Thursday, March 12, 2015

Fish

My sister had guppies when we were kids. That was supposed to be a pet.
I didn’t get it. What kind of pets are fish for a kid?
The oldest of us, my brother, got a dog. My older sister got a cat. Then my other sister got fish. It all seemed to be going down hill. I was the youngest, so I didn’t bother asking for a pet. I didn’t really want an ant farm, and I figured that was next in line.
Is a pet a pet if you can’t pet the pet? Aren’t you supposed to be able to cuddle a pet? I mean, even an iguana, like the really mellow one I met at Bernie’s house that spent all day gnawing leaves off his five foot pot plant, can be scratched under the chin. I’ve never met a fish that will let you scratch him under the chin. Maybe a bent index finger looks too much like a hook.
So what do you do with a fish? You can’t teach it to fetch; I tried it. Sure they go after the thumb tack when you throw it in the tank, but once they figure out they can’t eat it, they lose all interest.
“Headley – why are there thumb tacks in the bottom of my aquarium?”
“Search me – they’re your fish.”
I used to stand there for hours waiting for the moving wallpaper to do something interesting. Once in a while I would tap on the glass, until Mom set a rag and a bottle of Windex next the tank with a note – “You tap it, you clean it.”
Finally it occurred to me why my parents bought fish. It was because I stood there for hours, tapping or not tapping the glass. I wasn’t messing up the house, breaking stuff, eating all the Pop Tarts, or hatching fiendish plots to annoy my siblings. Fish aren’t pets, they are child pacifiers. I was spending so much time trying to figure out how they were pets that I didn’t realize – the pet was me.
So I plotted to steal my brother’s dog – that’s another post.
Maybe it’s like what Douglas Adams wrote in the Hitchhiker series. We don’t do experiments on mice – they do them on us.
 Maybe fish get bored of sitting around in a pond looking at the same slimy rock and submerged Uniroyal. Maybe the fish arrange for us to dredge them out and put them in PH balanced environment with a nice plastic castle, a regular food supply, and a minimum of predatory waterfowl.
And how do the fish see us? Are we like moving wallpaper to them? Maybe we’re like a really annoying television program that they can’t turn off.
“Here comes that boy to tap on the glass.”
“Oh, I hate re-runs. Hey, Gill, change the channel, will you?”
“I would, but the underwater remote hasn't been invented yet.”

And thanks to Gill, I have an idea for yet another post.


You can blame this post on MPK who put this vid up on Facebook.

Monday, March 9, 2015

Signs Get Me All Turned Around

Sometimes I wonder if we have too many signs.  They can be confusing or unnecessary.  Did I really need an inanimate object to tell me what animate objects have been happy to inform me all my life?  For instance...
Yeah - probably
Okay, I didn't know that one - but is it a bad thing?
Well, maybe signs can be helpful.  After all, where would American business be without signs?
Not that that's always a good thing.  I can think of a number of reasons to put them out of business.
Makes you wonder what they were saying before.
Might have been something like this
Or this.  Not the best English, but who am I to talk?  Asian languages translated to English make for some interesting signs.
Sometimes it's sweet and poetic.
Sometimes confusing.
Alright - frequently confusing.
Maybe it's a cultural thing.
Yeah - cultural thing.
I guess...  No, no guesses.
I'm pretty sure this is not a cultural thing.
Yeah - whatever.
Just go with it.  Makes me wonder what our translations into Asian languages look like to them.  Not that we always need the translation process to get confusing signage.
Wait! did Mittens just lift my wallet?
I'm almost certain this is a goof - but I'm using the restroom anyway.
I could have lived without that one.
Slipping is unpleasant - Up With People is torture.
Maybe the pound could adapt this as an advert.
I see this sign at all the high class establishments.
I'm all turned around - but I think this is where I started.



Whenever I get confused - I turn to Weird Al to straighten it all out.

Thursday, March 5, 2015

Trial by Trade by S. McFarland

Stanley offered me this essay.  It actually made me chuckle a little which I really don’t expect from Stanley.  The least I could do is pass it along.


Trial by Trade

                             by Stanley McFarland

My sister’s a lawyer.  (We love her anyway.)  She likes lawyer jokes.  She doesn’t practice law.  (You don’t need practice when you get things right the first time.)  She helps undergraduates get into law school, writes stories, and helps the one’s she loves do things they could never accomplish without her.
She doesn’t like to bring it up, but I’m pretty sure that the reason she doesn’t practice the profession she worked so hard to attain, is that she doesn’t like the smell.

Centuries ago when you had a problem, the guy with the biggest army or the best sword or the biggest club would sit in judgment and settle it.  If your problem was with the guy with the biggest club, you kept your mouth shut or suffered the consequences.
Some people believe that law came about as a natural progression in the cultural advancement of humankind.  What really happened is that the guy with the biggest club decided he’d rather go out and kill animals than sit around and hear everyone else’s problems.  The judge was an invention of convenience for everyone involved (except the animals).
 Potentially, judges cared more about the dispute than making animals bleed.  Some only cared about how much each party was willing to pay him but many prided themselves on being fair.  Each party would approach the judge, give the best possible spin on their side of the dispute and await the ruling.  When the ruling just about equally pissed off both parties, they called it – just – for short.
Everything went along swimmingly until Fred the goldsmith had a dispute with Ralph the actor.
Now Fred figured he was in the right or at least no more in the wrong than that parasite line reader but Fred had a problem.  Fred stuttered pretty badly and had a high pitched wheeze from inhaling too much gold dust.  There were people in town that held up their own hankies when Fred sneezed just to capture any gold mixed with the spew.
Fred was sitting in a saloon lamenting his chances and was overheard by Juris who, like Ralph, was an actor.
Juris offered to speak for Fred if Fred would construct an object of gold to hide his nasty overbite.  Fred knew that actors lied and as Juris was a well-known actor – he lied well but prudently.  Fred could see some real advantage in this but only if Fred could be sure that Juris would lie for Fred’s benefit.  Fred demanded that Juris swear an oath by whatever Juris held most dear.  Juris was not a religious man so he swore by the very place they were sitting, his favorite saloon.  
Fred, satisfied that Juris would hold to standards of his bar, delivered the golden retainer, and Juris became known as Fred’s mouthpiece.
Today, we live in a land where most of the people who make the laws, prosecute the laws, judge the laws, appoint the judges of the laws, defend people in trouble with the laws, and profit from the laws: hang out in the same bar. 
 I find it particularly ironic when members of this association put people on trial for what they call “conflict of interest.”

Which ones fit lawyers...?
If Fred and Ralph had a dispute today, the actor would have no advantage.  No amount of stage eloquence or even common sense will help if you don’t go to that bar and speak the guild language of “legalese.”  Both Ralph and Fred would need to hire members of the mouthpiece cartel to seek what should be theirs.  The winner, after legal fees, would be left with a snow cone drained of syrup-
Or...  Just-Ice.

Someday maybe all of us can join this bar and enjoy all the rights and benefits of full citizenship.  Until then, I’m looking for a big club.


My sister told me most of these.

Monday, March 2, 2015

Things You Never Knew Existed (again)

Once again I received a wonderful Things You Never Knew Existed catalog in spite of the fact that I have never sent these wonderful people a dime. home page  I would love to buy from them, but their inventory includes things I'm happy to celebrate - but would never want to own - such as...
It's unclear whether this is a small model or a way for people to vie for the Darwin Awards.  If you're looking for something smaller scale...
I had a friend get one of these but I got turned off when I caught it humping a dragon fly.
If you're looking to make breakfast an adventure, how about...
For those of you who want your toast on the Dark Side.  And when the force sends your toast out the other end, you might require...
Or for those of you of a higher caliber...
But the best thing about Things You Never Knew Existed is the Tee Shirts.  I have posted several of them over the last two years.  Here's a few from their latest batch.
Makes sense
It's all a bit clearer now.
The great innovators - we owe them so much!
Anybody have a dog I can borrow?
Nobody can convince me they don't do that on purpose.

Unfortunately, many of their tee shirts are mean-spirited.  Those of you who are nice can skip to the video.  anybody... anybody?
 Gee - Mom liked photography...
Because we LIKE our phones!

 The only use I can think of for them.
Somebody sent me this one...  Actually two people did.
Here's my favorite of the bunch.
And finally, somebody who is on a lot of our minds this week.


These folks have nothing to do with the catalog folks - but it fits the theme.