Archive for Oddness

The ‘Working Families’ Drinking Game

Are you sick of hearing that political catchphrase, ‘working families’, everywhere you go? Does it irritate the eejits out of you to hear how the government is helping ‘working families’ (as opposed to lazy, bludging families? working single people? pensioners? couples? what?) every time you turn on the radio or the news. Then the Purple Dragon ‘Working Families’ Drinking Game  is for you!

‘Working Families’ drinking game*

This is a good way to make watching the news much more interesting.

Rules:

1.  Grab the alcoholic beverage of your choice. It’s more fun with friends, but you can play it singly if you’re lonely and unpopular. Alcohol loves you just the same.

2.  Switch the tv onto a news channel. If you’re on free-to-air tv, the ABC news is a good pick; it’s nice and long, and it has a varied, more thoughtful look at current events than other channels, which gives you more opportunities to play the game.

3.  Every time one of Kevin Rudd’s people mentions ‘working families’, have a drink.

4.  Every time some one from another political party** mentions ‘working families,’ have another drink.

5.  If a more or less neutral group** refers to ‘working families,’ have two.

6.  If the man himself, the honorable Keven Rudd, mentions ‘working families,’ yell ”BANZAI! “*** and have three drinks in quick succession, as fast as possible!

By the time you’re finished you will be completely sloshed, and feeling much more charitable towards this annoying catchphrase. The best part is, the rules can be adjusted at a whim and new ones can be added by players to make the experience more interesting. So have a go at the Purple Dragon ‘Working Families’ drinking game today!

 

*This will probably make no sense whatsoever unless you are familiar with Australian PM Kevin Rudd and his political policies.

**They do this surprisingly often. I don’t think they like this phrase, either.

***The Japanese equivelent of “Bingo.” It is pronounced sort of like ‘barn-z-eye!’ and is much more fun to yell than ”bingo” is.

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Dance, girl, dance!

*Lil Sis walks into family room, to find Dragon standing in front of guinea pig’s cage, humming a tune*

Dragon: To the left *steps left*

*guinea pig steps sideways in same direction*

Dragon: -to the right! *steps to the right*

*guinea pig steps sidesways in same direction* 

Dragon: Left! *both step left in unison* Right! *both step right in unison* Da da da da…

Lil Sis: What the hell?!

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Of Bugs and Fish

*Dragon is minding her own business when small child wanders up*

Small child: I found a bug. Want to come see?

*Dragon sees her carrying container and surmises that she is going to go trap bug*

Dragon: No, but you can bring it to show me if you want.

*small child returns later with container. Dragon looks inside*

*blinks*

Dragon: It’s dead.

Small child: *declares* I love it.

Dragon: But it’s dead.

Small child: I shall keep it for ever and ever. *wanders away*

*Dragon blinks*

———–

I bought the Veronicas second album, Hook Me Up today. From what I’ve heard so far, it’s fairly good. It doesn’t have the distinctive sound of the first album that made me fall in love with it and made 4ever my yearr 12 class’s graduation anthem, but it has a sound all its own that is equally distinctive. Do I like it? Yes. Do I like it as much as the sound of the first album? I don’t know yet. Probably not. Love it all the same.

I think at the centre where I work we must have the most indestructible fish ever. Let me explain. In one of the rooms with the older children we have a small fishbowl with two goldfish in it. They don’t do much, nor do they elicit much interest, which is probably a good thing for them because things the kids are interested in tend to either get chewed, broken, or dropped in some wet substance such as paint, milk, etc. Nonetheless they find themselves subject to a range of, erm, interesting incidents probably outside the range of experience of most goldfish. The very first week I started working, the fishbowl was full of white stuff. Some child, it had transpired, had apparently disliked their yoghurt and wondered if the fish would like it better. A few weeks back one child climbed up and somehow got into the kitchen, stole the fish food, and emptied a month’s worth into the bowl. Piles of fish food sat on every surface inside the bowl and came drifting off the fish as they moved, floated near the surface of the water and collected at the bottom of the bowl. Disintegrating fish food clogged the water. Once the bowl had been cleaned out, fish were fine. A week or so ago I walked in one morning to find the fishbowl full of… bubbles. I walked over for a closer look and watched as the fish placidly opened and shut their mouths, sending amusing little bubbles up to the surface. Wish were a bit lethargic for a bit after that, but soon recovered. Superfish, I tell you. Thank God we don’t have hamsters. We’d have gone through five Mr Fluffys by now, at least.

Have I ever mentioned skippyslist.com, otherwise known as ‘The 213 Things Skippy is No Longer Allowed to Do in the U.S. Army’? No? Gosh, what a tremendous oversight. Well, it’s a blog by a guy in the army which not only has the list that gives the blog its name, but also hilarious blog entries like this one, and this one. Yes, the list inspired the ‘50 things I am no longer allowed t odo at Hogwarts’ list - but unlike that one, Skippy’s list is true. *scared mindboggle*

I don’t know how often I’m going to be update guys, coz it’s been hard as it is, and I’m going to be working even more days a week than before, and I’ll probably be working through the Christmas holidays. (ah boo.) I’ll try to update whenever I can though, coz I loves yous all! *Loki muse hits Dragon over back of the head because of her grammar*

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Things I’m Not Allowed to do at Hogwarts

Found something that set me laughing hysterically; ‘50 Things I am Not Allowed to do at Hogwarts.‘ It has *counts* 12 appendices full of additions to the original list, and includes references to lots of facets of poular culture. I like this one:

-I am not able to see the Grim Reaper, nor am I to claim that he is standing by the Headmaster, tapping an hourglass and looking at him impatiently. Or, for that matter, Harry Potter.

Also:

-Please do not refer to Dumbledore as Methuselah.

And:

-Not allowed to play poker with Tarot cards anymore, last time I did, I got a royal flush and the Dark lord returned. 

And another:

-Nor will I send magical equipment to Caltech or MIT in exchange for full tuition.
-By “I,” we actually mean you, Hermione.

And lastly:

-I will not enchant Hermione Granger’s Time turner to rotate every half hour.

I was on the train this morning when a bunch of high school girls get on, and didn’t ppay attention until someone said, “hey, why have you got a kitten?” I look over, and on this girl’s lap is a maroon school jumper made into a sort of nest, and wrapped inside is a tiny, sleeping black kitten curled into a ball. It was really cute. At one point it woke up and started squeaking, which I didn’t know kittens did;  so there was this high-pitched tiny ‘meep, meeeep,’ noise until the girl settled it back down again and it went back to sleep in the jumper. Kittens should be on trains more often, I think, even if it is against some council by-law or something.

Week before last ended horribly; one of the disabled children tried to bite my thumb off and was prised off my poor thumb with difficulty; I got slapped; someone threw a large plastic toy at the back of my head; and when I was dealing with H. (henceforth referred to as ‘that f***er’ when I am really mad) sucker-punched me in the gut and when I doubled over tried to climb the fence. So I was glad to have a fairly restful one last week. Hopefully this week will be nice too. I work the rest of the week. *droops* I hope you all feel for me. I get beat up by preschoolers.

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Stardust

For those people wondering about last post’s list, I will perhaps re-type it at a later date; it included me getting bitten (ow), the aggressive boy with the gang, *ahem* relieving himself under the computer desk (were his instincts and pent-up testosterone too much for him? Was he marking his territory? God, I hope not. Once was enough), the adventures of the Terrible Three (R. the Bad, I. the Handful, L. the Naughty), and learnign lots of things I didn’t necessarily want to know. But to just continue the first point I began last time:

  • When Twin 1 comes inside he is asked, “do you want to take off your hat?” He stares up, eyes wide and lip trembling, completely aghast at the prospect of being parted from his hat, before bursting into tears.
  • Later on a worker is trying to change Twin 1’s pants after he spilled water all over them. Twin 1 bursts into tears. Turning to Twin 2, who is never far from his brother, she askes he he can help Twin 1 take off his pants. Twin two stares in complete horror; he bursts into tears as well, leaving both of them sobbing almost hysterically.

I saw Stardust today, based on the book by Neil Gaiman. It’s a really great movie. I’ve read bits of the book, and while the book is great, I actually think I like it better than the book.  Meanwhile on his blog I have discovered a new word: neep-neep, one who is fascinated by computers (but may or may not have more skill than is necessary to play games) and its related word, neepery. I like that. I can’t really count myself as a computer geek to the same extent that I used to, seeing as I failed IT at uni (I know, I know) so now I can be a neep-neep. It even has a silly, amusing name. How can I not like that? I like lots of strange words, actually. Maybe I should make a list. My Mum used to be an English teacher so she always encouraged me to read and bought me lots of classics as a kid, as well as corrected my grammar constantly (although to be fair, my Dad always has too) and so I’ve always used words like ‘morose’ and  in everyday conversation, and know things like the difference between ‘imply’ and ‘infer.’ (For the record, to try and give you a rough idea, if someone implies something, then you might infer it. They’re more or less opposites.)

I also discovered a specialist bookstore that sells in-print Rex Stout novels, do you know how hard to find those are? My Dad and I are major fans of the Nero Wolfe series. We love the eccentric detective and smart-arse assistant, Archie Goodwin! This has made my day.

Anyway, going now, post again soon. Bye.

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Cyberman Alert!

I was reading RaJ’s blog, because I haven’t read it for a while, and came across this post about a cord-free, Bluetooth-enabled earpiece for one’s phone that sits on one’s ear.

Cord-free earphone

 (RaJ’s earphone, above)

 

My immediate thought: Holy cow! He’s been taken over by the Cybermen!

 

Pre-Cybermen earphones

(Pre-Cybermen earphones. Is it just me or is there a distinct resemblance?)

 

You may all smack me for being a geek now.

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Practicality

Ernest Digweed, a retired schoolmaster from Portsmouth, who died in 1976, left 26,000 pounds in the care of the Public Trustee with the following instructions:

‘if during these 80 years, the Lord Jesus Christ shall come to reign on earth, then the Public Trustee upon obtaining proof which shall satisfy them of His identity shall pay to the Lord Jesus Christ all the property which they hold on his behalf.’

If by 2056 the Lord has not appeared to claim the bequest the whole amount will revert to the State.

~’The Man Who Ate Bluebottles and Other Great British Eccentrics,’ Catherine Caufield,1981. Routledge  & Kegan Paul Ltd, London.

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High School Memories #1

After blog-hopping several teacher blogs (reading one blog, checking out their blog links, and so on) after coming across the Reflective Teacher blog listed among the best blogs on wordpress, I found myself reminscing about my high-school days.

In year 8, for example, we had this kind but hopeless RE teacher. I remember, during one lesson we had one girl chasing another around the room attempting to hit her over the head with a broom (while this is going on I am happily playing my digimon and telling one of the class bitches that no, she cannot borrow it - I didn’t trust her with it  - for which she got revenge a few minutes later by telling the teacher that I had one when they weren’t allowed) and our teacher was so deep in conversation with another student that she didn’t notice until another student pointed it out.

Then there were the random acts of strangeness. I can remember seeing one girl who, not in the mood to tie her school tie, had simply looped it around her neck and stapled it together with about ten large shiny staples. Thigns like that happened all the time.

There were the hopelessly stupid ditzs, inevitable in an all-girl school, who did things like ask if Islam was a city in Iraq - during year 11 Study of Religion - or observe that they thought the polis was a disease during Ancient History. I’ll never forget in year nine, our bright-eyed, first-year-teaching science teacher started off by asking whether we thought whwther the moon was a) transparent b) translucent luminescent* c) opaque. Even after explaining what each word meant, we still ended up with slightly less than half the class convinced that the moon was transparent, the rest believing it to be translucent, while I was the onyl student who believed it to be opaque. The poor man looked as though he was goign to cry. By the end of the year he looked permanently depressed. These classes took place in the biology lab, which had a tank with a small turtle that spent all it’s life trying to dig its way through the glass, and a larger tank with two axolotls. I used to say hello to the axolotls every lesson, and the black one would swim to the surface of the water and stare at me. Once I patted it on the head, but it continued to stare at me. As for the turtle? i felt sorry for the poor thing and once picked it up and let it walk around on my desk, but was sternly order by my classmates to put it back in its tank.

When I was in year 8, students were banned from using the elevator. This was because up to twenty students would squeeze themselves in there at a time, and every lunch time there would be an elevator party, where people sat in the lift and ate junk food, pressing the buttons for other floors and pressing ‘STOP’ before it could move far so that the lift would constantly jerk up and down. I remember the elevator parties fondly.

In year 11 my English teacher was always late for class, leaving us waiting outside the locked classroom. On a couple of occasions I solved this problem by climbing in the window and unlocking the door from inside. My year 9 maths teacher was a British man with a habit of making jokes with a deadpan look so that none of the students but me worked out that he was joking, which tended to result in me laughing hysterically while my classmates tried to decide who was weirder, me or the teacher.

My year ten SOSE teacher was wonderful. I remember, when the students were let out for a drink break, fifteen minutes later when only six of us had returned she locked the door and taught those of us who were there, merely raising her voice above the noise when the other students returned and tried to burst the door in. Only twenty minutes later did she open the door, and then she gave them a vicious trimming beofre letting them in. Another time I had a toy lizard that I was throwing up in the air and catching, and she called me up so she could look at it. She then glanced at one of the girls who never stopped talking - Helen - who was in fact talkign at that moment, called “Helen!” and threw my lizard at her. Helen looked around in time to see a creepy-crawly-shaped thing flying towards her face, screamed, and leapt out of her chair, much to the amusement of the class. Our teacher recommended in a loud whisper that next time I should bring a toy spider. She had no tolerance for stupidity, and once told us that we had the “organisational skills of fleas.”

*Meant to say luminescent, don’t know why I typed anything else.

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Woman In Accident After Teaching Dog To Drive

BEIJING –A woman in Hohhot, the capital of north China’s Inner Mongolia region, crashed her car while giving her dog a driving lesson, the official Xinhua News Agency said Monday.

“It’s these learner drivers,” said a witness. “They’re always turning left after they signal right.”

No injuries were reported although both vehicles were slightly damaged, it said.

The woman, identified only be her surname, Li, said her dog “was fond of crouching on the steering wheel and often watched her drive,” according to Xinhua.

“She thought she would let the dog ‘have a try’ while she operated the accelerator and brake,” the report said. “They did not make it far before crashing into an oncoming car.”

Friends say that the dog had watched the pod-racing scene in ‘Star Wars: Episode I’ too many times.

Xinhua did not say what kind of dog or vehicles were involved but Li paid for repairs.

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Ways to Die

Moved from somewhere else. Written November 1, 2005

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Ten Possible Ways to Die

Mood:

Uninspired

The idea for this meme came to me when I was reflecting that I’d probably end up dying from eczema if I kept eating chocolate.
Thus, this bizzarre …thing.  Marvel at the weirdness.
Ten Possible Ways to Die
(in no particular order):

1. I could run into a wall really fast. (Don’t laugh. I ran into a pole last week, quite forcefully …the inside of my mouth got beat up and it now ulcerated, and my nose is still sore when I touch it. The optometrist says all the study I’ve done has temporarily messed up my eyes.)

2. The computer could electrocute me.

3. My knee could jam while I’m walking down the stairs. (It’s been doing that lately… I have to hook my fingers under the edge of the kneecap and wiggle it. Ugh.)

4. I could strangle myself in the night by falling asleep before turning off my walkman and taking off my headphones.

5. I could catch that incredibly deadly-painful-etcetera-parasite that lives in water that the optometrist told me about when he explained why I shouldn’t rinse my eyes out with tap water.

6. My father could spontaneously do the Darth Vader telekinetic-throttling-thing because I drove him to the edge.

7. I could fail my exams and commit hara-kiri.

8. I could bleed to death from severe eczema. That’ll teach me to eat things that give me that particular allergic reaction. *stares at red hands balefully* Huh. I refuse to stop eating chocolate.

9. Two words: sleep deprivation. I hate school term. And insomnia.

10. Random axe-murderer.

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