Category Archives: Humor

Random Thoughts for the Day

Good doggy

Burning sticks is interesting when you have a Golden Retriever nearby.

She’s always trying to help Papa. Unfortunately she was trying to help Papa by bringing Papa the sticks he dropped in that big smokey pile… Even when Papa goes inside.

I happened to glance out the window to see a branch (about the size of your arm) on our wooden deck, merrily burning away, leaving a nice scorch mark for me to worry about. The scorch mark matches the burned hole in our yard where she dropped the other burning branch…

Near Riot Conditions

Facebook crashed early this Monday morning, striking terror into millions of users who are now faced with the reality of actually having to work today. Hundreds of thousands of Americans check their Google + accounts for the first time in nine months…

Auf Deutsch?

Now THAT’S good!

We’ve been completely and utterly inundated by phone calls the last few weeks, all from presidential candidate’s supporters. I mean, seriously, we’re getting a phone call every five minutes now. We’re timing them like contractions to see when the caucuses will end.

For a while my beloved Viennese Snickerdoodle Dagmar was answering the phone, saying “Richardson” and hanging up again without even waiting to see who was calling. “The first question dey ask is alvays ‘do you know who you’re going to support?’ I figger I’ll save them de hassle.”

A few days ago, however, she switched tactics and started answering the phone in German, generally with a happy little yodel tossed in for good measure. Most times the staffer on the other end would simply get frustrated, say something that (hopefully) sounded polite, and hang up. Most times.

A few days ago I heard the now-familiar “Hallo… Nein, Ich spreche keine English. Sprechen Sie Deutsch, bitte?” I smiled to myself, knowing that some poor schmuck on the other end of the line was frantically wondering how to handle this gracefully… Then I heard, “HA! You have MY vote!” Then the conversation continued for a few moments auf Deutsch. A few minutes later she peeked her head around. “Vell, I’ll be darned,” she said. “Richardson’s people speak German!”

Sunday Ruminations

To Whom It May Concern:

Here’s a letter I e-mailed Philips, a national corporation, complaining about something:

Hiya… I just bought your “4 in 1 Complete Cleaning System.” “All you need to clean CD/DVD” it says on the package. I haven’t tried it yet, so I assume the product itself is fine. What’s got my tail twisted into knots is the horrible, terrible, miserably misbegotten hardshell plastic packaging the product comes in. Have you ever tried to open one of those things? It’s neigh on impossible, I tell you.

Here I’m sitting in my comfy robe and slippers, cat snoozing gently on my lap, adoring wife by my side as I stare in complete bafflement at this fine example of impervious packaging that encases your product in a shell of transparent plastic that’s so tough I’m not sure a diamond-tipped drill could make so much as a scratch. All I want to do, you see, is get a DVD to work, thus ensuring me an afternoon of peace and quiet. But instead, I now have a distraught wife, and angry cat, several cuts and scratches on my hands as I sit here, surrounded by various knives, scissors, box cutters and razor blades. I’m reasonably sure I just heard my cat say a bad word, and I’m fairly certain he learned it from me as I struggled to open your product.


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\n Register your product at www.club.philips.com and get the most out of it.
\nBe informed on the latest software upgrades and product offers we have.\n
\n + Register at Club Philips\n

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*whew*

It all started last Thursday…

“Gaaack!” I hollered. “Drat!”

“Meow?” came from the other side of the door, followed by the muffled sound of a pair of kitty paws trying to pull the door open. I’m not sure what my little buddy, Fruitloop, would have done to help, he not having opposible thumbs and all. Not that I was in a life-threatening situation, mind you, I was just irritated.

Me in the shower, my glasses in the sink, I’d grabbed the conditioner instead of the shampoo. “Gaaaaah!” I hissed through clenched teeth.

It was Thursday. I could tell without even looking. Thursday mornings are difficult for me. You see, the weekly jam at the Chesterfield is Wednesday night. That means I’m often facing Thursday mornings through a mere five hours of sleep and a slight headache. A person gets to an age eventually where five hours of sleep and a slight headache really sucks.

I rinsed the errant conditioner out of my hair, quietly mumbling near-obscenities though my teeth, and eventually finished my morning carcass-scrubbing routine and managed to dress myself with a minimum of fuss. “The time is now 8:57,” said the nice man on the radio. “Drat,” I said to Fruitloop, scratching him on the chin. “I’m already an hour late…” Thankfully my bosses are tolerant – they know I’m out late Wednesdays playing bass and taking photos and sipping on the occasional beer – but I still like to get to work by eight if I can. I threw my boots on, grabbed my coat and WHOOM out the door goes the hippie.

Keys in hand I open the car door. Cold! I started the car, groped around in the back seat for the ice scraper, and then back out into the cold to scrape, scrape, scrape the windows. I glance at my phone – 8:58. I might yet make it to work by nine (it’s a small town). I turn back to the car and grab the handle to open the door and WHAT THE HECK?

I found myself staring bemusedly at the car door handle in my hand. Yes, it broke off. Hmmm…

“Okay,” I thought to myself, “you’ll just have to crawl over the back seat or something.” No problem. Except that all three other doors were locked. With the keys in the ignition. Engine running.

Well, poop. “Okay,” I thought to myself, “you’ll just have to call your wife and have her come and unlock the passenger door.” No sooner said than done. “Beep beep boop beep,” went the phone, my frozen fingers dancing across the numbers. “Ring, ring, ring.” No answer. Drat. She must be in a meeting. Now what?

I called work. “Hi,” I said. “This is Chris. I’ve broken the handle off my car door. All the other doors are locked. I’ll probably be a bit later than anticipated this morning.”

“You’re only a few blocks away,” the lady at work said. “Why don’t you just walk to work and figure this out later?”

“Well,” I replied, shivering a bit, “because the car’s running. I can’t very well leave my car idling in the middle of the street all day…”

“Oh,” she said. “You’re probably right.”

As I pushed the “hang up” button on my cell phone I realized I still had my ice scraper in my other hand. I looked at the car door. You know, it’s not ALL the way shut… Not quite knowing what else to do, I started beating my car with a stick, poking at the door, pounding on the roof… Sure enough, the door popped open! Wheee! The joys of driving a rustbucket! (The car’s got just under 200,000 miles on this engine – no one quite knows how many miles the poor body’s been through.)

I jumped in the now-warm car and off to work I went!

By 9:11 a.m. I was in the office, turning on various computers, printers, scanners, and platemakers, wondering why the other guy hadn’t turned ’em all on yet. “Car problems again?” asked my boss as I waited for all the equipment to come on-line. Before I could answer he continued, “The other guy’s sick. He’s not coming in today. The network is down. The lady in New Jersey FTP’d that post card to us – we need to get it off the server and plated right away.”

“How do I get it off the server if our network is down?” I asked.

“I don’t care,” the boss replied. “Just get it done.”

“I’m gonna have to call the IT guy in,” I said. “I don’t know how to fix the network…” The boss promptly told me that there was no way in blazes he was gonna call in some IT guy and pay him two-hundred bucks just to push a button.

So, there I stood, in the back room, staring at a mound of cables and cords, wondering just where the network actually lived… I grabbed an anonymous-looking box at random and unplugged it. I stood there, wondering how long I should wait before plugging it back in, when the thought struck me, “Why not just unplug EVERYTHING for a few minutes? That should re-boot whatever it is that needs re-booted.”

Well, that didn’t work, but it sure got everyone’s attention.

I tossed the problem back to the boss. He unplugged the router. He unplugged the modem. He turned off that beige box no one can identify. No luck. He swore. He even told someone else to try it. Nothing. We stood there, wiggling cords.

Three hours later the IT guy showed up… He pushed a button and everything sprang back to life, e-mail mailed, browsers browsed, life was good again.

But… this left me a mere three and a half hours to get my eight hours of work done as well as my absent cohort’s eight hours of work (he called in sick, remember). But somehow I managed, headache and all. By five-thirty I was home. By six-thirty I was in bed.

That was last Thursday. Today is Wednesday. I have to admit, I’m dreading tomorrow.

The Politics of Hate

You know, I really don’t want to hate anyone. It’s not my style. I’m not much good at it. But I want to be patriotic; I love America, so they tell me I have to hate people.

If I don’t hate Muslims I’m unpatriotic.

If I don’t hate the Mexicans I’m anti-American.

If I don’t hate homosexuals I must not care about family values.

I would like to stand up at this point and say, loudly, “BULLPUCKY!” I don’t have to hate Muslims to support the fight against terrorism. I don’t have to hate Mexicans to understand immigration problems. Homosexuals do not threaten me, my family, or my way of life. I don’t have to hate them, either. I am NOT going to start hating my neighbors for being different. I’m just not going to do it.

Hate slithers under our door in unexpected guises, and is hard to recognize at times. Before you hit “Forward” on that joke someone e-mailed you, take another look at it. Is there an undercurrent of hate there? I’d be willing to bet there is, especially if the joke is at all political.

Let me posit this… Jesus taught tolerance and forgiveness. Our nation was founded on the belief that ALL of us are equal. By claiming moral superiority over another human being, don’t we go against Christianity AND America? Don’t we lose a little bit of our soul every time we denigrate another person, race, heritage?

Don’t get me wrong – I’m not soft in the head. I know there are terrorists out there who want to kill us. But I also know there are a LOT of people out there who don’t, and don’t deserve our hatred.

I’ve heard a lot of self-righteous chest-thumping about how John Wayne wouldn’t stand for being told to “press 1 for English,” and there’s some validity there — but racism and hatred isn’t the answer. (Where did YOUR grandparents come from? Chances are they came to America in a wave of immigrants, and chances are they were hated and feared by those who had arrived here fifty years earlier. Did you know that the national language is English due to one single vote? Our founding fathers nearly decided to go with German…) Should immigrants learn English? Yes. Should we be compassionate while they learn? Yes. America is growing and changing — that’s a fact that makes a lot of us, myself included, a little uncomfortable. But we need to pull immigrants into our society, not push them away with hate and spite.

I’m not saying we should all gather in a circle and sing “Kum Ba Yah” at each other, but I am saying that I’m not going to hate people simply because it’s politically expedient, or to go along with the crowd. It’s my way of being American. Please don’t hate me for it.

Thank you for your attention.

If you’re reading this on Facebook, you can see the original blog at www.radloffs.net, click on “Blog.”

Dagmar’s Operation

(This was originally an e-mail I sent out to a few people.)

Just a quick Dagmar update…

Dagmar had her little operation yesterday. We (Dagmar’s mother Kriemhild and I) took her in to the doctor at noon, watched Dagmar sign a lot of papers with big scary words on them, and got ushered into a little room.

After a few minutes of sitting in the little room, fidgeting, a nurse-type lady bustled in. “How is everyone today I just need to take a little blood are you Dagmar hold your arm out please,” she said in one quick blurt.

“I don’t do so vell with blood,” said Dagmar. “Can I please lay down?”

So the nurse-type lady pulled a little hide-a-bed out of the wall, Dagmar plopped down and had her blood drawn. “I’m really nervous,” said Dagmar. “I don’t mind the operation, but I’m allergic to painkillers und I don’t like anesthesia and I’m really nervous.”

The nurse-type lady smiled nicely at Dagmar. “I can give you a nice little ‘cocktail’ of stuff that’ll calm you down. You’ll like it. You won’t be nervous at all.” With that she bustled off, leaving Dagmar a little robe to put on. A few minutes she was back. “Here you go, dear. This tastes nasty, but in a minute or two you won’t care.” She handed Dagmar two evil-looking cups of goop. “One is the happy juice, the other is grape juice to wash it down with,” she said. In two happy gulps Dagmar had the evil-looking cups of goop down her gullet. “In just a few minutes the anesthesiologist will be here to go over the details with you,” the nurse-type lady said, bustling out the door.

We sat there for a few minutes, Kriemhild, Dagmar and myself, fidgeting, saying things like “I’m sure everything will be okay,” and “they’re sure nice here,” and “I’m sure everything will be okay.” Dagmar would intersperse every now and then with “I really like these drugs they gave me,” and “Vow! These drugs nice are sure good I like,” and the occasional mumble-mumble-giggle-mumble.

The door burst open, revealing a very buff-looking six-foot-two blonde man with an easy smile. “How is everyone today I just need to talk to Dagmar are you Dagmar how are you today Dagmar I’m your anesthesiologist I need you to take a few deep breaths,” he said in one big blurt, waving his stethescope in Dagmar’s general direction. Dagmar looked at the very buff-looking six-foot-two blonde man, sighed and smiled. “Vy yes, I’m Dagmar,” she said, breathing deeply, heaving her busom in his direction.

He listened to her boobs for a few seconds. “Okay,” he said “I need you to stick out your…” Dagmar pulled her robe down a bit and waggled her cleavage at him, giggling. “Tongue,” he continued.

After a bit, the very buff-looking six-foot-two blonde man asked if Dagmar had any allergies. “Yup,” she giggled. She then listed off almost every drug ever invented. “Okay,” said the guy. “I guess all I can really do is send you home with some nice Ibuprofen…” with that he bustled out the door.

“Vow,” said Dagmar. “Dese drugs I like happy happy wheee!”

Seconds later the doctor showed up. “Hi Dagmar,” he said. “How are you doing?”

“Blik aargoooie mang dipt,” Said Dagmar. She picked up the stethoscope that was dangling from the doctor’s neck and verys seriously intoned “Flooo bink?” into it.

“Okay,” said the doctor. “Let’s go!” He turned and headed on down the hall. Dagmar followed, making airplane “zoom zoom” noises. Kriemhild and I headed after them.

“No,” said a nurse. “You two don’t get to go watch. You have to go sit in the lobby, over that way.”

“Can I have a lollipop?” I asked. “I’m really nervous. Maybe you could give me some of the stuff you gave Dagmar?” The nurse didn’t bother to answer, she just pointed to the door. “Okay,” I said. “Fine.”

An hour and a half later, a nurse-type lady came out and asked Kriemhild and I to follow her. “You guys wait in here, and the doctor will be right in to talk to you. Dagmar’s in the recovery room, doing fine.” With that, she bustled out a different door.

“I’m nerfous,” said Kriemhild. “I hope everyting vent okay. It took too long.”

“I think she’s fine,” I said. “They said Dagmar’s in the recovery room, not ‘The body will be held for autopsy.’ That’s a good sign.”

After a few minutes of fidgeting, the doctor appeared. I could swear he came out of the closet. Why a room the size of a bathroom needs three doors is beyond me. Anyway… “Well, she gave me quite a workout,” he said. “But it all turned out okay.”

“Vy did it take so long?” asked Kriemhild.

“Here’s the story,” said the doc. “I made an incision and inserted the scope. As I kind of expected, there was a lot of scar tissue there from her previous operations. Her bowel was stuck to the wall of her abdomen, so I had to fix that. Then I found some more scar tissue, so I fixed that.” He pointed to what I had assumed was a piece abstract art on his clipboard. “Then, as you can plainly see,” he pointed at a goopy bit on the picture, “I noticed that she doesn’t have a gall bladder. I assume that’s on purpose?” We nodded. “Good,” he said. “They don’t often fall out on their own. Anyway, there was a lot of scarring there. Then I got to the right ovary, where the cyst should have been.” He pointed at another goopy bit on the picture.

“Should have been?” I asked. “Huh?”

“Well, he said, “We looked at her right ovary, and it was fine. No cyst, nothing. Then we noticed something BEHIND her right ovary. We were a little surprised – it was her left ovary.”

“Hmmm…” I said intelligently. “Oh. Hmmm…. You DID go to school for this, right? Like, for a long time?”

“Anyway,” he continued, ignoring me, “it turns out that her left ovary was the one with the cyst the whole time. It just happened to be on her right side for some reason. Her uterus was twisted up pretty good, too, so we fixed that, then we took the left ovary out, poked the right ovary back into position, fixed some more scar tissue and here we are. Any questions?”

“Yes,” said Kriemhild. “How far apart are ovaries, normally? How did her left vun get over by her right vun?” The doctor held up his fingers about this far apart. “The ovaries are only this far apart,” he said. “Just a few inches.”

“You’re kidding!” I said. “The pictures they showed us in third grade made them look really huge. Anyway, how is Dagmar? Will she need hormones or anything?”

“She’s fine,” the doctor said. “Her right ovary should be able to make all the hormones she needs. Um… I wouldn’t plan on having children though.” He then went over some other goopy details that I’ll spare you.

Kriemhild and I went outside to call some people and wait for Dagmar to wake up. After a considerable amount of time, a nurse-type lady found us. “Dagmar’s awake,” she said. “She’s drinking some nice 7-Up.” So, we all trooped into yet another little room where Dagmar was laying back in an easy chair, one green eye open. “Gurf?” she said. “Iggle vump.” With that, the eye closed and the snoring started.

Around five o’clock, Dagmar’s friend Marilyn showed up to see how things were going. “She’s sleeping nicely,” Kriemhild said. “It’s good dat dey let her sleep.” Marilyn agreed, I nodded somberly and Dagmar snored. “So many places, they don’t let a person sleep,” Kriemhild continued. “They just come in and vake them up right avay. A person needs to sleep after an operation.” She was interrupted at that point by a nurse-type lady. “I’ve just come to wake Dagmar up,” she said. “We can’t let her sleep the whole day away…”

“Dagmar,” the nurse-type lady said. “DAGMAR. It’s time to start waking up.” One green eye opened and slowly focused on the nurse-type lady. “You need to wake up now,” the nurse continued. “I need to see both eyes open.”

“Bitch,” said Dagmar, one green eye focused on the nurse-type lady. Marilyn stifled a laugh. Kriemhild turned toward the corner, giggling. I hung my head and concentrated on unfunny things. That’s when I noticed that after two hours of lying perfectly still, Dagmar had finally managed to wiggle a little. She had made a fist, leaving one finger sticking up. Dagmar must have been proud of it, because she made sure to show it to the nurse-type lady. I guess the nurse-type lady wasn’t too impressed. In fact, seemed to get much grouchier at that point. Within minutes Dagmar was up, padding up and down the hallway in her little robe. The nurse-type lady read off a list of things Dagmar could and couldn’t do. “Don’t let her take a shower today, she can take off her bandages tomorrow morning, she can have some toast and soup tonight for supper, no sexual relations for two weeks…” “Bitch,” I said, both eyes focused on the nurse-type lady. “No one told us that BEFORE the operation. That’s not fair!”

Anyway, to make a really, really long story merely tedious, Dagmar’s home now, and is feeling surprisingly good! Usually after any kind of surgery she’s in pretty bad shape, but this time she’s already had a few meals, passed gas (the doctor seemed to be concerned about that – “Don’t let her eat until she’s passed gas,” he said – so when she tooted this morning we held a toot celebration), and is happily pestering the cat. She’s rather stiff and sore, but not too bad. Hopefully she’ll be able to go back to work next week sometime if she wants (or if she wants to take a few days off, she should be able to enjoy them rather than laying on the couch moaning in pain). So we’re all happy!

Have a happy day!
Chris