October 19, 2005

My Childhood Horror

Bradley was a brat.

When I was 8 years old, his sister Robin was my best friend. We walked to school together, and since Bradley was only a year younger, he walked with us, tormenting us every step of the way. He ran in circles around us. He dangled any grubby thing he could pick up off the street in front of us (and that child would pick up ANYTHING.) He made up idiotic little singsong rhymes to annoy us.

He was the first (sadly of many) to call me “Farty Marti,” despite my lack of excess gas at that tender age.

He was a nuisance extraordinaire.

Next door to Robin and Bradley the Brat (which even I admit doesn’t have the ring of Farty Marti) was a vacant house. It had been vacant as long as anyone could remember. The weeds grew high and some of the windows were broken.

Naturally, we assumed it was haunted. Stories grew of eerie lights and strange noises. It scared the bejesus out of me. No one dared go trick or treat there, as it would certainly lead to some gruesome demise.

A few days before Halloween, I ran over to Robin’s house excitedly to show her my new gypsy costume. Knocking on her front door, I allowed myself one quick, nervous glance at the haunted house. I saw. . .something. . . move inside, and became paralyzed with fear. I wanted to run, but my brain was no longer connecting with my legs, and I experienced the horror of being unable to move.

Bradley answered the door as I stood there in shock, trying to force my muscles to function. I remained immobilized. Bradley glared at me and snarled, “Whaddaya want?”

I didn’t answer. I couldn’t, so intense was the grip of paralysis.

Never one to miss an opportunity to terrorize, Bradley unzipped his shorts and peed on me.

That’s right, he let loose with a stream of urine that saturated my beautiful new costume.

Nothing will bring you out of fear paralysis like being peed on.

I let out a blood-curdling scream.

Bradley’s mother appeared just as Bradley was laughing hideously, zipping his pants up.

She took in the scene and grabbed Bradley by his ear, dragging him inside. I started running home, crying, but could hear the slap of a paddle on Bradley’s behind, and paused.

I stopped sniffling and turned around, and felt the sweet rush of retribution wash over me as I heard him crying louder with each “thwack!”

Then, I kid you not, I heard a faint chuckle come from the haunted house.

I ran home faster than I’d ever run in my life, and to this day, I think that something in that house was amused by it all.

Categories: Humor

October 17, 2005

COSTUME COMEDY

It was Halloween time and an athletic guy was invited to a costume party.

He goes to a costume specialty shop, and asks a young salesgirl; “I am going to be Adam, nude with only a fig leaf to cover down below. Can you help?”

The salesgirl shows him a fig leaf for the occasion. He winks at the girl and says, “Not big enough for what I have, ma’am!”

She brings out a bigger one. He keeps shaking his head negatively and says, “Well, not big enough for what God has given me. You understand?”

She brings out a huge fig leaf; the largest possible made for the purpose.

He throws his hands on the counter, and says, “Still not big enough. I have a reputation at stake here. You know what I mean?”

Impressed, the salesgirl says , “Then, Mr. Hercules, why don’t you just attach the leaf, throw it over your shoulder and go as a gasoline pump?”

Categories: Jokes

October 14, 2005

Odd Fog

I love autumn.

I love the cooler weather. I love the leaves changing color.

I love October and Halloween (like duh, I’m a pumpkin farmer LOL)

I love how early in the morning there is a low fog hanging close to the ground, and steamy haze rising from all of the ponds.

When I took Daughter to school this morning, it was beautiful beyond compare. The entire eastern sky was a rosy glow. Light shafts from the rising sun were peeking between the branches.

Driving past fields and meadows bathed in a golden glow, we saw cows and horses standing knee-deep in the slowly undulating mist, lending them a mystical quality.

After dropping her off, I was driving home at a leisurely pace, a goofy smile plastered on my face because it was all so damn pretty, and in the distance, through the vapor, I saw a figure walking on the side of the road.

I frowned. There was something. . .odd. As I approached the figure I realized what was odd about the scene.

It was a clown.

A clown in full regalia - rainbow-colored fuzzy wig, red nose, face makeup and polka-dot baggy jumpsuit. Not sure about the big shoes, the clown’s feet were obscured by the fog.

Now here’s a little secret. . .I don’t like clowns. They creep me out. Especially a clown wandering down a deserted country road in the fog.

There are few pedestrians out here, and this is the first clown I have ever seen strolling alongside the cow pastures. It struck me as a tad odd.

I didn’t see a car pulled off the side of the road, so thinking that the clown was walking for gas or assistance seemed unlikely. Curiosity drove me to turn around and go back.

No clown. Nothing but the cows, the horses and the fog.

I turned back around and headed slowly home, occasionally glancing in the rearview mirror. . . just in case.

It was just so bizarre I had to share - LOL!

Categories: Humor

October 11, 2005

Tag

I have been “tagged”, and am henceforth bound by the Computer-users Loosely Interpreted Questionable Ethics (Clique) Code to follow suit and “play along”. ~snicker~

The instructions were given to me by my blog-buddy and quite amusing fellow, The Village Idiot, who scribes his words of wisdom over at Kicked Puppies.

Desperate for love and attention, I follow the Code of the Clique - here’s what I have to do:

THE RULES
1. Go into your archive.
2. Find your 23rd post.
3. Find the fifth sentence (or closest to).
4. Post the text of the sentence in your blog along with these instructions.
5. Tag five other people to do the same.

My 23rd post was “Leaning Tower of Puzza” posted August 9, 2005.
(Which shows what a lazy blogger I am - LOL)

The fifth sentence is:

When the pumpkin patch is open, I have a series of small billboards, placed every fifty feet or so along the road in front of the farm, in the manner of the old Burma Shave shaving cream signage.

I am tagging (with apologies and gratitude - LOL)

* A California Girl In Kansas
* Flying Piggies
* DDDragon
* Hillbilly Princess
* Sugar Mommy

Have fun kids!

No tag-backs allowed LOL

Categories: Memes

October 7, 2005

Homecoming - and Going

Another example of Just Say No to Nagging.

High School Homecoming was approaching. I asked Darling Daughter if she was planning on attending any of the events.

This was met with the, “are you insane?” look. She informed me that she is not into:
*Sports
*Pep
*Parades
*Spirit
*Preppies
OR
*Dances

Of course I didn’t listen. I nagged. I cajoled. I bribed.

Bribery worked.

So off we went to find a dress, a beautiful dress, fit for a princess. With dress and all accoutrements in hand, I was pleased (and out a trip to the anime’ store LOL)

Saturday morning I forced, err…suggested the kids accompany me, to town to watch the parade. I love a parade. Grudgingly, the joined me.

Of course Middle Son HAD to wear the whole Gothy regalia. This is a small town, and he was the Lone Goth. We took a couple of lawn chairs, and Daughter and I planted ourselves along the side of the road, while he stood, looking…”brooding” LOL He is a 2004 graduate, so there were a lot of students who still know him. As the floats went by, I saw students smiling and waving to the crowd, then they would focus on His Darkness, and frown, as they tried to rectify the face they remembered with this Matrix-coat-wearing fellow with blue-black hair. I could tell he was enjoying it, and struggling to maintain his somber, pensive demeanor. It sure made me smile.

Later that evening, it was time for the dance, and Daughter looked so lovely.
(Insert happy mommy sigh.)

Husband drove her down, and returned with a trying-to-hide-it soft look on his face, from seeing his baby girl in formal attire.

Within the hour, the phone rang, and she wanted to come home.

Went down to pick her up from the very decorated, very loud gymnasium. Inside were the very dressed up students and one very unhappy Daughter.

The chaperones released her to me, and when we got back to the car (where we could actually hear one another) she said that none of her friends were there and the music was giving her a headache. She looked miserable.
(Insert sad mommy sigh.)

Oh well.

Will I learn my lesson from this? Maybe……….

Categories: Family, Humor

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