dodge-’em cars

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Three Things Daley #14

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

…Close calls

1. I scream.  I was buying a double choc-dip from the ice cream van one afternoon when I was 11.  After our transaction, I had the cone in one hand and 80c worth of change in 10c coins in the other.  I stood in front of the van, about to cross the road, when he started his engine up like he was going to drive through me.  Suitably spooked, I ran out onto the road without looking.  And that’s when another car drove past and sent me flying.  At the top of the road, the driver got out of her hubcap-deficient, tinny, off-white vehicle.  “Are you alright?” she bellowed from the top of the hill.  “Yes,” I replied with a wobble.  And off she drove, leaving me sitting on the road surrounded by 10c coins, with half an empty cone in my hand.  My friend who saw the whole thing from across the street laughed.  “‘S not funny,” I told her.  The ice-cream man beckoned me over and gave me a free replacement double choc-dip – not that I felt like it anymore.  Had I been a moment sooner, I’d have surely gone under this car.  But as it was, my ankle, which bled because of the exposed screws on the shi!ty car that hit me, was the only thing injured.  Well, that and my faith in humanity* - and my taste for soft-serve.

2. Intoxication.  Back in Edinburgh, I did a wee video tour of our apartment.  This included showing “the people watching at home” our refrigerator, which was packed with a metric f’tonne of wine.  My favourite was one marked “ROSE”.  And I say “ROSE” because it was, without exaggeration, labelled in about a 700 point font.  In the process of dragging out the “ROSE” to show “the people watching at home”, I nearly smashed about 15 other bottles, in a cascade of glassy booziness.  Again, all’s well that ends well – no wine was harmed and, best of all, I caught my idiotic slapstick moment on video.

3. Dodge.  I was at the circus fairground dodge-’em cars once when I was 8 years old or so.  To this day I love dodge-’ems.  I hate spinning, I hate being upside down, I’m not a massive fan of heights.  But I can definitely get on board with a need for speed.  And if a few crazy collisions are involved, all the better.  I held my breath watching as the cars zoomed round and round when I saw it.  The purple one.  In that blurry, song-filled moment, I knew – I had to have the shiny, deep-purple metallic dodge-’em.  I watched it like a starving bounty hunter in the wilderness watches a wild boar – or an episode of Jamie Oliver via portable TV (an essential item for any adventurer).  Round and round it went until, finally, all the cars started to slow.  Determined to get my purple racer, I ran out onto the track.  Except they didn’t stop.  The cars all sped up again, and my beloved purple car came tearing towards me.  It hit me, I bounced onto the ‘hood’, and the guy driving it grabbed my arm and held onto me.  There I was, flailing about on the front of this little car, with a guy steering with one hand – and saving my limbs** with the other.  It was a close call, but fortunately it worked.  I got the purple car.  Oh and, like, I didn’t die (Darwin Awards, anyone?).

*Okay, it’s not THAT bleak.  But what a moll – am I right?
**People like him cancel out people like Mollface McMoll in the first story.  But, you know, that’s also a close call.

Antagonising killjoys made easy

Saturday, September 20th, 2008

(not that it isn’t already)

Anyone who knows anything about psychology - or dealing with people in general - knows that as soon as you tell someone not to do something, it will be all they can think about.

For example, if I say “don’t think about chocolate”, I’m pretty sure your head will be swimming in images of molten cocoa, floating down a canal built from a hollowed-out Boost, through a town of towering Twixes.

In short, as soon as you say “don’t do this” to people – and children especially – you’re screwed.

There are exceptions, of course.  Like, if you’re standing at the open door of a plane, about to skydive, and your tandem guy says “don’t jump yet”, chances are you’ll obey.  Ah life – it’s a keeper.

But if you’re, say, at Luna Park’s dodge-’em cars, and the dude on the microphone spends a lot of time telling you everything you shouldn’t do, and less time cranking the music, flicking on the fancy lights and letting you bump the proverbial out of your chosen target, you may feel an uncontainable urge to break the ‘rules’.

Bringin dodge-em back

 

This guy was the epitome of unfun, clearly hating life and everyone in it.  I’d have felt sorry for him… if he wasn’t such a d0uc#ebag.

He sounded like a voice-over wannabe – using deliberate and rehearsed inflections that you only ever hear on radio ads or in ice rinks (I suppose a carnie can dream).

As soon as people got in their cars, he’d start barking orders that went on for a good five minutes:

“No head-on collisions. If you are wedged somewhere, turn the wheel away from what you’re stuck against. Keep your foot on the accelerator at all times…”

The ugly yellow fluoro lights would stay on for the first half of each go, and there was no music until the last five minutes!  Once it was on, it was some kind of mellow trip-hop – as opposed to Born to be Wild, Eye of the Tiger, or any number of bogan rock tunes, as it should be.

And the dictation continued:

“No head-on collisions. If you are wedged somewhere, turn the wheel away from what you’re stuck against… turn the wheel away…”

Surely the point of dodge-’ems is to slam violently into each other, get wedged between the barrier and seven other cars, and have your car go wobbly while your steering wheel does 360s of its own accord.

When you first start playing with Lego, nobody stands there telling you, “Do not put the bricks squarely on top of each other or else your wall will fall down in pieces! Stagger them like a brick wall – I repeat, stagger them like a brick wall…”

Working things out for yourself, making mistakes and enjoying the ensuing mayhem – these form the point of child’s play, don’t they?

As I watched from the queue, I realised that, with every bellow, this sour-faced guy was killing the fun!  Not in a quick, painless way either.

There was only one thing to do - bring dodge-’em back.

My friends and I brainstormed while we were in line.  Flip him off every time he used the mic?  Seems too easy.  Shout abuse at him?  Actually, I was already doing that from the queue.  Collide as violently as possible?  Well, that was a given. No, it’d take something far more demonstrative to make a point.  And the right time was obvious.

We had our go at dodge-’ems, slammed violently into each other, and it was all over too soon.  The cars slowed to a stop.  And our killjoy friend started up again.

“Do not hop out.  Do not hop out,” he began.

We obeyed.

“As you leave, walk - do not run!  Do not run!”

You can guess what happened next.  We pi$$bolted.

“I said, do not run. Walk, do not run. Do. Not. Run!!!”

I kept running, weaving between the cars and leaping out of the dodge-’em track.  And I kept running out into the park - now with my arms spread like I’d scored a goal.

And I had.  As my friends and I high-fived, I turned around to see the mirth-murdering jerk glaring at me with poison daggers.

Childish?  Yes.  Satisfying?  Ab-so-freakin’-lutely.