A Visit to the Hair Stylist

hair style braidCategory:                            A visit to the hair stylist

Anxiety Level:                   Depends

 Level of Difficulty:            Also Depends

 Result of Blowing It:        Really Depends

My daughter, Kate, and I visited the hair stylist.  Guys visits barbers, gals go to “stylists.”  I need hair maintenance every three weeks.  My regular maintenance includes a 5-on-the-side-with-scissors-on-top.  I’m usually done in 11 minutes.

 DAUGHTER: Dad, my hair needs work. 

ME: Okay, you go first.

STYLIST: Do you want a style, trim, or cut?

ME:  There’s a difference?

 Kate walked to the chair and quickly made friends with the stylist who promptly pulled out a reference book containing photos, styles, colors, curls…a ton of information.  Not only was I the only guy around, I was the only person.  So, I bided time in the waiting area and thumbed through magazines.  Forty-five minutes later Kate was done.

hair style rabbitDAUGHTER: Dad, how do you like it?

ME: Uh, looks nice…what did she do?

DAUGHTER: You can’t tell?!  Hey, what’s that you’re reading?

ME: [Silence, embarrassment]

DAUGHTER: Is that Cosmopolitan?

ME: Uh…

 Guys can learn a lot reading Cosmopolitan Magazine.  But I sure wish they had photos of a style, trim, or cut (and gave advice on the right thing to say after a female gets their hair done).

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Dad’s Promise Leads to Butt-Kicking

photo olympic snowboarderI haven’t trudged like that since my walk to the principal’s office.  My shoulders sagged and my head drooped.  The parking lot seemed a mile wide.  I called my wife, Hun.

“We’re loading up.”

“How’d Maggie do?  You sound beat.”

“Got my butt kicked, but she nailed it.”

I fumbled my car keys, slumped on the hood, and peeled off gear.  Maggie had already changed into her sweatpants and sat in the car, munching on chocolate.

We just finished our first snowboarding class and it was a full day of face plants and back slams.  I rolled down the mountain like a tumbleweed.  I was sore, tired, and miserable.    

Chairlift & peakI’ve skied for over forty years, starting at small Colorado ski areas when lift tickets were $7 for kids under thirteen and $15 for adults.  I stayed twelve for two years.  I introduced Maggie, and big sister Kate, to skiing ten years ago.  Kate easily took to skis.  Maggie skied well as a tyke but never developed confidence.  She retired her ski boots at age eight.

“I’ll try snowboarding someday.  But promise to go with me, Dad.”  I promised.

Kate, my ski buddy, and I hit the slopes whenever possible.  For five years after her “retirement,” Maggie showed no interest.  That was okay—lift tickets are pricey.  My promise to Maggie eventually faded.  But during the recent Winter Olympics, Maggie’s interest sparked.  “Dad, let’s snowboard.”

I pondered my old promise.  I filed it deep in my memory, in the same folder as when I promised Hun I’d fold towels the right way.  To me, snowboarding was a wimpy second-cousin to skiing.  I thought it would be easy.  So, I sacrificed a precious ski day to snowboard with Maggie.      

When we arrived inside the lodge to rent gear, anxious parents and bored kids meandered in a serpentine line.  Moms scrambled to fill out forms while dads fussed with equipment.  A young teen stood shaving.  His dad must have told him to pretend he was twelve to avoid paying adult rates.  Almost every kid told the cashier they were twelve. 

Maggie-Bee snowboard sitting“Maggie, want to be twelve today?”

“No, I’m thirteen.  That’s lying.  I’ll take the same class as you.”

She’ll learn soon enough that I’m a chronic liar.  Her honesty cost me an additional $20. 

We rented our gear and waited for the class.  If I came home with a sunburned kid Hun would kill me.  I plastered Maggie with SBF 1000—she looked like a goggle-laden mime.  Our instructor first taught us how to fall.  I stood on the snowboard which was like being strapped to a gigantic bar of soap.

We learned how to make basic turns, by shifting our weight forward and leaning on either the toes or heels to carve the snow.  Our rookie turns triggered more crashes than a demolition derby.  I was constantly pummeled, while Maggie’s rubbery frame flexed.  My stiff as-a-board frame wobbled out of control resulting in at least twenty cruel landings on snow harder than concrete.  Afterwards, I felt like a truck ran over me.  When we got home I told Hun my snowboarding career would be short. 

Bee chairlift_140308Three weeks later Maggie asked to go again, but she gave me an option: I could bring my skis and skip the class.  I weighed the pros and cons of reshuffling my internal organs, which by now had returned to their original positions from last time.  Hun insisted I take another class.  “You’re spending time with Maggie.  Don’t be a wimp.  Do it.”

I swallowed my pride, a handful of painkillers, and played Queen’sWe Will Rock You” to get psyched for another beating.  I brought skis as a back-up plan. 

An hour into our second class the techniques began to gel.   Six hours later we hardly fell at all.  I even snuck in some skiing while Maggie boarded alone.  “Dad, I met cool people.”

Etc Guy and BeeMaggie surprised me.  She grew more confident in that one day than in the previous three months.  She also enjoyed her own company when we were apart.  More importantly, she discovered a new passion.

Maggie chattered about buying a snowboard during the drive home.  She grinned and dozed off.  That old promise was worth keeping.    And giving snowboarding a second chance wasn’t so bad either.

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Daughter’s Make-up Saves Dad Before Photo-shoot

makeup stuff1No one knows the hour nor day. 

 I’m not referring to prophecy, but to an odd situation everyone invariably suffers, whether you’re a high school kid on a date, an adult preparing to deliver a sales pitch, or God forbid, before a job interview.  At some point we’ve all had them.  They punish, attack, and embarrass, at the worst possible time.    

 These assaults have pestered humans since caveman days.  Advertisers call them blemishes.  Mothers call them pimples.  Kids at school just plain call them zits.  No matter who you are, how old you are, where you are, or what you do, they strike without warning and can destroy on any given day one’s self-esteem.  They may even ruin the entire day.  A zit outbreak can definitely alter the course of natural selection.  They’re worse than spilling coffee on beige khakis – you can’t change your face but you can at least change your pants. 

 My “harasser” struck shortly after I talked with a newspaper editor about writing a monthly column.  We spoke on a Friday.

 ”Can you come in Tuesday to sign paperwork?  Our photographer will also take your mug shot.”

 ”Sure, I’ll be there.”

 Cool, I’m a columnist……with a photo!

Etc Guy makeup1On Sunday afternoon I felt swelling on my left cheek and knew something was amiss.  Could it be what I thought?  Aw, give me break.  I did what any guy would do.  I’d nip the problem in the bud and apply force.  A blast of pressure followed by a cool rinse, and I’d be ready for Tuesday’s photo shoot no problem. 

By Monday morning the blemish gained momentum. I tried again to eliminate this menace, no luck.  And worse, my skin was now irritated.  Self-consciousness started creeping in.  I’m a grown up for crying out loud -I haven’t had a blemish for years – why me, why now?

 On Tuesday morning there was no visual improvement or progress.  If anything the zit looked worse and the photo shoot was less than 10 hours away.  More self-doubt crept in because I also have a small mole on my left cheek.  My mom told me it was a birthmark.  In family photos it looks like a bug landed on my face.   “You got it from your dad… his genes not mine.”  That line got me through adolescence but for today?  What if the photographer turns my head to the right and photographs my left profile?  Both a mole and blemish on the same side of my face?  Royal bummer.  “Nah,” I thought, “he’ll turn my head the other way.”  In haste, I consulted an expert – my high school daughter.  She’ll know what to do.

 NeutrogenaKate was amused by my cry for help to zap the zit, especially since she has beautiful clear skin.  Her demeanor was calm but clinical.  “You need an oil-free skin cleanser and make-up.  Use this tan colored stuff, put a little on your finger and massage it in.  Then never touch it again.”

I couldn’t believe I was wearing about a square inch of Kate’s make-up.  Why couldn’t I have a dimpled chin like the actor, Kirk Douglas, instead of a moled and pimpled cheek?  I deployed the miracle ointment two hours before the shoot hoping that the salicylic acid would eradicate the problem. 

 I arrived at the Editor’s office and was introduced to the photographer. 

etc guy makeup2 ”Hi Eric, nice to meet you, have a seat in our studio.  Careful the chair is a bit wobbly, how about you look to the…right?  And smile!”  Click.

 I didn’t see the final photo until my article appeared in print a few days later.  I’m at peace knowing that either the make-up or Photoshop worked.  It’s these imperfections that create our individuality and make life unpredictable.  Our blemishes eventually go away but they also contribute to what makes us a whole person.

Kids, here’s some advice: Watch out.  You’ll never be safe from a zit attack no matter how old you are…but with a little humor you’ll get through it.

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Words of Wisdom – W.C. Fields

etc guy WC fieldsI’ve had a dose of writer’s block this past week.  After spending many hours, and seven drafts, on a particular piece I decided to round-file that story.

This quote seems to fit:  “If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again.  Then quit.  There’s no point in being a damn fool about it.”  W.C. Fields (1880 – 1946)

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Even Hockey Coaches Have Hearts

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAPublished in the Chico Enterprise-Record, Colorado Springs Gazette Telegraph & Hockey Player Magazine (2012)

“I thought this may interest you,” the email said.  In the subject heading was a name, Wayne Marshall, my high school hockey coach.  I expected the worst, to see an obituary. 

I was relieved when I read it, then thrilled.  Coach Marshall was an inductee into the 2012 Colorado High School Coaches Association Hall of Fame.  The son-of-a-gun won top dog.

I tracked down Coach’s telephone number.  He still lived in Colorado Springs, my hometown.  I reached his wife, “Mrs. Marshall, you may not remember me but I played under Coach back in the early 1980s.  I hear he won an award.”

“Of course I remember you, Eric.  He’s out now but would love to speak with you,” she said.  In 1980 Coach was about 37, twelve years younger than I am now.  Back then I thought he was ancient.  All adults seemed ancient when I was 17. 

Team USA and CCCP_1980I played under Coach my junior and senior years.  I spent my sophomore year as an exchange student in Sweden where I played junior hockey.  Inspired by Team USA’s gold medal performance at the 1980 Winter Olympics, I was a hockey fanatic.   Coached figured that the Swedes enhanced my game, and he expected a lot, but he quickly became frustrated with me.  He always chewed me out.    “Miller, you’re hunched over, like an old man.  Is your stick too short?  Keep your head up!”  I skated well but my tunnel vision drove him nuts.

A tough fellow, even Coach had a few challenges.  “Miller, come here!” he commanded at one practice.  “Where’s your head at?”  A cough drop flew from his mouth when he yelled.  You see, Coach played goalie in college and lost his two front teeth courtesy of an errant hockey puck.  He wore dentures to school but removed them for practice.  The cough drop shot through his toothless gap and landed between my skates.  I grinned as the lozenge froze to the ice.  “You think that’s funny?  I’ll show you funny.  Skate some laps!” he growled. 

One day he called me into his office.  “Miller, let’s talk,” he said.  “Your passing has improved.”  Wow, he finally noticed.  “Thanks, Coach,” I gleamed.  “Yeah, it’s gone from terrible to bad.  Now pull your head out of your #$%& and pay attention!  You’re passing to the wrong team.  And for God’s sake get a shot on goal.  Even a blind squirrel finds a nut once in a while.”

NVSHC rinkSomeone with a sensitive ego would have sulked, but I actually felt complimented.  Consider the entire spectrum on the improvement scale.  I went from terrible to bad and was on the way to becoming poor, climbing the ladder to fair, good, excellent, then ultimately, awesome. 

We eventually connected via phone.  He voice was softer than I recalled.  “Eric, you played early in my career and I remember those days like yesterday.  Except for when I coached my son, those were among my favorite years.”   We talked about former players then changed the subject to family.  I gave him the 30 year data dump.  I told him life was good but complained that Chico (California) lacked ice hockey.  “I’m playing in a local in-line hockey league though, Coach.   I’m one of the older guys.  And my passing has improved… to fair.”  He laughed.

Coach became serious for a moment as he explained a near death experience.  He underwent emergency open heart surgery one recent Christmas Eve.  We nearly lost him.  He’s almost 70 now and feeling great.  “Time has flown by, Eric,” he reflected.  “I’m really glad you called.”

Gazette Telegraph All Area 1980-81My ice hockey career ended in college.  Though I made the All-Area High School Team my passing was admittedly, bad.  I didn’t make the college team at try-outs and hung up my ice skates.    

Hockey coaches aren’t known for their cuddliness.  Though Coach was tough on me, I wanted him to know that I appreciated him.  His corrections were never personal.  He sought to help me become better.

Very rarely do we express our appreciation to others, whether it’s a family member, friend, teacher, or boss.  But if you get the chance, tell them now while they’re still living.  They won’t hear you after they’re gone.

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Join  my Facebook page, or check out my book “Let Me Tell You a Story” by visiting www.etcguy.com.  Available in either hard copy or as an e-book.

 

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Dad’s Old Ski Gear Causes a Stink

Etc Guy at Sugar Bowl“You stink.”

No, it wasn’t an old hockey coach griping about my lousy shot, but another person of high esteem.  My wife, Hun, pinched her nostrils while Kate sprang for the Lysol®.

“It’s bad.  The dogs howl and the cats hide when you’re around.  Birds no longer visit the feeder.  You’ve become a smelly, middle-aged man.  You need to do something, especially if you wear that tattered, reeking ski gear.  You’re killing me with your 1990s era long-johns.  I don’t want to live with a malodourous, old man.”

I don’t understand her fuss.  I have two pairs of twenty-year-old polypropylene long-johns.  Aside from their overstretched waistbands, they fit like a glove.  I paid big bucks for them at the time; they’re $50 a pair nowadays.  But, yes, sweaty polypro smells worse than liver and onions. 

Skiing is one of my passions, albeit she’s an expensive mistress, so I scrimp and save.  These same long-johns serve double duty on summer raft trips.  I’ll forego new underwear so I can use the extra bucks for lift tickets, gas, or equipment for the kids. 

“Mom’s cranky, eh, Kate?”

“She’s right, Dad.  You reek.  I didn’t want to say anything.  That’s why nobody rode the chairlift with us.  Plus, your ski pants have a rip in the crotch.”

Etc Guy duct tape repair jobYikes, I hadn’t noticed that.  I wondered if other skiers noticed my crotch.  Typically at home, only our Labrador notices one’s crotch.  But I can extend the life of my ski pants using duct tape.

I ski with a daypack loaded with sandwiches, good old raisins and peanuts (GORP), fruit, and whatever isn’t nailed down in the pantry.  This saves me from a $20 hamburger at the lodge.  Kate’s a good sport when it comes to my food prep—though that day she nearly fainted.  My twenty-year-old pack is loaded with assorted items.  I often forget what’s inside.  It could be food, but mostly its critical stuff for wilderness survival.  I unzipped the pack. 

tired kidKate watched as I took inventory: Two matted but fresh cheese sandwiches,  foot lotion, first aid kit, harmonica, beef jerky, extra socks, wool cap, toilet paper (you never know), smashed crackers, water bottle without cap, spare cap to different water bottle, key ring, whistle,  Luna bar, chapstick, battery, pocket knife with missing corkscrew, old business card, bandages, bandana, naproxen, eyeglass repair kit, tweezers, sewing kit, analgesic, cough drops, extra knee brace, string, and an opaque bag of GORP.  On the bottom was a bruised banana and orange peelings from last week’s hike.  My daypack was a cross between a pharmacy, lunch box, locker, and compost bin.   

Etc guy lunch aleve kokapelli“Want some GORP?” I asked.

“No thanks.  It looks like it should be carbon dated.”

“Mom wrote February 2012 on the bag.”

“You’re not eating that, are you?”

“No, but I’ll eat the Luna bar.  It’s only a year old.  If we were astronauts, we’d be okay. “

“Yeah, but we’re at 7,000 feet outside a ski lodge, not in outer space.”

We ate our cheese sandwiches and skied two more hours.  We listened to Coldplay on the drive home, which sidetracked Kate’s olfactory nerves, and arrived after dark.  I unloaded the gear and showered.  I shaved, brushed my teeth, and rolled on deodorant.

“Whoa… you smell horrible,” Hun said.

“Quit messing with me, you’re dreaming.”

“Seriously, you smell metallic… like aluminum.”  Hun winced and turned away.

Etc Guy harmonica first aidI read the ingredients of the roll-on which was labeled “Body Heat Activated.”  Among ten other chemicals I can’t pronounce, it contained sodium starch, castor oil and talc.  The key active ingredient was aluminum zirconium tetrachlorohydrex.  The deodorant was made in a smelter.

Hun may have been right about my aluminous odor but that’s an easy fix.  I’ll either buy some Old Spice® or use her stuff.  Just don’t ask me to chuck my long-johns.  I have too many miles on them.  I wonder, though, if I’ll ever not smell like something. 

Maybe as we age, she’ll lose her sense of smell.

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Words of Wisdom – Will Durst

Selfie w Will Durst and EricMy wife and I are trying to live within our means.  We went from a $750,000 house to a $350,000 house, and didn’t even have to move.”

Will Durst, American political satirist, b 1952

 

### PS Readers: I recently interviewed Will Durst as part of my Humor Project.  The article is in development…standby for something really cool.  In the meanwhile, here’s a “selfie” with Will.

Editors: You may contact me at eric@etcguy.com.

Posted in Humor Project - Interviews, Words of wisdom | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Eighty Year Old Patrick McManus Still Hunts for Laughs

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA“My career doesn’t seem to be that it was one.  But it’s been fun.”

 Patrick McManus, Outdoor writer, columnist and New York Times best-selling author

 We met at a Spokane restaurant two weeks before his 80th birthday.  I arrived the night before, after a 15-hour, 800-mile drive.  I imagined meeting a burly man with bowling pin size  forearms, who wore suspenders, jeans and a lure brimmed hat.  That’s the image I recalled from past issues of Field & Stream and its sister magazine, Outdoor Life.  One of America’s favorite humorists, he has written thousands of columns and numerous best-sellers.  I thought jeans were too informal, so I wore khakis and a red-checkered collared shirt. 

He stepped inside as I fidgeted with my cell phone.  He wore khakis and a red-checkered collared shirt.  “Eric?”

Like gunslingers, we eyed each other’s red checkers and khakis.  “Hi Pat.  Nice shirt.”  He laughed.

The Grasshopper Trap book coverI explained I was on a mission to find out where the humor writers are.  Pat McManus‘ 1985 collection, The Grasshopper Trap, hooked me faster than a hungry trout especially after I read How to Go Splat, where McManus laments about the art of falling.  I was curious to meet this master humor writer.

Can you explain your start as a humor writer?

McManus: My characters fall a lot. I fell into humor writing.  I was inspired by Norman Rockwell and wanted to be an artist, but the art professors at Washington State College (now WSU) didn’t like Rockwell.  Discouraged, I transferred into the English Department.  After graduating and getting my first job, I kept to a strict writing schedule—two hours per night every day.  I spent weeks preparing a particular piece on telemetry and finished an hour early one night.  I spent that hour writing a nonsensical story where wildlife is connected to telemetry, and how some guy kept track of everything.  He’d get calls from hunters: “Any deer around?”   Why, yes, there’s a four-point buck off the highway.”  The story described the hazards of removing telemetry wires when skinning deer.

I sold that article for $300.  I spent a zillion hours researching the telemetry piece and only got $750.  Wait a minute.  I just made $300 an hour writing nonsense. Guess I’ll become a humor writer.

Was it difficult breaking in?

McManus BooksMcManus: Those were different times.  After college, my first job was a police reporter for the Daily Olympian.  I also sold pieces to other newspapers and magazines.  There were only a thousand magazines in the country back then, and I was a good feature writer.  The pay wasn’t much—maybe $20 per feature.  

I recall selling three features to a grouchy news editor.  One story was about a family with a pet buffalo.  Who keeps a pet buffalo?  The second was about a car that rolled off a dock.  Turned out it was a bootlegger’s car.  And the third feature was about buttercups.

Buttercup, flowers?

 McManus:  Yes [laughing].  The news editor was a macho guy.  He boomed, “I’ll buy the buffalo and bootlegger stories but forget about the buttercup piece.”  A panicked manager suddenly rushed in, “We just lost a story!”

The news editor asked, “Uh, how much do you want for the buttercup piece?” 

My price went up. 

Do you still write two hours every day?

McManus:  No, now that I’m semi-retired I don’t have the same level of income.  I’m now up to eight hours a day!  Let that be a lesson to you.

What’s a funny story you haven’t written?

Remote road near Shaniko OR 1 130814McManus:   Bun (my wife) and I once drove cross country on a book tour.  Before leaving home I received a letter from a teenage Amish boy from eastern Pennsylvania.  He invited me to visit his shop—a broom making business.  He said he’d make my wife a broom.  So I’m at this book signing event.  Over a hundred people stood in line and the local TV station covered the affair.  My visit was a big deal.  I noticed this tall, husky fellow in back.  He dressed in strange, outdated clothes, and wore a straw hat.  When he came up to me, he waved off the TV crew.  This guy had clout.

The man said, “My brother invited you to visit his broom making shop.  I want to make sure you’ll stop by.”

Did you go?

McManus:  Of course.  We visited that Amish community and met this kid.  His broom making machine clanged and had terrible claws.  I asked if he ever got hurt.  The boy rolled up his sleeves, revealing scarred forearms.  He insisted on giving us a ride in his horse-drawn buggy.  It had a battery-powered speedometer.  The boy chauffeured, families gathered…I was a major author [chuckling].

And Bun still has the broom.  That sweeper’s a keeper.

Now that you’re 80, what’s next?

spokane river rapidsMcManus:   I just finished my latest novel, entitled “Circles in The Snow,” which is based on a true story. It was winter, about 35 years ago, and I was on the phone with a New York editor.  An eagle suddenly flew inside.  I dropped the phone and the editor asked what happened.  “An eagle just flew through the window,” I exclaimed.  “Yeah, right,” he said.  That city editor had no concept an outdoor writer actually sees wildlife. 

My office overlooks the Clark Fork River.  One day I noticed a rock island covered with a fresh layer of snow.  It had a circle etched into it, like a giant protractor made it. The diameter was about seven feet.  What caused that?  I didn’t see any tracks.  I put on my waders and crossed a shallow underwater ledge to get a closer look.  I stepped over the circle’s perimeter and walked to the center.  In the snow were eagle claw marks.  The bird must have landed and rotated in place.  His wingtips touched the snow and created a perfect circle.  The story is about the relationship between eagles and people.  I feel it’s my best novel. 

You’ve written humor, mysteries, and novels, have won awards, and have been on the New York Times best-seller list many times.  What’s your legacy? 

McManus: I don’t really care.  I receive tons of emails and letters from readers thanking me, this means a lot.  I received a message from a young lady who read one of my stories to her father while he was on his deathbed.  She said it made him smile.  Then there was the soldier in Afghanistan who read to his buddies.  I have over two hundred email messages waiting for me.  I’ll answer them all.

I’ve supposedly sold over two million books.  Do you know what that means?  That there are millions of people out there!  [Smiling] I just love to write stories.  It’s not about the accolades or money…but I don’t mind it. 

Let me mention Tim Behrens, star of the McManus Comedies and one of my former graduate students.  Tim puts to life the characters I’ve created.  He’s performed for over 450,000 audience members. 

wind generator1 I-84 columbia river 130812I see that McManus Comedies tours throughout USA and Alaska.

McManus:   I travelled once with Tim to a remote location in the Aleutian Islands.  Several Aleut natives rowed their boats across the sound to watch the show.  Tim gave rock solid performances. 

The waitress checked on us and McManus asked to box his leftover steak salad.  “I’m full and should take the rest home to my wife, got to watch out for number one.”

She returned and offered dessert.  “Let’s stay,” he gleamed.  “We’re writing a book!  We’ll have two chocolate peanut-butter parfaits.”

Is humor writing vanishing?

McManus:  Humor writing was big in the 1920s and 1930s.  Now with TV and the internet, our sources of humor come in brief bites.  Newspapers and magazines are struggling.  I see a future in nonfiction stories, with humor folded in.  The trick with humor is to write seriously about nonsensical things.  Write stories people enjoy, to lift their spirits.  Make the story so people are happier after reading it than they were before.  Humor writing is not vanishing but writers need to adapt.

Do you use social media?

McManus:  No, but Bun got me a cell phone.  She calls to give me reminders.

Don’t feel bad.  My wife once sent me to buy groceries but I came home with a BB gun.  I forgot to write a list.

McManus:  [Chuckling] Really?  Wait, I’m supposed to get something and you’re worrying me.  Now I remember, it was two ears of corn.  Let’s revisit our talk about accolades.  One I truly appreciate is my college English department’s Centennial Scholar award.  Before college I was an inexperienced country kid from Idaho.  I didn’t know anything about the world.  I remember attending my first freshman lecture.  The professor said, “Look at the person to your right.”  So I looked right.  “Now, look to your left.”  And I looked left.  “Those two people will not be here four years from now.”  All I could think was, that I’m glad I’m not one of those two people.  His statement went right by me.  That professor introduced me to Shakespeare.  He spent an entire lecture on the first three words of Hamlet: “Who goes there.”  Those three words revealed Shakespeare’s genius.  That professor challenged me to look for the telling detail.  He was some professor.

We finished dessert.  I noticed McManus ate the entire portion. 

Spokane 100 miles 130812“I thought you were full.  Don’t you want to save any for Bun?”

“No, it’s not good for her,” he winked.  “You have to look out for your wife all the time, you know.” 

Our visit wrapped up and Pat paid the bill.  “Thanks for driving 800 miles to see me.”

“No, thank you.  By the way, I noticed an airport about ten minutes from here.  I didn’t realize planes flew to Spokane.”  He laughed and walked to his car.

I returned to our table to gather my notes.  To my horror, I noticed Bun’s leftovers.  I picked up the box, sprinted outside, and intercepted Pat.

“Pat, your leftovers!”  I handed him the box through the car window.

“Thanks, you saved my neck.”  He grinned and drove off.  I sure hope he remembered the two ears of corn.

Pat McManus is welcome at my campfire anytime.  Though the drive to Spokane was 800 miles, his wit is only a bookshelf away.  Thanks for the stories, Pat.  Happy Birthday.

 ”Circles in The Snow“, Pat’s latest novel, will be released in spring 2014.

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Eric Miller, aka Etc. Guy, lives in Chico, California.  He is a terrible angler and eats wild game whenever he mooches it from friends.  He travels to interview humor writers.  Contact him at eric@etcguy.com or visit www.etcguy.com.

 

 

Posted in Humor Project - Interviews, The Humor Project | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 91 Comments

Weight Watcher’s Journey May Require Duct Tape

Etc Guy Sees candyThe adult arm weighs eight pounds, about five percent of one’s body weight.  Thanks to my holiday junk food diet, I’m that much heavier.  I awoke this morning and had an epiphany: I still have the same arms.  The calories must have flowed further south.

I know better, but I’ll binge until muffin tops lap over my belt.  Chips are my greatest temptation, whether they’re made of chocolate or potatoes.   Unlike a carnival mirror, mine doesn’t lie.  Human anatomy fascinates me; every body part has a role.  What puzzles me, are disproportionate body parts.  My right bicep is larger than my left, but my left love handle is bigger than my right.  I’ve worked on that left love handle for months.  My wife, Hun, gave me a pep talk.

“I accept you eEtc guy love handles 1ven if you’re lopsided.  Here, take out the trash.” 

I maintained a trim physique well into my 30’s but by age 39, I surpassed the recommended body-mass-index or BMI.  Not to be confused with a BMW, the BMI is based on weight and height, not on body fat.  My buddy Steve alerted me about BMI after he joined Weight Watchers®.  He wanted to lose 80 pounds.

“You dork; I bet you’re the only guy there.  Hah!”

Steve flinched.  I felt bad and later apologized to my friend who only wanted to improve his health, and for moral support I went to a meeting with him.  We sauntered inside on a busy Saturday morning and stood in line.  The receptionist handed me a brochure.

“Nope,” I said.  “This isn’t for me.”Etc Guy fat guy w beer

“Well, you can weigh in and see how it goes.”

By now Steve moved ahead, and I listened to a stranger discuss her weight loss goals.  A husband and his wife walked in behind me.  They joked about cinching duct tape around their thighs to reduce chafing.

Before long, I stepped on the scale and numbers flashed past 200 lbs.  I was the same weight as an NFL running back, one who’s paid a lot of dough, except I was just dough. 

 ”Holy cow, what happened?”

“That’s alright,” the receptionist said.  She tapped my wrist.  “That’s why you’re here.”

I joined the Etc Guy WW weighing ingroup.  I ate more greens and fewer carbs, drank more water and less beer, and took on a physically challenging home project: digging fencepost holes.  Weekly meetings became a ritual and I soon learned how to play the weigh-in game.  One trick was to wear the same clothes I wore when I started, to compare net gains or losses.  Psychologically, every ounce mattered, especially for measuring progress.  About six months into it I substituted my heavy-weight cotton boxers with silk underwear that weighed next to nothing.  Five months later I weighed 40 lbs less, had a fenced yard, and an assortment of silk underwear.

The benefits were awesome.  My metabolism rivaled the Energizer Bunny’s®, and I dropped 50 cholesterol points.  My doctor grinned, “Your heart thanks you.” Etc Guy weight record

I’ve battled weight maintenance ten years now but the pounds creep up on me like a stalking cat.  I fall off the wagon with chocolate binges and the occasional bowl of bean dip.  Work, kids, and social activities clog my schedule, and it’s hard to make time for exercise.  But one lesson I’ve learned through this journey is that I need to take time for myself.  My mental and physical health depends on it.  Maybe that sounds selfish, but I’d rather be older and fit than selfless and dead.

Life’s too short toEtc Guy duct tape check out early.  I want to travel with Hun, goof off with the kids, and play sports until I embarrass myself.  I want an active, energetic lifestyle with no holds barred.  When my time is up I want to sprint through the Pearly Gates, rather than float in on a Lazy-Boy®.

I’ll keep eating chocolate though, and will replace fence boards or dig holes to offset any gains.  And as I continue reeling in the years, I’ll probably still wear silk underwear at weigh-ins.  I wonder, though, if there’s a way to use duct tape to even out my love handles.  I just don’t see them going away.

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Send me a note at eric@etcguy.com, share this story, or join the Etc. Guy Facebook page at www.etcguy.com.

Posted in Health | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 87 Comments

Losing Sucks, No Matter How Old You Are

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA(Hockey Player Magazine, January 2014)

Seven percent isn’t bad.  It depends on your point of view.

Consider weight loss.  If I was seven percent lighter I’d weigh a svelte 162 pounds, not bad for a guy fending off love handles and sagging breasts.  Seven percent is a strong return on stocks given today’s, last year’s, or last week’s, economy.  A seven percent growth in my portfolio means I can retire ten years from now at 60, about seven percent younger than 65. 

So, seven percent is good…unless it’s your hockey team’s winning percentage. We won one game and lost twelve this season, the best last place team in the league.  Percentage wise, we lost more games than the 1974 Washington Capitals.  They won ten percent of their games, going 8-67-5 in their inaugural NHL season.logo Washington Capitals

I haven’t lost this many games since my bantam season.  Our Colorado Springs All-Star team went 2-24-2 that year.  We were hardly stars, but rather, star-struck by Denver teams loaded with talent. We were the Bad News Bears of our bantam league.  I wore jersey number 1, with white tape stuck on my back, to make a 7.   Our one competitive line lasted a period or two but that was it.  The second and third lines were scrawny guys that got munched by larger opponents.  Our season must have frustrated Coach Thiessen, who played for Denver University’s 1969 NCAA Championship team.  After our final game Coach awarded me the Best Defenseman trophy but it was a shallow personal victory.  He knew I played hard but it was less about commitment than it was about skating for dear life. I was 14 and hated losing. But oh, how I loved the game.

Flash forward 36 years.  I now play in an adult in-line hockey league.  Sunday is hockey night, an evening of pushing, shoving, and gnashing of teeth.  But that goes away when I leave home for the rink.  The rink, a former warehouse, is a chapel for hockey players.  We confess our sins in the penalty box after skirmishes.

The in-line rules are d1969 du hockey teamifferent than ice. Each roster usually has 8 or 9 players and we skate four-on-four instead of five-on-five.  We lost our first seven games because we only had six players.  We’d sometimes beg, borrow and steal other guys who just finished the previous game.  Our losses were mostly one or two goal games.  We often played well but ran out of gas.   Twice we were blown out.  The referee skated to our bench during one of the massacres. 

“Boys, we have an eight goal rule.  You’re losing 7-0.  Shall we call it a night?”

“No way, we got ’em.  There’s still ten minutes.  Bring it on.”

“Suit yourself.”

We held them to 8-0.

Our sole victory was by three goals.  I scored a hat trick, which not only surprised our opponents and my teammates, but me too.  We were hot that night and had a full roster.  Okay, so they had a barking Labrador in the net.  A win is a win. 

Every team in our league makes the playoffs, and we took our 1-10 record as the sixth seed in a double elimination tournament.  It reminded me of when my daughter’s soccer team, the Sparrows, made the playoffs with a 0-8 record.  No wonder they had a lousy record.  How do you cheer a sparrow?  The only things afraid of sparrows are bugs.  Ironically, the Sparrows got hammered by the Crickets but all players still received trophies.  I guess our politically correct society wants everyone to “feel good.”  That just doesn’t seem right.  It’setc guy eric hockey blazers not real life.

The prize for our championship was more poignant than a trophy: a t-shirt, beers, and bragging rights.  For our first round game we came out flat and lost by four.  The loss discouraged us.  We thought we were peaking.     

The second round game was a hard fought battle.  We hustled and passed well but lost 8-7.  Afterward, we shook hands with our opponents, the eventual champions.  They complimented our effort.

Compliments aside, losing at 50 sucks just as much now as it did when I was 14.  But I’ll keep playing.  Oh, how I love the game.

### Eric Miller skates with the Hamilton City Hockey Club near Chico, CA.  Comment below, send me a note at eric@etcguy.com, or join the Etc. Guy Facebook page by visiting www.etcguy.com.

Posted in Sports | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 42 Comments