Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts

Friday, 4 October 2019

Snowstorm outside my office window & FREE BOOKS!

Check out this video of the January 2020 Victoria BC "snowstorm" that happened outside my home-office window. For perspective, the last time Victoria saw this much snow was in 1996!

I often have the white noise of videos like this playing while I write. It blots out distractions like sunshine and the noise of my happy-family. I looped the video and added wind sounds to make my own.





Also...
A heads-up...



100-eBook Giveaway of
Wakeless (Joe Sault, Book I)

(January 26-February 25, 2020)





The near future:
Reality is a blended (virtual, augmented, and holographic) and artificially intelligent robots have recently become available to the average consumer.
In Victoria, Canada, Constable Joseph Sault is out of touch with his children, possibly losing his wife to another man and his father to dementia, and constantly in trouble with his superiors. Feeling isolated and powerless, he finds solace only in his work. It’s a shaky balance that probably isn’t really working.
Investigating a simple traffic accident lands him in the middle of what might be a conspiracy with world-shaking implications. Then, when the prime suspect turns out to be his wife’s employer, his work and personal life collide. Worse yet, his only ally is a distractingly sexy hologram. Cornered and out of options, Sault risks everything in a desperate bid to outwit the man who has the world’s most powerful artificial intelligence at his command.




Sunday, 17 December 2017

A Christmas Skit for Children: The Interview




Every year, my sister organizes a homeschooler Christmas Pageant during which the kids (currently from ages 10 to 18) get to show us parents what they can do. My kids usually like to put on a short skit. In previous years, I have written and directed, but this year I wanted them to play a larger role so I actually listened to their suggestions, no matter how awkward they might be, and wrote pretty much what they told me to, though I added one or two items. I also allowed them to decide how they would act it all out. I advised but did not argue if they overruled me... which they did many times.

A couple of things to note...

• EI stands for Employment Insurance which is a Canadian government program that pays a percentage of your old wage if you suddenly find yourself unemployed. Some try to stretch the benefit as long as possible by applying for jobs while never intending to get hired. To do this, they need proof that they are applying regularly.

• Another thing I need to mention is that there is a reference to "The Onsie Kid," which is a very short music parody video which Noah made last year and which briefly went viral among the homeschooler families we know. This video can be viewed at the link beneath the picture...


Onsie Kid Video: https://youtu.be/GAjvUiptt4k

• Every year, the homeschoolers vote on a theme that all acts must try to incorporate. This year, each act had to include the following four words: Bidet, Waddle, Trump and Maple Syrup.

Below is the final script, which, as always, I release into the public domain in case another desperate parent out there can make some use of it. A link to the video of the final performance is at the end.





The Interview
(must use the words: Waddle, Maple Syrup, Trump and Bidet)

Santa at his desk: “Send in the next applicant! I do hope this one’s a winner. Not sure I can take another 5 billion landings. [adjusting the donut under his bum]

APPLICANT: Dude! This place is amazing. It’s like a full-on mansion. Even has a water fountain in the toilet!

SANTA: The bidet?

APPLICANT: Wow! Even a fancy name!

SANTA: Uhhhh… Breath mint?

APPLICANT: Thanks. Love the place. Love the job. I’ll take it!

SANTA: Hold on there, The Flash, we’ve got a few formalities to go through first. I got your online resume. Uh—it’s a picture of a dog.

APPLICANT: A puppy!

[Long pause while they stare each other down and we wait for Santa’s reaction…]

SANTA: I do love pugs! Sooo cute. Everyone knows that online applications are just for show anyway. We only hire friends and family. You’re my friend’s friend’s friend, so Ha! [rubber stamps the application] Look at that! You’re on the shortlist!

APPLICANT: I even have my own suit!

SANTA: You do?

APPLICANT: I really thought you’d notice.

SANTA: HR rules. We’re not allowed to ask. But, why a bear?

APPLICANT: It’s a dog!

SANTA: Looks like a bear…

APPLICANT: I mean, which would you rather see: A fat old man waddling about in some sort of fetish get up, or a cute puppy?

SANTA: Sorry. That’s not regulation.

APPLICANT: But this’ll make people remember Christmas during the holiday season.

SANTA: What are you talking about? Christmas is the reason for the season!

APPLICANT: Really? I think you’re forgetting Black Friday and Cyber Monday!

SANTA: Ok, you can wear it under the red suit…

APPLICANT: YES! [does the Onsie Dance]

SANTA: …but I’ve got’ta warn you, it’s gon’na chafe. Hey, wait a minute. Aren’t you that Onsie Boy?

APPLICANT: Onsie Kid. In the fake flesh!

SANTA: That dance went viral here at The Pole. It’s pretty close quarters in the workshop and twenty elves got poked in the eye but they totally love you! Wow! This is going to work out great. Ok, just a couple more question. It’s just a formality, but I’ve got to ask: Are you ok with drugging reindeer?

APPLICANT: You drug the reindeer?

SANTA: Well reindeer don’t fly on their own, you know! Got to get them … high.

APPLICANT: Oh. I guess.

SANTA: And you’ve got to push those elves.

APPLICANT: I thought the elves naturally loved to work hard making presents for all the little boys and girls.

SANTA: Are you kidding me? I swear, if it weren’t for rationing their home heating, they wouldn’t work at all! ...for free …16 hours a day…every day of the year. Oh yes, and how many cookies can you eat?

APPLICANT: Maybe four.

SANTA: This is a deal breaker, son. If you can’t eat at least 27... million, you can’t handle this job.

APPLICANT: Are they gluten-free?

SANTA: Almost never.

APPLICANT: Oh. Then, no problem.

SANTA: Have you got any questions for me?

APPLICANT: Can I use your wifi? (pronounced wiffy)

SANTA: My wifey? What have you heard? Those were trumped up charges. Wifey don’t do that no more.

APPLICANT: Uh... Wi-fi.

SANTA: Oh. That’s much more likely. Well, you’ve got the job. Report for work at 8am.

APPLICANT: I’m sorry, what?

SANTA: You’ve got the job.

APPLICANT: Like 8 in the morning? I mean is Starbucks even open then? Believe me, you do not want to see me without my Starbucks.

SANTA: It’s only one day a year.

APPLICANT: Yeah. You know what? That really doesn’t work for me.

SANTA: Go to bed early.

APPLICANT: I would, but right now, I really need my nights. I’m marathoning Game of Thrones on Netflix and just don’t want to break the momentum.

SANTA: You can sleep-in 363 days, afterward.

APPLICANT: Well…

SANTA: It’s one single day.

APPLICANT: Well… ok.

SANTA: Great. See you bright and early, tomorrow morning!

APPLICANT: Dude! Tomorrow’s like, Christmas Eve!

SANTA: Yes. That’s kind of the point…

APPLICANT: No one works Christmas Eve!

SANTA: Actually, lots of people…

APPLICANT: Ah, if you could just sign my E.I. form to say that I applied, that’d be great.

SANTA: Ugh! Not another one! (Sigh) OK.

[APPLICANT hands over his paperwork and Santa signs it…]

APPLICANT: Maple syrup!

SANTA: Er, what was that?

APPLICANT: Sorry. Tourette's.


The Interview Video: https://youtu.be/tqQ4-MspvkM




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Saturday, 9 December 2017

Daddy-style Fairy Tales: Little Peter's Christmas Miracle




My kids are 10 and 12 and love to hear my fairy tales which I tell while tucking them into bed. Ok, "love to hear" may be less accurate than "willing to endure," but I'm not one to split hairs. If I interrupted their play-filled day to tell them the same story, they'd no doubt consider it child abuse. But, at bedtime, they'd listen to me recite my tax returns if it bought them an extra ten minutes with the lights on. As they say, "timing is everything."

     Still, I enjoy watching their little faces while I'm reading. They're so cute when they grimace and roll their eyes, and I challenge myself to see how many times I can make them groan.

     After hearing this one, my son groaned (yes!) and commented, "Well, that was a huge waste of valuable sleeping time," but his face flickered with a smile he fought to contain.

     Huzzah!

     If you have little children who enjoy rolling their eyes and groaning, or who, perhaps, are willing to do so in exchange for an extra ten minutes at bedtime, then sit them down and recount this short tale of Christmas magic...




Little Peter's Christmas Miracle 

      Once upon a time, in a land far from those who lived close by, a very old man lived all alone in a cottage in the forest, at the edge of a small village. He had never married and had no children and was known to be sad and lonely. He was also crotchedy—probably because he was sad and lonely, but, perhaps, because of anal fissures. No one could be sure.

     Every day, he would venture out from his little house and slowly, very slowly, make his way into town to buy groceries, after which he would trundle, slowly, very slowly, to the park and sit on a bench and feed the birds while listening to the children frolicking, close by.

     Peter was the littlest of all the boys his age, but he had the biggest heart and also anime eyes, which were really cute, but totally distracting. These are the kind of congenital mishaps that occur, sometimes, in small villages, if cousins marry. Little Peter noticed the old man and came to sit beside him on the park bench.

     "My name's Peter," he said, which was not obvious, yet very true, and a perfectly good way to introduce yourself, if your name happens to be Peter.

     The old man did not look at little Peter, or acknowledge him in any way, except to say, "Too much information. What do you want?"

     "I just want everyone in the who-o-ole world to feel love and to be happy," replied little Peter, flashing a Cheshire smile and his anime eyes, which, of all of his features were two of the safest ones to flash.

     The old man took no notice, which surprised little Peter because everyone was always impressed by this anime eyes—especially when he added his Cheshire smile.

     In his most crotchety voice, the old man began, "Kid, I just want to feed the birds..."

     "That's really nice!" interrupted Peter, enthusiastically.

     "... to my cat!" finished the old man. And with that, he suddenly grabbed one of the little birds by its throat and shoved it into a small cloth bag. For someone who was slow, very slow, on his feet, he was fast, very fast, with his hands.

     "Ohhh!" exclaimed little Peter.

     The old man tied closed the rustling, squeaking bag, crotchety-pleased to have shocked little Peter.

     "You can't do that!" exclaimed Peter.

     "Ha! I just did."

     "But that's a Christmas Dove and it's only three days until Christmas!"

     "Sounds delicious!" grunted the old man, rising from the bench.

     "Wait 'til Santa finds out!" warned little Peter.

     The man hesitated. "You believe in Santa?"

     "Of course!" said little Peter.

     "Well, I'm really old and I've never seen him! Christmas means nothing to me."

     Little Peter was shocked that someone would ever say such a thing and his hands flew to his mouth, his grin collapsing into the shape of a something circular. But then, at that very moment, his glistening anime eyes caught those of the old man and in them, he glimpsed a hundred years of hurt and disappointment. In his heart, he instantly felt the old man's pain and anguish. In his stomach, he felt a bit hungry; his butt was tingling slightly, as well, but such details were not relevant and so, never became part of this story.

     As the old man ambled away, slowly, very slowly, the small sack squealing and fluttering on his shoulder, Peter resolved to bring happiness to this sad figure by creating a true Christmas miracle!

     It took him two days to set his plan in motion.

     The van rental had been especially tricky as he could barely reach the pedals and didn't know how to drive. But Peter had flashed his Cheshire grin and anime eyes and explained to the rental agent that he was on a mission to perform a Christmas miracle, and the rental agent had suddenly smiled, ear to ear—but, more importantly, turned his back to put away the rental forms. And that's when Peter grabbed the keys and bolted for the van. Making good use of the bumper, he managed to escape the parking lot and drive across town to meet up with the other boys his age whose help he had enlisted. And no one was injured or killed, so his plan was really beginning to look like a Christmas miracle.

     It was now late on Christmas Eve and, under cover of darkness, he and the other boys his age made their way down the tiny road that led to the old man's cottage, backed the van to his doorstep and rang the bell. The old man was slow to be rousted but, finally, he opened the door and came face to face with little Peter, Cheshire grin and anime eyes set all aglow, by the light of his tiki torch.

     "What's going on? What do you want?" shouted the old man.

     Peter giggled with a maniacal variety of glee, and pronounced, "It's going to be a Christmas miracle!" whereupon he snapped his fingers and two of the other boys shoved a burlap sack over the old man's head, pushed him into the back of the van, and drove off to Santa's village where they knocked on Santa's door. (For this small town was very near the North Pole and everything in it was made of ice and covered in snow. Did I not mention that? Oh. Well, it was. That's why Peter's butt had been tingling from frostbite while he sat on the park ice-bench. Also, the rental van was a ski-do-type van.)

     Santa came to the door wearing only underpants and a sock. Another sock was in his hand and he looked flustered; obviously in a rush. Santa was hairy and he was very old, so all the hair on his body was white. Coincidentally, his underwear was also white fur so that it looked like he was naked and especially hairy, down there. Everyone except the old man thought that it was gross. "Good heavens, boys. Don't you know it's Christmas Eve? I don't have time for—did you kidnap an old man?"

     "Well, technically, old-man-napped... and, old men nap all the time, so..." Little Peter flashed his Cheshire smile and anime eyes and Santa's heart melted so it was a good thing he wasn't Frosty the Snowman.

     "Ho, ho, ho. What can I do for you, little Peter?"

     "I brought someone who needs to meet you," replied little Peter, pulling the sack off the old man's head. The old man stood there in the soft glow of the porch light, face to face with Santa.

     "You!" Santa exclaimed.

     "Who else would I be, Santa?" replied the old man.

     Little Peter was now more confused than usual. "Wait a minute! I thought you didn't believe in Santa."

     "Get me a cane!" demanded the old man.

     Little Peter thought it very rude demanding candy from Santa, especially on Christmas Eve. "Oh no you di—in't..." he muttered, and he and the other boys his age began to giggle nervously, anxious to see how Santa would punish the old man for his insolence.

     But Santa remained quiet and still, and the old man turned to little Peter. "I never said I don't believe in Santa, you idiot! I said I've never seen him."

     "Well now you have!" said little Peter, beaming proudly. "All because of my Christmas miracle!"

     "I'm blind, moron. Where's my cane?"

     I may have forgotten to mention that he tapped his way to town, using a white cane. This was one reason that he had to walk slowly, very slowly.

     "Oh," said Little Peter.

     "And where's my oxygen tank?"

     "You want an oxygen tank for Christmas?" asked little Peter, even more bewildered than usual because, although little Peter had a big heart, he had a small mind; so small that he wouldn't have known a Snow Dove from a common Brown Bat and could only think slowly, very slowly.

     "No, you knucklehead, the great big oxygen tank that I have to lug around everywhere I go."

     Oh yeah, that was another reason that he had to walk slowly, very slowly; because he had a heart condition and had to carry a huge tank of oxygen with him, everywhere he went.

     "Oh," said little Peter who finally seemed to come up to speed and who, incidentally, was 25 years old, like all the other boys his age.

     The old blind man turned, mistakenly facing no one, and said, "As long as I'm here, Santa, let's talk about that Rubic's Cube you put in my stocking last Christmas..."


Epilogue:
     Santa later testified in court, and little Peter and the other boys his age were sentenced to prison on charges of kidnapping and grand theft, auto. But it was an ice-prison and they managed to escape during a heated argument.

     The old man was actually a great magician—this is why he was fast, very fast, with his hands. He had once been very powerful and had, in fact, given Santa his magical powers, way back when he, Santa, and the world were young. More recently he made helium balloon animals and sold them online, shipping them in little boxes that tended to float and saved money on delivery charges.

     After this incident, the old blind man slowly, very slowly, returned to his daily routine of tapping his way into town, lugging his oxygen tank, sitting in the park, trapping birds for his cat, alone in the knowledge that he was sad and lonely because he didn't actually have a cat. The truth was that lately, every time he'd made it to the grocery store, it was closed, so he had been forced to come to the park and trap birds to eat at home. What he didn't realize was that his Braille watch was running slow and he was now always going to town at night, after store hours, when the only ones in the park were gangs of losers partying and smoking cigarettes, like Peter.

Also, the birds tasted a lot like common Brown Bats.


CHRISTMAS BONUS! 
Alternate Endings:
     After this incident, the old blind man slowly, very slowly, returned to his daily routine of tapping his way into town, lugging his oxygen tank, sitting in the park, trapping birds for his cat, alone in the knowledge that he was sad and lonely because...

(A) ...his cat never ate any of the birds he brought home for it. Only the cat knew that he was actually a rabbit. Also, it was made out of a balloon.

(B) ...he had never married because he got tired of the blind dating scene.

(C) ...he was German and afraid people would call him a not-see.

(D) ...he never enjoyed jokes because he couldn't see the humour in them.

(E) ...he never married. He'd once had a girlfriend, but after she broke up with him, he just couldn't make himself start seeing other people.

(F) ...he was racist and constantly worried that he might be black.





EXTRA CHRISTMAS BONUS...

30 sec. CHRISTMAS BONUS VIDEO...
One basic difference between my 2 kids...



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Thursday, 5 January 2017

One Time, In Santa's Office: Dumb Ash and Granger Danger

   Rather than just filing away all the little scripts and speeches that I am forced to write so that my kids can participate in the Christmas pageant, friends can rub their long happy marriages in my face, relatives can turn a year older and their kids can get married and/or graduate, I'm posting them, so that others can adapt them for their own needs. Just for the record, I am officially releasing this work into the Public Domain. You can use it whenever and wherever you like. Some credit would be nice, but not required.




   The theme for our 2016 Christmas play was assigned to us and was "Christmas with a Fictional Character." Who these characters might be was a no-brainer for me because my son is a rabid Pokemon fiend and my daughter is equally obsessed with the Harry Potter world in general: Hermione Granger, in particular. How these two could be included in a single scenario was a little harder to figure out, but I managed to cobble together the following play. There are references to the movie Roger Rabbit as well as Superman's Miss Tesmacher, which I thought was fun even though I knew that very few would catch them. I hope you enjoy the play.

   For the record, in case your children are like mine, both kids disliked misrepresenting their heros as fools and criminals, and my son was particularly annoyed by me mentioning Pokemon creatures which he felt would not "realistically" be present under these circumstances. There were many concessions made from the original script and, in the end, they performed like the true professionals they believe they are.

(The video of our performance is here. 
At one point, I strayed from the script slightly, but the kids did well 
and I think you can get a clear idea of the intended characters by watching:



TITLE: One Time, In Santa's Office: Dumb Ash and Granger Danger

SETTING: Santa's North Pole Office

PROPS:
• Desk and 2 chairs
• Ash’s Cell phone
• Big Pen or Pencil for Santa
• File folders for Jessica Rabbit, Hermione Granger and Ash Ketchum
• Hermione & Ash’s clothes
• Window looking out on North Pole landscape
• (optional) Magic spell glitter (we used larger pieces of coloured paper and tinfoil for easy cleanup)



CURTAIN RISES: Santa alone in his office going over file folders of cases that require special consideration for his Naughty and Nice lists. SANTA picks up the file for Jessica Rabbit... her picture is clipped to the outside.

SANTA (looking at file pic—NOTE audience can't quite see who it is): Oh-ho! Looks like a very naughty girl...
SANTA (Then opens file and reads): Oh! I see. She’s not naughty, she's just drawn that way. Ok, then. Nice list it is.
SANTA (making a note in her file): J-e-s-s-i-c-a R-a-b-b-i-t.

SANTA (closes file and shouts to unseen secretary): Miss Tessmacher! Please send in my 10’oclock.

Ash Ketchum walks in intensely playing Pokemon Go! on his cellphone...

SANTA: Ahhh. Mr. Ketchum. Thanks for coming.

ASH: Hey.

ASH just stands there ignoring Santa, playing game. After a few moments, Santa notices.

SANTA: Please have a seat, young man.

ASH (sits, continues to play and ignore Santa.)

SANTA: O...K. The reason I called you up here is that I’ve been updating my lists and I have a few questions for you. I guess the first thing is that we got another letter from PETA, the animal rights group...

ASH (suddenly erupting): Holy smokes!

SANTA (without looking up): Yes, it is somewhat troubling but...

ASH: Santa, don’t move! There’s a Charmader on your desk.

SANTA (looks up in alarm): There’s a Cha-what-now?!

SANTA watches as Ash uses his cell phone to catch the Pokemon and howls in triumph.

ASH: Got him!

Santa is now annoyed and casts a magic spell.

ASH: “What the! Suddenly, I’ve got no bars.”

SANTA (sardonically): Must be a dead zone. Now, about that letter...

ASH (interrupting): Do you have wifi?

SANTA: No.

ASH: What? Seriously?

SANTA: Seriously.

Long silence as Ash continues searching for cell signal. Santa casts another spell and the cell phone slips from ASH's fingers. ASH is startled, picks up cell phone and examines it, shakes it... but it seems dead. He stands in shock for a moment, then... 

ASH: Can I use your cell phone?

SANTA: No.

SANTA beckons ASH back to his seat.

SANTA: So—back to that letter from PETA - the animal rights people. They say that you may be holding a number of exotic pets captive in tiny cages.

ASH (always too enthusiastic): They're my friends!

SANTA: You’re holding your friends captive in tiny cages?

ASH: I keep them in Pokeballs!

SANTA: You do what to your balls, now?

ASH (enthusiastically showing off 2 pokeballs): There’s a Froakie in this one! And this one has a Rowlett!

SANTA: How many of these Poke-your-balls do you have?

ASH: I’ve got hundreds!

SANTA (examining ASH, puzzled as to where he keeps them all): Really? How in heck do you fit them all... never mind that... how many of these creatures do you intend to imprison this way?

ASH: Got’ta catch em all!

SANTA: Well, that’s not good.

ASH: Say—I’ll bet you guys get a lot of Galcion up here! Have you ever seen a Regice? How about a Mamoswine?

SANTA: O...k, then. Let’s just put a pin in that for now. My IT guys tell me that your file is messing up our database. Just to verify, how old did you say you were?

ASH: I’m 10 years old!

SANTA: You know, I’ve been delivering presents to you for more than 20 years. so...

ASH just sits there.

SANTA: ...so if you do the math, that might lead one to conclude that...

ASH just sits there.

SANTA: Can you not see where I’m going with this?

ASH: I’m determined to be the youngest Pokemon master there ever was! Got’ta catch em all!

Silence for a beat.

ASH: Seriously? No wifi?

SANTA: Ok, then. I think I have everything I need. Thanks for coming in.

ASH leaves, still chasing after cell signal.

SANTA(sighs): OK, Ash Ketchum: still thinks he’s ten years old. ADHD, OCD. Exempt from Naughty List due to mental illness. Stocking stuffer: Riddlen.

SANTA closes file and opens the next.

SANTA (yelling to off-stage secretary): Miss Tessmacher, please send in the next person.

Hermione Granger walks in...

SANTA: Ahh, Miss Granger. A breath of fresh air. Please be seated.

HERMIONE: Thank you, sir.

SANTA: How is everyone at my old school?

HERMIONE: You went to Hogwarts, sir?

SANTA: Of course! Say, is Minerva McGonagal still there? She was such a hottie!

HERMIONE (taken aback): Uhhh... yes. She’s headmaster now.

SANTA: Really? You know, I was a Gryffindor, like you.

HERMIONE: Really, sir?

SANTA: Are you kidding. I was the most famous Gryffindor graduate of my time. Made the cover of the Alma Mater magazine 217 years running! (pointing at his suit) Still wearing the house colours!

HERMIONE: Why were you so famous?

SANTA: What? Why?! Because I started all of this! It may seem old school now, but at the time it was a radical business model.

HERMIONE: This is a business? But how does it make a profit?

SANTA (a little flumuxed): Well, it hasn’t yet. But I’m not in this for the short term... I’m playing the lo-o-ong game! Like AOL.

HERMIONE (after a moment of thought): So, are your elves unionized?

SANTA (clearly uncomfortable with where this line of questioning is leading): But enough about me! I must confess that I was disappointed to see your name come up in my reports from the Ministry of Magic. You’ve always been such a good girl...

HERMIONE (standing to self-righteously deliver speech): I believe that every student has a responsibility to follow the rules and always try their very best.

SANTA: Yes, well, fortunately no one goes on the Naughty List just for being a bit of a suck up. It’s these other activities I’m concerned with... sneaking about after curfew...

HERMIONE: I can explain that.

SANTA: Says here, you punched another student in the nose...

HERMIONE: I can explain that.

SANTA: Multiple counts of break and entry...

HERMIONE: I can explain that.

SANTA: ...and what’s with all this snogging? And Ron Weasley... really?

HERMIONE: I can’t really explain that. But that other stuff, sir, we had to stop Voldemort.

SANTA: Voldemort? Sounds like the child of hippie parents.

HERMIONE: He’s totally evil!

SANTA: I can’t recall any Voldemort on my Naughty List.

HERMIONE: Oh. Well, he’s a little bit... dead now, sir.

SANTA: My heavens! Was he involved in some kind of accident?

HERMIONE: No sir. We defeated him!

SANTA (almost afraid to ask): When you say defeated...

HERMIONE: Well, sir, Harry Potter did him, rather, in.

SANTA (deep sigh): You know, my system is really built to deal with things like being unkind to your house elf, or fibbing to your headmaster, or snitching an extra bowl of gruel. I don’t know if a lump of coal in your stocking is going to quite cover accessory to murder. Feels like it falls a little short of sending the right message.

HERMIONE: Sorry, Santa.

silence.

SANTA (suddenly jovial): Oh... bring it on in, girlfriend. (stands and comes around for a hug) I just can’t stay mad at you. Look, I’m running late for the mall. Let me walk you out...

as they are leaving, just before off stage...

SANTA: ...but, Ronald Weasely? Seriously?...



The End


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Tuesday, 27 December 2016

The 1990s (Christmas Play Script)

Rather than just filing away all the little scripts and speeches that I am forced to write so that my kids can participate in the year-end home schooler's Christmas pageant, friends can turn a year older and their kids can get married and/or graduate, I'm posting them so that others can adapt them for their own needs. Just for the record, I am officially releasing this work into the Public Domain. You can use it whenever and wherever you like. Some credit would be nice, but not required.

The theme for our 2013 Christmas play was assigned to us and was Christmas in the 1990's. I struggled with this one as it seemed to me that Christmas in the 1990's was not substantially different that Christmas in 2013. Eventually, I cheated and used Christmas only as a segue into a play about the 1990's.

Click here to see the captioned Video: https://youtu.be/aClN3RY4bW8

Here is the script...

Two kids run in to see Dad who is sitting in armchair reading newspaper…

Kids (together): Dad! Tell us a story about Christmas!

Dad: A story about Christmas, huh? I don’t actually know any Christmas stories. How about I tell you about the 1990’s?

Kids: >Yeah!

Dad: Ok, then. Well… gather round. You see, back then people could read and write in cursive. Not everyone had a cell phone, but those who did… their cell phone was a… a phone. We all realized that we knew someone who knew someone who knew someone who knew Kevin Bacon. A famous football player named OJ Simpson got away with murder. The President of the United States of America had an affair with an intern and got away with that. A cult group thought that they could hitch a ride to heaven on a comet by taking poison. I’m not really sure if they got away with that. And everyone thought that the entire modern world would crash when we hit the year 2000!

Kids: Dad! That’s crazy!

Dad: You want to hear something crazy? We all thought that M. Night Shymalan was a creative genius!

Kids: Who?!

Dad: Exactly. And I don’t mean to scare you guys, but in those days there were less than 100 channels on TV and hardly any internet.

Kids: NOOOOO!!

Kid 1: You were there when the internet started?

Dad: Yup. No YouTube, no online stores, no Google, no Facebook.

Kid 2: So why didn’t you start one of those and become rich and famous?

Dad: Well now, that’s complicated...

Dad begins to reminisce.
Kids get up and hold flashback sign, make flashback sounds.

Dad (in 1990) tapping on keyboard: Oh my gosh! This internet thing is amazing… Without investing a dime, without hiring a single person I could create a super slick online web-oriented store or service and sell it to everyone out there. I could become stinking, filthy rich! I’m going to do that! I’m going to… ohhh… cute kittens.

Dad stops to watch kitten video then suddenly shakes head, returning to his idea…

Dad: Oh, no, no… got to focus… ok, the first thing I’ll have to do is… Hey! Isn’t that the dancing baby from Ali McBeal? That’s computer generated. Amazing!

Dad stops again, momentarily distracted. Then suddenly shakes head an refocuses…

Dad: Ok, now I’m going to take my ideas and put them on a web site and… oh, just got an email… the King of Nigeria… Oh my Gosh! He needs my help to get his money out of the country! … No! Focus! I’ll do that later. Right now I’m gon’na… oh! Victoria Secret’s online.

Dad begins pressing one button over and over (as if viewing picture after picture) and pressing and pressing and pressing and pressing…


The end.
_______________________________

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Wednesday, 30 November 2016

Gifting Grievances



I'm that person who has everything. I've noticed that there are a lot of ads depicting gifts for me. These are lies. You know what that "person who has everything" really wants? By definition: Nothing.

I know that I'm impossible to buy for and I wish my family would stop trying.



I don't actually have everything, but I am very satisfied with what I do have and can afford to buy anything I need, and most everything I want. Those few things that I can not afford are beyond the budget of anyone else I know. Also, I've been told that I am very picky. I prefer to call it "discriminating." Which, I suppose, pretty much proves that point.

I don't try to be difficult, but I'm a middle class, North American adult and if I really want something, I buy it. Therefore, if I didn't buy it I didn't want it. I've told my family this—repeatedly. And yet they persist. I even posted the concept on social media. Surprisingly, it did not go viral. Humbug!

Do me a favour and help this go viral, on social media.

Birthday and Christmas gifts are appropriate for children as they generally don't have the means to purchase every single thing that they want or need. But with manufacturers cheaply churning out millions of copies of every possible thing while online marketers make them irresistibly accessible, it's hard for parents not to spoil their children. Whether your kid is into Lego, Superheroes, Harry Potter, Barbie or vintage Elvis bobbleheads (you know your kid's not like other kids, right?) you can find it and you can probably afford to purchase it. Worse yet, your child knows this.

To combat this, my wife and I err on the side of giving too little, as opposed to too much. This has made our children unusually easy to please which failed to solve the problem. Paradoxically, because of their minimal expectations, a day rarely goes by where they don't have a stocking-stuffer moment. My son is a Pokemon freak. Give him a single sticker and his eyes light up and he vibrates like a lab rat on sugar-coated Cocaine. Similarly, if you present my daughter with a printed out Harry Potter colouring sheet, she will tear up and hug you until it gets awkward. They are aged eleven and nine. It may be relevant to point out that they are home schooled. With the bar set so low, it's difficult to stem the flow of what they consider to be gifts. So, for them, every day is mini-Christmas.

It's hard to not spoil a kid who still thinks that a paper hat
and a target bag is dressing up like Santa...
...or her older brother who believes he's made an
amazing super hero costume from newspapers.


Their friends have similar experiences but on a grander scale. Those few things that the average kid lacks are beyond our gift-giving budget. I suspect that's why a trend amongst our circle of parents is to limit birthday gifting. A typical invite may mention a token monetary donation—usually for charity—but will clearly state "no gifts." The pendulum has swung so far that each party guest receives a complimentary "goody bag," just for showing up. I'm not sure why there have to be goody bags. Why can't humans be happy with a zero-sum game? I wish that we could all just agree that none of us really needs anything and that celebrations are best when they are about getting together rather than getting presents?



But, at least kids love receiving gifts.

For me, unwanted items are a burden. I resent having to store, organize and redistribute them. Most are regifted, donated, or sold. If you are ever in my neighbourhood, you'll want to make a point of checking out my summer garage sale.

We are overstocked and everything is priced to sell! 

It's all about divestment. Price is merely a formality and almost everything is brand new. Beyond untreasured gifts, you will also find a year's worth of my wife's excess couponing purchases—things we don't use but that she made money on, by buying. It's all name-brand and typically includes candy, shaving cream, shampoo, hair dye, electronic soap dispensers, scented candles and cleaning products. (For more couponing details, refer to my 4-part series: Adventures in Couponing)

My family makes a point of visiting my garage sale. They never buy anything. They come to find out whether I appreciated the gift they gave me, six months previous. I see it as a classic demonstration of "if you ask for it, the Universe will deliver." My family really, really asks for it—assuming, of course, by "it" you mean disappointment. Consequently, I endure a family rep for being cold and unsentimental and am sometimes lovingly referred to as "The Grinch Who Sold Christmas." In silent retaliation, I've labelled them all "slow learners."

I've told them my feelings. I've demonstrated my resolve. And yet, each Christmas or birthday I still get saddled with gifts for the guy who has everything—a stylish ornament which never matches our "day-care chic" decor, an animated plastic object that sings an irritating song the entire time you're desperately trying to gouge out the batteries, or another pocket knife. I'd still have more knives than pockets even if I wore cargo pants, a fishing vest, trenchcoat and a billiard table. I've used a pocket knife exactly once in my adult life—to pry open another pocket knife for someone at my garage sale. On balance, I probably don't whittle as often as I should.

If I wanted bad gifts, I would just keep all those art projects my kids bring me to decorate my office. Ok, maybe I am a little bit cold, but to be fair, my kids are very industrious and have far too much free time.


Well, At Least They Tried:
One Christmas, my family thought it would be a good idea if, instead of stressing out to buy a couple of dozen gifts, we put our names in a hat and selected a single person to buy for. Naturally, I was enthusiastic. I drew a name and had an entirely stress-free season... right up until Christmas morning.




There was an unforeseen downside to the name-in-a-hat strategy: it upped the budget which put additional pressure on that one gift. Instead of gifts valued in the tens of dollars, most people decided that they had to spend hundreds. But anything that expensive really needed to be something the recipient would truly appreciate. By this time I had a policy of only purchasing consumables (i.e. food, engine oil, printer toner) or experiences (i.e. movie passes, elocution lessons, interventions) so this worked well for me. I gave my brother-in-law an anger management course which, as it happened, was not well received. Fortunately, his rant only increased my confidence in the appropriateness of the gift. But it turned out that others had less confidence in their purchases and so, had hedged their bet.

I received a second gift. Followed by a third. Then, a fourth; ending up with just as many unwelcomed gifts as I'd gotten the year before. Apparently, no one else had adhered to the single gift restriction. In secret, they had all reverted to their usual Christmas shopping.

To fill one of the awkward silences, I explained that from my point of view, I was the only one who did not have a "shopping problem." Their counterargument: "Grinch!'

The family never again attempted to tamper with the gift-giving tradition.

As we've grown older, the others are slowly coming around. Gifting the adults has not ended, but it's deescalated into a strange, circular ceremony wherein we all exchange lottery tickets. To me, this is a good idea because millions of dollars happens to be on the short list of things I don't yet have. However, I'd prefer if we each just bought ourselves a ticket and dispensed with the ceremony which is as redundant as me buying your kid's Soccer raffle tickets when you buy my kid's Girl Guide cookies. Also, I'm not sure how I'll handle the resentment if my sister wins ten million from a ticket I bought and was forced to give to her in exchange for a losing one.

Good Gift/Bad Gift:
In case you are still bound and determined to get something for the adults in your life, here is the short list of things that I have found to be decent gifts for adults:
• magazine subscriptions, books
• lottery tickets
• food items (candy, specialty jams/tea/coffee, alcohol, Pop Tarts)
• other consumables like soap, bubble bath, perfume, lipstick
• gift certificates to favourite store or for things like a spa treatment, a movie, or the driving range


For contrast, here is a prime example of a bad gift...





Gifting The Spouse:
My largest gift-giving problem each year is my wife, Junko. (June•ko)

I see no reason to buy gifts for other adults, but I always want to get something for her in spite of the fact that she's Japanese and this adult gifting idea is completely foreign and somewhat repulsive to her.


(Note: The Japanese have a much more complex, yet equally illogical, gift-giving culture which, oddly, Junko thinks makes perfect sense and participates in, to the point of obsession—as is the Japanese way. 

As in North America, generous gifts are expected for all major events like weddings, birthdays, new year's day and bar mitzvahs. But, as well, there is a huge industry built around exchanging unappetizing confections wrapped in decorative packages to celebrate the smallest of events...

•Hello, thanks for coming. Have a cookie. 
•Oh, well thanks for having me. Here's a cookie. 

•Goodbye. Thanks for leaving. Take a cookie.
•Well, thank you for kicking me out. Please enjoy this cookie.

•I've been sleeping with your wife. I'm sorry. Please accept this cookie. 
•Thank you for your honesty. Did you get the cookie I left under the pillow?

•I accidentally used your toothbrush. Cookie?
•Though you are the cable guy and your timing is unusual, it is good that you brushed your teeth. Please, have a cookie. 
•Actually, I used it to clean the seat before I used your toilet. Please accept this cookie. 
•Er... you have saved me the trouble of cleaning the toilet seat. Please enjoy a cookie.
•Actually, my aim was not good. You'd better take the whole box.)



Even before she got into couponing, buying a gift for Junko was not easy. She has that traditional Japanese sense of romance which, in case you weren't aware, is just slightly more subdued than a sedated Vulcan's. Chocolate and flowers are meaningless to her—she does like diamonds, but I feel it's mostly for their economic value and, after fourteen years, we've pretty much exhausted the affordable variations on that theme. And, she's eminently practical, with a hair trigger for returning anything that isn't. This is why I strive to be handy around the house.

On top of all of this, she's a minimalist, never purchasing anything extraneous.

In desperation, I now keep a list on my cell phone of anything that she's running low on, or expresses the slightest interest in. Things that break can be a source of great joy for me, but I have to balance this against my need to appear handy.

Early on in our relationship, it was established that Junko would always be our household's primary purchasing agent...

ME: What are you talking about? I'm great with money!

JUNKO: Perhaps. But you are not so great, without money.

ME: . . .

JUNKO: And, you tend to run out of it very quickly. So, I think it would be best if I did all the shopping.

Bested. And in my own language! Again.

So, while she doesn't endorse the adult gift-giving idea, she nevertheless participates by acquiring almost all of the gifts we give. And, she does it in her own very special way because she's a "couponer." I used to have to be forced to admit this—under my breath, with my head lowered. But now, having seen the thousands of dollars she saves us, each year, I announce it proudly, without prompting. Sometimes, without apparent relevance.

When it comes to paying attention to detail, efficiency and innovation, the Japanese are unrivalled. Junko considers the rest of her countrymen to be slackers. She spends hours researching and strategizing special offers, rebates, in-store specials and coupons until she's certain to save more than she spends. She not only surpasses the highest shopping and saving standards, she one-ups us native North Americans at our own game because if it's the thought that counts, her gifts are among the most valuable ever given.

We enjoy many other perks from Junko's constant scrimping and saving: a constant stream of rebate cheques, free movie tickets, our butts get to experience a wide variety of toilet paper, a junk food cupboard that is always full, a junk food cupboard!, and, of course, we save money.

But there are unexpected consequences, as well: We don't necessarily get the brand of Peanut Butter we grew up with, we are encouraged to use only a small portion of a single paper towel, we use clothing remnants instead of cloth napkins at the dinner table, depending upon the specials in the produce aisle we may be eating a wide assortment of zucchini and eggplant dishes for a few weeks, and we never get Pop Tarts. And also, she is incredibly difficult to buy for because:

• She shops almost every day and knows all the prices. I must be prepared to defend every purchase.

• She's very conscious of the total amount spent and as the price rises so does her blood pressure. Followed by mine.

• If my gift passes all the other tests, I must still be prepared to hear that she has a coupon for that item and will not be satisfied until I return it, then re-purchase it with the coupon.

• For it to truly be a gift, I must include a trip back to the store to return it. Bought it online and already unboxed it? Well, not only can she get that precision-packed item back into its original box but, if we're paying the shipping, she'll demonstrate to the manufacturer how it could be safely packed into something smaller.

Last Christmas, the only gifts of mine that she did not ask me to return were a spatula I put in her stocking and cute little gift certificates I made for free massages—which she never redeemed, presumably because she knows exactly how long a free massage lasts and where it leads. I considered it a win.

This Christmas, I lucked out and found a great book that I know she really could use. It cost a hundred dollars and is non-returnable, but I feel confident. It's called, "How to Argue Logically, for Dummies."

This is going to be the best Christmas ever!

Sure to promote a healthy dialogue with my wife.

_______________________________

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