Showing posts with label Spirit Animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spirit Animals. Show all posts

What We're Thankful For

By OYIT Staff

Every four years, in the same month as the presidential election, we celebrate the genocide of the people indigenous to the United States of America by attempting a genocide on Turkeys and yams.  We call this holiday “Thanksgiving,” and you are supposed to keep all of the things you are thankful for in your thoughts.  In keeping with this tradition, the writing staff of One Year in Texas attempts to list the very few things they have left to be thankful for.

Bub

I am thankful for small manifestations of the absurd in everyday life.  Here are a couple from the tiny town I live in - A 2nd story entrance door without stairs:

And an air conditioning unit in a decrepit, abandoned, art deco gas station with a smiley face dented into it:


Glenn

Spirit Airlines - by far the worst airline to ever exist, including the short-lived Air Qaeda.  But they allow you to fly cheaply as long as you don’t have any luggage, legs or need to use the bathroom.

The Dirty Projectors - released the best album of 2012, a little weird but very listenable.  Will not scare your Midwestern parents but will help you get your crush into bed.

Jake

Twitter - A place on the internet to make jokes about cum and 9/11.

RT Ryback - the WWE wrestler who is so strong he can lift people up and walk around with them.


Sarah

Vodka - It literally goes with everything and is especially useful during the holidays.

Atkins Diet - allows us to lose weight and live forever.

Ryan

Wilhelm Reich's theory (FACT) of Orgone Energy - I've converted my entire apartment building into a large orgone accumulator and set up cloudbusters outside the building. My landlords don't like this, not to mention the neighbors I've violently forced out, but being way overbuilt during the Cold War (a psyops scam if you ask me), the building itself is basically impenetrable. My orgastic potency is through the roof and if the National Guard breaks in like they're threatening, their bullets will probably just bounce off my orgone aura.

My custom designed "GF Body Pillow" - After doing a lot (a LOT!) of talking about my large anime body pillow collection, my lady friend finally decided that she wanted me to put up or shut up and take this "thing" we're doing to a whole new level. Together, we designed custom body pillows that resemble each other to use when we're apart, due to work travels, orgone energy conventions, church lock-ins, Risk board game tournaments, etc. This really brought us closer together in a new form of intimacy. While it was kind of tough to let my anime body pillow collection go to the Goodwill, where they'll hopefully find a good home with some other dedicated otaku, none of them had the bells and whistles we designed into ours - like the intimate whip-it dispenser in mine, or the vibrating micronub in hers. This was a really great experience for us that I'm happy to share with my closest friends across the whole internet.



Happy Thanksgiving Everyone!

April Cargo Cult



By ScottB

A cargo cult is a type of religious practice that may appear in traditional tribal societies in the wake of interaction with technologically advanced cultures. The cults are focused on obtaining the material wealth (the "cargo") of the advanced culture through magic and religious rituals and practices, believing that the wealth was intended for them by their deities and ancestors. - Wikipedia


BOOK: "American Studies" (2002) by Louis Menand

Centering mostly on the intellectual/cultural history of 20th Century America (duh, it's Menand), this book acrobatically straddles the divide between T.S. Eliots' antisemitism and the codependency between the SAT's and the hydrogen bomb. And yes, it's true that most of Menand's paragraphs end with a joke.

Album:"Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere" (1969) by Neil Young and Crazy Horse

Less radio friendly than "Harvest," Neil Young's first album with Crazy Horse offers more to get lost in. Some artists, like Springsteen, take an environment you thought was simple (farms, cars, summer) and transforms them into mobius strips of beautiful complexity. Neil Young takes complex themes (ephemerality, Nietzchean emotional politics between hippies, disillusionment) and makes them cartoonishly simple. And it rocks. There's something life-affirming about walking home through Brooklyn in the rain listening to "Down By The River".

Movie: "The Human Spark" (2009)

I have a soft spot in my heart for PBS docs. I've always wanted to see them get BBC levels of funding and production quality. At least we have Alan Alda to host our shit! And in "The Human Spark," his sincere interest in human origins bubbles over into a childlike enthusiasm. It's like having Hawkeye as a science teacher.

Food: CT Style Lobster Rolls from the Red Hook Lobster Pound

If the cheap, high quality fixed-gear bikes and turn of the century subway maps don't lure you to the Brooklyn Flea, then the lobster rolls from the Red Hook Lobster Pound should. Connecticut style consists of a buttery meat claw sauté, topped with chives, and served on a lightly toasted bun. I wouldn't just die for it, I'd kill you just to eat it out of your mouth.

Cargo: Blublockers and a Stuffed Bat Inside of a Crystal Ball

-The Zach Galifianakis look alike who sold them to me said: "Blublockers...well buddy, now you're on top of the world." But I couldn't respond because my breath had been taken away.

-Those who truly love me know that my Spirit Animal is a bat. I'd like to think that the purchase of my stuffed bat inside of a crystal ball represents my final and lasting victory over the beast inside.