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February 5, 2012

Tag: bad luck

December 23, 2011

Jingle Bell FAQ by Susan Schorn

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Q. When did jingle bells originate?
A. Jingle bells predate human history by millions of years, tracing their origins back to small rocks that the dinosaurs swallowed in order to produce tinkling sounds in their stomachs during mating season. No one has ever figured out what these sounds added to the experience of having sex with a 50-ton lizard, but who are we to judge?

Q. When did humans first use them?
A. Early humans also swallowed rocks, mainly because they didn’t know any better. Once people figured out the difference between rocks and edible objects, the practice declined in popularity; it is now limited to a few nomadic tribes and the occasional Delta Tau Delta pledge.

Q. How did livestock become associated with bells?
A. Humans have used bell-like tools since the Mesolithic period, when rocks were hung around the necks of domesticated goats to make the animals easier to find. Initially, this worked because the rocks were very heavy and pinned the creatures to the ground neck-first. Gradual technological refinements resulted in smaller neck-stones that would rattle together and provide audible evidence of the animal’s movements; during the Bronze Age, these finally evolved into true bells.

Q. Who started the custom of putting bells on sleighs?
A. The modern sleigh, or “jingle,” bell was invented in 1632 by Hans Jengelen, a Dutch buttonmaker living in exile in Germany due to a dispute with Holland’s politically influential Buttonmakers’ Guild. Searching for a practical way to speed the transport of buttons to market during winter, Jengelen hit upon the idea of attaching noisemakers to the official German Button-sleds, or Knopfschlittern, so other conveyances would hear them approaching and clear the roadway.

Jengelen first proposed using caged parrots for this purpose, until the difficulty of keeping tropical birds alive during an Alpine winter was pointed out to him. He experimented briefly with KreischendesSchwein (Bavarian Shrieking Pigs), but after limited success and the loss of several toes, he realized that some form of “shrieking button,” which could be attached to the sleigh harness, would serve his purpose equally well, and moreover would not try to eat the horses pulling the sleigh (KnopfschlitternPferd).

Q. What are some of the more charming traditions and superstitions associated with jingle bells?
A. The sound of jingle bells is traditionally believed to ward off bad luck and evil spirits. Depending on the remoteness of the region and the level of inbreeding among the populace, jingle bells may also be credited with attracting meteorites, curing wooden tongue, and preventing turnip blight. In some areas of France, such bells are believed to cause the tails of otters to grow. In Portugal, they are thought to promote fertility in poultry of all kinds. Westfalians believe that by ringing sleighbells, one communicates directly with St. Philologus of Sinope. And Belgian tradition holds that the first sleighbell chime of December heralds the advent of Dietger, the Gaily-Clad King of Winter, and his Splendiferous Ice Court.

Q. And what of the more dark and cryptic elements of jingle bell history? Do they exist?
A. They do indeed. In fact, jingle bells have a sordid, arcane history, intertwined with some of the worst episodes in human history. Really, they’re much more interesting than all those fucking carols would lead to you expect.

During the Crusades, for example, The Knights Templar would hang a small bell from their lances each time they killed an infidel. Sir William de Harcourt, who fought at the Siege of Damietta in 1218, is rumored to have acquired more than 3,000 bells this way.

Q. Was he overcompensating?
A. Duh.

Q. What other sinister associations do jingle bells have?
A. Plenty, but before we can tell you about them, you’ll have to hand over a pint of your own blood and show us your secret tattoo.

Q. How did sleigh bells become so closely linked to holiday celebrations?
A. Sleigh bells were originally employed at Yuletide to give advance warning of visiting family members. Hearing the distant jingle that proclaimed the approach of guests, people had ample time to run out into the snow and die of exposure if they preferred.

Then Currier and Ives started churning out lithographs of bell-laden horses dashing along with sleighs full of merry, holiday-making idiots, and it kind of became a thing.

Q. Do horses enjoy the sound of jingle bells?
A. While they prefer them to the sound of Bavarian Shrieking Pigs, it is an established fact that jingle bells actually irritate the living hell out of horses.

Q. Then why do sleigh owners keep using them?
A. Because people are assholes.

Q. How will mankind employ jingle bells in years to come?
A. In the future, jingle bells will be solemnly rung at the funerals of puppeteers. Doctors will prescribe them (unsuccessfully) to treat melancholy. During the next Ice Age, jingle bells will provide the accompaniment for soloists in Portuguese Frost Operas. Street urchins will use them to send signals across toxin-filled alleyways during the New Jersey Apartment Wars, and peasants will barter them for root vegetables in the early years of the Great Inter-Planetary Famine.

But for the next hundred years or so, they will mainly be used by street-corner Santas to mark their territory.

December 7, 2011

Fading the Vig: A Gamblers Guide to Life: $100 Hand of Blackjack, Foxwoods Casino by David Hill

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I met Anthony in a poker game at the Diamond Club in New York City. He was fairly nondescript, just a normal everyday thirty-something white guy, business casual, head-down and putting-in-work in the pot-limit game. We were having a conversation around the table about blackjack. I had just made a comment about card counting when his head shot up.

“You count cards?” he asked me.

“A little,” I responded. I had no idea how to count cards. “Do you?”

“Do I!” He laughed.

It turns out Anthony, a finance industry flunky by day, had a small crew that hit Atlantic City and Foxwoods on the weekends and counted cards. He said a typical weekend haul was “nothing serious, maybe twenty or thirty grand.” It just so happened they were looking for some new talent and would I like to go to Foxwoods with them for the weekend and give it a shot? It sounded like an adventure. The fact that I had no idea how to count cards never entered in to my mind before I enthusiastically agreed.

Card counting isn’t mathematically very complicated. You keep a running tally in your head of the high cards versus the low cards. Low cards add to the tally, high cards subtract from it. The higher the number the more favorable the conditions for betting; the idea being that a shoe with a high concentration of high cards in it will deal out more winning hands than a shoe with low cards. There’s more complexity to it than this, but that’s the basic gist. I went to the bookstore and bought a book on counting called “Blackjack for Blood.” I practiced on decks of cards at home. I thought I had it down. I felt like I was ready. Once again my overconfidence was not only unfounded but about to get me in to trouble.

- – -

Overconfidence, both founded and otherwise, runs in my family. My mother is one of these people who is always coming up with new business ideas and trying to make them work. It is one of the traits I picked up from her that I’m most proud of, the proclivity to not just talk about something but to go ahead and do it. My sister, too, has always been what we call back home “too big for her britches.”

I’m three years older than my sister, which means that we only went to school together one year, my senior year. It was uniquely humiliating to be known throughout my senior year as “Jamie Hill’s brother.” I had been there for three whole years before Jamie showed up, yet almost as soon as she arrived she made her mark on the place. She was popular and outgoing, she was loud and brave, she was domineering and aggressive, and she loved attention almost as much as she loved getting her way. As long as I could remember she had always been that way.

We grew up as close as two kids of different ages and genders could. With one parent working on the road and the other one working full-time, we spent a lot of our childhood together being shuttled between school, day care, and grandma’s house. I tried to look after her, to be the protective big brother, but it wasn’t always so easy. One of the consequences of being in the middle of everything all the time meant that whenever there was trouble, you were in the middle of that, too.

One of my earliest memories of not being able to protect my sister from danger came around the age of nine. My sister and I were at daycare and all of the children were playing outside. Despite my protestations Jamie insisted on playing with the bigger kids who were roughhousing and chasing each other, rather with the other little kids, who were playing with toys. I’m not sure if my motives for wanting to stop her were more that I didn’t want my “baby sister” cramping my nine-year-old style or if I was truly concerned for her safety, but it didn’t matter. She did what she wanted. And on this particular day while she was chasing some of those big kids in the yard, she tripped on a stone, flew through the air, and ate dirt face-first into the yard. At first everyone laughed, myself included. But when she stood up all of the kids stood in horrified silence. Her face was covered in dirt, her mouth was filled with blood. It poured out over her bottom lip like a faucet. Her teeth were knocked in every direction. She wailed like no six-year-old should ever have to. I froze in fear.

- – -

Anthony’s crew worked like this: there were four of us who would sit at four different tables and play for the minimum while we counted the deck. When any of us had a high count we would signal in Anthony and his girlfriend Alexa, who would come over to our table and start betting big until the count went cold.

The table I saddled up had a $5 minimum. I just played $5 a hand while I tried to keep the count going in my head. It wasn’t at all easy. There were so many distractions all around me that kept me off the count, not to mention all of the decisions I had to make along the way. One thing I failed to take in to consideration while practicing at home was that I’d still have to play my hands and play them correctly, which often caused me to forget where the count was at. It was constant stress. I was sure I wasn’t counting right. I missed cards left and right. It’s one thing to be a little off when you’re playing with your own money, but this was a whole other thing, Anthony’s “nothing serious” money. I prayed that my count never got high enough to warrant me signaling Anthony and Alexa over to my table. Just a couple of hours in to the first night and I was petrified. I wanted out of this.

It didn’t help that I was seated next to Paul. Paul was a very large man in a tweed jacket with wild hair and large, thick eyeglasses. He was professorial but also completely wasted. He rambled on and on out into the ether; neither the dealer nor I were paying his trivia and anecdotes much mind. It was irritating on many levels, but mainly because it was fucking up my count.

Then it happened. My count was growing steadily. One stiff card after another came out of the shoe. I grew anxious. If my count was right then it was time for the signal. I signaled by taking off my baseball cap. I waited. The count grew higher. Plus-one, plus-one, minus-one, plus-one, plus-one, plus-one, on and on it went—still no Anthony or Alexa. I glanced around the room. The other counters were all around me. Anthony and Alexa stood behind a table, not even playing. I leaned back in my chair, trying to get their attention. Anthony looked over at me, saw my hat was off, and then looked away as fast as he could, not even making eye contact.

“Sir, place your bets.” The dealer was waiting for me to put my $5 chip out in the circle before dealing the cards. I wasn’t sure if my count was right, but I knew that even if I was a little bit off, the count was still huge. I wasn’t going to let this opportunity go to waste. Screw waiting for Anthony. I put a hundred bucks on the circle.

“Holy Mary Mother of God!” Paul almost fell out of his stool. He slapped his big ham hock of a hand on my back. “Check out Mr. High Roller over here! You feeling lucky or what?”

Paul wasn’t helping. The whole reason card counting crews operate this way is so that a single player doesn’t have to do what I’m doing, dramatically vary their bets with the count. It is a dead giveaway that you’re counting if the pit boss or dealer is paying attention. We do the counting, Anthony and Alexa do the betting, that was the idea.

“Yeah, I feel lucky. Plus I’m going to go soon,” I tried to cover.

“If you’re feeling lucky, I’m feeling lucky,” Paul said. He dropped three more $25 chips on top of the green $25 chip he had already bet. Great, now I got a partner. I looked around for the closest exit. I wanted to disappear.

- – -

I left Arkansas after graduation. Jamie finished high school and stuck around Arkansas. She tried college for a semester but failed every class. She tried living on her own for a while but managed to get fired from every job she had, usually for sleeping through work. Over the years her popularity had turned to notoriety. Her circle of friends shrunk and her number of enemies grew. She did drugs, she drank to excess, she stole, she got in to fights. She had a terrible car accident one night while driving stoned and exhausted. She was thrown through the windshield of her car and met the pavement on the interstate with her head. The crack in her skull that prevented her brain from swelling kept her alive. When she regained consciousness in the hospital, the police were there waiting to question her about the stolen purse they found in the car and the drugs they found in her system.

Eventually Jamie figured she needed to flee Arkansas and the people in her life in order to give herself a chance to catch some good cards. Our parents reluctantly agreed. On one hand she had proven a poor decision maker, immature and irresponsible in virtually every aspect of her life. On the other hand there were no good jobs in Arkansas and Jamie’s only friends were a seedy cast of characters. Collect calls came to the house from prisons. Police would come to my mother’s home, guns drawn, to search for suspects. Every month there seemed to be another funeral for another kid from Jamie’s class. It was a tough choice to let her go off on her own, but at the time it certainly seemed wise compared to the status quo.

She chose Dallas, Texas. She crashed with a friend and quickly found a good job and a nice apartment. By that Christmas she was buying everyone expensive gifts and paying off her debts. She was kicking our mother extra cash, even picking up the check at dinner. She seemed happier. A little change of scenery and the cards were finally breaking the other way. Everyone breathed easier and bragged on the newfound spring in Jamie’s step.

- – -

The dealer dealt out the hands. I had an eight. Paul had a sixteen. The dealer showed a face-up four. So much for the count being high. The dealer motioned to Paul.

“Hit me.”

I sat straight up in my seat. Did he just say “hit me”? With a sixteen against a four? Even a drunk nutjob like Paul should realize that the dealer was going to have to take a card and stood a good chance of busting. The dealer peeled off another card. Fwap. A three.

“Nineteen! Not bad! I’ll stand.”

The dealer motioned towards me. I swiped my card towards me indicating I wanted a hit. She slid out the next card from the shoe and flipped it over—the jack of clubs. I waved my hand to indicate I wanted to stand on eighteen.

The dealer then flipped over her facedown card. It was a nine giving her thirteen. She took off another card—a six—giving her nineteen. She picked up my green chips and put them in her rack. She patted the table next to Paul’s chips, indicating a push. He clasped my shoulder.

“Guess that feeling you had wasn’t luck after all,” he chortled, rubbing salt in my wounds.

“It would have been if you knew how to play your hand!”

If Paul had stood on sixteen like he was “supposed” to, then I would have caught his three and my ten to make twenty-one.

“I think I did just fine. If I played my hand the way you say, I would have lost,” Paul huffed, his breath sour with booze. “Just worry about how to play your own hand instead of worrying about how I play mine.” He grinned and winked as he slapped me on the back.

“That’s hard to do when the way you play your hands is costing me money,” I growled. The dealer patiently waited for our argument to finish before dealing the next hand.

“Your bad luck isn’t my fault, kid.”

“You are my bad luck,” I shot back.

“You think all those cards are in that shoe in some kind of perfect order, just magically arranged so that you can win? The cards come how they come. How I play my hand didn’t make you lose. You think that when I got up to take a piss an hour ago and missed all those hands, you think that made you lose this hand, too? I mean if everything I do affects you, then it must!” He laughs and slaps the table. “This isn’t like some butterfly flapping his wings in China shit. Me and you aren’t connected.”

“I don’t know about all that. I just know that nobody hits a sixteen against a four.”

“It’s easy once all the cards are out face up to see how maybe you could have won if this thing didn’t happen or that thing did happen. But that isn’t how life works.”

“What are you, a philosopher now?”

“No, I’m just someone a lot older than you who has been playing this game a lot longer than you. You think you’re fooling anyone? I know you’re counting cards. Hell, even she knows!” He pointed at the dealer. She chuckled. I knew then why Anthony and Alexa had written me off. I was made. The pathetic thing was it didn’t even matter; the casino didn’t even push me off.

“What’s the point of all that, counting cards?” Paul asked as the dealer started dealing again.

“To make money,” I responded. “To get an edge on the house.”

“Yeah but where’s your edge?” he laughed. “You just lost a hundred bucks!”

“Over the long run I have an advantage.”

“Long run, I love it.” Paul grabbed me by the back of my neck and aimed my face towards the dealer. “Can you believe this kid?” he said to her. I wiggled out of his grip.

“How long is this long run, anyway? Hours? Weeks? Months? You planning on moving in to this place? You gonna sit here wearing a diaper like those other degenerates?”

“It’s all just one long session,” I said, repeating something I’m sure I heard someone else say once. “Tonight and every other night, it’s all one long game.”

Paul shook his head in disapproval. “That’s the trouble with you ‘advantage players,’ you long run types. You never know which shoe could be your last shoe.”

He looked down at his cards. Blackjack. The dealer said “ooh, nice one,” as she stacked his chips in front of him. He tipped her a five-dollar chip.

“Forget the counting, kid. Carpe diem and all that shit. Just try to enjoy the game.”

- – -

Jamie told herself this would be the last time she did it. She had been lucky so far. Lucky to have made so much money. Lucky to have so many powerful people looking out for her. Lucky to have kept it all from her family. Lucky that she hadn’t been caught by the police. She knew that eventually her good luck would run out. But she needed to do it one last time. One last time and she’d be done for good.

There had been other ‘one last times,’ but this one was different. She needed this money. She had to get oral surgery, the last oral surgery in a long line of dental work she’d had done throughout her life. The time she fell at daycare when she was six had set her teeth growing in all sorts of strange directions. She spent decades with braces and bridges and mouthpieces, all manner of contraptions to get her teeth growing back in the right direction. But now she was an uninsured adult with several maxed-out credit cards and an expensive drug habit, and dental work isn’t cheap.

She knew the routine. She left her apartment at dark driving a white rental car. She called up the guy she only knew as Peanut and told him she was on the road. As many times as she had made this run, she always knew better than to ask what it was she was carrying. Better she not know, she figured, in case she ever needed the deniability.

She drove for a couple of hours on Interstate 30 heading east towards Arkansas. Usually when she made these runs she had an escort in a car up ahead of her or behind her, just to make sure things went well. Tonight they sent her out alone. When she crossed over the state line she picked up the phone they gave her and dialed Peanut to tell him.

“Get off at the next exit,” he told her. “There’s a Wal-Mart on your right. Park it in the lot, leave the keys in it, then go inside. I’ll call you when it’s time to come out and someone will give you a ride home.”

“I’m afraid,” she told him.

“You’re doing great,” Peanut consoled her. “There’s nothing to be afraid of.”

Jamie reached up and adjusted her rearview mirror to get a count on the number of police cars behind her.

“What about all these blue lights in my mirror, P? Should I be afraid of that?”

- – -

Walking around the yard outside the prison visiting room, I tell my sister about counting cards. I wonder whether or not she thinks it is an apt metaphor for what happened to her—that her life ran in streaks, each one eventually and inevitably met with its opposite.

“I don’t think there’s such thing as streaks, as luck. Nothing was inevitable. I just think the more you win, or get away with or whatever, the more you risk the next time. And the more and more you risk, the more severe the consequences when you finally lose.”

“Was this really the last run, then? It sounds like you think if you got away with it you’d have done it again.”

“Every trip was supposed to be the last one. At least that’s what I’d tell myself. But I don’t think that means I had no choice. I had a choice. I made the wrong choice over and over again. And you get used to making bad choices is all. But it doesn’t mean you don’t still have a choice. It just gets harder and harder to make the right one the more wrong you do.

“I could have got out. I could have avoided 38 staples in my head when I was nineteen. I could have made straight A’s and got an education. I could have made different choices. But this life got to where it was what was more comfortable for me, believe it or not. Doing all this shit was actually the easier choice than to play it straight. Isn’t that nuts?”

I didn’t think it was nuts at all, and I told her so.

“I still try to make my bad choices worth all of this,” she motions around the prison yard. “I had tons of money, tons of friends, tons of free time, tons of fun. But then sometimes I think coming to prison saved my life. Maybe that’s all luck is, unintended consequences. Like I was lucky I didn’t wear my seatbelt that night I had the wreck because flying through the windshield probably saved my life. And I’m lucky I got busted because who knows where I was headed if I didn’t?”

We sit down on a bench for her to show me the hat she has knitted for my infant son, her only nephew, who was born after she was locked up. Knitting is a popular pastime in prison. I always figured that when my sister did her bid she’d make use of the time by taking college courses, learning a new language, exercising, whatever; and she did all of those things. But eventually the women in the prison turn their attention to idle activities like knitting or playing cards because it makes time pass by quicker. I asked her about this.

“That’s one of the things you learn in here,” she tells me. “Nobody can stop time. You just have to wait it out.”

I look up to my sister despite all of this. Her kind of life has been a hard kind, one filled with heartbreak of epic proportions, only the surface of which I’ve scratched here. Even now, hearing her brush aside any suggestion that a hard life is a form of hard luck, I still won’t be angry with her for the choices she has made. Her choices had terrible consequences, and they affected more people than just her, myself included. All the same, they were hers to make alone. Sitting here next to me in this prison yard, telling me about how luck is bullshit, holding this tiny little hat, she’s paying the price alone. I still can’t protect her. I will not judge her.

“That’s the trouble with you ‘carpe diem,’ short-run types,” I tell her. “You never …

November 11, 2011

Historys a Bitch: A Dog Walk Through Time: Man Weds Dog by Robb Fritz

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With Halloween just past, and the numerologically significant day of 11/11/11 upon us, it seemed fortuitous, if not a matter of supernatural necessity, for me to acknowledge the occasion by delving into the ominous history of dogs and superstition.

What makes 11/11/11 so important to the mystically inclined is that, first of all, it is a once-a-century singularity. Second, the date is made up of all 11s and 1s, like 11:11, the time of day noted for its synchronistic power to focus life’s supernatural forces by none other than Uri Geller, the man who had my occult-obsessed 11-year-old self staring for hours at spoons pinched between my fingers as I fruitlessly attempted to bend them with the power of my mind.

Not surprisingly, considering dog’s presence at man’s side since long before the dawn of history, there’s no shortage of dog-related superstitions and beliefs. The greater portion of these superstitions have to do with bad luck, death and dying—a quality, to be fair, that they probably share with the majority of all superstitions, anywhere, ever. But there are a handful of warmer and fuzzier superstitions attributed to dogs. If a dog licks a baby, for example, the child will be a fast healer; meeting a dog, especially a Dalmatian, means good luck (a belief no doubt set in motion by the owner of a Dalmatian); a greyhound with a white spot in its forehead means good fortune (a belief no doubt set in motion by the owner of a greyhound with a white spot in its forehead). On a statue in Moscow’s Revolution Square metro stop, the nose of the patriotic soldier’s faithful dog has been rubbed pale by an unending stream of metro passengers, who believe that touching it will bring them good luck, including college students who often rub their essays on it in pursuit of a good grade.

But man’s best friend’s main place in the world of superstition and myth is most often related to man’s ultimate end. With amazing consistency across different cultures, dogs serve in mythology as messengers of death, protective companions of the newly departed as they move to the afterlife, and fierce guards at the doors of heaven and hell.

One prevalent superstition is that a howling dog either indicates a death soon to come or newly arrived. This belief will come as no surprise to anyone who has ever had the deeply creepy sensation of being in a cabin, or camping in the middle of a forest in the dead of night, and hearing a dog or a wolf howl at the moon.

One form of this ominous howler is the ghostly “black dog” found in legends throughout England, New England and Appalachia. The black dog is known by literally dozens of names, depending on the local legend: Hairy Jack, Skriker, Churchyard Beast, Black Shuck, Hateful Thing, among many more equally vivid names. Padfoot, as the black dog is known in Lancashire, Leeds and elsewhere, is the name J.K. Rowling chose to give the animagus black dog form of Harry Potter’s godfather Sirius. While Led Zeppelin’s monster hit “Black Dog” was reportedly named after an actual flesh-and-blood dog that hung around outside their recording studio, the song does include the line “eyes that shine burning red,” a well-known trait of the canine specter.

One New England variation was the Black Dog of the Hanging Hills in Connecticut. According to 19th-century geologist W.H.C. Pynchon “if you meet the Black Dog once, it shall be for joy; if twice, it shall be for sorrow; and the third time shall bring death.” One imagines this read ominously in the voice of Vincent Price, with the sound of howling wind and possibly a church organ wheezing out three climactic chords in the background. In 1898, Pynchon (whose relation to the cult author I tried but failed to ascertain) reported that in 1891 he’d been out in the region with his companion, fellow geologist Herbert Marshall. Marshall had apparently seen the legendary dog twice but had scoffed at the story Pynchon told him about the dangers of seeing the dog for a third time. Regardless, the next time Marshall saw the dog, he slipped on a patch of ice and plunged to his death. This death was one of no less than six ascribed to triple sightings of the dog.

One form of the black dog, the barghest, is considered not just a messenger of doom, but a demonic force of violent destruction. One form of the barghest, known as Black Shuck, is the inspiration for Arthur Conan Doyle’s Hound of the Baskervilles:

“A hound it was, an enormous coal-black hound, but not such a hound as mortal eyes have ever seen. Fire burst from its open mouth, its eyes glowed with a smouldering [sic] glare, its muzzle and hackles and dewlap were outlined in flickering flame. Never in the delirious dream of a disordered brain could anything more savage, more appalling, more hellish be conceived than that dark form and savage face which broke upon us out of the wall of fog.”

As it turns out however, the hound is just a hound, albeit a massive one, and the flames just a preparation of phosphorus cleverly mixed by the novel’s villain to literally scare his victims to death, victims as much to their own magical thinking (and Doyle’s stretched and implausible plots, sorry Holmes lovers) as they are to his involved machinations.

I knew the barghest from Dungeons and Dragons, where it made its appearance in the Monster Manual, a book I studied in seventh grade, along with the Player’s Handbook and Dungeon Master’s Guide, with the focused, religious attention of a Talmudic scholar. As I always chose to play magical characters, usually illusionists, it’s safe to say I was still in thrall to a certain amount of my own magical thinking, the kind that had previously led me to try moving objects and melting spoons with my mind. Still, by the ninth grade, I realized I was the only one in our group willing, if not wanting, to put the time and attention into running the game as Dungeon Master, and this—along with a sneaking suspicion that pursuing a passion for role-playing games was directly harmful to future romantic prospects—finally led me to give away my much-coveted collection of multi-sided dice and move on.

Superstitions, of course, are all about magical thinking, one form of which, both terrifying yet strangely comforting, is a belief in ghosts and the ability to contact the dead. A number of superstitions insist on canines’ ability to see the spirits of the dead. One states that if you look between a dog’s ears when it is suddenly staring intently at nothing for no good reason, you’ll see a ghost. In China it is believed that a dog’s ability to see the spirits of the dead comes from the fluid in a dog’s eye. As a result, mediums will smear this fluid over their own eyes in order to see into the supernatural world, while it is believed that if the average, uninitiated person did so they would die from the shock of seeing into the afterlife.

Given the role dogs often fill in peoples’ daily lives as guards and protectors, it’s hardly surprising that their mythological role in death is often more protective than ominous. In a number of traditions, they serve as man’s benevolent companion, leading them, like a calm, reassuring tour guide, from the world of the living to the world the dead. Anubis, the jackal-headed god of death, served this role in Egyptian mythology, and a dog also accompanies the dead to the afterlife in the Indian epic Mahabarata. Curiously, an ocean and half a world away in Meso-America, the Aztec god Xolotl was also a dog-headed god who fulfilled this role, guiding the dead on their way to eternity.

Dogs stand, throughout folklore, as guards before the doors of the afterlife. The Greeks described the three-headed dog Cerberus who guarded the gates of Hades in order to prevent those who’d crossed the River Styx from turning back; in Norse mythology there was Garmr, the blood-stained hound that guarded the gates of Hel (not to be confused with the Christian Hell); the Celts had C≈µn Annwn, the dog guardians of the otherworld; and in India dogs are considered to guard the doors of both heaven and hell.

Many of these beliefs have faded with the passage of time. But the world is vast and there are still plenty of people who pursue traditions the rest of us would consider completely bizarre. One example is the practice of human-dog marriage that still take place today in certain parts of India. Most often these take place when a young child starts growing a tooth above their gumline, usually above another tooth, considered by certain tribes to be a very bad omen. The child’s tribe will then sometimes marry the child to a dog who will serve to guard the child, and the tribe, from evil spirits. While the full Hindu marriage rite is observed, the marriage is nevertheless considered more of a good luck charm than an actual marriage, and it is fully expected that the child will marry a human spouse later in life. As the owner of one of the canine “brides” explained: “This is just a ceremony to please the tribal deity—in the great epic Mahabharata a dog helped the Pandavas reach heaven.”

While these marriages usually involve young children, in 2007 a 33-year-old man named P. Selvakumar married a female dog in order to shed a 15-year-old curse of paralysis and deafness that he said he brought on himself when he stoned two dogs to death and hung them from a tree. As one of his relatives described it: “On the advice of an astrologer and others, he decided to marry a bitch to get cured.” It was not reported, unfortunately for my curiosity, whether marrying a bitch actually managed to solve Mr. Selvakumar’s condition.

To the western mind it all seems crazy. But one person’s crazy is another person’s deeply held belief. Consider one well-known historical tribe who believe their spiritual savior to have been born of a virgin impregnated by the word of their tribal god. This same savior then died at a young age and was raised three days later from the dead. In between this birth and death and resurrection, a host of other events occurred that are fully impossible by all the physical rules of the rational, known universe. And yet if you are raised a Christian, as I was, these events are somehow taken in, accepted and, most importantly, believed with an astonishing degree of psychological aplomb.

While religion for me has faded away, at least until I get older and grow inevitably more terrified of burning in the hot place with Mr. Scratch, superstition for me in one form or another is probably here to stay. I will readily admit, for example, to a hopeless and indefensible weakness for astrology (where, in the Tarot, dogs serve as a symbol of faithful guidance and protection). Because while I may pooh-pooh the irrational for public consumption, deep inside the overheated furnace of my teeming and self-contradictory brain remains the trace of an 11-year-old still convinced he will one day, with the power of his mind, bend a motherfucking spoon.

September 14, 2009

How the fight started…

by admin — Categories: Jokes — Tags: , , Comments Off

A woman’s husband had been slipping in and out of a coma for several months, yet she stayed by his bedside every single day. When he came to, he motioned for her to come nearer.
As she sat by him, he said, “You know what? You have been with me all through the bad times. When I got fired, you were there to support me. When my business failed, you were there. When I got shot, you were by my side. When we lost the house, you gave me support. When my health started failing, you were still by my side… You know what?”
What dear?” She asked gently.
I think you bring me bad luck.”
And, that’s how the fight started!

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