When Ames was going under, Mike immediately ran out and got one of those inflatable chairs, because they were popular at the time. It became readily obvious as to why they went out of style, because it was a total pain in the ass to inflate and keep inflated. It came with patches for when it sprung leaks, but we’d gone through them all within the week.
It was a cold Saturday afternoon. I arrived at Mike’s house, as it was the de facto assembling point at the time. Joe was there, so was Mindy, the chick he was dating at the time, along with Tim ‘n’ Rick, and maybe Jered and Ken. As we were loading up out cars to head over to Behrend for sledding, Mike walks out with the inflato-chair.
“Are you throwing inflato-chair out?” I ask.
“Yeah, but I’m going to ride it down the sledding hill first,” said Mike.
“Oh, so you’re going to deflate it and sit on it, like one of those roll-up toboggans?” I ask.
“No, I was just going to keep it as it is, and ride down the hill on an easy chair,” said Mike.
I collapsed with laughter, because the movie in my head was just that great. So we all drive to Behrend, and trudge up the hill. There were about thirty people there, all of whom smiled at the prospect for fun upon seeing the inflato-chair. Mike mounts the inflato-chair, and we push it down the hill, except that we just wound up pushing Mike off the chair. We repeated this another six or seven times to collect enough data to conclude what was going on. Apparently inflato-chair had a coefficient of friction large enough to render it unusable as a sled. We also found that to keep from being pushed off, you had to recline almost, by leaning back. Even then, the chair’s bottom would remain in place, and the rest of it would just ooze over that point, kind of like a Caterpillar drive, eventually ejecting the passenger. WD-40 could not correct this. In anger of the massive disappointment that was inflato-chair, we kick it into the wooded thicket atop the hill.
“Stupid inflato-chair,” mutters Mike.
“I hate inflato-chair,” declares Joe.
So we sled for a while, I had some pretty neat jumps and wipe-outs on the Saucer of Doom, but nothing as epic as last time. Little kids kept coming up for a hit of WD-40, and their parents would pull them away, fearing for their safety. Eventually, I discovered the solution to our problems.
“Dude!” I shout. “We need to put inflato-chair on the saucer!”
Everyone’s eyes light up, then fade away as Joe points out:
“You’ll just be pushed off of it.”
“No, I wont, because you’re pushing the saucer, and not the chair,” I tell him.
Without speaking, we all run into the thicket to retrieve inflato-chair from the woods. I WD-40 the saucer and set the chair on top of it. Everyone backs the fuck up, I align the chair with the jump in the middle of the hill, lean back, and give a thumbs up. Joe and Mike pushed me down the hill. It worked flawlessly. I was about halfway to the jump, when a little kid, maybe about six or seven — old enough to know better — was standing in the middle of the hill. No one saw him before because the jump had obstructed him from our view. It was a really sweet jump. I started shouting at the kid:
“Dude! Move dude! Get out of the way dude! Dude! Move!”
The kid didn’t move. He just stood there for what seems like a minute. I want to think that his brief life was flashing before his eyes, but that couldn’t have been it. He hadn’t accrued nearly enough life experience to cause him to seize for that long. He stood there because he was too damn confused, because a twenty year-old man with a beard and a silly hat was hollering all kinds of sentence fragments at him, while barreling towards him in a bright yellow Barcalounger at thirty miles per hour. I drew closer and closer, and screamed louder and louder.
“Dude! Get the hell out of the way dude! Run, man! Run! Move dude! Dude!”
I want to say that everything was ok. I want to say that kid was… well, fuck, sentient. He wasn’t.
I totally crushed that kid. Bad.
I should be in jail, that’s how bad it was.
Imagine a hovercraft running over a speed bump. That’s an accurate portrayal of events. He didn’t even have time to scream as he got sucked under.
“Oooooh!” shouted the thirty people atop the hill in unison.
A second later, I hit the jump, and became a projectile. I flew in a parabolic path, similar to an Olympic ski jumper, but without skis or training. As the ground rapidly approached, I tucked my chin and did a proper ukemi, and log rolled about 300 feet down the hill. I laid there for a second, testing each joint to make sure my spinal cord was still intact. When it was, I walked in a sine wave back up the hill, picking up my saucer and inflato-chair, breathing deeply to get the stars to stop. Towards the top of the hill, sitting next to the jump, was the crying child who I completely and totally destroyed, and his dad. He was angry.
“Why did you do that?” asked the dad.
“I tried to tell him to move,” I explain.
“You could’ve done something,” snaps the dad.
“No, I was stuck in that that thing. I couldn’t move, he could,” I explain.
The dad wants to be angry, but can’t.
“C’mon,” he says to his brutally crushed and p0wn’d son. “Let’s go!”
I want to feel bad, but I can’t because it’s not my fault that his kid was too dumb to move. At least that’s how I think the conversation went; my razor-sharp memory fails me in this instance. I likely suffered a minor concussion, so I get a by for that.



January 4th, 2010 at 12:02 am
brings tears to my eyes when i hear pwnage such as this…
January 4th, 2010 at 12:37 am
I think I showed up that day at some point… everyone was stepping lightly around our group. I also remember seeing the chair back in the woods.
January 4th, 2010 at 10:01 am
Coons,
That was such an accurate description of the event that as I was reading it I almost started yelling at the stupid kid!
You were right, he did just sit there and look up at you as you were hurling toward him!
It kind of reminds me of the National Lampoon Christmas Vacation part except minus the snow saucer add the inflato-chair and yellow hat dude instead of Chevy Chase. In fact it was even funnier than the movie!
January 4th, 2010 at 4:24 pm
We tried to re-enact that scene once before with great success. That’s a story for another time.
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September 25th, 2010 at 1:26 am
I would start out by making a list of all of your friends and family, this list will be the start of your database. Contact all of these people and let them know about your new career. You can let them know face to face, e-mail them, or mail them a post card or flyer. Hopefully these will be the first people to refer you or contact you for your help. Eventually it would be best to put these people in a database or on note cards and contact them once a month just to remind them that you are doing real estate and here to help. Also if you do get someone that contacts you about buying, or selling or just for questions be sure to send a thank you note. Also be sure to follow up on leads, most people may not make a decision right away. Most loans that I get are not made until after my 4th or 5th follow up with the lead. You can follow up with just a friendly phone call, then maybe a nice letter, or some other information about the market, just something for an excuse to follow up with them.
September 30th, 2010 at 11:43 am
I used to have the Harry Hill annual, there were some great paintings in there
October 27th, 2010 at 2:38 pm
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November 19th, 2010 at 7:48 pm
You will be able to choose from , from using that, to.
November 19th, 2010 at 8:29 pm
That is pretty run-of-the-mill.
November 22nd, 2010 at 3:44 pm
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November 23rd, 2010 at 3:57 am
http://www.thesespod.com/hhs/phpBB3/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=81875
December 2nd, 2010 at 4:28 am
Just proves the old adage. It’s an ill wind that blows no good. – The computer is a moron.
December 9th, 2010 at 7:34 pm
Lona Luckett and Kim Burge are Herion addicts and they work at the BBB in Southland
December 13th, 2010 at 7:00 pm
Lona Luckett and Kim Burge smoke Herb in the back office and decide what business their going to extort. My brother use to work their until he saw them doing this.