The intellectual equivalent of a ham sandwich.

Posts tagged ‘Weekly Wacko’

Weekly Wacko (12)

I am the Jaguar
When I was home for Christmas and New Year’s I got to meet up with both sides of the family and hang out. I found out that my Cousin E had never heard of the blog. I was of course quick to post on his facebook account – yes, I’m constantly whoring myself out for this thing.
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My Cousin E posted a comment on an animal facts post. The comment is: “You know, I’ve always wanted to know about the jaguar. Not the jaguar everyone knows and is intimidated by, but underneath it all, what makes the jaguar tick?”
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This relates to an odd inside joke of sorts with the family which I’d like to share.

My sister, E$, and I enjoy GOOD questions like, “if you were an animal, what would you be.” Not what you WANT to be, but what you WOULD be. E$ and I debated about this and we came up with answers for our family.

My mom is a kangaroo because she is protective, but can be fierce.
My dad is a beaver because he is very mechanically and do-it-yourself inclined.
My brother is a … well, he doesn’t agree with what we say he is.
My sister is a panda because (this one is more joke-sy) she likes to sleep, and eat.
And according to my mom, I’m a sheep dog because I’m smart and cute.

That winter I ended up going on a short ski trip with my sister and two of her friends. The four of us went out to dinner one night and the question was raised: if you were an animal, what would you be? My sister continued to be the panda (one of her friends at dinner was the one who coined that), and I offered one for myself.

“I’m a jaguar.” BOOM! It’s a fact.
“What?!”
“Uh-uh.”
“No. Sorry, no.”

No one could see my true jaguar self. One of them suggested pigeon, to insult me. We talked back and forth and decided I was a fox. The conversation cracked my sister up because of the immediate and strong “nuh uhs” that came from my saying I was a jaguar. I was shot down, but like the jaguar, I’m a fighter.

This past Thanksgiving my sister and I had dinner with my Cousin E and his wife. Again, I raised the question. After a little while someone asked me what I am (it may have been my sister, who did so deliberately).

“I’m a jaguar.” Still a fact.
“Ehhh …”
“Nah.”

My sister started laughing and again I was foiled. Cousin E and his wife did not know that my past has been RIDDLED, yes RIDDLED, with people not knowing how jaguar-like I really am. But they were quick to shoot down my thought.

A little while after that my sister found an online test, found here, which through nine simple questions lets you know what animal you are. According to them I am an owl.

We all know that’s a lie.

At Christmas I found a report I’d written in the 4th grade on the lovely, the talented, the me, the jaguar. The report is magically bad. Fact after fact comes at you for 2 large font, double spaced pages. My Cousin E said, “it’s like you’re reading the encyclopedia.” We looked on page three of the report, the bibliography, and sure enough the encyclopedia was one of my three sources.

Except this gem of a line: “Other animals are intimidated by the jaguar.”What animal are you?Jaguar Out. 

Weekly Wacko (9)

It’s Christmas! We’re waiting on my brother to arrive before we open gifts … In the meantime here’s a story about a time I looked like an idiot. Not a Christmas theme, but an every day theme for yours truly.

Also, the banner photo is of me waiting for the recital to start. Dig that costume.

Eat Your Heart Out, Horowitz

Me: “Did you stay til I played my song?”
My friend: “Oh … no …”
Me: “Ah … probably for the best. I screwed up big time.”
My friend: “Well I’m sure you weren’t worse than the girl who played [that one song].”
Me: “Actually I thought she was pretty good …?”
My friend: “Oh …”
Me: “Uh … So …”

My senior year of high school I finally got to take part in something I’d been wanting to do for a while – piano lessons. In seventh grade, when my family lived in West Point, New York, my mom saw that a piano was for sale. It was a good piano – and a good price, too. A member of the West Point band was moving and didn’t want to deal with having the piano shipped.
My mom was thrilled: A piano!
My dad was not: A piano?
Enter: Me.
Naturally I had spent fourth grade making sweet cash money (I was a paper boy). I, like a young Scrooge McDuck, would take every penny I earned and deposit it. I was in fourth grade, I couldn’t be irresponsible and spend my money on toys! Heck no! What if a recession hits!?
I loaned my mom several hundred dollars (at a good interest rate … seriously, though for fun I calculated things like what if I charged 3% interest per day. I’m a real stud) and she bought the piano.

We got the piano and I tinkered around and memorized a few songs (by counting from the one note I knew – middle C), but eventually I became tired of this.
I’m sure my family had tired of it long before I had.
“I’ll be taking requests …”
“Anything but Good King Wenceslas! You play that stupid song like ten times a day!”
“Did I hear Good King W? That old fan fave? Out of season … but you got it!”

Senior year, though, this would change. I would learn to play the piano!
My neighbors took lessons from someone they enjoyed – so I was signed up under him as well. I told my piano man: I know squat, I’m moving in May, I want to learn songs. He was down with it.

About a month and a half into my lessons a word came up: Recital.
The Piano Man was happy with my progress – he wanted me to shoot for playing an easy version of The Entertainer for the recital. An easy version, but still pretty dang tough thank you very much.
The Piano Man and his wife both taught piano lessons, and most of their students were little kids. They decided, since the recital would be right before Halloween and the parents would gush over this, to have the recital be in costumes.

I practiced. And practiced. And watched “The Sting” (for costume research).
I could play The Entertainer beautifully. Standing up. Eyes closed. Lightning speed (The Piano Man told me not to, but come on, it’s fun).

The day came and on went my costume. Grey slacks, dark shoes, a white button up shirt, a ‘Newsboy’ hat (like Robert Redford wears in ‘The Sting’), and a bow tie.
The bow-tie was untied and just hanging around my neck. This gave me the look of a cool, rebel piano player. I didn’t know how to tie a bow-tie.

I arrived at the school where the recital was being held.
I realize The Piano Man and his wife had a requirement for what little kids they taught.
“My son would like to learn to play the piano …”
“Hmmm … not adorable enough. Sorry.”
Every stinking kid was leaking cute.
There were some other older looking kids (my neighbors included) who were slated to play good songs. What you’d expect from older kids.
Then there was me.
Six feet plus of gangly, much too tall and long-limbed to be cute – and yet, I still maintained the same piano skills as a child.
A classic case of: not cute.

As the recital went on I started to get more and more nervous. In class you can practice a speech in your head as your classmates go. But what could I do there? D … D sharp … E …
I was killing myself.

Finally the kid before me gets up to go.
His song was “Puff, the Magic Dragon.”
He was in a dragon costume, and a pretty awesome one at that.
He aced the song.
You never heard a more beautiful “Puff, the Magic Dragon.”
As he walked back to his seat you could feel a giant collective wave of “awww!”
My turn.
My big, awkward, crappy piano skills turn.

I sit down the proper way you’re supposed to sit at a piano. Probably the first time I did that.
Oh God.
Which key.
Oh nooo which key which key which key which key …
I press the right key.
I’m off to the races.

Do you know the song The Entertainer? Probably so – but you may not know that you know it. You don’t need to know the song for my story, but you do need to know one thing about the song (my short version in particular). The song starts, hits a sort of middle section, then repeats the first part. Then it ends with a kind of bang.
I managed to get through the first part ok – my fingers had trembled and were quite unsure of themselves at first but eventually it almost felt like normal. Time for the middle break part before I repeat what I’d just played and –
Yeeesh!
That wasn’t the right key!
Ohh …
Oh no …
That wasn’t the right key!
My fingers and mind were going there separate ways.
My mind saying things like, “oh no oh no oh no oh no,” while my fingers poked at keys like a child – amused that each key made a noise.
I panicked.

The Piano Man had told me so many times to practice at the right pace. Don’t play unnecessarily fast. Whoops.
I skipped the second half of the song and tore through the end part.
Whoosh.
The song was over.
I had played the start ok, ‘stumbled’ through the middle part, skipped the second half all together (bravo! A daring artistic move!) and played the end lightning fast.
The next thing I know I’m at my seat, by my parents, embarrassed and wanting to leave.

My dad told me later that, when I’d finished, I stood up and faced the crowd and shrugged.
I really don’t remember that – I was too freaked out – but I think that was probably the perfect ending to my piano debut.

Weekly Wacko (8)

First … I posted this not on Friday like I usually do because … I went snowboarding for the first time! And I didn’t die!

A Christmas Miracle!

I think you can tell a lot about someone based on what they find funny. I’m not sure what this story will lead you to think about me, but I want you to keep in mind this. Yes, I was aware something bad was about to happen, and then I laughed when the bad thing happened … BUT the bad thing that happened, happened to my brother.

For Christmas Eve my family’s tradition when I was growing up was to open one gift. The gift would be hidden amongst all the other gifts under the tree, with something to mark for my Mom which one was the designated Christmas Eve gift – it sometimes took her a while to remember her own cryptic messages. Does the star mean it’s their main gift, or the Christmas Eve gift? When I was younger, my brother, sister and I would get a new pair of pajamas for the Christmas Eve gift. Now that I’m older, I figure this was to make us look more presentable for Christmas morning pictures/videos.

When I was in 7th grade, Christmas Eve finally came around. My family was sitting in the living room, about to open the one gift. The TV was probably just turned off, interrupting our watching of “The Christmas Story” or “Scrooged.” My brother popped up, said, “be right back,” and came back shortly with a glass of milk. He set this over his left shoulder, within easy reach.

We opened our gifts. I got some little thing that wasn’t exciting for a 7th grader, but was nice. My family went back to the TV and the night slowly came to a close.

When the next morning finally arrived, and we were given the green light to come into the family room – my parents liked to make us sit just outside the family room while my Dad turned on the camera. He wanted to capture our angelic faces as we sized up the Christmas loot.

My brother again disappeared and came back with a glass of milk. Strong, healthy bones on that one.

We all resumed the same seats we had the night before – a sort of unwritten thing we tended to do. As my brother was setting his glass of milk on the ground between his feet, I noticed something. He hadn’t put up his glass of milk from the night before. And, wasn’t this just so funny, he had unknowingly placed last night’s glass of delicious milk on a heater.

Somebody, not me or my brother, got up and started to distribute presents.

Then, an unexpected present.

My brother reached back, not down. Back, to the sat-on-the-heater-all-night-long milk.

Then he raised the glass up and, wow, not just a sip of milk, a swig, a gulp even (Snagglepuss, that one’s for you). His eyes practically popped out of his head as the taste hit him and he sprinted out of the room to spit the milk out into the nearest possible sink.

Around the same time he started sprinting, I started laughing. Everyone else was confused.

When my brother came back in the room he stared at me, realizing by my laughter I’d known.

This seems appropriately-brother-like for this to be (probably) my favorite memory of him.

Shalom to Christmas everybody! And shalom to you!