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Fan Art
This letter came in today:
Dear Mr. Philosophunculist:
I painted this owl for you in the hopes that you will recognize our spiritual connection. This is actually a painting of you, or as I see you in my imagination. You are wise and elegant, yet fierce.
I will be your field mouse, and you may hunt me.
Swoop down on me with your sharp beak, and eat me for dinner. I’m okay with that.
You may notice this owl looks like a combination of angry, suspicious, and judgmental. I imagine this may be how you see me.
As I painted your eyes, they pierced my soul. As your blurbs of wisdom often do.
Look at this note as creepy, haunting, weird, I don’t care. Our souls are connected, and you don’t even know it yet.
But you will in time. YOU WILL.
My sincerest regards,
Your soulmate.
Here’s What I Think Of The Royal Baby
Dream Interpretation
I saved this message on my phone while I was half asleep:
“Put dog in box and threw it into tree dream.”
The overall theme of the above text would lead you to believe that I had a dream where I put a dog into a box, then threw it into a tree. Sounds simple. On the other hand, dreams are riddled with arcane themes and symbolism, which may or may not be the subconscious trying to send a message or solve a problem.
Let’s break it down into component parts to see what it means.
Dog—I don’t like dogs.
Box—I don’t mind boxes, you can use them for storage.
The act of throwing—Also something I don’t mind, but also an activity I’m not gonna go out of my way to do.
Tree—I like trees.
We have here two things that I am indifferent to, one thing I don’t like, and one thing I do like. What a bizarre mixture of symbols. I already figured out what the dream means, though. Saddle up:
The dog is obviously a reference to the 1980 novel The Sirian Experiments by Doris Lessing, in which a planet very similar to Earth has been influenced and tinkered with behind the scenes by distant visitors from Sirius. Sirius is also known as the “Dog Star.”
The first message is clear: I must smoke out the Dog Star race, and “box” them up before they start inserting their instruments of science inside of us, if they haven’t already.
The box must then be thrown into a tree. Just any old tree? No. In Jewish mysticism, the Tree of Life represents the interconnectedness of all things, as well as the harmony of all creation.
Summary of interpretation: If I put the Dog Star people in a box and throw it into the Tree of Life, their conniving ways will come to an end and balance will be restored. That would make me the most important person on the planet at this point in Time.
My New Catchphrase: “It’s Bath Time, Baby!”
“I’ve always told people that for each person there is a sentence—a series of words—which has the power to destroy him…….another sentence exists, another series of words, which will heal the person. If you’re lucky you will get the second; but you can be certain of getting the first: that is the way it works.” —Philip K. Dick, from his novel VALIS
I already know the series of words that can, and have destroyed me. There are a few, in fact. My destruction has materialized in the following forms, as well as subtle variations: “Hey, you can’t pee there,” or “Stop picking at it,” and “That was in the garbage, you know.”
So, then, what series of words would heal me? I sat down and did some soul-searching. I thought about what mine should be. Nothing came. I cogitated a while longer. Who am I? What have I become these last few years? This quotation by Mr. Christopher Wallace, aka Biggie Smalls, aka The Black Frank White, aka The Notorious B.I.G., aka Biggie Biggie Bay-Bay, the man with the sycamore style, that’s more sicka than yours, tells the complete story of where my life is right now:
“I’m flamin’ gats, aimin’ at, these fuckin’ maniacs who put my name in raps.”
For a few days, that was my catharsis. In a tight, easy-flowing package, my redemption was defined. I almost kept it. Then I thought some more. I realized that perhaps my healing verse should come not from without, but from within.
My series of rejuvenating words needed something that would really kick you in the crotch, then steal your wallet. I thought about things I say at parties that always give rise to joviality, things like “This puppy needs some chow. Woof!” I’ve ridden that one to deafening heights of laughter. But I’m more than that.
I once had a saying that went “First you dump it, then you pump it.” More good words to live by. They rhyme. But I recently realized they don’t mean anything.
Here’s something I like to say when things aren’t going to plan: “I’m not gonna let it pucker my panties.” That was so hard to let go. But then I realized I would have to be wearing panties like all the time for it to be applicable. So I moved on.
I almost gave up. This was a few Saturdays ago. And on Saturday, of course, comes bath night. As I let hot water fill my tub, I thought to myself, “It’s bath time, baby!”
I was so excited I didn’t even take a bath. That was my healing phrase, because at bath time, anything goes. I can pee, pick, eat, talk, and do anything else you can possibly imagine in there.
And that, my friends, is how I found my healing sentence.
This Is How I Found Out Where Babies Come From
It’s my little sister’s birthday today. Around the time she was born, or sometime in the months or years after, I found myself wondering, “Who is this other kid, and where did it come from?” I asked Google of the late ’80’s, my Mom, why there was another, smaller member of the family. In response to whatever form of the “Where do babies come from” question I dropped on her, I got this: “You pray for it, then you get pregnant, and then you have a baby.”
Even at the age of three, or four, or five—however young I was at the time, I remember thinking to myself, “Something about that doesn’t sound right.”
I took this info to my older sisters, and was told “You don’t have to pray for a baby, the man just sticks his penis in the woman’s vagina.”
This was confirmed much later in school when we watched animated sex-ed videos with wacky talking sperm and kids wondering why they have hair growing in places where it seems like hair isn’t necessary.
I Write My Own Jokes Now
I have a couple of questions for you this afternoon. The first:
What is the favorite snack of teachers everywhere?
Academia nuts. Again, that was academia nuts.
Wow. What a fantastic joke. It’s smart, it’s sexy, it’s relevant. It’s so good in fact, it may be possible that I heard it somewhere, allowed it to marinate in my subconscious, and then regurgitated it here. If I did steal it, go ahead, sue me. I have NOTHING that you would want.
Second question:
What’s the easiest, cheapest, least painful way to get rid of a giant ass wart?
There’s no punch line to that. I need the answer. My friend wants to know how to get rid of the giant wart on his ass.
Blong (Blog song). It’s 3/11. Here’s 311.
International Women’s Day Was Yesterday
Women are alright in my book. I used to live inside of one.
Yesterday was International Women’s Day, and we’re going to keep the party raging, all weekend if necessary.
These are just a few songs I’ve been listening to a lot lately. All the singers are gals.
Wild Belle—It’s Too Late. It’s reggae-y.
Little Daylight—Overdose. It’s electronic-y.
The Knife—Heartbeats
Arcade Fire—Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)
I Get The One Subway Sandwich “Artist” Who Was Influenced By The Minimalist Movement
It’s my own fault, really. I wasn’t paying attention when my sandwich was being made right in front of me.
I got home, bit into the sub. It made a whooshing fart sound, then deflated. I opened it up. The general layout was an embarrassment. The few ingredients in the sandwich were concentrated in the middle. A few pickles, a light splattering of black olives, a couple of tomatoes. Even the cheese had somehow withdrawn and puckered. A total of two pieces of green pepper were visible.
I’ve never had a Subway Sandwich Artist drop this kind of bomb on me before.
I would have gladly eaten a sub prepared by a Dadaist or Surrealist Sandwich Artist, if it would have gotten me more than four banana peppers. The sandwich I crave needs someone, maybe and Expressionist or Impressionist, who isn’t afraid to bombard the sub with rich, girthy, experimental swaths of ingredients, and more than one pass with the mustard bottle. But a Minimalist? I love a diversity of styles, but Minimalism has no place in Subway.
This sandwich artist was clearly rejecting the bombastic array of rich textures and colors before her in some sort of sick rebellion against the norms of conventional Subway Sandwich Art. I wanted a sandwich that would make me feel like this:

The Scream, by Edvard Munch, 1893
But got this:

Black Square, by Kazimir Malevich, 1915
Next time I go to Subway, I will be asking the potential Sandwich Artist to display a catalogue of previous works, as well as a list of creative influences.
The Chicken Ticker
Years ago, my roommate and I were sitting at a bar. At one point, I convinced him that I had a chicken ticker running at all times on my computer. He then wanted to know what a chicken ticker was. So I told him.
A chicken ticker is exactly the same thing as a stock market ticker, only it constantly informs you of the current price of chicken in your area. It crowed when the market opened, and all day there was a quiet, constant buck, buck, bucking in the background as the prices crept by.
Even I knew I had drank too much at that point.