Sunday, July 25, 2010

Reality: real life, actuality; truth; physical existence

I am starting to think that I am living a real life version of the Truman Show where everyone around me is involved in some master plot to put me in precarious and irresolvable situations for the entertainment of the rest of humanity.

Now don’t get me wrong, I am not self centered enough to truly think the world revolves around me, but I am cognoscente enough of my daily reality to know that this kind of stuff does not happen to real people.

Case Study #1

Friday Afternoon, approximately 12:37pm.

210 Freeway East On-ramp

It had been a long, exhausting week. I had spent its entirety using every ounce of available brainpower to fix problems not of my own making and was leaving the office exactly one hour and seven minutes later than I promised myself I would.

As I pulled on to the freeway, I let out a sigh of relief thinking, “my week is over. All I have to do is fold a mountain of laundry.” But no, someone else, someone sitting up in a control booth in the sky thought, “laundry will not bring in ratings! My advertisers will not pay top dollar to watch this. How about a little fire instead.”

And fire is what I got. Literally.

As I pulled on to the freeway in my ignorant laundry folding bliss, I noticed a flatbed truck quickly making its way into my lane (this is a nice way of saying he cut me off). Now, under normal circumstances, I would have laid on my horn and let him know my distaste for his driving techniques, but the fingers of flames expediently crawling from beneath the vehicle atop his flatbed caused me to rethink that decision.

Within three seconds the truck had maneuvered its way to the side of the freeway and the flames had maneuvered their way to encompass the entirety of the vehicle atop the truck, with my cute little death trap, ahem car (full of gas, might I add) less than what your driver’s ed. instructor would consider a safe distance between two vehicles.

Oh but wait, “man in the sky” (played by Ed Harris) is greedy and thinks he can go for the Super Bowl style advertising placement on this one - what if the cab exploded into flames and the truck driver narrowly escapes said flames by jumping right in front of the heroine’s death trap. Oh, it’s an Emmy in the making.

I swerved and pulled over.

“911, what is your emergency?”

AguyjustjumpedoutofhisflatbedtruckinfrontofmeonthefreewaywhileitwasonfireandtheflamesaregettingBIGGER.”

“I am sorry ma’am, let me transfer you to the CHP”

“Hello, CHP what is your emergency?”

AguyjustjumpedoutofhisflatbedtruckinfrontofmeonthefreewaywhileitwasonfireandtheflamesareGETTINGREALLYBIG.”

“I am sorry ma’am, let me transfer you the fire department,”

“Fire Department, what is your emergency?”

AguyjustjumpedoutofhisflatbedtruckinfrontofmeonthefreewaywhileitwasonfireandtheflamesaregettingBIGGERandnowthetruckisstartingtoEXPLODE.”

“We already know about this (insert dial tone here).”

Finally, flashing lights. But it’s just the paramedics, but not all the paramedics, just one, who doesn’t really do anything but sit and watch the truck continue to burst into flames.

Now, man in the sky decides “oh, let’s make this a bit more fun” and an ambulance full of three attractive paramedics, all in full firefighter uniform, visit the scene and decide that my current location on the side of the freeway is not safe (because really, sitting directly behind an ambulance is not the safest place on earth to be) and I am relocated to the front seat of the ambulance (for future reference ambulance guys, me+knobs+buttons+ambulance=accident waiting to happen).

It wasn’t long before ambulance guy number one decided placing me with all the knobs and buttons might not have been the best idea ever and sent me on my merry way.

Friday Afternoon, approximately 1:37pm.

Kitchen, Dining Room Table

Here I am folding my laundry and thinking “hey man in the sky…I want my cut.”

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Plan: a detailed proposal for doing or achieving something

One would think that with 26 years of real-life experience I would have the ability to plan a catastrophic-event-free vacation. My parents trained me well, giving a diverse range of painstakingly planned experiences to prepare me for any situation.

Left in a deserted castle in the hillsides of Bavaria at the age of two? Check.

Stuck in a death-defying riptide in Mexico? Check.

No usable Italian while barefoot wearing pajamas at midnight in Rome? Check.

Finding yourself passportless in Spain? Check.

I’ve met witch doctors in the Bahamas and watched toilets explode in the British Virgin Islands; but nothing could prepare me for the mighty, ever daunting, girls road trip.

In theory this girls road trip should not require more than two minutes of planning – throw some clothes in a suitcase, a cooler in the backseat, some bikes on the back and hit the road by 9. Right?

Evidently not.

Hear-in lies the first mistake: the bike rack on the back of your mother’s car that disguises itself as user friendly is in fact not.

Beach cruiser one on? Yes. Tie it down and move to beach cruise two.

Wait, beach cruise two will not fit on bike rack. How is that possible? What if we put it on first?

Untie beach cruiser one and replace with beach cruiser two. Unfortunately beach cruiser two only confirms to the bike racks static design constraints while placed at a vertical angle. Oh well.

Load beach cruiser one again. If only beach cruiser two weren’t encroaching on all usable space.

Remove beach cruiser two and replace with beach cruise one.

An hour later all appropriate angles were ascertained and girls road trip is ready to depart.


NOW WHERE DID THE CAR KEYS GO?

Highway 1. You have been warned. We're on vacation.