Take off your daisy dukes and stay awhile

Friday, October 08, 2004

C is for cookie. Me no share.

Listening to Wagner's Tristan und Isolde. Your classic boy loves girl, girl loves boy, boy has allegiances to royal uncle, royal uncle loves girl, jealousy and same-sex incest kinda story. Ok, maybe not the uncle. Wagner is so German that he embodies everything before and after him in German culture. He is at once beer steins and Habsburgs, Nazism and Humperdinck. Impossible to like the man, but I highly recommend the music. but not at sleepy-time. ok enough. I can't make this anti-semite funny, so I'll just quote Young Frankenstein.

"Why, he'd have an enourmous Staanstücher!" The incomparable Teri Garr.

Today was Carl smacks Carl in the face day. I just went crazy buck wil' with the faux pas. At one point, I turned on Bob Vila to see if he could give me tips on how to nail-gun my lips together. I suppose it's not surprising... I'm not the most candy-coated-gooey-center kinda guy. I'm those little generic brand-name suckers that can only say, "Your pediatrician is too cheap to get Tootsie-Roll Pops." I'm the old, stale Dots, the ones that you think might be pretty good, but ohp! they're vile and stick to your teeth. I don't try to be this way, but often people would much rather eat the nondescript, homemade Halloween candy from the Cat Lady down the street than break into a box of old, stale Dots.

So, les grands faux pas...

1. In theory, since there are 709476,09837465o97,26435097,63409586.1235 people in my class, they split it up into a lecture and a drill. The lecture is taught by a professor, a luminous and illustrious Yale PhD. When she writes tests, however, her syntax and diction can sometimes be confusing and misleading. (i.e. let's use a word that we've never heard before to write a test question). We have a test tomorrow, and in drill today I raised my hand and said, "Ok, so Gretchen words things kinda strangely... anything we should know how to translate into Normal ahead of time?" I got some polite chuckles and agreement-nods, and the instructor answered my question. I immediately felt guilty for using the professor's first name, so I added, "And I apologize. I should call her Professor **** [names omitted as a result of my pussiness]."

The drill instructor narrowed his eyes and curtly replied, "Yes, you should."

So I came out of that one smelling like a rose. A rose in an anal sphincter.


2. My German teacher was late to class today. After ten minutes past the official starting time, some classmates and I decided our time would be better spent napping and watching DOL and OLTL, classic noon tv favorites. The party of miscreants includes: myself, two other Californians (I thought it was very Berkeley of us to walk out. The girl didn't have a big enough bra to burn, though. oh well.), and a Ms. S. Kim, of Seoul, South Korea. The other Cali people exited the room and went to the left. Ms. Kim and I went to the right, and the boba-binger decided it would be best if we waited for the elevator.

"But the teacher will soon arrive and see us escaping!" said I.
"He will not!" quoth she.
"Whatever, Margaret Cho," I retorted.

So we took the elevator, and of course at the bottom was our teacher. grand. He's about 25-26, balding, and from Provo... so this very sweet man looked at us, obviously having been running, and said, "Oh wow, guys I'm so sorry, has everyone already left?" Well, shitcrumpets. "Some people," I said. "Oh," he replied, "well, I guess I'll run up there and teach whoever is still there."
At this point I had myriad options:

a) I could say, "Yeah, you have fun with that," at which point Ms. Kim and I would have left. But it would've been faster to just grab his head and press his lips to my ass.

b) We could pretend that we didn't recognize him, and still leave. The next day, say, "Wow, that was you?! You look so different outside the classroom." No.

c) Running.

but we chose:

d) Enjoy a 10-second awkward moment while the teacher realizes that we obviously don't care enough about his class to wait 15 minutes, then we say, "Oh, well, now that you're here, of course we'll stay," and proceed to follow the man up three flights of stairs in silence, all the while looking like two bad seeds being escorted to the principal's office. Also included in this option is arriving back in the class that we had so flamboyantly left 3 minutes earlier, following the teacher and having the class give out a long, "Ooooooooooo" (read: you're in trouble sound).


3. A delightful-looking violinist had laid out some cookies in a densely populated common area, hoping to attract students to her and her chatter about the Music School Student Organization. I, in my hunger, approached her and decided not to waste time. "Is taking a flyer all I have to do to get a cookie?" I asked, cookie in hand and smiling ever so deliciously, proud of my sarcastic cuteness.

She was not amused. "No," she said plainly, grabbing the cookie from my hand, just inches from my open mouth, and putting it back in the box. Turning to another interested student, she said, "Hi, you want to join MSSO?..." It was clear that I was now finished at the dinner table.


Ok, so maybe those weren't all textbook faux pas... maybe more of me just being rude and not realizing it. But I felt mighty ashamèd all day. I went and found a dark corner of my apartment to sit in, so I could think about what I'd done. I also said an act of contrition and went to confession. By that I mean I came home and watched Oprah with Kate.

You know when you were little, and the most mortifying thing in the whole world was being scolded by an adult you didn't know? Yeah, I felt like that.

So, I resolve to have more class and be conscious of my words and actions from now on. Not everyone warms to me immediately, especially, it seems, when I try to take their confectionary delights without asking. In the meantime, I'll practice using my wheelchair. Both feet are in my mouth, so I need some way to get around.

Music RIGHT NOW: Louis Prima, I ain't got nobody. He became famous as the voice of King Louis in Disney's 1967 The Jungle Book. At least that's how he became famous to me. When I was five. He scats like a good red-blooded Guido, and so I'm turned on. Excuse me.

1 Comments:

At 2:05 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Awwwww Carl!!! Have I told you lately that I love you? I enjoy your antics!

 

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