I’m a volleyball player.
At least, I play volleyball, in a couple of local leagues. I’m not actually good or anything. I can claim, ‘I’m a volleyball player‘ in much the same way I can say, ‘I’m a writer‘: I spend several hours a week doing it, but nobody’s ever going to pay me for it. Or, indeed, encourage me in any way whatsoever. Not if they know what’s good for them.
I might as well say, ‘I’m a driver‘, or ‘I’m a sleeper‘. Or even, ‘Hi there; I’m Charlie, Professional Pooper. Damned glad to meet you!‘
None of this is the point, really. The point is about volleyball, and me playing it, and not being especially good. Let’s get back to that, and leave my professional pooping aspirations for another time. Like ‘never’, for instance.
I don’t want you to get the wrong idea about these volleyball leagues, either. They’re not just a bunch of tired, fat old guys limping around the court, playing out the string just to get to the bar afterwards. Don’t be ridiculous.
“The proper form takes advantage of leverage and torque and momentum and mechanics and all sorts of other shit I slept through in freshman Physics class.”
Rather, it’s just one tired, fat old guy limping around the court, playing out the string just to get to the bar afterwards. But there are lots of other people around me, and some of them are only barely tired, fat, and old. So it’s different, see?
(To be fair — and to give fellow volleyballers an accurate picture — the leagues are just what they’re advertised to be: ‘intermediate level’. So we’re not allowed to lift the ball or throw it over the net, but nobody’s going to put out an eye with a vicious spike, either.
Unless maybe it’s a teammate’s eye, on a ricochet off a pole or something. ‘Deadly accurate’, we as a group are not.)
Anyway, I understand what I need to do to improve — I need better form. And I’m not talking about the shape of my butt, either.
Not that a pair of aerodynamic asscheeks wouldn’t help matters, probably. At the very least, I could forget about my on-court deficiencies faster and focus on my spectacular ass. But one thing at a time here.
The ‘form’ I have in mind is volleyball form. Like any sport, there’s a right way or three to perform any maneuver. Like a hook slide in baseball, a hook shot in basketball, or a right hook in a hockey brawl, there are established techniques that increase your chance of success. The proper form takes advantage of leverage and torque and momentum and mechanics and all sorts of other shit I slept through in freshman Physics class. Possibly, magnets are involved, too. I was out sick that day.
Nowhere in volleyball is form more important than the spike. Spiking is the act of leaping into the air and driving the ball from the highest point possible on your side of the net directly into the crotch of an opponent standing on the other side of the net. There are several steps involved in a proper set-up, approach, and effective spike:
Sounds simple, no?
And it is — to a point. With my current skills, I have no problem making it through step #3. It’s step #4 that’s the tricky one, with the jumping and the swinging and the hopping all over the floor. I’m here for a workout, not the goddamned hokey-pokey. I can’t do a jumping jack without slapping myself in the face, and I’m supposed to manage all of that? Honky, please.
See, the problem with such a complex bit of aerial gyration is that if you screw it up, it’s not going to be pretty. Get the timing just right, and it’s an effortless, graceful, nearly dance-like motion, unleashing surprising power and force.
But get one little part wrong, and it can be an awkward, painful, nearly seizure-like experience, unhinging muscle fibers and important ligaments and possibly the current contents of your bowels. I envision myself going up to spike, and winding up tangled upside-down in the net with a slipped disc, soiled boxers, and my own sneaker in my mouth. That’s totally going to happen some day.
So, I get a little lazy with the proper form sometimes — which, coupled with the aforementioned ‘tired’, ‘fat’, and ‘old’, is not what the cool kids call a ‘winning combination’. In fact, it leads to a whole new world of mortifying results.
For instance, there are few things more embarrassing in volleyball than to rush toward the net, leap unsteadily into the air with arms and legs flapping wildly, careening up toward the ball…
…then speeding down, away from the ball…
…hitting the ground before the ball has a chance to reach you…
…and feebly swiping it onto the other side of the court. Or into the net. Or into your own forehead. Gravity is a cruel mistress, people. And being an uncoordinated rhythmless jackass ain’t much of a concubine, either, let me tell you.
Hell, I’d give up volleyball altogether and take up an old man sport, if I thought I could do any better. But I’m just as likely to hurt myself there, too. I could trip over my putter and into a sand trap on the golf course. I’d end up pulling muscles from withers to brisket playing shuffleboard. And croquet — don’t even get me started. Mallets actually designed to knock balls into other balls? I’d never stand a chance.
I guess I’ll stick to volleyball, and try to keep the embarrassment and crippling injuries to a bare minimum. Which ought to mean ‘no spiking!‘, but I suppose I’ll keep trying that, too. I’ll just have to find some poor schmuck on the other side of the net who’s more tired, fat, and old than I am, and hope I can sneak one past him.
That won’t be easy, though. Does anyone know if Abe Vigoda even plays volleyball?
Permalink | 1 CommentBetween my house and the office, there’s a sandwich shop I often visit. It’s hands-down the best in town.
How do I know? Is it the quality of the food? The service behind the counter, perhaps? The fact that I’ve been there so often, they know what I want when I walk in the door? Or that there are hardly ever any ashes or roaches or fingers actually in the food they serve?
No. It’s none of those things. I know it’s the best sandwich shop in town because that’s where the cops eat.
“I see so many cops there, I feel like I’m on parole. I’ve seen less police presence at a Whitey Bulger Fan Club meeting.”
Every time I go there, the place is littered with the fuzz. City cops, traffic cops, university cops — they’re all there, rubbing elbows and billy clubs and chowing down together. And frankly, it’s a little scary. I see so many cops there, I feel like I’m on parole. I’ve seen less police presence at a Whitey Bulger Fan Club meeting.
(That’s a New England joke, folks. You out-of-towners will have to either read up about Whitey or insert your own local scamp above. I can only cover one neighborhood at a time here.)
In some ways, breaking bread with the boys and girls in blue is a little scary. There’s no way in hell, for instance, I’m ever going to double-park there, and ‘just run in for a minute’. I’d have seventeen parking tickets and a busted taillight by the time I reached the counter. A seven-dollar sandwich is reasonable; three-hundred bucks and an impound fee would be just a tad pricey, even with the extra cheese.
You also never know when the cops are going to get itchy. The place is crawling with badges, and I’m worried that someday they’ll try to ‘one up’ each other to enforce the law. If I accidentally throw my soda bottle in with the non-recyclables, am I going to get handcuffed and Mirandized? If I drop my change, will I get the breathalyzer? If I neglect to tip, will they taser my ass and search me at gunpoint for a buck fifty gratuity?
(For the record, I always tip there. Partly because the owners are nice, and partly because I’m just cool like that.
But mostly because the only ‘toasted buns’ I need are the ones wrapped around my chicken cutlet. I don’t want no trouble, officer.)
Still, I keep going back. The gaggle of gun-toting lawmen may be a little nervewracking, but it tells me that this sammich shop is the place to be. There’s no better food for miles around, guaranteed.
Think about it. This is Boston — these cops could eat anywhere they want. They could shake down gourmet Italian joints in the North End for free pasta on the side. They could threaten to raid any number of shady-but-delicious Chinatown establishments, and walk out with all the dim sum they could carry. And the seafood! Plant a dime bag in the kitchen of any one of dozens of fancy-pantsed crab shacks around here, and you’re in line for tasty ocean treats most people can only dream of.
(Assuming you’re a cop, of course. One of us civilians drops an ounce of blow in the back room of Legal Seafood, all we’d get is an ounce less of blow and a lobster claw where the sun don’t shine. Sometimes, you do need the steenking badges.)
But are these cops out there, intimidating waiters and forging dirty back-room deals with five-star chefs?
Possibly.
But probably only when they want to impress a date, on the weekend. For their regular, workaday noontime meal, where do they all end up, screaming in with sirens blaring and pistols drawn?
That’s right. The little sandwich shop on the corner, just past the bridge. My shop, the same place I get my chicken cutlet special and two sodas three times a week.
Hey, maybe this is how all cops get started. Maybe I’ll walk in one day and they’ll be waiting for me, with my very own nightstick and a deputy badge. I could patrol the counter, keeping the lines single-file and breaking kneecaps on any fool who makes a special order. You want fries with that, buddy? NOT ON MY WATCH, MISTER!
Oh, yeah. ‘To Protect and Serve and Score Free Sammiches’. Where do I sign?
Permalink | No CommentsTonight, I played softball for the first time this year. The first game each season is always an adventure, as various muscles are awakened from their winter slumber and put to use in… well, in popping the ball up a lot and coaching third base, apparently. Some of those muscles have hit the snooze bar, it seems.
I like to go into each softball game with a set of goals — something to keep in mind, and strive for while I’m on the field. As the season winds down in the fall, my list of goals might look something like this:
“My plate appearance in the first inning was the first time in six months I’d swung a bat in anger — unless you count shooing Jehovah’s Witnesses off my lawn last November.”
And in August, I might have a chance in hell of doing any of those things. Tonight — after a winter’s worth of hibernating inside with a TiVo, a couch, and an impressive supply of Guinness — not so much. My plate appearance in the first inning was the first time in six months I’d swung a bat in anger — unless you count shooing Jehovah’s Witnesses off my lawn last November. Do those people not have Thanksgiving, or what? Honestly.
So, my list for this first game was just a wee bit less ambitious. Here’s what I was shooting for:
Eh, two out of three isn’t bad. And it’s not like I’m a worse third base coach with my shorts around my ankles. On the contrary, I think I’m better — you should have seen how fast the girls on our team rounded the base and scampered home. Even on walks, or fly balls, or when the other team was batting. I had no idea I could be so motivating.
Honestly, I was happy just to make contact with the ball at the plate, and to not contact the ball — with my face, chest, or nethers — in the field. Also, I was happy they played me at third base, so it was a short walk from the coaching box to my position. Hey, this is softball — we’re not out there to exert ourselves, for crissakes.
Now I just need a couple of weeks — and a new elastic band — to improve my play, and I’ll be all set. I need to step my game up on the field if I want to really enjoy the obligatory beers afterwards. It’s softball, after all — we’ve got to hit the bar after the game; it’s in the rule book.
At least there’s one aspect of my game already in midseason form. Batter Bottoms up!
Predate Mingle:
Boy, there are a lot of singles here. I had no idea there’d be this many other bachelors. Sure, I expected some of these guys to show up — Count Chocula hasn’t had a date in centuries. Chef Boyardee’s never done well with the ladies, and that Trix bunny — word is, he’s still a virgin. Silly rabbit. Chicks are for kids.
And don’t even get me started on those Keebler elves. They’re here ‘looking for women’… riiiiight. We all know what’s going on in that oak tree, fellas. You’re not fooling anybody.
Still, there’s some real competition here, too. Louis Rich? Jimmy Dean? Oscar Mayer? Jesus, it’s like a sausage factory in here.
“His bologna’s got a first name and a last name, if you know what I mean.”
And that Mayer guy — the rumor is… well, you know. His bologna’s got a first name and a last name, if you know what I mean. If those guys snatch up all the hot chicks, it’s really gonna boil my broccoli.
Suddenly, I’m having second thoughts. But they’re ready to start, so what the hell. Into the frying pan, I guess.
Session #1: Mrs. Buttersworth
Nice woman, I suppose, though a little old for me. Turns out she’s a widow; Mr. Buttersworth died a few years back, in a freak molasses accident. Seems like she’s desperate to find another man; the vibe I got from her was all clingy and sticky-sweet.
I think she’d be tough to handle, except in small doses.
Session #2: Betty Crocker
Jeez, another gal past her prime. She could be my grandmother, for the love of leafy lettuce!
At least she doesn’t come with a lot of baggage — though how an old-fashioned woman like her could stay single this long makes me wonder. I thought maybe she’s lesbian — but look at those clothes. An apron? And a bonnet? Nah. They’d laugh her right off the field hockey team.
Must be something else. Something scary in her past. I don’t need that kind of train wreck. Next.
Session #3: Wendy
Hrm. Cute. Redhead. Freckly. Jailbait.
Jeez, do they not check IDs for these things? I can’t even look this girl in the pigtails without feeling like a dirty old man. Leave her on the vine, man; this one’s not ripe yet.
Man, that’ll soften up the old celery stick. Speaking of which, I could sure use another Bloody Mary. Bartender!
Session #4: Mrs. Paul
Great, another widow. Is it all ‘dented cans’ in this place, or what? I don’t think I’m being overly picky; it’s not like I’m only looking for a thirty-foot tall girl with green skin. Just give me something to work with here.
Still, Mrs. P. does make a mean fish stick. She may be a little wilted and brown around the edges, but you can’t argue with good cooking. I’ll put her on the ‘maybe’ list.
Session #5: Sue Bee
Now we’re talking — this girl is hot like a bagful of jalapenos! And the costume getup doesn’t hurt, either.
Oh, sure — now she takes offense when I ask whether her clothes are ‘tandoori and curry’ Indian or ‘we call it maize’ Indian. Lady, I’m sitting here in a toga made from fricking leaves. Get over yourself, already.
But no. Now it’s the silent treatment for the next five minutes. C’mon, it was a joke! I’m freezing my peas off over here. Bitch.
Session #6: Clabber Girl
Creeping cauliflowers, she introduces herself that way? Damn, no wonder she can’t get a man, if she–
Oh. Wait. Clabber Girl. I thought she said Clapper Girl, like she’d contracted… um, yeah. How awkward is that?
Lucky for me, the session got cut short by a commotion at the bar. Seems Mrs. Buttersworth had been hanging out with St. Pauli Girl all night, got herself hammered, and propositioned the bartender to a three-way with her sister Jemima. *shudder*
Yow. I could have gone a whole harvest without picturing that.
Session #7: Sara Lee
Wow, what a cutie. This is what I came here for! Great girl, fantastic smile, fun to talk to, quick on her feet — there’s just nothing wrong with this lady. She can cream my niblets any day.
Of course, from what my buddy Dinty Moore tells me, that’s the problem. The way he tells it, nobody doesn’t like Sara Lee. She’s bumped Brussels sprouts with half the guys on the shelves — Mr. Peanut, Mr. Clean, even Poppinfresh. That pasty little dough boy got to see her ‘hee-heee!‘ before I did. It’s just not fair. One hottie in the whole crop, and it turns out she’s a ho-ho-ho. Damn.
Eh, screw it. At this rate, I’ll never find a girl. If anyone needs me, I’ll be in the corn field with a tub of Cool Whip and a Butterball turkey.
You, um… you might want to knock first. I may be jolly, but a green giant has needs, you know?
Permalink | 6 CommentsKids, I’ll be honest — I’m pooped tonight. It’s been a long day, a long week, and I’ve got nothing left.
“No, not Dave Barry, ya jackass — me, dammit. Me!“
So it’s just lucky for you — depending on your definition of ‘lucky’, of course — that the new Issues Magazine is out today. I suggest you go have a look. In between the hard-hitting and thought-provoking pieces on world politics, sticky social issues, and tomorrow’s scaaaaaary 06/06/06 date, you might just find a humor article from a familiar author.
(No, not Dave Barry, ya jackass — me, dammit. Me! Stop making me work at this; I told you I was pooped.)
Enjoy your stroll through the latest Issues Mag, folks. I’ll be back tomorrow, after a bit of rest and recuperation. Happy Cinco de Mayo, amigos!
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