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Dec. 2007/ Jan. 2008
Humor Writing Contest Results |
Congratulations to
all Finalists in our December
2007/ January
2008 Humor
Writing Contest!
(Listed alphabetically by author.)
A Kiss Will
Cost You
By Burton Cole, Ohio
I expected to find the dating service in a back alley.
Instead, the crisp, uncluttered offices nestled inside a
gleaming business tower.
But those two nagging questions remained: WHAT am I
doing here, and how do I log it on my expense report?
It started a few days earlier as I muddled through the
office e-mail. It was jammed with the usual nonsense of offers to
shrink, enlarge, multiply, save, lower, get away or peep. And there was
the standard array of dating services.
Judging by the plethora of ads on radio, TV and e-mail,
I don't think any industry outside of Smilin' Bob's has grown faster
than dating services.
Service attendants used to pump gas while we hunted our
own dates. Now we pump the gas while service attendants cross-match our
preferences in a data base to find our one and only. Several of them, if
we wish.
We’ve spent so much time in this self-service society
learning to run gas pumps, scan and bag our own groceries and even cook
our own meals at some of the finer restaurants that we no longer
remember how to ask a person out for coffee. We’re probably jittery that
we won’t remember how operate the self-serve latte machine.
As a fully licensed journalist, it was high time I
investigated this trend. I did so as a public service. And to find out
if hot women really were looking for me, why didn’t they just say so
while I was pumping gas.
My personal dating service counselor asked me a few
strategic questions designed to expose the heart of my personality. In
just a few keystrokes, she was able to determine that I indeed have a
good credit rating and a valid Visa card. I was exactly the kind of
person to match what they wanted.
After a few more questions about hopes, dreams,
qualities I wanted in a woman and when I was due for a raise, she asked,
"How much do you think the average person spends a week dating in hopes
of finding true love?"
I calculated the cost of a Taco Bell run, video rental,
dessert, doubled it, then tacked on aftershave and breath mints.
"I dunno – $40?"
"Yes, well, let’s say about $55 to $65 a week," she
said.
She figured she could eliminate all that costly
searching if I would just hand over my Visa card for their complete
services for about $5,000 over the next three years. Plus incidentals.
I was beginning to doubt I could sneak this through my
expense report.
She kept slashing the price till it was less than half
the original figure.
"You said you were willing to pay $40 a week," she
snapped.
"Not EVERY week," I said. "Besides, wouldn’t I still
have to pay that much to keep the woman of my dreams in gorditas AFTER I
paid you your fee?"
"We've screened these woman. They can buy some of the
burritos."
"Plus the hot sauce?"
"Look, you can't expect Cupid to send the perfect person
to your front door," she said.
"What if he did? What she's knocking right now while I'm
stuck here with you? Say, do you want to go get a enchilada?"
I could tell my service attendant was working up
misgivings about my qualifications.
I intended the research to extend to a moonlit evening
on a lake cruise with the sample client who looked like Sandra Bullock –
at company expense, naturally, since I was conducting an investigation.
Instead, I felt fortunate to escape dateless but with my credit card in
my own pocket.
I picked up a couple DVDs, ordered Taco Bell and went
home with most of my $40 for the week intact.
But I’ll be watching the next time I pump gas.
www.tribune-chronicle.com
© Copyright
by author, used with permission by Humor Press. No unauthorized reproduction or redistribution is allowed.
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Have
I Got A Cure For You
By Burton Cole, Ohio
We have yet to discover the cure for the common cold --
but that doesn't stop us from spouting off enough home remedies to make
the sufferer truly sick.
I'd barely started coughing a couple days ago when
friends started insisting I drink tea laced with honey, suck zinc, rub
Vicks on my feet and wear garlic around my neck.
Or maybe that was to ward off vampires.
We have doctors, but they are unnecessary in the face of
a little mountain magic that the sister of an uncle's neighbor of a
cousin twice removed swears he was paid off by pharmaceutical companies
to keep secret because it would put them out of business.
It's like that relative we all have who knows a shortcut
to everywhere.
The other day, I said to my brother-in-law, ''Hey, hold
for 30 seconds. I need to run to my mailbox.''
''Thirty seconds!'' he yelled. ''That's ridiculous. I
know a shortcut to your mailbox that will take only 20 seconds. Fewer
traffic lights and no speed traps.''
It took me 10 minutes to get my mail by the time I
finished arguing that there were no lights or traps in my front yard.
I once made the mistake of telling him about an
eight-hour trip I planned. He insisted he knew a better way to my
destination -- a place he'd never been, by the way -- that took only six
hours. Not only did the trip drag on for nine hours, but I got carsick
because he sent me through a bunch of mountains.
That's the way it is with colds. It's your cold, but
everyone else claims it so they can fix it -- and add a half dozen
symptoms to your suffering.
I have one friend who wants to rush over a gallon of
chicken noodle soup any time she hears me clear my throat. A co-worker
wants to keep halved onions lying about the room. One buddy got
absolutely annoying with the number of times he worked the word ''zinc''
into the conversation when someone sniffled. He no longer uses zinc
himself, by the way, having moved on to chicken feathers dipped in soy
sauce. Or something like that.
Someone else insisted that I slather the bottoms of my
feet with VapoRub even though the congestion was a considerable distance
north of my big toe.
It's made going to the store confusing. The other night,
I stood stymied in front of the cough drop display for 45 minutes:
''Let's see, those have honey. Terry said honey is the only thing to
use. Those have echinacea. Daryl swears by echinacea. Those have ...''
But fear not for I have come across the cure! Dark
chocolate!
According to Wikipedia, the Internet encyclopedia of all
knowledge written by anyone who cares to contribute: ''Recent studies
have found that theobromine, a compound found in cacao, is more
effective as a cough suppressant than prescription codeine. This
compound suppresses the 'itch' signal from the nerve in the back of the
throat that causes the cough reflex.'' And dark chocolate has up to 10
times more cacao than milk chocolate.
Is there nothing that chocolate can't do?
Actually, I have no idea if it works. But anytime
another friend offers another miracle cure, I just pop another dark
chocolate Hershey's Kiss in mouth and smile. I'm still sniffling, but I
sure feel better.
www.tribune-chronicle.com
© Copyright
by author, used with permission by Humor Press. No unauthorized reproduction or redistribution is allowed.
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New
Years Revolt-lutions
By Laurie Fabrizio, Minnesota
I hadn’t even barely swallowed my last Christmas cookie
or recovered from my New Year’s hangover and they appeared like
Montezuma’s revenge. Thin, leering spokespeople from Waist Watchers,
Seattle Glutton, LA Flab Loss and No Pain No Gain Systems emerged from
out of now here like a pimple on senior picture day. They invaded my
television, radio, and now they have infested my computer.
Who told them I wanted to lose weight and what are they
insinuating? Maybe I like my double chin or have an emotional connection
with my fat clothes from 1985and the muumuu I bought in Hawaii when I
got married.
I’m already in shape…I can walk to the refrigerator
without getting winded, hoist myself off the couch without a crane and
only drive to the mail box on really cold days. I think I ate a salad
just last week…that was healthy. I limit snacking to stressful times,
like watching Grey’s Anatomy, Desperate Housewives or American Idol.
Want to see how in shape I am? Wrestle me for the chips or Hershey
Kisses if I have PMS, and it could cause you bodily harm.
Besides, I don’t want to look like the Olsen twins; I
prefer to be like Oprah and yoyo diet my way through life. I’m
horizontally challenged and proud of it.
Normally I can live with these annoying advertisements,
but this year they crossed the line. The mother of all infractions…they
attacked my email and didn’t have the common courtesy to get caught in
my spam blocker. It’s bad enough that I survived the "You’ve got mail"
era, but now I am expected not to be offended by "Are your clothes too
tight?"
Yes, my bandwidth exceeds the current limits and the
Internetpol is badgering me. Alright, I accidentally broke my ergonomic
chair last week. It was time for a new one anyway. What are they…the
scale police? I thought I threw that darn thing out with my Thigh
Master.
In order to purge my system of this nasty intrusion, I
have come up with a new solution. My New Years revolt-lution is to have
"laptop suction." I am going to link my naval up to my internet
connection. I will then upload all of my excess body fat to the skinny
person in cyber space who sent me the email. They want me to lose the
weight in six weeks, great; I’ll send it to them in an email. How’s that
for instant gratification?
In the mean time, here are my other revolt-lutions:
1.) I promise not use my treadmill to hang my daughter’s
art work.
2.) I will remove the dumbbells from under my bed, so I
stop stubbing my toes.
3.) I will toast obnoxious weight-loss ads with a milk
shake.
4.) I will eat only chocolate based sweets, because
chocolate is good for your heart.
5.) I will get up every morning and be more creative
about my excuses not to exercise…my exercise clothes may be hazardous to
your health. I might burst a seam and hurt you.
6.) I will cook healthy meals for my family as long as
it includes potatoes or pasta.
7.) I will stop consumption of alcoholic beverages as
soon as I finish this bottle of wine.
8.) I will encourage my family and friends to become
healthy with me…as soon as they stop laughing. Okay…I tried this last
year and the year before…
9.) I’ll stop trying to run over thin fit people and
will offer them a Krispy Kreme donut as a peace offering.
10.) I will continue to add black to my wardrobe because
it always makes Morticia Adams and Ozzy Osborne look thin.
That being said, I plan to make my goals this year.
Granted, my alter ego is a thin person clawing to get out, but I can
usually stifle her with an apple pie or an order of fries. If she
becomes too annoying…she may become my test case for laptop suction.
www.fabrizios.com/laurie
© Copyright
by author, used with permission by Humor Press. No unauthorized reproduction or redistribution is allowed.
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Got
To Get You Into My Life
By Jennifer Graham, Ohio
Back in my college days, I dated an optometry student for a short
period. I don't remember a whole lot about him, other than he loved to
interpret Beatle songs and check my eyes.
That's all we ever did.
I would meet him at the Optometry School and we would escape to an
examination room, where he would elevate me in his magic chair and ask
me things like, "What is a yellow submarine?"
Then he would lean in, pretending to check my cornea, blowing his cover
with a sweet kiss.
I'm not even sure why we stopped dating. Perhaps we ran out of Beatle
songs to digest, or maybe we just didn't see eye to eye.
Twenty five years later, I remain committed to regularly scheduled eye
exams.
My latest optometrist is all business, but there's still a small part of
me that wants to lean in for a wet one during an examination.
I try to dismiss the thought as soon as it occurs, and direct all
energies to observing the tip of his ear while he checks out my eyes.
He has perfect ears, I might add, with just a touch of soft downy
covering. There's also something in the way he moves...
For two years running, the man has made a declaration of "excellent
optical health, but you might want to consider a light bifocal."
A light bifocal --sure, fella.
I convinced him (and myself) that such a beast was not necessary quite
yet.
Yes, I catch myself backing off at times to read the small print, but
I'm not ready to incorporate into my wardrobe eyewear that hangs off a
beaded chain. That'll be the day...
It wasn't two weeks after my last appointment with Dr. Downy Ears that
everything became a blur- a kind of curse from the gods, no doubt, for
my exercise in vanity. We were vacationing in Charlestown, S.C.,
watching some B movie, when an announcement slid across the screen:
Food alert!
"My gosh, kids, there's a food alert!" (Do we have to leave?)
Lady madonna, baby at your breast- wonder how you manage to feed the
rest..."
"Mom, it says 'FLOOD alert.'"
Oh, well, no need to panic then. Carry on.
Catching up with the news online, I see that Burger King's earrings are
at an all time low.
I thought, "When did Burger King get into jewelry?" I pictured tiny
cheeseburgers dangling on Eurowire, lettuce leaves brushing the
shoulder, elongated Whoppers whisking in the wind.
A closer look revealed the operative word: 'earnings.' Oops.
Recently, I sturggled through a short novel about a woman named Bec who
works as a caregiver for a woman afflicted with Lou Gehrig's disease. My
eyes transformed about every third "Bec" into "Bee," and I was so
confused that I labored to grasp the story.
I kept thinking, "Who in the Sam Hill is Bee, and how is she related to
Bec?" I eventually gave up and just added the character to the plot: Bee
is Bec's evil twin.
Darn good story.
What can I say? It seems that my perspective of the world is becoming a
bit skewed.
I am considering a visit to my eye doctor for the second time this year.
Help, I need somebody- help, not just anybody...
© Copyright
by author, used with permission by Humor Press. No unauthorized reproduction or redistribution is allowed.
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Resolving
Mediocrity
By
Mary McCarthy,
Maryland
New Year’s
Resolutions are awful. They basically set you up for failure. I remember
my parents ‘giving up smoking’ every January 1. After about three days,
the six of us kids would literally be begging to walk down to the corner
store to buy their nicotine-starved cranky selves some cigarettes (we
could do that in those days).
I haven’t noticed myself losing twenty pounds any other January in the
last decade or two, so no point in making that a resolution. I really
should pick something environmental- like, I recycle everything, but my
environmental dirty secret is paper towels. I am all about saving Mother
Earth until someone tells me I can’t clean my counters with paper
towels. Then, I’d pretty much chop down the last rainforest tree myself
to get more. Sad. So, maybe this year I will try to find like recycled
paper towels that will make me feel less guilty.
I think we should all resolve to stop putting so much pressure on
ourselves and to accept just being good enough. In that spirit, I offer
the following list of
10 New Year’s Resolutions for Being Good Enough:
1. I resolve to only worry about cleaning the kitchen floor when it is
so sticky that my shoes come off when I try to walk across it.
2. I resolve to eat extra dessert only when it something really, really
good.
3. I resolve to not gossip about people unless it is so steamy and so
juicy that it absolutely cannot be avoided.
4. I resolve to exercise, as long as hauling laundry up and down three
flights of stairs counts as exercise.
5. I resolve to have the children be clean enough so that it is evident
they have been bathed sometime recently. Nails trimmed, teeth brushed,
and faces unsticky as often as reasonably possible.
6. I resolve to have no more than 1 foot of ‘stuff’ on the floor of my
car, not including McDonalds bags that can be crunched down to less than
one foot.
7. I resolve to send thank you notes, but only for gifts with a value
exceeding $5000.
8. I resolve to water the garden and plants so that 75% have a fighting
chance for survival. In fact, I will practice Darwinian Gardening:
Survival of the Fittest plants and flowers.
9. I resolve to supply my family with healthy meals, providing ketchup,
French fries and sweet potato chips can be counted as vegetables and
fruit snacks with a reasonable percentage of something healthy-sounding
can be considered fruits.
10. I resolve to learn to appreciate the dust bunnies that gather in the
corners of the rooms in my house, as they can be considered family pets
after a certain amount of time.
So Happy New Year everyone! Let’s celebrate our mediocrity together
proudly!
www.marytmccarthy.com
© Copyright
by author, used with permission by Humor Press. No unauthorized reproduction or redistribution is allowed.
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Farewell
Funky Chicken
By Kathleen Norton, New York
Baby Boomers grew up with one mission: We would NEVER dance like our old
fogey parents.
This explains the Frug and the Boogaloo.
Turns out the joke’s on us. Ballroom dancing is back from the grave like
the B-movie zombies who refuse to die.
Every week on TV, couples in sizzling outfits do spicy versions of the
rumba and foxtrot.
And here’s the rub: Lots of Boomers like me can’t turn away. “Dancing
with the Stars’’ is like a porn version of the Lawrence Welk Show we
knew as kids.
I couldn't even take my eyes off TV sleaze king Jerry Springer last
season when he danced his fumbling best. “Nice samba,'' I thought. "He’s
got class.’’
Jerry Springer?? Class??
What’s happened to the Boomers? Our principals? Our pledge?
“I (fill in your Boomer name) will be True to the Funky Chicken until
the end.’’
We were the generation that did the Pony and the Mashed Potato. Partners
not required; go-go boots preferred.
Later on, we came down with raging Saturday Night Fever. And we get a
twinge in our hip today because we slammed together doing the Bump all
those years ago.
But we’ve become a generation of two-stepping traitors.
We’re watching that “old fogey’’ dancing on TV and -- horror of all
horrors -- some of us are even doing it.
This is what happens when you have no plan.
Boomers didn’t consider how ridiculous we’d look trying to do the Jerk
in middle age.
It is not a pretty sight.
“Get help! Aunt Kathy is having a stroke!’’
“Nah. She’s just dancing.’’
It's how a Boomer like me turns to what I once called the Dark Side of
Dance.
My tale is like so many others.
It began when our oldest child was getting married. She and her groom
had learned a fancy wedding waltz.
My husband and I had two options:
A. Do the Batman at the wedding and look like idiots.
B. Do anything to avoid “A.’’
“Anything’’ turned out to be ballroom dancing lessons at the local
junior high gym.
The students were all ages, but the ones having the most trouble were
Boomers like us.
My husband’s John Travolta moves were hard to shake. You do NOT thrust
your Disco finger into the air during a waltz.
I kept trying to lead. Blame that on Women’s Lib.
Darn you, Gloria Steinem!
After a while, we got the hang of it. We managed a twirl or two, and
even showed off our tango at the wedding.
The best part: Nobody called an ambulance.
This winter, we are going to learn Swing. There is no going back now.
The Funky Chicken is dead to us. Forever.
http://www.poughkeepsiejournal.com/boomergal
© Copyright
by author, used with permission by Humor Press. No unauthorized reproduction or redistribution is allowed.
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How
To Alienate Your Grandchildren In One Easy Lesson
By Judi Veoukas, Illinois
Today I’m babysitting my granddaughters, but conjugating
verbs in my head at the same time. I’m not conjugating just for the hell
of it. Today is the last day of winter break and tomorrow I go back to
tutoring English at the local community college. I am near comatose when
Katie, the 8-year-old, interrupts me. "'High School Musical' is over.
What should we do now?"
"Play school?" I say, and hope this will get me nearer
to the reality I face the next morning.
Katie and her sister, Emma, 6, run into the kitchen and
shove their cats off the table. "We’re ready," they shout, as two
startled felines each loses one of his nine lives.
Oh lord, now I have to teach the girls something and all
I can think of — and who the heck knows why? — is parallel construction.
In my tutor voice I say, "We’ll do the simplest form of parallel
construction. Do you know what that is?"
"I do, I do," Katie says, her hand shooting into the
air. "I did real good on them in gymnastics."
"Really well," I say. And then I stop, think, and ask:
"Did really well on WHAT?"
"The parallel bars, silly Grandma," she giggles.
"Me too, me too," Emma shouts. "I did real good on the
peril bars too."
"No, this is about parallel construction. You use it in
writing."
"Daddy got a ticket for that," Emma says.
I am dumfounded. "He got a ticket for WHAT?" I ask.
"He was in a ‘struction zone,’ and he drove too fast."
OK. Somehow they know the meanings of "parallel" and
"construction" separately, but the concept of both, as they are used in
writing, is lost to them That they are 6 and 8 might have a lot to do
with it, but I’m not giving up.
"I think I’ll write some sentences for you," I tell
them. One cat is back atop the table, hissing at me. The girls don’t
bother to chase the cat off, but instead bolt for the family room where
they dump their Barbie paraphernalia all over the floor. Emma takes a
Barbie’s head off its body. I look at the cat on the table and ask if he
wants to learn about parallel construction. He spits out a hair ball. I
join the girls in Barbie Land.
"OK, ladies," I say, as I pick up Emma’s blackboard.
"This is an example of parallel construction. ‘Barbie and Ken waltzed,
fox trotted, and tangoed at the ball.’"
"Grandma!" Katie says, "Don’t you know that Barbie and
Ken broke up!"
"No," I say meekly. This breakup has come as a shock to
me, but I recoil. "I’m going to write another sentence using parallel
construction." (Katie makes a gagging motion, but I pretend not to
notice.) I write, "Barbie and Ken broke up, but Barbie kept the house."
"It was Barbie’s house anyway," Katie says.
"That’s not the point. The word ‘broke’ and the word
‘kept’ are both in the past tense so that makes the sentence connect
better."
Four confused eyes stare at me. Even the eyes on the
unattached Barbie’s head look baffled.
"Well," I tell them, "you don’t want to say, ‘Barbie and
Ken have broken up, but she will be keeping the house’ because that
doesn’t connect the ideas as efficiently. ‘Have broken up’ is an example
of past perfect tense and ‘will be keeping’ is in future progressive
tense." Actually, I’m not quite sure my information is correct, but my
audience is naive.
The girls cease eye contact with me, head toward the TV,
and dive-bomb into their DVD and videotape collection. They pull out a
spider-web covered box containing a Barney tape and soon I hear, "I love
you; you love me" emanating from the purple dinosaur of their infancy.
I stop myself from pointing out that Barney is using
parallel construction, but promise them that if they turn Barney off
that Grandma will stop playing school with them. Instead I pop 'High
School Musical' back into the DVD player. "You sit and watch," I tell
them, "while Grandma sits and sleeps."
"You used peril ‘struction!" Emma shouts!
I can now go back to work knowing I have taught and they
have learned.
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