Friday, November 16, 2012

Milk mania. (A culture of fake conditions)

I think lactose intolerance is totally fake. I've never heard of one founding father that wussed out on a glass of milk so it seems to be a more modern condition caused by a society that has humans enclosed indoors all day becoming diabetic obesities.

My theory is some kid from a strict catholic household made it up so he wouldn't have to finish his milk before leaving the dinner table and the lie just snowballed from there.

This kid was so convincing that they took him to a renowned physician who was also fooled and concluded that the parents had to keep him away from a whole host of dairy products.

Then the child tells his schoolmates how to get out of drinking milk and suddenly all the local physicians are flooded with this supposed epidemic.

Little did the young boy know that he had just black balled himself from ice cream and other tasty deserts but it was too late. The punishment was severe for lying in his house and he was stuck with his story.

Meanwhile word of lactose intolerance (then called milk mania) spreads to medical journals and conferences. People start believing they really have this new condition. Much like depression, anxiety, diabetes and breast cancer, a bunch of people jump on the band wagon. So now a bunch of sad bastards, worry worts, candy eaters and chicks who never got felt up have a new "condition" that totally enables them.


*** I realize that I neglected my blog for the rest of the summer. So here's some pics of my Mage from Order and Chaos: a hot Elven Wizard exploring some new and far off lands. (She needs to be checked for breast cancer.)







And here's a pic from this years Renaissance Festival!



And my beloved Minneapolis at the end of an Indian summer.




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Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Buy my love: XXXIV

September 27th is that time of the year when we celebrate the day I came out of the womb all slimy and bloody. Eww. So back by popular demand is my twice annual "buy my love" birthday edition.

1. Let's start out with some small basic things that no one should be without. Like this iPad for instance. I'm not an extravagant person. That's why I've left it up to you on whether or not you want to include a custom cover.

(Seriously, if you get me this, you just bought my love for 5 years with an extended 2 year warranty. You needn't worry about my christmas gift or that person that's been bothering you at work. It's taken care of.)




2. Lets talk clothes. If your gift screams: "It's the thought that counts", chances are I'm throwing it out the window or using it as a washable ass wipe. Besides, why go through the trouble of trying to pick something out when EVERYTHING I've ever wanted is at Urban Outfitters this season.

(I only have 2 pairs of pants and I'm dangerously low on sweaters. Gift card. It's a no brainer people.)

3. Anyone that knows me knows I have an addictive personality. My current addiction is my iPhone and not only am I excited for the new one, I never have enough memory for both my music and apps. I've always wanted at least a 32GB phone or higher. This december marks my 2 years clean of heroin. Aren't you proud of me? No your not unless you order me the new iPhone



4. Music. It's the gift that keeps on giving and an iTunes card is the gift for the financially impaired. Now you can win a place in my heart for a minimum donation. This gift assures that everyone regardless of culture or social class can be a part of this, proving I'm not some greedy, manipulative person just trolling for gifts.

So there you have it. A modest and heartfelt edition of "buy my love". Just what my adoring public wants. Now please give me what I want. Besides, how can you put a price on unconditional love? Well I just did.

Send gifts via snail mail to the below address and email gifts to:
Autum_empires@yahoo.com

Be sure to check out Artiface for all your graphic design needs.



Tuesday, September 11, 2012

What a girl wants, what a girl needs

Finally an excuse to blog again. I just read this Facebook post this girl put up saying that she wanted a guy just like in those 80's movies. You know, like John Cusak holding up that boom box in "Say Anything" or what's his face with the cake at the end of
"16 Candles".

So I had to shed some light on this farce and the stark contrast between what girls want and what they think they want. The truth is: those guys never win. Girls ignore them, break their hearts and walk all over them and that's what makes these movies so awesome! These guys finally win!

If a girl didn't have a guy with a million things to bitch about they would probably implode. The only way around implosion for a girl is to have no guy at all and play the whole "I'll never find my one true love...feel sorry for me" card.

So here is what you've all been waiting for: the actual profile of what a girl wants. Drum roll please.

They want a half interested guy with a slight air of douchiness. A guy who so rarely expresses his emotions that when he does, they can claim it as a victory.

Lets talk about victories for a moment. "A victory for what?" you may ask. A victory for what men really are to women: Their little projects.

Now small victories include girls getting us to see chick flicks, apologize for nothing and pretend to be nice to their catty girlfriends despite the fact they're constantly trying to sabotage our relationship with all that "advice" they keep giving her.

Major victories include us taking tango lessons, wearing khakis and (after your married) actually asking her permission to buy something with the money you made at the job you work.

You see I was once a guy much like the men from those classic 80's movies: full of youthful romance and not afraid to show it. Girls either ate me alive or paid no attention at all. I didn't actually get girls until i was crushed by the weight of the world and became a sarcastic, disinterested chauvinist.

The truth is girls want a guy that has a selfish agenda and will feign interest in them just long enough to get what he wants.

And what DO we want? The whole "I've been a naughty schoolgirl" thing. I'm pretty sure every guy wants that except me of course. I just wanna go out dancing, shop for trendy purses and someday have a baby. If only I could find girls like that. Perhaps I'll never find my one true love.
---

I haven't really been taking any pictures so instead of disappointing you, I just quick snazzed up these boring and terrible photos I did of two bus stations.



From Southdale



To uptown

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Sunday, August 19, 2012

Internet trollers. We be thuggin'

People sure are brave over the Internet, aren't they? There's at least a few faceless profiles I'd just love 5 minutes with, alone and in person.

Just look on YouTube. It's incredible the amount of venomous comments you'll find on almost any video. So where does it all come from. Asia?

The internet, while providing a global intermediary for those to share their ideas and information has also become a vehicle to those anonymous beings that wish to spread their vulgarity. Here are the breeding grounds for 12 year old kids to talk like they have a pair.

While there's nothing wrong with a heated debate, a mass influx of mindless, malicious, pointless and even Chinese opinions have spread like a great horde of locusts to every forum and networking site known to man.

Let's break them down by categories: (because it's fun)

Profile ------- Example comment

The Hate Troller:
"Just like when I f***ed your mom you piece of sh**. I feel sorry for you! Rotfl!!!!!!!!"

**Notice how it said they felt sorry for them but clearly they wouldn't be rolling on the floor laughing if they did.

The Political Hothead:
"You socialists love to redefine every word possible. You're all immoral people. Please jump off a bridge."

**Notice how he said "please" when the comment isn't really polite at all. The very fact that he didn't use some Hitler analogy deserves merit.

The Genius:
"I have an IQ of 168 according to national standardized testing. 'Prometheus' was so much better than 'Aliens' it's not even funny. if you can't understand the plot, your probably too dumb to begin with."

**anyone who lists an IQ score as a preface is a retard and needs a crash helmet.

The Racist:
"You squinty eyed Chinese f***tards and your hacked game cheats!! Maybe now you can see why God cursed your race with perma widescreen vision."

**Ok, ok. So maybe I made that last one up.

So what can we do about all these angry trollers? The answer is as simple as they come: trace their IP addresses and alert a global task force that will in turn, alert a local ass beating team to break down the door to their poorly lit, messy bedrooms, smash their trilogy DVD sets and deliver an old fashioned ass whoopin'.

This kind of "thug life 'till I die" reality check would be sure to clean our forums massively.

---It's been real


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Location:The Internet

Saturday, August 18, 2012

If you hate religion...

People need to get over their prejudices against Christianity. Seriously. I mean it's not like I sit there and trash on your religion. Unless your some violent Islam, conveniently neutral Buddhist or wife collecting Mormon.

So you had some bad experiences. Did it ever occur to you that was entirely the fault of the person not the religion? If they were following the Bible, chances are you wouldn't be all salty. Take me for instance. Nobody follows the goddamn ten commandments better than me.

I'm not saying I'm perfect. But I am saying if you want to discuss cliché topics like the hypocrisy of the church, your just another bigot passing sweeping generalizations. I've got news for you: that's my job. You can't be some liberal moron for tolerance and then persecute Christians. No offense. I on the other hand, am all about compassion and tolerance. Unless your stupid enough to believe a bunch of lies.

Here's some photos. I have no idea why I'm so crabby.  Sorry its been so long. I'll try to start blogging more.




The Wells Fargo Musuem




A bike ride passing lake Calhoun








Minneapolis Police Headquarters
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Location:Minneapolis

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Pocket Rats

So Carmen brought her friends nice little dog home a few weeks ago. In the world of single women, this little thing was the perfect augmentation: Cute, non threatening, needy and subservient.

I personally think chauvinistic men and rapists are reincarnated as these dogs, doomed to a life as animals broken of all instincts and entirely dependent to their women masters.

Carmen thought it would be nice to take him for one night as she's always gushing over purse sized little dogs unfit for the wild. So I knelt down to pet the little guy and he rolled over playfully, inviting me to rub his tummy. Right as I did he let out a screeching "YIPE".

"What did you do?!" Carmen asked. "Oh my god nothing!" I exclaimed looking over to see the dog fake limping away as if it's leg was broken. "How could you?" she yelled rushing over to smother the thing in affection. "I didn't do anything! That stupid thing is faking it!" But she didn't believe me.

Carmen left to do errands and the dog came up on the couch and laid in my lap until she got home. I was petting it gently as she was taking off her coat and purse in the bedroom when it suddenly YIPED again and bolted for her room. "Awe did he hurt you again?" she said cradling it in her arms like an infant. "I didn't do anything!" I was about ready to snap the neck of this little con artist.

The whole night it slept in her bed waking up every 15 minutes to bark like crazy because some leaves rustled outside or I opened a drawer in the kitchen. Each time Carmen awoke and comforted it back to sleep. See that's what these little dogs do. They bark like crazy at the slightest thing as if they run a tight ship but then hide under chairs when approached.

By 4am Carmen's comforting "that's ok" had turned into a more appropriate "God dammit dog!" By morning she was exhausted and sleep deprived. I came into the bedroom and picked up the little thing. "Let me show you something."

I began petting the dog. "YIPE" it screeched but I didn't let go. Holding it securely, I was petting now in a more soothing manner. "YIPE" it screeched again trying to jump for Carmen. "See?" I said. I gently put him down and he jumped up on the bed into Carmen's lap fake limping like his leg was broken.

"I can't stand this thing" Carmen said and drove it home.


--Here are some pictures I took working my sweet new job in downtown.










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Location:Minneapolis

Friday, March 16, 2012

Quit faking diabetes

"Quit faking diabetes bitch." That's what I said to this old guy I used to ride with who walked with a cane and had to be helped out of the car to the dialysis clinic. Total faker.

Like me, he needs to get a life and he can start by kicking the insulin...and don't sit there thinking I'm some fart sniffin' reverse faggot. That's not even a real fetish anymore.

I have to move soon because apparently chicks don't dig it when you live rent free for 8 months and eat all their food. Women. Am I right? They're always nagging: "Stop burning cigarette holes in my ceiling." The thing is I hate moving. When someone says box cutter all I think of is some cunt slicing maniac. I'm not getting counseling.

What's up with people these days always wanting rent money? Surely the fact I didn't leave a burning cigarette on the couch has to count for something. Then they bug you nonstop when you don't look for a job everyday. I have a process I'll have you know, and I'm not about to look everyday when I'm still waiting to hear back from that one interview. "Don't put all your eggs in one basket" they say. Well why would you want multiple baskets when you could just as easily make one trip with one basket. I have tons of great ideas just like that one.

Here are more pictures:




The skyway highway



A dreary day I was fond of




That one interview

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Location:1:45 am

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Into belly of protective custody


I feel like I've set this standard for "Rotfl" satire that I cannot keep up with, hence the months of no blogging. But I refuse to let my blog become a dead place with memories that I can indulge in once every couple of years so that's why I'm writing this:

To rebel against my own ridiculous standard of flawless satire. I'm going to write if I feel like it and it won't always be funny, but it will be honest.

I spent the day in county lock up and had some time to think. The concrete was freezing against my skin as I laid there, curled in a ball, arms inside my t-shirt, wondering what would happen to me.

When the squad car drove me down to the underground parking I thought: "Its ok. You've been here before. You can't run from the past forever." My phone kept chiming from my pocket so after the officer parked and left me there, I struggled to see who it was. I could grab the phone from two fingers but the cuffs were too tight. If I pulled it out, I risked it dropping so I gave up.

Inside the intake, the police were friendlier than I remembered but then again I was sober and more cooperative than before. I had fought back the anxiety until they took off my hoodie and threw me into a freezing waiting cell with doors on both sides. One into the cell, the other into the unit like some sort of air lock between freedom and confinement. The mouth that feeds the belly of protective state custody.

In there I shivered and lost calamity to the throes of anxiety. My warm hoodie was the last security blanket and I was nothing more than a trembling fleshy morsel in the mouth of the system. So I wept silently until that door opened and I was fed to the jail population.

In another waiting room a sheriff took down information and I sat in a movie theater arrangement of plastic chairs that faced a television playing closed captioned loops of a conduct expectation video. These plastic chairs were a final pleasantry before entering a world of concrete routine. "I'm cold." I said to the sheriff to which he replied "It happens." A female guard saw how upset I was and got me some tissue.

I had been here once before some 7 years ago and theres a certain numbness that goes with the experience when you know you lead a lifestyle where incarceration could come at any hour of any day. My life as a heroin addict ended well over a year ago and I was anything but numb this time. I noticed things like the bugs crawling on my feet, the frigid temperature and the magnitude of total loss jail offers a free man. I suppose when your life is out of control, jail is not much worse than a day on the outside where addiction is your prison and great danger is always close behind.

I was lead down the hall to a hospital like row of intake cubicles made of concrete where nurses ask your medical history. After that they made me wear an orange smock to be photographed in. I wanted to keep it for warmth but they take it the moment your photos are done and a wristband is put on you bearing a black and white copy of your picture and your prisoner serial number. Then i went to a holding cell across from another intake window.

Inside the window is an office with towers of file cabinets and cubicles of workers with stuffed toys on their desks and pictures of their families. A 9-5 world of administrative work separated by bullet proof glass.

In the holding cell, a group of colorful people slowly collected and at this point I began to appreciate what the arresting officer had done for me. I had mistaken his hurry to get me downtown for that of an overzealous patrolman, eager to pump me like a token into the coin slot of his quota taker but that wasn't the case. He had got me to the front of the line so I wouldn't wait behind the row of inmates that come to intake every morning before they await court that afternoon. He had even let me have a last cigarette before cuffing me and was careful to put my unfinished soup in the fridge as we left my home.

Two middle age black men sat beside me; career criminals visiting from another county. Next was a silver haired professional man obviously there on a DUI. Then there were two guys my age - a composed bright eyed guy from Minnetonka and a slightly beat up chatterbox from New Hope who rambled aloud as he tried to piece together what happened to him last night.

I shuddered to think that the annoying chatterbox was my same kind: an addict. He had just lost 13 months of sobriety in a night of reckless drinking that had gotten him pepper spayed, beat up and convinced he had slapped around his fiancé. We all talked of our offenses and exchanged opinions on release dates. When the black men learned I was a former heroin addict, they seemed impressed I didn't have AIDS. The chatterbox, claiming to have had 60 shots of Jag, argued with me about Hep C and claimed to be am expert after his 13 months of drug treatment. As they called my name, I stood up and told him he probably thought he knew everything, but he didn't. He shut up a little after that.

Even though they roll every part of your hand on a new computerized machine designed to record your fingerprints, they still make you do it with ink afterwords and after trying to wash my hands I was afforded some phone calls.

A while later I found myself in an ice cold holding tank with two collect call phones where I curled up on the concrete bench and tried to sleep. There's something about that cell that makes you remember things clearly as you wait for hours, hoping someone bails you out.

I thought of the summer I spent in Wilmar Treatment Center and how my mother had flown from California to be there for my release and driven out there to pick me up. Wilmar is more state funded damage control than rehabilitation. They put you on methadone, refer you to a local clinic and release you some 60 days later.

My first night there was very different than most people who immediately start complaining of withdrawal to get as much methadone as they can. All I asked for was a bed where I slept off the first 9 hours of withdrawal. When I came to, I was crawling on the floor in the hallway, my body burning so badly I could hardly move. The nurses hoisted me up, one on each arm and held me up to the dosing window where the drug was poured down my throat. I was carried to bed and as the burning subsided, I fell into a deep sleep. It was 2 days before I could get out of bed and join the daily activities. During those 43 days of controlled withdrawal, I experienced the kind of pain and fear only a career addict knows. At the end of it all it was good to see my mother.

When my mom and I arrived at my apartment, I was reminded how bad things had become. The basement unit I rented was littered with charred spoons, used needles, pill bottles and empty soda cans and dried blood was smeared everywhere. My mom cried and offered to put me up in a hotel but I refused and said I needed to begin cleaning up so we sat on my mattress and prayed together. I never dreamed that my life would get worse than that but it did.

I thought of my summer living out of my car in uptown. The hard work I put in everyday to get drugs only to spend my nights crammed in a dirty two seat Honda waking up to the hot sun. I survived being robbed and beaten unconscious, a near fatal overdose and escaped arrest time and time again while my partner in crime went to jail. Here I am laying in jail freezing with 15 months of sobriety, you'd think these things wouldnt happen anymore.

Later on that day I was freed. I was spit out onto the city streets, all my money put into check form. There was no one waiting for me. I stood in the sun and even the winter streets of downtown Minneapolis seemed warmer than those cells. Some cute girls gave me a cigarette. I felt alone but the immediate intoxication of freedom was upon me. I didn't know who bailed me out, I didn't care. I guess the difference between now and then is I'm writing this from a warm apartment, I may be down but in not out and lastly I will live to see another day. There was a time not long ago when I really couldn't say.






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Location:Minneapolis