Monday, November 18, 2013

Shy Guy Says

No trip home is complete without whipping out the Nintendo 64 and pounding my good friend Sean Morris at Mario Party 2. And by "pounding," I mean letting the stupid luck of the game mercilessly decide which one of us wins as we're pretty much even and the computer just pampers itself with hidden stars anyways... looking at you, Peach. But anyways, we've pretty much capped our skills and are even- he has his games (MECHA MARATHON) and I have mine (TOTEM POLE POUND). But there's one game that pretty much always has us at a standstill (no, I'm not talking about Honeycomb Havoc, Sean) and that is the game of Shy Guy Says. We can pretty much run that game indefinitely if we wanted to. 


Don't let him fool you. He's actually kind of a jerk.

This game appears in both Mario Party and Mario Party 2, where this dirtbag of a shy guy raises flags to tell you which button to press, A or B. Depending on which version you play, he either cuts the rope which connects you to a boat and causes to you be lost at sea, or shoots the balloon holding you so that you plummet to your death if you select the wrong button. And the fool tries to trick you! He'll hold up 2 flags, switch flags, do what it takes to mess you up. Don't fall for it. This Shy Guy should really be called Mean Guy.



It's a tough life for harmless Mario enemies.

But not all Shy Guys are mean. Originally, they were pretty much your typical Mario enemy, first appearing in Super Mario 2. They'd just walked around back and forth, not really trying to hurt you and then you'd either pick them up and throw them into each other or peg one with an over-sized, creepy faced turnip.




I mean, some would try to hurt you as the game got harder, but some were just normal guys. Shy guys got more popular thanks to games like Yoshi's Island and Yoshi's Story, where they pretty much did the same thing except now they'd get eat by Yoshi and pooped out as eggs in a matter of seconds, which is a fate I wouldn't want even Bowser to suffer.







Well, we obviously don't live in Super Mario World, but there are actual shy guys in Regular Normal World. And by that I mean shy people. Real actual people who are shy. For whatever reason these people have trouble with social interaction. With talking to people. With getting out of their koopa shells. It's scary, they get anxious, there's just something that stops them that isn't your typical meeting new people jitters.

AAannnd.. we kind of look down on these people in our lovely, happiest of valleys. We judge shyness as laziness, lack of commitment, or even lack of faith. When it's really just a weakness, a struggle. And I really think it's not very hard to help people who are shy be a bit more social. With that being said, here are some things that I think are pretty easy ways to help our shy guy friends.



Shy Guys are Nice Guys

Shy people really aren't that different from anyone else, their struggle (and we all have them) it just that they're bad at being social. So while they might seem a bit standoffish, they're probably just feeling a bit anxious being in social situations. But they want and need social interaction just like anyone else- and want to develop friendships/relationships the same as anyone. Keep that in mind if you see someone struggling to talking with others or with you- it's likely that he or she just beat their fear into the ground to talk with people and we need to appreciate that. Plus, why not appreciate someone taking an interest? Weird isn't always bad, and neither is shy.

Don't be a Bear.

I've often heard that if you run into a bear in the woods, you're supposed to try to make yourself look bigger than it so it gets scared off... which is ridiculous, cause you'll never be bigger than a freaking bear. Sometimes social situations seem as scary as a bear. No joke. What makes it harder is when we make ourselves less approachable to someone who is looking for friends.

You'll see this a lot at say, ward prayer. People like to get in their friend groups, which is a great thing. But sometimes these groups are difficult to approach, even if you're familiar with people in the group. It's very hard for a shy person to approach a group standing in a circle, with their backs out.* It just kinda says "eh.. we're outta room." You might see someone wandering between groups kind of looking lost. They may be looking for a way into a group to meet some friends. And even though the group looks "closed," it's easy to rope someone in. Break of from the group if you have to for a minute, talk to your shy guy and you can easily bring him/her into the group. Then they don't have to go chasing bears.


Shy Guys Often Have Ninja-Like Stealth


No ninjas allowed.
I've often been in this situation- I hear about a party, and I think, heck why not go. So I go. I pump myself up and convince myself that this time, I'm gonna like it. I'm TOTALLY gonna like it. Then I go. Once there, I remember that I totally hate parties- it's loud, there's a lot of people, and it's pretty overwhelming in every way. I'm there and gone, likely before anyone really notices. Or perhaps, I try and stay as long as possible, but just sit in the same place the whole time- not really talking to anyone. I watch what's going on, but wonder if anyone really knows I'm there. I admit, it does feel pretty cool to be so ninja-like and practically unseen.

You've probably seen someone like this at a party before. Should they be trying to talk to people? Yeah, they should. Is it possible that they're very uncomfortable? Yeah, it is. Would it be that hard for you to talk to one of these shy guys? Could be, or maybe it's not. But it only really takes one or two nice people to make a party (or any social situation) worth the while.










In short, being shy is a real struggle that people face. Don't look down of them for it. There's already a lot of social, friendly people who help others make friends and feel welcome. There are also many shy guys who beat their fears every day, and honestly that's pretty dang heroic. I think with just a little extra awareness, we can make life a bit easier for A LOT of good people who are trying their best anyways.

And that's one more friend to invite to your Mario Party ^.^




Sunday, October 27, 2013

frowns



Back in 1998, there was something in my 8 turning 9 year old brain that made me really think that I wanted Yoshi's Story on the nintendo 64. Looking back I really don't know why- it may have seemed cool at the time- I mean I was just barely accountable for my actions anyways. Plopping the game back in years later, I just really can't do it. It's basically an easier, lamer version of the Yoshi game that came before it (but now I'm ranting a little too much).

The premise of Yoshi's story is this- Yoshi's Island is all full of happy, happy, Yoshis because of the Super Happy Tree. Yes, that's what I said- a SUPER HAPPY TREE. BUT the Super Happy Tree is stolen by Baby Boswer and all the Yoshis are put in a weird trance except for 6 baby Yoshis who hatch and are happy and can lay eggs somehow even though they're babies.


Oh yes, and cheesy rhymes. Don't forget the cheesy rhymes.

The game plays as your typical sidescroller, except instead of going from left to right, in order to beat a level, you have to eat fruit. I'm not kidding. Once you eat enough fruit, the Yoshis get all happy and then you watch an explosion of hearts and sugary Yoshi love and read another cheesy poem as they sing you a song that to this day no one understands, though everyone who's played the game knows what I'm talking about (is it "be careful... the apple... eat air, yo? we won't really ever know).

Anyways, that's the jist of the game- eat fruit, and somehow that explodes happiness everywhere. Cheesier than basically any other Nintendo game made in the 80s or 90s, which is saying something.



Contrast that with my experience a couple of years later. I really wanted to get The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask and for good reason. Zelda has always been an amazing series, and Ocarina of Time seriously knocked everyone into heaven with it's majesty. And though not as loved by most, I really enjoyed Majora's Mask. It's very fun- though one of the darkest and creepiest games Nintendo ever put on the shelf.

The premise of Majora is quite different from your typical Zelda game. In this game, the basic story is that this little imp get got possessed by an evil mask, went crazy, caused problems in EVERYONE's lives, and sits on top of a clock tower laughing at everyone. 

Oh, and he turns you into this:


Oh and by the way, the moon is going to crash into the earth if you don't stop him in three days.


So while you're on your quest to stop the evil moon, you'll meet a lot of characters who have problems- and you can help them. Whether its a nice old lady getting mugged, ghosts who are sad, ranchers who are in trouble or a wedding to save, or people just scared cause a terrifying moon is about to crash land on them, there's a lot of people to help. There's a recurring theme of healing and letting the past go that is actually quite beautiful at times, even though it's in a video game. And those themes come up as you help the characters in the games with their problems, big or small.

The sad thing though is that you have to do it all in three days (each day is about an hour of time in real life) or else the moon crashes and everything is destroyed. You have the ability to go back to the beginning of the three days, so you have more time.. but wen you do, it all resets. That nice old lady you stopped from getting mugged? Yeah, that didn't happen. And she'll get mugged again if you don't stop it again. The ranch whose cows are gonna get stolen by aliens? Yeah, gonna happen if you don't stop it. Again. As if it didn't even matter that you helped in the first place. 





Lately I've been thinking a lot about depression and anxiety and what they do to people. From what I've experienced with on my own or by seeing others who suffer, depression is an extremely misunderstood disability that we are so willing to judge without trying to understand. We're pretty good at being nice to people with physical or intellectual disabilities (I say pretty good, cause that could be a lot better too, but that's another story). Depression though, while as serious (or even moreso) as these other disabilities, we don't really want to discuss it or even admit that it's a problem. 

Depression is a selfish disability, in that it demands your constant time and attention. It works tirelessly to beat the ever-loving crap out of your motivation, your confidence, whatever it is that makes you happy, it seeks to wreck. And we're pretty insensitive to others when they're suffering from it- we say "oh snap out of it" or "it's all in your head," as if it being in their head makes their feelings any less valid or the depression any less of a problem. It's like what Dumbledore said to Harry- (ohmygosh spoiler alert) "Of course this is all in your head- but that doesn't make it any less real." 

Having depression is kind of like being in the middle of Majora's Mask. You can be doing everything you can to help people or be good or whatever it is. Sometimes you feel like you're making progress, and that's kind of cool, and sometimes you just feel like you're not getting anywhere at all. And that no matter what you do, it's not gonna matter cause things will just reset again. Or you might be like one of the characters who feels utterly hopeless, waiting for the moon to crash in a couple of days. 

In addition to this though, you're probably surrounded by people who are in Yoshi's Story. They think their method of eating fruit and getting happy somehow is the one way everyone is supposed to be happy, and they don't get what's wrong with you. You see them and how happy they are, but to you the problem is just as real as a giant scary moon closing in on you. You'll get frustrated cause people either don't want to actually help you by telling you to just eat a melon and get happy- or the people who do care have no idea what to actually do. In short, depression is real, and people suffer from it.

I talk about video games cause they relate to me and a lot of people in my generation. When it comes to depression (or any problem in life), I used to and still often get caught up in the Yoshi approach. I think oh, you should just eat some fruit and then you'll be happy. We often kind of give those primary answers- OH well if you read your scriptures more you'd be more happy, or OH if you worked harder in your calling you'd be more happy, or OH if you prayed better you'd be more happy.

And yes, living the gospel brings us happiness. It does. But it also does not give us a free ride from pain or suffering. You don't have to look hard in the scriptures to find faithful people who suffered due to no fault of their own. When Amulek was rejected by his family, Alma didn't say "oh get over it and be happy," he took Amulek to his house and took care of him. When Ammon's brothers were in prison, he traveled to get them out- he didn't just live the gospel and expect them to be freed. Mormon saved the Nephites several times, yet they never repented or even thanked him. 

These guys weren't just going with the Yoshi approach. They did what they could to care for others. They got to know and love other people. They understood what it means to "mourn with those that mourn, and comfort those that stand in need of comfort." 

When we actually try to love people- listen to them, care for them, and try to feel how God feels about them, it's a lot easier than we'd think to help them. And it doesn't have to be a huge deal. Even things that seem small or kind of weird can mean the world to some people. You can help someone know they're loved when they might not be able to feel like they are. You can be an answer to prayers that they may think will never come. You can make life a little better for someone who may otherwise think they're world could end any day now.

Keeping that great commandment- to love others as ourselves, brings a much more meaningful joy and healing to us than the standard "read your scriptures" or "go to church" ever will on their own. 

And I think it makes God smile too. 

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Close Encounters with an Old Friend

Summer days before your first year of teaching can be long and boring, but can also go rather quickly if you're as horrible at time management as I am. Typically, I don't mind doing the same things over and over-- and my chosen line of work is going to have plenty of repetition. However, I do enjoy a good random change to the monotony every now and again.

About a week or two ago I got up one morning to set up the booth for Laugh Out Loud's upcoming improv show. I didn't mind setting up since I certainly had the time and needed a reason to wake up anyways. I didn't stay to pass out fliers that day though since at the time I was feeling pretty gross for having not showered yet and one of my roommates wanted me to meet him to get some lunch before he had class. On the way back, as I was crossing the section between the Library and the JFSB I saw a girl talking on her phone who (at least from that point of view) looked just like my childhood friend who used to live across the street from me.

I was a little bit confused as to why she would be on BYU campus, if memory served me she had grown up Jewish (which wouldn't keep her from going to BYU if she really wanted to) and was most likely as disinterested in attending a religious university as every other kid in my hometown. Not to mention she's a year older than I am and would have surely graduated by now. Regardless of the confusion, I did what any normal person would do in the situation, and walked right past her and tried to see if it was actually my friend while looking back as walking in the opposite direction.

Suddenly I was overcome by the feeling that I was being stupid and so I turned around to go fix this silliness I had gotten myself into. I hid and waited around in the plaza at the JFSB, spying on this girl on her phone, trying to remember if this was actually my friend or not. I soon started feeling pretty gross on the inside for creeping on her for so long (and gross on the outside for not having showered that day yet), so I told myself that I'd talk to her if she got off her phone in the next few minutes.

Sure enough, she got off her phone, so I manned up and walked towards her. Before I could even figure out what to say, she looked straight at me and smiled as if I had made her the happiest girl on earth (and I why wouldn't I? I am pretty awesome).

"Hi Scott!"

I wasn't quite ready for this reaction at all, and so I returned her greeting by freezing right in my tracks, mid step, one arm as obnoxiously in front of my body as the other was behind it, and stared. I am 80% confident that she was laughing at me on the inside and 100% confident that I looked like a tool. At least I was smiling back.

I then started to play the stupid game I always play where I pretend not to know someone as to not look creepy (even though I was convinced that this was my childhood friend).

"Uhh, uhhh.. Elena, right?"

She laughed, and shook her head, saying no as if I was just being silly. By then I had realized that I had no idea who this girl was but had somehow met her and she seemed to know me at least fairly well. This was even more bothersome to me, since I have a pretty good memory with people, especially when these people are cute girls who have long brown curly hair and are adorably shorter that I am.

"Well, I'm going this way," she said, pointing in a weird northeast direction that few students actually live at. It felt like she was implying that I walk with her, and I wanted to figure out how the heck I knew this girl, or at the very least, how she knew me.

She walked quickly, and so keeping up was pretty hard. She got on her phone again, looking quite focused as she walked and waited for the other person to answer. Then it hit me that we were already inside the Wilk and halfway down the stairs in the back towards the parking lot. She stopped and left a message on whoever's answering machine, mentioning her name in the message. It sounded like she said "Jenessa," or something close like that, though I definitely only knew one Jenessa and it definitely was not this girl. At least now I knew it started with a J.

We kept walking, she was fast and a few feet ahead, not paying heed to any of my questions. I had no idea where we were going, but she was cute and knew my name, so I didn't really care. She seemed to know every shortcut in the book. She cut through lawns and bushes, through alleys between campus buildings that I'd never been to, and she even squeezed herself through the bars of one of those fences-- you know, the kind that everyone with a childhood pretends are jail bars. I found myself cutting, stomping, and squeezing too, though that last fence was too small for me to fit through, even with a missing bar, so I stepped over it. I don't know why she didn't just step over it too.

At this point I was getting pretty frustrated with her, as she was always several steps ahead of me and wouldn't answer any of my questions, at least any that I asked when I wasn't focusing on where she was going or getting through her crazy obstacle course of shortcuts. Eventually, we ended up at this playground that looked exactly like the playground at the elementary school that I went to-- though not the awesome wood playground I had, the stupid plastic one they replaced it with. It was weird, it was an exact replica, complete with a soccer field to the left and a mini forest behind it, and an old, worn-out wood fence separating the playground from someone's backyard. This fence however wasn't as decrepit or covered in ivy as the one at home.

It was only after I had gotten this far that it hit me that she could have been trying to lose me this whole time. Fed up and annoyed with our little adventure I called out as she was walking,

"You know, if you just wanted to get rid of me, you could have just asked!"

She was about ten feet in front of me, and turned around that instant. She didn't look at me, but was looking with her eyes and her head at the air above me, as if something was there. At the moment I didn't think about how weird it was, because as she was staring over my head I was fixated on her eyes- they didn't look right. They were a whitish-yellow color instead of their normal brown.

The thought came to me that maybe she was blind and we were just following her memorized course home. That may account for all the weird shortcuts, maybe it felt safer to her and she wouldn't risk running into people or walking into traffic. My theory started to make sense, at least a little, until I remember that she recognized me by looking right at me. Even though unshowered Scott probably smells similar to childhood Scott, it probably wouldn't be enough for a blind person to recognize.

After a few seconds, she snapped out of her little trance and walked up to me. She giggled and looked at me, smiling as if to say thanks for putting up with her shenanigans. Her eyes were back to normal, so I dismissed my silly thoughts and walked with her behind the playground to the fence. I figured she either lived in the house behind the school, or she was just going to hop the fence and use the yard as a shortcut to wherever she was taking me.

She stood with her back to me, concentrating at the fence. I figured as long as she was still for a moment, I could gather at least some minimal information about who she was and how she knew me.

"Sooo, um, your name... is..."

"Jessica."

"Right, Jessica," I said. (And by right, I really meant, "You aren't any Jessica I know, who the heck are you.") "And uh, how do we know each other again? I don't... I don't really recall meeting you."

Jessica looked at me again and smiled, "Oh, that's not really important."

Her statement would have been a lot more confusing to me had I not witnessed something even stranger after she had said it. After talking, she looked right back at the fence and walked right into it. Right through the fence. She stood there on the other side in the yard, with her back still facing me.

"Wait, I said.. not important? WAIT, did you just walk through that fence?"

The fence was definitely solid, it didn't have any holes to squeeze through or under, but it wasn't tall enough to keep an adult from climbing over. She definitely made it past the fence, though I didn't see her climb. Were my eyes just playing tricks on me... was I just tired or something?

Before I could figure out what had just happened, Jessica giggled again. I kept staring at her from over the fence, she did not look back at me as she slowly walked towards the house. As she walked, she slowly levitated up into the air. Shocked, I kept staring. She floated forward and up, until she was nearly at the roof of the house. At that point she stopped moving, and faded like a bad movie effect from the 80's until she disappeared.

Needless to say, it was a very confusing morning. I didn't even get her number.









You're probably wondering what the crap you just read. It's a story I wrote based on a dream that I had this morning. The dream was confusing and weird, but since it had my focus from the moment it started, I figured it would make a good story. It's one of the more involved dreams I've ever had. So uh, hope you had fun :D







Thursday, May 16, 2013

spiders of the curse

I remember how big of a deal it was when The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time was released for the Nintendo 64. The first Zelda in 3D, a great experience, all that goodness. There were these monsters called Skulltulas, basically big ol spiders with skull heads or something like that. Weird dudes. So while you're adventuring in the first dungeon, you kill these even weirder looking skulltulas that are gold in color. When you kill one, it drops off a little gold token, which you collect. Um, cool? Obviously, we've just discovered a new side quest!

Well... after stomping the life out of a bunch of these gold spiders and collecting their tokens, you finally figure out what the deal is. You get to the Kakariko village and walk into yet another unsuspecting house. You figure that there's townsfolk there to tell you boring or possibly useful information, or maybe some pottery to smash. However, inside you just see a dark, dusty, empty old house. After taking a few steps, you realize you aren't alone, when from the ceiling a gigantic, nasty skulltula pops down.. AND.. tries.. talking to you?

Your instinct is to fight it, which you do, of course, and after managing to hurt it, it lets our a horrifying scream of pain. Then it hits you- this skulltula has part of a human face on it.. and a human arm. GROSS!

It turns out that this guy and his family were cursed, cursed to live as skulltulas until all the spiders of the curse (in other words, gold skulltulas) were destroyed. Thus started a trend in Legend of Zelda Games of collecting magical items in order to turn people back into people (seriously, it's in like every game after this one)

um... hey.. sorry about uh, well, trying to kill you.




So, I figure that because of these guys.. uh.. condition, it's probably pretty hard for them to get out of the house and talk to people. I'd guess that most people just freak out when they see them. I mean, only Link is nice enough to come over and visit them. They probably really appreciate that, even if he hasn't killed enough spiders of the curse.



The thing is, there's some people who, for whatever reasons, really struggle with getting out of the house and talking to people. Or making new friends. Or just being social in general. And we, in our little happy valley/church culture tend to kind of treat them like... sinners. Or like they're a cursed spider guy, or that there's just totally something wrong with them.

Cause obviously, they just need to "be more happy" and if I tell them that then it'll fix it all. Or if they just "work really hard" then they'll be back to normal (by the way normal is just like me and the way I see things).

I'm not the most anti-social, hating of people guy out there, but I won't pretend that it's easy for me either. I have a hard time talking to people, and I misuse sarcasm all the time (though I also use it well a good deal too :P). But really, as much as I "work at" being nice to people, being positive, talking to and meeting new people, it's all still pretty hard. I don't think it's really every gotten any easier, I've just seen what good things can come of it.

But it's still a very quick inclination in all of us to judge the guy who isn't social as some kind of terrible loser or even a sinner. Or to treat the person who isn't going to ward activities (which for someone with social anxiety can be incredibly overwhelming) like they're inactive or breaking covenants or something. That's not how it is. You wouldn't go up to a person with autism or Down syndrome and tell him that if he was just a little bit more faithful, or read his scriptures more, or "tried harder" that his disability would go away. But that's the kind of stuff we tell to people with depression or social anxiety all the freaking time.. it really doesn't work that way.


And I know there's people who are just plain anti social. They don't want to be around people, they aren't concerned with others, they really should work at being better to the people around them. But most people want to have friends, want to care about people, and want to help others.. but it's hard for them to beat their fears or weaknesses.


The great thing is that there are so many people who are just doing it right. There are many, many nice guys and nice girls who don't have trouble being social. They don't do it to be popular or to be the big fish or what have you, they do it cause they want to be good and care about people. My current ward is very good at this; I've felt that most (if not all) of the people actually care for each other and are interested in making other people feel happy. When people act like that, then it is much more motivating to be social than out of some sense of duty or to feel like you're "doing your part."

I guess that's when it gets easier- when you know that people care and that you can put yourself out there without feeling like a wacky skeleton-spider-guy.


Monday, May 6, 2013

HEY! LISTEN!!!

just about everyone who read the title already knows what i am referencing. very few people who have played video games don't recognize the annoying, nagging, anger-inducing voice of Navi, a not-so-useful, powerless, "guardian" fairy whom you're cursed to have following you throughout the duration of The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time." the only real useful thing that navi does is z-target, which nintendo continued on after the n64 days but didn't necessitate  the use of an annoying fairy to do so. navi did, however start the trend of annoying companions, following Link around while hiding in his hat, sword, or shadow and prodding you to continue with the main quest, cause the game doesn't think you're smart enough to do so. sheesh, navi, where the heck were you in zelda II? oh yeah, you weren't needed then, and you aren't needed now!


it doesn't matter what you're doing. running along hyrule, hunting those big poes, and...


HEY!!

navi's little annoying "press C up now" button flashes. you ignore it, CAUSE YOU GOT BETTER THINGS TO DO RIGHT NOW


you're dashing to get the eyeball frog to the scientist, to make eyedrops for biggoron aaaannnndddd...

HEY!!!!

and you're like, "STOP IT NAVI, I REALLY WANT THAT SWORD!"



eventually, you can't take the nagging anymore. the flashing 'navi... navi... navi... navi...' gets to you and well you press the dang button to see what she has to say. and surprise, surprise...

doesn't that cloud over Death Mountain look weird to you?

she doesn't tell you anything that you didn't already know. heck, half the time, you're on your way to doing whatever she's nagging you to do in the first place!



thanks, navi. thanks for nothing. yeah, i already knew that the water temple was up next. yeah, it was already obvious that the monsters weak point is its giant red eye. 




the thing is, regardless of being annoying, at least navi is pretty much always right. every once in a while i got lost and navi helped me figure out what i was supposed to be doing. and by that i mean, the one time i forgot seeing zelda throw the ocarina in the moat and not knowing what to do next. 






well, the other day i got to thinking-- i hope i listen to the Spirit a lot more than to navi. yeah, i know, paralleling video games to life is kind of silly... and awesome, but anyways, instead of pretty much sort of knowing what i should be doing, the Spirit is always right and always knows better than i do. i can be off running on my own little side quest but if i am listening, then i'll be put in a better direction. 

of course, i don't think the Spirit is annoying or nagging. it's quiet, but it won't force it's way into your thinking. you gotta be waiting, listening, ever ready to press C up and listen. and that brings way better blessings than you could pick up in a side quest

Monday, April 8, 2013

must be stopped.

there is a malicious evil that is seeking to destroy each of us. it lurks in our phones, our photos, our facebooks, twitters, the internet, but mostly just on facebook. it saps our intelligence, demands constant attention, but mostly--
















it just annoys the ever-loving crap out of me.

yes, hashtag, i'm talking about you. you're pretentious, you're annoying, and you contribute absolutely nothing to whatever status or photo you're riding the coattails of. 


i mean, i think there was a time where they kind of had a purpose. i think. i remember sometime last year they started appearing everywhere at the end of statuses, and at first i thought they were like, some kind of thing you can put into twitter to get more information. (i know nothing about and care even less about twitter, so i have no idea how accurate my assumption was). i thought this cause i most often saw hashtags at the end of political/social statements, you know like, "status about how the economy sucks #occupywhatever" or "status about how my presidential candidate can beat yours in a pokemon battle #marackrobomney2013"

but if that was even the original intent, all hashtags do now is, oh, state the exact same thing you already said in an annoying and difficult to read way, or really just add nothing to whatever was just said. very often i see a status or photo that's like--

"Hey guys! I just totally posted something on Facebook!

#postedsomethingonfacebook #totallyposted #heyguysitsfacebook #lolbffs #facebookposts #bestdayever #yolo #hashtag #hashtag #toomanyhashtags #didimentioniposted #hashtag"


no really, this isn't too far off from what i see. my favorite is when people say #toomanyhashtags (it's a common one i've seen). but then they keep adding more stupid hashtags.

whatever, maybe i'm just a loser who never saw the appeal, or maybe if i want to tell someone how i'm feeling or what i'm thinking about, i'll just tell them instead of barrage the internet with a bunch of one-word sentences that are seriously ineffective at actually communicating what i want to say.


eh screw it, i should just text the person sitting across from me to get my messages across. 

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

just for fun

so at school today our teacher was having the students write some tongue twisters and well the other paras and i thought we'd do some too.. so i wrote these guys. have fun

the dog

the bog had a log that was full of eggnog and the dog in the fog jumped over the log and fell through the smog and into the bog

now the doggy is soggy because it was smoggy; he fell through the foggy right over the loggy

(the dog hogs eggnog every night in the fog as he sits on the log in the bog through the smog)

the letter u

unusual unicorns use unified uvulas to undermine urchins and undo umbrellas- under Umberto the unicorns unite and unmake all urchins with usual uses.

hee hee

oblivious girls at the octopus orchid omit all compliments from Oliver Optimist while over ornery orangutans' oranges and opening olives on Oliver's waffles.

perhaps my personal favorite

Remember to hustle your muscles when caught in a tussle with Russel.

Thursday, February 28, 2013

be a MAN

i've been growing up... sort of. i mean i GUESS finishing college and getting a teaching license is pretty cool... ok, so i'm actually really happy about that. life can be pretty fun and pretty dang nice.

but now that i've (at least legally) been an adult for a while, i still keep wondering what it really means to be a grown up. you know, to be a MAN.

i mean, lets think about what it takes.. the speed of a coursing river? the force of a great typhoon? the strength of a raging fire? or perhaps the mystery and secrecy kept on the dark side of the moon..



well, to be honest, i don't really know what it takes. i try to think of some people i've looked up to-- seminary teachers, young men leaders, my student teaching mentor, my radical brothers and brother in law...




but of course it's my dad who takes the cake, hands down.

today's my dad's 65th birthday. well, it's SUPPOSED to be his 65th birthday. i guess i can't really legitimately say that he's 65 and i won't ever get to tease him for being old, but whatever.

i've never really felt like really ever needed another example beside him of manhood. for real. i guess he had a lot of practice before i was born, cause he's always been manly ever since i knew him.

and i'm not talking about manly like being RIPPED WITH AWESOME MUSCLES AND PECTORALS TO THE MAX or like manly like JUMPING OVER MOTORCYCLES ON A MOTORCYCLE WHILE SHOOTING STUFF or any of that junk (though dad was pretty good at being a buff guy).

i always think of him as like.. knowing how to do the important manly stuff. like never making it a question whether or not he loved my mom. or me. or my sister and brothers. he just acted in a way that the thought of him not loving his family could never even enter my mind. ever.

my earliest memory ever is when i had apparently been to a family's house in my ward for my parent's date night or something to that effect. i don't remember why i was there. i also don't remember falling asleep there, but i must have, cause the memory is of my being at that house, and then being in my crib with my dad asking my whether i wanted milk or orange juice to drink.

when i was a little kid i would usually wake up before everyone else in the house. i would wait in bed until i heard my dad get up, then run into the kitchen. he'd ask me what cereal i wanted and then would get if for me. he probably taught me how to pour cereal. i mean, even if he never actually taught taught me, i learned cause i watched him. silly little thing, right? whatever-- it's kept me from being hungry thousands of times

i remember exactly what i did the night before my parents found out something was wrong. i remember cause that kind of stuff just gets scorched into your memory whether you like it or not. i was in 8th grade and i had my two best friends over for the night. i could have been a long weekend or something, i don't remember. but my dad had us come with him to a hockey game. it was roller hockey and my older brother was playing. after the game my dad took us to get fast food.

and holy crap i'm so grateful he did that. but that's just how it was- it was important to Dad that he could be with his sons, so he takes me to support my brother doing something that he really loves.


here's some pictures.. i don't really have as many as i would like though

my dad and his older sister when he was a TOTALLY ADORABLE baby! my aunt just emailed this to us,  and i'm happy that she did


my sister (she's the oldest) when she was little and my dad when he was a young studmuffin (as opposed to a middle-aged studmuffin)


i overuse this picture, but i don't really care. it's my best picture with me and my dad, who  pretty much looks the same as i've ever known him to







someday i'll be a man. like a for real man, who cares about other people and helps and loves them like my dad. if i can be just a fraction like him then that's a really dang good life.





Monday, January 21, 2013

no sinking lures allowed

a few years back, right before i left home to come to BYU, i was talking at church with one of my seminary teachers who has inquired about my less than favorable dating circumstances. his advice was this:

well, there's a LOT of girls at BYU.. its time for you to go fishing!

...


huh.

just this month, while my roommate was on his flight from houston to provo, he sat by a man who also happened to be LDS. upon finding this out, the first thing this man asks my roommate was this:

so then, how's the wife hunt going?

...


huh.



now i don't know a whole lot about hunting or fishing, but i'm gonna spell out what i can figure anyways.

this may or may not be where my sources come from

i'll start with hunting:

from what i can understand, the hunter first must seclude himself within the bushes, trees, or otherwise natural things in the environment to avoid detection. the hunter wears camouflage to further his or her stealth. he then either waits for or runs after the prey. often, a hunter will wait by a river or stream, hoping to find an animal looking for a drink. the hunter then shoots and fatally wounds said animal. cool. great job, man.

the hunter takes the animal and gets it skinned to either sell the fur, keep it as a rug, or do whatever with it. he may take the meat for some tasty snacks later on. or he might just have some weirdo cut off the head so he can hand it on his wall. whatever he wants, really

and that is what i understand about hunting.


now on to fishing:

a fisher will put some bait on a hook and casts it out into the water. he waits for the fish to bite the bait, as fish are a little silly and don't usually notice the hook or understand that it's a threat. upon biting, the fisher then yanks the rod so that it pulls the hook through the fish's mouth, and reel the fish in. often, the fish is fighting for its dang life. once forced out of the water, the fish will pretty much suffocate and die. the fisher will then gut the fish, cut of its skin, and eat it, or have it plastered so he can hang it on his wall for all his smelly old man friends to see. that, or he'll make the fish sing cheesy songs to people who walk by. whatever he wants, really






now, thinking about what we do when hunting or fishing, it actually kind of scares me when we think about dating as "going fishing" or "hunting for the one." i mean, sometimes i feel like i have to trick a girl into spending time with me and then she's fighting me the whole time, trying to go back to her natural habitat.. but i don't really think that's how you develop a mutually dependent relationship. and i won't pretend like i know anything about dating.. but i don't think its really about stealth, deception, force, or fatal wounding.. nor do i think that the end goal is to eat the other person or show her off to all your friends.


and i get it- marriage is important. so important, in fact that its a covenant that we make with God in the temple. when you think about it that way, its kind of a big deal

unfortunately in our wonderful little happy valley i think we treat it way more like a social status or a really cool pokemon card (or whatever you kids are into these days). it's like we think more of people who are dating or married- they somehow have more value or they're more important.

i really blame our silly hunting/fishing mentality. we can all love the guy who shot the biggest dear or caught the heaviest fish.. but that aint really what it's about, now is it?

and i know that it's a metaphor. i just think its a really crappy one. hunting is all about what the HUNTER wants. fishing is all about what the FISHER wants. if dating was all about what the "HUNTER" wants then well.. that's just sad.



then again, what the heck do i know? probably nothing.. i don't have any dead fish or deer heads hanging on my wall  O.o