I Saw The Light

I couldn’t breathe. Not in, not out.

With my airways blocked, I couldn’t yell for help, either. I couldn’t even squeak for help. My lungs were as useless as Congress in a fiscal crisis. Something had gone terribly wrong while I was swallowing my vitamins.

My life flashed behind my eyes. I know, I was expecting it to flash before my eyes, too. But that’s the problem with clichés. Sometimes you can’t rely on them to perform as expected, not even in an emergency.

I liked the light at the end of the tunnel.

So I stood there watching the documentary of me. The film was a lot shorter than I expected. Grainier, and poorly edited, too. Think Night of the Lepus, circa 1972. Nothing wrong with a movie about giant, mutant, carnivorous killer rabbits, mind you. Classic B-rate science fiction. It’s just that I expected something more colorful, and gripping. Something along the lines of Avatar 3D, but with an actual plot and a lot more gratuitous nudity. Instead, it was boring. So dull that for a moment I felt grateful my life was ending. I didn’t just float toward the light, I sprinted.

Then, from somewhere deep in my throat, a gurgling sound.

My wife, Kerry, whirled around, saw that I was choking, and prepared to give me the Heimlich Manuever.

Then, more gurgling, and a gasp. It was water stuck in my throat, not a pill. I relaxed, and it slowly began clearing. I waved Kerry off, fighting for air.

This is ironic, I thought. Vitamins are supposed to make me feel better, not kill me. That’s why I dutifully take a handful of them before I go to bed every night.

I was standing at the kitchen window staring wistfully at the distant moon — I love the moon — when it happened. I was, in fact, waiting for it to happen. I wait for it to happen every night because I’m too impatient to take my vitamins one or two at a time. Instead, I swallow ten to twelve of them all at once, like a circus freak. I know it’s risky, but my pill-swallowing routine has become the biggest thrill of my day, and a matter of personal pride. Normally, it works out fine. Maybe I get a little indigestion from the garlic pill, or a bad taste in my mouth from the cod liver oil in the vitamin D. Unpleasant, but not life-threatening.

This time, I thought I’d finally blown it. Dishonorably offed myself with 1,000 International Units of encapsulated vitamin E.

Imagine the shame of seeing that finding on the coroner’s report.

But I was breathing again. I was all right.

This is what my vitamins are supposed to do for me. It's not working. And you're welcome, straight female and gay male readers. I strive to serve.

Kerry looked relieved. A self-proclaimed expert on natural health, she prepares my daily cocktail of vitamins and herbs. She says they’re supposed to make me less grumpy, improve my ability to remember things like my phone number and, generally speaking, make me look like Mr. December in New York City’s 2012 firemen’s calendar. You know, the shirtless guy on the cover who apparently extinguishes apartment fires with mighty blasts of wind that he creates by rapidly flexing his well-defined pecks.

They’re also supposed to extend my life, although I’m not entirely sure why she wants to do that since I’m so ill-tempered, senile and ugly. It isn’t like I made us rich by inventing the iPad, either. Or even the Insta-Hang, the easiest way to put thumbtacks into a wall since the thumb. Most days, I just sit around muttering obscenities at the television, or sighing forlornly.

But Kerry seems to want me to live, and I don’t argue with her. It would be pointless to argue with her anyway. I haven’t won an argument with her since…well, since ever. I lost my first argument with her — over the appropriate volume for playing power chords on a electric guitar in a dorm room — before we even formally met, and my debate skills haven’t improved over time.

I can’t say I gained any valuable insights from my near-death experience. I don’t even care that I didn’t. I still regularly risk my life by taking my vitamins a handful at a time.

I guess I’m a thrill-seeker at heart.

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The Top 10 Worst Things About Being A Garage Door

10. Hockey practice.

9. You’re always forced to stand in the back row for family photos.

8. Nobody fully appreciates the critical role you play in the success of garage sales.

7. Everybody always blames you when the bikes and tools are stolen.

6. It’s hard to feel emotionally stable when your life is so up and down.

5. You know there must be other garage doors like you in the neighborhood, but you can’t seem to find the time to get out and meet them.

4. You live with the constant fear that somebody’s going to come home drunk.

3. You’re not convinced your career is going anywhere.

2. Sometimes you wish you could just be a regular door like all the other doors in the house.

1. You want to believe in God, but can’t shake the feeling life is controlled by a big, uncaring machine.

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I’m Not A Fucking Cricket!

“I’m not a fucking cricket!” she shouted.

Of course you’re not, I remember thinking at the time. Crickets only talk in Disney cartoons, or when I go without sleep for too many days. Then they’re damnably chatty, and surprisingly lucid. But this is real life, and I’m rested. You’re not a cricket.

Now, however, months later, I anxiously wonder what she was trying to tell me. Although I recall her words and my internal dialogue clearly, the point of our conversation completely eludes me, much like the meaning of my life. Her statement seems like a non sequitur. Bizarre, even.

What was she trying to say?

I should ask her.

But I’m too embarrassed to admit I don’t know. Maybe this cricket thing was important to her. Maybe it was the single most important circumstance of her life. I don’t want my forgetfulness to crush her spirit. I must figure it out for myself.

I’m not a fucking cricket!

There are only two possible explanations.

The first — the most improbable — is that she is, despite appearances to the contrary, a cricket, but a non-fucking cricket. A cricket who does not fuck. A celibate cricket. The Mother Teresa of crickets. Or, more fancifully, the Sister Bertrille of crickets, the flying nun-cricket. A flying nun-cricket who has happily abandoned corporeal lust and consecrated her virginity and eternal soul to the prayerful service of Christ.

It is not difficult for me to imagine a tiny flying nun-cricket wearing a miniature habit and outlandishly aerodynamic white cornette, although her rosary beads would have to be very small, almost molecular in scale. Still, in a world filled with impossibilities discovered and yet to be discovered, I believe it may be possible for a cricket to become a flying nun-cricket. To be devoutly religious.

Faith, like love, knows no bounds.

What’s harder to accept is that a cricket would take a vow of celibacy.

Crickets are simple creatures. They live to eat. To scare men, women and children by leaping out of the shadows. But more than anything, they live to mate.

That loud chirping noise crickets make? Male crickets create it by rubbing their forewings together. It’s a primordial courtship ritual designed to attract the attention of female crickets in the same way that teenage boys often shout and wave their arms wildly to get the attention of girls at the mall.

It works, too.

Foreplay between a pair of Hawaiian crickets can last up to 8 hours. It consists of eight to 15 transfers of capsules between their bodies, with only the final capsule containing the sperm that impregnates the female. I’ve seen videos, and they’re sexually graphic. Dirty enough to make a porn star blush. Crickets may be the most amorous, free-loving creatures on God’s green earth.

No! A celibate nun-cricket is not possible.

Some crickets might be religious, even deeply religious, but they’re Protestants, not Catholics. Self-controlled or reserved in their sexual expression, perhaps, but never chaste like a nun.

She isn’t a non-fucking nun-cricket. No way.

I’m not a fucking cricket!

Only one other explanation remains.

She was angry. Afraid. Railing against a fearsome and inevitable metamorphosis from woman to cricket.

Something similar was detailed by Franz Kafka, the infamously morose Czech writer who described how a common working man slowly became a cockroach because of the dehumanizing, demoralizing nature of his job. Kafka was a government employee, brilliant but trapped in a mundane existence, and irrevocably despondent about the absurdity and hopelessness of his life, and life in general. She is also a government employee, similarly gifted and underutilized. Could it be that her emotional outburst was her way of telling me she sees parallels between Kafka’s life and her own? That she is becoming a cricket, just as he became a cockroach?

Perhaps.

But who reads Kafka’s work literally? Who reads Kafka’s stories at all, except for university professors and their academically servile students, who believe literature must be filled with obscure metaphors and dark ruminations in order to be judged great? Kafka may be a talented writer, but he is no Stephen King or Janet Evanovich. He’s dull, and depressing. He holds little, if any, sway over modern readers, and for good reason.

I’m not a fucking cricket!

I cannot make sense of it. I will have to either try to ignore it, or muster the courage to risk offending her by asking what she meant.

I do not know what to do.

I will never know what to do.

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The Top 10 Most Boring Movies Ever Made

10) At Last: The Incomparable Phil Collins and Celine Dion Together in Concert (featuring special quest appearances from Michael Bublè and Josh Groban)

9) Fred Verne’s Around the World in 17 or 18 Years

8 ) In His Own Words: The Unedited Speeches of Henry Kissinger

7) Journey to the Center of the Tootsie Pop

6) Harry C. DeMille’s Sweeping Epic, ”The 10 Stern Suggestions”

5) The Rise & Fall of the Canadian Empire

4) James Cameron’s “The Making of ‘The Making of the Titanic’ ”

3) William Allen’s “Midnight in Poughkeepsie”

2) The Girl With the Butterfly Tattoo on Her Ankle She Was Afraid to Show Her Parents

1) Mission Implausible: Ghost Proctologist

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Now Everybody Knows Why I Go To The Bathroom So Much

Read this sentence, and consider your response to it: “A recent British study found cocaine on nine out of 10 baby-changing tables in public restrooms.”

I had two distinct reactions:

“Hey, are you from around here? Do you know where I can get some good blow?”

First, I felt a great sense of relief, because this study totally explains my baffling and somewhat disturbing urges to lick baby-changing tables in public restrooms. All these years, I thought I had a mental problem. Now I understand I was merely being thrifty and efficient. Cocaine is expensive, so it makes sense that a cost-conscious writer like me would take it where he finds it.

Second, as a paid, professional guardian of the English language (I don’t know how I got the job, either, but I did, so there you go), I don’t believe these fold-down, cocaine-delivery devices should be called baby-changing tables. We don’t use them to change babies. Not usually, anyway. We use them to change babies’ diapers.

It’s not that they couldn’t be used to change babies, of course. In fact, it might be great way to speed up the economic development of America’s baby-changing industry. Help put the nation back to work, one infant at a time. God knows I wanted to exchange my babies plenty of times when I was a young father, especially after they repeatedly soiled themselves, or spent the entire night screaming at me and my wife, Kerry. I would’ve loved having easy access to baby-changing tables back in the day.

But under our current overly restrictive government regulations—where’s Libertarian Ron Paul when you really need him?—the use of these plastic platforms is strictly limited to changing baby’s diapers. You can’t legally exchange babies on them. You can’t use them to play three-card Monty. You can’t even sleep on them, mostly because they’re not strong enough to support the weight of a full-grown adult. Don’t ask me how I know that. Just trust me—don’t try it for yourself unless you’re willing to suffer a blinding concussion and a $300 bill for replacing a plastic platform that ought to cost about $12 in my estimation. These devices are for changing babies’ diapers, and changing babies’ diapers alone, which is exactly why I argue they ought to be called babies’ diaper-changing tables.

I know what you’re thinking: “Why am I wasting my life reading this absurd post?”

But I’m going to pretend that you’re thinking: “Don’t be so picky about words, you idiot. They’re changing tables, and everybody understands what that means.”

Hah!

You couldn’t be more wrong unless you typed the sentence, “You couldn’t be more wronger,” which I almost did because thinking about babies makes me very, very tired. That, and coming down off a cocaine high. The post-cocaine crash is extremely exhausting, as a lot of celebrities and musicians could tell you, Charlie Sheen excepted. That guy may have stopped snorting cocaine sometime in 2011, but I guarantee you that he’s not coming down from it until sometime in 2013.

Anyway, my point here is that babies change all the time, with or without tables. I know, because I helped raise four babies without ever touching a baby-changing table and my kids looked so different from year-to-year I could hardly remember their names, let alone their birthdays or school band concerts. Even now, my children—and I’m only assuming they’re mine because they keep asking me for money—seem like complete strangers to me. They’re really big, for example. Not at all like the teensy-tiny little people I remember crawling around the house shitting their diapers and throwing up all over my furniture, although I admit their behavior hasn’t changed much over time. Nope, the fold-out tables we find mounted in public restrooms all over the country aren’t baby-changing tables. They’re specifically designed for changing baby’s diapers, and should be officially labeled babies’ diaper-changing tables, or BDCTs for short.

Now, I suppose it’s possible the folks who conducted the BDCT-Cocaine study had another point to make with their research, which is: WHY FOR THE LOVE OF GOD ARE ALL THE BABY TABLES DUSTED WITH COCAINE?!!!!

The researchers probably assume this question is inherently and appropriately alarmist, but all it says to me is that researchers conduct some crazy-assed pointless studies, and that these particular researchers haven’t raised any children. Because if they had, they’d totally understand the link between BDCTs and drugs. Frankly, I think they should’ve also tested the changing tables for alcohol and anti-depressants. They would’ve found plenty of those, too, I guarantee it.

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