I say “meta-” because at my old job, I had a ROUTINE. Bold letters, big and loud, capital ‘R’, capital ‘OUTINE’. My lunch — every day, rain or shine, come hell or high salsa — was a burrito. From the burrito guy, and it was not an easy relationship to end.

(My last day at work, I went by the stand and he’d thrown all my jalapenos out on the curb in a huff. Or a juff; I couldn’t quite understand what he said. Either way, it was not a pretty sight.)

I vowed not to fall into the same sort of lunchtime codependency again. And so, I now enjoy variety in my midday repasts. I no longer make the mistake of seeing just one lunch provider for my nooner noshing needs.

Instead, I see three.

Thus the ‘meta-‘ in ‘meta-routine’. In a neighborhood with fourteen restaurants, four pizza joints, a Greek bar, multiple middle Eastern cuisineries and a full-fledged food court, I go to one of the same three restaurants every damned day: the sandwich place, the takeout Chinese stand in the mall, and naturally, the burrito joint down the block.

(What can I tell you? You can take the guacamole out of the guy, but you can’t… well, something. You know what I’m saying, hombre.)

The goal was to dilute the lunching experience enough to prevent those uncomfortable-to-break bonds from forming in the first place — while still preventing the drooling mental shutdown that nineteen viable lunch choices would cause for me every day around eleven forty-five.

So far, it’s working. All my options are in one direction from the office. So at lunchtime, I don’t go right. I don’t go straight. And I sure as hell don’t consider going out any door but the front. Then I hang a left, walk a couple of blocks, and presto, I’m practically at one counter or another, ordering grub. No worry, no inertia, and the only drooling is if the burrito shack happens to have chorizo that day.

More importantly, there’s been no bonding with the servers. None of the burrito shop guys make eye contact. And the Chinese food people seem to think I look like everybody else. The sandwich place is run by this Middle Eastern couple who seem awfully sympathetic and nice — and I think she gave me a free soda one day. So I worry about them. They may need a ‘time out’. I’ll keep you posted.

In the meantime, there was lunch today. I had my usual three shots at it, which is two more than I’ve ever required in the same day. And I skipped breakfast, so I was more than ready for food by eleven thirty. Since the burrito joint is closest and the noon rush hadn’t yet hit, I decided to pay them a visit. Meaning, I practically ran across the street to their door.

When I entered, I could sense something was wrong. As usual, there were bodies pressed together near the register, chatting and spitting and sweating at one another. Only this time, there was no one on the other side. Nobody manning the meat grilling station. No one heating tortillas. The tamale steamers were scandalously unattended.

Turns out the place had lost power just a few moments before. Lost power, they said — in this day and age! So they were just hanging around, waiting out the brownout or tripped breaker or whatever was the problem. What they weren’t doing was serving any burritos.

(They could’ve made the food work. But the cash register is electronic. No juice, no dinero. So they came around the counter to see how the other half lives.

They still called me gringo. So it wasn’t very much different. Just a little darker.)

Fine, I thought. I’ll schlep the two extra blocks ahead for a sandwich instead. I rerouted my taste buds from pollo to chicken, and marched down to door number two.

Which was also dark. Not only was there a mysterious outage, but it was affecting a pair of food joints two blocks apart. My food joints, and I was starving. I got the hell out of there before the Eastern European couple pulled me in for a heart-to-heart, and made a beeline for the food court.

Surely, said I, the mall isn’t affected by this nonsense. They’ve got generators and adapters and such — you could never kick off all the power in that place. This is America, dammit. ‘The mall must go on.’

And sure enough, I entered the mall to find it as well-lit, well-cooled and well-manicured-mannequined as ever. I rounded the corner to the food court with just the slightest trepidation, but the stalls and booths were all bright and serving away. I hustled, stomach grumbling, to the Chinese food joint and started the usual dance.

Whatchu want?” the lady charmingly opened, pointing at various bits of mystery meat and tofu-like substance. I started her off the way I always do:

I’ll have the steamed rice, please.

I figure that’s the sporting way. I’m about to shovel three pounds of “chicken” and “broccoli” and “soy” sauce into my gob. The least I can do is give my body a fighting chance with the filler.

Usually, the lady slaps a couple of spoonfuls into my new best styrofoam friend, and we take turns pointing at dishes until I’ve got something edible. But not this time.

No white rice now. You want brown?

The thing is, I didn’t want “brown” — that is to say, fried — rice. Not even a little. I have a policy that at least one thing on the plate shouldn’t be deep fried, battered or slathered in gravy. And if it’s the thing at the bottom, all the better.

(Easier to push aside and leave that way.

Hey, I said I had policies. I never said I liked them.)

So I tried to get creative, while telling my stomach it could wait a few minutes longer before digesting any tasty-looking muscle walls it saw lying around.

Nah, I can wait. How long will the white rice take?

She wasn’t ready for that. I guess most customers hold their insolent tongues when told what is and isn’t available. Still, the sassy American devil is always right, as the saying goes, so she did her best to gauge the relative readiness of the white rice.

First, she lifted the lid of the rice cooker nearby. Unsatisfied, she walked the length of the counters, ducked into the back chittering at someone, and soon emerged with a firm look on her face.

“No. No white rice. Is broken.”

I thought about asking more follow-up questions. Like, how is the cooker out here beside you, but the guy who says its broken is in the back? And, how do you start a lunch rush without rice? But mostly, how does one fritzed-out cooker knock all the steamed rice out of a Chinese food joint? My understanding is that your people have been doing this for quite some time — probably before the first Ronco Automated Rice Fluffer came onto the market. Is there no “Sichuan old-school” way you can whip up a staple of a billion and a half people worldwide?

Put another way: Did the universe get to you, dammit?!

So I left. And I did what any starving, wary, universe-fearing guy with three strikes against his lunch options would do. I went to the fancy Au Bon Pain across the food court — a place where the universe would never think to look for me — and I bought a big-ass salad.

It went without a hitch. Because the universe didn’t even know who I was any more, man.

And I took that salad back to the safety of my desk and I ate the shit out of that thing.I didn’t care if it was rabbit food — or rabbit poop, at that point. It was lunch, and I was famished. Circuit breakers and rice fluffers and universe be damned — sometimes, a man’s gotta eat.

So was the universe talking to me today, telling me to maybe skip a lunch and see what happens? Maybe. I guess if the universe does talk to people occasionally, then the key is knowing when — and how — to listen.

Which is not something I’m good at, clearly. I’ve always listened to burrito shack guys instead. And they never tell you to skip lunch. Even the gringos.

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