Oct 27, 2006

D'oor!


A couple Saturdays ago, I took out a window air conditioner and carried it out the front door. It's a big bulky thing, so I couldn't see where I was going, and I scratched the door on the way out. See? Sigh.

Keith, Ya Goof!

Oct 26, 2006

Our son, the Cokehead

Here's Emmett in this year's Halloween costume, adapted from a prop that I made back in high school. We added a little stability by stuffing a partially-inflated beachball behind his head.

Two words: Proud. Pop.

Oct 21, 2006

Meet Katherine the Smart


Submitted by our new friend Lisa, who wins fantastic chocolate from McIntyre's Candies! Thanks, Lisa!

My daughter Kate, at nine years of age, is the bright one in the family, while her six-year-old brother is the funny guy. Back in June, we were looking for a new home and had just finished touring one when Kate pipes up with "Mom, I bet I know the last name of the people who used to live here." Then she proceeds to spell MIRROR from the box she is looking at beside their mailbox. (We don't get our paper delivered). After I stopped laughing, I explained to her that that was where the newspaper goes.

So Kate, you still get straight A's, but Mom's got to say: Ya Goof!

Oct 18, 2006

Don't tell me I threw it out with the office party video

I've seen this story in a number of places, but I still don't know whether it's actually true ...

NASA lost the original tapes of the first man on the moon?!

If so, someone deserves to hear, REALLY, REALLY LOUD: Ya Goof!!

Oct 5, 2006

Remember me? At Meineke?


I needed an oil change, so I decided to drop my car at Meineke in the morning and get it in the evening. I asked my ol' work pal Carl to pick me up and drop me off.

Even though last time we arranged the same thing, he forgot me.

I remembered that after he did it again today.

Carl, Ya Goof!

Note: The picture above is not the local Meineke. The similarity is: Carl's not there, either.

Oct 1, 2006

Holy Shirtnapping, Batman!


This story has two parts.

PART 1
A few weeks ago, a shirt appeared in our basement, on the clothesline where we hang laundry after it comes out of the dryer. It was a Batman-oriented shirt, used but still nifty. I'm the Bat-fan of the family, so I thought maybe Janet and/or the kids had come across it in a second-hand shop and brought it home. It hung on the line for a while, and no one claimed it, so I thought that must be the case. I never did actually inquire about it; I just wore it one day around the house, and no one said anything contrary, so that was that. Or so I thought.

PART 2
It so happened that after church today, (a) I wore the shirt and (b) we had guests for part of the afternoon, brothers Gabe and Kendrick Imler. Gabe is in sixth grade, like Emmett, and Kendrick is age five. Janet picked up a pizza for dinner, and everyone was seated around it at the kitchen table when I came in. It was the first that Gabe or Kendrick had seen of me.

"Hey!" Kendrick said. "My brother has a shirt just like that!"

That's when it first occurred to any of us that Gabe must have left the shirt behind the last time that he slept over. He and I happen to wear about the same size.

"Hmm," said Gabe, quickly latching on. "Have you ever been to Six Flags New England?" (which is where the shirt hailed from.)

"Er ... no," I said. The jig was up.

Above you see Gabe reunited with his shirt. I guess Janet must have made an assumption similar to mine (that the shirt came from a second-hand shop) when she put the shirt in the laundry.

Keith, Ya Goof!


Sep 29, 2006

ThINK next time!

Reminder to self: Don't put a red felt tip pen in your shirt pocket ... Ya Goof!

Like you did today.



Somewhere along the way, I learned to use hair spray in a case like this. It keeps the ink from setting into the cloth.

Probably my mom taught me that.

The shirt is soaking right now in water and Oxi-Clean.

(To be continued)

Sep 27, 2006

Bus-ted


Ethan had an away soccer game last night. It was the team's fifth straight shutout, so when the bus stopped at Burger King on the way back, the defense got to get off and order first. Ethan plays defense.

But that's not the story here.

Ethan called from the road. He does that so he can get prompt pickup service when the bus reaches the junior high.

"Where are you now?" I said.

"Where are we?" Ethan asked of the bus at large. "What, Skip?" I heard. The answer was coming by way of Ethan's friend Justin Skipper. "Huntingdon," Ethan said.

Okay, that meant about twenty-five minutes. About twenty minutes later, I drove down and waited.

And waited.

And waited.

After about half an hour, still no bus. Accident? Or ...

I went home, figuring that Ethan would call again.

A few minutes later, he walked in the door.

"Skip's dad dropped me off," he said. "When I called, we were actually in Clearfield." About thirty miles farther out than Huntingdon.

The list of navigators who I trust just got shorter.

Ethan and Skip, Ya Goofs!

Image scarfed from clearfield-county.com.

Sep 23, 2006

Vote 4 Emmett

If any of you readers have a vote in the student council election at Charles W. Longer Elementary in Hollidaysburg, it's only fair that you have full information about this candidate.





On the one hand, he thought of a nice way to create a campaign sign (with Dad's help)--a gigundous paper chain with writing on it.

On the other hand, he gave the impression that he needed to have this on Friday morning, making Dad late for work, and then revealed that he didn't need it until Monday.

Vote 4 Emmett! Even if he does sometimes make us say: Ya Goof!

Sep 19, 2006

Talk about a long bad spell

Today I learned that I've been spelling my niece's nickname incorrectly for all of her life.

Bethany is 23. Here she is with boyfriend Ryan.

For some reason, we've always called her "Buggany." Naturally, this shortens to "Buggs." That's how Bethany signed an email that she sent me today.

And that's when I realized that I've always handled the spelling as "Bugs." You know, like this character:

That's a small thing, I know, but I've always been a strong speller and had a taste for the fine details of words. Yet here was a matter that had escaped me for literally a lifetime.

Buggs (note correct spelling!) would roll her eyes that I'm commenting on this. She might even say: "Uncle Keith, Ya Goof!"

Sep 18, 2006

Caution: Kids at Work

These young men are huge fans of work.

They could sit back and watch it all day.

Aw, that's not fair to say. Dad, Ya Goof!

What you see is the project to refurbish the bike rack in front of the Hollidaysburg Area Public Library. It was sunken into the ground, and the paint was ragged. Not any more!

Sep 15, 2006

At least I wasn't off by a whole year

Some people—namely, women, men, and did I mention women?—get really mad when you overestimate their age. But in other matters of time, you dare not underestimate.

For instance, a mother's time of labor. Guys, even if you think you were present during every moment, you were not. Your observations of start- and end-time do not matter and do not count. Never, ever, try to do the calculation on your own. Even if the lady comes up with, say, 86 hours of labor, over a two-day period. She will not be shorted.

If you violate this rule, you deserve to hear: Ya Goof!

For having learned this the hard way, I say to myself: Ya Goof!

For even raising this topic and risking wrath from all directions, I repeat to myself: Ya Goof!

Another matter is time of service to an employer. Our company has an intranet site (an internal web site) whose home page notes company anniversaries. Yesterday, the list included a friend's name and the number of years: 18.

I was surprised that this person had served the company that long. I took special note because my own company anniversary falls three days earlier.

Being the cute and clever person I am, I sent an email comparing the person's time of service to my own: "Me 6212 days, You 6209 days. My lead: .04%." I got the count of days using this calculator.

The reply: "What does that mean?"

My answer: "It means that I started here 3 days before you did."

The reply: "Didn't you start in 1989? I started in 1988."

D'oh! I had forgotten that I had just passed 17 years, not 18. I instantly fell behind by 362 days. (How the company got along without me all that time, I have no idea ...)

Keith, Ya Goof!

Sep 10, 2006

(Almost) time to eat the donuts.

Emmett and I went to the newer Dunkin Donuts on the Boulevard.

But I forgot my wallet.

So we turned around and went home and got my wallet.

And went to the older Dunkin Donuts on Blair Street.

Dad, Ya Goof!

Sep 9, 2006

One game = one W, one L and another kind of W

Above is a picture of Ethan in his soccer uniform juggling (soccerspeak for "bouncing off his feet and knees") a golf ball.

This is in lieu of a picture of Ethan playing in his first official game for the junior high because he didn't tell us he had a game.

Ethan, Ya Goof!

This was a make-up for a rain-out on Tuesday, but did Ethan think to mention it to us? No. We're not even the type of parents who yell from the sidelines in embarrassing ways. In fact, we're the type of parents who just watch and clap or moan as appropriate.

Granted, Ethan had an athletic bag with him when I dropped him off at school this morning.

"Ha!" he pointed out after the fact. "You should have known!"

"Ha!" I replied. "I thought you just had a practice. It's the same bag."

In the end, he agreed that is was mostly his fault. It's a bummer to think that we could just have crossed town on a nice fall evening and plopped down our lawn chairs and seen Ethan run around and get himself too tired to get into trouble.

Okay, that was a weak line. Ethan never seems to tire. I remember that age fondly.

And he doesn't get into trouble. (at least, not that he's confessing to). In fact, he acted as a good Samaritan on the way home from the game. He told us that he came across a kid in front of the elementary school who was having trouble with his bike. Ethan couldn't fix the bike, but he walked the kid home, a few blocks out of the way.

"I just didn't feel right about leaving him there," Ethan said. 'That why I was so late getting to the Y and calling for a ride."

A little gesture, but huge to me. I was proud to hear that. If we'd been at the game, I suppose Ethan wouldn't have come across the boy and helped him.

So I have mixed feelings. I would have liked to have seen the game (a win for Ethan's team by the way), but I can settle for seeing him juggle a golf ball on our lawn.

Sep 6, 2006

One wrong turn recalls another


I'm just curious if word of this post will reach the driver who ended up on the wrong side of the median at about 7:40 a.m. today at the top of the hill near Wal-Mart. It's a bad feeling to find yourself driving the wrong way up a turning lane, with all the traffic coming toward you.

I know. I've done it, too. Not in that spot, but still.

Fortunately, this morning (as in my case) the road wasn't very busy, and the person quickly popped on the emergency flashers.

C'mon, fellow motorist, we deserve to hear this:

Ya Goof!

Coming home to a swinging single

Here's a voice mail left on my work phone late yesterday afternoon:

Hello, Dad, this is Emmett. Um, It's ... Um, call back if you're there, but ... well, one of the sliding doors, Er, no, not the sliding doors, but the swinging doors ... one of the swinging doors to the kitchen, just fell off somehow. I guess it was stuck or something. Okay, bye.

Followed by this voice mail a couple minutes later:

Hello, Dad, this is Emmett again. Just calling to forewarn you. Bye.

Emmett wasn't even the goof who was, shall we say, closest to the door when it "fell off." That would be Ethan.

"I just kind of shouldered it like I always do," he said, shrugging said shoulder and its mate.

One too many shoulderings, apparently. Or maybe it got snagged on the backpack carrying fifty pounds of books.

Anyway, this damage is not an easy fix, and it was a major pain to install those doors, so for a while the doorway has reverted to its old naked self.

Janet cuts me slack these days when I take things like this in stride. That will buy me (a wee bit of) time for a replacement strategy.

Still ... Ethan, Ya Goof!


Aug 30, 2006

Fresh headlines from "Hey, Watch This!"


Click here to see the latest stories collected by Click and Clack of Car Talk

DON'T DO WHAT THESE GOOFS DID!
  • Iced wine, anyone?
  • Shocking lesson
  • Snot a good idea
  • Llama have it
  • Fire eater
  • Cannon ball!
  • How to make bucket soup

Aug 29, 2006

Names submitted to a co-worker who's expecting


The baby's last name will be Rehm (pronounced "reem.") That's important for understanding the following list of ideas for the first name. No, not just important, c-r-u-c-i-a-l.
  • Chris Peek
  • Isaac, pronounced with an "s" sound and not a "z."
  • M. Ericand
  • Heezad (boy) or Sheezad (girl)
  • Follo Yord
  • Hadda Bad
  • Lifis Buttud
  • Cookies Ank
  • Old Milst
  • Ime Gonnask
  • Rowan Upst
  • Sowerk
  • Bostonk

Names inspired by the format of last-name-first:
  • Ark Ubbel
  • Atch
  • E. Deeyate
  • M. Burr
  • Ian Derr (long "I" on the first name)
  • Itt Uns
  • Odd L.
  • Ote
  • Oov L.
  • Yooner Ate

If our co-worker doesn't go for any of these gems, we can only say: Ya Goof!

The topic this time? Oh, just desserts.


After work one day last week, I opened my car door to find a can of chocolate pudding in the seat.

And I mean a BIG can. Institutional size. Evidently someone thought I wasn't getting my daily allowance.

(On the other hand, others would be quick to say that I'm full of chocolate pudding, if you know what I mean.)

Or maybe someone bought some chocolate pudding from someone else and it ended up in my car by mistake?

I brought it in the next morning and paused in the doorway of my co-worker Beth, pudding can on hip. That brought a knowing smile.

"I've heard that was going around. It just keeps turning up where you least expect it."

I know a budding Pudding War when I see it, so I decided the circuit would end with me.

You know my posting yesterday about Camp Blue Diamond? That's a very busy church camp. With a dining hall that can always use donations. This weekend when I was there, the kitchen manager gratefully accepted my contribution.

Drop a dessert on me, eh? Ya Goof!

Aug 27, 2006

Rain drops keep fallin' on my chair

If one runs about in the rain with a chair on his head, surely one deserves to be addressed as: "Ya Goof!"

Or maybe not. You decide after you read the following, which I posted at
CarePages.com, a site that everyone should know about, because it provides (CarePages' description) "free, easy-to-use Web pages that help family and friends communicate when a loved one is receiving care. It takes just a few minutes to create a CarePage, share it with friends and family, and build a community of support."

I've been following two CarePages for two friends with cancer. One, Karen Eckenrode, died yesterday. Readers of this blog may know her and her wonderfully supportive husband, Ray. All sympathy to all of Karen's loved ones.

Readers may also know the other patient, Doug Rhodes. At CarePages, he creates beautiful and often-funny posts on his progress, with reminders to enjoy each day. Livin', as he says.

Today, Doug, who attends the same church as the YaGoof! goofs, posted that he missed this morning's service. This was my response:

Doug, you didn't miss anything at church this morning. Because the service was down at Camp Blue Diamond!

(Last I knew, there wasn't going to be a service at the church building itself, to encourage everyone to enjoy a change of pace. My apologies if there WAS a service at Hollidaysburg.)

We prayed for you, as always. Pastor Marlys told an inspiring story about a young man she met at M.Div. school--a PhD at 26--whose parents are both mentally handicapped. Have her tell you the rest; she'll do it with much more style than I would. The service concluded with four being baptized in the lake. It was a special time.

The Eldred and Imler families each spent last night in a separate cabin at the Camp; Bonnie and I were at the same training in the Lodge yesterday. We had a fire and made "banana boats." You probably know this recipe from survival training at Parris Island:

1. Take a banana
2. Slit the side
3. Scoop out some of the banana
4. Insert little marshmallows and chocolate chips
5. Wrap the banana in aluminum foil
6. Place the boat on coals to melt the marshmallows and chocolate
7. Pull it out with tongs OR
8. If you're a Marine, just pull it out
9. Remove foil and peel and eat with a spoon OR
10. If you're a Marine, just pop it (hot foil, peel and all) into your mouth

I woke up before everyone else and was showered and relaxing with a book before the rain started. It came down pretty good. I had to jog up to the car holding one of those folding canvas chairs (unfolded, upside-down) over my head for an umbrella, so I could drive down for us to pack up before the service. Another survival school trick (or should be).

A little later in the morning, while Janet got cleaned up, the boys each used the chair-as-umbrella trick as we ran over to the little gazebo in front of the Lodge, where we at a breakfast of cold Pop-Tarts and warm bottled water.

I guess I'm posting this because it's what you're talking about: Livin'. Enjoying the moment. Thank you for all the reminders to do that. God bless.