Archive for April, 2009

No Time For Love, Dr. Jones.

Sunday, April 26th, 2009

Been a little preoccupied lately, so check out my Twitter account for what little energy I’ve got left for mini-blogging lately.

http://twitter.com/chrishokeblog

I’ve been working on my new project, Geek-O-Matic.com, in addition to working on a super-new project, Proto-Buzz.com. I’ve got another project that’s so new that I don’t even know it’s name yet, but more on that later.

I’m a bit too excited about KFC grilled chicken because it presents a pretty healthy alternative for my chicken-on-the-road needs, which is great because I’m a little tired of eating healthy here at home and then eating horribly while touring with the band.

It’s so easy to eat badly on the road, though. Just when you think you’re reaching for trail-mix at the gas station, your hand snakes out and grabs the gummi-worms. Daily recommended values of gummi aside, trail mix is the smarter choice, the choice less likely to give a band member searing gas pains as they travel down the road.

Yeah, well that’s it. I’ve now talked about searing gas pain on my blog. It’s all downhill from here. Now I’m going to tag it!

The Moth, The Jerk, And The Thief: A Christmas Story

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009

When I sit at my computer late at night, certain questions pop into my head. Questions for the ages, I guess, questions that gnaw at the soul, tickle the psyche relentlessly and keep me from sound sleep.

Questions like: Where the hell did this giant moth come from?

I mean, seriously, it’s the size of a sparrow. We’ve got screens on our windows, and the front door’s been closed all evening. How’d it get in?

It’s huge and, evidently, highly attracted to me. Come to me, Chris, it says, let me sprinkle you with my moth-dust and we can be together forever. I don’t blame it, really: my bloodshot, bedroom eyes, my rapid Diet Coke consumption, my wild and tangled hair, and the faint smell of garlic and butternut squash that I’m sweating from my pores all add up to make me just a heart-breaking and dreamy chap.

Still, you would think that this moth would prefer a creature roughly the same size and species. My anatomy alone would prevent an intimate relationship, and, besides that, I’m married. I mean, she’s sleeping on the couch right over there, you naughty thing! It would never work, my sweet moth. Which is why I’m going to smack you with this rolled up magazine. Wait, not that one, that’s the latest Esquire. You’ve got a stay of execution, mutant moth, while I find a magazine I don’t care about. What the… Modern Bride magazine!? Where did this come from? Oh yes, now I remember:

A year or two ago, on Christmas Eve-Eve, I found myself in a Longs Drugs parking lot in a dodgy area of San Francisco. I was on a street named for a civil-rights leader, which means, sadly, that I was in a very bad part of the city. I don’t remember exactly why I was there, I think I was delivering something to someone. Probably not drugs. On the way home, my wife had called me and reminded me that I needed to pick up a few items from the drug store.

While I was on the phone I saw, out of the corner of my eye, a Long’s Drugs sign! Well, isn’t that fortunate, I thought to myself. I parked my car close to the Long’s entrance and went in.

I shopped quickly, weaving in and out of aisles between large families all doing last minute Christmas shopping. I finished in under 10 minutes and headed towards the front of the store, where I saw a man in his late- forties/early-fifties with silver hair, wearing a business suit, yelling, red-faced, at a the only cashier in the store, a girl of no more than sixteen years, with a ponytail, who looked on the verge of either crying or clawing her abuser’s eyes out. It’s quite a scene to stumble across.

“I’m going to be talking to your manager about this. This is ridiculous! Your job is NOT that hard, you’re just incompetent. Or are you just stupid? I’m never shopping here again, I’ll tell you that right now. Obviously you don’t need MY business. Just go back to filing your nails, there, princess. I don’t need this SHIT!”

“I’m sorry, sir. My manager is on lunch right now. You’re more than welcome to come back in an hour and we can sort this all out then. But, right now? I’ve got customers behind you I need to take care of, so, please, move aside.” she said patiently, even as the tears welled up in her eyes.

“Fuck you, bitch.” he said and threw a handful of wadded up bills at her. He didn’t wait for his change. He grabbed his plastic bags of groceries, and stormed out, muttering to himself.

I was the next in line, with a few people behind me. I took a second to let her regain her composure as she flattened the wadded up bills and then stepped forward.

“Wow, what was that all about?” I asked.

“I told him that we didn’t have any of the ‘Buy-2-Get-1-Free’ Camel Turkish Silver promotional cigarette packs left. He accused me of lying and/or being lazy.” she said, and then, with realization as she counted the money he’d thrown at her, “And he fucking shorted me!”

“Are you serious? All that over cigarettes? What an asshole!” I said, shocked.

“Tell me about it.” She said, and shook her head, perhaps wondering why she put up with these sorts of abuses. She bagged up my groceries and I paid, wished her Merry Christmas (to which she just shrugged) and left the store. I left the city without incident, driving North towards home.

Halfway there, I remembered that I’d bought myself a bottle of grapefruit soda, and starting rooting around through my bags to find it. Hmmmmm. That’s interesting, I thought. I don’t remember buying any magazines. Or chocolate. Or all this other junk. Who the hell’s stuff is this?

I realized then that the asshole in line before me must have been so enraged that he had left two decent-sized bags of groceries behind when he stormed out. And I, in my normal absent-minded state, had picked them up with my own bags and absconded.

Well, hell, I though to myself. Here I am, sitting in traffic, closer to home than the city, with a bunch of paid-for-but-sort-of-stolen items.

“Serves that motherfucker right.” I said to myself and drove on.

Sure, maybe it wasn’t the “right” thing to do. Some of you reading this might even say it was ungentlemanly. But here’s my view on the subject: He was a jerk. And jerks deserve to be punished. I do take solace, in most cases, in knowing that the universe would punish him in due time, what goes around comes around, karma and all that rot. However, the thing about karma is that it’s just so slow and I’m usually not around to witness it in action, and so I feel the need sometimes to, on rare occasions, just kind of, well, help it along a little bit, you know? Just give it a little boost. And if I can come out a little bit ahead in the end because of it, well then, that can’t be helped, right? And if, in order to deal out this retribution, I must do something a little ‘morally nebulous’, well, let’s just say that I’m more than willing to take one for the team.

When I got home I told my wife what had just happened and she looked kind of shocked.

“Why didn’t you bring them back?” she asked me.

“Well, he was just such a complete asshole, and bringing the bags back to the store would have amounted to another bridge toll and being stuck in traffic for hours. Plus, I thought, you know… free stuff. Did I mention this guy was an asshole?”

She thought about this for a moment and then smiled and said, “So… what’d we get?” Ah, this is part of why I love my wife. She, like myself, doesn’t like to muddy up a victory for righteousness with such fluid concepts as ‘morals’ and ‘legality’. However, I have to set my standards somewhere:

“Well, hold on there, missy. Let’s set some rules up here. If there are ANY prescription medications in here, ANY AT ALL, I will call this bastard up and give the stuff back to him. His phone number would be on the bottle, right? And I don’t want someone in his family to suffer without medicine just because this guy is unable to behave in a civilized manner. Poor Timmy isn’t going to go without his heart medication over the Christmas holiday just because Daddy was too clouded with anger to remember his bags.” I said.

“Fair enough,” my wife said. “Now give me the bags.”

“Wait just a second. Secondly, barring any medications, and because this is Christmas, I think we should give away to friends or charity anything that’s in these bags that is suitable for giving away.” I said.

“Great. Give!” she said, impatiently.

In the end, we ended up with 6 bags of Ghirardelli chocolate squares of varying flavors and intensity that we gave (mostly) to one of my brothers, a big box of some other candy that we gave to my Mom, a six-pack of Coca-Cola in glass bottles and a large assortment of glass and tin ornaments. Also, we got a box of ‘Super’ tampons and a double-issue of Modern Bride magazine. No prescription meds, just last minute Christmas shopping stuff.

Somewhere out there, I thought to myself as I wrapped up the loot, there is a menstruating, soon-to-be-married woman in dire need of chocolate, who is, I hope, taking out her frustrations on the asshole from the store. I hope she claws his eyes out.

True to the Christmas spirit, we gave away everything but the Coca-Cola bottles because, well, I love Coca-Cola in a glass bottle. Also, I think my wife snagged a box of milk-chocolate and caramel squares. The tampons got shoved away in the bathroom cabinet and are still there, I think, and the only other thing was the Modern Bride magazine, which I think I just found a use for.

WHAP! Farewell, Mothra. Your attraction to me was fierce but I simply couldn’t return your love and so you had to die. Hmmm. That’s poetic.

Now, where to wipe your guts…

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Hot Hot Heat

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

The heat’s coming down now in Northern California like a ton of bricks, hot sticky bricks. I have once again left myself drastically unprepared for the present weather, having not moved to Alaska and not built myself an igloo.  I can honestly say that thye heat does nothing for my mood and I present you with the following example.

Last night, after the wife got off work at around 9:30, I found myself in line at Safeway, holding a case of bottled water and a basket full of oranges, both of which increase in awesome when stuck in the fridge and left to get nice and cold. I’m standing there with my wife, Traci, in a line of, say, 6 people, and there’s a guy with a melon standing to the side of me because the line is so long that it’s doing the “L” shaped thing.

I set down the waters because they’re quite heavy (should have gotten a cart, you know) and just then another checker opens up. Some people from further up in the line rush over, so I grab my waters to move up when this… man… with the melon… sidesteps me. He line-jumped the wife and I. The cad!

I step up to him and am about to unleash hell upon him, when the wife looks at me and shrugs, communicating to me that, oh well, he’s only got a melon, just let it go.

So I let it go. Sort of.

He gets up to the conveyor belt doohickey and puts his melon up there and puts one of those little dividers down and stares straight ahead. I slam down my waters with enough force to cause his melon to hop a little. I laser him in the back of the head with my eyes (if ONLY I could afford laser-eye implants) and beam him a message.

“Dude. I know what you just did. You know what you just did. Why’d ya do it, huh? Are you high? I mean, it’s 4-20 and all, so is that it? Got a hankering for some melon, what is that, a seedless watermelon? And decided to come on over the the ol’ Safeway and buy one, and now here you are, staring Death in the face. Not literally Death and not literally in the face, but, oh, you know I’m staring at you. Can you feel it? Can you feel my eyes penetrating deeply into your soul, etching upon it the details of your sin? Can you…” And so on.

I must have been staring a little too hard because the wife elbowed me in the stomach and stopped my mental bludgeoning.

I remark casually, while perusing a magazine from the handy rack, that, apparently, people who cut in line have small genitals. Who’d have thought?

Oof, another elbow from the wife.

He pays, without glancing back at me or the wife, and begins to leave the store. This is your last chance, Chris, say something that’ll sting, something apt, something just right. Think, think, think…

“I HOPE YOUR MELON IS BITTER!”, the wife calls out at him as he leaves. He hesitates for a moment and then continues without looking back.

Well done, love. I am humbled.

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Trips of Several Different Kinds

Saturday, April 18th, 2009

Well, I’m still working on my forthcoming geekery blog (Geek-Sauce.com! WOOT!) but progress has been slow lately. Most of my energy has gone into last week’s trip to Reno and the gigs I’m right smack in the middle of playing currently.

Reno was a, err, fun. I won $160 within a few minutes of getting there which the wife then proceeded to weasel out of me over the next few days (also I bought a ‘party shirt’ with the money at a local habberdashery (that’s not right, a habberdashery sells hats; I just enjoy that word), a striped, subdued brown and turquoise affair with cuffs that rolls up to reveal a sort of ‘mariachi’-ish turquoise embroidered pattern and a velvet lining around the neck).

(On a sidenote: why is it that when you are describing a shirt, it always sounds so very ugly? Srsly, the one I bought looks great, very good for wearing on stage, but from that description, brown and turquoise stripes, it sounds really awful. I should add that those are very thin and vertical stripes. That’s a little better, I guess.)

Normally I consider these types of places (Reno, Las Vegas, Atlantic City) to be garish and tacky, but sometimes there’s no choice. The wife’s sister lives in Reno, and thus my angelic nieces live there too. Also, we had free rooms at the Peppermill courtesy of my wife’s previous trips up there sans myself.

When the stars align as such, there’s nothing to be done except to ’slum it’ and re-watch Fear and Loathing In Las Vegas for pointers. Well, no huffing ether my the wife and I. Too old for that. Plus I wouldn’t even know where to find any. I wouldn’t be able to tell you that if you go down to the corner of Moana and Virginia and ask for “Frank”, you can get your hands on a small but powerful amount of ether and a dirty rag for huffing, all for under ten dollars.

Nope.

No, the strongest thing I had all weekend (and this was merely to take the edge off of the harsh lighting, relentless beeping and pinging of machines and vomit-inducing carpeting of the casino interior) was quite a few Khalua and Creams. These were gratis while playing slots, of course, so they only had a teaspoon of actuall liquer in them, but when you’ve got an empty stomach and knock back 6 or 7 of them back-to-back, they can get the job done.

In conclusion: The nieces are wonderful, Reno was ehh-okay, the summit had snow on it, which is sort of novel for me. Oh! And we stopped by Der Wienerschnitzel in Auburn, CA, on the way home where I proceeded to burn the ever-loving-shit out of my bottom lip with a combination of molten hot cheese and magma-chili that had been generously slathered onto my hot-dog. Burned so badly that I’ve got a blistering wound now, so yeah, thanks Wienerschnitzel for making it look like I’ve got herpes as I walk around letting it heal over the next week.

Awfully good chili-dog, though. Top notch. Sonic the Hedgehog would have loved it. And I enjoy the paper wrappers on all the food that say “World’s Most Wanted Wiener”. Oh, yes. I see what you did there.

Watch for the forthcoming geek-blog someday soon! Still tweaking the theme and whatnot, so it’ll be any day now. On a related note: Eff you, Safari. Why can’t you be CSS standards compliant? Geek-sauce looks great on everything but you, you daft browser. Ah, well.

Tootle, pip!

P.S.: Crazy response to that ‘8 Awesome and Disturbing Wonders” post from last week! Thanks everyone who visited that one, and thank you StumbleUpon. Never again shall I refer to you as Digg’s retarded cousin. At least not in public anymore.

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On Birthday Suits…

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

There is a vital point in every man’s life where he must make an important and life-long decision regarding his body: You must love your body, or you must hide your body. In the case of most men, your body is your body is your body. You’ve developed fully and, for the most part, as you age, nothing really much happens. Sure, you start to sag a bit, and wrinkles happen, but, barring drastic weight gain/loss, a new rigorous workout routine, or major surgery (male-to-female or something like that), you get to know your body in a mirror. You get to know your body well enough to be able to pick it out of a line-up. (Why you’d ever have to do this, I don’t know.)

In my case, this decision was made at a pretty standard age. Upon exiting the swimming pool at the age of 13, my chest/back/shoulder-hair slicked down and darkened by the water, I was instantly made the object of ridicule by my peers. My stated fact that the men in Italian GQ’s Summer issue said that hairy chests were nothing to be ashamed of did nothing to stop the local girls from tossing about derisive comments like “monkey boy” and “missing link”.

So I went home and took one of my father’s rusty old razors and went to work on my chest and shoulders, sans shaving cream or water. Within seconds my chest looked like it had been attacked by a wolverine. I managed to staunch the flow of blood with a hand-towel (which prompted some embarrassing questions from my mother later) and I avoided the pool for the rest of that whole summer, fearing (smartly, I think) infection and more ridicule for having a five-o’clock shadow on my chest. This memory, along with having forever burned into my mind the shocked faces of the several women who’ve walked in on me in the buff during my lifetime, has given me what my wife calls a “complex”.

Sure we’ve been married for a few years. Sure, we’ve been intimate on many occasions. But does that mean that she NEEDS to see me walk around in my birthday suit, in all of my glory, when I get up in the middle of the night to get a glass of water?

“I can’t believe you put on your robe and boxers to go to the bathroom. Just go! I don’t care about seeing you naked! I won’t even look!” she says.

“It’s not about ‘not looking’. What if there’s a burglar out there? I don’t want him seeing my twig and berries. It’d be inappropriate.” I counter.

“But he would be ROBBING US! Wouldn’t that be MORE inappropriate than you catching him in the act while nude?” she argues.

“It’s not an “Inappropriate Behavior Contest”, sweetie… that I know of…”

I wink at my wife as she she rolls her eyes, and tottle off to fetch my water, this time in just boxer shorts, for a thrill.

A friend of mine realized his body-image decision in a different, I think a more admirable, way. He awoke one morning, nude, in his college dorm room, and had forgotten to close the blinds on his sliding glass balcony door. He got up, walked across the room, and, while pulling the blinds closed, he noticed that a group of girls were looking up at him from a walking path outside.

There were three or four of them, and they had stopped dead in their tracks when one of them had, at just the right moment, looked upward and seen my nude friend. Now they were all looking.

“A full second ticked by in which I thought about what I should do.” He told me later. “I played out several scenarios in my mind: I could recoil from the window immediately, and hope I never saw those girls ever again. I could walk calmly away from the window, dress quickly, run down to the group and apologize profusely for… what? What would I be apologizing for? THEY were looking at ME in the privacy of MY ROOM.”

“It’s true,” I said, “you were not at fault. So, what did you do?”

“Well, I decided to have a bit of a stretch. I calmly yawned and reached my arms way up, really working the yawn out, you know, and I really stretched, like a cat does. I finished up, tastefully, by taking in the lovely view from my balcony with my hands on my hips for a few more seconds, all the time pretending not to notice them, and then calmly closed the blinds, making sure to shoot a smile in their direction just before I disappeared from view.”

“Hmmm. I would have winked.” I said.

“I thought they might not have seen that, though. Too subtle.” He replied.

He’s probably right. I mean, who winks these days anyway?

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Haunted By The Zombie Owl

Saturday, April 11th, 2009

When I was first learning how to drive, I had an irrational fear of pigs. At a young age my Grandfather had impressed upon me the fact that, were I to hit a pig with my car while out for a leisurely drive, I would suffer a horrible fate.

“Pigs,” he told me, “are unlike other animals you may hit with your car. A deer, having long legs and most of it’s body mass a few feet off the ground, will pop up over your hood, or, since it’s not very heavy, it’ll bounce off of your bumper without causing too much damage. A ‘possum or raccoon will go beneath your vehicle and you’ll feel a small bump, nothing more. In both of these cases, you’re pretty safe.”

At this point he would pause, and then, staring right into my eyes so I knew he meant business he’d say: “But not… a pig.”

“A pig,” he’d continue, “will not go over your hood or under your wheels. If you hit a pig, you’ll hit it square on. Now, your average pig can weigh anywhere from 200 to 1,000 pounds, and when you combine that with the velocity of your car?” At this point he’d clap his hands together, loud. “Wham! It’s like hitting a brick wall. You’re gone. You’re dead.”

Of course, my grandfather grew up in a rural area of West Virginia, so this makes sense to him. Pigs wandered into the road there and it was a real concern at night that you might go over a hill on your way back from the sock-hop or the hamburger stand and there would be a sow and whammo! Of course, we were all living in Northern California now. I haven’t even seen a pig in years. I rarely even eat bacon. But that did not stop my Grandfather from impressing upon me the grave fate that would befall me if I were to encounter a pig on the road. I would die, is what I’d do.

So when I started driving, I’d watch. Sure, I thought to myself, I’m just being careful. There could be a dog in the road, or worse, a woman with a stroller might step off the curb. There’s no pigs out here, I’d remind myself. But in the back of my mind lurked that pig. I’d see a shadow in the road up ahead and I’d think, instinctually, for a split second, “Pig?!” but no. It would always turn out to be a ‘possum or a fluffy white cat who would look very shocked up until the moment I lost sight of them under my bumper. Just a little “bump” as my tires rolled over it’s poor little skull. No “Wham!” Not even a “Smack!” Sigh. I never hit anything exciting.*

That was, of course, until I hit the zombie owl.

No, that’s not exactly right. Technically, the owl was not a zombie until after I’d hit it and it came back to life, but I’m getting ahead of myself.

“It was on a night just like tonight…” I tell my nephew as I drive him over to my place so that he may escape the wretched boredom that is my parent’s house for a night. I’ve got a fridge full of Coca-Cola and more video games than a grown man should probably own, which makes me a rather ‘cool’ grown-up, in his book. What can I say? My wife tells me I’ve got the heart of a child. Which, I think, really says something creepy about her, you know, sexually. (The pervert.) But I digress.

“…on this very same stretch of road…” I continue, saying it slow, for effect.

He rolls his eyes. He’s a teenager now, so he’s really good at it. “This isn’t the ‘zombie owl’ story again, is it?”

“You just listen, or I’ll take you right to the closest minimum-security orphanarium. And don’t think I can’t explain my reasons to your mother. I’m gifted with words and horribly persuasive.” Oh, he knows I’m joking. I don’t even know where the orphanarium is located. And the paperwork would take SO long!

“And, yes, it’s about the zombie owl. I don’t care if you’ve heard it before. If you want to drink Coca-Cola until you’re silly with sugar and caffeine, you’ll be quiet and let me tell my story.” He rolls his eyes, but waves his hand in a manner that tells me to go ahead with my tale.

“Anyway, like I was saying, night like tonight, same stretch of road, and, oh yeah, around this very same bend! It was two in the morning and I was in my big Chevy diesel pickup truck, coming home from a gig.”

“The truck where you spilled an entire 32-ounce strawberry-pineapple smoothie right into the pocket of the driver’s side door?” He asks, giggling.

“Yeah. That’s the one. Now shut up. Like I was saying, as I came around that bend, right back there, I was suddenly confronted with an image I will never forget. A pure snowy-white owl with a wingspan as wide as my truck stood in the middle of the road, stooped over eating, probably, a person. It could have been a vampire he was eating, which might explain his unwillingness to die. You know, like a transfer of powers where, through eating the flesh of a vampire, the owl gains the ability to come back from the grave? What do you think?”

“I think… that…,” he stalls for a moment, and is, I assume, carefully weighing soda-pop and video games with the perfect opportunity to verbally bash my silliness. It’s a test of my authority. He decides to play it safe. “I think that’s an interesting theory. Yep, interesting.” Well played, young man. Well played.

“Well, anyway, he was stooped over, eating, and when my headlights hit him he spread his wings out to take flight and that’s right when I hit him, head on.”

I notice that I’m using the pronoun ‘he’ a lot. Who’s to say this beast wasn’t a female? If we’re going by the theory that “hell hath no fury like a woman scorned”, then ’she’ might be a bit more accurate. But that’s just a theory, too.

“He bounced right over my hood, and right by my open driver’s side window, and I could swear I caught a glimpse of a blood-and-gore-encrusted beak and some enormous talons, but I can’t be sure. He crashed over my truck with a few weighty ‘thumps’ and I came to a …screeching** halt. I pulled over and got out, taking my big ol’ metal flashlight with me, to see if, against odds, the owl was still alive and I could put it into my truck bed and save it’s life. I envisioned myself bringing this great big, possibly endangered snowy white owl into the animal emergency room, just in time to revive it. I’d visit it occasionally during it’s healing process, and there would be an article in the local paper, detailing my compassion and heroism. Possibly I’d receive a medal. I’m just saying.”

“Yeah. Right. A medal.” My nephew said.

“It could happen. So, I walked back along the road to the point where I’d hit the thing, and there it was. No, not the owl. A pile of white feathers with blood on them. The owl was nowhere to be found, and neither was the carcass I’d seen it chewing on. Nothing else. I was confused. And horrified. Had it dragged itself away, into the bushes next to the road? Had is flown away on twisted, broken wings? Had a lurking predator made off with the fresh owl and it’s meal? I mean, what the hell had just happened?”

“You’d hit an owl.” My nephew deadpanned. “With your truck.”

“Yeah, thanks. Anyway, I got back into my truck and drove home. When I got out of my truck I had the bright idea to check out my bumper to see if there was blood or anything to prove my story to the wife, any evidence. And there was. Wedged right into the gap between my headlight and it’s frame, there were white down feathers. The frame around the headlight was broken, too, cracked through the plastic. The headlight was fine, though.”

“Well, thank goodness for that.” My nephew said sarcastically. He’s too young to appreciate how expensive a headlight is to replace on a 1985 Chevy truck.

“So, as I was checking out the feathers, I heard the most blood-curdling screech right behind me, coming from the direction of my front door. Then, a sound of something scraping against the wood shingles of my roof, something evil. Then, whatever it was that was on my roof fell off and landed in the bushes. So I did what came naturally to me. I got the fuck in my house and shut the door.”

“Hey, you can’t say the ‘F’ word around me! I’m an impressionable youth!” My nephew said, suddenly paying attention to me after hearing my accidental swearing.

“What are you like, thirteen now? I can say the ‘F’ word, you can’t. That’s life, buddy. It’s a double standard.”

“That sucks.” He replied.

“Don’t say ’sucks’.” I said. Then I laughed. “I’m just kidding, you can say ’sucks’ all you want. I don’t give a shit. So, I got into the house and told your aunt Traci all about it and she listened to the story, half-asleep. She said it probably just dragged itself into a ravine, and she’s probably right. But here’s the thing. Ever since that night, I’ve heard, probably about once a month at least, that hideous screech that I’d never heard before. I can practically see him out there, creeping around in the dark on broken, ragged wings, his rotted feathers crawling with worms, his eye sockets hollow and his beak gleaming and sharp as a razor. He rises every night and roams the countryside, attacking people who resemble me and old Chevy trucks, hoping to one day sink his beak into my throat, and when he eventually does? Then he will finally rest. And I’ll be dead, the only person on Earth to have been killed by a bloody vengeful owl.”

We pull up to my house and my wife hears us and opens the door, creating a golden parallelogram of light that spills out invitingly, with herself silhouetted in the middle. We get out and walk up to the house, my nephew carrying his backpack with clothes and CD’s and teenager stuff.

“He told me the one about the zombie owl again.” He tells Traci, and she rolls her eyes, just as good as he can.

“Again?” she says.

“He’s out there somewhere.” I tell her, narrowing my eyes and turning to stare meaningfully out into the darkness with my arm around her. “Oh, yes. He’s out there. Waiting.”

* Don’t give me that look! Let me explain: I live in the wine country and the roads I use to get to and from gigs and errands are long and windy and just full of cute little woodland creatures harboring suicidal tendencies. These circumstances (combined with the fact that I come home from gigs at 2- or 3- or even 5AM) mean that I run over a couple of groggy little critters every month. It’s a “them or me” mentality. (Or, rather more correctly, a “themselves or I” mentality.) I’m not about to swerve off the road and ram into one of our famous thousand-year-old redwoods, killing my wife and I, while that furry little bastard hippety-hops away to father another few thousand garden-ruining runts.

** Ha! Owls, screeching, you know?  ”How does he come up with these?”, you’re probably asking yourself. Magic, my friends. Magic.

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8 Strange Wonders of Nature

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

The world is just awesome and also strange and sometimes deeply disturbing on a psychological level. For every beautiful butterfly out there, there’s a flesh eating deer. For every cute little bear cub, there’s the Dracula Ant. And nowhere during the “March of the Penguins” did they mention that, on occasion, a penguin will kidnap another penguin couple’s chick. Yes, penguin-napping. It happens.

So on that note, here’s some more interesting stuff about those beautiful, exotic, and sometimes very weird creatures with whom we share our planet. Enjoy!

8. Tardigrades: Tougher than Chuck Norris.

Tardigrade - Nature's Chuck NorrisCommonly called “water bears”, tartigrades are microscopic water-dwelling organisms with segmented bodies and eight legs. The name “water bear” comes from the way that they walk, which is reminiscent of a bear.

These hardy little critters can survive almost any place, as long as there is moisture: hot springs, the peaks of the Himalayas, under layers of solid ice, stone walls, roofs, ocean sediment, and toxic bogs.

But, the most amazing things about Tardigrades is that they can go into a state of reversable suspended animation where they become like tiny little superheroes. While in this suspended state, Tardigrades can survive bursts of heat up to 151ºC and cold as low as –272 °C (a single degree above absolute zero) They can withstand super-low pressure as well as super-high pressure (up to 1200 times atmospheric pressure) and can survive a completely moisture-free state for up to ten years. They can also withstand boiling water and being submerged in pure alcohol, and. They’re also impervious to radiation. Pretty amazing, really. But not as strange, per se, as…

7. Female Trout Who Fake Orgasms

Female Brown Trout Can Fake Orgasms

Swedish scientists have found that female brown trout fake orgasms in about half of their spawnings.

During a normal spawning, the female digs a gravel pit for the eggs. When she prepares to mate, she crouches down to protect the nest, opens her mouth and starts to quiver intensely. The male then swims alongside the female, assumes the same position,opens his mouth and starts to quiver as well. After a few seconds, the female releases her eggs and the male fertilizes them. But some researchers found that sometimes the female fakes it and doesn’t release her eggs when the male releases his sperm.

Why? Well, some say that the fish may perform this ruse with a less desirable male in order to ‘make it go away’ so it can then get it on with a more desirable trout.

6. The Platypus

The Platypus has a venomous barb on it's hind leg.Despite being 12 animals rolled up into one, the platypus also has the honor of being one of the only mammals in the world with venom and is THE ONLY mammal in the world that delivers it’s venom in a way other than a bite.

The male platypus has a venomous spur on its hind legs, which can incapacitate an adult human and causes excruciating pain. The venom is unlike any other venom in the animal world, using defensin-like proteins, which are normally reserved for innate immune functions like killing bacteria.

On a similarly freaky note, the platypus also lays eggs AND nurses it’s young with milk, although it doesn’t have any nipples. It secretes the milk (and immune-boosting chemicals) through patches on it’s skin.

Just like Mom used to.

5. The Argentine Lake Duck

The Argentine Lake Duck has the world's largest penis.Also called the Argentine Blue-bill and the Argentine Ruddy duck, this species of fowl is a small, stiff-tailed duck native to South America. Clumsy on land since their legs are set unusually far back, they spend most of their time in water where they feed by diving, and very rarely fly.

Which is probably difficult anyway, because these ducks have, in relation to their body size, the longest penis of all vertebrates on Earth. The penis, which is coiled up in its flaccid state and has a bristled tip, can reach about the same length as the animal itself when fully erect (about 42cm), although, despite what the male ducks will have you believe, it is more commonly about half the bird’s length (about 20cm).

Most male birds do not have a penis at all, but male ducks have a long corkscrew penis and female ducks have a long corkscrew vagina (it corkscrews in the opposite direction).

It is theorized that the remarkable size of the Argentine Lake Duck’s spiny penis with its bristled tip may have evolved in response to competitive pressure in these highly promiscuous birds, removing sperm from previous matings in the manner of a bottle brush.

4. The Wholphin

The Wholphin is a cross between a false killer whale and a bottlenose dolphin.A hybrid known to occur in the wild, a wholphin is what you get when a false killer whale and a bottlenose dolphin love each other very very much. A false killer whale (Pseudorca crassidens) looks just like an orca (killer whale) but actually is a member of the dolphin family, hence how they can breed.

A wholphin almost exactly averages the characteristics of it’s two parent species. Example: Bottle-nose dolphins have 88 teeth, false killer whales have 44 teeth, and the wholphin splits the difference with 66 teeth.

3. Giant Salamanders

Japanese and Chinese Giant Salamanders are awesome.Asian giant salamanders are aquatic amphibians found in streams and ponds in China, Japan, and (occasionally) in the Eastern United States. Japanese salamanders can reach up to 4 1/2 feet and have been known to live over 50 years! Chinese giant salamanders can get as big as 6 feet in length, and eat crustaceans, fish, and insects, worms and mice.

Giant salamanders are the largest species of amphibian currently living on the planet, yet perhaps not for very long. The giant salamander’s numbers are dwindling due to the fact that it’s flesh is considered a delicacy in many parts of Asia.  It is currently listed as a ‘Critically Endangered Species’, according to the IUCN Red List.

2. Albino Alligators

Albino Alligators. At least you'll see it coming.“These gators are a genetic mutation of the American alligator,” says Kathy Landry, a zookeeper at the New Orleans’ Audubon Zoo. Buried in the cells of every newborn animal is a unique set of genes. The blueprint shapes how the animal will develop and grow, what its eyes, scales, fur, or feathers will be like. But sometimes the instructions have defects.

The gators inherited a defective gene that produces too little melanin, the pigment that lends skin its hue. Their parents may have had normal greenish skin and eyes (no one knows, since the gators were found in the wild). But if an animal offspring is albino, then both parents carried the gene for that trait.

1. Carnivorous Red Deer

Carnivorous Red Deer on the Island of Rum (Rhum) eat puffins to help them grow antlers.Red deer on the Scottish island of Rum eat the heads and legs of live seabird chicks in order to get the minerals they need to grow their antlers.

Situated 16 miles off the west coast of northern Scotland, the island of Rum has one of the largest colonies of Manx shearwaters (Puffins). In late August, the birds hatch and begin to venture out from their hillside burrows (birds burrow?). Unable to fly, they make a perfect snack for carnivores, among them that lovely picture of doe-eyed innocence, the red deer.

For many years the appearance of decapitated shearwater chicks baffled bird watchers. The bird were mostly intact, though, missing only their heads and leg bones.

Generally, vegetation will provide a deer with enough minerals and nutrients that it needs, but the vegetation on the island of Rum has a low calcium content. The calcium supplement that the deer get from the bird bones aids in the growing of strong antlers, which are vital for a deers mating rituals.

Now, I know that this all makes sense and everything, but I don’t think I’m alone when I say that I don’t think I’ll ever get the image of Bambi ripping apart a dove out of my head.

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A Rambling Thought

Sunday, April 5th, 2009

As I sit here, typing, I can hear the television in the other room. Since I’m not quite listening it thinks it can get away with saying scandalous, strange things, things that make no sense.

“A pub is not only a great place to raise a family, it can help steer you in the right direction…” it informs me.

Clearly, this is false. A pub is not a great place to raise a family. I don’t have any children, but I mean, where would you put the baby down?  I guess a corner booth might work, but still, come on. It’s irresponsible. The baby would be knocking over drinks and not holding up it’s end of the conversation.  And babies are notoriously bad at darts.

As my wife gently snoozes on the couch, I have stolen away to write. Writing is, you might already know, my passion and my mistress. I write when I should be eating. I contemplate submitting essays to lofty magazines or finally finishing my book and submitting it to publishing houses, before remembering that thousands of people have the same idea, people with full college educations, people with connections, people who want to ‘get their foot in the door’, not just ‘get invited to crazy-fun parties and drink Bombay Sapphire like it’s going out of style’ (it never will, btw), people who don’t rely on run-on sentences to convey their  stream-of-consciousness rambling. People with serious names like “Howard Bell” and “David Sedaris” and “Diablo Cody”.  People with boobs.

Sure, I’ve got other passions. Playing music, for one. And it’s a passion I’ve been able to make a fairly decent living at, too. But it’s not like this writing thing. This writing thing has got a grip on my guts now. It’s exciting to me and new. The simple act of turning a phrase, making it a bit more visceral or a bit more graceful with just a subtle tweak of the language can be exhilirating. It must be so rote and familiar to some of you more experienced writers out there, but to me it’s still a novelty, still a fascination. Still something to obsess over when I should be, say, eating or sleeping.

“Let’s see what kind of booby traps this thing’s got!” the television states quite plainly from the other room.

Indeed. Let’s see what kind of hidden bits I can unearth from the wet, pink-gray folds of my brain today. My shovel is the written word, and my pickaxe, punctuation. And booby trapped this brain of mine certainly is. I start off writing about my Dad, and suddenly a trap door opens and I find myself in the back of a station wagon, sometime in the late 80’s, remembering the time my parents took me and my brothers to see Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade at the drive-in. We had to park close to the screen, so close that I got a pain in my neck that lasted for several years. The pain only began to subside with weekly neck adjustments from my granfather, a licensed chiropractor.

“Never, ever, EVER,” he told me, “become a chiropractor. Just promise me that if you decide to become a doctor, you won’t become a chiropractor.” I nodded in agreement, not knowing at that young age the stigma associated with chiropractors, how many people don’t consider them to be ‘real’ doctors. If my grandfather wasn’t a real doctor, then I’m a ballerina.

(Note: I am not a ballerina. However, I did participate in some Armenian folk dancing a few years ago, at an international food festival. If you are ever invited to an international food festival, I urge you to go. The experience changed my life, and mostly for the better.)

“Your brother was an animal!” the TV says.

“You’re right,” It says in reply to itself, in a deeper register. “He WAS an animal. And you got his number, didn’t you?”

It’s an action movie, edited for television. I’ve seen it before. They’re not really supposed to be saying ‘animal’, they’re supposed to say ‘asshole’. The way it sounds when it’s edited makes it sound sort of racey, sort of, well, incestuous and homo-erotic, quite frankly.

I leave you now, to pay attention to the television and to my long-suffering wife, and to leave the winding, dense hallways of my mind free from my probing tendrils for the moment. My wife’s soft breath, a comfortable place on my BROWN couch, and a late-night, heavily-edited, action movie beckon to me, and I must oblige them.

(For an excellent read, check out this blog: Grace Undressed.)

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Jokes That You Can't Help From Making. Every. Single. Time.

Saturday, April 4th, 2009

A few years ago my Dad received a large cabinet smoker for smoking meats and he enjoys the hell out of that thing. He enjoyed it so much the first year he had it that he smoked everything. EVERYTHING. Turkey? Sure. Salmon? Excellent. Sturgeon? Mmm-mmm. Pork loin? Not my favorite. Chicken? I’d rather not.

Anyway, he got really good at the smoked turkey, so much so that my brothers and I began to ask him to smoke turkeys so we could give them to in-laws/friends/clients. Which is a great gift, by the way, because it looks so great and it involved absolutely no work/time on my part whatsoever. Perfect!

Nearing Christmas he had back-orders for turkeys going back weeks (Get on it, Pops. Chop-chop.) and so we would ask him, periodically, have you had a chance to, you know, smoke that turkey yet?* And each and every time, up to this very day, he will answer with the following line.

“Well, I tried to, but I couldn’t keep it lit! I couldn’t keep it lit! Did you here what I said? I SAID I COULDN’T…”

“I HEARD YOU.”

We all do this. Not make that turkey joke, of course, but make the same joke over and over again. I myself have been known to repeat jokes. The difference is that mine are funny. Every time.

Scene: I’m standing outside of my parents house, waiting for the wife to come out so we can have a little after-dinner cigarette. She sidles up next to me, pulls out two cigarettes and holds one out towards me. I look down at it.

Wife: Cigarette?

Me: Yes, I know.

Wife: JUST TAKE THE DAMN CIGARETTE.

You know, sometimes you’ve got to do something that amuses you, even if people don’t understand, even if no one else ‘gets it’. That’s why, quite randomly, I send my friends text messages that read “IT’S A TRAP! GET OUT OF THERE!” from a random SMS-sending service online. I like to imagine that they’re in a business meeting or having tea with their grandmother and this causes them to look around furtively and maybe say to grandma, “So, Nana, why did you really bring me here? WHO ARE YOU WORKING FOR?!”

Usually what I receive back is a message saying “Dude, wtf?”, but that’s okay. I do it for me. It makes me smile.

*Asking this question “Have you smoked that turkey yet?” always provoked, in my own warped little mind, images from a 70’s cop movie, where the bad-guys are all standing around and talking shop.

Lester: Man! Freakin’ cops man! The fuzz have been coming down on me like… like… like raindrops on my beautifully sculpted fro!

T-Bone: Yeah, if only we could take out that amazing wonder-cop, Glad Hammercock. That jive-ass fool has been running us ragged…

Lester: Man! I can’t believe we haven’t smoked that turkey yet!

T-Bone: Well, we tried but it was hard to keep it lit.

The Gun Lester Has Just Pulled From His Waistband and Pointed at T-Bone: BLAM!

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A Hit And Run He Never Saw Coming

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

Today, after the wife got off of work at about 1:30 PM, she informed me that she had an appointment with the chiropractor, to which I replied “Yippee!” because that meant we’d be going to Sonoma Valley Bagel, where I would be able to devour my favorite bagel in this dimension, toasted garlic, that would imbue my breath with a not-so-subtle ability to melt a man’s (or woman’s) face off at a distance of 3 meters. (Remember that scene in Raiders of the Lost Ark? It’s kinda like that.)

Sonoma Valley Bagel is a unique business in that they are owned by a wonderful Asian (Korean maybe?) couple who don’t speak much English and, in order to help them communicate with customers, they hired on a young Latin girl who, quite frankly, speaks English even worse, if that’s possible. Between their mangled attempts at relaying to each other what my order might have originally been, I’m lucky if I order a bagel, toasted, with cream cheese and end up with a sack of dried kiwi, a short-stack of blueberry pancakes and a cup of rum punch.

So why do I keep going back? Well, they’re nice people, really. Also, their dried kiwis are delicious. And, additionally, inertia, I guess. A sort of life-inertia that makes me do all sorts of things that I do that I don’t necessarily have a reason for or enjoy in the slightest.

(Just as a quick example, I order coffee when I go places, even though it makes me ill and I don’t really like it. I like dark English teas with a drop of milk and no sugar, and yet I order coffee or, say, a mocha. Why? What the hell? And why doesn’t anyone stop me? Wife? Little help here?)

Anyway, while driving away from the bagel shop we encountered an unprotected left-turn light. The truck in front of us pulled into the intersection and we pulled up a bit, just in time for the light to turn red and prohibit our turn. So, we’re blocking the crosswalk.

No big deal, right?

Well, it is if you happen to be blind and trying to walk across the very crosswalk my car is blocking and your (admittedly kinda cool) collapsible cane doesn’t help you because you’re not expecting the large ostensibly-floating front end of a 1989 Volvo to be sticking out into your intended path.

So, the birdy chirp is sounding to let blind-dude (probably 40-years-old, by the way) know that it’s okay to cross the street and blind-dude starts walking and my wife and I see what’s about to happen. My wife grabs for the knob to roll the window down so she can warn this guy and, I’m not kidding, the knob pops off the door.  So, she’s scrambling to put the knob back on the window and then tries to open her door, but it’s locked and by the time she pulls up the locking mechanism it’s too late.

He hits the front fender with his knee pretty hard (WHACK), which sends the front half of his body forward, bent at the waist, and he smacks his forehead right on the hood (BONG).  He doesn’t fall, thank goodness, but rather stumbles back a step, sways for a moment, then goes WAY around the front of our car, and continues on his way like nothing happened. I wanted to run out there and see if he was okay, but, well:

  1. The light changed and someone honked at us from behind.
  2. It wouldn’t have been safe for me to run through traffic like that.
  3. He, honestly, seemed completely fine. No limp, nothing.
  4. I was laughing too hard.

Yeah, I know. I’m ashamed now, you know. Does that count?

My wife (who, let the record show, was driving the car this whole time) pulls through the intersection and then turns to me after a beat and says, “So… that just happened.”

“Yeah.” I agreed, wiping a hysterics-induced tear from my eye and pulling myself back together.

“He was pretty casual about it, wasn’t he? Just kind of shook it off and continued walking. Do you think that happens to him a lot?”

“You mean getting blind-sided like that?” I said.

“You’re horrible, Chris.” My wife said, pulling into the chiropractor’s office parking lot.

Baby, don’t I know it.

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