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Charlie Hatton
Brookline, MA



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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!

Contractorally Obligated

There’s something to be said for home contractors.

Nothing that’s printable here, mind you. But still. Something.

We’re having some work done on our place this week. In the sense that it was originally scheduled to begin in early August, we’re well behind schedule. In the other sense — it was originally scheduled to begin in early August, but these are home contractors we’re talking about — we’re probably ahead of the game. The work has begun before we’re eligible for Social Security benefits, so who’s to complain? Not I.

Not before the job is finished, anyway. I’m in no position to count any chickens right now. Or soon. I’ll count my chickens when the mortar has set, the paint has dried and the tarps have been cleared away. Basically, around the time Colonel Sanders dumps his herbs and spices on the chickens’ delicious dismembered carcasses.

Meanwhile, there’s work happening. The lead guy — of two — on the project is actually quite pleasant. Eastern European, in his 50s, maybe, seems very easygoing and knowledgeable and was happy to talk me through his plan.

(Which is part of the guy’s charm, I think. He speaks and parses English quite well, with a moderate accent — and just enough occasional word scrambling to be endearing. Like:

You can give me a key to the door for entrancing?

It’s a bit of fun, and many orders of magnitude better than I could muster in his native language, or any other.

I still want to ask him if his hovercraft is full of eels. I’m not proud. I just can’t help it.)

This contractor also likes to begin work at seven in the morning, as I found out today. Which is super, really. Good for him; he’s an early-rising go-getter.

“I also prefer not to take emergency twelve-second showers in the guest bathroom, using Dial soap as shampoo and drying off on a hand towel of uncertain origin.”

Me, I prefer to sleep at seven in the morning — as, I suppose, he found out, too. I also prefer not to take emergency twelve-second showers in the guest bathroom, using Dial soap as shampoo and drying off on a hand towel of uncertain origin. Maybe that’s just me. Anyway, it makes for an interesting start to the week.

He has a helper — who didn’t show up until 7:15, the slacker! — and apparently the two of them are going to manage the whole project here over the next couple of days.

Or weeks. Or geologic epochs. I mean, I like these guys, but they are home contractors, after all.

Of course, I don’t have any control over how long it takes. Nor do I know all the details involved, so I couldn’t really push back if — okay, when — the project gets delayed. These guys are taking out a big window, and replacing it with a door. If I were doing it myself, it would likely take fourteen years, give or take a quarter. Or it would take three hours, catch on fire soon after, and the building would collapse around it.

These guys say they’ll be done within the week — because contractors always say they’ll be done within the week. They should just write it on their business cards, and be done with it. Put in a door? We’ll do it in a week. Rebuild a porch? That’s about a week. Put up a gazebo on nine-foot stilts that rotates like a merry-go-round and paint it to look like the Sistine Chapel ceiling?

Give it four days. A week, tops. In case there’s weather.

Some of these jobs finish in a week. Others get finished by sons or grandsons of the head contractor who weren’t yet conceived when the mythical “week” came and went. Which will our job be? No idea. How much say do I have? None. What can I do about it? Bupkis.

(Is being married good practice for dealing with such situations? Yes.)

(Sorry, that’s not fair. What I meant to say was:

Yes, dear.)

So tonight, I set the alarm for six AM, in the hopes of looking vaguely human when the contractors return tomorrow. Unlike today, when I resembled a particularly feeble ground sloth with a speech impediment and soapy hair.

Also, they’ll probably come at noon tomorrow. Just to mess with my head. Because they can.

What fun would being a contractor be otherwise?

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Thrice as Nice, But at What Price?

My employer does a lot of nice things — which is nice. But sometimes, a combination of nice things leads to… unexpected results.

One nice thing they do for us is to buy snacks for the office. Every week, we get a delivery of goodies — sodas, chips, fresh fruit, granola bars and little 100 calorie packets of cookies.

“Sure, you have to eat nine or ten of those little bags to get dessert. But all that exercise tearing them open must cancel out the calories, right?”

Sure, you have to eat nine or ten of those little bags to get dessert. But all that exercise tearing them open must cancel out the calories, right? It’s simple maths, probably.

Anyway, that’s a very nice thing they do. And much appreciated.

At the same time, the company wants us to be healthy.

(They don’t, for instance, condone actually eating a dozen Lorna Doone mini-cookie packs all at once.

And certainly not eating them lying on the conference room table in your underpants. Apparently.)

To encourage healthiness, our employer has a health drive every few months. We’re rewarded for making healthy decisions — like exercising and eating nutritious meals and working out at a gym.

Also, wearing pants while we eat our Lorna Doone cookies in the conference room. That’s highly encouraged. The “pants” part, at least.

The healthy thing is nice, too. Healthy is good. So good, in fact, that a few weeks ago, the company decided to do something even nicer.

And that’s where things went a little bit wonky.

Nice thing number three was this: a way to boost one of the contributions the employees make to charity. The premise was, in the interest of even MOAR health, anyone getting a “non-healthy” snack from the break room on Wednesdays in the fall would owe one dollar for the privilege. Fruit — free. Water — also free. Granola, unsalted peanuts and dried chewy craisins — no-fee, gratis and compliments of the house. Or management. Whatever.

Fourteen packs of little bitty cookies? That’ll cost you.

The money — should anyone’s sweet tooth overcome their horror at publicly paying for a fistful of Funyuns — will go toward our latest charity drive. They’re calling it “Willpower Wednesdays”. And it’s working. Sort of. But also not, mostly.

First of all, nobody’s buying snacks. The “buck of shame” thing seems to be working. So that’s a good thing, I guess, willpower-wise. And we’re a generally healthy group — conference room underpantsed dalliances notwithstanding — so people aren’t even doing the obvious thing you’d think: hoarding armfuls of brownie bits and crunchy pretzels on Tuesdays, and pigging out in Hump Day private. We’re better than that. Honest people. Upstanding. Responsible to ourselves and to each other.

Also, the CEO sent a memo saying not to. Anything we get caught with costs triple.

So nobody’s doing that. Clearly.

Which means we’re not making anything extra for that charity, probably. I guess we’ll just have to redouble our efforts elsewhere for orphaned Bolivian tree frogs or underserved hangnail sufferers or Texans who voted for Yosemite Sam. Whoever the hell we’re trying to help. We’ll get there. Just not with snack money.

Meanwhile, an odd thing is happening. Those unhealthy snacks don’t typically go so fast; there are usually a few left at the end of the week. So with nobody eating them for a whole day, there should be even more left, right?

Weeeeell…

Now it’s psychological. I’ve felt it. I walk through the break room on Wednesday, bee-lining for the rice cakes and low-fat organic bottled water. And any other day, that would be just fine for me.

But not on Wednesday. Not Willpower Wednesday.

Now I walk past those chocolate chip Cheetos and popcorn-flavored popcorn — and I crave. I long. I drool a little, on the rice cakes. Which is good — they need a hint of flavor. But the point is — I don’t want that crap usually. I only want it because I can’t have it, because I’d actually have to pay for it in front of other humans who have managed to not give in to their own longings and cravings and drooling on whatever bone-dry cardboard-tasting bits of stupid crap they’re trying to choke down.

That’s one thing. But then there’s the other thing. The thing called Thursday.

Or, as I like to call it, “Thanksgiving Thursday”.

You see, after Wednesday, the money jar goes away. Along with the stigma, and the sanctions, and the “Tostito tariff”. All that’s left on Thursday morning? The crave.

Thursday mornings are now a complete and utter snarf fest. By eleven fifteen, I’m twitching in a sugar coma, surrounded by a mound of empty cans and candy wrappers. The conference room table will never be the same again.

And I’m not the only one. By three o’clock Thursday afternoon, the snack shelves are wiped clean. Possibly licked clean; I’m afraid to look too closely. All that’s left to eat in the break room are half-squeezed mustard packets and drooled-on rice crumbs.

I don’t know. Maybe our company is too nice. I’ll have to think about this some more.

Right after this stomach ache goes away. So, like, April. June, at the latest.

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None Direction

I don’t mind being lied to.

Sometimes lying is necessary. Often, it’s expedient. Occasionally, it’s downright fun. I understand this. Lying happens, and from time to time it’s going to happen to me.

I ask just one thing: if you’re going to lie to me, do it in such a way that I’ll never find out the truth.

It’s a small consideration. A courtesy, really. And yet, my car GPS refuses to play ball. The douche.

“I often get the feeling the GPS is stalling, like it’s furiously consulting Google Maps in the background or something.”

I’ve long suspected the GPS of lying to me — but most times, I don’t know any better. On unfamiliar turf, I’ll punch in an address, and the system winds me around whatever town I’m in, homing in on the target. It’s not always a straightforward ride. There are sometimes odd twists and cryptic directions and three left turns in a row. I often get the feeling the GPS is stalling, like it’s furiously consulting Google Maps in the background or something.

But I usually get where I’m going, and if it wasn’t by the fastest route — or the straightest, or the safest, or one not requiring a passport to hop across town — then I’m none the wiser.

Except when I am.

Last night, I had an appointment in a part of town I know well. Mostly because it’s where the local animal hospital is, and our beloved and departed four-pawed furball spent a lot of time there.

(Like, a lot. She could practically lead tours of the place. They were this close to giving her her own parking spot.)

Still, I didn’t know exactly where this place was, so I popped the address into the GPS. When the map came up, I grinned — it was on a little street right behind the hospital. I could get there in my sleep, once I saw the location. A quick right, over the bridge, come out past Fenway, slide left, straight down Route 9, another right, and it’s right there. Twenty minutes tops, even with a bit of traffic.

And then my non-frown turned upside down.

(Into a frown. I know, it doesn’t work so well this way. There aren’t useful words that rhyme with “grin” for this purpose. Deal.)

The GPS had calculated its route, and it wasn’t taking me “quick right” and all the rest. Instead, it said, “Hey — you should go two miles in this direction, and when you get into that thick mess of humanity downtown, I’ll tell you how to get there.

And it offered to park me at my destination in a mere thirty-two minutes. Or roughly half as much longer as it would take going the way I knew. Which was closer. And easier. And, I was firmly certain, faster.

(Ooh! “Then my grin took it on the chin.”

That’s right. Nailed it.)

Anyway.

I fiddled with the GPS buttons, sure that some setting had gone wonky. My wife drives my car sometimes, and is always closing my A/C vents and horking the mirror positions. Maybe she’d tried to get the nav system to take her to Shangri-La or the middle of Massacusetts Bay, and turned the wrong knob. So I carefully and specifically tuned the search to give me the fastest and most straightforward directions.

Righto, said the GPS. “Recalculating… *bing*

Go two miles this way, get lost downtown, and I’ll circle you in. Thirty-two minutes.

The lying bitch.

That’s when I started talking to the GPS. I figure, it’s always yapping at me, telling me to turn left or take the third exit or stop driving into public parks. Now it was my turn to talk a little smack. Thirty-two minutes? I got your thirty-two minutes right here!

So I went my way. Some little teeny part of me even held out hope that I was wrong. Technology should be smarter than me, right? Maybe the GPS did know what it was talking about. Maybe some road I thought I knew had been torn up and turned into a drivethrough liquor barn. Maybe there was an accident — like, a nuclear accident — snarling up traffic on my usual route, and this seeming detour into oblivious was actually a genius move. And who am I to question our robotic overlords, anyway? Maybe I should give the device the benefit of the doubt.

So I did. A bit. Right up until I made my quick right, deviating from the path proscribed. The GPS pleaded with me — “take the next left!” “For god’s sake, turn around!” “All is lost; woe be unto all!

Then I hit the bridge, the point of no return. I couldn’t simply turn back and follow directions; the GPS was forced to play catch-up and plan a route close to the one I’d intended all along. Which it did, with twenty-eight minutes remaining on its countdown for the original plan. And when it recalculated?

Nineteen minutes. *Bing*, indeed.

If the GPS had a face, I imagine it biting its lip and avoiding eye contact — or headlight contact, or whatever — with me, as it ‘fessed up to sending me on a wild goose chase downtown. In its own way, it was probably sorry. Shamed. Remorseful.

And also pretty shocked, because I called it every name I could think of. And I know words, people. Bad words. Real mouth-soapers. I’m not kidding.

Like I said, I wasn’t angry that it lied. I was incensed that I found out. Seriously, put in a little effort next time. Lie to me in Vermont. Send me three loops on a roundabout, to jiggle my navigation skills loose. Tell me there’s construction. Something.

But don’t lie to me on my own turf. Don’t tell me my own backyard is out front, when I can clearly see it through the window. In short, if you’re going to lie to me, then for shit’s sake make it good.

It’s a simple courtesy. The very least one can do. And yet, my GPS still doesn’t get it. Ass.

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Character, Schmaracter

There are many ways to reveal the character of a person. I’d say — being entirely objective here — that in most of the ways that people usually mention, I do okay.

That’s right. Entirely objective. No, you shut up.

Seriously. Here’s one: some say you learn about a person’s character by knowing how well they tip when they think no one is looking. I’m a pretty good tipper — and I always fold my tip or bill or whatever and tuck it under a coaster or something so it’s not obvious what I’ve left.

I mean, I make it somewhat obvious. To the waiter or waitress. Not what I’ve left, exactly — but where to find the check, at least. Tips don’t do anyone any good if they’re buried in a half-eaten glob of mashed potatoes and dumped down the disposal. I don’t go that far to hide the tippage.

Or if I do, I leave a map on the back of the place setting. Who says the customers are the only ones who get to have fun with those things?

Another way to measure character, they say, is seeing how someone treats people in service jobs — bank tellers and taxi drivers and cafeteria ladies and such. Here again, I think I pass with flying colors. I’m extremely polite to all of those sorts of people I meet.

And no, it’s not because I’m afraid they’ll short-change my deposit or dump me in a bad neighborhood or spit in my Jell-O brand dessert cup.

Well. Not just because I’m afraid of those things, anyway. I’m sure character has something to do with it. Maybe.

Anyway, the point is — by most measures, I do okay in the character department. I’m not Mahatma freaking Gandhi. Actually, I don’t even know whether he took cabs, or ever left a bartender twenty percent for a round of beers. Probably, he did other nice stuff. But I do okay. I like to think (entirely objectively) that I definitely probably do pretty okay, in the character department. By most standards.

Except one.

There’s one situation that no one talks much about, yet I contend it’s one of the most revealing about how — or even whether — we deal with our fellow humans. How accommodating and generous of spirit we are. Whether we’re willing to overcome obstacles and rise to the occasion.

I’m referring, of course, to the early-morning doorbell. The one you weren’t expecting, that catches you asleep or groggy in bed, with your first coherent, panicked thought of the new day suddenly being:

Should I get up and go see who that is?

“I probably should have been held back a grade somewhere in the primate years. Maybe as a lemur, or something in the capuchins.”

I fail that one every time. No exceptions. Every. Single. Time. If this truly is a test of character, a window into my essential being, a buzzing crucible to lay bare my soul at its barest and most vulnerable, then I’m just not even worthy to be human. I probably should have been held back a grade somewhere in the primate years. Maybe as a lemur, or something in the capuchins.

I was reminded of this today, when the doorbell rang about an hour and a half before I’d planned to get up. I was awake enough to register it, and just barely lucid enough to sort out that there was no good reason for it. My wife — who does have a nasty habit of locking herself out of the condo occasionally — would have been at work already. Nobody was scheduled to deliver, fix, assess, inspect, clean, shampoo, consult or otherwise assist us with a house call. It was an out-of-the-blue bell. And now I was awake. The question was: what should I do?

And that’s my problem with this test. There’s only one “right” answer, character-istically speaking — get up, become marginally presentable and see who it is. Discover their needs. Converse with them. Share information, as needed. Interact. Communicate. Engage.

Yeah. Fuck that.

When this sort of things happen, a lot of choices run through my head. “Get up and go see” is never on the list. Never. Not even on the bottom, or if you turn the paper over maybe it’s scribbled in the margin. No. “Get up and go see” is the right answer, and it’s not on the table. Not first thing in the morning.

That leaves my other options. “Go back to sleep” is always popular — though never so easy in practice. The wee-morning waking doorbell gets certain juices flowing — adrenaline, probably. Neurotransmitters of various kinds, to process the situation. Pee. All of these things make it terribly difficult to simply roll over and rehit the sack.

Which is not to say I don’t often try. It just doesn’t usually work.

All of the other options involve hiding in some way. Maybe I need to get up and use the bathroom — that’s fine. But don’t go near the windows! You never know when someone ringing the doorbell in the vestibule will wander back outside, veer off the walk, approach the building — in broad daylight, on a well-traveled street — and surreptitiously peer into the windows to see movement.

Hey, I saw Ferris Bueller. This kind of shit happens, people.

So a low profile is key. Don’t be seen, don’t move around suddenly and for the love of god, don’t make any noise. If I do visit the bathroom, I wait at least ten minutes before flushing — the better to avoid an awkward “aha!” moment from some sneaky lingering bell-ringer hearing the telltale *whoosh*.

It’s true. I think about these things. Which has to be exponentially worse. Not bothering to get up, or being too lazy to talk to someone at the door is one thing. But to obsessively scheme about how to duck them — even in the event that they, too, are obsessive relentless schemers — can’t be a sign of good character. Or mental health. Or anything.

I thought about this today. I had a lot of time, while I tiptoed around the bedroom and stood in the bathroom waiting for a safe window to flush. So I thought about it, and I’ve come up with a solution. I don’t like these insults to my character — or my beauty sleep, because obviously — and naturally, I want to be a better person.

Or, you know, feel like a better person. So I did something about it. I took a step toward a more positive personal tomorrow.

By which I mean, I disconnected the doorbell.

Hey, I might lack character. But I’m not stupid. And no way am I answering the door before noon. That shit is crazy, yo.

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Zugged, But Not Forgotten

Yesterday, I received an email from someone who’d been mostly away from the internet for a few months — having a child can do that to you, I hear — who was asking:

What the hell happened to zug.com?

That’s a good question.

ZuG was around for a good eighteen years — or actually, as I understand it from the old-timers, five good years and then a decade-plus of relative suckage once we “whippersnappers” came along and wrecked the joint. In any case, it was an interweb institution of sorts, until site proprietor John Hargrave closed up shop on April 1st.

(It seemed like a prank at the time. If so, John’s really taking the long play on this one.

Is it still a prank if no one’s left who remembers the setup by the time you get to the reveal?)

“You never know when someone’s going to ask you to point to your one hundred most humiliating online moments.”

Much of the content on the site, sadly for comedy fans, is lost forever. Also, most of the conversations on the associated message board, happily for anyone involved who would ever consider running for public office, are also lost. I wrote two sets of articles over there, which I was able to snatch from the proverbial shredder’s jaws before the site went kaput.

Why did I snatch them? I dunno. Seemed like a good idea at the time. You never know when someone’s going to ask you to point to your one hundred most humiliating online moments.

I hadn’t thought about ZuG for a while, before getting that email. But it reminded me that, while I managed to reformat and republish my set of ZuG Facebook articles, I’d never gotten around to fiddling with the older Amazon posts.

Also, it reminded me that reformatting those articles is a shitload of work. So I’m not going to do it right now, either.

However — getting those articles live again is back on my radar (for one afternoon, at least), and so I’m hoping to get around to them in the near future. In the meantime, the least I can do — and I do mean the very least — is tease the article set with a few of my favorite pictures from the series.

(For those not in the know: the “Zolton Does Amazon” series involved pretending to use ridiculous products available on Amazon — or to use regular products in ridiculous and possibly life-threatening ways — and then leave reviews on the site about the experience.

Also, taking pictures of the products during their alleged uses, which typically amounted to horrifying shameful selfies of “Zolton”, the author of the articles. Also, I was Zolton.

There. Now you’re caught up.)

Anyway, here are a few random pictures which make even less sense out of context than they did in the articles. At some point, I’ll have the texts up to take some sting out of what you’re about to witness.

Or I’ll forget again. At least until someone who’s been in a two-year coma emails me in a few months to ask “whassup with ZuG?

In the meantime, enjoy — assuming such a thing is possible. Click any picture to make it bigger… if you dare.

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