Monday, December 28, 2009

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Short Story (12/25/2009): Christmas Nerves

Christmas was standing menacingly over my raw nerves with a meat tenderizer. It drew back its bejingled arm and struck.

I watched the mall Santa sneeze twice right into his gloved hand before he welcomed an anxious (and unsuspecting) toddler onto his disease-riddled lap. My own toddler and I left the Santa line...after waiting for nearly two hours. He cried through three department stores. I explained the danger of germs and disease - and I emphasized the importance of sanitation and hand-washing. He explained (through a series of sobs and screams and enraged arm-twitches) the danger of crossing the will of a 2-year old.

Seeing my nerves not quite tender enough, Christmas prepared another wallop.

My step-mother put way too many onions in the broccoli salad. The recipe calls for "some diced onions" - not as many full onions as there are broccoli florets. If someone wanted onion salad, they would move to a small eastern European village where no one cared about taste or bad breath.

This one really hurt:

I had bought these really cute Converse sneakers for my twin nephews. They had been admiring a similar pair that I had been wearing. I was so excited to see them open my gift. But...on a whim, a whimsical family member of mine, whimsically decided to let the kids open a gift at the very whimsical moment that I whimsically needed to make an emergency trip to bathroom. I can't control when Nature calls - nor can I screen her calls. I missed one of the Christmas moments that I'd planned and hoped for. Thank you, Christmas whimsy.

Christmas Wallop #4

I was listening to some amazing choral Christmas carols while I was washing dishes. The Mormon Tabernacle Choir was singing "Angels We Have Heard on High," and the fortissimo on the "gloria" part was coming threateningly close to making me merry. My sister-in-law waltzed into the kitchen and said, "Ugh...let's listen to something a little more Christmasy." And - right before the final fortissimo refrain, she managed to save the day by finding a slinky saxophone version of "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas."

I really thought I'd had enough tenderizing. I guess Christmas disagreed: it pulled out the Meat Tenderizer 2.0, or as experts on such things refer to it, "The Meat Obliterator."

I settled in the TV room with my kids, my brother's kids, my cousin, and my wife. We decided to watch Miracle on 34th Street together. Most of the kids hadn't seen it, so we adults were excited about sharing this tradition with them. After the hot chocolate was served and the popcorn was popped, right as the movie was beginning, the rest of the clan, who had been doing some late Christmas shopping, burst into the room. Despite their chatter, they insisted that we didn't have to pause our DVD; but they chattered and chattered and talked and talked and stood right in front of the TV screen for interminable periods of time. Every time I attempted to pause the tradition (to be resumed at a more convenient Yuletide moment), someone would issue a hollow apology, say they were getting out of the way, and continue to chatter, talk, and impede the viewing. THEN, someone asked what we were watching. And when my wife informed him it was Miracle on 34th Street, he told us that they had a modern remake of the film on DVD upstairs. And upon retrieving the new DVD and ejecting the old, worthless, original film from the player, he eagerly reassured us that this was much better than the original - because it was in color!

Christmas then added insult to Meat Obliterator-induced injury, by letting it rain all day Christmas Eve - with temperatures at 39-degrees. So close to beautiful snow; but so amazingly far away.

Then it added a few more jolly wallops:

I aggravated a back injury while trying to help my dad get presents out of the closet to wrap.

No one enjoyed my favorite board-game (Balderdash), so we played a no-holds-barred game of Jenga instead.

My sister's new boyfriend Tyler was the most annoying person with the most annoying voice ever. He sounded like what the offspring of Gilbert Gottfried and Marge Simpson's sister might sound like - if you force-fed him helium-inflated balloons, popped them seconds later by jamming a darning needle into his esophagus, and enrolled him in an online horse-training degree program.

Instead of receiving the Flight of the Conchords box set that I had requested, my wife bought me an old Disney film called The Flight of the Navigator. Then she labeled it "From your loving kids," so I couldn't blame her.

Spaghetti? For Christmas dinner?

My uncle Jeff is a self-indulgent, self-important, know-it-all. He can't be wrong or sorry about anything he's ever done - including the $106,000 of debt he has incurred making sure he appears cutting-edge, or interesting, or smart, or whatever he's striving for...

Who cut my brother's hair before his vacation? His twin three-year-olds? One operating a paper-cutter while the other one trimmed with a sharpened tortilla chip?

It was almost sickening how much horrifying junk food some people in my family eat! They mechanically graze on fudge, peanut brittle, peppermint bark, or anything remotely sweet within grasping distance. I think my sister once ate a soggy half-brownie that had fallen from my toddler's high-chair tray!

It would have been an ideal time to have a run-in with a homeless veteran, a single parent, a starving child in a third-world country, or even an insightful stranger in an elevator. Someone was supposed to remind me of the true, selfless meaning of Christmas to infuse mirth to my holiday and remedy my mangled nerves.

In fact, my situation might have even warranted a word from the Almighty!

But my reminder came, in fact, from an unexpected and unwanted source: my sister's new boyfriend, Tyler. He called me something terrible and unrepeatable.

My sister volunteered him to drive with me to the airport to pick up my youngest brother Alex. I guess we needed some alone time to form an everlasting, brother-in-law-to-be bond. The first few moments of the trip (from the garage to the end of the driveway) went very well: Tyler didn't open his mouth once. Then he opened it for a matter of moments...and we drove all the way to the airport in the complete silent wake that followed the words he spoke. He said:

"Dave, in the short time that I've known you, I can't help but realize that you are a complete [something terrible and unrepeatable]. I can't believe you treat your wife and family like you do. You're always rolling your eyes and making that self-righteous "hmmph" noise when things don't go like you want them to. You think people don't notice that? What's great is: they do...and they put up with your [something terrible and unrepeatable with the rhetorical suffix "-ness"] anyways. Because miraculously, they love you for who you are. And you condescendingly sneer at their inferior taste or their lack of dignified respect for traditions.

"I only relate my observation because I'm going to break up with your sister in a few weeks and I don't care what you think of me - as a person or a potential in-law. You aren't self-aware. You think you are; and that makes you think you're better than people. You're a fool. And you need to change."

Then Tyler paused and seemed to stare at me for entire minutes. I never had once taken my eyes off the road.

"It's good advice," he said. "Take it or leave it."

Then he turned the radio on. Christmas music. Saxophone. "Silver Bells." Very jazzy and inappropriate.

I didn't talk to anyone about my "conversation" with Tyler. But it played in my mind for days. Naturally, he's right about everything.

I've set about mending my wayward ways:

I've made my "hmmph" noises almost inaudible. I refrain from rolling my eyes, and, if the eye-rolling is a must, I just pretending I'm checking ceiling fans for dust on a whim.

I've let my guard down against what I classify as "non-traditional" holiday activities, like horse-related conversations around the fire or Mediterranean cuisine at Anglo-Saxon feast settings.

I've almost learned to tamp down that gag reflex when I run across a cache of unwelcome onions in a salad (still working on the involuntary swearing).

I now carry hand-sanitizer in a miniature bottle on my key chain.

I watched that Navigator movie and really enjoyed it. I graciously thanked my kids...but not my wife.

I posted a very official looking edict on the wall of the TV room that outlines my feelings on Christmas movie remakes. People can still watch them: but they will be doing it in willful violation of my edict. The edict states that there is no official punishment, but I will be entitled to "hmmph" loudly and make tasteless jokes about the actors.

My doctor diagnosed me with IBS (Irritable Bowel Syndrome). I don't know how this directly relates to my Christmas Bowel Syndrome (...or Irritable Christmas Syndrome, whichever makes more sense), except for the part where I missed seeing my nephews open my gift, but I will eternally blame it for everything. Ever. Including my upcoming mid-life crisis.

And...I downloaded some Kenny G and Josh Groban onto my iPod. I still hate it, but listening to it helps me understand the minds of less advanced holiday celebrators.

Come on, Christmas 2010! Hit me with your best shot!

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Poem by an anonymous freshman

This poem must be shared with the world (I didn't actually get permission...but I think he'd be glad I'm broadcasting his brilliance). These were the directions for one of my freshmen exam questions: Write a poem (at least four lines) that is either free verse or uses personification. This is what I got:

Volcano

I watch a volcano
It rumbles as if it were mad
When the lava comes out
It looks like it is wearing a red dress
So I ask God to calm the volcano down
So the volcano opens the top
To listen with its ears
Because it wants to hear God talk.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

More Scarlet Letter Projects




This cupcake-A-sculpture atop a scaffold exhibits a very swarthy-looking Hester replete with swarthy-looking baby Pearl. I think the immensity of the letter itself (both on Hester's outfit and engulfing the scaffold) is surely meant to symbolize the immensity of Hester's sin and her vast loneliness in bearing it.


It is rare that a cookie sheet so aptly portrays the symbolic representations of Hawthorne's novel. The A-besmirched tombstone parallels death with Hester's shame - AND gives a snarky wink to Dimmesdale's "buried" guilt. The scene depicted on cookie's right hemisphere shows the symbolic rose spurting hope and regeneration outside the ghastly Puritan prison door.


The white tapestery of icing is besmirched by the symbolic M&M candies - scarlet M&M candies! The brief pleasure of sin (signified by the rich milk chocolate in a crunchy-candy coating) leaves its eternal mark on the soul. (Also, if you look closely, the M&M candies form the letter A on each cookie! Brilliant, yet subtle!)

Monday, December 14, 2009

Scarlet Letter Project: Janie, Josh, Brittany, and Bethany

This is definitely A+ work...and I grade on a very difficult scale.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Highlights: UNC #12 vs. Kentucky #5 at Rupp Arena

The Wildcats put together an impressive 28-2 run in the first half, but the Tarheels came back to make it a nail-biter after John Wall's second-half playing time was limited by cramping. This was UK's first real test. And they passed. If they can maintain the kind of energy and execution that they showed during the first half (and there's no reason why they can't if you factor in a few mroe tough games-worth of maturity), they can beat any team in the nation! Patrick Patterson has proved my doubts about his adapting to Calipari's dribble-drive offense completely unfounded. He's flourishing! I guess Coach Gillispie somehow managed to totally misuse and diminish Pat's ability and usage. Calipari + Patterson + the best recruiting class in college history = Final Four!

Highlights: West Ham 0-4 Manchester United

Gibson scores his third right-footed screamer of the week! I love the keeper's celebration after the fourth goal. I don't know if he's trying to emualate Nani or Peter Schmeichel, but he did a pretty good impersonation of my brother in this video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GOXRSdJiJ7k

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Why I'm not in the Christmas play this year

Now I have a good reason to say, "I don't think so," whenever Jeremy asks if he can kick a bottle off of my head. It's not that I don't trust him...okay...I don't trust him. I mean, he's got a lot more reason to roundhouse-kick me than his buddy Craig: I grade his papers!

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Highlight: Manchester United 2-0 Spurs

These future stars are already household names for the Manchester United fans: Gibson, Macheda, Welbeck, et al. I love how this highlight compilation shows Gibson's first effort - a one-timer that comes closer to hitting the corner flag - before showing two incredible long-range goals. The second was the most impressive.
Manchester United 2 – 0 Tottenham (Carling Cup) 01.12.2009
by manchesterunitedinfo

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Highlights: UNC-Asheville and Kentucky at Freedom Hall

Apparently, UNC-Asheville has had little experience defending the lob pass. What was that? Like twenty-five alley-oops? The 'Cats are 7-0 - best start since Adolph Rupp was coach!