Archive for October, 2005

It’s all about meme

Go to Google Image Search and type in the city and state/province of the town where you grew up, no quotation marks. Then select the picture you like best from the first page of results and post it on your blog. Here’s mine:

Next do the same with the town where you currently reside. My result:

Next your name, first and last, but no quotes. My result:

Next your grandmother’s name. My result:

Next your favorite food. My result:

Next your favorite drink. My result:

Next your favorite smell. My result:

Lastly, your favorite song. My result:

I’m shooting for the 8-18 demographic

Tonight ACWF and I will be handing out candy to the youngsters for the first time in our new house. I’ll probably be handing out more candy than ACWF because ACWF has a medical condition known as Paralyzing Comatose Laziness. That, and I object to ACWF putting razor blades into candy bars. Everybody knows that straight pins go in much more easily and inconspicuously.

We’re giving away full-sized candy bars (as opposed to the lollipops that I usually use to lure kids into the back of my van) in order to build some positive “buzz” about our house. The reason for this is twofold. First, you don’t TP or egg a house that gives away whole candy bars. That would be like biting the hand that sells you your inhaler you asthmatic freak. There are plenty of hoodlums running around our neighborhood, so this is like an investment. Second, full sized candy bars ensure repeat customers next year, and next year I plan to build a haunted house in my backyard.

ACWF isn’t keen on the idea, but I’m pretty sure I just heard the internet say, “Hells yes! That would be awesome! Can I help?” just as everyone else has said to me when I’ve explained my plan.

Given the layout of our house, we can get people in and through and out with enough room to deliver some solid scares, but without having to worry about any damage done to our property, or a ton of expense put into the creation of the haunted house. I think we’ll probably do donations or a baked goods table or something to recoup any cost.

So who’s with me?

Happy Halloween, and to be on the safe side, Hail Satan

I wrote you a story for Halloween:

Through the dingy window I can see it limping. Its eyes find me like a spotlight and I can see the bones in its neck popping against the fatty skin as its head turns. It runs unevenly toward the house. The white hair that hasn’t fallen out is matted against its face and neck, held in place like a second skin by mud and crusted blood. Pale skin is pockmarked with fat, wriggling maggots and worms that have taken residence in its neck and shoulders. Its clothes are rotten and brown, revealing a dried, gaping wound under her ribs where its spongy intestines dangle and wrap around bare legs. Leathery skin stretched tight clings to sinew, bone and hard, muddy muscle. Something like a necklace, a choker, is rust-covered and digs into dry, papery skin around the throat and below its crackling spine.

It’s not the shuffling that bothers me, I told him as I hurried him through the outer wall.

Twilight had descended over the earth, but the moon had not yet climbed above the evergreens. The oily smoke coiling off of the flaming branch in my hand would have to wait to transfer to the signal torches. We’d struggled through 6 harvests since the last time we’d seen anyone foolish enough to travel on their own, yet he was in remarkable health. The absence of people is more common than groups. Groups are more common than lone travelers. Frayed, frenzied, and at each other’s throats. You can tell the leaders because they always have the eyes of someone who’s had to kill a member of their group. You can tell the burdens because they break down psychologically on arrival. You have a better chance guessing when a rattlesnake is going to strike than guessing when a group of starving travelers is going to go to hell in a handbasket.

It’s not the smell that bothers me, I told him as I dragged a heavy, wooden chair from under the rough table.

My wife, she’s a sleepwalker, a somnambulist. Her doctor’s word. The doctor advised me to not wake her when I found her rearranging the house in the darkness before the sunrise. He said it wouldn’t cause her any harm to outside of waking up exhausted each morning. I didn’t worry until she started sleepwalking outside. I’d wake in a cold sweat after standing over her bloody body, a coyote or a mountain lion sliding into the treeline.

It’s not the heavy silence of the winter that bothers me, I told him as my boots flexed the ancient floorboards of the kitchen.

We must have been some of the last people to be notified. Our house is miles from the nearest highway, and we never wanted anything to do with television or the noise coming out of the radio. There’s enough to do to keep my hands hard and calloused around this old place without worrying about such things. Our wood stove has charred a spot into the floor, and I keep the handle of the well pump loose and rust-free. You’d have to go miles to hear another generator, and we don’t want to hear them around anyway. Whenever the troopers stopped by with news I shrugged my shoulders and raised my axe to split another log. It made sense that they’d all be drawn toward the cities. People are packed in there like greasy fish in a tin. I guess it’s been about 12 years since then.

It’s not the sight of them that bothers me, I told him as his head collapsed into his hands.

We saw more people those first few years than we’d ever seen before. They crashed through with military vehicles and ATV’s, mopeds and mountain bikes. Next were the whine of snowmobiles and the silence of skis. Then leaves and twigs crackled underfoot, and the walkers were the first of any of them to take the time to notice the house. Some stalked up to the wall to see if the windows in our home burned with light or if they were cold and empty like the cities and the suburbs they had left in the control of those things. They’d snoop, and throw pinecones over the wall, but they’d always keep moving, thinking no one lived here. Even if the barbed wire at the top of the wall hadn’t sliced them up enough, they would have found this old house occupied, and souls with no intention of leaving their haunt.

It’s not their unhumanity that bothers me, I say as his skull collapses under the weight of my hammer.

The first person we cared to contact since the troopers was a frightened young woman with crazed eyes. Her skin was rubbery and sallow, and she needed help. The reinforced door in the wall shuddered as it opened and rust flaked from the hinges as I rushed out to collect her. Her mouth threw up a sound of terror and salvation. Halfway between the wall and the safety of our house her weight nearly toppled me as she collapsed in my arms. Her heels bounced along the bumpy path to the porch. My wife burst onto the porch with an old bucket full of fresh water and dishrag with a rooster embroidered onto it. She cleaned the grit off of the young woman’s pale skin as I loped back to force the rusty hinges to allow the door to swing closed.

It’s the moan that bothers me, I say as I heave his deadweight out onto the porch.

That thing lurches from below the dingy window to the porch with an animal urgency. Through the railing it digs its bony fingers into his shoulders and drags him against the wood closer to its lipless mouth. All teeth and tongue, ready to devour his flesh. It rips off his ear with its sandpaper fingernails while clawing open his stomach and spilling his slippery guts onto the wood. His shoulder dislocates with a sickening pop and he’s pulled halfway under the porch railing, the hinged collar around the papery skin of its neck. The chain on the back of the collar runs to a piece of rebar welded onto the weed choked bulk of an old tractor. The chain jingles and clanks as it drags dried offal in its links, keeping it from getting any closer than the edge of the porch.

It’s the moan that bothers me. It’s that abysmal, rasping moan that burst from that young woman as her chest heaved forward, and her arms and legs shot back like harpoons into the ground. It’s not even a moan. Its air, and mucus, and blood forcing its way out of the throat. The unnatural cacophony of life being restored to the dead. I didn’t know what it was then, and I was too far from my wife to keep that thing from biting a chunk out of the fleshy part of my wife’s palm. She scrambled inside and locked the door as I throttled the young woman. I crushed her still-chewing, blood-soaked mouth with an axe handle that found its way into my hands. She was no more than a skin-sack of chunky pulp when I buried her in a shallow grave as far as I dared venture outside our walls.

It’s the moan that I hate. The moan that escaped from my wife’s cracked lips, covered in spidery purple veins, after she had cursed my name with her last living breaths as she struggled against her restraints.

thanks for reading, feel free to critique in comments

Everybody do the no-pants dance

Pretty much, I don’t have anything to blog about but I’m all like, “Why should that stop me from writing anything?” So it don’t. As you can see, or read, or have read to you in a sexy James Mason as God voice, I’m writing nonetheless.

It’s like when you have nothing to do but the book you’re reading is way over there, and VH1 is showing I Love the 80’s for about the fudillionth time, so you decide that you’re going to steal your neighbors lawnmower and cut your lawn in a baseball diamond design after getting lacquered on paint thinner and margarita mix.

When the cops pull you over going 7 miles an hour down the middle of the interstate in your neighbors riding mower and your breath stinking of Jimmy Buffet meets This Old House, you realize you’ve hit bottom.

So you dedicate yourself to yourself in prison. You start by bench pressing stacks of Bibles. Then you move on to benching lesser prison bitches. By the time you’re getting a crying clown tattooed on the whole of your back you can tear cell doors open with your still delicately deft classically trained pianist fingers.

A pianist to prisoner outreach program (Concerts for Convicts) takes notice of this an enrolls you in their education program. All seems to be going well until you perform Chopsticks as a joke to warm up the crowd at the annual prison rodeo. You had no way of knowing that Chopsticks was the trigger song that the Russians had brainwashed you in responding to.

The next few years are a haze of cigarettes, superettes, and marionettes as you implant yourself as the successor to take over as Kermit the Frog’s muppetteer. Once you make it onto national television you can begin to sing the song that Americans have learned subliminally for dozens of years. As soon as that song is sung, you’ll be one government overthrow away from fulfilling your mission and eating the cyanide capsule that has some how stayed in the shoe that you have somehow managed to hold onto lo these many years.

My baloney has a first name….

This just popped into my head for some reason

When I was in my freshman year of college, my girlfriend at the time, Megan *coughpsychotichellbitchcough* was a senior in high school, so of course I went to the beach with them for Senior Week.

For those of you who don’t know, Senior Week is the first or second week after graduation where parent’s who are just phoning it in allow their high school senior aged children go down to the beach and get alcohol poisoning.

Because we didn’t know anyone who was 21 once we got down to the beach, we knew we’d need to buy our booze before we left. My assistant manager at the pool where I was a lifeguard took pity on us, and he said he’d buy us whatever we wanted, with only a very slight mark-up for his trouble.

After he walked out of the liquor store and deposited two cases of Zima in my trunk, he told me that I needed to learn how to drink beer, and that he wasn’t buying me anything else until he saw me drinking beer. My objections that the Zima was for the ladies (my hellbitch went to an all-girls school) fell upon deaf ears. He simply shook his head as he walked to his own car with a case of Maryland’s Best (it makes Boh seem like immaculate ejaculate).

We made it down to the beach without any trouble. By without any trouble I mean the hellbitch called me every 30 minutes to get me to change my schedule at the pool so I could get down there a day earlier and once someone took my shift and I was able to make it down there she gave me the cold shoulder for not getting there faster. Bitch.

The first half of the week was filled with craziness. People were getting drunk every night, a half-dozen people were sunburned after the 2nd day, and we were quickly running out of food due to drunken munchies. Then we hit the wall.

We were running out of Zima and we had no one to buy us booze. By a strange stroke of luck, or a bizarre coincidence, or something, it turns out that the guy who was staying in the apartment below us was a guy who I had gone to pre-school with. Oh, and he was friends with my cousin who was 21 and also staying below us. So, they gave me a bowl of gin, and I took it back upstairs to try to find something to mix it with and I see everyone in our apartment sitting around and talking.

All of a sudden the hellbitch bursts from the bathroom wearing only a tshirt and her underwear. Her overall-shorts things (which I always hated) were crumpled in a ball beneath the toilet. She stumbled towards the kitchen and grabbed the last two Zimas from the fridge. She gave one to her friend, and she took the other one for herself, before flopping down onto the couch Al Bundy style.

Her friend was pretty drunk so she set her full Zima on the corner of the table and helped me look for something to mix with the gin. The hellbitch continued to pound her Zima as she talked to my buddy Joe, who was leaning up against the table. By some stroke of misfortune, Joe knocked over the Zima on the table and it spilled onto the carpet. The filthy carpet of the beach place that probably had been there since they built it.

Hellbitch’s eyes go wide and she dives onto the carpet and starts licking the Zima out of the rug. Between licks she’s saying, “This is the last Zima guys. C’mon! Help! Don’t waste it!”

At this point her sort-of-but-not-at-that-moment-friend Heather comes into the apartment wasted off her ass, eyes completely glazed over, and barely able to stand up and sees the Hellbitch licking the carpet and starts laughing her head off. Then Heather starts spanking my ex-girlfriend, the hellbitch.

I grabbed Heather’s arm and pulled her away and told her to take it easy because they were both drunk. For a second I saw a glimmer of rational thought in Heather’s eyes, but then it disappeared and Heather leaned her head into my shoulder and bit me, and broke the skin, through my shirt.

Mind you, I’m not a violent guy. Though I did terrorize my brothers when we were children, they can both vouch that now I’m a chilled out dude. So I shocked even myself when I grabbed Heather, picked her up under her arms, and forced her backwards until her back was against the closet and her feet were dangling in the air. I looked at Heather, and I loudly, but calmly said, “If you ever fucking bite me again I’m going to rip your fucking head off and show you your body so you can watch yourself die.”

There was then a pause so long that I thought the world had stopped spinning. But then, a flicker of life in Heather’s eyes and she started laughing. She cackled. I couldn’t help realizing how ridiculous this all was, so we went back to laughing at my ex-girlfriend who was till licking Zima off of the floor.

Everybody thinks they’ll be the one

Go wish Huw some luck as he attempts to ingest a gallon of milk in an hour.

Here’s what happened to me when I did it.

Some other stuff, and praise for pants

1) “Waiter?”
“Yes, sir?”
“What’s this dragon doing in my soup?”
“It looks like early nineties indie rock.”

Ha ha ha. I was listening to the aforementioned band on the way to work this morning, and I suddenly heard a siren fast approaching. I swiveled my head around to see where it was coming from before I realized that those tricky Scottish bastards had pulled a fast one on me. Touche.

2) When I got to work, I watched a woman get out of her car and close the door with the keys in the ignition and the engine running. She must have had something on her mind. So I hit her with my Corolla.

I’m just kidding.

I drive a Tercel.

3) The pants I’m wearing today are pretty much the greatest pants in the world. Say what you want about Tommy Hilfiger (that he’s a racist, that he exploits workers overseas, that he uses underage women in sexually suggestive and potentially abusive poses and situations to market his wares, that he invests heavily in the secret government project to clone the devil and use his clones to create the most destructive army the world has ever seen, that he has gold-plated bidets that squirt chocolate-flavored soy milk installed in all his stores just in case he decides to stop in and has to use the bathroom) but he makes a hella fine pair of pants.

I got mine at Value City (holla PLD!) for like 9 bucks, and I think the number that they blacked out on the tag was 45 hojillion dollars and 95 cents, so I paid an extremely reduced price.

The pants feel like they were broken in by my identical, evil twin. They fit like a sock. A tube sock. Get your mind out of the gutter. Furthermore, I may have mentioned to you before that I frequently make my daily dalliances sans undergarments. Today is no exception. Yet these pants have some sort of special built in section of fabric so that my delicate bits have all the warming comfort of boxers, but none of the restriction.

In conclusion, I will kill you if you try to take my pants, and I think my pants are probably built for killing, what with Tommy Hilfiger’s predilection of sacrificing the first-born children of his employees.

Turning over a new leaf

I just volunteered for a job at work that may consume the vast majority of my time for the next month. So, blogging might slip a bit.

The thing is, before our most recent staff meeting, I was taking a look at my job responsibilities, and there’s a component of my work that has remained unfulfilled. It’s not an essential part of my job, and the fact that they still employ me shows that it’s a task that’s completely superfluos. I proposed a proposal (as proposals are wont to be prosposed) to get this task going, and it turns out that my boss has been thinking of doing the exact same thing. So that shows some good initiative on my part. The only problem is that she wants it to coincide with “National [Our Industry] Awareness Month” and she wants it to be over before Thanksgiving, and she wants it to last for a few weeks. So, I have two weeks to plan a two-week implementation of my idea. If it flies, it might be something we do each fiscal quarter, and I’ll be the lead each time.

Here goes nothing.

After Karaoke

After Karaoke we headed over to Frazier’s on the Avenue. I hadn’t been there in a while, and Mike was determined to buy us some Bohs. Damned nice of him.

While walking to Frazier’s Mike and his Wifey pointed out the brick in the sidewalk that had their names on it. It was joined by bricks with other people’s names and businesses. I stepped on the brick and Wifey was all, “Oh no you di’int!” and I was all, “Oh yes I di’id!” and it looked like it was about to be broughten, but it wasn’t, because we were just joking around.

Once I made it into Frazier’s I almost immediately ran into an old friend of mine, Ryan. Ryan is an interesting guy, to say the least. Just recently Deanne was lamenting how frequently she’s had to nearly fight some “chav scum” for their want of her cigarettes. I told her about my friend Ryan.

Ryan used to keep 2 packs of cigarettes. From one pack he’d remove a single cigarette, pee on it, and then let it dry. Once it was dry, he put it in the other pack. He’d carry both packs around, and whenever anyone wanted to bum a cigarette, he’d give them one of the cigarettes from the “special” pack. It brought him a sick sort of pleasure.

I run into him from time to time, and he’s one of those people with whom you don’t have stupid back and forth forced conversation about the weather. I can’t even remember what we were talking about (the time he got kicked out of a Billy Idol show? The time he got kicked out of a Foreigner show? Both?) but in the middle of the conversation he removes the napkin from on top of the plate of food resting on the bar between us and he starts eating. He starts eating the half-eaten potato skins and onion rings and pizza bread that someone else had left behind.

At first he looked at me and said, “What? I’m just eating the stuff that they didn’t touch.” He held up and unblemished onion ring for me to examine. Then he stuffed it in his mouth.

“Dude, that’s so gross. Think about what you used to do to cigarettes.”

“Meh. I’m hungry. No sense wasting good food.”

He paused for a moment as he finished the last of the untouched food, looked at me, and then started eating the food that already had a few bites taken out of it. I was disgusted, but not surprised. Ryan, at the ripe old age of 23 or 24, has always been like this.

I made sure to bum a cigarette from his friend.

Karaoke

Saturday night ACWF and I headed into Baltimore for some Karaoke at Molly’s.

It was our first time there, and the 2 buck Bohs and PBRs were quite a treat. We saw quite a few people there that we knew, including Jennetic, Fool (and her hat) and Eric, Mike and his Wifey, Snay, Kmart, and I even got to meet Benn and Rachel.

The karaoke was lots of fun, and I think I’ve determined that if I ever get drunk enough to actually sing karaoke, I’m going to sing Neil Diamond’s “Forever in Blue Jeans” (so I can adlib parts in between singing and say stuff like “This next song I wrote after I killed a drifter to get an erection“) or I’m going to sing some AC/DC, cause I can do that high and squeaky rock and roll singing thing.

But that’s not the point of this post. The point of this post is to tell you how ragingly drunk Snay got at Molly’s. After a few beers and a cider or two he was simultaneously the friendliest and angriest drunk I’d ever seen. He went from giving me a huge hug, to trying to break my arm in 2 seconds. I’d watch that guy if you’re around him and he’s gotta couple a drinks in him. I told him a story about how I peed on my cat (by accident, which is not to say that the cat didn’t deserve it, but the cat came into the bathroom and jumped right into the toilet while I was peeing) and he tried to relate it to the internet at the end of his post, here. “acw opeef all ovewr hisa furbalz.” Pretty clear, huh?

After we left karaoke, Snay rode home with Kmart, and promised not to throw up inside the car. Darn nice of him, if you ask me. I just wish we could have talked him into singing.




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