Tonight, the missus and I went to see The Nutcracker at the Opera House in downtown Boston. My wife bought the tickets several weeks ago, and was really looking forward to attending.
“Thank the North Pole there’s no interepretive dance based on the Rudolph story, or we’d probably be watching three hours of reindeer pirouettes every December, too.”
I know, because she reminded me several times not to forget about it. The regular everyday stuff, she might remind me once about. Taking out the trash, walking the dog, putting on pants before leaving the house, that sort of thing. For the really important stuff — paying the taxes, buying her a birthday present, getting that nasty rash looked at by a doctor — I might get two reminders, or even three.
For The Nutcracker, I got six. My lady digs the Christmas ballet, yo. Thank the North Pole there’s no interepretive dance based on the Rudolph story, or we’d probably be watching three hours of reindeer pirouettes every December, too. It’s enough to make me go out and get red-nosed myself.
At any rate, this year our seasonal theater was limited to The Nutcracker, and I had plenty of warning that it was coming. As a public service to you other husbands out there who are probably in the same sleigh, here are a few pitfalls to avoid when your sweetie reminds you of your Christmas obligations:
Her: Hey, we should see the Nutcracker this year. It’s playing downtown.
You: Yeah? Well, there’s a guy in the subway stop at Boston Common who plays a mean set of spoons. But I’m not dragging you all the way down there to see it.
Her: Okay, I’m buying tickets to the Nutcracker. It’s on in early December. You’re in, right?
You: Oh, sure. Why, I was just saying the other day how I haven’t seen my quota of plum-smuggling tiptoers for the year. Thank heavens for holiday ballet!
Her: Great news, honey! I finally scored tickets to the Nutcracker!
You: Goody! If I go with you to that, you’ll go with me to the Foxy Lady to watch the Christmas spectacular, right? They wrestle in frankincense, then they see who can hang the largest tree ornaments from their nipple rings. It’s ever so festive!
Her: Don’t forget — we’re going to see the Nutcracker next week.
You: ‘Nutcracker’? I thought we weren’t seeing your mother until Christmas Eve?
Her: All right, the Nutcracker is on Friday. Isn’t it exciting?
You: I dunno. I saw the ballet version once, and it wasn’t so great.
Her: Um, the Nutcracker is always a ballet.
You: Including this one?
Her: Yep.
You: Poopstain.
Her: We’re going to the Nutcracker tomorrow. Don’t be late!
You: Late, right. I wouldn’t want to miss any of the plot that everyone on the planet already knows. How would I know who the nutcracker is? Or why everybody’s dancing around in their underwear? Or that the whole thing is some prissy girl’s feverish dream, and the house wasn’t struck by a tornado at all?
Her: You have no idea what you’re saying, do you?
You: No. Can I stay home, then?
Her: Not a chance. Pick me up at seven. And wear a tie.
You: Double poopstain.
All of these conversations are purely theoretical, of course. Purely. Just as pure as the driven snow. In the reindeer paddock. After they’ve been eating fruitcake and Christmas turkey all week. And you know about Donner’s ‘intestinal issues’.
At any rate, recognizing — and avoiding; I can’t stress this enough — the danger in these exchanges beforehand may prevent you from landing in holiday hot water. This is a time for frosty snowmen and seasonal cheer, not chilly glares and marital strife. Nobody wants to spend the ‘twelve days of Christmas’ sleeping on the couch.
Trust me.
Permalink | No CommentsIt’s been a while since I offered a set of personal wild-eyed opinions about an ordinary, everyday object.
Oh, I’ve done it in the past. I’m not denying that. It’s just that it’s been a while. And I think it’s time. So without further ado, here’s…
How I Feel About… Marshmallows
Marshmallows are BAD because Peeps are, apparently, made primarily from marshmallows. Peeps don’t taste like marshmallows. Peeps taste like squishy rancid ass. But the marshmallows are in there, so they get blamed, too. It’s the ‘ass by association’ rule.
Marshmallows are GOOD because people often add marshmallows to hot chocolate. And without marshmallows, hot chocolate would be nothing but a dark bland burnt sludge.
Marshmallows are BAD because people often add marshmallows to sweet potatoes. And with marshmallows, sweet potatoes are nothing but a dark bland burnt sludge.
“Marshmallows are BAD because marshmallow spread is in a fluffernutter sandwich. And fluffernutter sandwiches killed Elvis.”
Marshmallows are GOOD because if you have a steady hand, you can roast a marshmallow to a delicious subtle brown, using only your favorite campfire and a handy, highly unsanitary forest twig.
Marshmallows are BAD because if don’t have a steady hand, like I don’t, then you’ll spend much of your campfire time choking down the dry chalky embers of unlucky innocent marshmallows. And you’ll catch a lot of twigs on fire.
Marshmallows are GOOD because if you have unsteady hands, you can at least pretend the marshmallows you’re catching on fire are the camp counselors who brought you out to the godforsaken woods with only a bag of stupid marshmallows in the first place. Haven’t these bastards ever heard of Domino’s?
Marshmallows are BAD because the Stay Puft Marshmallow Man nearly destroyed Manhattan a few years ago. I’m not the biggest fan of the Big Apple, I don’t think it deserves to be conquered by a giant wannabe s’more. Cleveland, maybe. New York, not so much.
Marshmallows are GOOD because at least the evil demigod who morphed into the Stay Puft Man managed to turn Rick Moranis into a big mute dog first. That’s gotta score the big tubby white guy some points.
Marshmallows are BAD because Moranis didn’t stay a dog. I guess marshmallow mojo isn’t quite as strong as we’d hoped. Maybe next time they’ll send a badass like Poppin’ Fresh, and the job will get done right.
Marshmallows are BAD because marshmallow spread is in a fluffernutter sandwich. And fluffernutter sandwiches killed Elvis. Well, that and the booze and the drugs and those sixty extra pounds. But my money’s on the fluffernutters. Damned rock and roll-hating marshmallows.
So marshmallows are BAD. Just ask Elvis, or New Yorkers, or any Cub Scout with the detox shakes. They’ll tell you. It’s not just me, people.
Permalink | 1 CommentLast night, I was at my local pool hall as usual, playing in our Tuesday night 8-ball league. These nights often have a way of continuing well into the late hours, and sometimes bleeding into the wee hours of Wednesday morning. Where ‘bleeding’ is usually — usually, mind you — a figure of speech.
This week, I was determined to get out of the billiard barn at a reasonable hour. I’d go in, play a quick match, grab some food, maybe a couple of beers, and get the hell out. At seven pm, I set my jaw, steeled my resolve, and barged into the pool hall on a mission. The goal:
Win my pool match.
Eat greasy bar food.
Barge back out by ten.
For the first half hour, everything went according to plan. I found our table, met my opponent, and started the match. Meanwhile, the teammates and I had a confab with the waitress and decided on a plate of chili nachos and the loaded potato skins.
Greasy bar food: check.
It was around a quarter till eight when the first wrench was thrown into my plan’s fragile gears. I had just come back to the nacho table for another chilied-up chip when one of my teammates gathered there said, to no one in particular:
‘Hey, we should all go to Chinatown for late food after pool.‘
That’s what he said. Just like that. With a potato skin in one hand, nacho cheese on his chin, and a perfectly straight face, he suggested that we all make plans to get Chinese food later. That kind of idea comes from only two kinds of people:
Now, my cheesy-chinned friend is Italian, so the ‘food obsession’ angle was certainly plausible. But he wasn’t waxing poetic about his grandma’s canolis; he was suggesting we schlep all the way down to Chinatown on a late-night lo mein run. And that’s not an ‘out the door by ten’ sort of scenario. You can bet your mother’s marinara on that.
“With a potato skin in one hand, nacho cheese on his chin, and a perfectly straight face, he suggested that we all make plans to get Chinese food later.”
Thus began my journey through the five stages of grief, as my precious plan of an early night and eight hours of sweet sugary slumber fell into mortal peril. To my credit, I managed to deflect the first mention of Chinatown entirely, figuring it was a whim that would fade as the evening wore on. I simply grabbed a handful of ‘chos, shook my head at this pupu pipe dream, and went back to my game. Chinatown? Who is this guy? Pfffft.
At ten after eight, I went back to order a beer — and walked straight into Denial:
Chinatown Dude: Really guys, we should hit Chinatown later. Keep it in mind.
Me: Man, come on. There’s no way we’re driving to Chinatown. We just ate, it’s way the hell downtown, and besides, I’m getting out of here early tonight. So, maybe some other time. And wipe your chin, there, cheese boy.
I’ll be honest — I was quite proud of myself after that exchange. I’ve instigated more than my share of after-hours odysseys, but this time I’d brought my guns and I was sticking to them. I was reasonable but firm, tough but fair. I provided evidence to support my position, and no one else in the group seemed to be supporting his crackpot Chinatown notion. Plus, I called him ‘cheese boy’. I considered the matter closed.
At twenty after nine, I wrapped up my match — with a win, check — and ordered a Guinness to celebrate. There was plenty of time before ten o’clock; one beer and I’d be out of there. Just as I was finishing the pint, I found myself in the next stage, Anger:
Chinatown Dude: Hey, nice game! I’ll buy your first egg roll when we get to Chinatown tonight.
Me: Would you quit it with the Chinatown crap? Nobody’s going to Chinatown tonight! I’m not going, they’re not going, you’re not going. Nobody wants to go! Stop talking about Chinatown already! You’re killing me, dude. Jesus. Now I need another beer, to settle myself down.
Ten o’clock. Go time. I still had half a beer left, and Chinatown dude was recruiting help. He’d finally gotten one girl on our team to say:
‘Eh, whatever. If people go to Chinatown, I guess I’d tag along.‘
Flushed with triumph, he tried his luck with me again and I found myself ass-deep in Bargaining:
Chinatown Dude: So. Nina says she’ll go to Chinatown if we’re going.
Me: Oh, dude. Please. No.
Chinatown Dude: Come on, it’ll be great.
Me: Look, next week. How about we go next week?
Chinatown Dude: I’m out of town next week.
Me: The week after?
Chinatown Dude: Off night.
Me: After?
Chinatown Dude: Christmas break.
Me: Look, here’s… six, eleven, fourteen dollars. And fifty cents. Fourteen fifty, if we don’t go to Chinatown.
Chinatown Dude: Sorry.
Me: I’ll pay for the nachos.
Chinatown Dude: No.
Me: Take my watch?
Chinatown Dude: Nah.
Me: Shit. *sigh* Waitress? I’ll have another, please.
Chinatown Dude: That’s my boy.
Eleven thirty. The last matches have ended, and some of the teams are starting to leave the building. I’m left at our pool table with Chinatown Dude and Girl Who Doesn’t Particularly Want to Go, Either. They’re playing a game for practice. I’m sitting against the wall with a beer, half-watching SportsCenter and stuck firmly in Depression.
Chinatown Dude: Man, that Chinatown food is gonna taste good.
Me: Get away from me.
Chinatown Dude: Mmmm, just think of those scrumptious egg rolls.
Me: Egg rolls suck. You suck. Go away.
Chinatown Dude: Oooh, I bet they’ll have crispy pepper squid, too. Oh, mama.
Me: Poop on your squid. Feh.
As the clock neared one am, the pool hall started shutting down the lights over the tables. We gathered the balls, paid our tab, and I finally moved, kicking and screaming, into Acceptance.
Chinatown Dude: All right! Chinatown, here we come! You guys ready?
Me: Fine. Let’s frigging go.
Girl Who Doesn’t Particularly Want to Go, Either: Enh, sure. Whatever.
For the record, the crispy squid was delicious. And I resisted the urge to dump hot and sour soup all over Chinatown Dude’s head. Barely.
I got home at a quarter after three. Only five hours after I’d planned. So much for my sticky guns. Next time, I’m faking a heart attack. The ambulance ride will cost me, but I bet the paramedics can get me home by midnight. They hardly ever stop for spring rolls on the way to the hospital.
Permalink | 1 CommentI own a pit bull. At least, she looks like a pit bull. My wife and I adopted her from the pound, so there’s no way to say for certain. The pooch is smallish — forty pounds or so — but she’s got the square head, the powerful jaws, and the stocky stance of a pit.
She’s also a big goofy dork.
She loves people, gets along with (most) other dogs, and is far more enthusiastic and good-natured than the vast majority of dogs I’ve encountered. Or people, for that matter. Including me. If I wagged my tail as much as my mutt does, I’d have three slipped discs and need an asscheek transplant by now. I don’t have that kind of energy.
I like to say that my dog wouldn’t hurt a fly — unless the fly happened to be made out of Snausages, or some other tasty meat-like material. Given the events that transpired last night, it seems I need to append ‘or rawhide chew toys’ to the end of that line.
Chew Flips
The specimens to the right are known as ‘chew flips’. They’re made from rawhide, which as I understand it is made from layers of skin stripped from some unfortunate animal or other. Which animal? I try not to think too hard about that. Pigs? Horses? James Gandolfini? I don’t really need the details.
The important bit to know is that somebody peels these bits off some beastie, cleans them, shaves them, sterilizes them to some minimal degree of safety, and — in most cases — bastes them in a concoction meant to taste like peanut butter. Or beef juices. Or chicken gravy. Or cat innards. Different bastes for different tastes, I suppose.
From what I’ve seen in my mutt, this last step is wholly unnecessary. She goes nuts for these chew flips, and subtleties in the various flavors be damned. You could dip one in a fresh puddle of yak whiz, simmer it in sulfur sauce, bury it in a compost pile, and she’d still gnaw off her own paw to get at the thing. Whatever animal they make these ‘chew flips’ from must be smuggling dognip under its skin. Powerful stuff.
We give the dog one or two of these treats a day — partly because we love her, and partly because she often deserves a tasty reward. But mostly because we’re afraid if we hold out, she’ll bite off our faces while we’re sleeping. She is a pit bull, after all. Bitch can’t be looking soft in front of the rest of the pack, now.
Many mornings, I’ll feed the mutt a chew flip while I’m getting ready for work. I figure it’s a nice way to start the pooch’s day — plus, it keeps her from staring at my shameful nakedness when I get out of the shower. And it’s a great way to say ‘Thank you for not eating my face off during the night!‘
(Some people would just send a card. I prefer the personal touch. Call me old-fashioned.)
Yesterday morning, that’s exactly what went down. Only in this case, the chew flip was rather large, and I was rushing out the door to make a meeting at the office. So when I left, the chew flip was still in play, and only half-eaten. This happens sometimes; I didn’t give it a second thought.
Until I got home.
“She goes nuts for these chew flips, and subtleties in the various flavors be damned. You could dip one in a fresh puddle of yak whiz, simmer it in sulfur sauce, bury it in a compost pile, and she’d still gnaw off her own paw to get at the thing.”
I arrived back to the cozy confines of my house after a long day of work to find bits of foam strewn in the entryway. I froze, trying to remember whether I’d remembered to hide the kitchen trash can before I left. The dog will sometimes smell some tasty decomposing bit of food or other in the can and carry it through the house in triumph. It’s not enough to simply eat what you find rotting in the garbage; apparently, you have to do a few victory laps through the living room first. I love my dog, but she’s not exactly the perkiest pair of nipples in the porno, if you get my drift.
At any rate, I was sure I’d put the trash away that morning. Also, I couldn’t remember discarding any foam or foam-containing products recently, so I ventured further into the house, afraid at what might be waiting. In the foyer, I found the dog. From her darting eyes and nervous, apologetic wag, I knew she was guilty of something. My suspicions were confirmed when, upon seeing me, she jetted up the stairs and made herself scarce. That’s a bad sign. A very bad sign. She wreaks all sorts of havoc with seemingly no conscience whatsoever. If she knows she’s been bad already? Good lord. Get me a hazmat suit and a sturdy shovel — this isn’t going to be pretty.
And it wasn’t.
In the living room, I saw the couch. Or rather, the remains of the couch. Strips of green fabric were littered across the room, and chunks of foam ripped from the guts of the beast were everywhere. The frame of the couch, usually backed against a wall, was pushed at a sixty-degree angle into the center of the room, where it had gotten tangled with the carpet and wedged tight. When I finally extricated the crippled legs of the sofa from the rug and lifted it to assess the damage, I saw it. Sitting under the center of the couch, lonely and pristine, was the flat, pale form of the half-eaten rawhide chew flip from that morning.
The dog had lost it under the furniture, and gone positively poochy postal trying to get it out. Which she couldn’t, once she’d jammed the couch against the rug and the wall. Evidently, that’s when she decided to dig her way through the couch to get at the treat. And with a couple more hours of work, she just might have made it. You couldn’t drive a truck through the hole she made in that couch, but you could pedal a tricycle into it for certain. That thing was shredded.
So, I learned three lessons last night. First, I learned the dog does have some kind of rudimentary conscience. If she’s really screwed up, she can wrap that pea brain of hers around the consequences before the shit hits the fan, and get the hell out of Dodge early. In this case, I was so stunned by the spectacle, I didn’t really even punish her. I didn’t lay a finger on her, I didn’t yell at her — hell, would you? The bitch just demolished a whole couch made of wood and metal and tear-resistant fabric. What chance does my tender flabby skin have against those claws and teeth? None, that’s what. I’m not about to piss her off.
(On the other hand, I also didn’t let her get at the chew flip she wanted, either. Considering she just went through eight hours of hell trying desperately to reach her treat, which she then saw me retrieve and discard, I’d say that’s pretty punishing right there. That’s like driving across three states to your favorite ice cream shop, only to find out it closed ten minutes before you arrived. Harsh.)
The second thing I learned is that the dog really loves those chew flips. I knew she liked them — but I had no idea she liked them liked them. I mean, I like beer and sports and sex. Especially together, all at the same time. I’d like that a lot.
But am I willing to eat through a couch to get at it? Meh. That’s an awful lot of trouble. I’d probably watch some TV or something instead.
Finally, of course, I learned that we need a new fricking couch. Or a new dog, and quite possibly both. Either way, I’m never leaving a live, undetonated chew flip alone with that mutt in the house again. It’s obviously a recipe for disaster, disarray, and divan deconstruction. And now I’ll take extra care to make sure one of those damned things never ends up under me. The last thing I need is to have my cushions ripped apart and my foam spilled all over the floor. Owie.
Permalink | 3 CommentsSo, I’m not dead.
I’m not even maimed, or sickly, or lying comatose in a muddy ditch somewhere.
Which is a relief, since that’s how many of my weekends turn out. Especially during football season.
“If I developed a full-blown migraine, I’d probably bury my head in a Zip-loc bag and toss it in the freezer to kill the pain.”
What I did have — and what scrambled up my posting schedule — was a week-long headache. I’ve never had a week-long headache before. I can’t remember ever having a day-long headache before. Nor, frankly, can I recall my last non-hangover-related headache. So a noggin throbbing for seven straight days isn’t something I was quite prepared for.
Also, when it comes to headaches, I’m a whimpering little boo-hoo Nancy boy. I’m not proud of that. But I’m whimpering little boo-hoo Nancy man enough to admit it.
The truth is, headaches bring me to a quivering halt. There’s something about those stabby jabs in the back of the head, the pounding surges in the temples, and the blinding flashes behind the eyes. I’m not even talking about ‘real’ headaches, either. I’ve never had a ‘real‘ headache. If I developed a full-blown migraine, I’d probably bury my head in a Zip-loc bag and toss it in the freezer to kill the pain.
Meanwhile, my aching odyssey began on Sunday evening. A mere twinge at first, I had no idea what was in store. When I woke up on Monday, it was a little worse, and clung to my brain all day like a remora on a great white underbelly.
On Tuesday, I started fighting back. Advil. Aleve. Bayer asprin. I raided the medicine cabinet with extreme prejudice — but with little effect. By Thursday, the headache was still going strong, and I was down to Ex-Lax, NyQuil, and half a bottle of rubbing alcohol. I decided not to go down that road — who needs another prom night? — and resigned myself to the possibility that this headache just might last forever.
At that point, I began guessing what might have caused my predicament. A concussion? Earwig? Brain tumor? Being overzealous with a Q-Tip? None of these seemed likely from what I could remember — but all that thinking made my head hurt worse, so I couldn’t rule anything out. Maybe I’d finally popped that gasket my mother always warned me about.
(But why would I believe her about that? I didn’t go blind, or grow hair on my palms. Why should the ‘gasket’ thing turn out to be true?)
Anyway, long story marginally shorter, the head hurting lasted a few more days — and made the weekend fairly miserable — but finally eased up last night, and I’m more or less back to normal now. Just as persnickety — and verbose, apparently — as ever.
So that’s the story. Apologies to any of you who’ve checked in for updates recently, and found none forthcoming. Hopefully — brain freezes, hangovers, and debilitating aneurysms notwithstanding — things around here will be back on track for a while.
Just in time for Christmas vacation. Bleh. Just thinking about it gives me a headache.
Oh, dammit.
Permalink | 4 Comments