Posts Tagged ‘story’

Smelly Jellies!!

jellyfish are spectacular!

I love Jellyfish!

As long as they’re not swimming near me…

I just read a story about someone’s workday completely ruined by one of these gelatinous freaks of nature…and I couldn’t keep it to myself. 

How selfish would it be if I didn’t share someone else’s misery with you guys?

Trust me. It’s hilarious!

Remember…if you think you’re having a rough time at the office…at least it’s jellyfish free:

 

April 1998

Hi Sue,

 
Just another note from your bottom-dwelling brother. Last week I had a bad day at the office. I know you’ve been feeling down lately at work, so I thought I would share my dilemma with you to make you realize it’s not so bad after all.

Before I can tell you what happened to me, I first must bore you with a few technicalities of my job. As you know, my office lies at the bottom of the sea. I wear a suit to the office. It’s a wetsuit.

This time of year the water is quite cool. So what we do to keep warm is this: We have a diesel powered industrial water heater. This $20,000 piece of crap sucks the water out of the sea. It heats it to a delightful temp. It then pumps it down to the diver through a garden hose which is taped to the air hose.

Now this sounds like a darn good plan, and I’ve used it several times with no complaints. What I do, when I get to the bottom and start working, is I take the hose and stuff it down the back of my neck. This floods my whole suit with warm water. It’s like working in a Jacuzzi.

Everything is going well until all of a sudden, my butt started to itch. So, of course, I scratched it. This only made things worse. Within a few seconds, my butt started to burn. I pulled the hose out from my back, but the damage was done. In agony, I realized what had happened. The hot water machine had sucked up a jellyfish and pumped it into my suit.

This is even worse than the poison ivy you once had under a cast. Now I had that hose down my back. I don’t have any hair on my back, so the jellyfish couldn’t get stuck to my back. My butt crack was not as fortunate. When I scratched what I thought was an itch, I was actually grinding the jellyfish into my butt.

I informed the dive supervisor of my dilemma over the comms. His instructions were unclear due to the fact that he, along with 5 other divers, was laughing hysterically. Needless to say, I aborted the dive.

I was instructed to make three agonizing in-water decompression stops totaling 35 minutes before I could come to the surface for my chamber dry decompression. I got to the surface wearing nothing but my brass helmet. My suit and gear were tied to the bell.

When I got on board the medic, with tears of laughter running down his face, handed me a tube of cream and told me to rub it on my butt when I got into the chamber. The cream put the fire out, but I couldn’t poop for two days because my butthole was swollen shut.

…Now repeat to yourself: “I love my job. I love my job. I love my job”

 

Unfortunately, I doubt that  this story is actually true. I don’t have any hair on my arm…and I can tell you first-hand that jellyfish don’t need hair to stick to you: The millions of harpoon barbs covering their tentacles do just fine exploding into your skin, and they can stick to just about anything…

but there really is no harm in laughing at a good story.

Haaaaaaaaaaaa

Wallet Adventures

escaped-wallet1A little while ago, my wallet was stolen at the local Movie Theatre. It either dropped out of my bag, or some sneaky son of a Bi$%*  managed to grope around my backpack while I was oblivious to everything except for the chubby kid next to me crunching down on hand-fulls of popcorn.

I was PISSED. Not only was the movie HORRIBLE, but it was also one of the most expensive cinematic experiences I’ve ever had. No film is worth 250 bux. Some people are just inconsiderate butt-munchers. Ugh, I still get upset when I think about it, but instead of  imagining the glory of shoving a giant pineapple up the thief’s no-no place, I’d  rather reminisce about the almost miraculous event on the other end of the wallet loss spectrum:

**********

I don’t know what prompted me to bring my prescription sunglasses, wallet and cell phone on a rafting trip, but I did.  A couple of my friends decided that it would be a spectacular idea to buy a Wal-Mart inflatable raft and float on a river and I apparently thought it would be an even better idea to carry wads of cash and a phone in case I needed to call AAA or something.

We asked a clueless fisherman where the calmest part of the river was, and then proceeded to squeeze ourselves into the flimsy raft that looked more like floating yellow garbage bag. Even if we were in the calmest part of the river, it wouldn’t have mattered, because our friend Dave had no friggin idea how to row. We spun around down the river in circles and yelled at Dave who just sat between us completely bewildered: “I didn’t know rowing was this hard”. 

We knew we were in trouble when my other friend, Jesse, tried grabbing a low hanging branch (that almost lopped our heads off) to stop us. He ended up pulling the whole dead tree it was attached to into the boat. Obviously, a raft meant for nothing more than paddling around in a swimming-pool couldn’t handle the sudden change in weight and flipped over.

The entire event also caused Dave to freak out and he proceeded to scream and let go of the oars so he could hold on to the boat for dear life. We weren’t too far from the shore when this happened and managed to pull ourselves to a shallower section of the river by crawling along the fallen tree like soggy rats. Of course we ended up on the less forgiving side of the river, trapped between the rising water and thorn covered bushes. Our raft was now covered in holes, and we were all suffering from a mild case of hypothermia.

rafting

 

The fact that I lost my bag with all my belongings was the last thing on my mind.  We had to take turns lying on the floating remnants of the raft to get out of the water and warm up every thirty minutes or so. It was embarrassing when the same fisherman who had told us that the river was completely safe poked his head out from behind the thick underbrush on the other side of the water. What really killed us was that the other side was also covered in soft sand, and harmless trees. We could have easily made it back to our car from there. We ended up on the section blessed with raspberry bushes (no fruit, I might add) that seemed to scratch at us every other second.

In the end, the fire department cut down some bushes and threw a rope our way. It was pretty exciting to watch them scooch across the river by rope and then strap us to their vests for the ride back. This was my very first rafting experience. Did I also mention we weren’t wearing life jackets? Yes, we were some geniuses.

**********

Two years later I get a call from someone:

“Is this Dani?”

“Uhm, Yeah.”

“Did you happen to lose a wallet? I found one while fishing.”

“What? No…”

“Are you sure? It has your Driver’s License in it. It has your name on it and everything.”

Was this some sort of joke? Were there little tweenies on the other line about to explode with laughter at my expense? Wait…No….Holy Crap! He friggin found the wallet that rolled out of the raft over two years ago.

“Wait. Yeah, that’s mine! I lost that forever ago.”

In the end, a really nice gentlemen rolled to my apartment in his Audi and proceeded to hand me a soggy wallet covered in algae and with $200 worth of limp bills wedged inside.  Little bite marks were abundant on the cash where fish had sampled the outlandish cuisine, but I don’t  think they really developed a taste for it.

I pulled out a couple limp $20 bills and offered them to the man who was now looking at me rather oddly, but he just smiled and rushed to his car. Then I had a thought: Maybe  dumping a few wallets in the river was a good way to meet more people. Ok, maybe it was a ridiculous idea…even though it would make a DAMN good reality show.

I spent most of that money since then, but I still keep one of the original cruddy 5 dollar bills as a reminder to never buy a damn raft from Wal-Mart again, even if it did make for a good story.

Medusa – A Biography (I would be pissed too)

Medusa wasn’t always a spiteful lady with a hissing hairdo. Taking a closer look at what she had to deal with growing up explains why she turned ino the enraged monster most people have come to associate with the name.

Medusa was the daughter of Phorcys and Cetus. Cetus, Medusa’s mother, was a hideously ugly sea-monster and bore more resemblance to a fish full of raggedy teeth, than a woman. Medusa’s father, Phorcys was the infamous ‘Old-Man of the Sea’ with an apparent taste for ugly ladies. I doubt Medusa would ever want to be seen with either parent in public.

Medusa’s grandparents were a different story altogether. Her beautiful and voluptuous Grandmother, Gaia, gave birth to all of the Greek gods. She is as high up there as it gets, and the Greeks wouldn’t even swear in her name, unless they were really serious. You never, EVER cross Gaia.

This is also the where it gets weird: Before Gaia, there was nothing, but every lady wants a man in her life. So, this fruitful god of the gods had to give birth to a man to marry. This is how Medusa’s grandfather/Uncle, better known as Pontus- came into being. Pontus-wasn’t as ambitious as his wife/mom (and who would be with a family-history like that?). He was just happy being the sea-god that he was, busy contemplating how wrong it was to get it on with his mother to make more inbred children.

Medusa had all this to deal with, but you would think that she at least had some sort of special gift, since she was directly related to some of the most powerful gods out there, right? No! It sucked. And that would piss me off too.  Out of her three sisters, she was the only mortal one with no real skills to speak of. 

The one thing Medusa did have going for her, though, were her looks. She didn’t always have a head full of snakes. In fact, some stories claimed her to be drop-dead gorgeous. Every man who caught a glimpse of her, would start drooling and obsessively lust after her. This did get to Medusa’s head though, and she eventually became a snob, repeatedly insulting higher gods by proclaiming that nothing was really as impressive as her beauty.

Unfortunately, being as unlucky as she was, it was no surprise that Medusa’s beauty became her curse as well: Disgusted with Medusa’s vanity, the goddess Athena turned her into the creature that men came to fear instead of lust after. Not only was Medusa’s long shiny hair turned into a pile of writhing snakes, but any man who approached her would turn into stone (and not in a good way, like they did before).

The more complicated version of the story involves Poseidon, who just couldn’t help himself after seeing the gorgeous Medusa, and proceeded to rape her in Athena’s temple (this was a major insult to the virgin Athena and her reaction can be described as nothing more than extreme). In a way, Athena took away the one thing Medusa had going for her. Now a monster, it was all downhill for Medusa from there.

Perseus eventually beheaded Medusa and was proclaimed a hero. His statue, with Medusa’s head held high by his muscular hand, stands tall in many cities. But I always feel sorry for the headless body lying underneath him who hadn’t seen a good hair day in centuries.

In my opinion, the most horrifying thing in the whole story happened after Medusa’s beheading: After getting her head lopped off and it rolled onto the ground, Medusa gave birth to two HUGE babies (they supposidly sprang out of her bloody neck.) One of her kids was Pegasus-a winged horse-and the other a handsome man-Chrysaor. Chrysaor established himself as a hero and eventually had a cute three headed baby of his own.

Poor Medusa. You would be grumpy too if you had to carry around a pair of twins that weigh more than a volkwagon and anyone who came around to help turned into a useless statue.

Medusa really did have a hard life and kudos to her for handling herself so well in a fight, pregnant with a horse and a giant. Hopefully, during times like family game night, Chrysaor told his own three headed offspring what a courageous grandmother he had.