Monday, June 24, 2002
“I was one of the first people ever to give up smoking. I have no proof of that, really, but you can take me for my word.
The year was 1950, when everyone had just started smoking. Already I knew it was a bad habit—my clothes smelled terrible, I would get nervous and jittery when I went a long time without a cigarette, and my genitals would burn terribly and catch fire. Usually that was because the ash would drop in my lap while I was on the toilet smoking, but your crotch catches fire once and you decide that’s enough of putting lit things in your mouth.
It had become very addictive already and was very hard to give up. Back in the day the superstition was that you could give up smoking by drinking water upside down or having someone scare you. After one near-drowning and countless times where my neighbor jumped out from behind the bushes yelling ‘sabotage!’ I realized he probably wasn’t the one to cure my smoking.
To discourage smoking, I put Tabasco sauce on all my cigarette butts whenever I opened a pack. That only served to get me addicted to Tabasco sauce, an addiction which I still have yet to shake. I then tried satisfying my oral fixation with celery, but the fumes from a celery fire make you very unpopular at parties.
Eventually, I turned to hard drugs, and let me tell you, call me old fashioned, it works wonders. I have yet to really shake my heroin habit, and I’ll be a heavy drinker until I die, but the smell of smoke doesn’t make me crave a cigarette in the least.
I should really tell Mr. Polkit I quit smoking in 1950, but I hate to break his heart when he still enjoys leaping out of the bushes and yelling ‘sabotage!’ Whatever keeps him young at heart.”
“Smoking”
"Argument"
The worst it ever got between my brother Goose and I was just after high school. After my high school, six years before his high school started. And despite all the animosity, I still say Goose is the best twin brother anyone could ever have.
"Field Goal"
I was not a football player myself, but a cherished member of the Oscar Wilde Yahtzee Team. My school pride knew no bounds, including legal ones. I shouted and cheered for the home team through the match, touting our strong defense and lack of homosexuals on the team.