
5 Uses for a Wedding Bouquet

...or if you’re dating someone.

However, all is not lost if you’re stuck with the bouquet. Yes, you must suffer the slings and arrows of eternal shame, but look on the bright side: you never know when this acquisition will prove unexpectedly handy.





Greeting Card Tactics
Daily life is filled with irritations. So many irritations, in fact, that many are easily overlooked... until someone points them out.




As soon as I grew old enough to buy my own cards, I realized just how right my mother was, and the following years have only confirmed this reality. Take, for instance, the sympathy card I needed to buy last fall. I knew the recipient in a professional setting, not a personal one, which made most of the options inappropriate.


Others were downright creepy.

Some card manufacturers have realized how awkward cards can be and have decided that a bit of humor will solve this difficulty. Unfortunately, very few of their attempts are actually worthwhile. No matter the occasion (birthday, anniversary, Pancake Awareness Day...), the majority of the allegedly funny cards break down into three categories.
Group One: Dumb Joke




Group Three: Egocentric Sender


My family has developed a number of coping mechanisms for dealing with poor greeting card options. My mother always tries to get cards with Snoopy on them.



Now after every birthday I return the card so my parents can give it back to me the next year.
My younger brother deals with birthdays by refusing to conform to societal expectations.

In retaliation I gave him this card. He used it for my birthday the following spring, and we’ve been trading it back and forth ever since.
My usual tactic, however, is to find a card with one of those delicate paper-y inserts. I then proceed to rip out the insert and write whatever I want in its place.

Then there was the best card I ever gave my mother.
Bunny the Blue
It all started with a seemingly innocuous package.

Little did we know the psychological trauma about to be wreaked by the outwardly adorable beast. The creature was a palm-sized mixture of fluff and fuzz, and to perpetuate the myth of its cuteness it was dyed blue to boot. Then there was its special feature.
Yes, the blue bunny was musical -- in the most irritating fashion possible. It sounded like a demented ice cream truck, and its song lasted about twenty seconds longer than my patience.
Unfortunately for my mental state, some of the others were highly amused by the wretched bunny. As I went about my end-of-the-semester tasks, I felt my sanity steadily slipping.
What really unhinged me, however, resulted from Bunny Blue disappearing into the moral abyss of our next-door neighbors. To this day I don’t know what exactly the Brown House boys did to that creature, but when it came back it had taken atonality to new levels.
Something had to be done. Someone had to contain the beast.
There was no question who that someone would be.
When the Æsir moved to contain the monstrous wolf Fenrir, they bound him by means of a magic fetter.
I used a freezer instead.
Like Monty Python plague victims, the blue bunny wasn’t quite dead. As the semester ended and we packed up to head our various ways, the creature was foisted on housemate upon unsuspecting housemate. The roulette only ended when everyone had dispersed for good.

Once again I found myself in control of the beast, and this time I was taking no chances.

Thanks to my merciless surgery, Bunny Blue was at last fit for human company, and he’s spent the past five years in seclusion with one housemate or another. Right now he’s sitting on my desk, staring at me with unreadable eyes, and preparing himself for tomorrow’s Long House reunion.

He’s either speechless with delight or silently plotting my death.