Look at me, look at me. Look
at me. Would you? Would you believe that snowflakes are among the most
dangerous naturally occurring phenomena this side of the Mason-Dixon line? That
frozen water -- a necessary component in such Southern staples as sweet tea and
Type 2 Diabetes -- is responsible for more deaths than cotton balls and
corduroy pants combined? It’s the
honest truth, friends. Last year, cotton balls and corduroy pants accounted for
almost 2 fatalities when Carl Kittering, the corduroy-clad Cotton Ball Company
employee, consumed too much caffeine, causing an acute fire as his chaps
combusted. Several onlookers also suffered severe alliteration intoxication.
He deserved it for wearing corduroy, though. |
Judging by the bread section at the local supermarkets, I
predict that this winter storm will be responsible for nearly 15,000 deaths.
Not human, of course, that would be preposterous. Innocent sandwiches, however,
will needlessly suffer disgraceful deaths at the hands of people who apparently
believe that 1-5 inches of snow constitutes a State
of Emergency. These barbarians, having bought up loaves upon loaves of
white, wheat, pumpernickel, and brave rye breads, will likely toast the spoils
of paranoia in the warmth of a perfectly-illuminated kitchen. That is not what
these breads were trained for. These breads were specifically crafted to be
palatable for lonely children, disgruntled employees, and woebegone hikers in
their times of need. The wanton use of processed bread during hours of
merriment and school closings is a disgrace to the callousness and
mechanization that goes into producing them, and should be eliminated
posthaste. We should be disgusted by our gluttony and avarice.
Aside from the decimation of our doughy comrades, frozen precipitation seems to
bring out a unique type of stupefaction in many southerners. Regardless of the
situation, you will catch many a redneck staring intently out the window during
a snowstorm or even staring up at the sky outside, slowly accumulating little
snowballs in their gaping maws. It’s really quite majestic.
What we see here is the result of the innate savagery of short people. |
Nevertheless, a very real danger presents itself when
southerners attempt to drive in these conditions. The lack of focus is exemplified
behind the wheel, as we are not only are distracted by the snowflakes,
but also believe our untimely demise at the hands of Old Man Winter can only be
prevented by driving slowly and liberally slamming brakes. Common wisdom will
tell us that this is actually the opposite of what you should do (driving
breaks and liberally slamming slowly are much safer), but we suffer from guilt.
For after witnessing our vicious breadlust at the Battle of Pepperidge Farm,
we’ve grown cautious and preoccupied. Despite this, we will drive on into that
good night, staring intently at the snow, blissfully unaware that we’re
operating a 2-ton death trap on icy roads. You might say we’re too dumb to
drive in snow, but I say “Look at all the good we did for the baking industry.”
But seriously, you alarmist bastards bought the last loaf of
honey wheat, and some of us are still expected to function when temperatures
are below freezing. Cut it out, the snow is gonna melt in 24 hours anyway.
Notes:
1.
Out of work early and probably going in late
tomorrow! I love you, Cold Front.
2.
You’d better believe I’m going to destroy some
neighborhood kids tomorrow in a snowball fight if I can. And yes, I am a newly
employed adult.
3.
On the other hand, this will probably make for a
busy couple of days in the office. Pity your insurance adjusters.
4.
I actually love the snow and get pretty excited
about it. Not buy-out-the-supermarket excited, but I will stare at it intently.
5.
And maybe whisper sweet nothings in its
earflakes.