Friday, October 26, 2007
Joke of the day
Looking around he noticed that the bar was empty except for himself and the bartender at the end of the bar.
A few sips later the voice said "beautiful shirt".
A little worried, the man decides to play the slot machine. As he puts a coin in the bandit he hears a harsh voice say, "You ugly cunt."
Looking around there's still no-one around.
A couple of seconds later the second voice said, "Fuck off you ugly tosser!"
At this, the man called the bartender over. "Hey...I must be losing my mind," he told the bartender. "I keep hearing these voices, one saying nice things, and one being really offensive, and there's not a soul in here but us."
"Ah" answered the bartender. "the peanuts...they're complimentary, but the bandit's out of order."
Diary of a Lady - 7
Fickle
Pronunciation: \fi-kəl\
Function: adjective
Etymology: Middle English fikel deceitful, inconstant, from Old English ficol deceitful; akin to Old English befician to deceive, and probably to Old English fāh hostile — more at foe
Meaning: marked by lack of steadfastness, constancy, or stability; given to erratic changeableness
She's been judged. Step right up ladies and gentleman, here comes the fickle one. She'll change her tune tomorrow, but that's another day, isn't it? For now, she's tired, restless and sore all over, like she's been tackled by a football team. (Sigh, if only).
She bruises easily, I should know. I'm forced to comfort her, to give her the strength to tackle an unwanted day, to watch out for her, to allay her fears, to calm her mind and discard her inadequacies. I'm there to hold her hand when she visits the dentist, to keep her company when she's feeling alone. I do not judge her, I only protect her. It is my purpose. At least I have one, she has none.
You've read her diary – is she fickle or selfish? Is she inconsistent or is she simply riding the waves? She's spellcheck -- always looking for the ultimate high, but too much of a coward to jump in the absence of a safety net. I'm just her alter ego protecting her from shattering into a million pieces.
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Joke of the Day
"OK jerk, I've heard just about enough of your denigrating blonde jokes. What makes you think you can stereotype women that way? What do a person's physical attributes have to do with their worth as a human being? It's guys like you who keep women like me from being respected at work and in my community, of reaching my full potential as a person...because you and your kind continue to perpetuate discrimination against not only blondes but women at large...all in the name of humor."
Flustered, the ventriloquist begins to apologise, when the blonde pipes up, "You stay out of this mister, I'm talking to that little fucker on your knee!"
Return of the Devil
Ambrose Bierce’s Devil’s Dictionary is a classic of satire and literary innovation published in 1911. Every day The Crystal Ship will bring to you one word from this most witty of lexicons. Don’t say I never do anything for your betterment.
ABSOLUTE, adj. Independent, irresponsible. An absolute monarchy is
one in which the sovereign does as he pleases so long as he pleases
the assassins. Not many absolute monarchies are left, most of them
having been replaced by limited monarchies, where the sovereign's
power for evil (and for good) is greatly curtailed, and by republics,
which are governed by chance.
Diary of a Lady - 6
I once smashed a mirror, just to see my face shatter into a thousand pieces.
Today the mirror showed me my first grey hair. And as the morning sun filtered into my bedroom through my orange curtains, the grey hair gleamed elusively before disappearing. I cannot find it now no matter how hard I look for it.
Operation Sunrise
Taking over as the head of DNA’s Interactive journalism department (a job I was hired for, but one that has gaily danced away from my perverse clutches) should have been a moment of great rejoicing, and it was, until the pin dropped. The pin in question being the fact that I would now have to report at 11am, rather than the far more agreeable time of 2pm.
Now to many rats that run the proverbial urban rodent marathon, 11am seems hopelessly late to start one’s day, but for the journalist it could very well be the middle of the night.
The timing, however, wasn’t the worst of my worries...that position was reserved for the crowds that I imagined would be buffeting me like a hooker at a stag party.
The first day had dawned and I emerged from the safety of my parents’ flat, neatly framed by the trees that line this scenic street. The sun wasn’t harsh, but it nevertheless made its presence felt in the refracted rays that fought their way through the green canopy.
The walk to the Bus Stop takes about five minutes (or the time it takes to smoke one cigarette) and apart from the looming threat of being run over by a bus, it was rather uneventful.
The bus stop boasted the regular motley bunch of office workers and college students, unfortunately the college girls comprised oily-haired, pasty-faced, 50-pinters, rather than the sought-after buxom, hip-hugging-jeaned variety. But, no matter, the bus duly arrived, and lo and behold, it was empty.
Thanking Zeus’s phenomenal libido I promptly settled into a window seat and perused the latest New Yorker (picked deftly from one of DNA’s saving graces...its great library). People embarked and got off at the various stops that marked the circuitous route from Four Bungalows to the Andheri Railway Station, but not once were there more than five people standing in the bus.
The station itself had the de rigueur bunch of unwashed, tree-hugging Greenpeace activists handing out leaflets about some stupid whale that would be better off on my plate. A simple “Fuck Off” and they were on to the next person with their environmental nonsense.
I was on schedule to catch the 10.32am train that started at Andheri, and already the creeping dread was...well...creeping up on me: the dread of a human wave that would certainly engulf me, when those 12 carriages pulled in.
But the platform lay relatively empty, like a town in the Wild West that had just heard the Baker Boys’ posse was riding down.
The train emerged from the haze conjured by the heat and pollution that rose up from the earth entwined in a macabre dance of warmth and putrefaction. Yet the wave did not break.
As the First Class (it’s only the best for me) bogey approached my anxiety, I found myself a straggler. And then there it was; its vacant doorway gaping at me like a 16-year-old at his first strip show. I stepped in and the seats beckoned with their empty embrace.
I sat down, by the window, and exhaled a breath that had been caught in my chest for a good minute. I had caught the morning train and Moses and the promised many had not materialised. Victory was mine: the little man had triumphed over the thronging behemoth.
“Operation Sunrise has been completed successfully sir,” the voice of my inner Colonel proclaimed.
“Good work son,” I replied in my best rendition of Rommell, “Next stop Paris!”
OK so maybe not Paris, but hell, Elphinstone Road can’t be all that bad