Monday, August 14, 2006

Unforgettable Encounters

I like to think that I could be friends with just about anyone. Sometimes I'm not so sure.
BigJason and I used to have this really bad habit of stumbling upon persons of unusual nature. I think you'll agree.

Once upon a night, BigJason decided to stop at Wendy's on our way to someplace or other. He ordered a baked potato among other things. After paying for his food and advancing to the next window an employee of Wendy's described an unanticipated occurrence to BigJason. "Um, we're out of baked potatoes, so..." We waited patiently for him to finish his thought. He didn't. Instead he merely looked at us. This continued for an uncomfortable duration of time. Encouragingly, BigJason replied "So...." Astonishingly, the employee repeated himself, perhaps unsure that we had heard his first unfinished statement. Another uncomfortable silence followed before BigJason, realizing we were about to get nowhere with this guy, said "So, what? So you'll give me my money back?" The employee then explained that they couldn't do that. What happened next, BigJason? Somehow he wound up giving us fries or something instead
of the BP, but we had to perform the duties of customer service ourselves until an agreement could be reached cause this guy wasn't helping. He was done. Now granted, fast-food employees can often be found to be of unusual nature so that story isn't as compelling as this next one.

We were browsing the deli at Albertsons Grocery Store looking for some delicious deli meats when an individual I will refer to as Bozo began to walk past us repeatedly. He kept looking at me intently and after a few passes smiled at me knowingly. After a few more passes he said to me, pointing, "There's a drinking fountain right over there." I thanked him for the unnecessary information and tried to continue my browsing of the meats. Bozo then said that it looked as though I could use a drink. I asked him why he would say that and he gestured toward his eyes with a couple of fingers and rolled his eyes around. Then he imitated taking a drag on a joint and pointed at me. I nudged BigJason to draw his attention to the matter and he nodded to indicate he was following the events closely. It was hard for people to ignore what was going on there in the delicatessen. "You're stoned," Bozo said to me. "You should go get a drink." Apparently people who are stoned like to get drinks. I was blissfully naive to this before that day. I told him that I thought HE was stoned. Why else would he be badgering an innocent deli customer? Bozo then said he knew I was stoned cause my eyes were bloodshot (they weren't) and again suggested that I get a drink from the fountain. This guy was alone. He was not some punk teenager with a need to impress his buddies. I could see no reason for this guy to be hounding me. I don't think he was mentally handicapped but he was definitely mentally deficient. After a few more points and gestures to indicate that I smoke dope he tired of his charades and moved to another part of the store, presumably to accuse someone else of something equally unlikely as me being stoned.

Monday, August 07, 2006

Nights-time Monkeyshines (Part 2)

I can't think of anything to say about this picture that it doesn't already say for itself

There were many evenings when Paul and I were sitting in his room wondering what we could do to entertain ourselves apart from talking about the time when he decided to hang his athletic supporter from the ceiling and the hilarity that ensued thereafter. This story relates the tale of one of those times. Maybe two.

Just then we realized that we were in for a nightful of unevent if we didn't do something and fast. A group of friends had decided to go camping that night and not being a camping type of guy I declined to go with them. But I knew their favorite campground and told Paul we might could cause a ruckus for them if he was so inclined. He was and we gathered the necessary ingeredients required to do so.

Ingredients:
1 rubber snake
1 Melty honeycomb wax candle
1 pair of leather shoes on Paul's feet (no socks)
700 firecrackers in a 32 oz. plastic cup.
1 box of matches.

We drove up the canyon to the campground where we suspected they had gone and soon found the campsite they had chosen. Everything was quiet and it was obvious the campers had already gone to sleep. In order to be more stealthy Paul removed his shoes and proceeded barefoot. Our first order of business was to try to frighten the campers into thinking they were being made the subjects of some satanic ritual. This we did by drawing a pentagram in the dirt in front of their tent door and placing the melty honeycomb wax candle in the center. This candle was quite disturbing looking. It was red and crooked from having gotten soft in the sun at some point. We figured it was precisely what satanists would use (we HAD been inside Academy Square where this type of stuff was a regular occurance, after all.) After lighting the candle we snuck behind the tent to await a response. It seems our camping friends were not bothered by the dim flicker of the candle light so we decided to light firecrackers and throw them over the tent one at a time. This produced a more enjoyable response. The tent door unzipped and someone blew out the candle. I doubt they even saw the pentagram or noticed the bizarre shape of the candle itself. After a few more firecrackers with not much effect we decided to give them what-for. We tore the heads off of a large number of matches and mixed them in with the firecrackers in the 32 oz cup. Then Paul snuck down to the back of the tent to set it nearby and light it when to our dismay the campers all came out of the tent and started milling around! Paul was trapped! He couldn't move without being seen. In an act of selfless bravery he lit a match and dropped it into the cup while he remained holding it! The explosions that followed were many and loud. Especially to Paul. It wasn't long thereafter that we realized the campers were packing up to go home. They were not appreciative. In order to remain undetected we stayed where we were. Paul was nearly trodden on while the campers took their tent down. While packing up, the campers discovered Paul's shoes and decided to keep them in retaliation for what we had done. (This event resulted in a later scheme to retrieve said shoes without bringing suspicion upon ourselves as the culprits.) When they told me about the "drunk hicks" the next day, they were triumphant about having taken their shoes away from them.

It wasn't until 10 years later that I revealed the truth of that night to my friends, the campers. Now we all look back on it. But I can't remember what that rubber snake was for.