Archive for humor

Self-Improvement Attempts #1 – Missing Wallet

Posted in Humor Column, Self Improvement with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on December 17, 2012 by Joe Zimmerman

I took one step backwards Friday night in the area of getting it together, when I lost my wallet (or possibly had it pick-pocketed). I know we all like to jump to conclusions and say, “Oh, Joe probably dropped it or left it on a table or it’s probably still at home under a couch cushion,” but I know it definitely went missing inside of a small bar called Lulu’s in Greenpoint. As soon as I entered the bar, I went to buy a Guinness, but found only five dollars in my wallet. I needed another dollar to tip, so I went over to my buddy Ryan and asked, “Hey can I have a dollar forever?” because who pays back one dollar? It’s an insult to repay a dollar, and certainly it’s embarrassing to collect on a dollar:
“Hey buddy, just wondered if we could settle up today.”
“Settle up?”
“Yeah, remember last month? You borrowed four quarters for laundry.”
“I don’t remember that.”
“Well, I’d like to square up.”

So I take Ryan’s dollar and buy a Guinness. Fifteen minutes later, I’m half-way through my Guinness, and I realize my wallet is missing (my goodness!). I searched every corner of the bar and asked all of the staff, and it never turned up.

I had been showing a positive improvement trend when it came to losing things, so this was a setback. Four years ago was the last time I lost a major item, and once again it was the wallet. I was working in Atlanta and I was wearing old jeans with holes in both pockets. It’s not that I was living in such poverty I couldn’t afford new pants, it’s just that I liked these particular jeans, which happened to have defective pockets. The wallet fell through, and I never found it, so I stopped wearing those jeans. Improvement.

This time, there was a different malfunction. The wallet, keys, and phone are the three important lumps that I’ve become very aware of. I have an internal security system that is constantly running a perimeter sweep on the three lumps, and as soon as a lump goes missing the alarm is tripped. I’m usually able to track down the problem within seconds: keys on table, wallet on car floor, cell phone in my hand because I’m on a call, etc.

Unfortunately on Friday night, there was a false fourth lump that threw the whole security system off. My contacts were bothering me, so I brought my glasses along in a glasses case, just in case I’d need to make a switch. Not only had I added a lump, but it was a relatively similar lump to a wallet lump, in both size and firmness. When the wallet went missing, I still had three lumps, and my security system remained unaware that there was a breach.

The question is, moving forward, how can I improve? Well, I can make sure to never add a fourth lump again, or I can get lasik surgery. Those seem to be the two routes to improvement. I’m afraid of Lasik, because of the possibility that one of my eyes will be exploded by a laser, so I don’t think that’s the option for me. I think the answer for me is that if a fourth lump is required (i.e. glasses, phone charger, digital recorder) then I need to bring my satchel. I don’t care if you make fun of my satchel.
“Oh, Joe decided to bring his man-purse today.”
Okay, well maybe I do care a little bit, but you always thank me later when I’m helping you sneak wine out of the wedding reception, or burritos into the movie theater.

If the satchel had come along, I suspect this crisis would have been averted. Instead, I’ve had to cancel my credit cards and I’m walking around with a passport and a check book, like some sort of 20th century European tourist. The good news is there was no cash left in my wallet, as I’d just spent the last five dollars. The bad news is I had three gift cards in my wallet, and when you crunch the numbers it stings:
1) Starbucks gift card – $19 remainder (unrecoverable because the card wasn’t registered)
2) Barnes & Noble gift card – $12 remainder
3) Olive Garden gift card – $25 unused, yikes!

This means some criminal is on the loose drinking my Mocha, reading my paperback copy of “Awaken the Giant Within,” and eating my endless breadsticks. Alternately, if the perpetrator simply tossed my wallet into the garbage, that means the corporations are making out like bandits with gift card donations.

Moving forward:
1) Three lumps only. If the glasses need to come, so does the satchel.

2) Due to increased satchel carrying, I’ll need to brainstorm some better satchel come-backs:

“Nice man-purse Joe.”
“No you have a nice man-purse.”

“What is that Joe, a Wachovia bag?”
“What is that…your face?”

“Do you really need that satchel Joe?”
“Do you really need…that face?”

Not bad.

3) must register all gift cards to keep the corporations honest.

There you have it, I’ve learned from my mistakes and I’m better for it. What doesn’t kill me, only makes me stronger, unless it steals my identity and now there’s a warrant out for my arrest for something I didn’t do.

Famous Quote First Drafts

Posted in Humor Column, Lists with tags , , , , , , , , , , , on August 1, 2012 by Joe Zimmerman

I’ve found that one of the most difficult things in writing is to keep your sentences concise and to the point. For instance, that first sentence could have probably been shortened to, “The toughest thing for writers is to be concise,” and then that could have been wittled down further to, “Writers work hard to be concise,” and then finally we could just cut it all out and get to my point, which doesn’t exist. That’s really the writer’s ultimate goal – to edit your words down to nothing so that no one has to read anything in the first place. In thinking about the editing process, I wondered if the most famous quotes of all time had earlier, more rambling versions. I unearthed a few of these earlier drafts, never before seen until now:

“The only thing to fear, is bears and wolves and ghosts and death and spiders. But ultimately, you should try not to be afraid of any of these things. Though I admit, it is difficult to avoid fear, given all of the spiders of varying size and color.”
-Roosevelt

“Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do to stop blaming the president for every damn little thing that happens. Jeez, step up and accept a little responsibility for your own crap life, it can’t be all me people.”
-JFK

“There’s at least twenty-three ways to skin a cat, give or take two.”
-Cletus the cat skinner

“Storms break branches, but they don’t break the base of the tree, unless it’s an extremely bad storm, or a really old tree that’s rotting.”
-proverb

“I have been daydreaming!”
-MLK

“An eye for an eye makes everybody look gross and have poor depth perception, so let’s try to avoid that strategy.”
-Gandhi

“That which doesn’t kill us, may leave us in a weakened state or permanently scarred, but that’s okay, because staying alive is what’s important, right?”
-Nietzsche

“Two roads diverged in the wood, and I, I took the left one where there were more brambles, but ultimately it got me where I wanted to go because it was quieter and I prefer the quiet. Though at one point, I did have to fend off a vicious badger. That’s the main downside of clearing your own path – more badgers.”
-Frost

“All the world’s a green room, and all the men and women merely waiting to go on stage, complaining about the lack of beverages and worrying about the intelligence of the audience.”
-Shakespeare

“I think and therefore I have a brain, and therefore my brain exists because if it didn’t exist I would not be able to think these thoughst, so therefore I must also exist. Unless my thoughts aren’t real, but just illusions that my fake brain has created. Woh, brain explosion.”
-Descartes

Another Day Dream – NBA Mediocrity

Posted in Humor Column, Memories with tags , , , , , , , , on May 16, 2012 by Joe Zimmerman

I’ve always had a recurring day-dream about playing in the NBA.  The strange thing is I don’t dream of being a great player, but having a freak growth spurt and being eight feet tall.  Then I get drafted as a project, not because I’m good, but just purely because I’m freakishly tall.

So there I am in my day-dream – suddenly eight feet tall, unable to fit on an airplane – and everyone is going, “Woh, what happened?!” and I’m like “Yeah, I’m huge right?!”  The doctors are saying that surely I’m going to die, and now I’m the guy  people gawk at  - little kids point and say, “look at the tall man!”  Japanese tourists want to take pictures with me, and they call me “White Giant,”  (spelled 白い巨大な of course) and my teammates call me “Legs,” –  not because I’m fast, but because my legs are so long and pale.

At eight feet, you can dunk without jumping.  It’s great!  I’m an entire foot taller than most other centers.  Meanwhile, the media rails me for being such a bad player, and I only come in and get garbage minutes, maybe commit some fouls.  The headlines say things like “Giant bust.”  After a few years of grinding it out as a bench warmer, I become a passing NBA player, and maybe even have a few double-doubles in the playoffs.  But that’s pretty much the extent of my success. No championships, or all-star games, or Nike commercials – just good enough to barely play at the NBA level. You’d think in my day-dream, where anything is possible, I would imagine up something more exciting than mediocrity, but apparently that’s all my brain needs to have a good time for five minutes.

I have one other NBA related recurring day-dream, and that is that suddenly I am given the gift of a 100% shooting percentage.  I suddenly can’t miss any shot, from anywhere on the floor, including half court.  I then try to figure out, given no other improvement in my skills, if I could actually help am NBA team.  Even at a 100% half court shooting percentage, my defense would still be nonexistent, and once you put a good NBA defender on me, I’d never be able to get the ball –  let alone get a shot off.  So, I’m running around, trying to get the ball, and then shooting mid court fade-aways.  This day dream is more of a riddle than an aspiration, and the answer to the riddle is that even with a 100% full court shooting percentage, I would still be a detriment to every NBA team, as I would  end up missing 90% of those shots due to the ball getting swatted out of bounds.

Related follow-up riddle: The average height of the NBA has grown at a steady clip.  In 1950 the average was 6’3″ (197 lbs), while today the average is 6’7′ (225 lbs).  If it continues at this rate, the average will be 6’9″ in 2032,  7 feet by 2062, and 7’5″ by 3012.   At what point, if ever, would you have the rim raised to eleven feet instead of ten?   I would say raise it by 3082 for sure, when the average player is eight feet tall (my day-dream height) and can dunk flat-footed.

Procrastination and The Power of Tomorrow

Posted in Humor Column, self help with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on May 14, 2012 by Joe Zimmerman

Procrastination has always been an issue for me.  I tend to start a lot of projects and then not finish.  I actually started writing this particular blog months ago and then forgot about it, and I’m only going back to it now because I’m putting off something more pressing.  Years ago I purchased the Idiot’s Guide to Overcoming Procrastination and I never got around to reading it. In the first few pages it mentions the Procrastination Society of America and gives you a number you can call to join.  To my surprise some guy answered on what sounded like a home phone:
“Hello.”
“Hi, is this the Procrastination Society of America?”
“Yes, speaking.”
“So, how do I join?”
“You want to join?  You’re in.  Just need your address and we’ll put the membership info in the mail.”
“Okay …(address)…”
“Perfect, you’ll be hearing from us.”
“Great, thanks.”
“It may take a while…”
Fast forward to now and I never received anything.  I don’t know who that guy was, but he’s awesome.

The strangest part about procrastination, is that my brain continues to trick me into believing that I’ll actually be productive tomorrow.  It’s always tomorrow, and never today. Everything important in life is getting done tomorrow: finances, productivity, fitness, diet, taxes, social-consciousness, you name it, miscellaneous, etc.

I have something important to do and my brain goes, “Hey, you know what?  Tomorrow would be a perfect day to get cracking on those Turbo Tax forms,” and I say, “Yeah, good point brain,” and we high-five, and then I eat carrot cake.   In my experience carrot cake is the direct result of high-fiving your brain.

So then tomorrow comes, and now it’s today, and that’s a problem, because today is now, and now is always an issue.   At this very moment, I’m writing a blog, and right after that I need to eat lunch.  I mean, you have to eat lunch.  I can’t be running on the treadmill or doing my taxes while I’m eating lunch.  Tomorrow however, I have the entire day.  Tomorrow I have a sixteen hour window to TCB (yeah, take care of business).  I can do one hour at the gym, two hours on taxes, and two hours getting started on that novel.   That still leaves eleven more hours to get everything else done.  But today I have a seven hour drive back to New York, and let’s face it, you can’t get anything done while you’re driving – you have to listen to podcasts and stop at Chipotle.

What’s truly bizarre, is that my brain plays the same trick over and over, and I continue to fall for it.   You’d think I’d wise up and go, “Not this time brain! You said tomorrow yesterday, and today it’s the same thing as the day before yesterday!  Fool me once, shame on you, fool me every time forever, shame on me.

I’m also guilty of thinking that everything will be easier when I’m older.  There’s this illusion that when you’re older you’ll have more money, a nice house, plenty of free time to knock out that bucket list and start that charitable organization.   But the reality is when I’m actually old I’m gonna be like, “Ooooh, my bones hurt!” I’ll be in a nursing home reminiscing on the times when I had the energy to stay awake for more than forty-five minutes.

Procrastination probably follows you to your deathbed.
“Do you have any last words?
“Ooh, I sure hope there’s an afterlife so I can finally get started on this bucket list…”
“What was that Mr. Zimmerman?”
“My bones hurt… (incomprehensible mutters)…pigeon-crust…(death rattle)”
(checks pulse)
“He’s gone.”
“Make a note, his last words were ‘pigeon-crust’.”
“What does that mean?”
“Let’s come back to it tomorrow, right now I need a drink.”

TPC Sawgrass

Posted in Humor Column, Memories, Off Stage with tags , , , , , , , , , , , on May 12, 2012 by Joe Zimmerman

This week the Players Championship is being held at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.  Watching this tournament is particularly interesting for me as I know the course very well, having spent a very bizarre year of my life working there as the range ball picker upper guy.  For some reason I was convinced that I needed to take a year off after highschool and go live somewhere all by myself and do nothing but golf, and that’s what I did.

I didn’t do as well as I thought at living the life of an eccentric eighteen-year-old hermit.  I spent a surprising amount of time at night on AIM, reconnecting with people from Morgantown, some of whom I’d barely known while living in Morgantown.  I would sometimes even save the “interesting” conversations and read back through them like an old grandma flipping through a photo album.  I’m pretty sure reading back through your old instant message chats is the definition of lonely.

I played golf, practiced golf, worked at the golf course, drank red Powerade, ate at Subway, and drove the range-ball picker, or “picker” for short (I don’t think that machine has an official name).  My life skills are minimal now, so at that time we were in the danger zone.  Early on, I put the wrong soap in the dishwasher and the entire kitchen filled up with suds while I watched Sportscenter in the other room.  I then cleaned up the suds by wiping at them with paper towels, as I did not have a mop or functioning brain.  Sometimes I would treat myself to a nice steak at the grocery store (sirloin), marinade it in A1 sauce, and pan-fry it with no sides (yum).   One problem – I thought “marinade” meant to pour your sauce over it while it’s cooking in the pan, so that firy liquid A1 balls jump out of the pan at you and sting you as you duck and dodge and curse the difficult marinade process.

TPC Sawgrass is one of the most corporate golf courses in the world, and the staff is huge.  There were at least two-hundred people on staff, and the range ball picker is the lowest ranking position, right beneath cart barn guy.   Sometimes you’d have to attend a giant staff meeting, and the director of operations would refer to us as a “team” which sounds fun at first, until you realize the corporate version of “team” is not the same as the “team” you’re used to.  At first you think, “Great, I’m on a team. Let’s go guys, let’s win this fun game that we’re playing!”  But then soon you realize you’re just a role player on the team, and your role is to pick and bag and clean thousands of golf balls, and none of your teammates know your name or pass to you, and there is no other team that you play against – it’s just you, all by yourself, against the golf balls.

It’s one of those weird teams where you have to show up to a cart barn in the pitch black at 6 am, and there’s this sixty-five year old Vietnam veteran named Bobbie Sauers barking orders.  I believe his official title was “Head of Cart Barn” which meant that he was my most direct boss, though there were also about twelve assistant pros, a head pro, and two head cart guys who were also my boss.  Bobbie had glazed over eyes and bushy grey nose hairs that came down to his lip.  His happiest moments were at 6:30 in the morning, when all of the carts were lined up and ready to go, and in those rare moments of quiet, he would sit back, chew his tobacco, and reflect with great nostalgia on various French prostitutes he’d known, as though being at war was the best time of his life.   He had the posture and demeanor and raspy voice of Golum, from Lord of the Rings –hunched over at the shoulders with dangling arms and a hungry look on his face and a constant chewing motion from the tobacco.

At 6:30 a.m. I would drive off in my golf cart to the far end of the driving range, to the shed where the picker was parked.  That shed was like a second apartment for me – a nice quiet hiding place far from the corporate bustle of the club house and cart barn – and the time between  6:30 and 7 ( after preparing the carts but before the course got busy) was the best part of the shift, because I had the whole private back range to myself.   It was strictly forbidden to hit golf balls at the back range as it was the private area where the tour pros practice.  It was an immaculate practice area – one of the best in the world – and for that thirty minutes, hidden from the rest of the staff, I had it all to myself.

And then came 7 o’clock, when the range fills up with members, and tourists warming up for their big day playing the famous stadium course – home of the famous 17th island green.   I realize being a range ball picker sounds fun in theory, but I promise it’s grueling – especially working at a golf course that is extremely corporate that takes everything so seriously.   During the tournament I worked 110 hours and afterward I slept for 17 hours straight, which remains my personal record.  My official title was “practice facility” which means that was also my name.    I had to carry a walkie-talkie like I’m in some war against golf balls that only Bobbie Sauers wanted to fight.   I would receive the call from Bobbie every hour or so: “Cart barn to practice facility.”
“This is practice facility.”
“Ranger is low on balls, do you have balls?
“Got balls coming.”
“Alright, over.”
That was the conversation.  There is a strong element of Sisyphus to the work of the range picker, at a busy range.  You are doomed to an eternity of collecting golf balls, cleaning them, bagging them, and delivering them to the driving range, only to have them immediately unbagged and returned to the place you just got them.  I’m assuming Sisyphus didn’t have a 30 minute lunch break though.  Wow, if you hate your job, you love your lunch break. I’m no scientist, but there has to be some correlation to the obesity issues in America.

Life in the picker consists of two primary thoughts: 1) My back really hurts and 2) I wish people would stop practicing.  The initial awe of watching famous tour pros practice wore after finding out my primary interaction with them would be them asking me for more balls, and me being like, “sure, here are your balls.”

The positive thing about a crappy job, is that everything you do after seems awesome.  As a freshman at Davidson I couldn’t believe how easy school work was.  Davidson prides itself on giving students a heavy work-load and the Princeton review ranked it number 1 for “Students who never stop working” so I would often hear gripes about all of the homework, and  I’d think, “Are you crazy?  When you do homework you can sit down in a chair, with a cushion, and listen to nice music.    You don’t even have to have a walkie-talkie – homework is the best!”

Excited to watch the final day coverage on Sunday.  I’m going to say Matt Kuchar wins, and Kevin Na hits in the water on seventeen.  I’ll also go out on a limb and say Rickie Fowler places second and dresses in a plum color.

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