Monday, January 31, 2011

If Dove were more honest

A co-worker recently gave me a piece of Dove chocolate.  If you haven't had the chance to try one of them, they're delicious and there's a saccharine motivational phrase on the inside of every wrapper.  Almost like a fortune cookie, if fortune cookies catered exclusively to single desperate women past their prime.

Inside of my wrapper, I found this delightful little quote 

"You're gorgeous.
              Love, 
              Dove"

See, the Dove corporation has this 'Real Beauty' campaign that wants all women to know that they are beautiful, smart and sexy, no matter what the world (or their mirrors) say.  Of course they'd say that.  With America reaching unprecedented levels of obesity, it'd be bad for business not to.  And now I too have fallen victim to their cloying campaign, as they seem to think I'm gorgeous.  But if they were a bit more honest, they'd have put this in my wrapper:


"You're gorgeous.  Even if you're 39, single, childless and overweight, with too many cats with names like Mr Snuggles and Mittens, we will always think you're beautiful.  Unlike all the bastards who have ever disappointed you, we will never let you down.  We won't judge you or call you names.  We like you just the way you are.  Awww, now you're crying.  There, there.  It'll all be alright, you just need a friend.  A chocolatey friend.  Just dig into the bag.  That's a good girl.  Unwrap one and let the velvety goodness spread over your tongue.  Now eat another.  Yes, that's right.  We will always be there for you when you need us." 

Love,
Dove


Though I doubt they could have fit that on the wrapper.

But I appreciate the boost, Dove.  Thanks for making me feel pretty.  I think I'm going to go tuck back my sack now, put on some lipstick and dance to "Goodbye Horses" in the buff.

And if you got that 'Silence of the Lambs' reference, you're old

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Mustache madness

Being deployed makes people do things differently than back in the states.  Some people catch up on reading.  Others learn a new skill or language, or take courses online to get a few credits closer to a degree.  Some people use the 6 months they're away from home to see how big a mustache they can grow.  Many of my co-workers have taken to growing mustaches, and even turned it into a competition.  Months have even been rebranded to accomodate this cause.  January has become Manuary; February has become Stache-uary; March has become Mustache March, and so on and so forth. 

Of course, if you want to be a rebel, there are still rules to be followed.  The Air Force regulations for mustaches state that they may extend up to the edge of your lips and no lower than the corner of your mouth. 
Try to look cool with those rules and we all lose
Which means no handlebars, or any other cool displays of individuality, unlike some other countries, such as the Canadian and New Zealand militaries (I know, I know, haha, the New Zealand Army?  But they DO in fact have a military) which allow their soldiers to grow some fine examples of nose hair gone wild. 
New Zealand's military: spending more on mustache cream than bullets since 1854
The first 2 weeks I was here, I decided to join in, but soon came to my senses and realized that it looked ridiculous.  In my opinion, these are the only men manly enough to pull off a mustache:

Tom Selleck

Daniel Day-Lewis

Genghis Khan
Mark Twain

Friedrich Nietzche

Wyatt Earp.  His mustache is the most famous thing in Tombstone, AZ
Ron Burgundy?
Among the honorable mentions are Borat and Geraldo Rivera


I'm pretty sure Geraldo's mustache is property of Fox News and will be retrieved upon his death

For more information on facial hair, please visit Cracked.com's guide to the modern mustache.  Or continue reading their extensive research on the topic.

EDIT: Apparently all of my follicular-cultivating co-workers came to their senses right before this post was to be published.  My office is now mustache free.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Comment and get a fantastic prize!

Happy anniversary to my blog!  It's only a week old and has already been viewed 200 times!  But it has yet to receive any comments. :-(

So for a limited time only and on the special occasion of this blog's one week anniversary, be one of the first 5 commenters and you get a super special prize: an autographed copy of the movie 'Due Date'!!!!!
This masterpiece of crap
What I mean by "you will receive an autographed copy of 'Due Date'" is that you will get a picture of a  bootleg copy I got for a dollar on the black market in Afghanistan.  The autograph part is the mustaches drawn on the faces of the main characters with a Sharpie.  Yes, the dog too
And look, he's all decked out for the party.  Seriously, does anyone know how to use Paint in Windows 7 so it's not so obvious I just pasted that party hat on?
 So act now and WIN!!!!

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

My brief but torrid affair with DeVry University

Trouble has always seemed to follow me like the seat of my pants.  "Now wait a minute," you may say, "what if they had holes in the bottom or were ass-less chaps?"

If I owned ass-less chaps, you'd be absolutely correct in pointing this flaw out, and I'd have to say "like the seat on some of my pants," but I don't own any ass-less chaps.  So I can safely and firmly (almost as firm as my own sculpted glutes) say that trouble has always followed me around like the seat of my pants. 


The least offensive picture I could find when I googled ass-less chaps.  Besides, I'm German, and this guy is Austrian (which is a kind of German, right?)
So if I ever go missing or wind up at the bottom of the river with a rope around my neck tied to a gigantic rock with a bullet through my chest, just know that DeVry sent their shady hit squad after me, because I'm pretty sure for profit "universities" aren't known for their sense of humor or generosity when it comes to perceived slander.

2014 EDIT: I just found out in my Business Law class that written defamation is known as libel.  Slander is verbal.

The Air Force encourages all its members to pursue higher education, so in 2007, when I had finished all my training and settled down at my first duty station, I decided to do just that.  I had previously done a few semesters at community college, but when I realized there was no way I could get a 4-year Engineering degree without either selling a kidney or taking on massive student loans, I quit school and joined the military.

I mean, shit, Sacha Baron Cohen got a degree from Cambridge University.  Now he gives motivational speeches at Harvard for a living
I looked through a potential list of online colleges and settled on the one whose name I'd heard the most, figuring it to be the best.  'Settled' being the key word here, as I was never truly happy with them. 

For one thing, they didn't really have any degrees I really wanted to pursue, but since I needed a degree, I settled on a Bachelor's in Network Administration.  Their courses were also very expensive, over $500 a credit.  The Air Force has something called 'Tuition Assistance', which pays up to $250 a credit for school while you're serving in active duty, and this university had conveniently lowered their credits for the men and women in uniform to... you guessed it - $250. 

On top of that, the 'books' they sold to their students were nothing more than limited-time PDF files which required special software to read.  There was no way to save these e-books or even print them.  And future online access to a copy was out of the question.  They expired a week after the class finished.  The worst part, however, was that they cost the same as a regular college textbook, about $100.  They weren't included in the tuition.

After a few semesters, I got tired of all that, and switched over to American Military University.  They came highly recommended, actually had a degree I was interested in, and the textbooks (paper, not pixels) were included in the cost of tuition, covered entirely by the Air Force.

Shortly afterward, I began receiving phone calls and emails from DeVry University's student advisers looking to sign me up for the next quarter's courses.  I explained that I'd changed schools, but every time they called, it was a different adviser.  As time went on, the phone calls got more frequent, from about twice a month to twice a day.  I started making up excuses.  I didn't have time at the moment.  My dog had died.  I was undergoing painful treatment for my Attention Deficit Disorder.

After a while I just started letting the calls go to voicemail.  About a year later, I got an email with the subject line "We Miss You."  The email essentially asked me to come back to them, and sounded a lot like a dumped ex-lover.  I thought I'd have a bit of fun with them, so I reciprocated with this email:   


"Dear DeVry University,

Sadly, I can't say the feeling is mutual.  The relationship started out well, mostly because of a lack of viable options, and because I had never been in a relationship of this type.  Although you may not realize it, there were issues between us almost from the very beginning, which even if I had brought them up, wouldn't have changed.  I'm referring specifically to the very high priced "textbooks" which not only were purely electronic, but would vanish at the end of the course.  However, it wasn't all bad.  I was happy for a time.  But i was young and naive, and as I mentioned, you were my first.  I didn't know what I wanted, so I went along with everything you said, swallowing all your glorious promises of a degree in higher learning.  But shortly after, I was introduced to someone else; someone who didn't charge me for textbooks, no, they would even send me physical copies of the books without me having to ask for them and expecting nothing extra in return.  I'm happier than I ever was with you and don't think I'll find anyone better in the foreseeable future.

I know that you miss me and would love to have me back, but I've moved on.  I hope this will suffice as a final break-off, as I have asked you many times to stop calling and sending me emails, apparently to no avail.  I have had to make up so many excuses for why I no longer love you, but I figured that I won't keep you hanging any longer and I'm just going to come out with it.  The endless calls and series of carrier pigeons, although romantic, will do nothing to convince me to come back to you.  I hope you understand.  I wish you well in all your future endeavors and relationships.

Sincerely,
Paul Stephan
P.S.: If you insist on further contact I will be forced to get a restraining order"

Like Pamela Anderson did when this guy tried to crash her dog's wedding.  I think he's wearing assless chaps here
I thought that would satisfy them, but the NEXT day, the same adviser sent back another email again informing me that classes would soon be starting and asked if I'd like to sign up for classes.  That's when I realized DeVry University's job pool was probably filled by robots.  Or zombies.  Or even robot zombies.  Rombies?

Dirty Pirate Hooker


The other day, I heard someone call a girl a dirty pirate hooker.  Not that she was parrticularly dirrty, a hookerr (as farr as I know) or a pirate.  She possessed neither eyepatch narr peg-leg, both of which arr the most basic of prerequisites to joining the noble league of pirates.  Perhaps wenches arr held to different standards.

What be yarr thoughts, mateys?   Comment here or send portraits or drawings of what you think her appearance to be.


Musings or discourse?  Toss the old bottle into the great cyber-sea.

Monday, January 24, 2011

My First Job

In 2004, at the impressionable age of 20, I got my first real job.  Real in the sense that the money was all mine to keep and do with whatever I wanted.  I've "worked" since I was 9 years old.  For lack of a better term, or just because it sounds more interesting than "I sold stuff", between the ages of 9 and 12, I hustled.

Kind of like this, except there were no drugs or bootleg Star Wars holiday special VHS tapes involved

I sold everything from flowers to cakes to candies.  I think it started when a neighborhood kid with whom I was acquainted came over to my house and asked if I could come outside to play.  I'd like to say he was a friend, but as I've mentioned, I rarely got to leave the house and we didn't spend much time together.  I don't remember much about him except that he was Chinese and that his name was Richard, and in retrospect, precociously business-minded.

My mother, in a rare display of leniency, relented but said I wasn't allowed to go across the street or any farther than 2 houses away from my own.  Once we were safely outside, Richard produced 3 candies.  I jumped on them, as sweets were a rarity in our household, both because my mother was into health food and seldom allowed us the good stuff, and because she learned soon after I could walk that providing an ADHD kid with sugar was just a bad idea.

Somehow, Richard persuaded me that instead of eating them now, there was a way we could multiply those candies.  I wasn't too keen on the idea of postponing the sugary bliss, but I went along with it, as more was undoubtedly better.  He sold the candies to a passerby for a quarter, then made the perilous journey across the avenue to one of those little bodegas you find everywhere in Queens, emerging with some more candy, which was promptly sold to another passerby for 50 cents, and so on.

Each time, the return was double the investment, and each time, he'd go back to the store and spend all of the money on more merchandise.  After about an hour, when my mother called me back in, we had about 5 dollars and a bunch of candy.  We split the spoils and went our separate ways.  When I first walked in through the door, my mother looked at all the sugar in my hands with a great air of unease (due to its vast potential as a weapon of mass destruction), but after explaining its source, the wheels in her head started turning, and a few weeks thereafter I was selling candy on the steps in front of my house.
One tootsie roll would have me looking like this.  Up the ante to a pixie stick, and you could have your condemned home demolished in no time

Over the years the product shifted from candy to baked goods (my mother is a pretty good cook), to flowers a couple of years later, until I was walking around the 'hood with a bucket full of roses in an old baby stroller.

Of course, I never enjoyed all this.  It might have helped if I got some more money out of it than the nominal 2% of profits, or even an allowance or monthly wage of some sort.  And I would have liked to be just like all the other kids, with friends, video games, and after-school activities, but such was life, and there wasn't much I could do about it.  My family was not very well off, mom and dad poor German immigrants, so we needed all the income we could fit in our lederhosen.

So it came as kind of a surprise to me when my father announced we'd be moving to Africa as missionaries/aid workers.  I said that I was on board as long as I didn't have to sell the damn flowers any more.  They agreed, and a few months later, shortly after my 13th birthday, we moved to Equatorial Guinea.

No, not Ecuador.  No, not New Guinea.

The 6 years I spent there will probably give me enough material for many posts to come, but in the interest of staying on topic, I'll just say that my main job was as an English teacher in the school my parents ran out of our house there.  About a year after I graduated from high school, I had scraped enough money together to buy a plane ticket back to the States.  I had only the vaguest of ideas of what I was going to do, but I really needed to get away from home and start my own life.

In 2003, I came back to New York.   I soon realized everyone in the northeast was an asshole, so I moved to the west coast, settling in California.  I couch surfed for a bit, did some volunteer work with a church youth group, and started going to Community College there a year later.  This was also when I started looking for a job.  It was pretty dismal.  I was in a particularly odd situation, as most people my age still had their parents to fall back on for lodging or money.  I had no one.  No one seemed to be hiring, either, and the meager amount of money I had brought with me was fast drying up.

I finally found my first job at the college's career center.  They were looking for someone to tend their garden and possibly help out with things around the house.  The pay would be $8/hr and the schedule was flexible.  They'd like to help a college student out, they said.  So I show up at the house the next day and after initial introductions, I got to work digging weeds out of the garden.  The owner was a nice upper middle class old lady who lived with her 50 year old son.  Her husband had been an engineer, and they had a couple of nice cars, a boat and a small plane at the airport.  The house had all sorts of interesting trinkets related to her husband's old job, all of which I would have to clean once a week.  It started out fine, just working in the garden, with her giving me verbal instructions on what to do.  After a few weeks, though, it started getting to be too much.





For one thing, she micromanaged everything.  I appreciated having a source of income, but seriously, there were things she could have done herself instead of standing behind me, constantly telling me what to do and how to do it.   I may be coming off as harsh, but she was pretty spry for an 82 year old, and climbing on the roof to clean leaves was all well and good, but she might as well have wiped down the table herself.  Or at least given me a list of things to do and return later to check on them.

Another thing that got on my nerves was the way she referred to non-living items as if they were sentient beings.  Some things were prescribed their own names (the garden shed was named 'Weg'), and objects were always referred to as 'he' or 'she', never 'it'.  I don't know why it bothered me so much, but it did.

After a while I found another job, put in my two weeks notice, and left, but not before the old bird flipped me the final bird.  You see, I had been operating under the assumption that I was being paid under the table, and indeed, my paycheck was for the full $8 for every hour I worked, but when I received my W-2 in the mail from her and filed my taxes, it was abruptly and unpleasantly brought to my attention that I owed the IRS $144.

Exactly like this, except metaphorically
This was money I didn't have.  I was barely making ends meet as it was, and I didn't have 144 extra dollars to give to the government.  I had finally qualified for a credit card with a $500 limit, and that was already used up on frivolous purchases like gas and groceries.  I couldn't believe the old hag had done this to me.

Reporting someone to the Man is, like, the lowest you can sink, man

I begrudgingly sent them a check for the amount owed and received a check back for about $50 a few weeks later.  Apparently I hadn't done my taxes very well.  In my defense, it was my first time filing, and those forms are confusing as hell.  At least they didn't try to squeeze some more money out of me.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Am I right or what? Part 1

You know what really chafes my privates?  The British system of measuring anything.

Who the hell thought it'd be a good idea?  I'm talking about everything from distances (inches, miles) to volume (gallons) to temperature (Fahrenheit), though that one sounds suspiciously German.

None of those units make any sense.  12 inches to a foot.  5,280 feet in a mile.  Water freezes at 32 degrees and boils at 212.  What.  The.  Fuck?

The metric system is so much simpler.  Everything's based on 10.  100 centimeters in a meter.  1000 meters in a kilometer.  Water freezes at 0 and boils at 100.  If you haven't noticed, water's all around us.  Most of our bodies are 65% water, unless you're like me, in which case you're mostly muscle, nerves and hyperactivity.

Who do we have to thank for this monstrosity?  Oh, right, the British.  They just had to be different.  The same people who, up until 1971, divided their unit of currency, the pound, into 21 shillings and further into 12 pence.  How are you supposed to calculate anything with that?  It's a wonder their entire banking system didn't collapse.  Fortunately for them, they reverted to the metric system in the 70s, divided the pound into 100 pence, and started using grams and liters instead of pints and ounces.  Now if they would only undo the damage they've caused to the world by driving on the left side of the road.

According to Wikipedia, 76 "countries, territories and dependencies" still adhere to this insanity, most, if not all of them, may I add, former colonies of the redcoats.  There's a reason it's called driving on the 'right' side of the road.  Get with the program, (insert derogatory term for British people here).

The Brits even started the whole "we're better than all of you, so we won't bother to learn another language" which Americans so dutifully follow.  For some reason I really wanted to use the word gleefully there (instead of dutifully), though we aren't actually super happy about most of us just being able to speak a single language.

Would a better term be "sheepfully"?  As in, following like sheep?  Does a word with an equivalent meaning even exist?  If not, I call dibs on it, Webster.  You all bore testament to this word's creation and they'll have to pay me royalties if it finds its way into the public vernacular and they ever decide to include it in their fancy dictionaries.

America, we've declared our independence from the snaggle-toothed empire.  We invented Baconnaise.  We've created the greatest nation on Earth, and even taught the world the joys of carbon dating and the Cleveland steamer, but can't seem to overcome this final shackle.  I implore you all to write your Congressman (or is it congressperson?) and ask that the lingering British oppression be banned once and for all. 

There would be growing pains, sure, but as with the advent of any new technology, the world will be better off for it.

EDIT: I looked it up, and yes, Fahrenheit was indeed created by a Kraut, named Daniel Fahrenheit. 

A Google image search returned this picture:

This ghey

Very original, naming the system after yourself. By the way, you suck.  The only reason I don't dig you up and kick your ass is because you invented the thermometer.  And because your Wikipedia page refuses to give up any pertinent information about you, including what you look like.  They would have the world believe you look like this:

He's gotta be hiding behind one of those curtains

You win this time, Danny.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Uhh... first post?

How should I write this thing?  I'm very new to blogging, so I'm not sure how to begin.  I guess the object of any blog is to offer something of interest to its readers.

OK, let's start at the beginning.  I first realized I had a knack for writing a few weeks ago when I was sending letters back to my family and friends from my deployment. 

Wait, I guess that needs some backstory as well, doesn't it?  I'm in the Air Force and currently deployed to Afghanistan.  There.  Now back to the future.

People liked the emails, which was surprising, as my last writing endeavor that got any notice ended in total failure.  In the second grade, our teacher made us write a paper on what we did over the Christmas break.  I literally did nothing, as we lived in a semi-rough area of Queens, NY, and my mother was so over-protective that I had no friends outside of school hours, nor was I allowed to leave the house except to go to school.  I also lacked social skills (more on my dismal childhood later). 

I wasn't sure where to begin on this paper, so I took my teacher on a step by step account of my day.  "On Monday I woke up, brushed my teeth, ate breakfast, read some books, ate lunch, played Monopoly, ate dinner, brushed my teeth and went to bed.  On Tuesday, I woke up, brushed my teeth..."  Et cetera, ad nauseum.  When the paper was returned, it had soul-crushing red ink all across the top: "This is the most boring and repetitive essay I have ever read."  Oh well, at least I was a superlative in some way, right?

Naturally, this has haunted me for a long time and never thought anyone would want to read my thoughts on anything.  So it came as kind of a surprise when people gave me positive feedback on my emails.  The idea to publish my thoughts on the internet for all to see came from a hilarious blog entitled "Hyperbole and a Half" which you can read here.  The author shares much of the same wit and wry humor as I do, (though I don't know if I'll ever be able to match her readership or creativity) and some of the same disorders (she has ADHD).  I thought starting a blog was a fantastic idea, and here we are.

My goal is to make it interesting enough to appeal to the masses and keep my readers coming back, but not too interesting in any way that could be used against me in court or other situations where people may question my ability to carry something out.  Not that I'm particularly drawn to the dark side or illicit activities, but the written word tends to stay on the internet forever, and if I ever try to run for office (haha, yeah right) or something like that, and there's something less than flattering written about myself or anything that could be taken out of context and applied in such a way that makes it sound like I have a bias against a certain group of individuals (*ahem* Germans *ahem*) it would not turn out well for my aspirations.

Well, I guess that's it for now.  How was that for a first post?