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Tardsie’s True-Ass Tales–Take Me Out To The Ballgame

12 Friday Oct 2012

Posted by Smaktakula in Culture, Sport, Stupidity, True-Ass Tales

≈ 37 Comments

Tags

Anaheim Angels, Anaheim Stadium, Baseball, California Angels, Candlestick Park, Colorado Rockies, Coors Field, Dock Ellis, Dodger Stadium, dope, drugs, grass, hemp, Los Angeles Dodgers, LSD, lycergic acid diethylamide. LSD not LDS which is something very different, marijuana, Pittsburgh Pirates, pot, reefer, San Francisco Giants, schadenfreude, Seattle Mariners, sweet sweet cheeba, Tardsie's True-Ass Tales, vomiting, weed

By Tardsie

Relax, baseball-haters, the following True-Ass Tales are concerned less with what happens on the field, and more with shenanigans in the stands.

Inexplicably, My Wife Wore An Orange Shirt To This Game. Chivalrous Dude That I Am, I Said, “If You Get Stabbed In The Parking Lot, Don’t Blame Me!”

The Sweetest Beer–Safeco Field, Seattle, Washington

I guess you could call me a beer snob. I don’t drink much these days, but when I do, I prefer to drink something good, which means avoiding the mass-produced fermented goat urine flowing from America’s big breweries. Nonetheless, there have been exceptions.

Sometime around 2000, a buddy and I were at the newly-opened Safeco Field to see a Mariners’ game (I have since forgotten the opponent). One our way from our seats to the smoking platform we passed a concession cart. The guy running the stand was looking the other way, and without hesitation and before the vendor had turned back around, my buddy snatched a Miller Lite from the ice-filled cavity at the front of his stand. We kept walking.

When we got to the smoking area we lit up a joint and split the Lite. Despite it being shit beer in a plastic bottle, it was one of the sweetest brews ever to cross my lips.

I Want You To Know, I Wouldn’t Normally Do This Kind Of Thing.

Love Some Dodgers (LSD) or Man, I AM the Baseball!–Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles, California

One time in the 1990s, me and two of my friends, Earl and You Ho, decided to drop some acid at the ball game. The Pirates were in town.

Rarely have I been so fascinated by a baseball game. The span between each pitch seemed interminable and pregnant with promise, as if the whole of the nine innings or for that matter the season hung on the arc and velocity of that single pitch. We were in the nosebleed seats, just below the top ring of the stadium, and the angle seemed impossibly steep, and left us feeling the slightest shift in movement might send us tumbling down into the seats below.

The kids behind us were throwing popcorn, which streaked over our heads like flame-caught moths, surprising us afresh each time they burst past us and fell dying into vast and unknowable distances below our feet.

The drive home was a harrowing kaleidoscope: the sea of tail lights which are the city’s sclerotic arteries, looming, barbwire enshrouded green freeway signs and the lava-lamp face of You Ho as he piloted us through the night.

There’s Precedent. Look Up Dock Ellis.

Letting It All Out–Coors Field, Denver, Colorado

The last time I was at Coors Field was for a Dodgers-Rockies game.  My friend Tyrell got us seats in the club level, where instead of having to stand in the beer line like the unwashed masses, fresh-faced, uniformed attendants would bring the alcohol to us. Perhaps it was the atmosphere of entitlement, the altitude or my own by-then infrequent drinking habits, but I got drunk. Shitty drunk.

We were on the way home when the urge to hurl hit me with immediate, implacable force. I was in the back seat of my buddy’s truck, and although he was quick in pulling over, the vomit was quicker. It was all I could do to get my head out the window before I was spraying mile-high chunks. You should know, I’m a powerful upchucker–it’s all in the diaphragm. I continued vomiting out the window until we got back to Tyrell’s place, where I may have decorated his driveway.

As my (very forgiving!) friend discovered the next morning, I hadn’t been as successful at clearing the car as I’d hoped. The side of the truck, which Tyrell’s company leased for him, was spackled with dried sick. Worse though, I’d managed to get no small amount of the pungent sludge down into the window well, where it was trapped between the panels of the door, free to ferment unmolested.

The story ends happily, though. Tyrell not long after accepted a new job with a different company, who provided him with a new truck of which he was much more fond, not least because it smelled better.

They Still Probably Haven’t Gotten That Stank Out.

Don’t Write Checks My Ass Can–And Will– Cash–Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles California

Those of you who remember my buddy Dave Chen already know that he has a tendency to begin speaking long before his brain properly engages, and will have no trouble following the path of foolish decisions which resulted in a significant cash outlay for him and for me a torpid stupor of inebriation and satiety.

It began one day when for some reason Dave and I had been discussing stadium beer. “Those beers they have at Dodger Stadium are pretty big,” Dave said, “I’ll bet you couldn’t even drink four of them during a game.” Amazingly, Dave wasn’t joking, and soon we had a bet. If I could drink four large beers during a regular, nine-inning ball game, Dave would pay for all the beer I could drink (including the original four) and all the food I could eat. In the extremely unlikely event that I lost the bet, I would be required to pay for his food and drink. A little rattled by my obvious glee, Dave blundered further, insisting that I had to carry out the bet ON A FULL STOMACH.

Yeah, That’s Pretty Much It Right There.

The wager was consummated at a Giants-Dodgers match-up. The game was notable not only for the debut of future first-ballot Hall of Famer Dennys Reyes, but also because we were treated to one of the truly rare and pure sights in late 1990’s baseball, a Barry Bonds home run.

No, The Guy I’m Thinking Of Was Freaking Huge.

As you might imagine, I’d killed the four beers by the third inning and Dave was buying the beer & snacks for another six innings. I don’t remember too much about those later frames, but I do remember approaching a guy selling pizzas.

“I’ll take one,” I said, then jerked a thumb at Dave, “He’s paying.”

Without missing a beat, the guy said to me, “Then why not buy two?”

As A Child I Was Pelted With Ice At Candlestick Park For The “Crime” Of Wearing Blue. That’s Just The Kind Of People They Are.

LA: Separate, But Equal. Well, Separate For Sure–Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles, California

A couple of years ago my wife and I were at a ball game. In the parking lot, I was chatting with two Latino dudes. We were all drinking beers. I was surreptitiously smoking from a pipe I concealed in my hand, but as the other two dudes were smoking cigarettes, they couldn’t smell it.

Security pounced on us from out of nowhere. Officers split us up and spoke to us separately. My officer made me dump the beer (you can’t drink in the parking lot of Dodger Stadium), asked to see my tickets before sending me on my way.

As I was leaving, I saw that one of the Latino guys was getting arrested.

And It Loves Me! (And People Like Me)

When the Angels Were Cast From the Heavens–Anaheim Stadium, Anaheim, California

In 1995, I went to game between the Seattle Mariners and California Angels (as the Anaheim Angels were then called) which the Mariners won. On the way out, my girlfriend, a self-described “Newport Bitch” and lifelong Angels fan grumbled about the loss.

The Angels’ World Series Victory In 2002 (Tied With 2010 For WORST World Series Match-Up EVER) Came As Something Of A Disappointment.

“Come on, Kathy, the Angels are up twelve games,” I said, not needing to add that the season was growing short and such a deficit nigh-insurmountable, particularly for the until-then, luckless Mariners. “Can’t you just let the M’s have this one game?”

What neither of us could have known, however, was that this game proved to be the first spasm in what would grow to be one of the most spectacular–and to my thinking, delightful–collapses in baseball history (at the time I think it was #3), as the Angels saw their commanding lead begin to erode against a suddenly ascendant Seattle. The Angels and Ms ended the season in a tie for first place in the American League West, necessitating a one-game tie-breaker to determine the AL West Champion.

Oh, Hell Yeah, Man–I’ve Got It Framed And Everything.

Tardsie’s True-Ass AUDIO Tales: The DMV

07 Sunday Oct 2012

Posted by Smaktakula in History, True-Ass Tales

≈ 30 Comments

Tags

California, Department of Motor Vehicles, DMV, places that suck, Tardsie's True-Ass Tales

By Tardsie

A True-Ass Tale as it was meant to be heard–with your ears!

***

In which our hero finds himself at a low point, made lower still by a visit to the 5th Circle of Hell.

The Scriptures Warn Of This. “Have Ye Not Heard It Said That The Masters Of Horses And Asses In All Places Alike, One Unto Another? And Hath Not The Testimony Of Your Own Eyes Born Witness To The Same? It Is True: They Are All Of Them Cocksuckers.”

***

The Slightly Sad Story of the Most Fun I Ever Had at the DMV

https://prometheantimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/dmv-tardsie.mp3

***

Although It’s No Fun At All, The DMV Offers Many Of The Same Features As Do America’s Large Theme Parks: Tortuous Lines, Hefty Fees And Cold-Blooded Fascism.

Tardsie’s True-Ass Tales: Talking With Mouth-Breathers

27 Monday Aug 2012

Posted by Smaktakula in Culture, Stupidity

≈ 46 Comments

Tags

Aberdeen, drunken Irishmen, morons, places that suck, South Dakota, Tardsie's True-Ass Tales, Why am I so stupid?

By Tardsie

They’re Not Always This Easy To Spot.

***

The Hotel Quickie

AmericInn, Aberdeen, SD. Monday, 03.26.12 11:59 AM CST (Cretin Standard Time)

Tardsie calls the Front Desk.

T: Hi. This is room 204, I’m running about ten minutes late. Do you think I could get a late checkout?

FD: Well…what are we talking about here? Like 12:15?

T: I just need about ten minutes…but yeah, 12:15 would be great.

FD: Because checkout is at noon.

T: Yeah, I know. That’s why I’m calling.

Time Is Relative In The Land That Time Forgot.

***

SNOW JOB

A few months ago I applied for a job as a sales-rep/customer liaison with a company with which I had previously had some dealings. It was a part-time thing, working the phones from home. Because of my skill set and my previous dealings with the company, I was pretty sure I’d earn an interview. I liked the company, and was interested in working for them in some capacity, but wasn’t sure if I wanted to sacrifice my evenings.

So when the president of the company called me (it’s a small outfit) for an interview, I didn’t really feel I had anything at stake, and had never been so relaxed in an interview. Although I make it a point in any interview to impress the person to whom I’m speaking (it’s an interview, after all), I try to present a pretty honest–if selective–picture of myself, and never so much as in this interview. I was candid, unguarded and, I thought, fairly plain-spoken.

Toward the end of the interview, the president offered me a rather left-handed compliment. I was initially pleased when he complimented me on my “authoritative voice,” polished manner of speech and extensive vocabulary. But then, as he transitioned to the next point said, “But I guess you can talk normal when you want to.”

I didn’t get the job.

It’s Not An Affectation, Folks–We Just Talk That Way.

***

It’s A Long Drive To Tipperary

A few years ago, I was at Rite Aid picking up a few essentials for a trip. As he rung me up, the clerk asked where I was going.

“Ireland,” I told him.

“That’s cool,” he said, then asked, “So are you gonna fly there or drive?”

Unsure if he was joking, I was too stunned for a moment to answer. When I was finally able to speak, all I could muster were the words “Drive to Ireland?”

“Yeah,” he said sagely, answering his own question, “Ireland is too far to drive.”

If You Think Drunk Drivers Are Dangerous, Just Wait ‘Till You Visit A Land With No Sober Drivers.

Tardsie’s True-Ass Tales: Keg-Stands With Jesus

10 Friday Aug 2012

Posted by Smaktakula in History, Religion

≈ 32 Comments

Tags

athiesm, Christ Crashers, Christianity, drugs, Evangelicals, house party, Jesus of Nazareth, raves, Tardsie's True-Ass Tales

By Tardsie

If Partying With The Lord Is Wrong, We Don’t Want To Be Right.

Growing up in a fundamentalist environment, you can bet I’ve seen a lot of proselytizing.  From missionaries converting the heathens in countries far and wide to In-N-Out’s Bible verse-emblazoned cups to the dude who used to treat football audiences to his home-made JOHN 3:16 sign. Some of these methods are overt, others sneaky. But not a one of them can match a membership drive so ballsy and innovative that I’m astounded I’ve not yet seen it repeated: Christ-Crashing.

Tardsie Can Sing This For You If You Like.

I like a nice house party. I’ve never really cared for big, anonymous keggers with their dense oceans of sweaty, beer-sloshing yahoos and 130-decibel rumble, and still view raves as enervating ‘Tard-fests set to a shrieking 4/4 beat, suitable primarily for the procurement of drugs. House parties, on the other hand, with no more than 100 guests (and usually fewer), were a lot more my speed, because you could actually carry on a conversation with another person. Back in my single days, this was practically a requirement–although I’m a handsome enough guy, for whatever reason, I just don’t have the the kind of looks that make the ladies weak in the knees. So back in the day, if I had any hope whatsoever of getting lucky, it was my mouth that would get me there (my mouth could also queer the deal with a quickness; I walked a razor-thin line in my youth). So house parties were always more my thing.

But Is Telling You You’re Attractive Really Such A Terrible Lie? Best Case Scenario–Everybody Wins.

About ten years or so ago, I attended a house party in Auburn, Washington. By 9:00 PM the house was loud and packed, crowd runoff spilling out onto the back deck and into the wide, sloping back yard.  Cigarette smoke mingled with the meaty tang of  dogs on the grill.  The volume steadily increased. But what none of us knew was that on the street outside, sinister forces were already advancing upon us.

“We’re Gonna Stand Around A Keg Of Redemption And Do Shots Of Jesus!”

Another thing I like about house parties is that inevitably, clusters of people form at various points in the house and yard, with people leaving groups and joining them, new ones forming and old ones disappearing. The addition of one new face to a cluster of people slightly changes the complexion of the conversation, which grows and changes as long as the party lasts. This facet of the house party experience was the vulnerability the Christ-crashers preyed upon.

Jesus Says He’ll Come Back If Some Chicks Show Up.  After Hanging Out With Twelve Dudes ALL Day, He Wants No Part Of This Sausage Fest.

The clandestine force had by this time breached the intimacy of the gathering.  No one yet knew that a cadre of insidious strangers already walked among us.  No one would until it was too late. About twenty minutes earlier, a group of about a dozen unremarkable twentysomething men and women arrived at the party.  They arrived in groups of one or two, either through the front or garage door, which was wide open.

The Party Is Here On Earth.

Once inside the party’s perimeter, the operatives split up, sidling up to different groups throughout the home and property. One of them joined the conversation I was having. I didn’t recognize him, but assumed–as the Christ-crashers were counting on–he was friends with other people at the party. Meanwhile, everyone was making this same mistaken assumption.

We started to get an inkling that something might be wrong when, in the space of no more than ninety seconds, every conversation at the party had turned to the redemptive works of the Lord Jesus Christ. No matter how base, inane or vile the conversation had been prior to the crashing, every conversation was now a theological one. Still not realizing we were being invaded, some of us debated the Christ-crashers politely, others turned abusive.

ATHEIST

All The Charm & Goodwill Of That Shitty Little Kid Who Ruins The Santa Thing For Other Kids.

It didn’t take long to understand the problem and identify the perpetrators.  They were dressed nearly identically, in dark blue track suits. They were shortish, men and women both, with traces of an Eastern European accent. I am very intrigued by accents, and asked where they were from. Their spokesman, a compact man with boyish features grew visibly uncomfortable and said, “We’re Americans.”

“Yeah, but you’re not from here originally, are you?” I asked, not accusing, simply curious (and I go through this little dance all the time; folks, if you don’t want me to ask where your accent is from, then fucking lose it. And if you don’t want a whole host of other questions, don’t fucking tell me it’s British–not all Americans are that stupid). The closest he came to saying was answering me in the affirmative when I asked if he was Slavic. The matter was quickly sorted out, and the newcomers revealed to be members of a local fundamentalist church.  The spokesman explained that they were a sort of youth outreach, bringing a message of salvation to iniquitous gatherings like this one.

Because Who Knows More About Saving Your Soul Than A Creepy Little Foreigner?

Even in the face of the Christ Crashers’ machinations, the host proved a class act by inviting them to stay. Sadly, the strange little man took the position that the Heavenly Father frowned upon drinking, clearly forgetting why Jesus was in such high demand as a wedding guest throughout Canaan circa 30 AD.

“Some Say My First Miracle Was The Coolest.”

The host’s not-inconsiderable patience by this time exhausted, the Crashers quickly found themselves back on the street. Undeterred, the Jesus Jihadists set off  to find someone else who wanted just a little more Son of Man at his or her party.

It happened once; it can–and almost certainly will–happen again. So if ever you find yourself at a party, and all at once every conversation turns to the joy of having a relationship with Christ, don’t panic–you’ve just been Christ-crashed.

This Christ-Crasher Is All Tuckered Out.

Tardsie’s True-Ass Tales: My Racist Cat And The White Guilt She Inspired

18 Wednesday Jul 2012

Posted by Smaktakula in Stupidity

≈ 28 Comments

Tags

Florida, guilty white folks, imaginary racism, miss you Spookitty, New Jersey, Political Correctness, racism, Spook, Tardsie's True-Ass Tales, Why am I so sensitive?

By Tardsie

You Disgust Us, Ghost.

When I was a boy, my family adopted a black cat during the Halloween Season.¹ I named her Spook. Although  a word meaning ghost or spirit, spook, if you don’t know (and my wife didn’t until I told her this story, bless her heart), is sometimes used as a racist term for black people. There weren’t a lot of black people in my town growing up (and when I say ‘weren’t a lot,’ I mean they were a single family), and I was completely ignorant of the word’s racist connotations.

That is, until my mom moved us to Lakewood, Washington when I was in the 7th grade. Lakewood, at that time an unincorporated are of Tacoma, Washington, is a far more diverse city than anywhere on the Central Coast. We lived in an apartment complex with mostly white neighbors, but also several black families. One such family, a military couple, had a kid my age, and we played together.

But sure enough, when the neighbor family heard the name of my cat, they asked, “Wow. Don’t you think that’s kind of…racist?”

Well, *A Certain Type Of Person* Sure Thought So!

And when I say ‘neighbor family,’ I mean the WHITE neighbor family. My cat’s name made them feel all funny inside.

The black family whose kid I played with? They never said two words about it, and even took care of the cat once when my mom took me back to California to visit my grandma.

The thought I’d like to leave you with is this: Do you think my friend’s parents were able to look past my cat’s name and see intentions behind the bullshit of labels, or do you imagine that they–originally from Florida and New Jersey and born sometime in the Fifties–had just maybe never heard that word before?

Bad Kitty!

¹Thanks the persistent–and most likely apocryphal–notion that black cats are sacrificed by cultists during Halloween, to this day animal shelters often make a special effort to ensure that black cats are adopted into good homes to prevent this. ∞ T.

Tardsie’s True-Ass Tales: We Like It Cold

12 Thursday Jul 2012

Posted by Smaktakula in Crime, History

≈ 22 Comments

Tags

punishment, revenge, Tardsie's True-Ass Tales, we're in trouble

By Tardsie

Much Like Making Out With A Barnyard Animal, Taking Revenge One Time Is Okay If Nobody Finds Out.

In general, I don’t think much of revenge. I believe it poisons the soul, slowly devouring whomever is possessed by it. It’s better to forgive and move on. I believe in legal (and to some degree societal) retribution–actions have their consequences, after all–but on an individual basis I think it’s much better to exclude the hated thing from your life altogether, rather than invest so much of yourself into opposing it.

Having said that, the following–necessarily vague–tale is of the other kind, of a vengeance so pure and sweet that it stands in stark relief to other examples, and a reminder that some rules, after all, are meant to be broken. Much, unfortunately, has been left out of the following tale. Were I to tell it all, it would be a study in redaction.

We’ve Said Too Much Already.

Many years ago, a group of friends was helpless to prevent the degradation and near ruin of a thing which they all held very dear, made far more humiliating by the capricious manner in which it was carried out. To the individuals who perpetrated this atrocity, it wasn’t anything more than a gag.

The friends were more than angry–they were devastated. Nor were they of one mind. Most of them, boiling with caustic, unspent hurt wanted to strike back right away, to smash and break and return the hurt that had been foisted on them. Others preferred to wait a while until after the haze of red emotion had cleared, and a more rational response could be crafted. No one, however, suggested that the matter be forgotten.

Okay, That’s An Excellent Point. But Isn’t He Also Supposed To Help Those Who Help Themselves?

Cooler heads prevailed, and for a time it seemed as though the matter had been forgotten. The folks responsible for the ugliness certainly forgot. For a time, all was well in the land.

Here’s the thing about revenge, though. If you’re going to do it, for God’s sake–do it right. The object of revenge is not justice, the taking of an eye for an eye. Revenge is punishment and ruin, a disproportionate response to remind that sorry fucker that all you wanted was to be left alone and in doing wrong by you he made the single poorest decision in his wasted and joyless life. Revenge is kicking him in the nuts again and again and again.

So the friends waited two whole years to strike. They planned. They watched. They didn’t forget. And when the time came, they struck. Folks, I can’t tell you much more than that, but believe me when I tell you figuratively that somebody got fucked. Hard. And in the eye.

Tell Us What It Tastes Like! Is It Yummy? Do You Like It? Yeah, You Like it.

And for years afterward they rarely spoke about it privately, and never publicly until one of them went and blabbed about it on the internet. Which will probably earn him a serious talking-to. You think I’m kidding.

There’s the cliché, ‘Revenge is a dish best served cold.’ Maybe that’s true, but this memory keeps me warm at night.

Revenge: Don’t Do It! Unless You’re Prepared To Do It Right.

Tardsie’s True-Ass Tales: Sparky & Sac-Licker

02 Monday Jul 2012

Posted by Smaktakula in Culture, History

≈ 29 Comments

Tags

bad parents, Cap'n Crunch, Cocoa Puff, death by electrocution, El Guapo, Frogboy, humiliating nicknames, I'm talking about you Stretch!, Keebler, My Name Is Earl, Sac-Licker, Sparky, Steve Wooster, Tardsie's True-Ass Tales, Tyrrell Laiblin

By Tardsie

Sometimes Dads Give Special Nicknames To Their Sons. Never Helpful: Queer-O The Little Sissy Boy.

Nicknames are funny things. Sometimes they’re temporary appellations which last–thankfully–only as long as the school day. Others are permanent, evidenced by pruny octogenarians with ridiculous names like Cookie or Skip. Often these sobriquets are bestowed affectionately by friends, family members and classmates. Just as frequently, these same people inflict upon their victims a moniker which serves not only to grind down their self-esteem as indefatigably as waves crashing against a beach, but also one which follows them all the way to their bitter and unlamented graves, hovering about them like a bad stink.

El Guapo: Not Nearly As Handsome As He’d Have You Believe. But Every Bit As Nefarious.

That some appellations fit so magically to specific individuals is surely one of the unrecognized beauties of the natural world. I have spoken in these pages previously of the spastic and afflicted Frogboy. He is but one of the many nicknamed characters to have crossed my path, including such delightfully named characters as the Fly; Bladder Girl; ‘Lil Apu; Easy Dana; Far-Side Freddy; Beerslut; Wigga & Little Wigga; Mexican Bush Chick (Any guesses as to how she got that name?); the Troll; Baby Reinhard; Blowjob Paige, not to be confused with Blowjob Holly; the Muppet; Crooked Katie, Zitty & Fatty (they were sisters); Rockstar & the Weasel; Dr. Knob; Sideshow Bob, who was also known as Puff; Cool-Whip Boy, Partyball; Poodlegirl and too many others to list. It beats memorizing a bunch of real names.

Freddy Pretty Much Looked Like This.

Nicknames sometimes attach themselves to someone simply because they’re so damn appropriate–like my buddy, Keebler. Damned if the guy doesn’t look like a happy little forest sprite with a mad jones for soft-batch. Upon meeting his wife, folks often mistakenly address her as “Mrs. Keebler,” believing that to be correct. Other people choose nicknames for entirely different reason, like my friend Nickname Withheld, whose physical-characteristic based nickname helps those close to him forget that his first name is Earl.

‘Cause There’s Just No Way To Make This Good.

Some nicknames are not politically correct. Back in my lifeguard days, we had a mouthy kid who’d come to the pool. He had attitude, but he was fun, and he took to calling a lifeguard named Jimmy ‘Cap’n Crunch.” Believing turnabout is fair play, Jimmy called the kid (who was African-American) ‘Cocoa Puff,’ and the name stuck. Now this is the kind of thing that gets people fired today, but fortunately for Jimmy, Cocoa Puff knew the difference between laughing with and laughing at.

Oh Yeah–Dude’s A Total Racist. Did You Ever Ask Yourself Exactly WHAT He Was Captain Of? Turns Out It’s The Amistad.

And sometimes, the difference between being saddled with an awful nickname and having it fade into obscurity depends entirely upon your reaction. Witness the entirely dissimilar experiences of my college friends Tyrrell and Steve.

Upon hearing the story that follows, it would be easy to assume that Tyrrell Laiblin is a ‘special person,’ who, if not by now asphyxiated after swallowing his own tongue, must surely live in some kind of assisted living facility where dangerous objects like scissors and pencils are kept in a special cabinet to which only the Day-Nurse has the key. In fact, today Tyrrell is living independently, employed and even the father of two children by his lovely wife, whom, one assumes, he blackmailed into marrying him. That Tyrrell is today able to live among normals is probably more a result of fortune favoring the undeserving and of our college’s anemic electrical grid than anything else.

The crux of the tale is this: Despite my repeated insistence, Tyrrell refused to believe that an electrical current ran through a phone jack, and was so convinced of this that he (folks, it’s hard for me to write these words without laughing) decided to prove it by touching the male end of the phone cord to his tongue while the other end was still connected to the socket. Unlike poor Tyrrell, I’m sure you already know what happened.

Retard.

By the time Tyrrell had picked himself up off the floor, we were already calling him ‘Sparky.’ It only lasted about a day, however. He took it with a begrudging grace that knocked most of the fun out of the nickname, and since it didn’t fit him faded quickly into obscurity, resisting the one or two half-hearted attempts to revive it.

Steve Wooster, on the other hand, managed simply through his reaction, to cling to an ugly nickname he didn’t deserve. One day, in tossing around the random cruelties attendant with the friendship of young men, someone called Steve ‘Sac-Licker’ (as in, he licks testicles). This was said in the playful manner that so often accompanies epithets like asshole, fuckface  or cum-bubble, any of which Steve would have simply shrugged off. But perhaps because he didn’t quite know what it meant–just that it was bad–Steve reacted poorly. And by poorly, I mean he flipped his fucking lid and demanded–demanded–that we not call him ‘Sac-Licker.’ And so of course, a nickname was born.

No, This Guy’s A SACK-Licker–Different Condition Entirely.

If we have to pull a lesson from all of this, it’s this: Don’t have friends.

Tardsie’s True-Ass Tales: A Lesson From Smart-Mouth Eddie

22 Friday Jun 2012

Posted by Smaktakula in Culture, History

≈ 22 Comments

Tags

douchebaggery, it's not funny when it's me!, Tardsie's True-Ass Tales, teachers, when a boy becomes a man

By Tardsie

Your Child’s Teacher Was Most Likely Not A Juvenile Offender, Has Probably Never Been Kicked Out Of College And Isn’t Going To Go On To Be A Word Press Spammer. We’re Just Saying That It Happens From Time To Time.

I taught at an after-school clinic in Southern California for a while after I graduated college. The pay blew ass, but to this day it remains the job I have most enjoyed doing, and in which I believe I did the most good. I taught reading and college-prep writing.

I tended to get the hardcases, for whom I had some affection–kids, like twelve-year-old Eddie Jong, who were too damn smart for their own good. Eddie was considered a particularly onerous student because of his inappropriate and razor-keen tongue. I didn’t mind working with Eddie, though, which was fortunate, because nobody else wanted to.

Being just a little bit lippy myself, I had a knack for taming smartmouths, and mostly I was able to keep Eddie reined in. But in a dastardly move that regular readers of the True-Ass Tales might see as some sort of karmic justice, there was one time when, in front of at least fifteen other teachers and students, Eddie got me good.

Today He’s An Annoyance, But Tomorrow He’ll Be Taking Over The World. Or In Jail. One Of The Two.

The thing which transpired couldn’t have been something he’d planned. He was simply a panther crouched in the tall grass alongside a watering-hole, and I the hobbled emu foolish enough to drink.

“I hate teachers,” he said one day. He said that a lot.

I sighed. “Yeah, Eddie–well let me tell you something, we just love you.” I was undone almost before I had finished the words.

The little bastard’s eyes widened in ersatz horror as he backed away from the table. “Did you hear that everybody? Tardsie said he loved me. HE’S A FUCKING PERVERT!”

Oh, The Little Fucker!

It took almost a minute for the other teachers to get their students refocused, a task made more difficult by their own snickering. In the meantime, I dragged Eddie up to the front desk, and told the attendant that I was docking an insane amount of points (the kids could earn toys and prizes–some of which were actually pretty cool–based on their points, which obviously, meant a great deal) for not only his improper and disruptive behavior but for his disgusting potty-mouthery as well.

It was the right thing to do, and when I next saw Eddie, he was suitably chastened–temporarily anyway. Although we would do battle many more times while I worked there, I was careful never again to let that crafty little turd score a knockout blow. I like to think, however, that I was in some way responsible for the maturation of Eddie’s devastating wit. The hardest thing about it was never being able to tell that smart-mouthed little shit how very proud he made me.

There Is Nothing More I Can Teach You, My Child.

Tardsie’s True-Ass Tales: No English

06 Wednesday Jun 2012

Posted by Smaktakula in History

≈ 18 Comments

Tags

conqueror tongue, crank calls, English Language, places that suck, Tardsie's True-Ass Tales, you got a real purty mouth

By Tardsie

This Delightful Image Is Taken From One Of The Workbooks With Which Tardsie Used To Teach Impressionable Children. No, We’re Not Kidding.

One of the most unnerving experiences I can recall, but which actually turned out to be a whole lot of nothing, occurred in the middle of the night on a train bound for Memphis from Chicago. I travelled on the cheap in those days, and usually slept in the observation car, stretched out on the floor on a blanket. But for reasons I can’t remember, that night I slept in coach. My body crammed between the exterior armrests of the two adjoining seats, my sleep was thin and unrestful, hovering around that line that delineates the divide between sleep and wakefulness.

All the winners seem to come out on the Chicago-New Orleans line, and the guy in the seat behind me was a real piece of work. He was about a hundred shades of mean, with a mousey, frightened girlfriend that didn’t say much unless she was spoken to first. Apparently this guy caused some sort of incident on the train–I never knew exactly what it was, and didn’t even find out anything at all had happened until the wee hours of the morning when they came for him.

And so the immense, threatening silhouette of the Amtrak enforcer to which I awoke wasn’t actually looming over me, even although he appeared to be. And not knowing this, it didn’t matter that he was speaking to the other guy when he said in a low, sinister drawl that practically oozed with tobacco juice, “Yew’re in a whole heap uh trouble, boy!”

“Now Let’s You Jest Drop Them Pants!”

***

Sometimes, when some semi-homeless person shoves a clipboard in my face and demands to know if I’m a registered voter, or a perky young alternavista with three semesters of community college asks if I’d like to give money to downtrodden Uruguayan salamander ranchers, I like to have a little fun.

“I do not…eh…speak zee English,” I say, trotting out a German accent I’ve developed for just such an occasion. I hold up my hands and offer a simpering smile.

And yet–invariably, they apologize to me, as if my failure to learn the Conqueror Tongue is somehow their fault. And it is through their apology that I’m able to apply the pièce de résistance.

Before walking off, I throw ’em a real smile, and say, “There’s no harm done–think nothing of it!”

Whereas, We Must Confess To A Rather Embarrassing Lack Of Aptitude For The Devilishly Tricky Tongue.

***

Those younger folks who have grown up entirely in the age of caller ID have most likely missed out on that beloved adolescent rite of yesteryear, the crank call. As with so many endeavors, the majority of individuals who made crank calls had little or no talent for the calling, and very often resorted to old chestnuts like “Is your refrigerator running?” or slobbery, sexually charged heavy breathing. It’s no wonder that the craft earned such a dismal reputation.

But my friends and I had a special aptitude for crank calls, many times ending the call with our victim not realizing he or she had been cranked, and believing instead that they’d been on the phone with, at best, a moderately disturbed individual, and at worst, a dangerous lunatic.

Our calls ranged from the simple–calling pharmacies to inquire if they sold cannabis (you’d be amazed how many of the people to whom we spoke told us “I’ll have to check with the pharmacist,”) or ringing up pet stores asking for the cheapest puppy (Why the cheapest? Because I’m going to feed it to my python, Hector!). Sometimes I’d pretend to be an evangelist calling to solicit money (I froze up like an amateur and ended the call the one time somebody agreed to send money). Other times we’d call dumps and landfills claiming that due to the nature of our business–which we would not discuss–we were looking for a place to occasionally dump certain waste products, which for safety reasons, were stored in body bags. What we needed, we said, was a guy who could open the gate for us late at night, and who knew how to keep his mouth shut.

My friend Tyrrell made one of the best crank calls I’ve ever heard. His victim was a music store of some kind, Organ Emporium. It went like this:

OE: Organ Emporium.

T: How late are you guys open tonight?

OE: We’re open until 6:00 tonight.

T: Oh, that’s awesome! I’ll be down in an hour.

OE: Great, well we’ll see you–

T: (INTERRUPTING): Wait! Before I come down there, I guess I should at least ask if you guys have a kidney in stock.

OE: I’m sorry?

T: A kidney. I have advanced renal disease, and I need a kidney.

OE: (LONG PAUSE) We…we don’t have kidneys here.

T: But…isn’t this *Organ* Emporium?

OE: Oh…no, no…we sell like piano-organs. Instruments, y’know?

T: (AFTER A LENGTHY PAUSE, VOICE FULL OF TEARS): I hope you know, you were my last hope.

You’ll Have To Determine For Yourself Whether She’s Expertly Performing Bach’s Passacaglia in C Minor Or Cruelly Playing With People’s Lives.

Tardsie’s True-Ass Tales: The Most Terrible Thing

25 Friday May 2012

Posted by Smaktakula in History

≈ 37 Comments

Tags

Tardsie's True-Ass Tales

By Tardsie

Just When We Think There Isn’t Anything We Can’t Make A Joke About…

It is no exaggeration to say that I sometimes feel blessed in that I can see the humor in just about anything. In times of great sadness and loss, this trait has often enabled me to remain standing when it seemed as though the whole of the world was arrayed against me. There are few events in my life–some sad, and a great many more happy–that I can’t to some degree view through a humorous lens. However, the story that follows is from that dark bag of memory from which there can come no laughter. It is not intended to be funny.

Warning: This Post Contains Scenes Of A Graphic Nature, And May Contain Themes Upsetting To Some Readers

Friends, this is the first–and I hope only–Promethean Times piece to come with a warning to readers about potentially disturbing content. Those of you who frequent this site are most likely already aware that we think nothing of from time to time exposing our readers to salty or risqué language and suggestive themes, and that we have been known to blithely utter staggeringly irresponsible and patently false statements

The following story is one which I’ve seldom told, and typically only to good friends. I recently put this unsettling memory “to paper” for the first time about a month ago in an email. I found myself moved once again in the retelling of this story. In so many ways it is the symbolic representation of a period in my life in which I was more terrified than I ever hope to be again, but a time in my history which I have come to discover served as the anvil upon which was forged the man I would later become. It sometimes seems like a fading photograph of someone else’s life. I’m not the frightened, bewildered young man who witnessed this terrible scene; I haven’t been him in a long time.

I can’t say precisely why it’s important for me to tell you this story or what it is exactly that I expect you to draw from it. To the former I can only say that I’m no closer to understanding my reaction to this long ago event than I was in the numb shock of its aftermath, and I suspect I will wrestle with this question just as long as I draw breath.

And to the latter? I leave that to you. Let’s get to it.

When I was seventeen years old, I watched two teen criminals sexually assault an eleven-year-old boy in the shower of a boys’ prison. What I was doing there is a story for another time.

Moving from maximum security to minimum security was supposed to be a good thing–you weren’t confined to a windowless Navajo-white concrete box that stunk of piss and disinfectant, where your combination sink-toilet stood in full view of the tiny, scored plexiglass window in which the eyes of a guard (they had the fucking temerity to call themselves ‘counsellors’) would appear every three minutes to combat the twin dangers of furtive masturbation and the occasional suicide attempt. Minimum security accommodations were like dorms, and the bulk of the inmate’s day was spent in a large multi-purpose room, with pool tables, a basketball half-court, an ailing television (and anything remotely interesting was blocked) and the company of about fifty of your fellows. I initially refused the transfer to minimum security (I had quite a collection of books and magazines, whose necessary loss in a move to minimum security I judged to be heavier than any benefit from association with the other inmates), but relented after it was suggested that my refusal would make me appear anti-social, which could have a detrimental effect on the outcome of my upcoming trial.

The assault took place in the communal showers shortly after my transfer, in the minutes leading up to lights out. Four of us stood around the metal pipe which ran from floor to ceiling, shower heads evenly spaced around it. In addition to myself were two guys, maybe fifteen or sixteen. They knew each other on the outside, I think. I don’t remember what they did to end up in there, if I ever knew. But the other person was an eleven-year-old boy. I don’t remember his name, but I remember that he was there for stealing a car. I guess he probably must’ve, but he had no business being in a facility with so many aggressive–and without exception, larger–boys. The boy had shoulder-length brown hair, and a soft, unmarked face that spoke of an intelligence not at all academic. He was thin and fragile, and his hairless body looked wrong and out-of-place here in a world of aggressive, well-muscled boys.

The kid was quiet as the rest of us talked, the other boys playing a spirited game of grab-ass with one another. It was perfectly normal (you would be amazed at how quickly you adapt to institutional life; you think you won’t, but you will) until that awful, inescapable moment when it wasn’t.

One of the bigger boys blew me a kiss; I blew him a kiss in return. As bizarre as it might sound, such displays were the norm, and even though calamity was less than ten seconds away, there was still not even a hint of the paroxysm of ghastly ferocity which would soon pervade the room. Of the four of us, I think only the boy saw it coming, and he had been feeling it creep up on him for as long as he had been in the place. He was waiting for it, and in his own way, invited it like a hated but inevitable guest.

When the grab-ass kid turned and blew a kiss to the boy, there was wild animal terror in those soft, clear eyes that now looked too big for the boy’s face.

“Don’t do that!” he practically screamed, and then it was on.

The bigger kids were on the boy in less time than it takes to write it. One of them stood behind the boy and wrapped his arms around the boy’s naked waist, lifting him from the ground. The boy began to scream, his bare feet kicking uselessly at the air. The air was thick with his inarticulate pleas.

And what do you suppose I did, readers? Do you imagine that I waded into the knot of naked flesh and pulled the boy free, perhaps throwing a righteous punch or two? Or maybe  I shouted at the top of my lungs, “STOP!”? Or if not that, surely I called out for the guards? Right?

Here’s what I did: I put my head under the spray, and with one or two quick, vigorous strokes, splashed the soap from my head and body. I turned off the spigot and threw my towel over my shoulder. For just a moment I made eye contact with one of the attackers, and then I looked away. I didn’t look at the boy at all, and a second later, when I stepped from the tumult and terror of the shower room into the placid and innocuous hallway the boy was eclipsed from me forever. I toweled off as I walked back to my room, moving aside for the guards rushing to the scene.

And at last we’re getting to the thing I wanted to write about, the thing which, to me anyway, makes this something more than just the ugliest thing I ever saw. In reading this story, you probably are asking yourself what you would have done in this situation. You may believe you would have acted differently. Perhaps you would have.

But for you, this question is an academic exercise, and your answer doesn’t have the power to fundamentally change who you are. Although this question is for me now moot, it can never be academic. I don’t have to ask myself this question–daily, it demands an answer from me.

I am a lifetime removed from the young man who experienced this episode, and now, I have three young boys of my own. I’m married to a lovely woman and live in a lovely house in a lovely town. I have a lovely life. These perhaps-undeserved bounties are what I see when I answer the question: Would I have done anything differently?

And this is the thing I expect to be most troubling for anyone who has bothered to stick with me this far: if I were given the chance to do it again, I would change nothing. For the sake of my own children and of my efforts to live as a righteous man, for the sake of the life I have created from the ashes of an old one–I would once again walk out that fucking door and not look back.

I don’t expect you to understand, but I do hope that this was of some value to you. Thanks for reading.

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