Posted by Jeff on 12/01/2003 11:04:00 PM

Some people say that childbirth is the most painful experience a human can endure. Others claim that passing a kidney stone is even worse.

Obviously, none of these people have ever burned the inside of their noses with a jalapeño pepper.

I should probably explain.

A few weeks ago, I was busy in the kitchen cooking dinner for my wife, which as far as you know is something I do on a regular basis. You could say that I really know my way around the kitchen. You could also say that there’s no way I could eat my body weight in Krispy Kremes. You’d be terribly wrong on both accounts.

The truth is, the minute I open a cookbook, my brain shuts down and I’m left with the mental capacity of a toddler and/or Jessica Simpson. Any recipe that involves more than one pan and five ingredients might as well be written in hieroglyphics. Or, in Jessica Simpson’s case, English.

Let me preface the rest of this story by saying that, while I have about as much competence in the kitchen as Anna Nicole Smith has at a chess match, this is a mistake that could happen to anybody. In doing my usual extensive research for this month’s article, I was appalled to discover that nowhere on a jalapeño pepper is it written that you should wear gloves when chopping them. Clearly, I am a victim here.

We journalists are the last watchdogs of society, and I am here to throw up a cautionary flag about the jalapeño pepper industry. If we allow this corporate giant to continue with such negligent behavior, we are opening the door to anarchy.

Before you know it, we’ll be living in a world without warnings, where some kind of “magic intuition” is supposed to let us know that our carry-out coffee is hot and our hairdryers should not be taken into the bathtub. And to that world I, for one, say, “No thank you!”

Sure, my wife might have offered up a few ambiguous warnings. “Honey, you should wear gloves when you’re chopping the peppers.” “Honey, you really should put on some gloves.” “Honey, you’re an idiot.”

But I made the mistake of assuming that my wife’s need to wear gloves while chopping peppers was like, say, her need to wad together an entire roll of paper towels in order to squash a spider. Because I’m so tough, I figured that the “terrible burning sensation” she was babbling about wasn’t going to be a big deal. I was wrong.

After a few minutes of dicing and slicing, I started experiencing a pain that I can only compare to shaving your entire body with a rusty straight razor and sitting down in a tub of rubbing alcohol. Not that I would know what that feels like.

I started shaking my fingers around in the air, knocking a few dishes onto the floor in the process. My eyes were tearing up a little bit, but in a totally manly way, like when your team loses the Super Bowl. The tearing up, of course, led to sniffling, and the sniffling led to me grabbing a tissue and blowing my nose, and blowing my nose led to me shoving a burning jalapeño finger right up each nostril.

My entire world was consumed by flames. If you’ve ever been walking near a fireplace and tripped and accidentally speared yourself in the nostril with a red-hot poker, then you have at least a slight idea of the pain I was experiencing. I ran to the sink and tried to invert my head under the faucet and snort water up my nose. It didn’t really help at all to dull the burning sensation, but it did almost make me drown, thereby distracting me for at least a moment from the hideous pain in my nostrils.

Then the flames came back even worse than before. “Fire!” I yelled, running in circles and fanning my nose. “Fire! I need a hospital! Get me a doctor! Fire! Call an ambulance!”

Meanwhile, my wife had entered the room to see what the commotion was. It was a relief to me just knowing that she was there for me during my time of need and would call the paramedics just as soon as she was able to stop laughing and pick herself up off the floor.

“You burnt it? Your nose? The peppers?” my wife howled, barely able to speak. “Did you? Your nose? With peppers? You did?” It wasn’t the consolation I was looking for.

Fortunately, my little Jack Russel terrier, Henry, was there to comfort me, by which I mean pee on the floor. Then he jumped up on me and tried to chew the wedding band off my finger. The one with jalapeño peppers all over it.

All of the hair on my dog’s back stood straight up. He started running around the room, grinding his face into the floor and shrieking like a piglet.

The good news is that my dog was eventually able to stop the burning in his mouth. The bad news is that he did it by climbing into the cat’s litterbox and helping himself to a deliciously soothing piece of doody. I decided to try other methods.

Methods that did not work: cramming ice chips into my nostrils; putting Aloe Vera up my nose; shooting water up my nose with a turkey baster.

Methods that did work: none. The fire burned on, constantly perpetuating itself in the coal mines of my nostrils until eventually, two days later, by the mercy of God, it slowly petered out. Sure, maybe I still haven’t recovered all of the feeling in my nostrils, and maybe I lost my sense of smell for half a month, but I survived it like a man.

Now, the second time I burned my nose with jalapeño peppers ...

Posted by Jeff on 11/01/2003 11:03:00 PM
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Oh, the excitement of Thanksgiving when you’re a child!

I can remember waking early in the morning, creeping down the stairs, and gathering round the Thanksgiving tree with my family to hear my father recite the Thanksgiving story.

This year, I thought it’d be a nice display of unity for all of us to hear the Thanksgiving story together. Feel free to recite the story along with me.

Now then, put on your pilgrim bonnet, and let’s begin.

Four score and seven years ago, an explorer named Christopher Columbus was commissioned by the queen of Spain to set sail on a great adventure in search of undiscovered lands. Under Columbus’ command were five great ships, including the Titanic, the Pinta, the Niña, the Piña Colada, and the Queen Amidala.

Columbus gathered up all of the animals two by two and loaded them into the boat, checking his list for who was naughty and nice. After dumping all of the tea overboard, the conquistadors strapped on their safety harnesses (“Safety first!” Columbus always said) and launched their voyage.

For 40 days and 40 nights, the explorers sailed the dangerous seas, suffering hardships like hunger, exhaustion, and terrible cell-phone reception.

Tragedy first struck the intrepid adventurers when, a week into the voyage, the captain of the Titanic mistook a bathing Anna Nicole Smith for an uncharted island and steered the vessel right into her. The ship, of course, sank.

“Forsooth!” cried Columbus. “There goes our precious cargo. The unicorns, the gryphons, the chimeras! The trolls, the cyclopses, the decent Creed album! The goblins, the minotaurs, the one guy in history who could actually justify driving a Hummer! Gone forever!”

Columbus was overcome with sorrow. His eyes welled up with tears, his eyebrows started twitching, and the corners of his mouth started to quiver in an unsettling manner.

“I think it’s time for another Botox treatment, sir,” said the first mate.

“Ah, yes, you’re right!” Columbus said, scurrying below deck for his appointment.

And it came to pass that, a few weeks later, Columbus spotted an island off to the east.

“Forsooth!” cried Columbus. “I spy an island to the east! Form a search party to explore it.”

“Aye, captain,” said the first mate. “I’ll send out the skipper and his little buddy, and maybe the millionaire and his wife.”

“What about the movie star?”

“Yes, let’s send her, too, as well as the professor and Mary Ann. How long of a journey should they prepare for?”

“Tell them to pack enough for a three-hour tour.”

“A three-hour tour?”

“A three-hour tour.”

The search party was launched on a tiny ship called the Minnow, but just minutes after the ship set sail, ominous clouds filled the sky.

“The weather is starting to get rough!” cried the first mate. “The tiny ship is being tossed!”

“If not for the courage of the fearless crew,” yelled Columbus, “the Minnow would be lost!”

“The Minnow would be lost!” echoed the first mate.

That was the last Columbus and crew saw of the search party. The seven stranded castaways were marooned on the island, not to be rescued until the 1978 reunion special, and then again in 1981, although to a smaller viewing audience.

And it came to pass that, a few weeks later, Columbus spotted land off to the west.

“Forsooth!” cried Columbus. “I spy new land to the west! Let it be called ‘France,’ and let the men be called ‘French,’ and let them develop their own style of bread, fries, and kissing!”

“Um, sir? There’s already a country called France,” said the first mate.

“Oh, right. ... How about ‘America’? Is that taken?”

“Not that I know of.”

“Then ‘America’ it is!”

And there was much laughter and rejoicing.

And it came to pass that Columbus and his entourage were visited by a tribe of natives bearing gifts of turkey, yams, canned cranberry sauce, freedom fries, gold, frankincense, and 500 free weekend minutes coast to coast. Touched by the kind gesture, the explorers decided to kill all of the natives and take the free loot.

“I declare,” bellowed Columbus, “that this day shall henceforth be referred to as Thanksgiving. Let families for generations to come gather together and celebrate our victory by eating three times their body weight in mashed potatoes and making awkward small-talk with distant cousins. Afterwards, let the men fall asleep while watching football and drinking beer while the women stand around in the kitchen and discuss the men’s sexual shortcomings and laugh a lot.”

So it was that the Thanksgiving holiday was invented.

It was during his journey home when Columbus would meet his tragic end, as is so vividly depicted in the famous song, “Columbus Eats Too Many Freedom Fries and Suffers a Heart Attack at Sea and Falls Overboard.” And that, of course, is where we get the famous mnemonic device: “Back in 1844, Columbus sank to the ocean floor.”

And there you have it – the beautiful Thanksgiving story. I think it’s a tale we all need to hear from time to time. And I hate to get on my soapbox here, but I really believe that if Americans today spent a little less time watching reality television and a little more time reflecting on the Thanksgiving holiday, it wouldn’t take long for them to realize that the letters can be rearranged to spell both “this holy vain kid gang” and “Hah! Not livid gay kings!”

Happy Thanksgiving!

Posted by Jeff on 10/01/2003 11:02:00 PM

Trick-or-treating is an entirely different type of event when you live in the city.

In our first year of marriage, my wife and I lived in a small apartment in a part of the city we affectionately refer to as “The Worst Place on Earth.”

We’d drift off to sleep each night to a sweet lullaby of gunshots, car alarms, and what I can only assume was the most excitable pack of cats in history congregating outside our bedroom window to satiate their perverse feline fantasies.

(For those who haven’t ever witnessed the hellish shrieking of mating cats, imagine the sound your cat makes when you step on its tail; then, imagine what it would sound like if, instead of stepping on your cat’s tail, you accidentally set it on fire with a blowtorch at the exact moment your cat stuck its whiskers into an electrical socket.)

Break-ins, car bombs, assaults – our neighborhood was a perpetual crime scene. Whereas other neighborhoods had strands of twinkling Christmas lights strewn across the porch railings, we had delightful strips of police tape strung gaily from tree to tree. Whereas other neighborhoods had streets full of children pedaling merrily around on their bicycles, we had sidewalks full of friendly cops coasting by on their friendly police bikes to give me a friendly parking ticket while a crack deal went down across the friendly street.

Whereas other neighborhoods had little to no car bombs, we had one detonate directly outside our kitchen window. Our cats were constipated for two weeks after that.

By the time our first Halloween came around, we felt conflicted between the excitement of seeing the cute neighborhood kids dressed up like ghosts and goblins and the justifiable fear that they might stab us.

We strongly considered the possibility of turning off the lights and hiding in the dark until the trick-or-treat terror passed. What changed our minds was the fact that, while getting mugged by a 10-year-old girl in a Pokemon suit would certainly be humiliating, it would be much less awful than, say, having our house set on fire because we didn’t give out any candy.

We ran down to the quickie mart and purchased enough candy to feed an entire herd of Anna Nicole Smiths. As the dinner hour ended, we took up our positions by the front door and waited for the children to arrive.

Finally, the doorbell rang. We opened the door, and there stood approximately every child born since 1990 dressed up as either a princess or Elmo. Their pupils were already dilated from consuming enough sugar to kill a moose. Their mouths were smeared with chocolate, their heads wobbling on their little necks like robots about to short-circuit. They needed more candy to maintain their sugar-high, and they were going to get it from us by any means necessary.

I tossed candy out into the crowd as fast as I could, swatting the most aggressive children away with a broom when they got too close.

“Oh, look,” I said, “A pretty little princess!”

“Two pieces of candy per person! Don’t be greedy!”

“Put my cat down.”

“No, you can’t have extra candy for your ‘cousin.’ He can come get it himself.”

“Oh, look! A pretty little princess!”

“Put my cat down.”

“No, you can’t have my wallet. Is that a real knife?”

“Did you just bite me?”

“Oh, look! A pretty little princess!”

“That’s funny. I had a watch just like that stolen from my car last week ...”

“Put my cat down.”

“Oh, look! A pretty little princess ...”

As the night wore on, the children ringing my doorbell became older and older. Eventually, I’d open the door to some smirking 15-year-old in jeans and a T-shirt, a bad teen mustache, and a greasy paper bag full of candy.

“And who are you dressed as?” I asked indignantly.

“Your momma,” he replied.

“That kind of attitude won’t get you anywhere, mister,” I said sternly. “Don’t you think you could have at least pretended to have a costume?”

“What’s your costume, dude?” he yelled, stepping towards me. “Oh, wait. I know: It’s a balding fat guy who’s about to get his ass kicked.”

“Good point,” I said, dropping a fistful of candy into his paper bag and running back inside.

And then it happened: we ran out of candy. We darted about the kitchen in a frenzy looking for items to hand out. Pickles? Packets of soy sauce? Sticks of butter? I broke out in a cold sweat as I realized that we had no option but to turn off the lights, hide behind the couch, and pray for daylight.

It only took about five minutes for the assault to begin. “Splat!” went the egg on our window. “Splat, splat!” went the eggs on our front door. “Splat, reeearrrr!” went the egg on our cat, who I had accidentally locked outside.

Eventually, the attack died down. I went outside to survey the damage. Our entire building was oozing like an enormous brick-and-mortar omelette. I turned to the street, shaking my fist in the air and calling out into the dark night.

“I’ll get you kids,” I yelled, “if it’s the last thing I ...”

“Splat!”

Posted by Jeff on 9/01/2003 11:01:00 PM

I have child-bearing hips. Its a problem that no diet in the world can fix.

I cant prove it, but Im pretty certain that when they sent my body through the Heavenly Assembly Factory in the sky, the angel who pieced me together accidentally gave me girl hips.

Maybe my angel was suffering from a distracting migraine, or worrying about a suspicious mole on his shoulder. For all I know, it wasnt my angels fault at all that I ended up with the curves of Delta Burke.

But the damage is done. No matter how fit or fat I may be, it will always look like I just shoplifted a hula hoop. And no matter what my mom says, having bigger hips than your date is not OK with women.

But my freaky hips are just one of many factors contributing to my larger problem. Namely, I am shaped like Winnie the Pooh, to the extent that it was an actual nickname of mine in middle school.

That's why I've started this fantastic "nutritional approach" called the Atkins diet. It's both simple and effective. Here's how it works:

Walk into your kitchen and open the refrigerator. Look around inside. See all that food? You can't eat it.

Im exaggerating, of course. Its only the food you like that you cant eat.

No pasta, no pizza, no fruit, no desserts, no sugars, no beer, no rice, no bread. So now Im that jackass standing at the fast food counter trying to order a hamburger without a bun. The girl behind the counter is looking at me with an open mouth like I just tried to order a fried poodle on a stick.

Its been a very difficult diet so far, although a very successful one, provided that the goal is to make me so grumpy and miserable that all I can do is lie on the couch, write spiteful editorial columns, and feed pieces of my $4 Atkins-approved protein bars to my dog.

I think that life would be considerably easier if God would just give us a phone call every now and then, just a quick chat to clear up some of those nagging questions we all have in life, like, Why am I here? and What should I do with my life? and Will I always be shaped like a Disney character?

After particularly demanding days at the office, I fantasize about coming home to find my answering machine blinking with some Heavenly voicemail.

Hi Jeff,

Its me, God. Sorry I missed you. Hows it going?

I heard that youve been a little confused about the meaning of life, so I thought Id give you a call. I did a little research on your life. Its kind of a funny story, actually. Um, see, it seems that there was a little switcheroo up here in Heaven, and it looks like we accidentally gave your life to some guy named Ben Affleck. Whoops!

Plus, your real body ended up on Brad Pitt. Sorry about that.

I thought it would only be fair if we compensated you in some way. That explains why youre so incredibly well-endowed. Oh, wait Im sorry, I was looking in the wrong file. It looks like you ended up with the ability to never, ever grow a full beard.

Anyway, about your future I was going to turn you into a rich, famous playboy, but unfortunately it looks like the last celebrity slot was just nabbed by some guy who won 30 Seconds to Fame by lifting a cinder block with his penis.

But the one thing youve got on your side is time. As I take a peek in your file to check your expiration date, let me just reassure you that the average American male lives to see 73, so Im sure youve got plenty of years to go. OK, lets see. It says right here that oh, my.

You know, its really the quality of life that counts, not the quantity. Ahem. Im sure that you have plenty of great moments still to come in your life.

Babies, awards, blah, blah, blah. Lets look in your file here at some of the highlights ... Oh. Oh, boy. Er ...

You know what a good motto is? Carpe diem! Youve really got to live each day to the fullest, like it could be your ... cough, cough ... last. But never you mind.

The good news is that you have a pretty wife and a cute albeit retarded Jack Russel puppy. The two of you shall go forth and multiply (you and the wife, I mean) and raise little athletically challenged children like yourselves. Provided that you survive that long. Lets just say that your love handles dont really fall into the fittest category. Hey, you should try that Atkins diet!

As for a career, I was thinking that you could make a living out of writing funny little editorial columns. We just have to find some sucker who will give up space in his magazine to publish it.

Well, that about covers the basics.

Oh, heres a tip: if you go to your 10-year high school reunion, whatever you do, dont try the crab dip. And at next years Fourth of July party, keep as much distance between you and the grill as possible.

And by the way, the third installment of Lord of the Rings coming out in December: freaking awesome!

Alright, good talk, bud. Ill catch you on the flip side. Literally!

Oh, and sorry about the girl hips.

Posted by Jeff on 8/01/2003 11:00:00 PM

A few weeks ago, a new couple moved into the house next door.

At first glance, it appeared that we were finally going to end up with a relatively normal set of neighbors, by which I mean people who won’t wake us up with loud porno movies at 3 a.m.

No Nazi flags in their windows, no pentagrams on their foreheads, no NRA stickers on their giant SUVs – there was nothing overtly evil, at least. My wife and I didn’t want to get ahead of ourselves, but we couldn’t help but hope that maybe, just maybe, these neighbors wouldn’t be the devil.

Yes, it was looking good. That is, until we were introduced to the new neighbors’ pets. They were those nasty little animals, those smelly and ugly ones with pointy little teeth and beady little eyes. What do you call them again? Oh yeah. Kids.

We watched in horror as they ran around our yard, drooling on their clothes, chasing our cats up the trees, and relieving themselves in our garden. There were hundreds of them. Short ones, tall ones, skinny ones, fat ones, all clumped together in a dark mass of dirty fingernails, skinned knees, and Cheerios breath. And they were multiplying by the minute.

In a matter of days, the children had worked their way into our lives like sand in your swimsuit. Look out your window in the morning – there’s a grubby little kid making a blowfish on the glass. Walk outside to get the newspaper – there’s some kid, vomiting up a nasty albeit colorful pile of Mike & Ikes right onto the sports section. Pour some cereal into your bowl – a kid comes tumbling out of the box, his cheeks stuffed with all of the orange stars, yellow moons, and green clovers.

You can’t even walk out to your car in the morning without seeing some dirty little kid with his finger up his nose peeking out from behind the front tire. Then you blink, and instantly three more children appear where the first one was, all three of them with a finger buried two knuckles deep into their nostril.

Blink – there’s five more, hanging upside down like possums from your exhaust pipe. Blink – there’s a dozen more, square-dancing on your hood.

Blink, blink – now they’re inside the car, giving you the middle finger and pressing their butt cheeks against the glass.

Don’t get me wrong – I’m all for children, provided that they’ve had their shots and are properly leashed. But had I known our neighbors would be so, uh, prolific, I would have invested in some more solid fencing.

The most challenging part of dealing with our neighbors’ several hundred children is the fact that I’m expected to act like a mature adult regardless of the situation. As my monthly columns attest, I have difficulty acting like an adult under normal circumstances, let alone when, say, a pair of snot-nosed 7-year-olds are trying to pee on my dog through the fence.

“Hey, guys” I say, trying my hardest not to pee back on them. “Waddya say you stop trying to pee on my dog? Huh? Wouldn’t that be nice? To not pee on my dog?”

“Arf, arf, arf!” says one of the children, subtly shifting his line of fire closer to my shoe.

"I have a penis!" yells the other, and sticks his tongue out at me.

“Yes, yes, I can see that,” I say. “How about not using it to pee on my dog?”

“Your belly’s fat, but your legs are skinny,” observes the first boy.

“I have a pee-ee-eenis!” yells the second boy.

"Oh yeah? Well, I have two!" I yell back. “Now get out of here before I call the police and they arrest you and break your toys and never let you see your parents again!”

The boys stare at me in disbelief for a moment before running into their house. I take a few seconds to enjoy my triumph before realizing that there’s just no way I could sound cool bragging to my friends that I totally scared the crap out of two 7-year-olds. Then I start thinking about the phone call I’ll be receiving from the police later that night. “You told them you had two what?”

Sure, maybe I was able to solve the problem of those two particular boys trying to pee on my particular dog, but what about the other few hundred kids? Lord only knows what they’ll try to pee on when I’m not looking.

I tried launching a counter-offensive. I hid just inside my door, armed with a secret weapon. I threw the cat outside as collateral damage and waited until the children gathered around it, holding knives and forks in their dirty little fists, their red eyes rolling around in their heads like marbles. That’s when I unleashed the dog. He plowed through the mass, tossing their little bodies in every direction. They scrambled out of the yard, but not before our brave little Jack Russel debriefed at least half a dozen of them. Tiny underoos were scattered across the lawn.

But it was, and remains, a losing battle. Even as I lie in bed at night thinking of ways to take the kids out, I can hear them scampering across my roof like fat squirrels with a sugar buzz. But I look at it this way: at least they’re not old enough to watch porn in the middle of the night.

Posted by Jeff on 7/01/2003 10:59:00 PM
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The other day, as my wife and I were on our way to the mall, we spotted a mangy, little three-legged dog hobbling like a pirate across the parking lot of the Boys Club.

“Oh, look at the little three-legger!” my wife squealed in a voice that I knew meant danger. It was a voice that said, “What we need in our house right now is one more brain-damaged animal.”

I knew the voice well. That sweet, irresistible voice is my wife’s trump card. No matter what we’re arguing about, when the voice comes out, the discussion is as over as Kathy Gifford’s career.

Here’s an example:

My wife: “So, I was thinking, maybe we should sell all of your books and CDs and your car and your birth certificate, and then I can use the money to buy new shoes.”

Me: “I’d rather take a bath in a tub full of fire ants.”

My wife (now using the voice): “Please? I’d really like some new shoes. And by the way, I double-checked my math, and it looks like we’ll need to sell your computer, too. And probably all of your pants.”

Me: “Yes, dear, that sounds like a good idea.” Later that day, my neighbors watch from their windows as I load my car with all of my possessions and head to the pawn shop, wearing nothing but a T-shirt, shoes, and a pair of tighty-whiteys.

So you can understand the futility of arguing with my wife about the three-legged dog now that the voice had come out. The best I could hope to do was distract her.

“I think my appendix just burst!” I said, dropping to the ground and clutching my stomach.

“It looks like it’s going to rain,” my wife said, stepping over me. “We’d better get Three-legger indoors before he gets all wet.”

Note the subtle yet important transition that occurred during that exchange. The dog was no longer referred to as the three-legger. The dog had simply become ‘Three-legger.’ Now he had a name. He was as good as pooping in my bed.

My wife squinted across the parking lot at the dog, which stood teetering in the wind like a cardboard cutout. I could tell she was sizing him up. Would the reindeer antlers we make our pets wear at Christmas fit onto Three-legger’s head, or would we have to buy another pair? Would Three-legger be able to make it up the stairs at night, or would we have to move our bed down into the kitchen? Would there be room for Three-legger on the bed, or would Jeff have to sleep on the floor?

I, for one, think that we have enough “special needs” animals living under our roof. Consider, for example, our senile cat, Mr. Puddy, whose immense fatness makes it impossible for him to execute even the most basic of cat duties, such as “washing,” “getting up,” and “not peeing on our furniture.” He spends most of his day sprawled out on our living room carpet, his fat spreading out across the floor like pancake batter in a skillet.

Apart from relieving himself on our couch, Mr. Puddy has a few additional less-than-desirable habits, not the least of which is his tendency to bite anything that is moving. He opens his mouth and comes charging like an angry slug in slow-motion, his head wobbling from side to side in nearsighted confusion.

So, to summarize, Mr. Puddy is an extremely old, extremely obese cat who can’t clean himself, pees on our furniture, and likes to bite us. While some people (me) might argue that Puddy’s time on this earth has expired, others (my wife) would argue that the logical solution is to invest lots of money in cat anti-depressants, which she then must force down Puddy’s throat as I try to hold him down and get all the skin clawed off of my forearms.

Just to balance things out, we also have an extremely tiny, extremely needy kitty, Maggie, who at all times must have at least one part of her touching one or more parts of you. Which is fine, unless her part is a claw and your part is your bare stomach while you’re sleeping.

If she can’t manage to wake you up by carving her initials into your skin, Maggie will resort to using the little air-raid siren lodged in her throat.

“Reeeeeeaaaaaeeeearrrrrrrr!” says Maggie at 3 a.m.

“Aaaack!” says my wife, shooting straight up in bed and smashing me in the face with her elbow.

“Hoooo!” I say, falling out of bed and onto Mr. Puddy.

“Errrrr!” says Mr. Puddy, biting my leg.

“Roo! Roo! Roo! Arrrooooo!” says our dog, Henry, adding, “Arf! Arf! Arf!” and “Yap!”

Faithful readers of my column (by which I mean my mother) will remember the article I wrote about Henry last February. For those who missed it: imagine one of those wind-up toys shaped like chattering teeth. Now imagine that toy powered by a jet engine. Cover it with fur and put one of your favorite shoes in its mouth, and you’ve got Henry.

Could our house possibly contain another “challenged” animal? And more importantly, could my self-esteem handle me being knocked down from No. 4 to the No. 5 slot on my wife’s priority list by a three-legged dog?
As she marched across the parking lot to retrieve our new baby, my wife was stopped short by the call of a woman from an adjacent house.

“C’mere, Bonkers,” called the woman. “Here, boy!”

And just like that, our Three-legger went galloping away (ba-da-bump, ba-da-bump) into the arms of another family. My wife spun around and got back into the car without a word.

As we drove to the mall, I waited, and waited, and waited, and there it was – my wife started sniffling.

“It’s OK, baby, we’ll find another dog, maybe even one with four whole legs,” I said.

“But I loved Three-legger!” my wife said.

“I know you did, honey,” I said, making a left turn towards the Humane Society.

Posted by Jeff on 6/01/2003 10:33:00 PM
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I spent most of my childhood in constant terror of the tiny foxes that lived in the air conditioning ducts of our house. I knew the foxes were there because (thank goodness) my older and wiser sister was there to warn me of the danger.

“The foxes,” whispered my sister, “have sharp little teeth and sharp little claws and like to feed on little boys just like you when you’re sleeping!” Squinting her eyes, she would lean towards me and start wiggling her fingers around as if she were one of them. “I’d watch out, if I were you!”

Then she’d jump in the air, wave her claws at my head, and scream, “Fox attack!” I’d scream and pee a little in my pants.

At night, I would lie in bed, the blanket pulled up to my nose, staring wide-eyed at the ducts in my ceiling. My only protection from the foxes was the three-foot Jesus nightlight hanging on the opposite wall, looking down on me. I knew that, as long as Jesus was watching, the foxes were too afraid to crawl from their hiding place to eat me alive. I sang church hymns to keep his attention.

Every now and then, I thought I saw one of the foxes stick his head out of the duct to see if I was asleep yet. He would look at me, smirk, and then shake his head at the foxes behind him as if to say, “No, not yet. The kid’s still awake, and Jesus is watching.”

This is one of many memories I owe to my mischievous sister, Pam, to whom I dedicate this month’s column in honor of her 30th birthday. Now my sister’s all grown up with a baby daughter of her own – a baby daughter who, if there is any justice in the world, will turn into a raging terror of practical jokes and messy pranks as soon as she learns how to walk.

Don’t get me wrong – I love my sister dearly, and will admit to everyone but her that her childhood jokes were funny. But you can be sure that, as soon as my niece understands English, I’m going to make sure she knows all about Mommy’s incapacitating phobia of mold.

My childhood terrors weren’t limited to the foxes in the air conditioning ducts. There were also the mutant spiders hiding behind the downstairs toilet. They were big, fat, hairy spiders with fangs as long as your pinky finger. Woe to the unlucky soul who sits down unawares on the toilet of death, for here come the bloodthirsty spiders to bite him, wrap him in their gooey web, and carry him into their den of darkness for a midnight snack.

While I didn’t ever see the spiders for myself, I knew they were there, because my older sister told me so. And, as everyone knows, older sisters don’t lie.

I was terrified. Mutant spiders were even worse than tiny foxes! I pictured them with napkins tied around their necks, rubbing four sets of knives and forks together in greedy, drippy-toothed anticipation of eating me for dinner.

Coming into physical contact with the toilet was clearly out of the question. But even when I was standing up, how could I be sure the spiders wouldn’t crawl across the floor and onto my feet? Clearly, my only option was to hop back and forth from foot to foot to make sure they didn’t. I may have sacrificed some accuracy, but at least I would be alive to sprinkle my tinkle another day.

Fortunately for me (and for the carpets), there was also an upstairs bathroom. Unfortunately, there were alligators in the upstairs toilet. It’s true. Just ask my sister. Little alligators lived in our pipes and waited for you to sit down on the toilet, at which point they would crawl out and give you a bite on your most tender of parts. My sister wouldn’t just make up something like that.

Man-eating spiders downstairs, nippy little alligators upstairs – it was a precarious situation. But sometimes nature calls, and when it does, it doesn’t concern itself with the wildlife that may or may not be lurking near the toilet facilities.

I would stand in the bathroom as far away from the alligators as possible, which sometimes meant taking my shoes off and stepping into the tub. Then, facing the toilet, I would get up on my tip-toes, arch my back, and do my best to hit my mark. Sometimes I didn’t. I blamed the dog.

Maybe now my parents can finally understand why I resorted to peeing in my trash cans. At the time, it seemed like a perfectly logical compromise between peeing on the floor and having my hiney bitten by a miniature alligator.

My mom discovered my new habit one day while emptying the trash from the wastebasket in my room. She looked up at me with a mixture of wonder, confusion, and annoyance. “Honey,” she said, “Did you pee in your trash can?”

I was going to explain the whole complicated matter of the mutant spiders in the downstairs bathroom and the miniature alligators in the upstairs bathroom, but thought it would be easier to just run out of the room crying.
It was a traumatic period of my life. To this day, I still get creeped out in the bathroom until I can check behind all of the fixtures to make sure there’s not a pack of miniature monkeys waiting to stab me with their tiny bananas. For example.

It took me an embarrassingly long time to figure out that my sister was lying to me. For all I knew, packs of wild animals were simply a harsh reality of domestic life. But I did think it was odd that my parents were so relaxed all the time, considering the fact that wild foxes, mutant spiders, and miniature alligators were running rampant throughout their house and trying to devour their children.

If you ask my sister about the terribly mean childhood pranks she pulled, I’m sure she’ll bring up some petty example of mean things I did to her, like hiding under her bed in the dark for hours at a time and grabbing her ankles when she came near.

To which I say: That’s a complete lie. And Mom always liked me best.

To which she says: In the end, truth and justice will prevail!

To which I say: Yeah, but truth and justice don’t have their own opinion columns, and I do. Nyah, nyah, nyah.

Posted by Jeff on 5/01/2003 10:31:00 PM

Take me out to the ball game.
Take me out to the crowd.
Watch me strike out and fall down in the dirt
And run from the baseball so I won’t get hurt.

It’s baseball season once again, that special time of year when young, Major League hopefuls gather on the little league diamond to fine-tune their swings, practice their fielding skills, and give long, painful wedgies to kids like me.

I was something of a hot-shot on my midget league baseball team. I don’t like to brag, but the truth is, I actually managed to get a hit each of the three seasons I played, except for the first two seasons. That works out to one base hit in just three seasons of play, which is really, really good, provided you are either 3 years old or don’t have any arms.

It’s a longstanding tradition in baseball to give affectionate nicknames to the game’s top players (“Joltin’” Joe DiMaggio, “Shoeless” Joe Jackson, “Incontinent” Elmer Merkle, “Barry” Bonds).

Something similar happened to me in midget league ball, except my nicknames were more along the lines of “The Fat Kid,” “That Fat Kid Who Always Strikes Out,” and “Fatty McStrikeout.”

Part of the reason why I struck out so much was that I was afraid of getting hit by the ball, and the reason for that is because I got hit by the ball all the time. My gigantic head had some sort of gravitational pull that drew the baseball towards it like a magnet. “Plunk!” went the ball off of my helmet.

“Plunk!” “Plunk!” “Plunk!”

“Oomph!” I said. “Oweee!” “Zimmmaaah!” “Gack!”

The reward for getting hit in the head with a baseball is that you get to go stand on first base as if you actually got a hit, which is all well and good until the next guy gets a hit, in which case you have to run around the bases.

Because, as the first half of “Fatty McStrikeout” implies, speed wasn’t really my forte. I would take off for second base, desperately holding up my husky pants by the belt loop and panting like an asthmatic piglet.

Meanwhile, the second baseman caught the ball, tagged the base, went home, did his homework, graduated, got married, and had a son of his own who joined the team and was waiting at the bag to make fun of me when I finally got there.

“You’re out, fatty,” he’d say.

“Shut up, Joey Junior!” I’d say.

I played right field, which is a very key position on a baseball team – the cornerstone of the defense, if you will. Or at least, that’s what my mom said. Of course, she also said the coach made me ninth in the batting order because he was “saving the best for last.”

“I couldn’t hit those pitches either,” my mom offered in her endless attempts to cheer me up. “And it’s just baby fat. You’ll grow out of it,” she added. Last week.

But the truth is that right field is reserved for people with the athletic prowess of an earthworm. You could put a drunk cat with four broken legs into right field and still win the game. Nobody ever hits the ball into right field. I spent most of my time singing Christmas carols to myself and popping the heads off of dandelions. “Oh, holy night!” Pop. “The stars are brightly shiiiiiiiining!” Pop. Pop.

Eventually, I’d notice that everybody from my team had walked off the field, usually when some overweight kid with glasses from the other team showed up beside me with his finger up his nose and a big mustard stain on his shirt.

“What a loser!” I’d think to myself as I stood up to find my glove, fasten the safety pin holding up my pants, adjust the corrective inserts in my shoes, tape my sunglasses back together, wipe the dog crap off my hat, and waddle over to our bench to join the rest of the team for the between-innings pep talk. “Remember,” our coach would say, “a team is only as good as its weakest player. Incidentally, it’s your turn to bat, Fats.”

It’s one, two, three strikes, I’m out at the old ball game. It’s not like I wouldn’t try to hit the ball. I swung all the time, but usually in self-defense.

My big base hit happened when, as a 70 mph fastball gravitated towards my head, I closed my eyes and did a big tomahawk chop with the bat – and I actually made contact. The ball dribbled down the third base line and, much to everyone’s surprise, I was soon standing on first base with my first bona fide hit.

Why I thought it would be a good idea to try to steal second base is anyone’s guess. I chalk it up to temporary insanity. By the time I was halfway down the base path, the game was called because of darkness. Fortunately, play was resumed the next afternoon just in time for me to slide into the bag and get tagged out.

But I was not discouraged. I had become a new kind of ball player – the kind that got hits. I had the eye of the tiger. I stepped up to the plate for my next at-bat with full confidence. I was prepared for greatness. As the pitcher went into his wind-up, I pointed at the fence with my bat. This was the day that I would become a man. This was my moment to shine.

I dug in my heels. I began my swing. I gasped in horror as the ball curved in towards my head.

“Plunk!”

Posted by Jeff on 4/01/2003 10:19:00 PM

When I was younger, my mom and I used to play a fun game around the house called “Surprise!” (otherwise known as “Scare the Crap Out of Jeff”).

To this day, “Surprise!” is still one of my favorite games, right up there with “Pee Your Pants in Front of Your Fourth Grade Class” and “Get a Prostate Exam.”

Here’s how the average game of “Surprise!” went. My mom would begin by hiding at the bottom of the stairs with all of the lights turned out. I would eventually come down the stairs, most likely on my way to do some selfless act like feeding the homeless or raising money for poor, starving orphans. I would round the corner, and my mother would jump out of the shadows, wave her arms around, and scream, “Googley-boogley!” My reaction would be to silently drop to the floor, cover my face with my hands, and somersault across the carpet like a lopsided soccer ball.

Every man likes to think that, when faced with danger, he will react with courage and honor. Imagine my disappointment when I discovered, at an early age, that my natural reaction to danger is to stop, drop, and roll.

After nearly passing out from laughter, my mom, of course, would go scurrying off to tell the rest of the family what had happened. The story of my roly-poly self-defense mechanism has since become one of those embarrassing anecdotes that, like my childhood tendency to pee in trash cans, will simply never go away. I mean, the tendency went away, but the story didn’t.

The vicious cycle continued. My mom kept jumping out of the shadows, I kept rolling around on the ground. My sister was always kind enough to break the news gently to my girlfriends. “Look at it this way,” she said. “If the two of you are walking down the street, and some thugs cross your path and try to set your feet on fire, Jeff will be there to roll around and put out the dangerous flames.”

My reputation as a sissy spread far and wide. Little old ladies started offering me their seat on the bus. Babies started stealing my candy. I got mugged by a gang of Girl Scouts.

But all of that came to an abrupt halt last December when I got my cowboy hat.

My wife and I traveled out to Arizona over Christmas for a week-long visit with her sister’s family, during which time I was left alone for hours on end with my monster-truck-driving, tobacco-chewing, horse-wranglin’ brother-in-law.

We sat around the house, desperately trying to find something in common to talk about. It was just me, a five-foot-nine marshmallow-with-legs, and my brother-in-law, a 300-pound grizzly with a Fu Manchu and a passion for machinery. I spent one entire afternoon reading Salman Rushdie in his garage while he overhauled the engine of his truck.

We decided to spend that evening driving around the desert. (He had to lift me up into the truck.) With the windows down and the ZZ Top cranked up, it was virtually impossible to talk, so that was a relief. I mostly concentrated on picking the bugs out of my teeth and wondering how many potholes we would have to hit before the handgun in the glove compartment went off. Then, without taking his eyes off the road, my brother-in-law reached under his seat, pulled out a ridiculously large cowboy hat, and jammed it down on my head.

I felt something magical happening. I was going through some sort of transformation. I became a new Jeff. Cowboy Jeff. Wranglin’ Jeff. A Jeff who would strike fear into the hearts of men. A swearing, spitting, truck-driving Jeff. A Jeff who would no longer take bullies sitting down. Or rolling around on the floor.

I brought the hat back to Pennsylvania and began wearing it around the house, much to my wife’s horror. I could tell it would be difficult for her to accept the fact that I was no longer the poetry-writing, “Ally McBeal”-watching muffin she married. I even grew a chest hair.

I knew that transforming myself into a true cowboy would take some work.

I can’t even spit without it dribbling down my chin. I have the alcoholic tolerance of a 2-year-old. I can fall down and break my arm just by looking at a horse. I had to practice.

I began by trying to lasso my cats with one of my neckties. They put up quite a fight, but I did eventually manage to catch one. OK, so maybe I used a sheet instead of the necktie. And maybe I didn’t really catch one of my cats as much as I caught my wife when she rounded the corner with a basket of laundry. Surprise!

I thought that maybe, if I tried harder to dress the part, I could coax my inner-cowboy to the forefront of my personality. Accordingly, I went out and got myself a new pair of chaps. While I did feel more manly, I couldn’t help but notice the terrible draft. I had been strolling around the park and strutting my stuff for a good two hours before the nice policeman informed me that yes, you are supposed to wear pants underneath.

It was a small setback for Wranglin’ Jeff. But things were looking up.

People were starting to treat me differently. My wife was completely turned on by my newfound manliness. My friends started dressing like me. My co-workers regarded me with a hushed awe.

My dog, unfortunately, was not as impressed, and decided to eat my cowboy hat.

Yes, the dog, man’s best friend, was the undoing of my manhood. Of course, I was the undoing of his when I took him to be neutered, so I guess we’re even. I came home from work this afternoon to find my hat in tatters on the floor, right beside a mangled shoe, half of a banana, and a shredded box of Girl Scout cookies.

Girl Scouts? Oh, crap.

Posted by Jeff on 3/01/2003 10:18:00 PM

There are a lot of things about me that annoy my wife. Most of them are not my fault.

For example, there is my inability to throw out a tissue, because maybe, just maybe, there is a useable inch on it somewhere that might come in handy later.

And there’s my mental blockage that prevents me from putting my clothes into the hamper. Instead, I’ve created a clothing purgatory on the floor where the clothes that are not-quite-dirty but not-exactly-clean have piled up into a monstrous heap that has sprouted arms and legs and I’m pretty sure is responsible for the mysterious disappearance of our cat.

And then there’s my inability to ever (Ever!) remove my socks. (I know what you’re visualizing right now. Stop it.) I can’t help it. I need them. My wife married me, socks and all, and it’s too late now to ask me to change. My socks. (Riotous laughter.)

But I admit that I probably am to blame for the thing that bothers my wife the most. Namely, my irresistable compulsion to make fun of her while she’s doing yoga. I should probably mention that my compulsion also involves lying down on the couch with a bag of potato chips and giving play-by-play color commentary.

“Whoa! You’ll feel that one tomorrow!”

“Those unitards really ride up on you, huh?”

“Wow, that’s not a flattering position!”

“That one should be illegal!”

“Smile for the camera!”

It’s really nothing personal against my wife. I’d pretty much make fun of anyone I caught rolling around on a rubber mat in a Spandex suit in the middle of my living room. Especially if that person was Anna Nicole Smith.

Now, I understand that everyone has his methods of relaxation. What I don’t get is why my wife’s method has to involve a video tape featuring Captain Banana Pants giving yoga instructions in nothing but a pair of immodest purple tights.

“Begin,” says the Captain, “by lifting both legs over your head, like this, and placing your right elbow into your left ear, like this. Good. Now, yank your own head back by the hair and firmly insert a finger into each of your nostrils. Advanced students may opt to insert the entire fist. This position is called Beautiful Flower Drinking Rainwater.

“Now, point two fingers directly at your eyes. Slowly bring your fingers in towards your face. At the last minute, raise your left hand and hold it in front of your nose, thereby blocking your fingers from poking you in the eyes. This is called the Nyuck Nyuck position.

“Lowering yourself to the ground, slowly coil your body into the Cobra position, unhinge your jaw, and swallow your own leg up to the knee cap. And remember, folks – relax! That’s what this is about, after all!”

As the Captain speaks, his students writhe around on the floor, contorting themselves into positions normally reserved for people being eaten by a dinosaur. Meanwhile, my wife is managing to make the whole painful process look easy, gracefully shifting her body from the Spitting Camel into the Surprised Chipmunk with the greatest of ease.

Nobody enjoys my wife’s yoga sessions more than the dog, who always manages to squeeze in a round of his favorite game, King of the Mountain, on my wife’s head. One minute, I’m watching my wife stretch out on the floor. The next thing I know, our little Jack Russel is perched on the back of her head with a look that says, “Look what a good dog I am!”

“Mmmph!” my wife yells.

“What?” I say.

“Mmmmmmph!!!!” she yells.

“I can’t understand you, there’s a dog on your head,” I explain.

And then we laugh. Well, I laugh.

I can usually lure the dog off my wife’s head by waving one of my potato chips around in the air for a few minutes. I’d get off the couch and help, but I don’t want to get my socks dirty.

Another hazard of my wife’s yoga is our cats’ drive-by rubbings. The cats, who have been lying in one spot giving themselves a bath since 1998, decide that now is the time to show how much they love my wife by running up and flopping all over her feet. Which is OK if she’s standing up straight, but a little precarious if she’s in the middle of a One-handed Inverted Moose, for example.

I think the most unsettling thing about her yoga has got to be the breathing exercises, which involve the kind gutteral snorts and phlegmy growls one might expect to hear from a congested grizzly bear. The first time I heard it, I thought an angry rhinocerous had somehow meandered its way into our living room. I ran in from the kitchen with a flyswater and a frying pan, ready for battle, to find my wife in a leotard with her leg wrapped around her neck three times, a cat stuck to her shin, and our dog perched on her forehead.

Who said that yoga wasn’t a spectator sport?

Posted by Jeff on 2/01/2003 10:17:00 PM

A few months ago, my wife and I became the proud parents of a bouncing baby Jack Russell Terrier. By bouncing, of course, I mean possessing the brain power of underwear.

As you may or may not know, Jack Russells are famous for two things: their hyperactivity and their ability to, while you’re standing up, hit you in the face with their wet nose approximately 10 times per second.

But when you’re wandering the halls of the Humane Society looking for a dog, and you see a little, shaking puppy with big brown eyes, and he’s crying out, “Ri ruv roo!” and looking helpless, it’s easy to forget which kind of dog you swore you would never, ever allow into your house.

The puppy hypnotized us with cuteness. Before we knew it, we were back in the car, driving home with a brand new dog filling our brand new back seat with piles of brand new vomit.

I, for one, was excited about owning a nervous little dog, mostly because they make for a great conversation piece at parties. Consider this scene:

Cocktail party. Lights down low. Sinatra humming in the background. Enter my nervous little dog, vibrating its way across the floor between our guests’ legs. Amused friends point, giggle, and say something like, “Look at that shaky little dog!” At which point I pull out a real zinger like, “Yeah, he’s been drinking espressos all day!” We all have a hearty laugh, and my friends wipe their eyes, pat me on the back, and say things like, “You did it again, Jeff!” and “It must be exhausting being so funny all the time!” and “Aaah! Your dog just ate my baby!”

They say this because, as it turns out, once we got him home, our new dog turned into the devil. Tongue flapping in the wind, he darted about the house in evil glee, spraying pee on the floor, eating the couch cushions, bulldozing the cats, knocking over lamps, and, finally, relieving himself in the worst way on the recliner.

“OK. So. Back to the pound he goes,” I said.

“But, I love him!” my wife said, scooping up the dog and running up the stairs.

“... Yes, of course you do,” I muttered.

A few ruined carpets, mangled slippers, and sleepless nights later, it was time to officially name the dog. We needed something that was fitting to his demeanor. I had to veto Sweetums, Snuggledog, and Puppernutter from my wife’s list. Likewise, she overruled my initial suggestions of Satan, Crappy, and The Worst Dog in the World. After much debate, we eventually agreed on “Henry” (French for “eats his own poop”).

Determined to take some wind out of his sails, my wife decided to take Henry to the vet for The Big Snip. I thought it would be funny to change his name from He-nry to It-nry after the neutering, but was shot down.

In her defense, my wife did give Henry plenty of warning, mostly in the form of threatening “scissor fingers.”

“Henry! Snip snip!” she’d say, opening and closing her scissor fingers menacingly at the dog. “Get off the couch!”

“Henry! Snip snip! Don’t pee in the house!”

“Henry! Snip snip! Drop that baby!”

“Snip snip!” “Snip snip!” “Snip snip!”

But in the end, poor Henry would meet the fate suffered by so many ’N Sync members before him: castration. He returned home a day later, stripped of his dignity (among other things) and wearing a lamp shade around his neck.

As far as I can tell, all we accomplished by having Henry neutered was decreasing his wind resistance. Within two days of The Big Snip, he was back in action, shattering his own speed records for finding a sock, chewing up the sock, eating the sock, puking up the sock, and bringing it to us in bed.

I have learned to appreciate the little things about Henry, like how he sometimes gets so excited to see us that he pees a little (When’s the last time anyone got that excited to see you?), and how, when he’s tired enough, he’ll let us put little reindeer antlers on his head and take pictures.

Not that any of this compensates for the three pillows, the couch, the recliner, the two floormats, and the backyard the dog has destroyed. Also on the casualty list is our elderly cat, Mr. Puddy, who now spends most of his time trying to keep Henry’s ice-cold nose out of his most private of areas. The rest of his time is spent communicating his displeasure in subtle ways, like shredding our chair legs down to the width of Ally McBeal.

The other day, I walked into the basement to find Henry enjoying the last of a little delicacy we like to call “the cat’s litter box.” A clever dog to the end, he decided not to squander this treasure trove of deliciousness, but rather to save some treats for later. That’s the only explanation I have for why, that evening, I discovered litter-coated cat nuggets in my shoe. After my foot was in it.

“That’s it! I have had enough! That dog goes back to the pound tomorrow!” I yelled with authority.

My wife turned to me, raised one eyebrow, and began waving her scissor fingers in my direction. “Jeff! Snip snip!” she said.

“Um, never mind,” I said, and scampered out the door to buy a new recliner for Henry to defile.

Posted by Jeff on 1/02/2003 10:14:00 PM
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If I were to make a Top-10 list of the best ways to wake up in the morning, Im pretty sure that breakfast in a Parisian cafe would make the cut.

Other good ways to wake up might involve a breakfast catered by French maids. Some would involve waking up on the tour bus of my world-famous rock band. Almost all of them would involve Ashley Judd in some way.
But none of them would involve anything close to the way that I woke up the other night, at 3:30 a.m., to the delightful sounds of a hardcore porn film blaring through the walls of my neighbors apartment.

My wife and I shot up out of bed, our ears ringing with the shrieks of what we could only assume was a cat on fire. We ran around the bedroom in circles, screaming, trying to figure out what was happening.

What?
Where?
Look out!
Someones being murdered!
Someone set the cat on fire!
Its Armageddon!
Jump out the window to safety!
Call 911!
Wait! Is that ...?
No ...
Yeah, I think it is.
No ...

It was. It was porn. I cant believe we just woke up to porn, said my wife. She stood still for a moment, trying to decide whether she should be laughing or crying, and compromised with a little of both.

I picked up my shoe and started whacking at the wall as if it were covered with boy bands. Dude! Turn! Down! That! Porn! I mean, Im all for free speech and everything, but not when that free speech is coming from Doctor Spankypants and his team of Naughty Nurses at 3:30 in the morning.

The TV was blaring. My wife was yelling. The dog was barking. The cat was not on fire, so that was good, but it was still running around and hissing. I was about as happy as Jerry Falwell at a gay pride convention.
Evidently, my neighbors porn was so loud that they failed to hear our rap-rap-rapping at their chamber door. So we went and made some popcorn and tried to pass the time writing dialogue for the worlds most unlikely porn stars. Heres a partial list:

George W. Bush: Lets you and me get romantistic. Love-making requires careful strategery.

Al Gore: Call me President! Ive got the key to that lock-box! I demand a recount on sexual favors!

Yoda: Love to me you will make. Much to learn you have in bed.
Chewbacca: Arrrrrr.

The neighbors had evidently rented a porno epic. It simply did not stop. We felt dirty.

I decided I was going to put a stop to this once and for all, in the only way I knew how call my mommy.

Put that phone down! said my wife. You will march next door, and you will use any means necessary to make the neighbors turn off the porn! I put on my jacket, laced up my boots, stormed out the door, remembered I wasnt wearing any pants, went back inside, put on some pants, and stormed out the door again.

I trudged around the house to the neighbors door and rang the bell. A young girl with wild hair, ghostly white skin, and pupils the size of a baseball hung her head out the door.

Hi. We havent met. I live next door, I said.

Silence.

Its 3:30 in the morning. Is there any chance you would consider turning down your porn? I asked.

Silence.

Yeah, that would be great, if you could turn down your porn. Your porn. The loud porn in your apartment. If you could turn it down, thatd be great. The porn.

Oh, she croaked. The TVs on? Ill get it.

Now, I dont know a whole lot about porn, but I do know that it doesnt normally just turn itself on. (It turns other people on! Ha ha ha ha!) Yet, my neighbor seemed surprised to learn that her TV was on, which I cant begin to explain. Had somebody broken into her house, stuffed her ears with cotton, turned on a porn movie, and snuck back out? Was there a Porn Bandit on the loose?

Regardless, the porn was turned off, and I returned home to a heros welcome, by which I mean the dog had crapped on the floor. Eventually, I made it back to my bedroom, where my wife was already sound asleep. I shuffled across the floor, threw the cat off the bed, threw the cat off the bed again, and again, and, delirious with exhaustion, crawled under the covers and shut my eyes.

Which is right about the time that the neighbors dog started barking.