Showing posts with label kids. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kids. Show all posts

Tuesday

Generation Landslide

Predator Press
 
[LOBO]
 
Recently at work I made the observation that the really good and profitable jobs were occupied by -almost exclusively- “Baby Boomers.” This sizable group is currently very competitive by virtue of sheer mathematics, virtually impossible to replace.

So then I thought, “Well shit. I guess I am waiting for someone to die? And then I could do that same job even worse?”

Bookmark this thought here, because I did tedious “research” for you to understand “Age Generation Classification” from a bullshit, unheard of website I found via Google, defining them:

(I did some “edits” via Excel)




  • 1900-1924 - G.I. Generation (WAS ASSIGNED TO READ YOUR BOOK IN SCHOOL)
  • 1925-1945 - Silent Generation (MAYBE READ YOUR BOOK)
  • 1946-1964 - Baby Boom (SLOWLY DYING OUT)
  • 1965-1979 - Generation X (ME)
  • 1980-2000 - Millennials or Generation Y (MORE PRICKS)
  • 2000/2001-Present - New Silent Generation or Generation Z (EVEN MORE PRICKS!)

-Generation “X” (ME) is a LOT smaller than the “Baby Boomers” (NOT ME). But unfortunately we again had fewer babies, and Generation “Y” (PROBABLE PRICKS) is small too: that means a bunch of smarter, younger, more well-adjusted prototype mes (ME plural) are out there, trying to steal my ability to fire all the “Baby Boomers” (NOT ME) FIRST! And even as I argue I am only 29 years old, there is some 13 year old “Generation Z” (NOT US) claiming he is only 25 years old -Generation “Y” (PROBABLE PRICK)- on Facebook, and POW! I lost the job. And if you think about it, you did too!

If those opportunistic and mercenary Generation “Z” (NOT US) fuckers somehow survive, I hope they get a lot of pimples. I am too old and too tired to have all the “Baby Boomers” (NOT ME) and Generation “Z” (NOT US) wiped out by alien zombies!

(Besides, I cursed the alien zombies with pimples in 1997 -I wouldn't count on any sympathy from those assholes.)

Long Live the Alien Zombie Omnacracy!


Sunday

Femmolition


Predator Press

[LOBO]

I remember Mom looking down at me and smiling.

“You can be anything you want to be,” she explained. “You can be a musician, an astronaut, a scientist … anything.” Winding in the strained peas on the yellow plastic spoon she soothed, “The only thing you can’t be is a failure.”

And she was right.

-I should have been a musician, astronaut, or scientist.

Tuesday

The Nature Versus the Nurtured

Predator Press

[LOBO]

“No, I will not teach you to play guitar,” I says to the Butterbean kid flatly. “I don’t know where you got the idea I play guitar in the first place. These are crazy rumors, spread by an obviously deranged individual. Probably a meth freak.”

Butterbean unslings his guitar on the porch. “Miss Terri said you used to be real good at it.”

“Terri knows better than to get addicted to meth,” I argue. “Shit. TMZ doesn’t even know we exist yet.”

“My mom says she’ll give you ten bucks a lesson.”

“Is this the same woman that insists you are ‘big boned’? I have serious doubts about her mathematical prowess. Tell your mom I want fifty million.”

Butterbean seems strangely skeptical.

"Maybe fifteen?"

"Your mom is a shrewd woman," I reply thoughtfully. "Tell her forty nine million, nine hundred and ninety nine thousand, nine hundred and eighty five is my final offer. Anything less would be cutting into my overhead."

“I don’t think she would go that high really,” he says.

“Then how about we compromise and just tell your mom I’m giving you guitar lessons?" I counteroffer. "We'll split whatever we get.”

“Seriously,” says the boy. “I want to hear you play.”

“Of course you do,” I says. “That’s what a lad I once knew insisted –almost verbatim- many, many years ago. ‘I want to hear you play, I want to hear you play, I want to hear you play.’ Christ you couldn’t shut him up about it. And then he quit drugs, fired David Lee Roth, started playing keyboard, and married Valerie Bertinelli.” I eyed the Butterbean kid warily. “This kind of knowledge can destroy your mind. Is Eddie Van Halen’s a fate you would like to share?”

“Who is Eddie Von Helsing?”

See?” I stammer, almost speechless in frustration. “This is precisely what I mean. Eddie would go on to die broke and in utter obscurity. And worse than that, he died broke and in utter obscurity while having to listen to Valerie Bertinelli clipping her toenails … Crack! Crack! Crack! And have you seen Valerie Bertinelli’s toenails? Somebody is going to lose an eye with those things shooting all over the place.”

“What if I promise to stay away from Valerie Bertinelli?”

“It’s more than just Valerie Bertinelli's deadly aerodynamic toenails and shocking capacity for evil,” I says coolly. “Playing guitar is a strict discipline. A lifestyle. Yes. A lifestyle of long hours, bloody fingertips, and skinny guys named ‘Kirk’ and big-haired chicks named ‘Amber.’ A lifestyle of being woken at three in the morning by colliding trash can lids, and stringing your guitar in under eight minutes. A lifestyle of forcing people to listen to you play ‘Smoke on the Water,’ like, ninety jillion times.”

Punctuating the discussion, I scoop up the welding mask from the counter and strap it to my forehead. Pausing for a moment before flipping down the mask I ask, "I'm making lunch. Do you want a grilled cheese?"

"That's not really grilling them technically," Butterbean points out, eyebrows furrowed.

"Well, I’ve always considered the term 'grilled cheese' more of a guideline than a recipe. After all, there's no reference to the bread or the butter either." Flipping my mask, I crack the arc to life. "You know, say what you will about plasma. But nothing really brings out the flavor like a good old fashioned carbon electrode."

Butterbean cupped his hands to boost his voice over the noise. "Should you be doing that in a Snuggie?"

"It's hard finding footie pajamas in my size," I call.

"No. I mean isn't that thing flammable?"

"I can't wear the gear," I explain loudly. "That stuff chafes, and I have very sensitive nipples." Pulling my torch to the side, I flip my mask back and inspect the soapstone surface. "Man I hope Terri managed to find a company that will give us another fire insurance policy. Grilled cheese is hell on these countertops."

"You think they will cover making arc-welded cheese sandwiches?"

"Well if they have a better way to cook, I'd like to hear it." I look around thoughtfully. "You know, you're right ... I should torch the whole place just in case. I'm getting a little tired of this furniture anyway. Good idea."

"You can do that?"

"That's the whole point of having insurance. Why go through the whole hassle of moving when you can just get new stuff?" I switch off the torch. "They deliver and install it too. Just watch your spelling."

"Spelling?"

"Our last insurance guy got really pissed when I misspelled 'bathtub' as 'H-E-A-T-E-D-I-N-D-O-O-R-P-O-O-L' on the claim. But it was an honest mistake. My spelling acuity is a direct result of the American public education system. I'm the victim here if you think about it."

"So you can get in trouble for it?"

"Well … yes. It turns out some people are really, really touchy about arson. But this was your idea, remember?" I rub my chin, trying to remember if there is any gasoline in the garage. "And frankly I'm shocked you thought of that. If I ever went on trial for arson and insurance fraud, you better hope I never have to testify 'cuz I'm singing like a canary."

"I don't think it's a good idea then."

"I think it's a great idea!" I says. "We could make it look like an innocent arc welded cheese sandwich making accident. But I would need to make a video all the stuff in our house first. Know where any friendly rich people live? I want another Ming vase to put our umbrellas in."

"You've got a Ming vase? Really?"

"Four of them. We use them as trash cans. See?"

“These say ‘Made in China.’”

“Yeah. Ming, China probably."

"There is no such place as Ming, China."

"Look, it says ‘Ming’ right there,” I point. “Next to the picture of the guy fighting Flash Gordon. How can you possibly doubt its authenticity?”

“I think 'Ming' is supposed to reference an ancient dynasty.”

“Well I would hope these aren't crappy old ones, ” I says, inspecting the container closely. "Over the past century, China has come a long way in an effort to improve the quality of their products."

“Hey, look at this,” says Butterbean, peeling at the label. “The back of this ‘Made in China’ sticker says ‘Made in Korea.’"

“Maybe Ming has a factory there in Korea. You know … outsourcing. China is very busy crafting high end vases like these. Vases, and making pandas boink. Maybe China just doesn’t have time for labels anymore.” Reflecting on this, I add, “I’ve heard of some odd fetishes before. But pandas? That’s just plain weird.”

“Actually,” corrects Mister Smarty-Pants, “they are trying to breed the few remaining pandas to save the species.”

“Yeah, whatever,” I scoff. “Another common misconception. How do you explain all those freaky websites?”

“Websites?”

“Yeah. I’ve downloaded about fifteen hours of panda porn. You’re too young to see it. But I assure you with possible exception of the Kanji, this stuff has no artistic merit whatsoever. It's pure filth.”

“Wait,” says Butterbean. “You downloaded fifteen hours of panda porn?”

“It was strictly for educational purposes,” I says. “If you want to study a culture, there’s only so much one can learn from a couple of vases.”

“But if this is all true," Butterbean speculates shrewdly, "then pandas wouldn’t be an endangered species.”

“Pandas are too busy having sex to make babies.”

Butterbean stares.

“Oh no,” I says, rolling my eyes slightly. “Don’t tell me. Somebody gave you that whole speech on how you make babies having sex, didn’t they?”

“Well, yeah,” says Butterbean. "Mom and Dad said that-"

"Silence!" I command, dangerously close to a lot of unwanted mental imagery of Butterbean's parents rolling around and grunting like sweaty, greasy hippopotami with a background narration by Lorne Greene. 'Mutual of Omaha presents ...' Shivering slightly I persist, trying to come up with an example. "Look. Have you ever watched 'Forensic Files'?"

"That television show about when the police solve those murders?"

"Yes. You watch the half hour program, and by the end the solve the crime."

Butterbean nods expectantly. "Okay."

"Well there's another show called 'Missing Persons Unit.' Similar, but this show is a little less predictable because sometimes they find the missing person alive."

"Go on."

"My point is with 'Forensic Files,' they catch the killer. With 'Missing Persons Unit,' it's almost the same thing ... you watch them interviewing suspects, canvassing the area, dredging the river, interviewing more suspects, blah blah blah. But then after fifty-five minutes of watching all that time, energy, money and manpower wasted, they find the kid waiting tables in Hollywood hoping to blow Steven Spielberg to get their screenplay read or whatever."

"I'm not following you."

"Think about it. We walk away hating the kid that survived. For putting us through all that."

Butterbean nods, but I can tell he's not 'getting it.'

"If you're going to lie and make people think you are dead," I elaborate, "and you aren't dead, don't you think it should be incumbent upon all concerned parties to provide some closure? We can set a dollar amount for it. Let's say when the search costs more than $250,000 and the kid has been alive and safe the whole time, somebody has to die. For $250,000, I want a body. And it should go up from there. For $500,000, I want two bodies. And so on."

"But what does this have to do with sex?"

"We're not there yet. We're still talking about lying. And you have to preface a conversation about sex with a conversation about lying. Any honest adult male will tell you well-woven and elaborate lying is an intrinsic component of having sex ... unless he's lying because he's trying to have sex with you. But we'll get to 'Courtship' soon enough. Stop interrupting me."

"Okay."

"Now where was I? Oh yeah. I'm not saying wax the kid right there on the Spago salad bar ... this all has to be treated on a case-by-case basis. What if maybe the kid was running away from abusive parents, and they should be killed? See? By lying we've transformed the whole situation. People deserve -if not demand- being lied to, and it's in their best interest really. I'm happy, you're happy, and Steven Spielberg is really happy. We all walk away slaked in the confidence and comfort of cosmic justice well-served, and with vastly improved television as a byproduct."

"I gotta tell you, this is way different than the speech my parents gave me," says Butterbean. "Are there birds and bees in this one somewhere?"

“No," I says flatly. "You’re too grown up for those fairy tales. But the truth about babies is actually more horrifying than you could possibly imagine -maybe worse even than being raped by a pack of wild pandas! That's why your parents are distorting the truth,” I assert. "They are trying to protect you."

Pensive and rapt, the boy hung on my every word.

“If sex resulted in babies,” I began, “we would have stopped doing it a long time ago. The first caveman to find a melted Jolly Rancher in his pelt would have been the end of the whole damn human race.”

“Then where did I come from?”

“I doubt anyone really knows with one hundred percent certainty," I confess. "But it definitely was not from sex. I mean put yourself in everyone else's shoes. Would you have sex knowing there was a risk of having you? And I’ve seen your parents. Trust me. Those people aren’t having sex ... especially with each other. Blech.”

“Maybe there are spores? Like mushrooms?”

“Well that seems plausible," I concede. "But it seems far more logical for people to contract babies. Like syphilis or rabies.”

“So the pandas are immune to babies?”

“No. I’ll bet pandas are as susceptible as anything. If there’s a scarcity of baby pandas, it’s more likely due to them being delicious.”

Butterbean’s inquisitive look transformed instantly to horror. “You mean we are eating the baby pandas?”

“There's a Panda Express two blocks from here,” I shrug. “And have you ever eaten baby panda? It’s fantastic. It tastes like chicken.”

Suddenly, I realize that this conversation –if furthered pursued- might actually make Butterbean vomit, cry, or vomit while crying simultaneously. But no matter how desirous these potential outcomes might be, I would prefer none of these events to take place in my kitchen.

“You look a little pale,” I comment. “Are you okay?”

“I’m fine,” says Butterbean unconvincingly. He seemed a bit wobbly, and it occurred to me he might faint. Fainting trumps vomiting, crying, and vomiting while crying simultaneously in my kitchen, but he could hurt himself -and I wouldn’t be a very responsible adult if this were to occur when it was completely avoidable, would I?

“Would you like to try some baby panda?” I says, grabbing the almost novelty-large, craziest, jagged-looking knife I can find out of the wooden block. “I’ve got some in the freezer. It’ll take me five minutes if I arc weld it. You can have the ears. They're kinda small, but that's the part Hostess uses to make Ho-Hos-"

WHAM!

It was a clean fall, square in the center of the kitchen ... afterward the sight of which could only be described as a small whale having beached itself on the linoleum. I probably could have caught him, but I would have missed the comedy entirely and therefore couldn't. Plus I was thinking about my new invention: the Sea Skateboard.

See, what we do is we make a really big skateboard without wheels. But here's the kicker: the Sea Skateboard floats on water. You could paddle around on it and ride waves or whatever. (I probably shouldn't have blogged this idea now that I think about it. People have a bad habit about stealing my ideas ... especially those shifty goddamn Hawaiians.)

Anyway. Once more concerned for the still-inert boy's safety, I poke him with the grilled cheese spatula until I'm convinced his vital signs are stable.

-And by the time he fully 'comes to,' I’m already on the phone with his mom.

“I think twenty bucks an hour is more fair," I explain, hardballing Butterbean’s mom over a terrible, static-addled connection. “This lazy kid was uncooperative and fell right to sleep during the lesson. If I'm going to take millions and millions of dollars in my time away from developing the Sea Skateboard, I deserve some kind of equitable compensation."

Butterbean groans. "Is that my mom?"

I put my finger to my lips to shush him quietly, and then cover the ear opposite the phone to hear better over the crackling background noise. "It's a really big skateboard without wheels that floats on water," I explain to her. "You could paddle around on it and ride waves or whatever. Shit ... you're not Hawaiian, are you ma'am?"

"What happened?" he asks, blinking blearily at the ceiling.

"Look," I says into the phone, trying to ignore him. "I'll only charge you ten bucks for this first guitar lesson, but look what I have to work with here ... this is the musical equivalent of smoking a cigar, drinking coffee and eating a box of Oreos in the dentist's waiting room. Your son would be better off doing something for which he was more genetically suitable. Like ..." Thinking quickly, I turn and look at the boy, still on the kitchen floor, for ideas. "Like, I dunno, becoming a perfume or something.”

Absently twirling the phone cord in my fingers, I see Butterbean sit up.

"Those poor pandas," the boy whimpered weakly.

"Shhh!" I says to him irritated, covering the phone mouthpiece. "I'm negotiating." Turning my back to him in order to concentrate, my attention returns completely to Butterbean's mom.

"So we have a deal then?" I ask. "Good. Now how much will you give me not to teach him ‘Smoke on the Water’?"

Saturday

Where Do Babies Come From?


Predator Press

-By LOBO

(My first children’s book. Illustrator needed)

So you have been wondering where babies come from, and you’re not buying the whole “stork” thing anymore?

Fret not.

-I'm gonna give you the straightforward birdless, beeless science.

See when mommies and daddies are in love, they take their pants off and share a ‘Special Hug.’ And if the hug is done right, they shoot Deoxyribonucleic Acid [DNA] all over each other.  This sometimes makes babies.

But one day mommy found daddy with his pants off, shooting Deoxyribonucleic Acid all over the realtor lady.

Mommy should have almost certainly gotten therapy -she still has that weird tic in her face. But instead she got an AR15 from the gun rack downstairs, and unloaded the clip on daddy and the realtor lady while they were in the shower.

The lawyers tied up the entire estate in probate, and the whole thing was gone even before the blood, bone and hair had swirled down the shower drain. And they were unable to get mommy a manslaughter plea deal: she was sentenced to six years, and subsequently jumped the $250,000 bail. That’s why you and mommy live out of a car in rural Montana, drink boiled rainwater and eat slightly al dente squirrels six times a week, and poop into a coffee cans for squirrel cooking fuel.

Probably.

But now that you’re older and have read the newspaper articles, have you ever wondered why you, daddy, and the realtor lady all had the same last name and mommy doesn't? Or noticed that you look more like the realtor lady than you do your so-called "mommy?"

Babies come from a horrible, horrible place.

Now go to sleep, ya lil bastard.

Wednesday

Rejection Coverage 2012

Predator Press

[LOBO]

Hmmmmmm.

My life was never worse than it was under the much-ballyhooed Ronald Reagan.

But Ronald Reagan is credited with restimulating the American Economy exponentially during the 80's.

Thus -despite being all old and battered and spent- I owe another hellish decade to protect the Nation's future for my kids and should vote Republican?

-Have you seen my kids?



Wednesday

Torque

Predator Press

[LOBO]

“I suppose,” I says, pacing back and forth across the room, “you’re all wondering why I’ve called you here.”

Complainy doesn’t miss a beat. “Because you haven’t found a job yet, and you’re slowly losing your mind?”

I stop and turn slowly to face my 16 year old daughter, but Screechy tugs on my leg. “Can I play Star Wars Legos?”

“No Star Wars Legos for anyone until I find out who did it,” I reply.

“Did what?” asks Terri.

“Something so vile and horrendous,” I says eyeing Shiftless warily, “the consequences will be dire.” I lean into a squirmy Shiftless and repeat in an ominous whisper, elongating two sylables slowly: “Die-re!”

“Mom he’s gone completely crazy,” says Complainy.

“Crazy like a fox!” I exclaim. “A crime-solving fox with X-Ray vision so’s he can peer into the dark hearts of evildoers!”

“Honey,” says Terri. “Would you please at least shave? You look like Tom Hanks in Cast Away.”

I look down at my own chest. Without a mirror I can’t quite see the beard yet, but it occurs to me that I’m in rumpled pajamas, an untied bathrobe and slippers.

-In and of itself this isn’t so weird, but it’s two o’clock in the afternoon.

I turn to Terri suspiciously. “And you sure seem to want to change the subject a lot!” I snap.

Shiftless is clearly losing patience. “So what is this ‘horrendous act’ you had to wake me up for?”

I grab the sheet and pause for a moment to build the drama. Then, in a quick, smooth motion I pull it away. Having revealed what was underneath, I point at it while facing them accusingly.

“What’s wrong with the television?” asks Terri.

My jaw almost falls open at her lack of observation.

I point again.

“Nobody messed with your crappy TV,” says Complainy.

“Can I play Star Wars Legos?” asks Screechy.

"There will be no fun in this household until justice is served!" Shaking with rage, I point a little closer to the upper left corner.

Terri squints. “What. Is it that fingerprint?”

Finally!

Rendered unable to speak by fury, I nod violently.

“So somebody probably touched the screen while we were moving it,” says Shiftless. “Heck it might’ve been you.”

“Silence!” I demand. “If 97 back-to-back episodes of Forensic Files have taught me anything," I says flatly, "It's that when you find a fingerprint there's been a crime. The last time I saw this television, it was snuggly chained between six mattresses and those six mattresses were encased in carbonite!"

“Can I play Star Wars Legos?” asks Screechy.

"-And I have further proof it was not me, as you have so clearly implied.” I show Shiftless the non-matching pads of my finger through my magnifying glass. “If you still think that print is mine," I add, "I’ve prepared a PowerPoint presentation we can go through later that illustrates the differences. My fingerprint is an ‘arch’ while this is clearly a 'whorl.'”

“Look honey,” says Terri from behind me. “It comes right off with a paper tow-“

“Stop!” I scream. “You’re contaminating the DNA!

Thursday

How to Get More Football out of Life


Predator Press

[LOBO]

I was vaguely aware as my youngest son audibly mistyped his name, “J-O-O …”

But then I distinctly heard the G.I. Joe M.A.R.S. Laptop announce with finality, “'Joo' is incorrect. Access denied.”

I am going to have so much fun with that thing at Sunday Mass this week ...

Friday

Leperball

Yes, it’s almost Fantasy Football time again. Want to sign up for my amateur league? Send an email to “carpenoctum at hotmail dot com." But act quickly -it is first come, first served, and almost half the spots are already taken.

Predator Press

[LOBO]

People are always asking me, "LOBO, with basketball season over and football not yet in full swing, how does a legendary athlete such as yourself spend your leisure time?”

Well I’m glad you asked me that.

See I’ve always believed that people as gifted and successful as myself should spend a lot of time giving back to the community: encouraging the "less fortunate" to try and become a chiseled physical phenomena such as myself is exactly the false hope today’s kids need to keep them from dealing drugs, stealing my car, or other things 'the community' generally frowns upon.

With Shark Boxing still tied up in pre-production due to a quagmire of insurance hassles, I generally spend my weekends coaching a Pop Warner pee-wee football team called the Starfishes -a spirited and rugged little squad of ‘can do’ types, all afflicted with advanced stages of leprosy.

This is my third year -the first of which I am Federally mandated to because of the “Anti-Discrimination Act”: little Timmy's dad used it to sue me when I puked at the post-game pizza party and tried to resign.

Little Timmy is now quarterback.

His little dad must be so proud ...

-Check out my 2010 Fantasy Football Pre-Drafting Tips!

Monday

Independence Day

Predator Press

[LOBO]

The only problem I have with an “official” holiday is that everyone else is on one too.

When I take a sick day for instance, the world carries on as normal: television is on regular scheduling, stores are open, et cetera. But on an “official” holiday such as Independence Day, well, virtually anything I might have done is on holiday as well.

-And if you lazy bastards don't get back to work pronto, my head is going to explode.

“Honey,” says Terri, knocking softly at the door.

Sitting in a bath of deep bubbles, my copy of The Best of Philip K. Dick tented on my forehead, I’m pondering the story I just finished darkly. Dick, a favorite author, took an unexpected detour in his story Faith of our Fathers; for this he seemed to channel another favorite author of mine, H. P. Lovecraft. And I was wholly unprepared for the exceptionally-

Another knock. Louder.

-bleak moral. But a lot of PKD’s stuff is edgy, provocative and foreboding: he wrote Minority Report, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep, and We Can Remember it for You Wholesale after all (although Hollywood would take liberties with them; most people know the last two as Blade Runner and Total Recall respectively.)

Terri tries the locked door. “Honey are you okay?”

PKD’s impact on Hollywood doesn’t rest there, either. I could make a case that the whole Terminator series is a spinoff of his short Second Variety-

Another knock.

“Yeah,” I says reluctantly.

“Honey I need a favor,” says Terri through the door. “Will you watch Jessica while I give Maude a ride to get some formula?”

Scowling, I remove the paperback from my head and set it on the edge of the tub. “I‘m very busy,” I reply.

“You won‘t have to do anything,” says another voice. Male.

The Butterbean kid.

-To get you up to speed, Maude is Butterbean’s mom, and Jessica is Maude’s newborn baby girl.

I grab a towel. "I don’t do diapers ‘an crap. It’s a strict policy I learned from Hillary Clinton. 'No Child’s Behind Left'"

“That’s 'No Child Left Behind,'“ Terri corrects.

“Even better,” I agree.

The rather debilitating sulk that Faith of our Fathers inspired didn’t drag me down alone. Neverlution, a heady and potent stand up routine by one of my favorite stand-up comics Christopher Titus debuted yesterday, and it seemed to round up all my demons into a nice little package: he covered everything from major depression -one of my many diagnoses- to the state of our mighty-yet-currently staggering beloved nation. Did we lose our Mandate of Heaven? Or was it always myth, like Bigfoot and the female orgasm?

I think I tried to be depressed for the country instead somehow, and it just made things worse.

-Nothing to buoy to, I suppose.

“We’ll only be ten minutes or so,” Terri adds. “I just want an adult here. I couldn’t find one, but you’re the next best thing.”

Ha ha.

“I’ll take care of everything,” Butterbean repeats.

Still toweling off, I contemplate this soberly. “You’ll take care of everything, eh?”

“Yeah,” he replies with the surfeit of confidence only found in adolescents.

“You'll have to prove your competence then," I says through the still-closed door bathroom door. "You can have any four guests for dinner. Who do you invite?”

Butterbean pauses behind the door. "Uh-"

"Quickly!" I demand.

Then suddenly he blurts, “Ben Franklin, Leonardo da Vinci, Thomas Edison, and ... Socrates.”

“Wrong, wrong, wrong and wrong,” I says, pulling on my boxers. “Jesus who could eat with all those dead people? The place would stink to high heaven. The correct answer is Adam Carolla, Drew Pinsky, David Allen Grier, and Justin Bieber.”

Duh, I thought, drying my hair some more in the mirror.

For the first time in my life I’m forced to admit I look like shit; I don’t think I’ve never been in this much cumulative physical and psychological disrepair. Perhaps worse, even the frail forty-minute sleep increments I manage -among the most painful experiences of all- are further complicated by a nasty bout of hay fever.

Still, the back surgery went really well and physical therapy starts tomorrow. The broken wrist is marginally usable already. The ankle, however, complicated by two breaks, not so much -the jury is still out on a possible additional surgery.

I do intend to blog all this here soon. Probably at the end of this month, as it will coincide with an important announcement.

But I need a nice tall pale beer first. And maybe a plate of pork chops.

-Or a good steak.

“So will you do it?” asks Terri.

In the mirror, checking for acne, I spot a small red spot on my cheekbone. I zero in. I think it’s acne.

“Do what?”

Holy crap … I hope it’s not melanoma.


Note: That mirror pic is from a great site I tripped on called Funny World, and the gallery is here.

-But shh! Don‘t tell them I stole it!


Sunday

Driving Miss Crazy

Predator Press

[LOBO]

“You need to slow down,” scolds an already irritated Terri. “You know why they put those ‘Children Crossing’ signs up, right?”

“Sure I know” I says. Decelerating, I sigh and roll my eyes. “They have to. Because children are stupid.”

“Children are not stupid.”

“Oh reeealllly,” my eyebrows arch in a mix of fury and snark. Spotting a little girl at the stop sign, I press the button to roll down my window. “You!” I points to the little girl. “Who won the 1994 World series?”

To this, the little girl stared confused -and after a moment decided to smile and wave.

“Ptthbtt,” I says,  rolling my window back up.  Proceeding into the clear intersection, I underline “See that?  Dumb as a fuckin' post.”

Terri scowled. “There was no World Series in 1994. The players went on strike that year.”

“Really?”

Tuesday

Zeus


Predator Press

[LOBO]

“Of course you don’t feel clean and fresh down there sometimes,” I remark.

The way Terri and Complainy -my wife and teenage daughter respectively- are sitting, holding hands across the table, I immediately have the sense I’m interrupting.

Moving quickly for the fridge, I try to make my ‘snack attack’ quick and precise: the sooner I let them continue in privacy, the better.

“And who could feel clean and fresh down there?” I offer hopefully. “Jesus I doubt that place has been cleaned in ten years. I wouldn’t be surprised if there was bat fecal matter all over the place. Plus must and mildew, mold, and other unidentifiable horrible smells … cobwebs maybe.” I shudder visibly as I select a carrot and shut the refrigerator door. “Oh my god … can you imagine the spiders?

I turn to see Complainy shriek as she flees for the door, and Terri, elbows still on the table, rest her own shaking head in her hands.

“What?” I says, munching. “Why is she so freaked out about the basement all of the sudden?”

"Baby,” says Terri, exasperated. “Can’t you try and be a little more sensitive when it comes to our children?”

“We tried that,” I says. I spin Complainy's former chair, already askew, backwards to sit. “Remember? It just reminds me how much I don’t like them.”

Suddenly –in mid-chew- I freeze. “Oh my God,” I says, dropping the carrot and grabbing Terri’s hands forcefully.

“Honey,” I whisper, looking around fearfully. “Is the basement haunted?




Saturday

Ask LOBO: Parenting Teenagers

Predator Press

[LOBO]

“Is Complainy up for school?” asks Terri.

“Yes,” I says, breathlessly removing my helmet.

“We have to figure out what kind of tampons she wants.”

“Blech.”

“Seriously,” adds Terri.

“Well don’t let her do the thing with the hangy stringy-thingy.”

“Why?”

“It's a widely-known fact if it’s accidentally pulled during a routine exam, she’ll rapidly inflate.”


Wednesday

The Butterbean Kid is Dead

Predator Press

[LOBO]

Butterbean scoffs incredulously over my shoulder.

“You can’t really write that if it isn’t true.”

Exasperated, I stop writing.

“How many times do I have to tell you not to interrupt me while I’m filling out insurance papers?”

"Sorry," says Butterbean, looking away. “I just thought it might be, I dunno, illegal or something.”

Decedent Age: 13

“Yeah, well,” I says. "It's only one of the many sacrifices I make for the millions and millions of Predator Press readers."

Cause of Death:

I pause to look at him for a second, then return to my keyboard.

Cause of Death: Morbid Twinkie Saturation

Butterbean, visibly wounded, seems to deflate somewhat.

“My mother says I’m big-boned” he offers. Showing me his fleshy, flaccid bicep with the water-soluble tattoos we got in Switzerland, he continues. “Some girls like guys with some 'meat' on them.”

-And I don’t know what got into me. Maybe it was all those hot, big-haired 80’s chicks I failed to woo with my ‘64 Dodge Dart replete with imitation vinyl interior, pine tree air freshener, and AM radio.

But I felt sorry for him.

Cause of Death: Morbid Twinkie Saturation Complications of Menopause

“What’s ‘Menopause’?” asks Butterbean.

“It’s a really high level of World of Warcraft.”

“Cool,” he says. “I gotta go home and tell my parents I‘m still alive. And I get in trouble if I’m late for dinner.”

I strip the receipt tape from the 10-key.

“Well if you must,” I says, scowling at the tiny scroll. “But try not to be conspicuous.”

Friday

Dangling the God Participle

Predator Press

[LOBO]

“But it’s two in the morning,” says the Butterbean kid. “Besides, the CERN Hadron Colider is closed to the public.”

“I am not ‘The Public,’” I says, lowering the rope. “I‘ve had a personal black hole on backorder since 2008. I‘m a prospective buyer.”

Butterbean gives the rope a tug forlornly. “Why do I have to carry all the luggage?”

“It was a condition of getting through Customs” I explain down to him in excruciating, hushed tones. “When they asked you the nature of your visit, I told them it was to carry my luggage.”

“What was the nature of your visit?”

“To tell you where to put my luggage. Now be careful. That Fabergé egg was very expensive.”

“I still think it’s a painted Wiffle ball.”

“Why would that guy charge me so much for a painted Wiffle ball? Painted Wiffle balls are comparably worthless.”

“Why don’t you just come down and unlock the door?”

I sigh.

This fucking kid is the laziest Administrative Assistant I’ve ever had.

“Oh, all right” I says. “You probably would have banged up my television anyway.”

Bounding down the two flights of stairs, I make it a point to turn on the lights as I go ... all the way, keeping a sharp lookout for the Swiss equivalent of a shipping department: if my black hole is already there, I figure I’ll save myself a few bucks by circumventing the whole UPS thing.

The back door latch cracks loudly with the sound of well-imbedded steel, and I swing the heavy door wide.

“Thanks” says Butterbean, collecting my luggage.

"I shoulda made you climb that rope for your own good" I says, pointing to his considerable belly. “A little exercise wouldn’t kill you, you know.”

“Yuh,“ he grunts, heaving my luggage through the door.

Once inside, he looks around.

“There's nobody here.”

“I can’t believe I’ve flown all the way to Switzerland,” I agree glumly, “and these lazy scientists are off screwing around when they should be working on my black hole! I’m going to send them an angry email.” Turning on a nearby computer terminal, I am immediately greeted by a screen requesting a password.

“Damn!” I says. Thinking quickly, I type ‘CERN.’

The screen says ‘Password Fail.’

Meditating on this solemnly for a moment, I try again.

‘NREC.’

Suddenly, the complex in buzzing

-Buzzing with the steady throb of science.

Butterbean is incredulous. "The password was 'CERN' spelled backwards?"

"Yep," I guffaw. "I told you scientists are dumb."

And as the computer screen blinks to life, it reads the line ‘Activate Supercolider?'

“Where the hell is the email in this thing?” I says irritated into the computer screen. “No shipping records, no porn ... just tons of physics crap and Elf Bowling.” Frustrated, I click ‘Activate,’ and the room seems to shrink with the whine of turbines.

“Cool,” breathes Butterbean. Spotting an addled dry erase board on the wall, he squints to read the nigh-illegible chart.

“Hey, look at this” he says. “It‘s a project schedule.”

“Jesus Christ,” I complain. “These worthless bastards haven’t even found the Hogus-Bogus Particle yet!”

“Nope.”

“We have to speed things up, or I’m never going to get a personal black hole.”

“What do you have in mind?”

Scratching my chin, I spot a steel huge porthole in the floor -about the size of a small car. "Lefty-loose-y" I mutter under my breath, spinning the lock.

“I don’t think that’s a good idea,” says Butterbean.

Blinding alarms and deafening sirens peal.

“Why?” I yell over the clamor.

“You’re opening the chamber of a 17-mile long supercolider” he shouts, a wild wind now blowing through his hair. “It’s just a hunch.”

“These so-called scientists will never get anywhere trying to smash teeny particles,” I explain.

So I started throwing small stuff in at first. Pens, clipboards, files … but that shit just whipped around noisily, missing each other entirely. Butterbean caught on soon enough, and went to the cafeteria and grabbed a handful of odds and ends out of the fridge; he soon returned with a half a Pepsi, some sporks, and tuna fish sandwich labeled 'BOB' in crude red capital letters.

But true science did not occur until pieces of the afore mentioned computer -on their third lap- cracked solidly into the afore mentioned dry erase board.

And there it was: a singularity -the main ingredient for my personal black hole- in all it‘s vacuous splendor.

And as the tuna fish sandwich spiraled in, Blackie -I have decided to call her Blackie- swelled slightly while devouring it.

"Bob is going to be pissed," Butterbean remarks.

“She’s hungry! Keep throwing stuff in!” I cry to Butterbean. “We have to get her to a size where she will stabilize!”

“How big is that?”

“About the size of the fruit basket Tiger Woods sent to Jesse James yesterday.”

Within an hour CERN was devoid of every stick of furniture and file cabinets, and exposed wires hung from holes in the wall.

“Don’t worry Blackie!” I cry down into the void. “I’ll think of something!”

“There’s nothing left except your luggage,” says Butterbean. “Hey! What are you doing?”

Trying vainly to scoop Butterbean in, I struggle against his mighty girth ... but I might as well have been trying to lift the Rock of Gibraltar.

“Damn,” I gasp. “I knew I shoulda made you climb that rope.”

The Viscosity of Toothpaste

Predator Press

[LOBO]

Since none of you cowards volunteered to kill my neighbors, I’ve had to take matters into my own hands.

“Look,” I says to the Butterbean kid. “You can’t go toe-to-toe with them. You’re too short. You need to use your weight against ‘em. Work up some inertia first. You know, hit ‘em like a 30 mile an hour walrus.”

“What if I don’t want to kill the neighbors?”

“Then why did you answer my ad on Monster-dot-com?”

“Because it said you wanted an administrative assistant.”

“Good administrative assistants kill people all the time.”

“Really?”

“Well, 'monster' is right in the name. And you gotta let monsters have some fun. If not, you have to pay them.”

“I’m not sure I want the job, actually.”

“You don’t want your secret identity as the deadly -feared and respected by all- Walrus Man? I think that would be a bad career move personally.”

“Why do you want the neighbors killed?”

“Because they’re evil.”

“How so?”

“They do stuff like mow the lawn while I’m trying to sleep.”

“My Dad mows the lawn here, Saturdays at two o'clock in the afternoon” says Butterbean. “I thought you meant the neighbors on the other side.”

“I do mean the neighbors on the other side. Killing your parents is merely a way to test your administrative assistant aptitude.” I pause. “How else am I to find out if you have, you know, the Eye of The Walrus?"

"How about if we ask my Dad to mow the lawn at some other time?"

"See this?" I says, showing my shaky hand. "And look how bloodshot my eyes are! I, author of Predator Press, am under enormous pressure. Millions and millions of readers will always be asking me every day, 'LOBO, why aren't your neighbors dead yet?' And if I don't get fifteen hours of completely random sleep a day, I'm likely to do something crazy -like not kill the neighbors. Do you want to be responsible for that?”

“You only have 150 RSS subscribers," he says skeptically. "And most of those are pre-med students looking for a psychiatric practicum."

“What happened to you?” I demand. “Did they get to you already? Fess up Walrus Man ... Despite a valorous career fighting crime, were you seduced by their massive payroll? Was it money? Was it women? Was it women made of money?"

“No.”

I gasp. “They gave you the Dale Earnhardt commemorative plates? Walrus Man, you are shrewd.”

“Stop calling me that.”

“But I already had it embroidered on your cape!”

Tuesday

Jackson Tweens Caught With Stun Gun, DCFS Conducting Investigation

Predator Press

[LOBO]

According to TMZ -because one of the children had somehow acquired a stun gun- the Department of Children and Family Services is conducting an investigation of the Jackson family.

So what’s the big deal? If I was 13 and lived in the Jackson home, I would want a stun gun too. They got giraffes 'an crap!

Look. I’m a staunch NRA supporter. And when I last checked, our Nation’s children were protected by a little thing called The Constitution. I for one love my stun gun. How else is one expected to deal with unwanted visits from Jehovah’s Witnesses and Census Takers? Kids getting a firearm should be a prerequisite for graduating kindergarten, thus beginning early the long road of preparation for the firefight formerly known as college.

Sure there’ll be a handful of you sanctimonious, whiny liberals, "But LOBO, a gun can be dangerous -especially when used by children!”

Pthbbbt! Where do you people come up with these ideas? And I didn't say give 'em, like, grenades or something: one measly stun gun is great fun for the whole family!

Don‘t believe me? This morning the Butterbean kid got sent over to borrow a cup of sugar, and I‘ve been stunning him ever since. I even recharged it twice. He’s fine. In the process, I even uncovered some false advertising: the box my stun gun came in says explicitly, “Will incapacitate virtually any assailant instantly.” But this little prick keeps twitching!

And this further illustrates my point, doesn‘t it?

If this little bastard had a gun, none of this would have ever happened.

Thursday

Everything You Ever Needed to Know About Being Domesticated:

Predator Press

[LOBO]

1) The phrase "I think it was milk" is always followed shortly by horror.

2) Despite being of perfect size and density, a piece of cake stabbed with cigarette butts will get you yelled at.

3) No matter how tantalizing the prospect, never -under any circumstances- try the garbage disposal on aluminum cans.

Tuesday

Through a Fog of Fever, an Antihistamine Transfusion, and a Nice Thick Glaze of Nyquil

Predator Press

[LOBO]

The annual tradition of facing a New Year with a list of self-improvement goals, or “resolutions,” is the result of events that can be traced back many, many years. So many years, in fact, most of them happened before I was even born, and therefore are considered inconsequential by numerous historians and scholars.

But one cannot trivialize history; indeed, “he who forgets history is doomed to repeat it.”

Like that “doomed to be repeat it” thing? I just made it up -I made it up to clearly underline the inherent dangers associated with repeating stuff! Due to a “lather, rinse, repeat” typo on a shampoo bottle, within two weeks my buddy Barbarossa lost all his hair and eyebrows, and polished top of his skull eggshell-thin. But despite this, the vast and sinister Paul Mitchell empire stubbornly fights the legislation to correct the phrase to “lather, rinse, STOP!” in a conspiracy to avoid an embarrassing and expensive worldwide shampoo recall. Mark my words: one day Paul Mitchell will pay for what his crimes, and pay dearly. But, like in any good democracy, there is a lot of paperwork to fill out before you can go and kill people. It's for our own protection supposedly.

But rather than bore you with "The Historic Origins of the New Year’s Resolution" blah blah, I've decided to bore you guys some good ideas for your own list of potential resolutions … resolutions that would make the world a better place, and possibly reduce my complaining about it:

Resolution Suggestion #1: Stop taking your babies on airplanes.

C’mon you self-centered pricks -this should be a no-brainer! The health and welfare of your spawn do not outweigh my right to travel in comfort. You can’t part with that thing for five minutes? Heck, you haven’t even had it that long!

I have it on good authority humans are a robust, hearty breed: civilization has been around for hundreds and hundreds of years without you givin’ it bottles and changing diapers and so forth, so a few weeks away is really no big deal. Babies are a lot like cats scientifically. Smelly, noisy cats. Yes. If you feed them once, they never leave ... and every few days you'll only have to do the whole food thing all over again to shut them up. And you gotta buy babies stuff a lot, whereas cats are aloof and unattached. Come to think of it, if you put a baby and a cat in the wild, the baby would adopt the cat. But you know what cats would do? Cats would eat the baby!

Alright ... forget I said anything about cats. But babies, like cats, need character, and you getting away for some well-deserved 'R & R' is a great way to build some. For the duration of most holiday trips, well-fed and watered babies in a fenced in backyard will do nicely if weather permits. And if you don’t have a fenced in backyard, perhaps you should use the money from your trip on one instead -thereby sparing me being trapped with the bundle of happiness you have wrought upon the Earth anyway.

But I suspect if you couldn't afford to get a fenced in backyard and travel, you probably weren’t able to afford having babies in the first place ... your New Year's Resolution list should probably include something about promiscuity too. Try something like "This year, instead of waving them around in the air like I'm trying to guide an airplane, I'm going to keep my legs sitting in the back seat of the convertible."

Whore.

Resolution Suggestion #2: Please start smoking again.

I’m sick of you sanctimonious non-smoking pricks kicking me out of restaurants and bars, et cetera.

You know what? I’m going to make a place where smoking is mandatory. It’ll have all kinds of cool stuff in it -like rides and junk- and we won’t let you in. Hah! One day you’ll be all like “Hey, where are those cool people that used to hang around our building entrance?”

But we will be long gone.

Years later, repressed, destitute, and alone, once you've realized that binge-eating tumbleweeds and soy beans will never fill that empty void inside, you’ll search us out.

“Let us in!” you will sob. But a guy on a megaphone in a tower will be all like “Sorry. Can’t. Today is the Superbowl. And if I gotta make an exception for you, I would have to make an exception for everybody." And as you glance down at your extremely healthy chest and realize it is dotted with little wavering red lights, he'll go on to say "Now unless you precious little daisies of Nature are going to fire up a cigarette or something, please step back a few hundred miles from the facilities. Move along.”

I imagine, to satisfy an innate human curiosity, our utopic self-exile won’t go on forever; future generations of us smokers will go on educational safaris to see you in submarine-like vehicles with wheels, pointing out your still-exposed skeletons in the sand dunes to our children through a thick porthole. “See kids?" we'll say. "That’s what happens when you don’t smoke.” And there will always be some smartypants fat kid in the back raising his hand, “Those poor people. How come we didn’t eat them?” And we adults will respond in hushed, low tones sure to inspire nightmares: “Because all the exercise and lowfat diets rendered them flavorless, soulless husks!

In the fat kid's defense, I'm sure we would have become bored of eating veal and baby sea lions, and at some point would have made some attempts at preparing a decent meal of you health freaks ... you know, with a fine Mornay sauce and a red wine or perhaps deep fried on a stick with a zesty Ranch dip. But all your sucking up to Mother Nature would probably pay off with some kind of defense mechanism such as smelling like boiled cabbage or something. Blech. I hate that smell! And it probably takes days to get your house smelling back to normal once you've cooked a health nut ... I mean Febreze or no Febreze, it just lingers and cloys in your couches, drapes and clothing for what seems like forever.

Screw it. We'll just hunt you for sport.

Anyway I’m bored with making my list now.

But most importantly, I have completed my own personal New Year’s resolution: to write a post including Barbarossa.

Isn’t ‘Barbarossa’ a cool name? When I met him he introduced himself incessantly, almost bragging through his big, pearly-white grin.

“Hello, my name is Barbarossa.”

“No it isn’t,” says Barbarossa’s doctor. “That’s half the reason he is here.”

“His name isn’t Barbarossa?” I ask.

“No. Actually, no one knows his real name.”

"Then how do you know it isn't Barbarossa?"

"Because he's in a straight jacket."

“Well this isn’t very convenient,” I says. “As author and narrator of this post, I can’t exactly call you ‘Barbarossa’s doctor’ if he isn’t ‘Barbarossa.’”

“Well, you’re pretty screwed then,” says the guy who isn’t Barbarossa’s doctor.

“Hello, my name is Barbarossa,” beams the guy who isn’t Barbarossa.

“No it isn’t,” said the guy that isn’t Barbarossa’s doctor.

“This is pissing me off,” I says flatly. “Have you tried giving him Napoleon pastries?”

“Ah,” says the guy that isn’t Barbarossa’s doctor with mild interest. “The old 'You are what you eat' trick, eh? He eats one, and then becomes Napoleon?”

“Yes.”

“That’s crazy.”

“I’m fine with calling him Napoleon,” I argue.

The guy that isn’t Barbarossa’s doctor rolls his eyes. “Oh man please tell me you’re kidding,” he pleads. “Jesus, you can’t throw a rock in here without hitting a Napoleon. I thought it was kind of refreshing to have a Barbarossa for a change.”

“Hello, my name is Barbarossa,” beams the guy that isn’t Barbarossa.

“No it isn’t,” said the guy that isn’t Barbarossa’s doctor.

“I’m calling him Barbarossa,” I says with finality.

“Please to meet you,” says the guy that is once again Barbarossa.

“Alright,” the doctor shrugs, sighing in resolve. “I hope you know what you’re doing.”

“Why is he in here -besides the Barbarossa thing?” I ask Barbarossa’s doctor.

“Because he is in a straight jacket,” he replies.

“Why is he in a straight jacket?”

“Because he is in here.”

“Huh. That’s good science, and pretty efficient," I conclude. "Doctor, I salute you. If not for your hard work and dedication, Paul Mitchell would have completely destroyed this poor man.”

“Hello, my name-”

“Uh, ‘Barbarossa.’ Got that.” I says.

“Pleased to meet you,” says Barbarossa.

"Well it wasn't easy," says Barbarosa's doctor. "It took six weeks to get him where he didn't smell like coconuts."

“Is he dangerous?” I ask Barbarossa’s doctor curiously.

“Only if you’re in our Acrophobia treatment. He likes to push the patients down the stairs during the therapy.”

“Does that cure them?”

“I don’t know,” shrugs the doc. “We don’t go down there anymore. Too much screaming. It’s hell on the nerves.”

Saturday

The Myth of the Female Orgasm

Predator Press

[LOBO]

“Huh,” says my oldest son. “Smells good. What is that?”

“Chicken noodle soup.”

Skeptically, he digs into the thick fluid with the wooden spoon. “What’s in it?”

“Chicken. And noodles.”

"Blech," he grimaces, spotting the carrots and celery.

"Sorry," I says. "I forgot about the 'soup' part."

“I’ll just get something later.”

“So what are you guys going to be doing?”

“I dunno,” he shrugs, sliding into his jacket. “Hanging out.”

“Yeah, okay,” I says incredulously. “Listen. When I was your age, my mom -your grandma- gave me some advice, and I still use it. She said, ‘Always remember, men are only after one thing.’

“What does that mean?”

“That’s all she said,” I reply walking him to the door. “I took it as some kind of warning. What she has against sleep isn’t clear, but she’s the unhappiest woman I’ve ever known.”