Life Is A Game. What Achievements Have You Unlocked?
Posted: September 10, 2012 Filed under: Culture, Humor, Internet | Tags: achievements, comedy, culture, games, humor, internet, pop culture 1 CommentH/T to Barnaby Felton. He posted this on Facebook a while back and it got me thinking. If life were a game, what achievements would it have? Even better, what achievements SHOULD it have? And which ones would I have unlocked by now? Which ones would I be looking forward to?
Below is my list of achievements, first the ones I’ve already earned and then the ones I’m still working on (or never intend to get, but just love the idea of). They’re not always things I’m necessarily proud of, mind you, but sometimes survival is an achievement all its own. I encourage you to submit your own in the comments, but please do your best to follow form. Give it a title and a description, and where possible be creative.
Unlocked Achievements
Level 20 – Turn 20 years old
Level 30 – Turn 30 years old
Man’s Best Friend – Own (or be owned by) a dog
Cat’s Cradle – Own (or be owned by) a cat
Full of Pride – Own (or be owned by) more than one cat at once
Yakety Yak – Do chores for your parents
Let’s Do the Time Warp Again – See the Rocky Horror Picture Show in the theater at least twice
Up the Creek – Go camping
Drinks Are On Me – Turn the legal drinking age in your country or state
Fade to Black – Drink so much that you pass out
You Can’t Handle the Truth! – Get caught in a blatant lie
And the Oscar Goes To… – Make a scene in public
Wage Slave – get a job
Tithing to Uncle Sam – Pay income taxes
Hate the Playa – Badmouth an ex
Hate the Game – Swear off dating for at least six months
I Put a Ring On It – Get married
Hey Mo(hawk)! – Have a mohawk
In the Midnight Hour, She Cried Mo(hawk), Mo(hawk), Mo(hawk) – Have more than one color of
mohawk at some point in your life
Bob Dobbs – Be accused of being a slacker
Part of the System – Vote in a government election
I Demand a Recount! – Have your candidate lose in a government election
Y’ain’t From Round Here, Are Ya? – Move at least 500 miles for work or school
Under The Bridge – Deliberately troll someone online
Achievements I’m Still Working On
Level 40 – Turn 40 years old
Level 50 – Turn 50 years old
Level 60 – Turn 60 years old
Level 70 – Turn 70 years old
Level 80 – Turn 80 years old
Level 90 – Turn 90 years old
Level 100 – Turn 100 years old
Older Than the Hills – Turn 101 years old
Leader of the Pack – Own (or be owned by) more than one dog at once
I Got Music, I Got Rhythm – Learn to play a musical instrument
Rob the Cradle – Date someone at least ten years younger than you are
Rob the Grave – Date someone at least ten years older than you are
Romero – Be personally responsible for a worldwide zombie apocalypse
Resource Hog – Have a child
Breeding an Army – Have more than two children
Jailbait – Spend the night in jail (including the drunk tank)
Macgyver – Improvise a mechanical devise to get yourself out of a jam, preferably one involving
terrorists
Gilligan – Join the Navy or Coast Guard
The Skipper – Have command of a boat (civilian or armed forces)
The Millionaire and His Wife – Marry into money
The Movie Star – Get a lead role in a motion picture
The Professor and Marry Ann – Create an item out of common objects that completely defies the laws
of science using only the help of your lab assistant, a simple farm girl from Kansas
Script Kiddie – Hack a computer system
Haxx0r – Hack a computer system using your own code
Neo – Hack a government computer system using your own code
White Hat, Black Hat, They All Look Good On Me – Work computer security before or after hacking a
computer system
I’m With the (Rubber) Band – Go bungee jumping
Lunatic – Jump out of a perfectly serviceable airplane in mid-flight (parachute optional)
The Dating Rorschach Test
Posted: September 3, 2012 Filed under: Culture, Dating, Humor | Tags: comedy, culture, dating, humor, men, relationships, women 7 CommentsI’m sure everyone has their own guidelines for what makes a good relationship. Between two friends of mine I have heard the entire spectrum, from a simple “am I as happy with this person three months in as I was the day we first met?” to a test that runs to several pages (I am not making this up). For myself, I long ago developed my own simple guidelines that have worked exceptionally well, and that I am at last ready to share with the world. They are as follows:
- Can I wake up next to this person without flinching?
- Can I put up with their shit?
- Can they put up with my shit?
Now, before I catch any grief over these questions, allow me to point out that this is the Dating Rorschach Test™. What you get out of it is what you put into it. Let’s take it one question at a time and you’ll see what I mean.
Can I wake up next to this person without flinching?
I’ll admit it, when I first came up with this question, I was about 15, and it was my entire standard for dating. And yes, it was all about looks. But then, as I got into my early twenties, it took on new depth and dimensions, like carefully leaning over and checking her ID, hoping not to wake her while I make sure I won’t get arrested- well, anyway, the point is I grew as a person. By the time I met the woman who would become my wife this question took on some real meaning. Will I still have self-respect when I wake up? Can I seriously see myself discussing matters of import with her? Does she fulfill my intellectual and emotional needs as well as being beautiful? (Hey, I never said I stopped being shallow). So what do you need in order to be able to wake up next to someone without flinching?
Can I put up with their shit?
I added this one in when I was about nineteen or so, after a string of short, tumultuous, and painful relationships that seemed to have one common thread: wacko girlfriends. I was absolutely convinced that every single girl I had dated to that point was batshit crazy. Quite the coincidence, and if I had any concept of basic probability I would have seen the flaw in my logic, but it took another few years for me to sort that one out (see below for that). The one good thing that came out of it was that I was able to recognize that, if I was going to sustain any kind of relationship, I was either going to have to find the perfect woman who had no flaws whatsoever and then convince her that she wanted to date me, or I would have to learn to live with another human being’s imperfections. All evidence to the contrary notwithstanding, even I didn’t have the kind of hubris necessary for option A, so I went with B. I know this doesn’t sound like much of a leap, but seriously, I’ve seen a lot of “adults” who still need to pick up on this one, so cut my younger self a little slack. The key, I realized, was to find someone whose craziness was compatible with mine, or that I at least didn’t find too noxious.
What does this mean for you? Whatever you need it to mean. Does leaving dirty socks on the floor drive you crazy? How about owning too many shoes? How do you feel about Friday night being “hangin’ with my boys night”? Or saying “whatever” and walking away being considered a perfectly acceptable way to end a conversation? Think about it, because what seems cute now might getting annoying a year from now, and what’s annoying now will drive you batshit crazy a year from now. And after almost a decade dating and married with my wife, I can say this is one of the most important points to consider. The other one is…
Can they put up with my shit?
So it wasn’t until I was in my mid-twenties that I figured this one out. As one Demotivational poster points out, “The only consistent feature in all of your dissatisfying relationships is you.” I finally realized that it’s not enough for me to be happy with the person I’m with; it might be within the realm of possibility that it’s just barely a chance there could be some fraction of a notional option of a thought I could be somewhat close to less than perfect (I’m able to acknowledge my flaws). Put another way, I’m an acquired taste. I may even have the occasional annoying habit, like leaving dirty socks on the floor, according to my wife. Although I still swear that was the dog. That we didn’t get until we had been married for a year. He has a time machine, like Mr. Peabody. He’s been using it to get me in trouble for years.
The point is tolerance in a relationship is a two-way street. We always think of relationships as being about love and respect and sex and sunshine and rainbows and all that jazz, but the reality day to day is that more often than not relationships are about listening to somebody tell the same story you’ve already heard a hundred times and I really don’t care about your level twenty barbarian honey but you go ahead and tell me anyway if it’ll make you happy and- sorry, got a little carried away there. What was I saying? Oh yeah. The point is relationships are about living with another person, in close proximity, every day, hopefully for the rest of your life. That’s a recipe for friction more often than happiness, which is why you need to find someone who can tolerate your bad habits, whether it’s leaving dirty socks lying around, telling the same stupid stories over and over, or blaming it all on the dog.
The Dating Rorschach Test™
So there you have it. Maybe you agree, maybe you don’t. Maybe you have your own standards for finding a mate. But at least I can say mine worked for me. And in the end, that’s all I ever wanted out of it.
Famous Literature as Haiku
Posted: August 24, 2012 Filed under: Culture, Humor | Tags: comedy, culture, haiku, humor, literature, poetry, pop culture, popular culture 2 CommentsThe Illiad, by Homer
Damn, Helen is fine.
Whoops, started a big ass war.
Look, a giant horse.
The Odyssey, by Homer
Finished fighting war.
Got held up on the ride home.
House guests are a bitch.
The Inferno, by Dante Alighieri
Virgil leads the way,
Beatrice sent to guide me.
Can’t wait for next two.
Doctor Faustus, by Christopher Marlow
Summon a devil
I learn magic, lose my soul
Didn’t think that through
Hamlet, by William Shakespeare
Dad killed by uncle
A show to unveil the truth
Caught in the mousetrap
The Cthulhu Mythos, by H.P. Lovecraft
Inherit old books.
Nightmares full of tentacles.
Hastur Hastur Hast-
Death of a Salesman, by Arthur Miller
Meet Willy Loman.
He’s liked, but he’s not well liked.
This will not end well.
Waiting for Godot, by Samuel Beckett
Nothing must be done.
Wait is interminable.
End of line: no show.
Finnegan’s Wake, by James Joyce
Book rich with meaning.
Complex, deep, yet still has puns.
Bitter old author.
Atlas Shrugged, by Ayn Rand
Too many moochers.
Let the country fall apart.
Get a job, hippie.
Nine Ravens
Posted: August 20, 2012 Filed under: Humor, Politics | Tags: America, culture, Edgar Allen Poe, humor, poetry, politics, pop culture, popular culture, Raven, satire, Supreme Court Leave a comment(With apologies to Edgar Allen Poe)
Once upon a web page I saw, that was dedicated to law,
(I do not recall if it was blog or wiki or something more,)
While I tried to keep from snoring (face it that stuff’s kind of boring),
There came a tapping, as of someone rapping at my study door.
” ‘Probably my wife,” I mumbled, “tapping at my study door;
Only this, and nothing more.”
Ah, distinctly I remember, it was a bleak and cold November,
The High Court’s term starting on the first Monday month before.
Desperately I wished the morrow; foolishly I sought to borrow
From Jack Daniels surcease of sorrow, sorrow caused by culture war.
Caused by the endless bickering that had been dubbed the culture war,
Discussed here nevermore.
And the monitor light glowing with new lawsuits overflowing
Thrilled me—filled me with fantastic terrors never felt before;
So that now to stop the throbbing of my head, I stood there sobbing,
“It’s just the puppy trying to get in at my study door,
It must be my little puppy pawing at my study door.
That must be it; nothing more.”
Eventually I took a nip, with liquid courage got a grip,
“Whoever’s there,” I said, “I hope you don’t mind about before;
But the truth is I was… napping, when you came so gently rapping,
When you came so gently tapping, tapping at my study door.
Wasn’t really sure I heard you.” Then I opened wide the door;
Darkness there, and nothing more.
I don’t know how long I stood there, staring out at nothing but air
Questioning my sanity like so many who came before;
But there was no sound but silence, and my only sign of guidance
And the only words there spoken were the whispered words,
“Culture war?” This I whispered, and an echo murmured back the words,
“Five to four!” Just this, and nothing more.
Back into my study turning, all my heart within me burning,
Soon again I heard a banging, something louder than before,
“Huh,” I said, I thought that I’d seen something just above my flat screen.
It’s outside the study window, so this mystery I’ll explore.
Let me just chill out a minute, and this mystery explore.
“It’s the wind, and nothing more.”
So I opened up the window, and suddenly what do you know?
Right in comes these nine ravens that I had never seen before.
Not a word or gesture to me; not a single “An it please thee”;
But with mien of lord and lady, perched beside my study door.
Perched upon a bench that was sitting inside my study door,
Perched, and sat, and nothing more.
Decked with feathers black as robes, sitting with patience to match Job’s,
I attempted to establish some semblance of rapport.
“An unkindness some might call you, yes, and a conspiracy too,
To be honest that’s the sort of name-calling that I deplore.
Tell me, pray, how I should know you, oh great Scions of Baltimore.”
Quoth the ravens, “Five to four.”
I was stunned at these ungainly fowl to hear discourse so plainly,
Though their answer little meaning, use, or relevancy bore;
For we cannot help agreeing that no living human being
Ever yet was given help by birds within their chamber door,
Birds or beasts sitting upon their bench within their chamber door,
With such words as “five to four.”
But the ravens, having spoken, would not let that be their token,
Instead they had to further discourse on matters more and more.
Topics timely and political; both trivial and critical;
Till my rage was near biblical, “I should show you to the door!
I want none of this, please, leave me be, get out of here, no more!”
Then the birds said, “Five to four.”
There’s nothing that they won’t debate, from abortion to speech of hate
Taking their sides from established ideologies of yore.
Though they might each strut and posture, give an enigmatic gesture,
Make us wonder if the outcome might be different from before
In the end there’s no cause for surprise about the final score;
The score is 5 to 4.
But the ravens still sat judging, so with grace ill and begrudging
I sat down, tried to ignore them and work as I was before.
But one thing there was no budging, no, never sufficient nudging
To shift the awful balance that had been previously foreswore–
That these awful birds of omen held over from the days of yore
Had doomed us with “Five to four.”
Each single word I was weighing, the game D.C.’s always playing,
Despite myself, taken in by the vile back and forth once more.
On this law there’ll be no bending, the back and forth is never ending,
Though we cry out for unity, it’s victory we look for,
But when that ugly fool’s gold is the prize that we all opt for
Then the prize is, “Five to four.”
Turning then to my oppressors, I became the new aggressor
Unleashing on them all the wrath I had pent up heretofore.
“Were you not all nine delighted when the citizens united
Or you sat in judgment o’er the case of Bush v. Gore?
Uninsured were not deplored, racial preferences galore?”
Quoth the ravens, “Five to four.”
“Jurists!” said I, “all divided!– never one, though sit united!
Whether Donkey sat or Elephant deposited before,
Determined though you are to lead us by example not at all–
In this land that’s so torn by strife– tell me truly, I implore:
What’s the chance for peace and brotherhood–tell me I implore!”
Quoth the ravens, “Five to four.”
Jurists!” said I, “still divided! Still deserve to be derided!
By that space that bends above us–by that God (that you won’t let His commandments be posted in a government building but somehow a six foot tall monument on government property is okay and how are those not blatantly conflicting rulings?) that we all adore–
Tell this soul with strife encumbered, if these days of pain are numbered,
Will the time come when we at last can put out the last flame war?
I beg you, can you tell me I will have the peace that I yearn for?”
Quoth the ravens, “Five to four.”
“Be that phrase our sign of parting, birds or fiends!” I shrieked, upstarting–
“Get thee back unto the night and to Baltimore’s polluted shores!
Leave no writ or other token of the cruel words you have spoken!
Leave my solitude unbroken!– quit the bench beside my door!
Take your damn conspiracy elsewhere and haunt me nevermore!”
Quoth the ravens, “Five to four.”
And the nation stands divided, never to be reunited,
Cursing politicians from north to south and from shore to shore,
Though we think they’ll keep us guessing, ain’t it really quite distressing
We’ve found out as Ackbar warned us that “it’s a trap!” to be sure,
We may all try to hope for change but we see forevermore
That the score stays 5 to 4.
Politeness for Impoliteness’ Sake
Posted: August 17, 2012 Filed under: Culture, Humor | Tags: culture, etiquette, humor, politeness, society 1 CommentAmong some of my family and friends I have a slight reputation as a know-it-all. Among the rest I have a huge reputation as an arrogant ass who thinks he has the answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything. (It’s 42. I read Douglas Adams.) I’d like to think this is an unfair characterization born out of jealousy of my awesome awesomeness. I’d also like to think I have a face like Matthew McConaughey, a body like Brad Pitt, and the intellectual acumen of Stephen Hawking. So I’ll let you be the judge of which of us is right.
The point, however, is that regardless of my reputation in this regard, my family and friends are generally too polite to make an issue of it, even when I start to go off an one of my infrequent rants. I am of course using the colloquial definition of “infrequent”, that being “the length of time that casts the speaker in the best light, usually a modest one.” I particularly appreciate this as I have reached a much more mellow middle age (no, I am not using a colloquial definition of mellow, I really used to be worse) and have come to appreciate the value of politeness.
In my brash youth, I didn’t really see the value of politeness for its own sake. It always seemed to me to be more a matter of hypocrisy; after all, when you are being nice to someone you would rather spit in their eye, how is that NOT hypocritical? It was only after I had spent some serious time in the corporate world (and if you don’t think that’s a culture all its own, you’ve never lived in it) that I started to understand the value of politeness. I found there that politeness was a tool, nothing more and nothing less, and like any tool the value of it consists entirely in what you make with it.
Politeness doesn’t exist, as I thought it did when I was younger, for its own sake. Nor does it merely separate us from the animals, as I have heard some people assert. Rather, I have found that politeness is the oil that keeps society as frictionless as possible. It is the “civil” in “civil society.” Consider: polite conversation doesn’t allow for religion or politics as topics. I look around these days and realize that’s not a coincidence. Not to put too fine a point on it, politeness is what makes it possible for us to coexist with the people we would rather not have to coexist with. Whether it’s in the workplace or the marketplace, at school or at church, there’s always someone you just can’t stand, chances are they return the favor, and politeness is the only thing standing between the two of you and a date with destiny.
That’s not to say we always have to be polite. Sometimes it’s time to get impolite. After all, I would hardly refer to a good protest march as “polite.” Your typical rock concert hardly measures up to the realm of “polite”. And God knows any conversation with my close friends will never be within seven dirty words of being “polite.” But those are the stand out moments, the exceptions, not the rules, and should be cherished more for it, not less. But when we start turning every day into a protest, when every night is a concert, and every conversation would make George Carlin blush (bless his smutty departed self), we lose something priceless. It’s not just a matter of losing the “specialness” or those moments. We’re losing our dignity as a society.
Our current culture of brashness that seems to reward the braggart, the loudmouth, the shock jock and the bully-pulpit preacher both, the people who drag their politics and opinions out at every turn instead of confining them to opinion columns and blogs where they belong; it needs to stop. We need to – not step up, but step back. Not speak up, but quiet down. Take our fingers off the hyperbolic trigger and for once, don’t let our voices be heard. Just let it go. Stop feeding the trolls.
Even me.

