Sunday, April 18, 2010

How to deal with floaters and my other superstitions

I am of the firm conviction that the more you know and the less you believe the better you are off. However, I am not free of my own personal superstitions.

Let us take floaters as first example. These days I seem to produce a lot of them. I don't know whether it is because I am eating better or just whether it is because I have less stress. Whatever the reason, there they are. Now according to my 'belief' system the best way to get rid of a floater is thus: Don't look at the fucker while flushing. I swear that's the best way.

This works nine times out of ten when you are in your own home and apparently one time out ten when you are in a friend's house as I found out at my friend Jan's house last night.

I dread to think what would happen should I ever have a shit in my boss' house ... I don't think I will ever do it but one must be prepared for any eventuality in life. So I'll just take enough cash for a taxi and go and stink up the nearest restaurant.

Stemming from my floater belief comes my belief about watching my laptop connect to the Internet. I hit the button and walk away. It works nine times out of ten. I do the same for 'difficult' websites such as Scrabble. Connectivity in South Africa is not what it should be. I walk into the street or garden and scratch my head or balls and light a smoke and refuse to watch.

My signal on my cellphone modem at home is dodgy when the the sky is blue, which is often the case here, and even dodgier when there is a thunderstorm, which is often the case here. In the good old days when I was young and life was predictable one could have set one's watch by the outbreak of a high veld (a geographical area in South Africa. Joburg is about 1250m above sea level) thunderstorm. It happened for a half hour at 4:30 on summer afternoons and that was it.

Not anymore. Now there is rain about all of the time (well at least this summer) and everybody sagely agrees that climate change is a reality while very few people want to sagely consider the cause thereof. According to most scientific evidence it is not Al Gore's carbon emissions, but who cares about science if we can believe something else and get hysterical about it. It is so much more fun to 'care' about something and express that care loudly in public than to be seen as 'indifferent'. Climate change is a reality ... so do not fart.

I also do not check my bank balance when I am unemployed, believing somehow that it would decrease the rate of the decrease in available funds. This works zero times out of ten, but hey ... a belief is a belief.

I also somehow believe that retracing your steps when you have forgotten something at home or in a restaurant would land you in more trouble than whatever the forgotten item is worth.

This is totally irrational and if it is your credit card or wallet or cellphone that is in the restaurant make haste to get back there and retrieve it.

What else do I believe ... not much ... except that is better to have a low-paying job that you hate than no job at all. This works ten times out of ten because you will find something better soon enough. Yes, I do believe one should stay positive when times are shit.

2 comments:

  1. I know you will not believe me (because this is not the first time that I point this out to you), but Jhb is between 1500 and 1800 m above sea level; Melville probably closer to the latter.

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  2. You are right, I don't believe you. It is 1250m at most.

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