New
Year's resolutions have basically become an annual joke. Every first of January we make resolutions
for the upcoming year and if we're lucky, they remain valid for the rest of the
month.
So, this
year how about making some resolutions you'll actually be able to keep during
2019? Here's a list of several such
resolutions. I hope you accept these
suggestions in the spirit of humor in which they are offered. If I've offended anyone, I apologize in
advance.
1. Gain
Weight. Let's face it, you already
have a start on this one with all the holiday meals, candy, beverages, and
snacks starting with Thanksgiving and continuing on through Christmas.
2. Go
Deeper Into Debt. You probably have
a head start on this one, too, from holiday gift shopping. After all, even buying new things for
yourself…well, it was probably stuff you needed and with all the great sales
this year who could resist?
3. Spend
More Money. This goes hand-in-hand
with the second item on the list. Spend
it now while you're still physically able to get out to do it.
4. Don't
Get A Better Job. Since having any
job is better than not having one, be happy with status quo.
5. Whatever
Shape You're In Is Fine.
Seriously…round is a perfectly acceptable shape.
6. Don't
Go Back To School. Look at your
current life and time schedule. Now add
a part time college schedule to that plus the cost of tuition (probably the
same amount as that new curved 80-inch 3D HDTV home theater with Dolby Surround
Sound you bought in item two on the list) and the cost of expensive college
textbooks. Hmmm…a fine bottle of rare
vintage wine or a bottle of aged single malt scotch vs. Concepts of Economics Vol. 1.
7. Drink
More Alcohol. Open that fine bottle
of wine or scotch and watch your new 80-inch TV.
8. Smoke
Like A Chimney. When someone
chastises you for putting second hand smoke out there, ask them if they've
traded in their gas-guzzling car for a bicycle.
9. Stay
At Home for your vacation. If,
however, you prefer to find toilet paper that's hard enough to scrape paint,
really weird television, and even weirder food…then travel out of the country.
And last
but not least…
10. Don't
Volunteer!
And now
for something completely different (with apologies to Monty Python for
stealing…uh, I mean borrowing…their
catch phrase).
As a
follow up to Christmas, a few words about that much maligned holiday treat, the
butt of so many jokes, that humble yet seemingly inedible concoction—fruitcake.
Food
historians theorize that fruitcake (any cake in which dried fruits and nuts try
to coexist with cake batter) is older than Moses. Ancient Egyptians entombed fruitcake and
Romans carried it into battle, probably for the same reason. Fruitcake was built to last and it did, well
into medieval times.
It was
in the 18th century that fruitcake achieved totemic status. At that time nut-harvesting farmers encased
fruits and nuts in a cakelike substance to save for the next harvest as a sort
of good luck charm.
And thus
the problem. Any cake that is not meant
to be eaten doesn't deserve to be classified as food.
Our
love/hate relationship with fruitcake began in the early 20th
century when the first mail-order fruitcakes became fashionable gifts. It ended up as a mass-produced product using
barely recognizable fruits and packed into cans as heavy as barbell weights.
And
another something different…
While
celebrating the arrival of the New Year, there's one thing you should keep in
mind—the darker the liquor, the bigger the hangover. According to a new study that compares the
after effects of drinking bourbon vs. vodka, what sounds like an old wives'
tale is true…to a point.
Brownish
colored spirits such as whiskey and rum contain greater amounts of congeners
than clear liquors such as vodka and gin.
And what are congeners, you might ask?
They are substances that occur naturally or are added to alcohol during
the production and aging process, many of which are toxic. They contribute to the alcohol's color, odor,
and taste. They also interfere with cell
function, and I'm NOT talking about your mobile phone. :) And they viciously punish your head and tummy
the next morning. According to the
study, bourbon is aged in oak barrels and has thirty-seven times as many
congeners as vodka, which is heavily filtered to remove impurities.
Drinking
in the study was relatively moderate compared to some New Year's Eve
binges. The average blood-alcohol
content of the survey participants was 0.1 percent, somewhere between 0.09
("mildly intoxicated" and considered legally over the limit in most
states), and 0.15 ("visibly drunk" and definitely on your way to jail
if you're driving a vehicle). The
study's findings may not translate to your holiday party.
The
bottom line, however, is that congeners are not the primary culprit in the
dreaded hangover. The credit goes to the
alcohol itself
2 comments:
I got a chuckle out of reading your suggestions for New Year resolutions we will actually keep. Funny. Thanks for sharing. Happy New Year!
C.B.: Glad you enjoyed my New Year's humor.
Thanks for your comment.
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