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Pastimes : Don't Ask Rambi -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rambi who wrote (7891)2/22/1998 7:42:00 PM
From: Lady Lurksalot  Respond to of 71178
 
Penni! Penni!! Wake up!!! You're having a bad dream? We're all here! We're all 29 years old, except one of us who's 22 years and some months. No crones--old or otherwise! No support hose! No dentures! No Ovaltine! No shuffleboard! No managed care homes! And--heaven forbid--no drooling. No rocking chairs, except the elegant and stately Bentwood, that is.

We're all here in the parlor telling witty stories, listening to Pachelbel and Vivaldi, laughing, sipping champagne, munching the delicious caponata Randy suggested. They're marvelous! Here, have one. And do try the braised rutabaga in spiced yogurt! It's my specialty! You'd never guess it's rutabaga! You'll love it! Chardonnay instead of champagne for you? Coming right up! Doesn't look like ZinMaster has arrived yet, so try to make do with this lesser vintage. I know, it's not nearly as good as what we have accustomed ourselves, but we're expecting him to bring the really good stuff any time now.

As previously reported, all of us went to that great little restaurant at the end of the universe. You must go there sometime. The food is terrific. Best of all, they let us relax be ourselves. They even allowed Janice her rattlings. Lexa delighted all with her party tricks. They even let Alex play bartender! Thomas and Gauguin and jp--in fact, all of us--told stories 'till dawn. We sang and danced--yes, on the tables, even--and laughted. Perish the thought! There was good music and fun. Of course, we left a generous tip.

Anyway, we're all back now, enjoying an early midnight repast. We're glad you came early to regale us with tales of your New York Adventure. Tell us, how did you find Times Square? No, I don't mean it that way. I'm sure the taxi driver knew how to get there. I mean, what's Times Square like these days? We want to hear all about everything! And, please, don't leave a thing out! The good folk of the Thread of Rambi await your tales with baited breath.

Holly



To: Rambi who wrote (7891)2/22/1998 9:45:00 PM
From: flickerful  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71178
 
ahh yes.

she returns
triumphant
to find
the decrepit remains.
well, i
am here to testify
peter has great
hands...
for starters.



To: Rambi who wrote (7891)2/23/1998 8:19:00 AM
From: flickerful  Respond to of 71178
 
oh no, please don't segue into cocoon.
please.

and
i really
should
have said
to begin with,
he has great hands.

in your absence,
my
grammar has suffered.
but maybe you won't notice...



To: Rambi who wrote (7891)2/23/1998 12:42:00 PM
From: Thomas C. White  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 71178
 
C'mon now penni m'dear. At least Shady Acres is way upscale. Sorta the Savoy of retirement managed care. Here's the brochure.

I checked it out and they have nine, count'em, nine shuffleboard courts, with these fancy awnings here, see? including clay, artificial surface, and grass. Though there's only one grass one. Strictly for advanced players. A complete nine hole putt-putt golf course with golf carts and greenside oxygen tanks at every hole. And lessee...looka here now, every bedside has onea those nifty electrical thingies with the cups (y'know, like the ones in ER?) that they wack on ya when your ticker commences to tocking instead of ticking. And here. What an activities roster! Monday pinochle, Tuesday bridge, Wednesday go fish, Thursday bingo...

And the chow! Omigod, No Mas! Here look. They got this guy who usedta be a chef at Lutece in New York, only now he's done this deal where he took all their recipes and just cooks them a whole bunch extra so's they're easy to chew. And anyway, denture cream's one hundred percentally included in the package, so no annoying extra charges you weren't expecting, y'know, like when ya go on a cruise and they hit ya up for all this stuff ya didn't know ya hadda pay for separate?

Geez, I try to do something nice and WHAT HAPPENS?? Whimpering and whining, whining and whimpering.



To: Rambi who wrote (7891)2/24/1998 4:59:00 PM
From: Thomas C. White  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 71178
 
The ease with which you just blithely up and jetted to and fro for your birthday reminded me by way of contrast of one of my worst jetting experiences. I feel compelled to regale you with it. Bear with me.

Last time I went to South America (November) I had to visit Paraguay, which is a few thousand square miles of leech infested swampland sandwiched in between Brazil and Argentina. For any of those of you from Paraguay, I'm sorry, but it's true. I looked.

I dreaded the idea of staying overnight there (my travel agent basically said...ummm...goodness, we just don't seem to have ANY information on hotels in Paraguay -- this was not promising). So I decided to fly from Brazil to Paraguay in the morning and leave on an evening flight to Argentina. I had to fly on some "alternative" Paraguayan airline called TAM, which is run by this enormously fat old guy who calls himself "El Comandante." He plasters his picture all over the inflight magazine. All the flight attendants and female staff on TAM are these absolutely stunning but utterly pteradactyl-brained crosseyed bimbos and I'm sure he picks each one out personally. I don't care to speculate on the nature of the job interview.

Anyway, I'm at the airport leaving for Paraguay from Sao Paulo in the morning, and at the TAM counter (ONE, count'em, ONE counter) they also tell me they have to issue my boarding pass for the evening Paraguay to Buenos Aires flight, and take my ticket. Why? Here's why. Because apparently a lot of the time nobody shows up to work the ticket counter in Paraguay and they want to make sure I don't miss my flight to Buenos Aires. I'm getting just a little nervous (giving up your ticket stub for a flight you're not taking yet is kind of a big no-no among Road Warriors). The lady asks me if I want to check my baggage. Yeah right. Anyway, I fly to Asuncion, Paraguay in the rattletrap Fokker jet (I think they have a total of like five planes and none of them should be allowed in the air).

That evening I go back to the airport. So I have my boarding pass that they gave me in Brazil and I go to the counter to pay the airport departure tax. The tax guy scowls at my boarding pass. Says it's no good because it doesn't have some kinda stamp on it that it's supposed to have (in South America, pretty much everything has to have some kind of a stamp on it). I guess the lady in Brazil didn't stamp it or something. I, fool that I was, did not notice. So he sends me to the TAM ticket counter. Nobody there. Just like they said. So now I'm REALLY getting nervous. I'm trying to look behind the counter for a suitably official-looking stamp and I'll just stamp it myself. No stamp. Finally a lady shows up (another ten on the Richter Scale brainless bimbo, God they're everywhere). She snatches my boarding pass. Looks at it suspiciously, like it's written in Armenian. Asks me, so where's my ticket? I say, they took it in Brazil. She says, accusingly, Oh, they should NEVER do that (I'm about to wet my pants, this is something you don't ever want to hear when you're trying to leave a strange country). This is not a valid boarding pass, she says. And I can't give you a boarding pass unless you have a ticket. And I can't check your ticket on the computer because it's not working (why am I not surprised?).

So by now I'm gnawing my cuticles off. Flight's leaving in 25 minutes and counting. So the lady goes and finds some officious looking character in a TAM uniform. Fifteen minutes they're back and forth, from time to time eyeballing me like I'm a rape suspect. I'm having visions of camping on a streetcorner of a strange sleazeball city in my Ballys and Lanvin tie at ten o'clock at night. No, thanks, don't wanna buy a watch. And I'm yelling over there, look if the damn pass isn't valid, I'll buy another goddamn ticket. How 'bout that? Nope, flight's sold out. Next one? Tomorrow morning. Bad ring to it.

Anyway, they finally decide that I'm probably not trying to cheat the airline and the nation. So they issue me a boarding pass. With hallowed stamp. Flight leaving in eight and a half minutes. I wack down my departure tax (that's okay bud, keep the change) at the counter and trundle off to Immigration. The guy says they can't let me through because it's past the "cutoff time." I'm thinking, do I palm this clown a tenspot and risk getting arrested? Maybe a few days fending off giant gringo-eating roaches in a Paraguayan hooscow? Nope. So I haul ass BACK to the counter. I'm screeching like a chimpanzee and waving my ticket, bimbolady goes with me over to Sr. Migra and explains whatever it is she has to explain. They grudgingly let me through. I'm sure they were going for the tenspot.

As the door is closing I'm running sweatstained in 90 degree heat with my carryon. New bimbolady at the the gate starts telling me she can't let me on with the carryon because the flight's full and there's no room. Another weighty debate ensues. She finally talks to El Capitan. They decide to let me on, there's no time to check the bag and I would have to miss the flight. My seat's already taken of course by a very imposing-looking fellow in a bad mood with the same seat number as mine (they're all written in by hand, remember the computer?). So I'm gazing desperately all over the plane and finally -- there it is -- a seat in the back in the smoking section. No room for the carryon, I have it in my lap. A two suiter. Maybe forty pounds. All the way to Argentina. And it's chocks away, the damn plane finally rattles and sputters and shakes its way down the runway and clears the ground and yaws like a besotted goose and I'm OUTTA there.

And that's my Paraguay story.