About the previous post

29 05 2008

WARNING:  YOU WILL NOT UNDERSTAND ONE WORD OF THIS POST UNLESS YOU READ THE PREVIOUS POST!!  I KNOW THAT I REFERENCED THAT IN THE TITLE BUT I WANTED TO MAKE SURE THAT ALL LEVELS OF INTELLIGENCE A FAIR CHANCE!  HOWEVER, IF YOU CONTINUE READING AND BECOME UPSET BECAUSE YOU FAILED TO HEED THE WARNING YOU ARE OBVIOUSLY BEYOND HELP AND NEED COUNSELING. 

There are a few things that annoy me!  Velour sweat suits worn out of the gym being one of the most annoying things of all time.  However, there is something that runs a close second…..Self Delusion!!!!  If you read the previous post you read the story of the marginally fat man and his Starbucks order.  Now, before I go any further please let me explain.  I have nothing against extremely overweight people.  This is America and everyone has the choice to be whatever they want.  Nor will I make it a sin to be fat although I do think that the biblical principal of “not destroying the temple” is definitely in play here.  I mean, with all of the complications that come with being overweight, i.e. sugar diabetes, hyper-tension, heart diseise, etc., I believe that you can destroy the temple with our “disgusting” eating habits.  But that is not what this post is about.  It is about self delusion!!  Let me explain. 

Yesterday the gentleman in question ordered a non-fat, sugar free latte and then proceeded to order a apple fritter AND a glazed doughnut.  I won’t argue with all of you who wrote and said, “I like the taste”!  That’s fine.   My problem stems from the fact that most people do this is a misguided and sad attempt to “save themselves a few calories”.  Really?!!  I mean, come on people!! How can you believe that?  If you’re going to “jump into the fat pool”, do a triple back flip off of the high dive and land in the bacon grease and wallow around in it!  But do not, I repeat do not, gingerly dip in a big toe like you’re testing the water.  You know that is where you want to be so just do it.  I personally could care less how big or small you are.  It’s none of my business and I refuse to make it mine!  It’s your choice.  Just don’t try and act like you really care.  Get all of the calories that you can.  Eat, then go to Krispy Kreme and eat some more.  If you’re going to live that lifestyle then live it to the fullest. 

This pathological obsession extends to all facets of life.  Just be what you are, what you really want to be.  Stop wasting time pretending to be something or want something that you don’t want!! 

Phew!!  I feel better.

PS.  I really hope that you are not offended.  If you are you have the choice to never return to my blog and to make your annoyance public by posting a rebuttal on your own blog!!  Remember this though, “Great peace have they which love thy law, and NOTHING shall offend them!!”  (The Bible doesn’t actually have the exclamation points.  I added them.)





Funny moment at Starbucks..

28 05 2008

Starbucks - starbucks icon

This morning I was standing in line at Starbucks waiting for my cocai….er coffee!  I’m not very awake in the morning.  It takes me a few hours to fully “realize my potential” in the morning.  There was a line of course, all of the other drug addicts needed there fix as well!!  The gentleman in front of me placed an order that sounded something like this.

Marginally fat guy, “Good morning.”

Barista Liz, “Good morning.  What can I get for you today?”

(By the way, these Starbucks people are really way too happy in the morning!)

Marginally fat guy, “I’ll have a venti, triple shot, non-fat, sugar free hazlenut latte.”

Barista Liz, “Anything else?”

The gentleman stared at the pastry display with a look of longing in his eyes….

Marginally fat guy, “Ummm, yeah.  I’ll have a apple fritter and one of those doughnuts there!!”

DING, DING, DING, DING, DING!!!!!!! Winner Stupidest order of the day!!!!!

Lot of good that non fat, sugar free Latte is gonna do you now pal!! 

I almost fell down on the floor and started kicking my legs!! I mean, this is ludicrous.  Why order the non fat, sugar free and then order an apple fritter AND a glazed doughnut?   Am I the only one who wants to know the answer to these very difficult questions? 





Amazing

27 05 2008

Amazing sidewalk art created with chalk by artists Julian Beever and Kurt Wenner. See more art here.


People avoided walking in the “hole”


WOW!




From the front, as meant to be seen…


… and the side view.





Since you enjoyed the last one so much……

22 05 2008


 

The sheriff of New Looneyton!!





Slight overcompensation???

20 05 2008

   Mug Shot of The Day (From The Smoking Gun)





Eh!?

16 05 2008

I have long believed that there are more people in the world with “below average” intelligence than there are with “above average” intelligence.  While doing my morning reading and browsing through the online newspapers that I like to look at I came across the following article that proves my point.  

Man uses gun for backscratcher, shoots himself

 

01:43 PM CDT on Tuesday, May 13, 2008

 

By KIMBERLY DURNAN / The Dallas Morning News

 

A Fort Worth man trying to scratch an itch on his back used a revolver and accidentally shot himself.

Jorge Espinal, 44, was drinking beer and playing poker around 3 a.m. Sunday in his home in the 3500 block of Montague Street, when he got up from the table and walked into another room, said Fort Worth police Lt. Kenneth Dean.

“He told officers he had an itch on his back and grabbed the first thing he could get a hold of, which was a revolver,” Lt. Dean said. “The gun went off.”

Mr. Espinal went back and told his buddies that he shot himself. “They didn’t believe him until they saw the blood coming down his back,” Lt. Dean said.

Mr. Espinal was taken to an area hospital, where he was treated and released with non-life-threatening injuries.

 

All I can say is WOW!!!





Happy Mothers Day

12 05 2008

Well, unfortunately I’m a little late with this post.  However, I did tell my mother “Happy Mothers Day” yesterday.  I also told her that, “In all my years, you’re the best mother I have ever had”.  It’s kind of a little joke in our family.  We had a great day yesterday that started with church and ended with pizza late at night.  In between all of that we went to the Cedar House for their Mothers Day brunch.  You can head on over to my Mom’s blog to see the pictures since I am incredibly lazy and won’t ever post them myself.  At the dinner I managed to get myself in trouble by my mother.  Ahhh, some things never change.  First it was because she thought I had jumped the line at the buffet, and secondly she thought I had left when I went back for seconds.  I had not left.  I was standing in the line for around 30 minutes for my second helping of food!!  So, then when I got back to the table I had to explain that the reason I missed the majority of the dinner was because I was following her directions and not “cutting” in line!!  It was great.  About half of the family was laying on the ground as I was explaining this very convoluted way of thinking that I have! 

Anyway, I thank God everyday for my Mom.  Without a doubt, I won the “lottery” when it came to getting her as a Mom.  I look around at a lot of people who are not as lucky as I am and shake my head in wonder.  I found this article in the New York Times yesterday and thought it was fantastic.  It is our mothers who push us to greatness and believe in our dreams like nobody else.  I hope you enjoy it. 

The article is by Thomas Friedman and appeared in his column yesterday. 

Call Your Mother

 

Published: May 11, 2008
The ad popped up in my e-mail the way it always has: “1-800-Flowers: Mother’s Day Madness — 30 Tulips + FREE vase for just $39.99!”

I almost clicked on it, forgetting for a moment that those services would not be needed this year. My mother, Margaret Friedman, died last month at the age of 89, and so this is my first Mother’s Day without a mom.

As columnists, we appear before you twice a week on these pages as simple bylines, but, yes, even columnists have mothers. And in my case, much of the outlook that infuses my own writings was bred into me from my mom. So, for once in 13 years, I’d like to share a little bit about her.

My mom was gripped by dementia for much of the last decade, but she never lost the generous “Minnesota nice” demeanor that characterized her in her better days. As my childhood friend Brad Lehrman said to me at her funeral: “She put the mensch in dementia.”

My mom’s life spanned an incredible period. She was born in 1918, just at the close of World War I. She grew up in the Depression, enlisted in the Navy after Pearl Harbor, served her country in World War II, bought our first house with a G.I. loan and lived long enough to play bridge on the Internet with someone in Siberia.

For most of my childhood, my mom appeared to be a typical suburban housewife of her generation, although I knew she was anything but typical. She sewed many of my sisters’ clothes, including both of their wedding dresses, and boy’s suits for me. And on the side, she won several national bridge tournaments.

My mom left two indelible marks on me. The first was to never settle for the cards you’re dealt. My dad died suddenly when I was 19. My mom worked for a couple of years. But in 1975, I got a scholarship to go to graduate school in Britain and my mom surprised us all one day by announcing that she was going, too. I called it the “Jewish Mother Junior Year Abroad Program.”

Most of her friends were shocked that she wasn’t just going to play widow. Instead, she sold our house in little St. Louis Park, Minn., and moved to London. But what was most amazing to watch was how she used her world-class bridge skills to build new friendships, including with one couple who flew her to Paris for a bridge game. Yes, our little Margie off to Paris to play bridge. She even came to see me in Beirut once, during the civil war — at age 62.

The picture of her in Beirut makes me think back in amazement at what my mom might have done had she had the money to finish college and pursue her dreams — the way she encouraged me to pursue mine, even when they meant I’d be far away in some crazy place and our only communications would be through my byline. It’s so easy to overlook — your mom had dreams, too.

My mom’s other big influence on me you can read between the lines of virtually every column — and that is a sense of optimism. She was the most uncynical person in the world. I don’t recall her ever uttering a word of cynicism. She was not naïve. She had taken her knocks. But every time life knocked her down, she got up, dusted herself off and kept on marching forward, motivated by the saying that pessimists are usually right, optimists are usually wrong, but most great changes were made by optimists.

Six years ago, I was in Israel at a dinner with the editor of the Haaretz newspaper, which publishes my column in Hebrew. I asked the editor why the newspaper ran my column, and he joked: “Tom, you’re the only optimist we have.” An Israeli general, Uzi Dayan, was seated next to me and as we walked to the table, he said: “Tom, I know why you’re an optimist. It’s because you’re short and you can only see that part of the glass that’s half full.”

Well, the truth is, I am not that short. But my mom was. And she, indeed, could only see that part of the glass that was half full. Read me, read my mom.

Whenever I’ve had the honor of giving a college graduation speech, I always try to end it with this story about the legendary University of Alabama football coach, Bear Bryant. Late in his career, after his mother had died, South Central Bell Telephone Company asked Bear Bryant to do a TV commercial. As best I can piece together, the commercial was supposed to be very simple — just a little music and Coach Bryant saying in his tough voice: “Have you called your mama today?”

On the day of the filming, though, he decided to ad-lib something. He reportedly looked into the camera and said: “Have you called your mama today? I sure wish I could call mine.” That was how the commercial ran, and it got a huge response from audiences.

So on this Mother’s Day, if you take one thing away from this column, take this: Call your mother.

I sure wish I could call mine.

Wow!  There is a lot of good stuff in there. 

Happy Mothers Day, Mom, I love you. 





Random Thoughts

9 05 2008

I think that these have become my favorite columns.(can you call them columns even when you’re not writing for a newspaper?)  Hey, this is my blog.  I can do anything that I want!!  The reason that I like these little writings, you know, the ones where I give you a peek into what bounces around in my head is that I can just see you sitting there staring at you computer befuddled and saying, “I have absolutely no clue what that means.”  And that, your head scratching, makes me laugh even harder.  So without further ado……

~Anyone who knows me knows that I’m not the most sociable person in the world.  (An understatement of Titantic proportions) Hermetic is a word that has been used!  Anyway, I struggle to put it into words sometimes but this morning on the way to work I saw a bumper sticker that explained how I feel to a T!! It said, “If I promise to miss you will you go away?!”  How perfect is that (you should see the gleeful grin on my face right now)

~As I drove out of Hollister on my way to work this morning I saw that gas prices have risen to $3.99 a gallon for regular unleaded!!!  Dear God, please take me now!!  When I first started driving, “Back in the day!!”, gas was less than a $1 a gallon!  Plus, I had a 1992 Honda Accord that got about 8000 miles a gallon.  Plus, I was not driving very much!!  There is an absolute classic story about the first time that my dad grounded me from driving.  It lasted all of about 30 minutes before he said, “go to the store and get some milk for your mother”  Me, “ummm, I’m grounded from driving Dad. Remember?”  Dad, “Ok, ok  you’re not grounded anymore just go!”  Classic moment in the annals of the Hurst family.  But, lets get back to my original point $3.99, $3.99, $3.99, $3.99!!  For those of you who don’t know, I drive almost 60 miles one way to work.  I have a four-wheel drive Jeep that also happens to be a 5.7L V8.  My gas bill is now more expensive than my car payment!!  I JUST THREW UP IN MY MOUTH A LITTLE BIT!

~Third, If you ever meet my Uncle Gary, RUN!.  No just kidding, (not really),  Yes yes I am just kidding.  (Sorry, my multiple personalities just had a little arguement).  You have to get Gary to tell you the story about the bumper sticker he saw while living in Texarkana, AR.  That’s right AR! 

~I don’t know that I should let you into these area’s of my brain.  Sometimes it gets scary!!  Anyhoo, I will end it by saying, adios amigos!  Have a great weekend.  Do something fun!





Say what? Come again? Pardon me?

5 05 2008

I’m not one of those people who likes to look at the younger generations with a cynical eye.  There are a few reasons for this, not the least of these being that I am but a wee lad myself….With all that being said, these are excerpts found in high school essays.  These may be the worst analogies of all time……

They lived in a typical suburban neighborhood with picket fences that resembled Nancy Kerrigan’s teeth.

He spoke with the wisdom that can only come from experience, like a guy who went blind because he looked at a solar eclipse without one of those boxes with a pinhole in it and now goes around the country speaking at high schools about the dangers of looking at a solar eclipse without one of those boxes with a pinhole in it.

She caught your eye like one of those pointy hook latches that used to dangle from screen doors and would fly up whenever you banged the door open again.

The little boat gently drifted across the pond exactly the way a bowling ball wouldn’t.

McBride fell 12 stories, hitting the pavement like a Hefty Bag filled with vegetable soup.

From the attic came an unearthly howl. The whole scene had an eerie, surreal quality, like when you’re on vacation in another city and “Jeopardy” comes on at 7 p.m. instead of 7:30.

Her hair glistened in the rain like nose hair after a sneeze. Her eyes were like two brown circles with big black dots in the center.

Bob was as perplexed as a hacker who means to access T:flw.quid55328.com\aaakk/ch@ung but gets T:\flw.quidaaakk/ch@ung by mistake.

He was as tall as a six-foot-three-inch tree.

The hailstones leaped from the pavement, just like maggots when you fry them in hot grease.

Her date was pleasant enough, but she knew that if her life was a movie this guy would be buried in the credits as something like “Second Tall Man.”

Long separated by cruel fate, the star-crossed lovers raced across the grassy field toward each other like two freight trains, one having left Cleveland at 6:36 p.m. traveling at 55 mph, the other from Topeka at 4:19 p.m. at a speed of 35 mph.

The politician was gone but unnoticed, like the period after the Dr. on a Dr Pepper can. John and Mary had never met.

They were like two hummingbirds who had also never met.

The thunder was ominous-sounding, much like the sound of a thin sheet of metal being shaken backstage during the storm scene in a play.

His thoughts tumbled in his head, making and breaking alliances like underpants in a dryer without Cling Free.