T’was the night before Christmas…

T’was the night before Christmas, when all through our shack

Not a drink was a-pouring—not a gin or a Jack.

The tumblers were set on the counter with care,

In hopes that Jack Daniels would visit this bear.

 

The children were rattled with sugar and cake.

They’d whipped me with belts just to see if I’d shake.

And Mama sat by with a glazed look devoid

Of sorrow or sympathy—brain opioid.

 

When out on the lawn there arose such a clatter:

A raccoon attacking our garbage—to scatter!

Away to the window I flew like a flash,

And yelled at my dad: “Have you still got that rash?

 

“If you are not still scratching your ass and your balls,

Perhaps you’d be up for one more of your squalls.

You see, there’s a beast in our yard, in the snow…

Devouring the peels in the garbage, you know.

 

“I was keeping those peels so they’d turn into booze.

That project, I’m sure, to you isn’t news.

And this tick-riddled vermin is wrecking my wine

So get out there, dad, and, well, get it in line.

 

“By which I mean beat it with shovel or stick

Or something from Walmart, you Langleyite hick.

Without that old compost, we won’t have Merlot.

And that, my dear dad, will totally blow.”

 

So stuck on this problem was I that I failed

To see the weird thing that had suddenly sailed

Into view in my window—first far and then near:

A miniature sleigh, and eight tiny reinbeers.

 

You got it, my fellows, my chums, my old drunks.

It wasn’t a sleigh pulled by reindeer, you lunks.

In front of the driver, whose eyes glowed e’er quicker,

Were eight sexy bottles of premium liquor.

 

And Santa, my friends, held his whip up to bear!

His veiny nose bursting with snot in the air.

More rapid than eagles his reinbeers, they came,

And he whistled, and shouted, and called them by name!

 

“Now Lager! Now Lambic! Now Dunkel and Wheatbeer!

On Pale Ale! On Pilsner! On Marzen and Altbier!

To the top of the porch! To the top of the wall!

Now dash away, dash away, dash away all!”

 

And then in a twinkling, he got out a gun

And aimed at the raccoon, who started to run!

He said, “I like cooking, and so does Ms Claus.

Especially when she can chop off the paws.”

 

Thus warping my picture of Santa forever,

This weird-ass old bugger proceeded to sever

The head of the raccoon, without even stopping

To slide down our chimney and disgorge his shopping.

 

“That’s that,” said my dad. “You’ve wrecked it all for us.

The children’s belief was already quite porous.

And when you espied him, he saw he’d been made.

Nice going, you furball. Now you’ll have to trade

 

Our alcohol money for toys and for dolls

Our Bailey’s for ponies, our Broker’s for balls.

And all ‘cause you had to sit here on this ledge

Determined to out Santa Claus and his sledge.”

 

“Not true!” did I shout. “I was nowhere near there

Until that raccoon started looking for pears!

And I thought you’d just go out and give it a swat,

But that psychopath killed it with nary a thought!”

 

“That psycho was Santa,” my mum at last said.

“We needed his presents much more than a dead

Raccoon, don’t you think? You indecorous bear—

What business have you on that window ledge there?”

 

When all of a sudden, the rooftop went thump!

That bastard had come back with presents to dump!

His fat ass came shimmying right down the chimney

The raccoon blood drying and coating him thinly.

 

He spoke not a word but went straight to his work

And despite wearing chaps he did not even twerk.

And pulling a finger across his thick throat,

He gestured a threat, if ever we spoke!

 

He sprang to his sleigh, to his beers gave a whistle

And away they all flew like the down of a thistle.

But I heard him exclaim as he left with a zoom,

“Merry Christmas to all, except that fucking raccoon.”

253

The 21 Christmas decorations your home needs, my fellow inebriates

OMG, my fellow inebriates, can you believe it? My parents have really let me down this season. I’m supposed to be commandeering Oprah’s Favorite Things, showing you how to make nasty liqueurs out of cheap Canadian whisky, and being the usual nuisance. But my parents SUCK, they really do. Supposedly there is just no time for poor little LB and his capsizing blog.

I’m practicing typing with my paws, but you know, it kind of looks like this:

kgiogqjhHOAEIRHTGIO;AHG;A

So….until the alcohol starts flowing again at LBHQ, here are some lovely ideas for making your holidays festive. Martha Stewart would envy this stuff, my fellow inebriates!

decorations

Crushing it in the career zone

My dad is still talking about switching industries, so I thought I’d help him build a new resume.

PROFILE

  • B2B sales professional with extensive electronics background on PC, tablet, and smartphone

 

  • Over six months’ experience in candy crushing, candy matching, bringing down ingredients, collecting orders, clearing jelly, optimizing points, mitigating chocolate encroachment, and navigating sugar-laden pathways with focus and determination

 

  • Strong emphasis on candy-smashing best practices

 

  • Expertise in managing lives, forming four- and five-candy lines, pursuing L-shaped candy formations; spotting unusual cross-shaped candy formations and detonating in a timely manner; creating candy canes, stripy licorice, stripy peppermints, and stripy orange candies; understanding various confectionaries’ explosive properties and deploying accordingly

 

 

SKILLS

  • Alternating among three electronic devices so lives are always available
  • Utilizing candy-bombs in  a timely manner
  • Persevering on difficult levels without losing focus
  • Managing distractions from family members and work-related exigencies
  • Understanding the interplay of specific candies in numerous contexts
  • Maintaining resilience in the face of “chocolate creep”
  • Preserving professional arms’-length relationship with little crying heart whose lives have expired
  • Carrying on conversations while blasting candies, even in the face of criticism and mocking
  • Containing foul language during difficult levels
  • Maintaining candy impartiality regardless of confectionary colour or shape

 

 

TECHNICAL EXPERTISE

Matching rows of three candies

Matching rows of four candies

Matching rows of five candies (cookie ball!)

Creating L-shaped candy formations

Creating cross-shaped candy formations

Matching two stripy candies

Matching two wrapped candies

Smashing a stripy candy against a wrapped candy

Smashing cookie balls against generic candies

Smashing a cookie ball and a striped candy

Smashing a cookie ball and a wrapped candy

Freeing caged candies

Detonating candy bombs

Blasting chocolate

Clearing jelly, particularly resistant types

 

 

EXPERIENCE

Apprentice, Candy Town

Candy Smasher, Candy Factory

Jelly Clearer, Lemonade Lake

Chocolate Blaster, Chocolate Mountains

Lead Jelly Clearer, Minty Meadow

Lead Candy Matcher, Easter Bunny Hills

Project Manager, Jelly Clearing, Bubblegum Bridge

Candy Wrangler, Salty Canyon

Chocolate Containment Advisor, Peppermint Palace

Bomb Defuser, Gingerbread Glade

Sugar Crush Consultant, Pastille Pyramid

Timed Blasting Lead, Cupcake Circus

Ingredient Collector, Caramel Cove

Booster Expert, Sweet Surprise

Mystery Candy Identifier, Crunchy Castle

Marmalade Spreader, Chocolate Barn

Jelly Fish Tamer, Delicious Drifts

Licorice Swirler, Holiday Hut

Coconut Wheeler, Candy Clouds

VP Detonation, Jelly Jungle

VP Jelly Clearing, Savory Shores

VP Colour Bomb Explosion, Munchy Monolith

Stripy–Wrapped Candy Relations, Pearly White Plains

CEO, Fudge Islands

 

 

 

REFERENCES

Tiffi

Mr. Toffee

The Easter Bunny

 

What do you think, my fellow inebriates? I hope my dad likes it and buys me some wine.