
After four days of unchecked growth, it was admittedly less like shaving and more like carving. Still, all cleaned up, I felt strangely giddy and lucid for the day ahead; within an hour I was at the employment facility -completely transformed from a person into shaven and spiff Subject 26 of Unit R.
The truth is I don’t mind the interviews and tests so much, but I hate filling out applications. It’s sooo repetitive. And pointless too if you think about it: I’m very pleased with my résumé ... why scrawl all that same information over and over and over by hand? I'm very, very busy busy being unemployed, and have better things to do than happity horsecrap. What am I, Jobe here?
Anywho, due to a scheduling snafu today was “Surprise Prospective Employee Aptitude Testing Day,” and four grueling one-hour tests and five hours later I staggered through our front door fini. Terri, already aware of the testing by virtue of a text message I managed to squeeze off, was already home and waiting.
“How did it go?” asked Terri. Noticing the shave, “You look nice.”
“Good I think,” I replied, buzzing with the dancing numbers, formulas and symbols seared painfully in my mind. Still, I felt unconsciously impelled to make excuses in case that wasn’t true. “I kinda struggled with the Math and Analytics parts though. It was tough to finish on time.”
“I’m sure you did fine baby.”
“The results should be available online already,” I reluctantly offered. In truth I was a bit burned out; the last thing I wanted to deal with at this moment was more test-related material. But -as was inevitable- curiosity prevailed.
As Terri logged in I lobbed more excuses.
“Threes are passable,” I volunteer. “Most serious jobs require a score of four. Engineering-type jobs require fives.”
Oh please God gimmee some fours.
“But threes are passable,” I repeated nervously. “I was pretty distracted toward the end. You know these tests are crap. And with the shabby way they are administered, I seriously doubt they produce an accurate assessment of-“
“It says you got a seven, two fives, and … and another seven.”
There’s a seven?
“And according to this,” Terri continues, “seven is the highest-“
She stops in mid-sentence, despite knowing fully the damage has already been done.

Without looking at me, Terri slumps into a slightly defeated posture.
I recognize her 'slightly defeated' posture. I know it because I’m a
-“Genius,” I repeat, nodding.
Terri, collapsing into the keyboard, sighs. “Oh Christ.”
“Please do not blaspheme in My Presence.”
“You put two CDs in the toaster yesterday.”
“And they sounded amazing,” I insisted. "C'mon. You're looking at irrefutable proof. These tests are very scientific."
“You’re going to be unbearable for weeks now, aren’t you?”
“Maybe,” I says coolly. Then, leaning in, I whisper in her ear. “Hey baby. Wanna get ‘wild an freaky’ with a bona-fide genius?”
Terri smirks, sitting up. “I don’t think so. But let me know if you see one. I might change my mind.”
I shrugged with disappointed resolve, sighing. "Okay."
-And then farted.

I'm a hero if you think about it.
Still, I dove out and continued to run a full mile in two minutes and eight seconds. Serpentine too, just in case Terri was still pursuing; there was a good chance her vision hadn't completely cleared up yet.
But there was no sign of her. So now I'm with no wallet, car, keys or cellphone, and -exhausted and a mile away- staring down the grisly task of going home to see if there are any survivors.
And I need a new living room window. And an end table. Cripes, I probably gotta wallpaper too.
This ‘genius’ stuff is harder than it looks.
10 comments:
You're too funny to be that smart.
The last couple of engineers that I ran across almost took my boot home in their backsides. The most inflexible, thick headed, it's either black or white, only one way (mine) to do it guys I ever encountered. And you're smarter than them? And you can still cut a room-clearing fart and write about it in such a funny way? You MUST be our lord and savior. I bow down before you, just keep that gas in check while I'm down here.
blame it on the dog, everybody else does...
Meh.
You set the bar pretty low for "genius".
:)
Math and Analytics always give me gas.
I see you have the exact same diet my husband does
DG: Eh, thanks! haha. The truth is I have a knack for tests. This won't be the first time I get myself involved in something I'm way underqualified for ... :)
Nooter: I tried. Terri doesn't fall for that anymore.
Stephanie: I've been lowering standards nationwide for years. For instance, I'm the reason there is a decimal in the "Average American Household" according to the US Census.
Sue: Can you imagine what it must smell like at NASA? Blech.
Anon: Don't rat him out. I had to register myself with government.
Here's a car trick for you that I used to pull on my college roommate, but it requires the electric door locks and window controls with the child safety feature. Disable all locks and windows (except for the ones in your control, of course). Fire in the hole. Crack the passenger window so that all of it flows past them on the way out. Just remember to re-enable the door locks before they vomit.
You're such a romantic. Nothing says luvin' like a big fart. You really are a genius.
Lunatron: Well that sounds cool, but then some dumbass lights a cigarette.
(-hair looks cool though.)
Leeuna: haha! They'll come into our house and just find a bunch of skeletons ...
It should be noted that the ability to do math and think logically is not associated in any way with the production of methane.
Exhibit A: my ex-husband
Post a Comment