Friday, December 27, 2013

A Guide to City Life # 11111 - The Country

Welcome to the Guide to City Life #11111 - "The Country". In this module, you will sigh with bucolic longing for the dying ways of your forefathers as their sons and daughters are pulled to the city and forced to labour long days and nights on the loom - the last refrain of a half-forgotten folksong caught in their throat as the whirr of industrial progress drowns out their world-weary dialect.

The country is a place that has no skyscrapers. It barely has any buildings at all, and most of those are filled with livestock, harvested produce, or equipment - rusty, bone-like things with dulled teeth and a nameless smear.

The country is eerie. In it, men have less teeth, and women are interchangeable with tree-stumps. Country-folk, or as they are known to themselves, "us of the patch", have totally different traditions and methods than city dwellers. Unlike you or I or anyone clean, country folk live off the land. They pay homage to the dirt that controls their lives. Sometimes they make out with it.

Country dwellers emerged from rocks about 50,000 years ago. They have gone through a lot. They have been: cave men, neolithic farmers, slaves of the Pharaoh, free yeoman, serfs, peasants, kulaks, industrial farmers, smarmy grandsons of industrial farmers, and smarmy great-grandsons of industrial farmers who decide to buy an organic farm on the side.

Why do city dwellers need to know about the country at all? Unfortunately, the country is where food is made. This is a huge disadvantage for all of us, because it means the food we get is usually pretty dirty and needs to be washed. Or at least rubbed. If you've ever been to a Farmer's Market, you will notice boxes of dirty tubers and leaves. These are actually what vegetables look like when they come from the country. It takes a lot of spa treatment to get them fit for the grocery store or processed ramen soup mix.

In the country it is illegal to smart-mouth a scarecrow.

If your car breaks down in the country, I'm sure someone will be along shortly. Wasn't there a gas station a few miles back? Oh great. It's raining. Just fucking great. This is totally worth seeing your crazy family for.

Music in the country is known as "country", "bluegrass", "folk" or "hoot'en'tootenany". Music plays a large part in country life, because they have a lot to get out of their system. Country music can consist of ancient ballads or tunes that have been passed down from generation to generation, or, alternatively, cheap knock-offs of top 40 hits. The common thread is that all country music must be played on a raggedy string-bereft fiddle, spoons, jugs, washboards, tractor parts, or bags of teeth.

All country music must be run passed Satan before it is allowed to be played in the country.

Here is a list of famous country songs:

  • Rock
  • Stick
  • Beethoven's 6th Symphony "The Pastoral"
  • Tube
  • The hucky munkin grammophone blues
  • Cigarette butt
  • Diesel

I bet you didn't realize some of your favourite bangers were actually long-treasured yokel bonfire tunes.

The country...Whispers. The country...Secrets. The country...The old, homey, bonified...The...

Thank you for tolerating the Guide to City Life # 11111 - "The Country". We won't have to deal with it for long, but until we can get the Great Concrete Age fully rolled-out, we'll have to at least try. Please hold your breath until the release of our next module, #4 - "World Cheeses, Local Cheeses, Warlords".

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Wolf-Dog, Son of the Wolf and the Dog

The sled toppled over in the snow, but the wolf-dog Mario Hernandez leapt free of the chaos to face the foe before him. A lynx! In a flash he was at the beast’s throat, examining for dry skin. The other mutts cowered like dogs. Not for nothing was the great Sibero-Alaskan wolf-breed prized by Indians, Sourdoughs, and Pita Breads alike. Fierce, loyal, cunning, a little schmutzig, but you know, generally pretty agreeable - as all things, men and beast, are, in the shadow of the Arctic Circle.

“Get ‘im Mario!” cried Mandible Pierre. “Get ‘im in de face, colisse!”

Mario gazed intently at the savage beast. The beast gazed intently at Mario. Then started a round of Devil Sticks. Such is life in the North.

Oh franchement!” cried Mandible Pierre as he kicked an empty can of erstwhile beans at his smarmy companion of the Gravy Curd.

Long weeks had the team been trailing – from Edmonton they set out, 16 men mushing a team of 21 sled-dogs. By the time they reached the Great Slave Lake those figures had mysteriously reversed - 21 dogs driving a doubtful team of 16 sled-men. In the Yukon country the figures had righted themselves once more and a decent 2 men were warily driving 8 dogs, of which Mario Hernandez was the undisputed Director of Communications.

Proud, cunning, fierce, and staggeringly large – none of these things were Mario Hernandez. A different breed of wolf-dog, Mario had inherited more atavisms and less chromosomes than the average arctic saltlick. Clearly he had that special, semi-retarded breed of Arctic Goonwolf in his pedigree. His head was massive and droopy. His eyes, red and hilariously wandering. His snout was as large as his legs were squat, and his moustache – so rare a “thing” in the dog world – was prominently bushy and usually pretty well maintained with some weird dog-brand of pomade.

“Mario Hernandez!” his first owner had named him, the Indian band-leader called Collectible Figurine. “For the beast looks like a Mario – what a moustache! Clearly the winner of our tribal Movember competition. No contest.”

After a bitter half hour of struggle – a lynx got hands at dem sticks – Mario Hernandez trotted up to his Poutine-stained owner, half a sandwich in his mouth and a bag of Alaskan-themed temporary tattoos tied to his bushy tail.

Such were the tallies on the great Excel Sheet of the Aurora Borealis. A promise made was a debt-unpaid – a debt of death, cold, harsh, or, if unavailable, at least a debt of severe frostbite in the posterior.

The team continued until nightfall, where they set up camp by the lone firelight, the dogs round in a ring howling their “oy veys!” to the nameless snows. Tucked in their furs, Mandible Pierre and his companion Brownie LeBrun discussed the life of the gold seeker and part-time stand-up comedian.

“C’est fucking nuts la. Cold as de tits.”

Mandible Pierre took a long draw from his pipe and frowned.

“’Bernac oui”.

As they were nodding off, they stared dreamily at the hungry eyes glowering at them from the fringes of the forest, beyond the reach of the firelight. Either they were being hounded by wolves, or these trees and bushes had, like, eyes.

Wolf-dog Mario Hernandez did not sleep that night. With droopy vigilance he stared down the pack of hungry wolves, tempting them with all his wolfish blood to just fucking try it. One time a daring silver she-wolf went to make a pass at him – in an instant Mario threw up the doggy gang sign of choice, and was troubled no more that night by silver wolves. One of the other dogs, however, was lured out of the camp to check out this really cool new lamb taco place for wolves – something something camino? I dunno, it got really good reviews so…But actually it was just a ploy, and the wolves totally ate that dog.

At dawn the men swore as they drank their morning coffee from the portable Keurig machine. Then they gathered their spirits, which were mostly marshmallow. They set-off on the sled, stopping at every really big hill for a good slide. Brownie LeBrun would occasionally bust out the GT-Racer for really radical slopes, while Mario Hernandez held up the signed poster of Brett Hull for encouragement.

Eventually the night fell once more, and the dreaded eyes returned. A wary Mario Hernandez started digging trenches. The two Frenchies however decided that there was nothing to fear but fear itself. They were so tired like, it was just a really long day. They were having none of it from some stupid hungry wolves, they are basically all the same anyway, they call at like 8 p.m. on a WEDNESDAY and don’t even know how to pronounce your name properly and just ugh. Not having it.

Another dog got ate that night lol.

When the dawn broke this time, the eyes did not dissipate. Not only that, they definitely had wolves attached to them. Bold wolves. Wolves with striped shirts and well formatted, single-page resumes. Wolves that weren’t afraid to neg a chick if they needed to. Mario Hernandez bristled. The Frenchmen shivered. The other dogs just flipped out. All the while, the wolves stared, licking their chops, tucking serviettes around their necks and banging rudely carved knives and forks against each other.

Mario Hernandez – wolf dog – had had enough. Every fibre in his body was attuned to the wild Salsa rhythms of the forest. His very blood was howling syncopated spasms of carnage and tacos. He was done. Breaking out of the protective ring of the fire, he trotted right up to the biggest, boldest, most aggro wolf in the pack. Mario Hernandez – wolf dog, son of wolf and dog. The big wolf started down at him, laughing weirdly.

And then Mario Hernandez did what he was born to do, what his father was born to do before him, and all the patriarchs of the Northern Wild – Mario Hernandez did that one act that defines a Northerner soul and heart from all other creatures. Growling maw to maw with the wolf, he opened his jaw and said in doggy argot:

“Fuckin’ cold eh? C’est frette icitte!”


Bitching about the weather unites all creatures under the frozen stare of the Midnight Sun. 

Sunday, December 1, 2013

A Guide to City Life # ٣٩ - "City Wisdom"

Welcome to the Guide to City Life # CHARNOTRECOGNIZED! "City Wisdom". In this module, you will learn some of the basic chunks of speakwisdom that will serve as your urban astrolabe. They will help you navigate the steel and concrete sea, avoiding pitfalls, pitbulls, pity parties, and pizzicato murder.

What is wisdom? Wisdom can be defined as a gumball machine for proverbs. What is a gumball machine? A gumball machine was an archaic form of sugar infection that involved the exchange of coins for treated rubber.

A proverb is a punchline for the cosmic joke of inevitable failure. Wisdom is an artform that originated in the desert. In the desert, death was dealt out quickly and harshly to nomadic peoples. When some kind, hoary-bearded patriarch was bitten by an ape spider, his dark bearded relatives would, instead of seeking help or praying to the Lord Johobo, reply with a quick punchline or proverb. Thus the prevalence of proverbs in books of desert divinity:

There is a way that seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death. Oh snap.

Although wisdom has helped to irritate men for all of history, many of its proverbs have grown irrelevant, if not outright baffling. The city man can hardly expect to relate to the old Arabic proverb الثروة تأتي كالسلحفاة وتذهب كالغزال  because he probably cannot understand old Arabic. If he could, he would  be faced with a new problem of interpretation: what is a turtle? Why a gazelle? Did I run out of staples again?

The city has, happily, grown its own pod of proverbs for the modern proletarian. Here are a few of the better ones, with a commentary to explain their significance.

Kill mosquitoes.
Commentary: Mosquitoes are awful and deserve death.

I've never even seen a goddamn Moose.
Commentary: Less frequently seen than one might suppose, the Moose is a creature of note.

Don't order the beef shawarma are you nuts? That meat has been there for like, 3 days.
Commentary: Vegetarians are usually vindicated through patience and observation.

I like Solange better anyway.
Commentary: In the city, the fine arts are judged by both aesthetic merit, and aesthetic anti-merit (or hype).

Wait, the purple bus tickets expired already? 
Commentary: In the city, "public transportation" is a by-word for death by strangulation.

A fool and his money are easily awesome.
Commentary: No one is impressive by city standards until they make money for spending money.

A stitch in time is a sci-fi novel.
Commentary: Literacy, a common form of improv theatre.

Eat around the Bananas dad, they are just empty calories.
Commentary: This is derived from an old Berlin poem that ends with the lines "girth equals mirth".

Prep your materials and marinate the night before.
Commentary: That which is juicy, is kingly.

Thank you for putting up with A Guide to City Life # CHARNOTRECOGNIZED! "City Wisdom". If this module has been helpful to you, we know a Nigerian prince that could make you quite wealthy. To proceed to the next module, simply think happy thoughts, and then crow.